Home Technology Blockchain Crypto altcoins lead push higher as Bitcoin jumps above $22,000 Ether jumped as much as 10.7 per cent on Tuesday in Asia, while Solana added 13 per cent and Polkadot about 7 per cent by Bloomberg July 19, 2022 Smaller, lesser-known digital tokens commonly referred to as altcoins led a push higher in cryptocurrencies that saw Bitcoin head toward $23,000. Ether, the second-largest digital currency, jumped as much as 10.7 per cent on Tuesday in Asia. Solana added 13 per cent and Polkadot about 7 per cent. Bitcoin at one point rose 6.8 per cent and was trading at $22,880 as of 9:15 a.m. in Tokyo. Ether is extending a rally that began last week after developers of the Ethereum blockchain gave a target for the long-anticipated software update that is projected to lower the network’s energy usage. Traders are paying close attention to any indication that Bitcoin is breaking out of its recent pattern of swinging between $19,000 and $22,000. The token hasn’t traded consistently above that range since mid-June, when news that crypto lender Celsius Network had frozen withdrawals sparked renewed panic selling. Virtual coins were hammered in May in the wake of the collapse of the TerraUSD stablecoin. “Bitcoin has recaptured the $22,000 level as some short-sellers need to call it quits,” Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda Corporation, wrote in a note. Cryptos are starting to look attractive now expectations for Fed tightening have eased, he added. Altcoins often outperform Bitcoin during rallies and underperform when prices are falling, in part because they’re a favourite of more speculative traders and tend to be less liquid. Read: Crypto trading volume tumbled in June to the lowest since 2020 Tags Bitcoin cryptocurrency Ethereum trading 0 Comments You might also like Bitcoin nears $90,000 as crypto market exceeds pandemic-era peak CFI’s trade volumes surpass $1 trillion in Q3 2024 OKX shakes up Dubai’s crypto scene with new exchange ADX implements insider trading ban ahead of Q3 financial disclosures