Bitcoin may no longer be legal tender in El Salvador, but Bitcoiners in the country haven't given up on the mission.
In order to accept a $1.4 billion loan from the IMF, El Salvador had to change some of its cryptocurrency laws.
Four years after becoming the first country to adopt bitcoin as legal tender, El Salvador is taking a step back. The ...
El Salvador appears to be sticking to its now-popular Bitcoin strategy and has “bought the dip” yet again. On Tuesday, February 4, the Central American country took advantage of a declining crypto ...
Bitcoin was never used by most Salvadorans, its modern city was never built, and now it will cease to be legal tender in El Salvador, the first country in the world to adopt it in 2021: a complete ...
El Salvador has again grown its Bitcoin reserve, this time purchasing 12 Bitcoin in the last day amid a dip in the crypto ...
El Salvador has quietly scaled back its ambitious cryptocurrency experiment, marking a significant reversal of President ...
El Salvador’s Congress has swiftly approved legislation to amend its Bitcoin laws, aligning with an agreement reached with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The legislation was ratified by the ...
El Salvador adopted Bitcoin as a legal tender to solve key financial issues such as financial inclusion and high remittance ...
El Salvador buys 12 more BTC, boosting its holdings to 6,068. Despite Bitcoin trading below $100K, the country continues to accumulate Bitcoin while adjusting its laws to meet IMF conditions.
Four years after making history as the first country to embrace Bitcoin as legal tender, El Salvador is scaling back its ...
El Salvador now has 6055 BTC in its reserves, worth over $618.9 million. The country signed a deal with the IMF to limit its Bitcoin transactions and make Bitcoin acceptance voluntary. Nayib Bukele ...