Dogecoin’s price has spiked to $0.35, an increase of 12% in the past 24 hours, as social media influencers continue to throw their support behind the Internet’s most valuable Shiba Inu dog.
Dogecoin, a cryptocurrency that was originally created as a joke, now has a market cap of almost $46 billion, making it the sixth-largest cryptocurrency. Its weekly jump of 24.5% makes it the second best-performing cryptocurrency. It’s just behind Bitcoin Cash, a Bitcoinhard fork, that recorded weekly gains of 24.8%.
Coinciding with today’s rise is a series of Dogecoin-endorsing tweets by WSB Chairman, an anonymous Twitter account with close to 1 million followers, including Elon Musk.
The user rose to immense popularity when it tweeted out on January 31, "Has Doge ever been to a dollar?” In a truly parabolic spirit, that simple tweet, once liked by Elon Musk, brought the account’s follower count from 12,000 to 750,000 in a week.
“I’ve been thinking a lot about Doge,” he tweeted this morning. “The community is so strong, there is no way this shit doesn’t become recognized as a legitimate cryptocurrency in the future.”
I’ve been thinking a lot about Doge... The community is so strong, there is no way this shit doesn’t become recognized as a legitimate cryptocurrency in the future. Name one other crypto that has united all types of people like Doge.
Dogecoin (DOGE) is surging right now, setting an all-time high price just above $0.11 within the last 24 hours—a more than 100% leap over the last week. Now, one of Dogecoin’s highest-profile proponents says that one of his companies is holding the meme-based cryptocurrency on its balance sheet for good. And no, it’s not Elon Musk.
Instead, it’s billionaire investor Mark Cuban—his NBA team the Dallas Mavericks is holding onto any Dogecoin that the team's fans spend on tickets and merch. Recently...
Cuban told chat show host Ellen Degeneres earlier this week: “Although Dogecoin is not the best investment, it is preferable to invest in the asset than to play the lottery; it is also a way in which you can learn to use cryptocurrencies.”
The grizzled entrepreneur thinks the coin’s price has been hampered by withdrawal restrictions on commission-free trading app Robinhood. Robinhood, a popular way to buy Doge, doesn’t let customers transfer their Doge to a cryptocurrency exchange or spend it elsewhere.
Billionaire investor and outspoken Dallas Mavericks NBA team owner Mark Cuban has become a surprising advocate for Dogecoin, the meme coin that has seen wild surges in value so far this year, rising from less than a penny to a recent all-time high of nearly $0.42 (currently $0.27).
Cuban was once known as a Bitcoin naysayer whose primary complaint was how difficult it was for the average consumer to spend the leading cryptocurrency. His Mavericks recently added the ability to purchase team merch...
This is common for large financial institutions, since it prevents them from getting in trouble with law enforcement over money laundering. PayPal does the same for its crypto sales. However, it means that such crypto can’t be, for instance, staked in decentralized financesmart contracts.
In another show of celebrity support, Remy Munasifi, a YouTube comedian whose videos amass tens of millions of views, released on Thursday a Dogecoin-endorsing rap video for ReasonTV, a libertarian media outlet. “There are various indicators showing that the U.S. could be headed for a currency crisis,” ReasonTV’s caption said. “One of them has paws.”
Sudden spikes and dumps have become the hallmarks of Dogecoin over the past couple of months.
Dogecoin’s first major price spike was in January when the so-called Dogecoin Army, the fans of the coin, coordinated efforts to pump the price in a similar fashion to the GameStop-style meme success from Reddit’s froum r/WallStreetBets. As they frantically bought Dogecoin, the coin’s price hit January 31 hit highs of $0.045, rising 66%. It quickly dipped down to $0.036 that day.
It was supposed to be Dogecoin’s day to shine, as meme makers talked up the joke coin’s prospects of hitting the $1 mark (or, even better, $0.69) on 4/20.
Alas, Dogecoin didn’t obey.
The sixth-largest cryptocurrency by market cap instead rolled around in the mud, dirtying its price to as low as $0.29, down from an all-time high of $0.40 over the weekend. Its current price of $0.34 represents a 20% drop over the last 24 hours, per data from Nomics.
Doge Day, like all cultural phenomena these da...
Another major, and this time even more successful, attempt, took place last month. On April 16, Dogecoin’s price jumped 225% to $0.42 after Elon Musk tweeted out a picture captioned, “Doge barking at the Moon.”
But the pump attempt on April 20, declared “Doge Day” by its fans, failed as the price dipped 20% to $0.29—a far cry from $1, the much-hyped “moon” price-level, or “at least $0.69.”
Alabama securities regulators have seized more than $125,000 in crypto assets for two residents who fell victim to elaborate "pig butchering" scams that collectively cost them nearly $580,000.
The Alabama Securities Commission recovered $53,227.81 for a Baldwin County resident who lost approximately $185,000, and $73,927.68 for an Etowah County victim who was defrauded of $395,000 in separate schemes that began on dating apps and messaging platforms earlier this year, as per a Friday statement....
Republican Party strategist Chris LaCivita, one of the architects of U.S. President Donald Trump’s winning presidential campaign in 2024, pointed to the two-term commander-in-chief’s embrace of cryptocurrencies as a lynchpin for his political comeback.
Speaking at the Coinbase State of Crypto Summit in New York City on Thursday, LaCivita said targeting so-called crypto voters helped President Trump court a lot of supporters, particularly those belonging to voter blocs that have traditionally pr...
Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm issued one of his starkest rebukes yet of the Trump administration’s Department of Justice on Friday, arguing that if federal prosecutors prevail in the developer’s upcoming criminal trial, decentralized finance could be permanently destroyed.
“The DOJ wants to bury DeFi, saying I should’ve controlled it, added KYC, [and] never built it,” Storm wrote. “SDNY is trying to crush me, blocking every expert witness.”
“If I lose, DeFi dies with me,” the crypto devel...