Bitcoin Surged Past $30,000. Is Another Crypto Boom on the Way?

When Bitcoin plunged from around $30,000 to below $20,000 in little more than a week last year, Three Arrows Capital co-founder Su Zhu described the tailspin as the “nail in the coffin” for his hedge fund.

Fast forward to today, and the largest cryptocurrency has just retraced that path from $20,000 back to $30,000 in the past month — but the industry is a shadow of what it was the last time the token crossed that milestone. That’s because several more caskets were hammered shut in the domino-like wave of bankruptcies that followed Three Arrows’ collapse: Voyager Digital, Celsius, FTX, Blockfi, Genesis Global, and other formerly high-flying startups.

It’s clear that while the mood has improved compared with last year’s apocalyptic vibe, the promising Bitcoin rebound alone won’t be enough to fix all of the damage from last year’s scandal-filled downturn.

“The sentiment here doesn’t seem like the last few weeks mean that we can pretend that the last 10 months never happened,” said Oliver Linch, the chief executive officer of the trading platform Bittrex Global, speaking on the sidelines of a crypto conference in Paris. “But there is certainly a feeling that maybe this signals that a line can be drawn under those scandals and we can get back to assessing – and valuing – crypto without all the noise from the rumors and wrongdoing.”

That alleged wrongdoing has drawn a deluge of regulatory scrutiny and high-profile enforcement actions in the US.