El Salvador halts Bitcoin purchases amid securing a $1.4B IMF loan, impacting its Bitcoin policy and over 6,000 BTC holdings.
The government secured a $1.4bn loan from the IMF, prompting a cautious approach to Bitcoin after the lender's recommendation.
El Salvador's Congress on Wednesday swiftly approved a bill sent just minutes earlier by President Nayib Bukele to amend its bitcoin law to comply with a deal with a key international lender to make ...
The vague language of El Salvador's $1.4 billion deal with the IMF may imply that it might stop buying Bitcoin at some point, ...
El Salvador's attitudes to Bitcoin are changing. Doug Specht explores why and considers how other nations are sizing up ...
Bitcoin Both Is and Isn't Legal Tender in El Salvador as the country has amended its laws at the request of the International ...
El Salvador recently made a significant move by officially recognizing Bitcoin as legal tender. This decision was made ...
Nayib Bukele and Michael Saylor discuss Bitcoin in El Salvador amid regulatory changes affecting its legal tender status.
Yet even in El Salvador—the world’s Bitcoin trailblazer, which passed its Bitcoin Law in 2021 and has been steadily adding ...
El Salvador was the first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, inspiring crypto enthusiasts worldwide. But three years ...
This article is part of a four-piece series on El Salvador. You can find the previous dispatch, a story on El Zonte, ...
Bitcoin (BTC) ”both is and isn’t legal tender” in El Salvador after the government amended its Bitcoin law to comply with a deal pushed by the IMF, according to Jan3 CEO Samson Mow.