QUESTION: Why is the exact price of bitcoin constantly changing little bits up and down all day long

Published July 21, 2025

  • YouTube Video Transcript

    00:02 If you’re new to Bitcoin, you probably
    00:04 wonder why does the price of Bitcoin go
    00:07 up and down little bits constantly all
    00:09 the time. In fact, if you just watch the
    00:12 price every few seconds, the price of
    00:14 Bitcoin is changing. So, what is causing
    00:16 that? What is making the price go up and
    00:17 down? Well, this often confuses people
    00:20 that are new to Bitcoin, but actually
    00:22 what they don’t realize is the same is
    00:23 true for everything that trades on any
    00:26 market. So any stock, any bond, any
    00:29 commodity, gold, wheat, silver, barley,
    00:33 you you name it. Everything when a
    00:35 market is open is constantly in a state
    00:38 of flux that is driven by supply and
    00:40 demand. You just don’t see it because at
    00:42 the grocery store, the price of eggs
    00:44 only changes every few days or every few
    00:46 weeks. Um whereas the people who are
    00:49 actually buying and selling eggs on a
    00:51 daily basis in large volumes, they
    00:54 understand that the price of a dozen
    00:55 eggs or 1,000 eggs or whatever is
    00:58 constantly in flux. A few cents up, a
    01:00 few pennies down, a few dollars up, a
    01:02 few dollars down, up, down, up, down all
    01:04 day long, just like the price of
    01:05 Bitcoin. So what causes that behavior in
    01:08 any market? Well, one way to think about
    01:10 it is that a market is like an elevator
    01:13 with a finite number of people that can
    01:15 get on, you know, be on the elevator at
    01:17 the same time. And the elevator only
    01:19 has, if you’re on the elevator, you only
    01:22 have one button you can push, which is
    01:24 the I want to get off button, which is
    01:27 what’s selling. If you own something and
    01:28 you want to sell it in a market, you
    01:30 basically only have one button, which is
    01:32 the I want to get off button off of the
    01:34 elevator. And if you push that button
    01:36 from inside, the elevator is supposed to
    01:39 go to down to the nearest floor and let
    01:42 you off. But if you’re outside the
    01:44 elevator, you exactly have one button
    01:46 you can push, which is I want to get on
    01:48 the elevator. And if you push the I want
    01:50 to get on the elevator button, the
    01:52 elevator has to come up to get you to
    01:56 from wherever it is. If you push the I
    01:58 want to get on button, it’s got to go to
    01:60 the next highest floor. So, because
    02:02 again, anytime you sell something into a
    02:04 market, it pushes the price down. Even
    02:06 if it pushes the price down normally
    02:08 such a microscopic amount, like if I go
    02:10 sell $100 on Coinbase right now, the
    02:13 effect on the price of Bitcoin is
    02:15 probably 1 1 millionth of 1 millionth of
    02:17 1 millionth of a penny. Obviously,
    02:20 you’re not even going to notice, but
    02:21 every buy of sell of anything on any
    02:24 market causes the price to go up. Now,
    02:27 again, you may not see that reflected in
    02:28 the prices. If you go to a farmers
    02:30 market, you may not see the prices
    02:32 constantly changing all day long. And
    02:33 that’s just because they don’t want to
    02:35 bother adjusting prices to supply and
    02:37 demand. But if you’re on a large market
    02:39 with a lot of what’s called liquidity,
    02:41 liquidity means with a lot of buying and
    02:43 selling, then you’re going to see that
    02:44 you’re going to see the price of a uh
    02:47 you know, a barrel of oil is constantly
    02:49 changing. Maybe it’s just by pennies,
    02:51 but the price of a barrel of oil when
    02:53 the markets are open is in constant
    02:54 flux. the price of gasoline again in
    02:57 major markets uh not at the gas pump
    02:60 because they don’t they only update the
    03:01 price every few days or every you know a
    03:03 couple times a day but if you are
    03:04 actually trading gas or buying and
    03:06 selling it in large volumes before it
    03:08 goes to the gas pump you’re seeing the
    03:10 the price in a constant state of flux.
    03:13 Okay so let’s go back to our elevator
    03:15 analogy. Okay so you got an elevator and
    03:18 each floor represents $1,000. So like
    03:20 right now we’re at 117 $118,000 coin. So
    03:24 the elevator is near floor 118. It’s
    03:28 actually kind of between floor 117 and
    03:31 118. So all the people who want to get
    03:34 on the elevator are up there on floor 18
    03:36 mashing the button to try to get it to
    03:39 come up to 18 to get them on. Because
    03:41 again, remember if you mash the button
    03:43 that you want to get on the elevator,
    03:45 you have to be on the floor above where
    03:46 the elevator is. Unless the elevator
    03:48 door is open. If the elevator door is
    03:50 open, you can get on and off at that
    03:52 floor. But if it’s between floors, you
    03:55 only can get on by mashing the button to
    03:57 get on the floor above. But remember, if
    03:60 you’re between floors and you want to
    04:01 get off the elevator and you mash the
    04:03 button from inside the elevator, it’s
    04:05 always going to go down to the next
    04:07 floor to let you off. All right, so
    04:09 where does the elevator go? The elevator
    04:11 represents the price of Bitcoin at any
    04:13 instant in time. The answer is the
    04:15 elevator is in a constant state of
    04:17 motion. Sometimes it’ll hold in one spot
    04:20 for like right at $18,000. It’ll hold
    04:23 because there’s enough people that are
    04:25 buying or selling at exactly $18,000 to
    04:28 hold the price steady for like a few
    04:30 seconds or even 30 seconds sometimes,
    04:32 right at a major point. That’s like when
    04:35 the elevator door is open at floor 118.
    04:38 And it just so happens right at a floor
    04:40 at 118, a bunch of people are mashing
    04:42 the button on both sides of floor 118
    04:45 saying, “I want to get on. I want to get
    04:46 off.” So, the elevator doors open and
    04:48 people are streaming on and off the
    04:49 elevator real time, real time, real
    04:51 time, real time, real time at 118. But
    04:53 guess what? Very quickly, typically
    04:55 within a few a matter of a few seconds,
    04:57 uh, the number of people who want to get
    04:59 on and the number of people who want to
    05:01 get off are no longer in balance. Which
    05:03 means there’s more people mashing that
    05:04 they want to get on as compared to
    05:06 mashing that they want to get off. And
    05:08 as soon as you have that imbalance, the
    05:09 elevator has to either because again at
    05:13 that point, as soon as there’s an
    05:14 imbalance, the door closes. Which means
    05:16 if people are still mashing the button,
    05:18 they got to mash up from floor 19 to try
    05:20 to get the elevator to come up and pick
    05:22 them up or they got if they’re in the
    05:24 elevator, they’ve got a mash that they
    05:25 want to go it to go down to floor 17. So
    05:28 the question is where’s the elevator
    05:30 going to go? You got the people on the
    05:32 elevator, some of them are mashing that
    05:34 they want to get off at floor uh 7 117,
    05:38 but you’ve got people up at 118 who
    05:41 missed the elevator door open when it
    05:43 was temporarily at 118. And now they’re
    05:46 up at 119 mashing the button, mashing
    05:48 the button, mashing the button, saying,
    05:50 “I want to get on. I want to get on. I
    05:51 want to get on.” And remember, the
    05:52 elevator has to go up. If you want to go
    05:54 on, get on. But it has to go down if you
    05:57 want to get off. So what’s where’s the
    05:58 elevator going to go? What’s going to
    06:00 happen? Well, the answer is what’s going
    06:03 to happen. Give me one second here to
    06:04 pick a park parking spot. Um,
    06:08 what’s going to happen in that situation
    06:10 is it depends on who’s mashing the
    06:12 button more. If the people inside the
    06:15 elevator, which is the sellers, the
    06:16 people who want to sell Bitcoin, if the
    06:18 people inside the elevator are mashing
    06:20 the button more to try to sell, then the
    06:22 elevator will go down to floor 117 to
    06:25 let them off. If more people are up at a
    06:28 floor 119 mashing the button, wanting
    06:30 the elevator to come up and pick them
    06:32 up, then you know we’re going up to 119.
    06:36 Now, typically we’re always between a
    06:39 $1,000 threshold and typically people
    06:42 sell. The only time uh the price
    06:43 stabilizes is typically at major
    06:46 milestones because enough people were
    06:48 buying and selling at exactly that
    06:49 price. So typically you will not see the
    06:52 price stay for like 30 seconds at a
    06:55 price like 80, you know, 118,436
    07:00 and.32. Like you’re normally not going
    07:02 to see it uh stop at some arbitrary
    07:06 number and just like hold there because
    07:08 again that’s sort of between floors and
    07:10 elevators just don’t stop between
    07:12 floors. they’re either, you know, sort
    07:14 of slowly going up, slowly going down,
    07:16 and you can get on and off, but again,
    07:18 you’re you’re always pushing it one way
    07:19 or the other. Um, so obviously tons of
    07:22 people are buying and selling Bitcoin
    07:23 between 117 and 119. And every time they
    07:28 do that, the people who push the button
    07:29 to get off the elevator are pushing the
    07:31 elevator down. Every time somebody wants
    07:33 to get on, they’re pushing they’re sort
    07:36 of pulling the elevator up. And so
    07:38 supply and demand is a constant pushing
    07:40 and pulling battle. where, you know, the
    07:43 people on the elevator are pushing the
    07:45 button to get off, which pushes the
    07:47 elevator down, and the people who want
    07:49 to get on are pushing the button from
    07:50 the floor above where the ever the
    07:52 elevator is, trying to get, you know, to
    07:55 get them to let them on the elevator.
    07:57 Um, and as a result, it’s just in a
    07:59 constant state of flux. So, obviously,
    08:01 the actual market doesn’t have like hard
    08:04 thresholds like that, 117, 118, 119. It
    08:07 might pause there for a few seconds
    08:09 while it just clears out whoever is
    08:11 buying and selling at that point. But
    08:12 generally all day long, the elevator is
    08:15 between floors and the people who are
    08:18 pushing sell from the inside are pushing
    08:20 it the elevator down by a microscopic
    08:23 fraction of a millimeter and the people
    08:24 who are outside the elevator pushing a
    08:27 button are pushing it from the floor
    08:28 above saying, “Hey, I’ll get on, but I’m
    08:30 willing to pay a little bit more than
    08:31 the sellers.” Uh, and that’s what
    08:33 happens all day long with every market.
    08:35 Again, it doesn’t matter if it’s wheat,
    08:36 corn, soybeans. It doesn’t matter if
    08:39 it’s gold, silver, a barrel of oil, you
    08:42 know, diamonds. Everything trades that
    08:44 way in a constant push and pull of
    08:46 supply and demand. And that constant
    08:49 push and pull, you know, you end up with
    08:51 the the sellers are, you know, the
    08:53 sellers have a hand, so the price is
    08:55 going down. Then the buyers have, you
    08:57 know, they have the upper hand, so the
    08:58 price is going up and then buying and
    08:59 selling and buying and selling. It’s
    09:01 called bulls and bears. The people who
    09:03 are want who are buying are called bulls
    09:05 because bulls attack by you know uh
    09:08 tossing their horns up and the people
    09:11 who are bearish. Uh bears attack by
    09:14 slashing down with their claws. So
    09:15 they’re called bears. So the people who
    09:17 are selling anything are uh typically
    09:19 bears. People who are buying something
    09:22 are called bulls. Uh that’s also used to
    09:24 refer to people who are just bullish on
    09:26 something means optimistic about the
    09:28 long-term future of an asset. And the
    09:30 bears are people who are pessimistic of
    09:32 the long-term future of an asset. So,
    09:33 the bulls want the price to go up, the
    09:35 bears want it to go down, the bulls are
    09:38 usually buying, the bears are usually
    09:40 selling. And uh and it’s that tension.
    09:42 It’s that tension that people are just
    09:44 not used to seeing because usually
    09:45 Bitcoin is the very first thing they’ve
    09:47 ever owned or bought where they can see
    09:50 that happen in real time. People are
    09:51 just not used to that. They’re not
    09:52 seeing that real time because nothing
    09:55 else they buy. gas at the gas station,
    09:57 eggs at the grocery store, everything
    09:59 else they buy, the price is only getting
    10:01 updated a few times a day or a few times
    10:04 a week or for some things a few times a
    10:05 months or or a year. Um but behind the
    10:08 scenes on the markets where those things
    10:11 trade before they get to the store or
    10:14 the consumer or the car lot or whatever
    10:16 it is on those markets behind the things
    10:19 the price is in a constant ever
    10:22 everpresent state of a little bit up a
    10:24 little bit down a little bit up a little
    10:25 bit down up up down down up up you know
    10:28 all that. Um, so if the price is uh
    10:31 tipping down with Bitcoin, it means that
    10:34 very temporarily the people inside the
    10:36 elevator mashing the button to get off
    10:38 are outweighing the number of people
    10:40 outside the elevator mashing the button
    10:42 to get on. So if um you know more people
    10:45 want to sell Bitcoin if the price is
    10:47 trending down, more people are wanting
    10:48 to buy, you know, the the the balance
    10:50 between buyers and sellers. If it’s
    10:53 tipped in favor of more buyers than
    10:55 sellers, the price goes up. If it’s
    10:56 tipped in favor of more sellers than
    10:58 buyers, the price is going down. Uh if
    11:01 that imbalance is happens quickly where
    11:04 there ends up being a lot more buyers
    11:06 than sellers, then you get this rip
    11:08 where the price goes from 108 to 118
    11:11 very quickly. Uh the reverse can happen.
    11:13 You know, we saw this most recently when
    11:16 the United States uh bombed the nuclear
    11:18 facilities in Iran, uh where the price
    11:21 of Bitcoin dipped from like 108,000 to
    11:24 like 99,000 very quickly in a series of
    11:27 hours or whatever it was. Same thing. A
    11:29 bunch of people panicked. The people
    11:30 inside the elevator all panicked at the
    11:32 same time. They’re all mashing the
    11:34 button. Let me out of the elevator at
    11:36 any price. At any price, get me out.
    11:37 Getting get me out. So, you know, people
    11:39 start bailing from the elevator. They’re
    11:41 bailing at, you know, whatever, 107,
    11:44 106, 105. The elevator keeps dropping
    11:46 and they’re just mashing that button.
    11:48 Get me out at any price. Get me out at
    11:49 any price. Get me out at any price until
    11:51 it gets down to about 99,000. At which
    11:54 point the people outside the elevator
    11:55 are like, $99,000 Bitcoin. Are you
    11:58 idiots? Yeah. You want to get off the
    11:59 elevator and give give me your spot at
    12:01 99,000? I will take it. And so, you
    12:04 know, as the price dropped from 108 or
    12:06 105, I think it was like 105. as it
    12:08 dropped from 105 to 99, as it dropped,
    12:11 more and more people got off the
    12:13 elevator. And so there were fewer people
    12:15 that wanted to get off the elevator
    12:16 because more of them had gotten off the
    12:18 elevator as it dropped. But as the price
    12:21 dropped, the more people on the outside
    12:22 mashing the button, you know, 104 people
    12:25 on the outside are like, “Ooh, a
    12:26 discount.” They start mashing the
    12:27 button. 103 more people mash the button
    12:30 on the outside saying, “I want on this
    12:32 elevator at 103.” And then two, 101, 99.
    12:36 Suddenly at 99, there’s a cacophony of
    12:38 people mashing the button outside the
    12:40 elevator saying, “Please, please, please
    12:41 give me Bitcoin below $100,000. Get
    12:44 these idiots off the elevator that don’t
    12:46 know what they hold. They don’t know why
    12:47 they’re selling. Let’s get those people
    12:49 off the elevator. I’ll take their spot
    12:50 for $99,000.” And so, and so they, you
    12:53 know, the elevator stops and the
    12:55 everybody swaps and, you know, they’re
    12:57 constantly buying and selling all the
    12:58 way up and down. But eventually at, you
    13:00 know, 98,762
    13:03 or whatever it was, the number of people
    13:05 outside the elevator mashing that they
    13:07 wanted to get on outnumbered the people
    13:09 of inside the elevator mashing the
    13:11 button cuz they’re scared of the Iran
    13:12 attack and a World War II and a, you
    13:15 know, worldwide recession, all this sort
    13:16 of stuff. And it’s again, that’s what a
    13:18 market is. It’s people inside the
    13:20 elevator wanting to get off, pushing the
    13:22 price down, and people outside the
    13:24 elevator wanting to get on, pushing the
    13:26 price up. And obviously, you know, the
    13:28 the place the analogy breaks down is you
    13:30 can buy and sell at any price. So it’s
    13:32 not like you have to be, you know,
    13:33 elevators you can only get on and off at
    13:35 a floor. In the case of any anything
    13:37 else, you can get off at the penny. So
    13:40 there’s like an 100 increments between
    13:42 floors and a th000 increments between
    13:44 that cuz obviously it’s not like you can
    13:46 only get off 118,000 or 117,000. You can
    13:49 get off at every dollar increment
    13:51 between that and you can get off at
    13:52 every penny increment between every
    13:54 dollar increment. you can literally buy
    13:56 and sell at any price uh for Bitcoin,
    13:59 you know, rounded to the nearest penny.
    14:01 And so that’s the way it trades. And it
    14:03 trades that way in other currencies as
    14:04 well. It trades that way in all
    14:06 currencies around the around the world.
    14:07 So you can get off at tiny fractions of
    14:10 a Japanese yen or a Chinese one or a
    14:12 euro or whatever it is. Um so anyway, uh
    14:15 so it’s helpful for people sometimes to
    14:17 think about the whole thing as an
    14:18 elevator with people inside mashing. I
    14:20 want to go down and get off and people
    14:22 outside mashing please come up and pick
    14:24 me up and the price is just it’s just
    14:27 the balance of the people mashing
    14:29 mashing on both sides the sellers and
    14:31 the buyers the I want to get offs and
    14:33 the please let me ons whoever outweighs
    14:36 the other at that exact moment in time
    14:38 is going to either pull that elevator up
    14:40 by a penny or two or five or $10 or
    14:43 $1,000 or the people inside mashing I
    14:46 want to get off are going to push it
    14:47 down a penny or a dollar or $1,000
    14:50 or Iran nuclear strike $6,000. It’s just
    14:54 it’s just happening real time all the
    14:56 time. And if you want to see it happen
    14:57 even faster than you see it, you know,
    14:60 normally uh normally in the standard
    15:02 interface of Coinbase and the standard
    15:04 intera interface of River, it updates
    15:06 every few seconds or if you swipe down,
    15:08 it’ll update real time. Uh the easiest
    15:11 way to see it update real real time is
    15:13 to flip uh Coinbase to the advanced
    15:15 mode. If you flip Coinbase to the
    15:18 advanced mode, you can actually scroll
    15:19 down and watch the trading volume. And
    15:21 you can see it’s just
    15:24 I mean just an avalanche of buying and
    15:27 selling constantly. And then right above
    15:29 that you see the price and the price is
    15:31 just updating. Especially if you do it
    15:33 on a laptop, if you do it on a mobile
    15:34 device, it updates like every second or
    15:36 two. Uh or not, it’s like every, you
    15:39 know, a few times a second. If you look
    15:41 at it on a desktop computer, it updates
    15:44 like super real time. I mean, the price
    15:46 is just like,
    15:49 and again, it may only be changing by a
    15:50 penny or two or five or 10, but like the
    15:52 if you look at uh Coinbase Advanced on a
    15:56 desktop computer, it’s like I mean, it’s
    15:59 just the the level of buying and selling
    16:01 is just absolutely insane. So, um,
    16:03 hopefully that helps you understand why
    16:05 the price is in a constant state of
    16:06 flux. And hopefully it helps you to
    16:08 understand that everything you buy
    16:10 somewhere has a price that’s in a
    16:12 constant state of flux. You just don’t
    16:14 see that because they even it out,
    16:16 smooth it out, and only change the price
    16:18 infrequently where you actually buy
    16:20 stuff. In the grocery store, at the gas
    16:22 pump, on the car lot, whatever it is
    16:24 you’re buying, they try to hold the
    16:26 prices much more steady for longer so it
    16:28 doesn’t freak people out with all that
    16:30 changing. But behind the scenes, every
    16:31 market is buyers and sellers, supply and
    16:34 demand, and the price is in a constant
    16:36 state of flux. Bitcoin is no different.
    16:38 That’s just the way it is. Have a great
    16:40 day, everyone.

**Originally recorded 7/19/25**

Share this content

Disclaimer:

The content provided in this post is for educational purposes only. It should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice. I am not a licensed financial advisor, and all opinions expressed are my own. Always conduct your own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Investing in Bitcoin or any other assets carries risk, and you should never invest more than you can afford to lose.

Post category:

  • Facebook Live

Subscribe to Joel's Friday Roundup ✉️

Stay current with the latest bitcoin insights with the Friday Roundup newsletter –  Joel’s latest posts from the week, wrapped up in a single email for easy viewing. 

Global Email List Subscription Form

NOTHING for sale. No SPAM ever. Unsubscribe anytime.