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- BitMine Immersion (BMNR) becomes largest institutional Ethereum holder with 1.71M ETH ($7.9B), reshaping supply dynamics through aggressive accumulation. - BMNR's "mNAV flywheel" model accelerates NAV growth by 640% via ATM stock offerings and ETH staking, outpacing MicroStrategy's Bitcoin strategy. - Ethereum's 4.9% circulating supply control creates "sovereign put" effect, stabilizing prices while CLARITY Act legitimizes ETH as utility token with $33B ETF inflows. - Institutional backing from ARK Inves

- Fidelity's Ethereum ETP (FETH) demonstrates the reflection effect in investor behavior, showing risk-seeking during losses and risk-averse during gains. - FETH's simplified structure amplifies sentiment-driven flows, creating volatility cycles as investors react emotionally to market swings. - Asset allocators exploit these patterns through counter-cyclical strategies, leveraging regulatory credibility and low fees to capitalize on behavioral mispricings. - Institutional adoption and weekly trading patte

- PARTI fell 86.53% in 24 hours but surged 63320% over the past year, showing extreme volatility and strong recovery. - Short-term declines highlight sensitivity to market dynamics, while long-term gains reflect resilience and accumulation by holders. - Analysts attribute the rebound to positive sentiment, technical indicators, and buyers capitalizing on volatility.

- Investors voluntarily dismissed a class action lawsuit against Strategy Inc. and CEO Michael Saylor over alleged inadequate Bitcoin risk disclosures. - The case centered on unreported impacts of ASU 2023-08 accounting changes, with plaintiffs withdrawing claims after court dismissal with prejudice. - The outcome highlights corporate crypto transparency challenges, as Strategy remains the largest corporate Bitcoin holder amid evolving legal standards. - Despite dismissal, the case underscores regulatory s

- Hong Kong’s HK$500M crypto investment and 2025 Stablecoins Ordinance aim to establish the city as a global digital asset hub through regulated innovation. - The framework mandates 100% reserve-backed stablecoins and attracts $1.5B in July 2025, while RWA tokenization grows 380% to $24B by 2025. - Institutional players like SenseTime and Fosun prioritize blockchain, mining, and RWA infrastructure, leveraging Hong Kong’s pro-crypto stance over Singapore’s restrictions. - Early-stage investors benefit from

- ONDO, an Ethereum-based altcoin, consolidates between $0.73–$1.19 with RSI 55–65, signaling moderate bullish momentum ahead of a potential 40–50% price surge above $1.20. - While short-term correlated with Bitcoin, ONDO has outperformed BTC by 64.7% in a month, driven by RWA tokenization, institutional partnerships, and Ethereum ecosystem growth. - A declining Bitcoin dominance (58% in August 2025) and Total3 index breakout suggest a maturing bull cycle, with ONDO positioned as a leading indicator for al

- MoonBull ($MOBU) redefines meme coins with structured incentives, Ethereum-based infrastructure, and a scarcity-driven whitelist model. - Its 5,000–10,000 whitelist slots offer early access, bonus tokens, and secret staking rewards, with $2.8M raised and 120% weekly growth. - Leveraging Ethereum's Layer 2 upgrades, MoonBull combines institutional-grade security with meme coin virality, targeting high-conviction investors. - Tokenomics allocate 30% to liquidity pools and 20% to staking, creating compoundi

- XRP consolidates near $3.00 support, a key psychological and technical level tested by 13% sell-offs but resilient since 2025. - Institutional adoption surges post-SEC commodity reclassification, unlocking $7.1B in flows and $1.3T in Q2 ODL transactions. - Technical indicators show bullish momentum with $3.08–$3.10 as critical breakout threshold, but risks persist below $2.85. - Whale accumulation and ETF approvals signal long-term confidence, though macroeconomic headwinds and Bitcoin weakness pose near

- U.S. appeals court ruled Trump’s IEEPA-justified tariffs illegal, citing constitutional limits on executive tax authority. - Market volatility surged as S&P 500 fell 12.9% in 2025, with investors shifting to gold and fixed-income assets. - Tariffs triggered $71B in costs for U.S. SMEs and accelerated supply chain fragmentation, raising production costs by up to 15%. - Supreme Court’s decision could reshape trade policy, risking 6% GDP decline or unraveling trade agreements with China/Mexico. - Legal unce

- Chainlink partners with U.S. Commerce Department to bring real GDP, PCE Price Index, and other macroeconomic data on-chain, democratizing access and enabling TradFi-DeFi integration. - Institutional clients like JPMorgan, UBS, and Fidelity use Chainlink infrastructure to automate compliance, tokenize assets, and execute cross-chain settlements for U.S. Treasuries. - U.S. government publishing GDP data on Bitcoin/Ethereum validates Chainlink’s role as a trusted infrastructure provider, supported by ISO 27
- 20:22The Dow Jones Index closed up by 617.08 points, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq both rose.ChainCatcher news, according to Golden Ten Data, the Dow Jones Index closed up 617.08 points, or 1.36%, at 46,108 points on Thursday, September 11; the S&P 500 Index rose 55.43 points, or 0.85%, to 6,587.47 points; and the Nasdaq Composite Index increased by 157.01 points, or 0.72%, to 22,043.07 points.
- 20:09All three major U.S. stock indexes hit record highs, Golden Dragon Index rises nearly 3%According to ChainCatcher, citing Golden Ten Data, U.S. stocks closed higher on Thursday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average preliminarily up 1.36%, the S&P 500 up 0.85%, and the Nasdaq up 0.7%, all reaching new record closing highs. Tesla (TSLA.O) rose 6%, Oracle (ORCL.N) fell more than 6%, and Figure closed up 24% on its first day of trading. The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index closed up 2.89%, Alibaba (BABA.N) rose 7.98%, JD.com (JD.O) rose 3%, and Baidu (BIDU.O) rose nearly 4%.
- 20:02The U.S. House of Representatives plans to vote on a temporary funding bill next Monday.According to Jinse Finance, citing five U.S. Republican officials, Republican leaders are planning to hold a House vote next week on a temporary spending bill to extend government funding until November 21—the Friday before Thanksgiving. House Appropriations Committee Chairman Cole confirmed on Thursday that a vote will take place next Monday, a move that will advance a measure Democratic leaders have already indicated they will veto. Cole said, "We can do it. The gap is not that big anymore. But it is also difficult to get this done in the little time we have left, because I may have to finish before the end of next week." If the temporary funding bill passes the House, Senate Republicans may also bring the bill to the agenda next week. Currently, the November 21 date has not been fully finalized.