This question has been settled with a final result: "200 US$ or more". Trading has finished.
The exchange rate of Bitcoin has reached record highs during March and April 2013. Despite a sharp decline from a short-lived high well above the 200 US$ mark in mid-April, the cryptocurrency has since recovered to a level of 140 US$ by the end of April. This still is tenfold the investment for investors who bought in the beginning of 2013. In May a sharp decline has started, the currency lost a third of its value in only three days.
Recent legislation in the US [citation needed] seems to have increased investor confidence in the new currency and has sparked a buying spree. The debate on the actual fundamental value of the currency is undecided, and has become highly visible through its exceptional volatility.
Given that the supply of "mined" Bitcoin is limited, changes in demand (whether for liquidity and "investment") from the originally low levels have caused observably sharp swings in the exchange rate of the digital currency.
In the period before the recent price bubble, the moving average of the exchange rate rarely went above the US$20 mark. The mining of new Bitcoin will increase supply over time at a certain cost of computing power. As computer power is rising, this cost will go down over time. At the current exchange rate, mining activity can be expected to rise sharply.
BitFloor, a Bitcoin exchange, shut down on 17 April, 2013. The largest exchange, Mt. Gox, was hit by a US$75m lawsuit from its prospective partner, CoinLab, on 2 May. [4] On 30 May, the Bitcoin Foundation reveived a "Cease and Desist" Order from California's Dept of Financial Institutions for allegedly operating an unlicensed money transmission business. [8] The Foundation as a standards and promotion body denies the charges but other companies in the Bitcoin ecosystem may well have received similar letters.
The San Jose Bitcoin Foundation Conference [6] is likely to spark another peak of media interest. Speculative interest may seek to profit from a typical short-term rise in the exchange rate. However, the subsequent realisation of this profit might be difficult, due to thin markets. A post-conference sell-off could could cause a major decline in the exhange rate.
Only a total 21 million Bitcoin can be mined. [5] As Bitcoins stored for liquidity purposes cannot circulate, dead capital will increase with user numbers, tendentially pushing the exchange rate up but also making it increasingly volatile. For gambling purposes and media attention, this effect may be attractive. For payment purposes however, systematically fluctuating purchasing power of a curency is highly negative. This erratic effect might lead its displacement by a more efficient digital currency. there are already several alternatives in existence such as Litecoin (LTC), Peer-to-peer Coin (PPC) and more to come [7]. As the likely success of improved systems becomes clearer, stored Bitcoin will flood the market and its price will go back to zero.
After the Bitcoin chart saw a dip at the beginning of October 2013 because of the closure of Silk Road, a black market for drugs online that used Bitcoin as currency, the virtual currency has been on a steady increase until the end of the same month. This could be due to increased media coverage but also because more start-ups are using Bitcoin and an increased interest in the virtual currency in China. [9][10]