Ethereum hits record high; bitcoin briefly climbs back above $17,000
Digital currency ethereum climbed Friday to a record high, while bitcoin attempted to recover from a recent slump.
Ethereum briefly rose 9.6 percent to an all-time high of $1,075.39 Friday, according to CoinMarketCap. The digital currency pared gains and was trading Friday evening about 1.7 percent higher near $980. It had a market capitalization of about $96 billion, remaining in third place behind ripple.
Bitcoin, the largest digital currency by market cap, jumped more than 13 percent Friday to a high of $17,178, according to Coinbase. That was still about 13 percent below its record high hit in mid-December.
Ethereum three-month performance
Source: CoinMarketCap
In contrast to bitcoin, ethereum allows developers to build applications on its network. The digital cat breeding and trading game CryptoKitties is based on ethereum, as are the majority of initial coin offerings.
Ethereum is up more than 30 percent in January alone. On Tuesday, the digital currency's co-founder, Vitalik Buterin, announced in a blog post the launch of two subsidy programs for improving the ability of the ethereum network to process more transactions. Grant amounts can range from $50,000 to $1 million, the post said.
"I think there's an increasing probability of [a viable upgrade] getting done and that's why you're seeing the price increase," said Benjamin Roberts, co-founder and CEO of Citizen Hex, an ethereum-focused start-up backed by three Canadian venture funds.
"The value of any one of these cryptocurrencies is very, very correlated with the utility. Speculators will only take it so far and people won't hold it any more if they can't use it," Roberts said. "I think people are just starting to wake up and realize the differences."
Smaller, lesser-known digital currencies such as ripple have taken the spotlight in the last few weeks as they surged dramatically to join the ranks of the 10 largest cryptocurrencies by market capitalization.
Ripple, or XRP, has a market cap of $118 billion and traded lower near $3.05 Friday evening, after reaching an all-time high of $3.84 Thursday. The coin has surged more than 30 percent in January so far.
"I think the market will likely soon shift its denomination back to the larger, more liquid, and more trusted assets like bitcoin, driving up their price while sending some smaller assets falling steeply as large holders exit on thinly traded markets," Alex Sunnarborg, founding partner of cryptocurrency fund Tetras Capital, said in an email.