The cryptocurrency market was electric on August 13, 2020. Bitcoin steadied itself above $11,780, inching toward the $12,000 mark for the first time since the pre-crash highs of February, while Ethereum staged a dramatic 9.6% rally in a single hour late in the day, reaching $428. The surge was fueled by the explosive growth of decentralized finance, massive trading volumes, and growing institutional interest in digital assets.
The day encapsulated the paradox of the summer 2020 crypto market: prices were soaring and innovation was thriving, but the underlying infrastructure — particularly Ethereum — was buckling under the strain. Gas fees had exploded to all-time highs, and the network was creaking under the weight of DeFi’s explosive growth.
TL;DR
- Bitcoin traded at $11,784 on August 13, up 1.8%, approaching the critical $12,000 resistance level
- Ethereum surged 9.6% to $428.74, with most gains realized in a single one-hour spike late in the day
- Total trading volume on Kraken reached $433.5M, dwarfing the 30-day average of $264.9M
- Ethereum gas fees hit an all-time high of $7.40, driven by DeFi protocols like Uniswap
- US Department of Justice announced a historic takedown of global terrorist cryptocurrency networks
Bitcoin Consolidates Below $12,000 Resistance
Bitcoin’s performance on August 13 was part of a sustained recovery that had seen the cryptocurrency climb from below $4,000 in March to nearly $12,000 by mid-August. The 1.8% daily gain to $11,784 represented a measured, steady advance rather than a speculative spike — a pattern that encouraged analysts who saw it as evidence of genuine demand rather than leveraged froth.
The $12,000 level had become a key psychological and technical resistance point. Bitcoin had tested it multiple times over the previous weeks, and each approach was met with selling pressure from traders taking profits. But the consistent higher lows being established suggested that a breakout was increasingly likely.
On Kraken, Bitcoin accounted for $157.4 million in trading volume, representing roughly 34% of total crypto trading. While substantial, this was notably lower than Bitcoin’s typical market share, reflecting the altcoin and DeFi rotation that was dominating market attention in the summer of 2020.
Ethereum’s Explosive One-Hour Rally
If Bitcoin’s move was measured, Ethereum’s was explosive. The second-largest cryptocurrency surged 9.6% to $428.74 on the day, with the vast majority of those gains concentrated in a dramatic one-hour spike late in the trading session. The move pushed Ethereum to levels not seen since the bull market of early 2018.
The rally was driven by a combination of factors. The DeFi boom had created enormous demand for ETH, both as a base currency for decentralized exchanges and as collateral for lending protocols. Yield farming — the practice of depositing crypto assets into DeFi protocols to earn rewards — had become the dominant narrative of Summer 2020, and Ethereum was the foundation on which the entire ecosystem was built.
However, the surge came with a significant cost. Ethereum’s average transaction fee reached $7.40, an all-time high that had risen fivefold since the start of August and 17 times since the beginning of summer. Uniswap alone consumed $3.38 million in gas fees over the month, while Tether (USDT) ranked second at $2.95 million. Users found themselves paying fees that could equal half the value of their transfers, making everyday transactions prohibitively expensive.
DeFi Mania and Network Congestion
The summer of 2020 will be remembered as DeFi’s coming-out party. Protocols like Uniswap, Compound, Aave, and Curve were processing billions of dollars in transactions, and the total value locked in DeFi had surged from under $1 billion at the start of the year to over $6 billion by August. But this growth was exposing fundamental limitations of the Ethereum network.
Recommended gas prices on EthGasStation had nearly doubled in 24 hours. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin acknowledged the crisis and championed EIP-1559, a proposal to reform the fee market by introducing a base fee that would be burned, along with priority fees for miners. The proposal was controversial among miners, who were earning record revenues from the congestion, but was seen as essential for the network’s long-term viability.
The congestion was further complicated by the presence of Forsage, a project widely characterized as a pyramid scheme, which ranked third in gas consumption. The fact that a potentially fraudulent project was consuming significant network resources highlighted the need for better tools and standards in the rapidly growing DeFi ecosystem.
US Government Cracks Down on Terrorist Crypto Networks
In a significant enforcement action, the United States Department of Justice announced on August 13, 2020, what it described as a “historic” takedown of global terrorist cryptocurrency networks. The operation targeted the financial infrastructure of terrorist organizations that had been using digital assets to move funds across borders.
The announcement underscored the dual nature of cryptocurrency’s growing mainstream acceptance: while institutional adoption and DeFi innovation were accelerating, regulators were simultaneously ramping up their oversight capabilities. The DOJ’s action was one of the largest cryptocurrency-related counterterrorism operations to date, and it sent a clear signal that illicit use of digital assets would face consequences.
For the broader market, the enforcement action had minimal immediate price impact, but it represented an important milestone in the maturation of the cryptocurrency regulatory landscape.
Altcoins Join the Party
The altcoin market was alive with extraordinary moves on August 13. WAVES surged 56% to $3.39, making it one of the day’s top performers. Algorand climbed 26% to $0.66, Gnosis gained 30% to $40.94, and StorJ rose 22% to $0.27. Even established altcoins posted strong gains: Chainlink (LINK) advanced 4.1% to $17.14, XRP gained 4.4% to $0.29, and Litecoin rose 4.7% to $57.07.
The breadth of the rally — encompassing both major cryptocurrencies and smaller tokens — suggested that the market was in a genuine risk-on environment rather than experiencing isolated speculation. Total trading volume across Kraken reached $433.5 million, a 64% increase over the 30-day average of $264.9 million, confirming that the rally was backed by significant participation.
Why This Matters
August 13, 2020 captured the cryptocurrency market at an inflection point. Bitcoin was reclaiming pre-crash levels, Ethereum was being stress-tested by unprecedented DeFi demand, and regulators were making their presence felt. The fee crisis on Ethereum would prove to be one of the defining challenges of the 2020-2021 bull market, ultimately accelerating the development of Layer 2 scaling solutions, alternative Layer 1 blockchains like Solana and Avalanche, and Ethereum’s own transition to proof-of-stake. For investors and builders alike, the summer of 2020 was both exhilarating and sobering — a reminder that innovation and infrastructure must evolve together.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.
9.6% ETH rally in one hour to $428.74. that was the DeFi summer peak energy. everyone was aping into yield farms
the DOJ terrorist crypto takedown announcement that same day barely got any attention because everyone was too busy watching ETH pump
^ that DOJ story actually was pretty significant long term. first real signal that crypto was on the radar for terror financing
btc from $3.8k to $11.8k in 5 months and people were still calling it dead. never change crypto twitter