Bitcoin was the best investment of 2024, but not without its usual volatility

Bitcoin was the best investment of 2024, but not without its usual volatility


Bitcoin was far and away the best performing asset class in 2024 as new ETFs ushered in more widespread adoption and hopes for deregulation under a new presidential administration lifted digital assets to record levels.

But owning cryptocurrency also came with its usual unpredictability and dizzying swings, as this month’s trading clearly illustrates. Bitcoin has more than doubled in price since starting the year in the $40,000 range, with it last trading near $95,500. Ether has scored a nearly 50% year-to-date gain, and last traded at around the $3,400 level.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

Bitcoin and ether since the start of 2024

The most prosperous stretch of the year occured in the weeks following the U.S. presidential election. By mid-December, the cryptocurrency had rocketed above $108,000 for the first time, fueled by optimism that President-elect Donald Trump’s victory over Vice President Kamala Harris would open the door for greater regulatory clarity and send new money rushing into the sector.

Since then, however, prices have eased. Bitcoin is negative for the month, hurt by the expectation that the Federal Reserve’s rate cuts will roll out at a slower-than-anticpated pace. The market has also faced a stretch of apparent profit-taking and choppiness into the end of the year.

The year began with a strong boost of confidence from the introduction in January of new ETFs that hold the cryptocurrency. The funds, which are pitched by asset managers as an simpler way for investors to access bitcoin, have pulled in tens of billions of dollars of cash this year. The iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) now has more than $50 billion in assets.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

Microstrategy shares this year

Ether ETFs joined the excitement in July. The demand for those funds has not been as strong as for their bitcoin counterparts, but the category has still attracted more than $2 billion in net inflows in less than six months, according to FactSet.

Strong tailwinds for cryptocurrencies also lifted connected stocks to record levels. Bitcoin proxy Microstrategy has surged 388% since the start of the year, while Coinbase and Robinhood have rallied about 47% and 200%, respectively. MicroStrategy shares have surged since mid-December as the company was added into the Nasdaq 100 index.

Some mining stocks, however, haven’t performed as well, with Mara Holdings and Riot Platforms on track for double-digit year-to-date losses. The drop in mining stocks may be a direct result of this year’s bitcoin halving, which reduced the block rewards. Along with transaction fees, this is one of the most significant ways miners make money.

CNBC’s Jesse Pound contributed reporting

Don’t miss these cryptocurrency insights from CNBC Pro:



Source

Nvidia embraces role of AI investor, pushing past  billion in equity bets this year
Technology

Nvidia embraces role of AI investor, pushing past $40 billion in equity bets this year

Nvidia founder and CEO, Jensen Huang, speaks during the 29th annual Milken Institute Global Conference at the Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California on May 4, 2026. Patrick T. Fallon | AFP | Getty Images Nvidia stepped on the gas last year, putting cash into companies up and down the AI infrastructure stack and helping […]

Read More
Jim Cramer says ‘it’s not to late’ to own AI winners powering the market
Technology

Jim Cramer says ‘it’s not to late’ to own AI winners powering the market

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said the market continues to be driven overwhelmingly by enthusiasm around semiconductors and data center stocks, and next week will test whether investors keep rewarding nearly any positive AI-related development. “This market keeps going up and up on the same old stuff: news about semiconductors, even old news about semiconductors, retreaded news […]

Read More
Intel shares soar on Apple chip deal report. Here’s why it signals a total pivot for chipmaking
Technology

Intel shares soar on Apple chip deal report. Here’s why it signals a total pivot for chipmaking

Apple and Intel are reportedly closing in on a deal that would see Intel make some of the chips for the iPhone maker’s devices, marking a major shift in the chipmaking landscape. Talks between the two companies have been brewing for more than a year, with a preliminary agreement reached in recent months, the Wall […]

Read More