Skip to navigationSkip to main contentADVERTISEMENTSome offers on this page are from advertisers who pay us, which may affect which products we write about, but not our recommendations. See our Advertiser Disclosure.Tim Manni · Lead EditorThu, June 18, 2026 at 1:50 PM GMT+2 3 min readBitcoin (BTC-USD) opened at $64,450.44 on Thursday, June 18, 2026, down 1.8% from Wednesday's opening price. The value of bitcoin slid this morning to $63,980.59 by 7:33 a.m. ET.Ethereum (ETH-USD) opened at $1,748.91, down 2.3% from yesterday's opening price. The price of ethereum edged lower this morning as well, moving to $1,744.25 by 7:33 a.m. ET.Despite a signed peace deal between the U.S. and Iran, crypto prices are falling this morning. While the prices of bitcoin and ethereum are up substantially from last week, they are sliding following yesterday's Fed meeting, which kept borrowing costs at current levels.Investors are turning more of their attention to stocks and focusing on the signed deal, which is designed to fast-track the opening of the Strait of Hormuz, rather than on the prospect of higher interest rates, which remain a real possibility due to the war.Read more: Bitcoin Steadies Near $64K as Analysts Eye Floor After Hawkish FedCurrent price of bitcoinBitcoinThe price of bitcoin this morning was 1.8% lower than yesterday's open. Here's a look at how the opening bitcoin price has changed versus last week, month, and year:The all-time high for bitcoin was $126,198.07 on Oct. 6, 2025. The all-time low value for bitcoin was $0.04865 on July 14, 2010. EthereumThe price of ethereum this morning was 2.3% lower compared to Wednesday's open. Here's a look at how the opening ethereum price has changed versus last week, month, and year:The all-time high for ethereum was $4,953.73 on Aug. 24, 2025. The all-time low value for ethereum was $0.4209 on Oct. 21, 2015.Bitcoin, ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies are rapidly evolving. Follow the latest developments from Yahoo Finance and others here.What is a crypto credit card?A bitcoin or crypto credit card generally works just like any other credit card. When you apply and get approved, you'll be assigned a credit limit, and you can use your card to make purchases. If you don't pay your total balance by your card's monthly due date, you'll start to accrue interest at your assigned APR.The difference is the types of rewards you'll earn. Instead of earning airline miles, rewards points, or cash back on your spending, you'll earn crypto. The percentage back you earn on each purchase — such as 3% back on gas or 2% back at restaurants — is converted from U.S. dollars to bitcoin or another cryptocurrency at the current market value. You can then access your rewards through your connected crypto account.For example, say you make a $500 purchase that earns 3% bitcoin rewards. You'll earn $15 in U.S. dollars on that purchase. With a bitcoin credit card, your $15 may be converted at the current bitcoin value (about 0.00014 bitcoin in October 2025) and deposited in your crypto account.The biggest benefit of crypto rewards is the potential for growth over time. Let's say you had a total bitcoin rewards balance worth $100 USD at the end of 2024. By early October 2025, the value of those same rewards would have increased to about $114 — even if you didn't earn any additional rewards over that time.Learn more: Do you need a bitcoin credit card? What you can gain (and lose) by earning bitcoin rewards on spendingBitcoin and ethereum price chartsWhether you're brand new to tracking the value of bitcoin and ethereum or a more seasoned crypto investor, Yahoo Finance's price-of-bitcoin chart and price-of-ethereum chart below show a visual history of how the currency's value continues to move and evolve.More on crypto from the Yahoo Finance team: How to trade crypto: A step-by-step guide