GulfBase Live Support
06/02/2026 02:39 AST
Bitcoin, the world's biggest cryptocurrency, extended its price slump Thursday to trade under $70,000 for the first time since Donald Trump's presidential election victory in November 2024. The digital currency dropped as low as $69,821.18 before climbing back above $70,000. Bitcoin has fallen sharply in recent weeks as investors pull back from risky assets. It had reached a record high above $126,000 in October.
"Bitcoin continues to suffer... caught up in the broader risk-off mood and geopolitical turmoil that has pushed investors away from riskier assets towards safe havens," noted Victoria Scholar, head of investment at Interactive Investor. The volatile cryptocurrency soared after Trump was elected as he was widely viewed as a strong supporter of the sector. He publicly celebrated bitcoin crossing $100,000 for the first time in December 2024. However it suffered a sharp setback in April last year, falling below $75,000 after the president's announcement of sweeping US tariffs rattled global markets.
It went on to reach a record-high of $126,251.31 six months later. The latest downturn is driven largely by regulatory uncertainty. While the US Congress passed a law in July to regulate stablecoins - a form of cryptocurrency backed by traditional assets - a broader crypto bill, the Clarity Act, has stalled in the Senate. Bitcoin's has been hit also by Trump recently nominating former Federal Reserve governor Kevin Warsh to head of the US central bank.
Warsh, seen by observers as a defender of the Fed's independence, reassured traditional markets, prompting investors to sell safe-haven assets such as gold and silver, whose prices plunged. Many investors rushed also to sell cryptocurrencies and other risky assets to help raise cash. Trump's close ties to the crypto sector have sparked accusations of conflicts of interest, as he has promoted his own cryptocurrency-related ventures since returning to office.
AFP
| Ticker | Price | Volume |
|---|
| US Dollar | 1.00 |
| Euro | 0.88 |
| British Pound | 0.77 |
| Japanese Yen | 113.21 |
| Saudi Riyal | 3.75 |
| Kuwaiti Dinar | 0.30 |
| Derham Emirati | 3.67 |
| Bahraini Dinar | 0.38 |
| Omani Riyal | 0.39 |
| Qatari Riyal | 3.67 |
04/03/2026
Indian expatriates in the UAE woke up to a sharp currency shift on Wednesday morning after the Indian rupee touched its weakest level ever against the UAE dirham, opening a potentially attractive win
Gulfnews
04/03/2026
Gold prices eased on Tuesday, pulled back by a stronger dollar, while investors assessed the impact of an escalating US and Israeli air war against Iran.
Spot gold was down 0.4% at $5,305.23
Asharq Al Awsat
02/03/2026
Cryptocurrencies dipped in weekend trading after the US and Israel said they ?had attacked Iran?.
Bitcoin fell 2% to just below $64,000 and ether slid about ?3% ?to $1,862.
US Presi
Asharq Al Awsat
10/02/2026
Soft Asian currencies continue to give UAE expatriates more value for every dirham they send home, with the Indian rupee, Philippine peso and Pakistani rupee all trading near some of their weakest le
Gulfnews
09/02/2026
The dollar posted its first weekly gain since early January, buoyed by haven demand amid broader market turmoil.
The dollar closed 0.2% higher for the week, even after paring gains on Friday
Bloomberg