The value of bitcoin looked set to break above $7,000 before experiencing a mini flash crash that took it back below $6,800.
The volatile cryptocurrency’s price has shifted wildly ever since mid-December - when it hit a record high of more than $19,850 with frequent heavy drops and speedy recoveries. Its price plummet back to earth in January and February, as governments and central banks around the world raised the spectre of future regulation.
Bitcoin’s value plummeted again shortly before Christmas, dropping by almost $2,000 in just an hour at one point, and almost slipping below the $11,000 mark.It then bounced back, before tumbling again in mid-January, recovering again, and plummeting at the start of February before levelling out for the rest of the month.
March saw bitcoin's price drop below $10,000, reaching a low of $6,500 before rebounding above $7,000.
Aside from the looming prospect of regulation, a series of high-profile thefts have also had a hand in the sudden rapid dips in value bitcoin and its rivals have experienced - the most recent of which was a failed raid on the Binance cryptocurrency exchange.
Google's announcement that it would ban cryptocurrency advertising from its pages from June on the grounds that it considers it "deceptive content" was also a major blow to the sector.
Recent goings-on have demonstrated just how quickly things can change for investors.
It is worth $6,829 as of Thursday morning, down considerably on the recent high of $11,640 it achieved in early March, according to the Coinbase exchange.
Its value remains less than one per cent off its price this time yesterday but is down by around 1.6 per cent week-on-week. Since last month, bitcoin's value has fallen by 26 per cent. The latest price gains follow a week of steady losses for the world's most valuable cryptocurrency.
Bitcoin's rise last year meanwhile led to increasing amounts of interest in other digital currencies, such as ethereum, litecoin and ripple XRP - all of which have performed well recently - and more and more people are now looking to invest in digital currencies.
However, there are serious fears that bitcoin has created a bubble that could burst at any moment.
Numerous financial experts have advised potential investors to avoid getting involved with bitcoin, and the US Securities and Exchange Commission has told people to "exercise caution" and be wary of scammers.
But others have speculated that it could eventually rise towards the $1m mark.
Bitcoin has no central bank and is not linked to or regulated by any state.
An anonymised record of every bitcoin transaction is stored on a huge public ledger known as a blockchain. #Source
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