Bitcoin goes through third ‘halving’
John E. Kaye
- Published
- News

Earlier this week Bitcoin slid in volatile trading after it went through a technical adjustment that reduced the rate at which new coins are created, however the outlook remained upbeat as the increase in supply slows down.
Monday’s “halving” cuts the rewards given to those who “mine” bitcoin to 6.25 new coins from 12.5. The next halving will be in 2024.
Bitcoin relies on so-called “mining” computers that validate blocks of transactions by competing to solve mathematical puzzles every 10 minutes. In return, the first to solve the puzzle and clear the transaction is rewarded new bitcoins.
In late afternoon trading, bitcoin was last down 1.3% at $8,620.43 against the dollar on the Bitstamp platform. It briefly turned higher.
“The incentive is less for miners now to mine bitcoin and they will probably switch to more profitable cryptocurrencies. So, in the short term, there’s going to be pressure for bitcoin,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA in New York.
“But longer term, you’re probably going to see higher prices. With all the fiscal and monetary stimulus that’s being pumped into the global economy, there’s renewed interest from institutional traders looking for alternatives to modern government-backed currencies.”
Bitcoin has gained more than 20% since the beginning of the year. It touched $10,000 last week, a roughly three-month high, after Bloomberg reported that hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones has backed bitcoin as a hedge against inflation.
Traders said the prospect of bitcoin’s halving has fueled gains in the asset this year.
Bitcoin two earlier “halvings”– one in November 2012 and the other in July 2016 — had signaled the start of bitcoin’s most dramatic bull runs over a period of several years, although not before a brief sell-off.
The previous two bitcoin events propelled rallies of about 10,000% from late 2012 to 2014, and roughly 2,500% from mid-2016 to the currency’s all-time high just shy of $20,000 in December 2017, according to traders.
Scott Freeman, co-founder and partner at crypto firm JST Capital, said volatility should subside from its recent highs now that the “halving” has happened.
“Given that the halving happened without any interruption to crypto markets, we expect to see continued growth in the crypto eco-systems, especially with recent increased interest from institutional investors and the continued buying by retail investors,” he added.
Reported by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss
Sourced Reuters
For more Daily news follow The European Magazine
Sign up to The European Newsletter
RECENT ARTICLES
-
New £2.5 million Rolls-Royce Phantom marks model’s centenary -
UK faces surge in major cyber attacks, NCSC warns -
Historian warns climate denial is causing “immense harm” as humanity nears a “major crunch point -
The European Autumn 2025 edition out now -
Study finds creative storytelling boosts confidence and career prospects for young people -
Global development banks agree new priorities on finance, water security and private capital ahead of COP30 -
South African students develop tech concept to tackle hunger using AI and blockchain -
Global startup expo enters final day in Dubai as Expand North Star marks a decade of innovation -
Bleisure boom turning Gen Z work travel into ‘life upgrade’ -
Automation breakthrough reduces ambulance delays and saves NHS £800,000 a year -
AI found to make people 15% more likely to lie, study warns -
Global aerospace composites market to triple by 2034 as demand for lighter, greener aircraft accelerates -
ICIEC to host 15th AMAN Union Summit as Islamic finance eyes closer trade integration -
Matching words and images helps charities raise more money, study finds -
UK to host African Development Fund summit as Africa pushes for food self-sufficiency -
Off the blocks: LEGO and Formula 1 reunite for documentary on viral Miami Grand Prix stunt -
Mergers and partnerships drive Africa’s mining boom – but experts warn on long-term resilience -
New AI breakthrough promises to end ‘drift’ that costs the world trillions -
Europe tightens grip on strategic space data as dependence on U.S tech comes under scrutiny -
Trinity Business School study warns conspiracy theories are fueling real-world protest and sabotage -
GITEX GLOBAL 2025 to spotlight AI’s expanding role in future-critical sectors -
UK organisations show rising net zero ambition despite financial pressures, new survey finds -
HumanX to establish permanent European base with 2026 Amsterdam AI summit -
Gulf ESG efforts fail to link profit with sustainability, study shows -
Glastonbury and Coachella set the stage for $400bn music tourism growth

























