Bitcoin is surging once again. And this time, the climb feels different.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency continued its dizzying ascent on Friday, smashing through multiple symbolic price thresholds in a matter of hours and setting a new all-time high for the second consecutive day.
After crossing $112,000 on Wednesday, Bitcoin has barely paused. On Thursday and Friday morning, it blew past $113,000, then $114,000, then $115,000, before jumping to $116,000, $117,000, and finally $118,909 as of press time. That’s a staggering gain of almost $7,000 in less than 48 hours.
The speed of the rally has electrified the entire crypto market, now valued at around $3.75 trillion according to data firm CoinGecko. Bitcoin alone accounts for nearly 63 percent of that market, representing a dramatic comeback from late 2022, when the total market had plunged below $900 billion during the crypto winter.
What’s Driving the Surge?
Several forces are fueling the latest bull cycle, but the most immediate catalyst appears to be political.
On July 10, President Donald Trump launched another attack on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, renewing his calls for aggressive interest rate cuts. “Tech Stocks, Industrial Stocks, & NASDAQ, HIT ALL-TIME, RECORD HIGHS! CRYPTO Through the Roof,” Trump wrote in all caps on Truth Social. “FED SHOULD RAPIDLY LOWER RATE TO REFLECT THIS STRENGTH. NO INFLATION!!!”
Markets appear to be responding to Trump’s pressure. Lower interest rates reduce the cost of borrowing and typically increase liquidity in financial markets, conditions that favor risk-on assets like cryptocurrencies.
Even a stronger-than-expected jobs report showing 147,000 new non-farm payrolls in June, compared to forecasts of 110,000, wasn’t enough to cool investor appetite. Trump’s public push for monetary easing has encouraged markets to overlook hawkish signals and double down on crypto.
Bitcoin’s Cultural Moment
Bitcoin’s rally is once again a cultural phenomenon. Crypto influencers, evangelists, and billionaires are basking in the moment.
Michael Saylor, who turned his software company MicroStrategy into a corporate Bitcoin vault, cheered the surge with a characteristically mythic post: “The halls of eternity echo with the cries of those who sold their Bitcoin.”
The halls of eternity echo with the cries of those who sold their Bitcoin.
— Michael Saylor (@saylor) July 10, 2025
Cameron Winklevoss, co-founder of Gemini, joined in by sharing a meme that captured the obsession many crypto holders feel right now. In the image, Bitcoin is calling for attention: “Check me, check me.” The response: “Bitcoin please, I’m trying to work.”
— Cameron Winklevoss (@cameron) July 10, 2025
What’s at Stake?
It’s a referendum on whether Bitcoin has finally matured into a macro asset class.
A run toward $120,000, and possibly $130,000 by the weekend, could spark a new wave of retail FOMO (fear of missing out) and institutional investment, further entrenching Bitcoin as a long-term alternative to traditional assets. It would also solidify Bitcoin’s place in the broader financial system just.
In the aftermath of the 2024 election, the U.S. government has made a dramatic pivot. The new Congress—once skeptical, now all-in—is embracing crypto like never before. Lawmakers recently declared the week of July 14 as “Crypto Week,” a symbolic and legislative push to formalize digital assets into the American financial system. Hearings, bill introductions, and bipartisan panels are scheduled to take place on Capitol Hill, covering everything from stablecoin frameworks to tax reform and blockchain infrastructure.
Bitcoin’s historic surge is arriving just as Washington is throwing open its doors. The convergence of political will and market momentum could signal the beginning of crypto’s mainstream moment in America.
The question now isn’t just how high Bitcoin can go, but whether this time, the world is finally ready for it.