GasFeeCry

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I just saw that BTC is now at $77.76K, and that made me remember an interesting signal that happened in February. The indicator ahr999, which people use to identify when Bitcoin is really cheap, dropped below 0.45 for the first time since October 2023 — it was 839 days waiting for this.
For those who don’t know, the ahr999 works like this: it compares the current BTC price with the average cost of the last 200 days of fixed purchase (like that DCA everyone does) and also takes into account an exponential growth curve based on the history. When it drops below 0.45, it’s kind of the market shout
BTC0,64%
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I found a very interesting study I saw about Bitcoin's behavior according to Bitwise. Basically, if you buy and hold for 3 years or more, the chance of losing money is practically zero — like 0.7% even. The longer you leave it untouched, the better: at 5 years it drops to 0.2%, and at 10 years there's no risk of loss at all.
But then comes the part that scares day traders. Bitwise showed that those who keep entering and exiting directly have a 47% chance of going broke. Even after a week, it's 44%, a month 43%, and even after a year of holding, there's still a 24% risk. It's basically the oppo
BTC0,64%
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Oh, I've been looking at market analyses and it seems that the Ethereum price is in a pretty serious situation. According to researchers who monitor this closely, the second-largest cryptocurrency is at risk of dropping about 22% to $1,500, which would be quite bad. We're talking about a sequence of declines that has no precedent.
The problem? Bitcoin is dragging everything down. Ethereum moves along with BTC but suffers more. When Bitcoin drops 10%, Ethereum usually falls much more. It's like an amplifier of movements, you know? And the market is ignoring good news — approved ETFs, billion-do
ETH-0,09%
BTC0,64%
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Look, the US market opened higher today and cryptocurrencies also followed suit. The Dow Jones rose 1.07%, the S&P 500 0.66%, and the Nasdaq 0.87%. But what caught attention was the performance of stocks related to cryptocurrencies.
I saw some companies in the sector exploded: Robinhood went up 4.38%, Strategy surged 4.4%, and a certain well-known exchange platform increased by 1.92%. Circle also had positive movement with 0.81%. When the traditional market takes a breather, it seems that rising crypto assets gain momentum together.
The interesting thing is that there's quite a bit of activity
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I see that the projections for Bitcoin in 2026 remain quite optimistic here. Analysts are pointing to around $150,000 as a likely target, but some are even talking up to $250,000. Standard Chartered and Bernstein agree on $150,000, while more bullish folks like the Fundstrat team see room for more.
What caught my attention was that Polymarket is pricing in a 40% chance of BTC surpassing $130,000 by the end of the year. Technical indicators suggest a floor of around $72,000, and considering where we are now, it seems that this Bitcoin price forecast for 2026 is developing as expected. The MVRV
BTC0,64%
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I just saw a very interesting move by Block that deserves attention. The company announced layoffs of over 4,000 employees — reducing its workforce from 10,000 to less than 6,000 — but here’s the curious detail: revenue increased by about $220 million compared to the previous quarter. The stock surged nearly 24% after the announcement.
Jack Dorsey, co-founder and CEO, was very direct in the letter to shareholders: artificial intelligence fundamentally changed how a company is built and managed. He even predicts that most companies will reach the same conclusion in the next 12 months and make s
BTC0,64%
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Have you ever stopped to think about what Shibarium really is and why so many people are talking about it? Let me tell you an interesting thing I've been observing in the Shiba Inu ecosystem.
Shiba Inu started as a decentralized alternative to Dogecoin, but has evolved into something much more complex. The community behind this project is truly passionate, and that makes all the difference. What stands out the most is that there is no central authority controlling everything; it's pure community power.
Now, what exactly is Shibarium? Basically, it’s a layer 2 blockchain developed specifically
SHIB1,52%
DOGE1,9%
ETH-0,09%
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So, that big bombshell news about OpenAI receiving US$ 110 billion in investment generated far less market buzz than we’d expect. Amazon, SoftBank, and Nvidia put serious money on the table—US$ 50 billion, US$ 30 billion, and US$ 30 billion respectively—taking OpenAI’s valuation to no less than US$ 730 billion. But you know that domino effect you imagine would happen? Not really.
What’s curious is that AI-related stocks reacted quite mildly. Amazon fell 0.93%, Nvidia plunged 4.4% (despite being up 1% over the last three months), and SoftBank was flat. Meanwhile, some smaller stocks such as Sou
ICP0,93%
FIL1,77%
TAO1,68%
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Hey guys, I need to share something that’s been keeping me awake. It’s April 2026, and the number of layoffs happening in the tech and crypto sectors is simply staggering. It’s no longer just cuts due to an economic crisis — now it’s AI, plain and simple.
About two weeks ago, Meta announced it would lay off 20% of its staff. Then a major crypto exchange also announced cuts of 12% of its workforce. But the most brutal case? Block. This payments company cut nearly 4,000 people — literally reducing from 10,000 to 6,000 employees. It’s like… 40% of the company disappeared. And do you know the just
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Cathie Wood and ARK Invest are making some very interesting moves in the crypto market, even as everything is falling apart. In recent disclosures, ARK funds added significant exposure to Coinbase stocks — we're talking about nearly 42,000 shares distributed between ARKK and ARKF, totaling approximately $9.4 million in new positions. At the same time, they also increased their bets on Circle Internet Group and Bullish, adding another $12 million. All of this while Coinbase shares closed down 2.77%.
What’s most striking is that ARK is doing exactly the opposite of what most do during correction
BTC0,64%
ETH-0,09%
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BlackRock continues to lead the game of Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. Just last week, IBIT pulled in $612 million in inflows, and ETHA (ethereum) gained another $168 million. In total, American Bitcoin ETFs have accumulated $816 million in net flows, while Ethereum ETFs received $187 million. The assets under management of Bitcoin ETFs have already surpassed $94.92 billion.
But what really caught attention was the movement in the product market. Bitwise updated the application for the Hyperliquid ETF (code BHYP), with a 0.67% fee, signaling an official launch soon. Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley debuted
BTC0,64%
ETH-0,09%
HYPE0,26%
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Something very interesting is happening in the cryptocurrency market that many people may not be fully noticing. While Bitcoin is practically stable here, small-cap altcoins have had some absurd surges these past few days. Tokens with a market cap below 20 million have exploded 3x, 5x—some even getting close to 10x in just a few days. And look, with no significant news at all—no ecological breakthrough, no institutions entering. It’s only prices going up.
The easy explanation everyone gives is: altcoins have high beta; when Bitcoin rises, they rise even more. Technically true, but it doesn’t e
BTC0,64%
ETH-0,09%
SOL0,37%
XRP1,34%
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Yesterday I saw that Bitcoin ETFs had an impressive day, with over US$240 million in inflows. BlackRock IBIT alone pulled in US$137.6 million, and Fidelity brought in more US$78 million. That’s quite a bit of institutional volume in a single day, which explains why the price of BTC has stayed steady above US$72 million.
The thing is, while these flows are positive, the technical structure is still a bit unclear. The price of BTC is oscillating between US$72K and US$74K, which has turned into a critical zone. If it manages to break upward, it could reach US$76K and then US$80K. But if it d
BTC0,64%
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Something very interesting is happening in the tokenized asset market. The market capitalization of tokenized stocks has just surpassed the $1 billion mark, and the growing speed of this adoption is truly remarkable.
What stands out most is how this is changing the game for traditional investments. We see more and more people seeking more accessible and flexible alternatives to trade real assets through blockchain. It’s not just about technology; it’s about democratizing access to financial markets.
The increasing speed of this movement directly reflects what the market has been asking for: mo
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I just came across a pretty interesting on-chain investigation. According to blockchain analyst ZachXBT, a Russian OTC broker, Aleksandr Khinkis, is allegedly laundering money for a ransomware group, involving more than $4.7 million.
Specifically, these suspicious funds involve three ransom payments, totaling approximately 796 BTC, and all of them are routed through the same exchange account. Even more interestingly, this guy transferred the funds from the Bitcoin network to Avalanche, and then split them across multiple addresses. Right now, about $16.6 million is still sitting in the Aave pr
BTC0,64%
AVAX1,5%
AAVE2,79%
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I see a lot of people losing money in DeFi because of fake tokens, and it's not even their fault. The crowd is falling for honeypots, rug pulls, these proxy traps that look legitimate but steal everything you have. And the worst part is that many platforms still list these tokens without proper validation.
Web3 Antivirus is emphasizing this issue right now. They are advocating for stronger platform-level validation to protect those who are operating. Because honestly, what’s the point of the best antivirus in these situations if the platform itself doesn’t do the basics? It’s no use having ind
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I found a recent Cambridge study quite interesting, which puts everything into perspective about what really threatens Bitcoin. We often hear about cuts in submarine cables causing network chaos, but in reality, the numbers show something completely different.
They analyzed 11 years of data and 68 failures in submarine cables. The result? They affected only 0.03% of Bitcoin nodes. Almost nothing. The network didn't even feel it. But here’s the part that should worry more people: centralization in cloud services.
Think about it—if someone managed to take down Hetzner, AWS, or Google Cloud in a
BTC0,64%
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I'm monitoring Glassnode data and found it interesting: over 400,000 BTC have accumulated between $60,000 and $70,000. Since the beginning of the year, the supply in this range has increased by 43%, rising from about 997,000 to 1.43 million BTC. This accounts for more than 8% of the total outside exchanges, creating a very dense cost basis there.
What catches the eye is the difference with the $70,000 to $80,000 range—there was practically an empty zone, very low volume indeed. The rapid drop from $80,000 to $70,000 in five days clearly showed this: the price moved straight through an area wit
BTC0,64%
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I'm following a very interesting movement in the AI world: OpenClaw is growing insanely fast on GitHub and basically redefining how people think about AI agent frameworks.
What catches attention is that traditional frameworks focused on answering questions, but OpenClaw goes way beyond. People are using it for real automation: information retrieval, code execution, workflow management. It’s no longer just AI answering, it’s AI executing.
The architecture is very well thought out. It has the Agent Core, Tool System, Memory System, and Execution Engine working together to enable continuous reaso
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Nic Carter from Castle Island Ventures brought an interesting perspective on a problem many don't realize: the quantum issue in the early Bitcoins. He discussed this recently on a Delphi Digital podcast.
The point that caught attention was how Satoshi Nakamoto, despite being aware of the quantum threat, left a loophole in the code affecting between 1 to 2 million of the initial Bitcoins. But here’s the important detail: in 2010, when this was decided, Bitcoin was virtually worthless. The code was flexible, updatable. Satoshi probably thought that any future problems would be solved with simple
BTC0,64%
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