Bitcoin is sliding after a big change was made in its software
Thomson Reuters
On Tuesday, bitcoin's blockchain network began adopting a new software called Segregated Witness, or SegWit.
"SegWit is a clever solution that essentially increases transaction capacity," according to Aaron Lasher, the chief marketing officer of Breadwallet, a bitcoin technology company.
The software was devised years ago as a solution to the cryptocurrency's scaling problem, which divided bitcoin power brokers for years and led to a split on August 1.
Bitcoin has been charging higher even since. After bottoming out at $2,643 on August 1, bitcoin rallied more than 30% before putting in its record high in response to Tuesday's SegWit implementation.
As for where bitcoin can go from here, estimates range from $5,000 to $100,000.
Arthur Hayes, CEO of BitMEX, a bitcoin derivative exchange, thinks SegWit marks an important milestone for bitcoin's future.
"At long last, the solution touted to solve bitcoin's scaling problems, Segwit, is activated," Hayes told Business Insider. "With Segwit implemented, I believe $5,000 Bitcoin is within striking distance," he concluded.
Josh Olszewicz, a bitcoin trader, seemed to agree. He told Business Insider he sees a "small price bump overall, but there will be a $300 pullback before it marches to $5,000."
But, Dennis Porto, a bitcoin investor and Harvard academic, has his sights set on a much bigger number. He noticed that bitcoin's price has doubled about every eight months, seemingly following Moore's Law. He says if that continues, bitcoin will be at $100,000 by February 2021.
Bitcoin is up 248% this year.
Get the latest Bitcoin price here.
- Global stocks rally even as Sensex, Nifty fall sharply on Friday
- In second consecutive week of decline, forex kitty drops $2.28 bn to $640.33 bn
- SBI Life Q4 profit rises 4% to ₹811 crore
- IMD predicts severe heatwave conditions over East, South Peninsular India for next five days
- COVID lockdown-related school disruptions will continue to worsen students’ exam results into the 2030s: study