It's the online currency shrouded in a (literal) dark web of algorithms and 
accusations of illegal activity – and now bitcoin is making a select group of 
geeks very, very rich.

Bitcoin, since it's emergence in mid-2009, has reached an all-time trading high 
of $3080 Australian dollars.

According to CNBC, that means if you were to buy $100 worth of bitcoin on May 
22nd 2010 – at a bargain price of $0.003 each – it would now be worth a 
whopping $75 million.

Few people – if any – picked up the crypto-currency at the bargain rate of 
$0.003, because by the time it hit the mainstream markets on the 1st of July 
2013, it was trading at $113.35 each.

So what’s sparking the growth of bitcoin? Much like any other form of currency, 
politics have a big role to play.

In April this year, Japan passed legislation that allowed regular retailers – 
like clothes and electronics – to accept Bitcoin as legal tender.

This effectively legitimised the online currency in law, prompting many buyers 
to snap up as many "Bitcoins" as they could, desperate to get ahead of the 
expected wave of growth.

The more demand there was for Bitcoin, the more expensive it became. Since the 
start of the year Bitcoin's "monster" rally has seen its worth grow by almost 
124 percent.

So does that make it a good investment?

It's impossible to say – since Bitcoin is not backed or regulated by any 
central bank or government, the base of knowledge needed to trade confidently 
is overwhelming to say the least.

https://finance.nine.com.au/2017/05/24/13/26/bitcoins-rally-100-in-2010-now-worth-75-million
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