News
Stay up to date on the latest crypto trends with our expert, in-depth coverage.

1Bitget UEX Daily | Trump Does Not Rule Out Sending Troops to Iran; Iran Closes Strait of Hormuz, Oil Prices Soar; Drone and Space Stocks Rise Collectively (2026/03/03)2Bitcoin slide slowing, but bear market still in play: Analysts3Research Report|In-Depth Analysis and Market Cap of Opinion Labs (OPN)
Flash
01:03
U.S. stocks closed with most crypto-related sectors down, UPXI fell more than 10.78%U.S. stocks closed lower, with the Dow Jones down 0.83%, the S&P 500 Index down 0.94%, and the Nasdaq down 1.02%. The crypto sector saw widespread declines, with UPXI falling more than 10.78%, MARA dropping over 8.36%, ALTS down more than 6.41%, and BMNR down more than 4.07%. It is reported that msx.com is a decentralized RWA trading platform, which has launched hundreds of RWA tokens, covering AAPL, AMZN, GOOGL, META, MSFT, NFLX, NVDA and other U.S. stock and ETF token assets.
00:59
Bridgewater founder Dalio: Bitcoin is not suitable as digital goldBridgewater founder Ray Dalio stated on Tuesday's All-In Podcast that bitcoin is not suitable as a long-term store of value or a safe-haven asset, citing reasons such as lack of central bank support and concerns about privacy protection and quantum resistance. He emphasized that bitcoin cannot serve as digital gold, saying "there is only one gold," and described gold as "the most mature currency" and the second largest reserve currency held by central banks. Additionally, Dalio said he does not understand why central banks would purchase and hold bitcoin for the long term.
00:56
Bitcoin ETF Attracts $1.5 Billion Amid Market Downturn, Supported by Baby Boomer GenerationChainCatcher reports that, while bitcoin has plunged more than 50% from its October 2025 peak, spot bitcoin ETFs have still recorded a net inflow of about 1.5 billions USD over the past five trading days, with nearly all major issuers seeing capital influx. Bloomberg Intelligence ETF expert Eric Balchunas exclaimed, "Even I am impressed," attributing this wave of buying to older 'Baby Boomer' investors (born between 1946 and 1964), joking that they are "once again stepping in to save the market."
News