Bitcoin rises to new record high as corporate interest expands
The cryptocurrency rose past US$123,500 on Wednesday evening in New York, topping the previous all-time high of US$123,205.12 reached on Jul 14. The milestone came soon after the S&P 500 closed at its own record for a second consecutive session, extending a summer run that has carried the benchmark to repeated highs.
Bitcoin has been steadily rising for most of the past year as a result of the friendly legislative climate in Washington, ushered in by US President Donald Trump. Public companies, led by Michael Saylor's Strategy, have boosted the demand by following an increasingly popular corporate tactic of stockpiling the original cryptocurrency. The playbook has recently spread to smaller competitors, such as Ether, leading to a broad rise across digital assets.
The coordinated move underscores how speculative market corners and mainstream benchmarks are drawing from the same well of optimism. US inflation data landed in line with expectations this week, and strengthened bets the US Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in September, easing financial conditions and encouraging capital to flow from blue-chip equities to volatile digital tokens.
'Crypto has been positively correlated to equities with the relationship stronger for ETH than BTC,' said Chris Newhouse, director of research at Ergonia. 'General sentiment looks positive.'
Ether's rise has been propelled by sustained demand from newly active treasury firms, while Bitcoin's steadier climb has leaned on persistent exchange-traded fund (ETF) inflows even as it has faced technical resistance.
'The combination of moderating inflation, growing expectations for rate cuts, and unprecedented institutional participation through ETFs has created a powerful tailwind,' said Ben Kurland, CEO at crypto research platform DYOR. 'What's different this time is the maturity of the demand base – this rally isn't just retail euphoria, it's structural buying from asset managers, corporates and sovereigns.' BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
3 hours ago
- Business Times
US widens products subject to steel, aluminium tariffs
[WASHINGTON] The Trump administration on Friday (Aug 15) widened the reach of its 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium imports by adding hundreds of derivative products to the list of goods subject to the levies. In a Federal Register notice late on Friday, the Commerce Department said the Bureau of Industry and Security was adding 407 product codes to the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States that identify the goods to be hit with the additional duties on the steel and aluminium content of those products. The non-steel and non-aluminium content will be subject to the tariff rates President Donald Trump has imposed on the goods originating from specific countries, the notice said. The levies on the goods on the expanded list go into effect on Aug 18. Earlier on Friday, Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he headed to a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska that he planned additional announcements on steel tariffs and on levies for semiconductor imports. REUTERS
Business Times
5 hours ago
- Business Times
European shares log second weekly gain, focus on Trump-Putin talks
[Bengaluru] European shares came off multi-month highs on Friday (Aug 15), as declines in heavyweight tech and financial shares offset gains from some corporate earnings, while investors monitored a crucial US-Russia summit. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index closed 0.1 per cent lower, after hitting a near five-month high earlier in the session. Investor focus was on a meeting between US President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Alaska later in the day that investors hope could pave the way for a resolution of the Ukraine conflict. Trump said he would not negotiate on behalf of Ukraine and would let Kyiv decide whether to engage in territorial swops with Russia. Analysts at Jefferies said that any progress towards de-escalation could benefit consumer, construction, materials and growth-oriented sectors, which have been relatively underinvested in Europe. Aerospace and defence stocks fell 0.8 per cent ahead of the summit. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Steve Sosnick, chief market analyst at Interactive Brokers, said: 'Barring something truly outrageous – positive or negative – markets are not necessarily treating it (US-Russia summit) as important from a market point of view.' Technology stocks fell 0.6 per cent, weighing on the Stoxx 600 index. ASML, the world's biggest supplier of computer chip-making equipment, fell 1 per cent after US peer Applied Materials lowered its fourth-quarter earnings forecast due to weak demand in China and impacts from tariff uncertainty. The Dutch firm had issued a similar warning in mid-July, saying it might not achieve its 2026 growth forecast. Chip stocks BE Semiconductor and ASMI dropped 3.3 per cent and 2.8 per cent, respectively. On the other hand, miners were the top gainers, adding 0.8 per cent. Antofagasta rose 1.2 per cent after a jump in half-year core earnings on Thursday, helping peers, including Anglo American. Healthcare shares, which have taken a beating this year from uncertainty around Trump's pharma tariffs, were on track for a recovery. The healthcare index logged its seventh consecutive session of gains, its longest streak since late January. Regional bourses were mixed, with Germany's DAX and the UK's FTSE declining, while France's CAC and Spain's IBEX posted gains. The Stoxx 600 also logged a second weekly gain, driven by expectations of a US rate cut in September and strong corporate earnings. Pandora bottomed the Stoxx 600, falling 18.4 per cent, after the Danish jewellery maker flagged weakening sales in its key European markets. This was its steepest one-day fall in seven years. Standard Chartered fell 7.2 per cent after a US Republican lawmaker called for probe against the bank over alleged 'ongoing sanctions evasion'. NKT jumped 8.6 per cent to top the Stoxx 600, logging its best day since May 2022, after the Danish power cable solutions provider raised its outlook for 2025. REUTERS
Business Times
5 hours ago
- Business Times
US: Stocks mostly lower after mixed data
[NEW YORK] Wall Street stocks finished mostly lower on Friday (Aug 15) with chip companies under pressure as markets digested mixed US economic data. US retail sales climbed 0.5 per cent in July to US$726.3 billion from June, in line with analyst expectations and a solid performance after numerous tariff announcements by President Donald Trump. But the Federal Reserve's index for industrial production edged down in July, while the University of Michigan's consumer sentiment survey fell for the first time in four months. The Dow Jones Industrial Average eked out a 0.1 per cent gain at 44,946.12, after earlier hitting an intraday all-time high. But the broad-based S&P 500 dropped 0.3 per cent to 6,449.8, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index slid 0.4 per cent to 21,622.57. Steve Sosnick of Interactive Brokers said Friday's reports amounted to a 'difficult combination' of data that the market took in stride. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up 'When the news is good, (stocks) react really positively,' he said. 'And when the news isn't good, they just go down a little.' Several semiconductor companies traded lower following a disappointing outlook from Applied Materials, which tumbled 14.1 per cent as it warned of lower revenues in the current quarter while it navigates 'near-term uncertainties' in economic conditions. Trump also announced plans to set tariffs on semiconductors in the coming weeks. Lam Research, KLA and Micron Technology all finished sharply lower. But UnitedHealth Group surged 12 per cent after Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway disclosed an equity stake in the insurer, which has been beset with government investigations into its billing practices. AFP