Don’t invest unless you’re prepared to lose all the money you invest. This is a high-risk investment, and you shouldn't expect protection if something goes wrong. Take 2 minutes to learn more

Unboxed image

ETH flexes muscles

MOVERS

8am EST 1st December 2021

Crypto: Biggest price rise

CRV

9.13

Equities: Biggest price rise

AAPL

2.92

Bitcoin

$57,123.40

Crypto: Biggest price loss

CSPR

-7.41

Equities: Biggest price loss

NFLX

-2.35

XRP

$1.00

Crypto: Biggest vol increase*

BTG

704.51

Equities: Biggest vol increase*

AAPL

29.76

Tesla

$1,148.71

*Volume bought in USD over the past 24 hours on the Uphold platform

WHAT'S UP

Harnessing Howling Winds, Ethereum Lifts Toward ATH

In a fear-soaked environment, Bitcoin kept calm, carried on and smacked head first into a wall spray-painted with "Long live $58K resistance!"

Ethereum, on the other hand, is sailing, catching an early December gale. ETH rose as much as 8% earlier today and for a moment seemed bent on $5K. A very do-able up move, and not much else, stands between the second-largest crypto and its all-time high of $4,880, reached Nov. 10.

Since hitting its ATH of about $69K (on that same day), BTC has shed about 18%. In the past week, ETH has risen 8% while one of its biggest rivals, Cardano, lost as much; and another big ETH competitor, Solana, is flat over seven days.

Meanwhile, Terra's LUNA reached an ATH of nearly $60 yesterday. The algorithmic stablecoin project is making an attention-grabbing run at Swift's antiquated global banking services turf, an Australian Kraken executive told Forkast.News. Terra’s token has gained more than 800% since July.

WHAT'S DOWN

SHIB Subdued; Showtime For LTC

Dogecoin rival Shiba Inu rocketed more than 40% during some stretches of Tuesday but has come in for a landing.

As of Wednesday, at 7:15 a.m. (EST), SHIB had shed 12.6% over 24 hours.

It's still up over the past week.

Turning quickly to seven-day time frames and sticking with downward dogs, Crypto.com Coin (CRO) has dropped by 17.5% in that span. However, right now, CRO is starting to suddenly green up on some news that it bought a pair of small exchanges, including one literally called Small Exchange.

A noteworthy biweekly loser: Litecoin (-8.4%). What, LTC, did you really think your sucking wind of late would go unnoticed? But our hat goes off to the No. 15 coin for its recently secured alliance with Regal Cinemas (AMBCrypto). Ridiculously priced popcorn will be even that much easier to devour knowing LTC was the means of exchange. LTC actually just popped 0.03% between 6:45 a.m. and 7:45 a.m. (EST).

WHAT'S NEXT

Santa Claus Rally Not Off Table

You call that a correction? Since reaching its ATH earlier this month, BTC has fallen 18%.

But before you can scream "oh no, BTC's just plunged through the ice and into a bear market pond!" take notice that November's dip was the weakest correction of 2021, overshadowed by the 53.4% meltdown between April and July (Cointelegraph). The most recent correction in September was the second-deepest, reaching 37% from April’s ATH.

Bears eked out a negligible victory as the calendar turned. But the bulls are greeting December like Scrooge, refreshed from a nightmare-laden slumber and caught up in the spirit of the season, as well as lively chatter of still-in-play Santa Claus rally scenarios.

FOCUS

Fidelity Lights Out For The Great White North

The top U.S. financial industry regulator needs more time to figure out whether spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds make sense. One of the world's largest money managers has decided it’s not waiting around. Fidelity Investments, a 401(k)-fund gargantuan with more than $4 trillion in total assets under management, is set to launch a spot BTC ETF – in Canada.

Fidelity's clients are said to be demanding it. The SEC has neither provided a green light for spot BTC ETFs, nor any sort of potential timetable for as to when permission might come. And so, Fidelity, with headquarters in Boston, has decided dawdling was not an option with the SEC unable to provide any clarity.


Previous newsletters


Wait, are you still not subscribed our daily newsletter?

What's all that about then, mate?

Please add a valid email address

Uphold works best on mobile, download our app now.



Uphold Europe Limited, Reg No. 09281410, Registered Office: Eastcastle House, 27/28 Eastcastle Street, London, United Kingdom, W1W 8DH

Uphold (FRN: 938277) is registered with the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) for AML purposes and complies with the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and Transfer for Funds (Information on the Payer).

Uphold is also an EMD agent (FRN: 938277) of Optimus Cards UK Limited (FRN: 902034) which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority to issue e-money pursuant to the Electronic Money Regulations 2011.

Cryptoasset services offered by Uphold Europe Limited are unregulated and not covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme as well as the FCA’s consumer protection regulations. Cryptoassets are very high risk and speculative. You should be aware and prepared to potentially lose some or all of your money. You should carefully consider whether trading or holding cryptoassets is suitable for you in light of your financial circumstances. Gains may be subject to Capital Gains Tax and there may be extra charges when paying via credit card from your provider. Geographic restrictions may apply.

Fiat money payments and balances (fiat is another name for traditional currencies, such as GBP, USD and EUR) constitute regulated e-money and payment services. In providing fiat balances, you are being issued with e-money by Optimus and Uphold is acting as its agent. See specific e-money terms. E-money is not a deposit or investment account which means that your e-money will not be protected by the FSCS. Your funds will be held in a designated safeguarding account with a regulated financial institution. E-money will not earn any interest.

Uphold is certified for SOC 2 Type 2, ISO 27001, and PCI DSS, ensuring rigorous control over our information security management systems, data handling, and payment processing practices. Furthermore, we comply with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), and the UK Data Protection Act, underscoring our dedication to protecting the personal data and privacy rights of our global customers.

© 2025 Uphold Europe Limited. All rights reserved.