Bitcoin Hits All-Time High as Recovery Accelerates

Bitcoin jumps 8 percent to an all-time high of $11,773.83, according to CoinDesk.
The gain marks a surge of 30.5 percent, or nearly $2,753, from a Thursday low of $9,021.85.
Bitcoin had topped $11,000 Wednesday, only to drop more than $1,000 in a few hours amid high trading volume that exchanges initially struggled to keep up with.

By Evelyn Cheng | @chengevelyn

In a massive rebound from a 20 percent plunge last week, bitcoin surged Sunday to a record high above $11,700.

The digital currency hit an all-time high of $11,773.83, up 8 percent on the day, according to CoinDesk. That’s 30.5 percent, or nearly $2,753, from a low of $9,021.85 hit Thursday.

The rapid recovery is the latest in bitcoin’s wild swings. The cryptocurrency had crossed the closely watched $10,000 figure Tuesday and topped $11,000 Wednesday, only to drop more than $1,000 in a few hours amid high trading volume that exchanges initially struggled to keep up with.

Bitcoin one-week performance

On Monday, Nov. 27, former Fortress hedge fund manager Michael Novogratz predicted on CNBC’s “Fast Money” that bitcoin could “easily” be at $40,000 at the end of 2018. But Novogratz said Tuesday at CoinDesk’s Consensus Invest conference that cryptocurrencies like bitcoin are “going to be the biggest bubble of our lifetimes.”

Bitcoin trading in Japanese yen accounted for about 58 percent of trading volume, while U.S. dollar-bitcoin trading accounted for about 23 percent, according to CryptoCompare.

The bitcoin offshoot, bitcoin cash, also jumped nearly 13 percent Sunday, to $1,606.06, according to CoinMarketCap. Digital currency ethereum rose more than 3.5 percent to $480, CoinMarketCap showed.

Bitcoin’s rapid gains mean that twins Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, founders of the Gemini digital currency exchange, are likely the first well-known bitcoin billionaires. The twins together had $11 million in bitcoin at $120 a coin in April 2013. With bitcoin above $11,700, that holding is now worth just over $1 billion.

A representative for the Winklevoss twins did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment.

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