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Bitcoin soaring drove the digital currency above the $ 50,000 mark for the first time in its history on Tuesday.

On the Bitstamp trading platform, the price recently rose by almost five percent to $ 50,331 (just under 41,396 euros).

Bitcoin has been flying high for weeks and months, and has recently accelerated again.

The rate has more than doubled since Christmas alone, and even quintupled since late summer.

The course was recently boosted primarily by the electric car manufacturer Tesla.

According to the company, it has invested billions in Bitcoin and intends to accept the digital currency as a means of payment in the future.

This raises the hope that other companies could follow suit, which would increase the acceptance of Bitcoin.

The credit card company Mastercard no longer seems averse to crypto money.

Raj Dhamodharan, responsible for digital assets at Mastercard, wrote in a blog last week that the company wanted to allow transactions with selected cryptocurrencies.

In addition, they are in close contact with central banks that are working on their own digital currencies.

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The crypto currency boom is fueled not least by the glut of money from central banks and important industrialized countries.

During the Corona crisis, the central banks made their monetary policy, which was already loose, much more generous.

The states support consumers and companies with high expenditures, which increases the national debt burden sharply.

This could result in increased inflation that would devalue traditional currencies.

Some investors are therefore increasingly asking for alternative investments such as digital currencies.

Critics warn against the bursting of a bubble

Bitcoin is based on the idea of ​​a currency that exists independently of states, central banks and monetary policy.

Unlike traditional currencies, digital means of payment are not controlled from a central point, and bookings do not have to be confirmed by a central point.

However, critics repeatedly warn against the bursting of a bubble.

They see the Bitcoin primarily as an object of speculation that can be risky for private investors.

Consumer advocates also point out the risk of getting to dubious or fraudulent providers on the subject of Bitcoin on the Internet.

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