If You Bought $1,000 In Bitcoin When China Imposed First Ban In 2013, Here's How Much You'd Have Now

Bitcoin BTC/USD is the largest cryptocurrency in terms of market capitalization. The cryptocurrency was proposed in a 2008 whitepaper written by a pseudonymous author or authors who called themselves Satoshi Nakamoto.

See Also: How To Buy Bitcoin (BTC)

The Coin: BTC allows for the peer-to-peer transfer of payments without the need for financial intermediaries. Bitcoin currently enjoys a market capitalization of $833.81 billion and a dominance of 42.7% among major cryptocurrencies.

On April 14, BTC touched an all-time high of $64,863.10 and at press time traded 35.68% below that level. Since the year began, BTC has returned 42.5% returns.

The Investment: On Dec.5, 2013, the People’s Bank of China, China’s financial regulators, and the country’s IT ministry issued a notice which decreed that Bitcoins were a “virtual good” and had no legal status and should not be used as a currency, reported BBC.

See Also: As Bitcoin Crashed On 'Ban' News, Many Chinese And Institutional Investors Used The Opportunity To Fill Their Coffers

This was the first ban imposed by the Chinese authorities and on that day a single BTC traded at $1,045.11.

At press time, BTC traded 1.69% lower at $41,780.66 over 24 hours. For the week, the apex coin has fallen 0.59%.

If a person had invested $1,000 on the day China first banned BTC, they would have received 0.956 BTC, approximately.

The investment would be worth $39,941.68 at the prevalent prices of BTC at press time — a gain of nearly 3,897.73%.

China has since then issued numerous bans and warnings, with the latest coming last week.

Read Next: People In China No Longer Able To Access Popular Data Aggregators Of Cryptocurrencies Like Bitcoin, Ethereum

Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
Comments
Loading...
Posted In: CryptocurrencyNewsEducationMarketsGeneralBitcoinChina
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!