Crypto
Bitcoin Dropped Below $80,000 Briefly: Is The Bullish Season Over? | The Motley Fool
Is Bitcoin’s price drop a warning sign or a buying opportunity? Here’s what you need to know.
The Bitcoin (BTC 1.09%) chart has been a roller coaster ride recently.
The original and largest cryptocurrency rose to an all-time high of $106,182 per coin in January, then fell back as much as 25.8% over the next seven weeks. That’s a sharp retreat from a long upswing — Bitcoin has more than quadrupled in price over the last two years. To put the gains in context, the S&P 500 (^GSPC -1.39%) market index showed a total return of 49% over the same period:
Bitcoin Price data by YCharts
So Bitcoin snapped a long winning streak, dipping below $80,000 per coin for the first time since last November. Can the cryptocurrency get back to robust gains or Is the bull run all done?
The bearish case
First and foremost, some investors see very little value in Bitcoin in the first place. Warren Buffett wouldn’t buy all the Bitcoin in the world for $25, because “it isn’t going to do anything.” It isn’t a business operation, or a valuable lot of real estate, or a patch of food-producing farmland. The value of this digital asset isn’t based on anything real, so the only way to make money with it is to find a buyer willing to pay a higher price.
From that perspective, Bitcoin is long overdue for a price correction. The current market value of $1.62 trillion is a lot more than $25, after all.
And even if you see significant value in Bitcoin assets, you could still argue that it’s overpriced. 2024 was packed with potentially game-changing price catalysts for Bitcoin. With the introduction of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) based on spot Bitcoin prices, the fourth halving of Bitcoin mining rewards, and the introduction of a more crypto-friendly U.S. government all in the rearview mirror, maybe there’s no room for further gains in 2025.
Furthermore, many crypto investors are nervous about recent advances in quantum computing. The next-generation computing technology will probably make current encryption algorithms breakable and worthless in the long run — including the popular SHA-256 hashing system at the heart of Bitcoin’s encryption security. Alphabet (GOOG -2.53%) (GOOGL -2.60%) and Microsoft (MSFT -1.17%) have taken massive leaps forward in recent months, arguably accelerating the quantum computing progress by several years. The thinking is that criminals and fraudsters must be on the threshold of hacking Bitcoin’s digital transaction ledger to pieces.
Where the Bitcoin bulls hang their hats
The Bitcoin whitepaper compares the cryptocurrency to physical gold. Instead of buying picks, shovels, mines, and ore refining equipment, Bitcoin miners invest in data centers and electric power. Either way, the two types of miner generate a scarce and therefore valuable resource. They are also useful in the real world: Gold is found in jewelry, medical devices, and electronics while Bitcoin offers a robust and flexible transaction ledger. Warren Buffett was never much of a gold investor, so his aversion to Bitcoin makes sense in this light.
The ETF catalyst delivered some of its value before the actual event. Bitcoin prices rose 72% from early October, 2023 to January 12, 2024. In this time span, the rumor mill chatter about spot Bitcoin ETFs turned into solid expectations, culminating in their approval and introduction. But that’s not the end of their value creation. The most popular name on the list, the iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT -3.46%) holds $47.4 billion of Bitcoin in a Coinbase Global (COIN -7.43%) custody service. This robust inflow of funds should be the start of a long-term trend. Deep-pocketed institutional investors aren’t ready to open cryptocurrency brokerage accounts yet, but ETFs are easy to use in a standard stock portfolio. So the Bitcoin ETFs open the door to a larger (and richer) population of potential long-term investors.
As for the Trump administration’s cryptocurrency policies, only time will tell how they are changing the Bitcoin market. The Strategic Bitcoin Reserve isn’t shaping up to the Bitcoin-buying bonanza some crypto holders had expected, but more of a quiet alternative to gold reserves. A more laissez-faire approach to cryptocurrency regulation may indeed accelerate the widespread adoption of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, but the final regulations are probably still many years away.
The quantum computing threat may sound terrifying. In reality, Bitcoin is very much under active development and should be immune to these attacks long before quantum computers are powerful enough to pose a real threat. There are math problems too difficult to solve with a mature quantum computer, and encryption systems are already adopting these stronger algorithms by the boatload. Meanwhile, even the most optimistic forecasts expect quantum computers to stay in the toys-and-experiment stage for at least five more years.
The long-term view
Finally, the shape of this halving cycle looks quite familiar.
Charts never tell the whole story, of course. Previous results are no guarantee of future gains. Still, the halvings make a significant difference to the economics of Bitcoin mining, effectively slashing the financial rewards in half while production expenses stay the same. In the long run, this production model only works if Bitcoin prices rise over time. Along the way, each halving shakes out underfunded or inefficient miners while the top producers continue to make a good living.
On that note, the current halving cycle is fairly close to former examples. The second and third halvings unleashed price jumps measured in thousands of percent — about a year and a half after each halving of the mining rewards. If the ongoing halving’s calendar stays on track, I’d expect peak prices in the fall of 2025, followed by another crypto winter. Things could be different this time, but that’s what Bitcoin’s pricing history looks like.
No, the Bitcoin bull run isn’t over
So the Bitcoin bears have their arguments, but the bulls bring a stronger case to the table. With or without the halving effects, Bitcoin is becoming the digital gold standard for value storage. Even if I never use Bitcoin to pay for a candy bar, a car, or a house, this cryptocurrency and its digital ledger look poised to replace savings accounts over time. That’s a multi-trillion-dollar market, ripe for modernization on a global scale.
That’s why expect Bitcoin to keep building market value, perhaps accentuated by a temporary price spike later this year. In my eyes, Bitcoin is a great asset to own in the long term. The recent price drop is just another short-lived squiggle on the charts.
Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. Anders Bylund has positions in Alphabet, Bitcoin, and Coinbase Global. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Bitcoin, Coinbase Global, and Microsoft. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Crypto
Current price of Ethereum for March 4, 2026 | Fortune
At 5 p.m. Eastern Time today, Ethereum (1 ETH) is trading at $2,161.09. That’s a $180.66 increase from yesterday and about an $8.94 loss over the past year.
What is Ethereum?
With a market capitalization of around $233 billion, Ethereum is the second-largest cryptocurrency. That places it well below Bitcoin’s roughly $1.33 trillion market cap, but significantly ahead of third-place Tether, which sits at $183 billion.
One major distinction sets Ethereum apart from other cryptocurrencies: It’s not simply digital money. It operates as a decentralized computing platform, allowing users to build and run applications without oversight from any company or bank.
In basic terms, developers use Ethereum’s blockchain network (instead of, say, Amazon or Google servers) to create apps for activities like borrowing, lending, investing, trading, and more. ETH, the token, is the currency used for these operations.
Ethereum price history
When Ethereum’s initial coin offering (ICO) launched in 2014, it cost just 31 cents per share. Since then, its value has climbed by more than 60,000%.
Looking at the past five years (2020-2025), Ethereum has risen by a solid 46%. But that figure doesn’t tell the whole story. Ethereum has been subject to extreme volatility, peaking at nearly $5,000 in August 2025. That represents nearly 1.6 million percent growth from its original ICO—making that previous 60,000% increase seem modest by comparison.
Since then, ETH has seen gains exceeding 80% and losses surpassing 60%—that is to say, virtually every dramatic swing imaginable. Early 2026 brought a steep drop in Ethereum’s value due to several factors, including recession fears and Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin selling millions of dollars worth of ETH.
The bottom line is that Ethereum can deliver both enormous gains and enormous losses, which is typical of other major cryptocurrencies too.
Ethereum vs. Bitcoin
In the cryptocurrency rankings, Ethereum trails far behind Bitcoin for the top spot.
But keep in mind, Ethereum wasn’t designed primarily to serve as a currency; its main purpose was to function as a decentralized computing platform. Ethereum has a wide range of real-world uses, and its developer community is huge. This appeals to investors because it offers growth potential beyond simply being an “alternative currency.”
Here’s an easy framework for understanding the difference between these two currencies:
- Think of BTC as digital gold—a straightforward currency designed to store and transfer value.
- Think of ETH as digital oil—the fuel that keeps decentralized apps and smart contracts running across the Ethereum network.
What is Ethereum staking?
Staking represents another feature that sets Ethereum apart from Bitcoin.
Before 2022, Ethereum’s network was secured by thousands of computers competing to solve random puzzles (called “proof of work”). When your computer successfully solved a puzzle, you’d earn some ETH as a reward. It sounds strange, but it proved effective for maintaining an honest ledger.
Because this approach burned significant amounts of electricity and didn’t really make sense, Ethereum chose to replace it with something called “staking.” With staking, you lock up your ETH as a security deposit to help verify transactions. In return, you earn a reward similar to what proof of work provided. Essentially, you’re earning interest on your staked amount.
What affects Ethereum’s price?
A few key things can affect Ethereum’s price:
- Investor speculation: Like most cryptocurrencies, Ethereum’s short-term price often moves with hype and trader sentiment. In the near term, excitement (or panic) can drive prices more than anything else.
- Network activity and DeFi growth: The more people use Ethereum, the more demand there is for ETH. A good example was the DeFi surge in 2020–2021, when heavy network use helped push prices up.
- Economic conditions: While Ethereum doesn’t always move in lockstep with interest rates or the stock market, the economy still plays a role. When people feel confident financially, they’re more open to putting money into assets like crypto.
- Regulation: Because crypto is still developing as an industry, new laws and regulations can have a big impact. Positive headlines can build confidence, while uncertainty tends to make investors cautious.
- Competition: Ethereum isn’t the only smart contract platform anymore. Projects like Solana and Avalanche offer faster or cheaper alternatives, so how Ethereum continues to evolve will help determine its long-term success.
How to buy and invest in Ethereum
There are many ways to invest in Ethereum with varying degrees of risk. Below are some of the most popular options.
Buy Ethereum on a crypto exchange
Buying ETH directly represents the most hands-on investment method. You’ll open an account with a cryptocurrency exchange and connect your bank account to purchase and store ETH in a digital wallet.
Invest in Ethereum ETFs
If directly managing crypto doesn’t appeal to you (think handling wallets and private keys) an Ethereum ETF could be a better option. These funds hold the crypto for you while their shares trade on stock exchanges just like traditional stocks.
Buy Ethereum-related stocks
You can invest in publicly traded companies with close ties to Ethereum as a way to gain exposure without directly owning ETH. This might include blockchain technology companies, firms holding substantial amounts of ETH on their balance sheets, and the like. This approach lets you benefit from Ethereum’s performance indirectly.
Open a crypto IRA that holds Ethereum
A crypto IRA allows you to hold Ethereum within a tax-advantaged retirement account. It functions like a traditional or Roth IRA, offering the same contribution limits and tax benefits.
Cryptocurrency prices today
Ethereum is one of the most ubiquitous cryptocurrencies, but it’s far from the only option. Consider the following options when deciding where to place your money.
- Bitcoin: Bitcoin is the first and most well-known cryptocurrency. It’s a decentralized digital currency built to serve as both a store of value and a peer-to-peer payment system.
- Tether: Tether is what’s known as a stablecoin. Its value is pegged to another asset, in this case, the U.S. dollar. Because of that, it tends to be much less volatile than Ethereum, though it also lacks the same potential for long-term growth.
- XRP: Created to make moving money across borders faster and cheaper than traditional methods, XRP offers near-instant transactions with minimal fees.
Is it a good time to invest in Ethereum?
Unlike established blue-chip stocks such as Exxon Mobil, Johnson & Johnson, or IBM, Ethereum is still a relatively young asset. There’s no guaranteed way to predict how ETH will perform in the years or decades ahead. Even so, its performance over the past decade has been incredible, and its usefulness goes far beyond that of a simple tradable token; it underpins a huge and expanding network of financial applications and developer tools.
Keep in mind, though, that Ethereum has a history of sharp downturns, so be prepared for volatility. It isn’t a good fit for investors with a low tolerance for risk. Stay aware of emerging blockchain competitors, and don’t overconcentrate your holdings. ETH is best viewed as a smaller, strategic component of a well-diversified portfolio.
Frequently asked questions
How much will Ethereum be worth in 2030?
Cryptocurrency experts are bullish on Ethereum’s long-term trajectory. Standard Chartered has predicted ETH could even eclipse Bitcoin by then, reaching $40,000 by the next decade. More conservative estimates place it closer to $10,000. Either way, that’s a meteoric rise from its early 2026 valuation.
What is Ethereum’s all-time high price?
As of this writing, Ethereum reached its highest price ever in August 2025, hitting nearly $5,000.
Can you buy a fraction of Ethereum?
Yes. Most cryptocurrency exchanges allow for fractional investing, giving you the ability to buy portions of a single crypto coin—including ETH.
How do I start investing in Ethereum as a beginner?
If you want to invest directly in Ethereum by owning the currency, you’ll typically open an account with a cryptocurrency exchange. Once the account is created, you can transfer your money from your bank account to your crypto account and begin making purchases. Alternatively, you can indirectly invest in Ethereum via an ETF or a company that’s closely tied to Ethereum’s success.
What is Ethereum staking?
Staking involves locking up your ETH to help validate transactions on Ethereum’s decentralized network. The upside to doing this is that you’ll receive a return similar to interest with a high-yield savings account.
Is Ethereum better than Bitcoin?
Neither Ethereum or Bitcoin is objectively “better.” They do different things. Bitcoin is primarily a store of value, while Ethereum is both a platform that powers a large ecosystem of applications and a cryptocurrency. Bitcoin tends to be less volatile and more established as a payment method, while Ethereum gives you more functionality, and likely more potential for growth.
Crypto
Better Cryptocurrency to Buy Today With $3,000 and Hold for 7 Years: XRP vs. Bitcoin
Key Points
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Bitcoin is a store of value, but it’s facing a huge risk in the next 10 years or so.
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XRP has utility today, but it’s facing an onslaught of competitors in the same time frame.
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One of these assets has a more straightforward path to its ongoing success.
Buying a cryptocurrency and then holding it for seven years is less about picking the flashiest chain of today, and more about picking the investment thesis that can inspire your conviction over time, survive your own boredom when the market is slow, and perhaps most importantly, survive a couple of gut-check drawdowns.
So with $3,000 to allocate today, is it smarter to load up on Bitcoin(CRYPTO: BTC) or XRP(CRYPTO: XRP) if you’re (hopefully) going to be holding whatever you pick through 2033?
Will AI create the world’s first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an “Indispensable Monopoly” providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »
Image source: Getty Images.
Bitcoin’s job is simple
Bitcoin’s pitch is that it’s an asset with a fixed supply and enough of a social consensus about its worth that it functions as a store of value.
The coin’s supply cap is hard-coded at 21 million coins that can ever be mined. A lot of that supply, approximately 20 million Bitcoin, is already out in the world.
And if you’re building a well-balanced crypto portfolio, it’s the scarcity of the remaining supply and the guarantee that it’ll only get scarcer and more challenging to produce in the future that makes this coin a must-have holding.
Nonetheless, the long-term risk that investors should not dismiss is the advent of quantum computing, which in theory could crack Bitcoin’s encryption and enable the theft of coins at some point in the tail end of the next 10 years. There are some early steps taking place to update the coin to prevent that from being possible. Even so, the risk might not be fully addressed for years, or perhaps even too late to prevent a quantum attack which turns into a disaster for holders.
But the odds are good that Bitcoin’s developers will adapt to the threat in time.
XRP needs to keep winning to outperform
XRP is a bet that its chain, the XRP Ledger (XRPL), becomes important financial plumbing, and that demand for the coin rises alongside its use.
There are a few pieces of evidence that suggest it’s succeeding. The XRPL saw around 1.1 million daily transactions recently, and it hosts 7.6 million activated wallets. That activity could accelerate if financial institutions continue to onboard their capital to the network in hopes of managing it more readily than they could elsewhere.
Still, XRP competes against other money transfer rails and also against legacy systems for capital management. It needs to beat out that competition consistently over time to continue to grow. And while it’ll likely win enough of its competitive fights to survive and expand somewhat for the next seven years, to continue to thrive and be a great investment, it’ll need to be winning against bigger and bigger competitors all the while — and that’s a lot harder to believe in because it’s a high bar.
So if you want a coin for a seven-year hold that demands the least babysitting and the least competitive jockeying, invest your $3,000 into Bitcoin, as it only needs to change elements related to its security rather than its core feature set.
Should you buy stock in XRP right now?
Before you buy stock in XRP, consider this:
The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and XRP wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.
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Alex Carchidi has positions in Bitcoin. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Bitcoin and XRP. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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