Bitcoin trader takes a moment from a busy day at his desk.
It’s no exaggeration to say that bitcoin has never had a year like this.

At the beginning of 2017, bitcoin enthusiasts celebrated when the cryptocurrency closed in on its then all-time high of $1,216.7, set in 2013. Since then, it’s been month after month of record-breaking, confounding growth, accompanied by regular warnings from bankers about money laundering fears and bubble speculation.

Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, gave business journalists a gift from the news gods, serving up a series of negative sound bites on bitcoin. A number of countries also took a negative stance toward cryptocurrency, most notably China’s crackdowns on bitcoin exchanges and freezing initial coin offering funding in September.

But such action and criticism amounted to momentary dips in bitcoin value, as the cryptocurrency accelerated its rise in sequential fashion. It took the first five months of the year to top $2,000; bitcoin values spiked from $9,000 to $10,000 in just two days this week.

Though bankers largely have kept their distance, other institutions, including Nasdaq, are seizing on the opportunity to serve institutional investors looking to try the market.

The frenetic gains by bitcoin this month are now triggering calls for official action. Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said “bitcoin is successful only because of its potential for circumvention, lack of oversight,” and added that it "ought to be outlawed,” in a Bloomberg Television interview.

Bitcoin's exponential growth is reportedly even starting to worry the Fed. But there’s no indication of action to curtail the market just yet.

To learn more about bitcoin's wild ride, scroll through our compilation of important milestones the cryptocurrency has experienced this year.
Roll of bitcoins.

Boom before the bust?

The cryptocurrency experienced rapid growth in the second half of 2017, as it entered the public consciousness and gained interest from all sizes of investors.

Overall, bitcoin has seen an increase of over 900% in value since the beginning of the year.
How bitcoin prices rose in 2017.
Bitcoin took months to breach the $2,000 per coin price. But once it crossed that milestone, valuations began to accelerate, prodded by increased attention from investors and an uptick in media coverage.

Repeatedly, when a public figure, central bank or government made a negative comment about bitcoin, its price would see a dip, then a fast recovery that led to a new high.
Stacks of bitcoins sit near green lights on a data cable terminal.
Stacks of bitcoins sit near green lights on a data cable terminal inside a communications room at an office in this arranged photograph in London, U.K., on Tuesday, Sept. 5, 2017. Bitcoin steadied after its biggest drop since June as investors and speculators reappraised the outlook for initial coin offerings. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg
Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Records shattered

At the start of 2017, the all-time high for bitcoin was still $1,216.7, set in 2013.

So far this year, the peak in bitcoin's price is $11,413.03, reached on Wednesday. The same day it saw rapid price fluctuations downward and then started inching back up by the evening.

Since the Thanksgiving holiday, the cryptocurrency was up more than $2,000.
Nasdaq electronic sign in Times Square, NYC.

Mainstream players see an opening

Though banks have kept clear of the bitcoin market frenzy, other financial firms see opportunity. Nasdaq is planning to launch bitcoin futures in the first half of 2018, and Cantor Fitzgerald is going to offer bitcoin swaps.

The derivatives exchange CME Group plans to begin offering bitcoin futures contracts by the end of 2017, a move that will put the cryptocurrency on an equal footing with other commodities such as gold and oil.

The most eager participants are institutional investors — more than 100 hedge funds have been created expressly to trade bitcoin, Ethereum and similar digital assets.
Xi Jinping, China's president, applauds during a swearing-in ceremony in Hong Kong, China, on Saturday, July 1, 2017.

Asia + bitcoin = love/hate

Asian countries that banned bitcoin this year: China, South Korea and Vietnam.

China's reported tough measures against bitcoin exchanges included levying fines and even threatening to cut off power to bitcoin miners. The hard line pushed many bitcoin miners out of the country into neighboring Russia.

But the biggest bitcoin market in the world this year is Japan, which legalized bitcoin in April as a currency and a legitimate form of payment.
Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase

Whoops?

JPMorgan Chase Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon's comments on bitcoin:

September 12 - “It’s a fraud” and “worse than tulip bulbs.”

September 22 - “Right now these crypto things are kind of a novelty.”

October 12 - “I’m not going to talk about bitcoin anymore.”

October 13 - "If you're stupid enough to buy it, you'll pay the price for it one day.”
1 kilogram of gold bars stacked

Weighing alternative currencies

Gold market cap: $7.8 trillion

Crypto market cap: $313 billion

(Sources: World Gold Council, coinmarketcap.com)

Wealth advisers have been fielding client calls about investing in bitcoin. But they need to take a wider perspective, said Jeffrey Kleintop, Schwab’s chief global investment strategist, during the custodian’s annual Impact conference.

“We’ve got another alternative currency called gold,” Kleintop said. "It’s been around awhile. It’s a $7 trillion market. How big is that in people’s portfolios?”
A huge demand for ICOs emerged in 2017
Technologists claim initial coin offerings represent the future of funding for startups and new internet protocols, which, in turn, could change the global economy.

In 2017, ICOs have raised $3.8 billion, according to Coinbase. Only a year earlier, ICOs raised just $228 million.

It was enough activity that in July, the Securities and Exchange Commission released a report concluding that parties making ICOs must comply with federal securities laws, just as if they were issuing shares of stock, unless they can find a valid exemption.
Credit Suisse CEO Tidjane Thiam

Still not convinced

Credit Suisse CEO Tidjane Thiam spoke for many bankers when asked for his perspective on bitcoin in early November.

“The very definition of speculation and the very definition of a bubble," he said.

It remains to be seen whether the investing public heeds the warnings of concerned bankers and skeptical financial advisers.
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