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
6 Dec, 2023

Bitcoin in all-out romp

What's being bought and sold*

TOP TRENDING ASSETS

View all assets

*Trading activity in the past 24 hours on the Uphold platform, as of 8 a.m. 6th December 2023.

The combined total of buy and sell percentages can exceed 100% due to customers who engage in both buying and selling the same asset within the 24-hour time frame.

All investments and trading are risky and may result in the loss of capital. Cryptoassets are largely unregulated and are therefore not subject to protection.

What’s up

BTC Crosses $44K; DOGE Turns Ten

In a year-end run-up reminiscent of 2017 and 2021, Bitcoin earlier today struck $44,000. It’s the latest milestone in a six-day surge during which time the largest crypto advanced by as much as 16%.

As of 7:17 a.m. (EST), BTC was $44,047, per CoinGecko. BTC had popped 5.4% in the past day as of that time.

The FTX-collapse-inspired crypto rout that defined the final few weeks of 2022 – and launched a thousand obituaries – is fading further into the rear-view mirror.

Still, critics in various corners of the financial and media realms continue to scoff at this latest rally as yet another head fake that won’t end well.

As of now, though, the market is that giddy kid on Christmas, rifling through a stocking stuffed with catalysts, from rosy interest rate forecasts to a coming halving event and the potential for spot ETFs getting a regulatory blessing, triggering a deluge of money coming into the market.

For most of the past 49 weeks, BTC has been climbing steadily. More than a few outbursts were eventually followed by frustrating retracements. A trading band between $25K and $30K dominated spring and summer.

Coinbase at one stage, only hours ago, reportedly stamped BTC at $45K.

The $40K mark, which only came into view this past Sunday, hadn’t been hit since early 2022. It felt huge. For an hour or so. Then $40K was left in the dust, as was $42K.

BTC has gained 160% in the past year. Roughly half of that return has come since September.

"FOMO, mixed with a dose of YOLO, seems to be back," said Nick Baker, deputy editor of CoinDesk.

Among Big Ten assets, Dogecoin is having its own private party. Overnight, DOGE lit up like an 80-foot-tall Norway Spruce crammed into Rockefeller Center. Today marks the OG memecoin's 10th birthday. DOGE's 24-hour journey from $0.09 to $0.10 in time for the anniversary sure seems like an orchestrated pump. But is there something more to this, maybe tying into Elon Musk?

DOGE gained as much as 16% since early Tuesday. The last time DOGE hit a dime was one year ago on its 9th birthday.

Musk, an unabashed DOGE champion, is trying to raise $1 billion for his AI aspirations, according to a filing. When this news broke, DOGE took off.

"One of the strangest correlations in markets persists," CoinDesk's Baker added.

What's down

Some Big Movers Get Kneecapped

BitTorrent as of Wednesday morning was going haywire. CoinGecko showed the Tron-affiliated, decentralized file-sharing protocol's native BTT had soared by 100% in the past 24 hours. But just in the one-hour period between 7 a.m. (EST) and 8 a.m. (EST), BTT fell 10%.

BTT's parabolic rise comes as the Tron network's total user base approached a major milestone of 200 million accounts.

Meanwhile, a few other outsized gainers on the week, including LUNC and ORDI, are shading incongruously red over the past day. The latter, ORDI, has gained 130% since the last day of November. ORDI fell 5.5% in the past 24 hours.

What's next

Rise Of 'Bitcoin NFTs' Raises Existential Question

A fiery debate has accompanied the explosion of the Ordinals protocol for putting NFT-like artifacts on the Bitcoin blockchain.

Purists do not want the network used for anything except financial transactions; and they view inscriptions of images and/or text added to satoshis so as to create digital artifacts as purely congestion-causing clutter. Others see the network as large and versatile enough to host a range of use cases, as Ordinals creator Casey Rodarmor insists.

One Bitcoin network developer, Luke Dashjr, currently dismisses Ordinals as nothing more than a byproduct of a bug, one that easily could be patched.

"Inscriptions are exploiting a vulnerability in Bitcoin Core to spam the blockchain," Dashjr explained in a recent X thread. "I can only hope it will finally get fixed."


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.