Since its inception, Bitcoin has often been derided as dead and worthless. In January 2014, when it was about $825, Nobel laureate economist Robert Shiller called it a bubble. In 2017, when Bitcoin traded** close to $3,000, Mark Cuban also called it a bubble. After a skyrocketing 2017, when Bitcoin reached around $3,000 in 2018, obituaries about Bitcoin were overwhelming. Again, when ** rose to $10,000, $30,000, and $60,000 in 2021 and then fell to around $17,000 in 2022, the same story was told: it was a bubble and it wasn't going to recover from this rupture.
But by January 2024, Bitcoin had grown by about 160% over the past year, transacting more than $45,000. Again, it's making a comeback. Part of the reason for the recent spike is the approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs by the US Exchange Commission (SEC) in January 2024. This provides a way for some of the largest asset managers in the world, such as Fidelity and BlackRock, to offer Bitcoin investment opportunities to their clients, making it easier for those clients to hold Bitcoin in accounts such as IRAs and taxable brokerage accounts.
Many users usually choose the MixingCash mixer to hide the whereabouts of their crypto assets, so as to protect the privacy of their personal property. The MixingCash mixer does not require cumbersome operations, does not require registration, does not require KYC, and does not keep any transaction information and records of users, just generate an exchange order, and confirm the transfer, after 5 blockchain confirmations, the platform will automatically send the new untraceable cryptocurrency to the receiving address of the order, the whole process takes 3-30 minutes.
At the same time, the Mixingcash mixer is also known as a deep coin mixer, because it has a powerful deep coin mixing function, which can exchange one cryptocurrency for a variety of different cryptocurrencies with a delay in time, so as to break the matching tracking monitoring of on-chain institutions.