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

- XPL and WLFI tokens exemplify 2025 crypto's volatility trap, with 200% price surges and 25% drops driven by thin order books and whale activity. - Whale trades trigger cascading effects: XPL's $20M accumulation caused short squeezes, while WLFI's $27M outflows led to liquidity collapses. - Investors must adopt multi-layered risk strategies: limit leverage on low-volume tokens, monitor NVT ratios, and diversify with Ethereum. - Institutional best practices include 80% cold storage and proof-of-reserve aud

Pi Network’s protocol upgrade failed to spark a breakout, with PI still trading sideways on weak demand and persistent bearish sentiment.

- Solana (SOL-USD) trades at $188.40 with $102B market cap, showing whale accumulation and bullish technical indicators. - Institutional demand drives $1B+ treasury funds from Galaxy Digital, Pantera, and others, holding 1.72B in SOL (1.44% supply). - Technical analysis highlights $207 breakout potential with $250-$295 targets, supported by 6.86% staking yields and 3M active wallets. - Regulatory progress includes Visa's USDC pilot and VanEck's JitoSOL ETF filing, signaling institutional legitimacy for Sol

- Melania Meme Coin (MELANIA) trades at $0.21, down 97.34% from its January 2025 peak but up 5.16% from its June low. - Technical indicators suggest a fragile rebound, with $5.04M 24-hour volume and a market cap of $173.66M hinting at potential short-term demand-driven price spikes. - Fundamentally, MELANIA lacks intrinsic value, relying on social media sentiment and faces regulatory risks from the SEC's aggressive stance on unregistered tokens. - AI forecasts predict $1.06 by 2026 but ignore structural we

- XRP's 2025 trajectory hinges on whale activity, technical indicators, and institutional adoption amid regulatory clarity post-SEC ruling. - Large whale outflows ($1.5B in August) contrast with mid-sized whale accumulation during dips, signaling potential support at $3.00. - Institutional momentum (ODL's $1.3T Q2 volume, 11 ETF applications) and RLUSD growth reinforce XRP's structural bull case. - Derivatives volatility (OI at $8.11B) and SMA battlegrounds ($2.78-3.20) highlight risks, with ETF approvals

- Asia’s natural gas market is reshaping through cross-border infrastructure, decarbonization, and geopolitical alliances, driven by rising demand and energy security needs. - China expands pipelines and LNG imports, while Japan and South Korea deepen regional partnerships, using gas as a strategic tool to diversify energy sources and reduce coal reliance. - U.S. LNG dominance (95% of new export projects) fuels Asia’s 70% global LNG demand by 2030, but infrastructure bottlenecks and geopolitical tensions p

- Japan's BoJ ends YCC policy, triggering JGB market volatility and exposing structural risks. - Foreign investors shift to shorter-term JGBs amid liquidity concerns and rising yields. - High debt-to-GDP ratio and liquidity risks threaten Japan's fiscal stability and market resilience.
Share link:In this post: The government has summoned the two social media platforms over disinformation. Indonesia experienced public protests because of the spread of misinformation and disinformation. Indonesia wants social media platforms to improve on content moderation.
Share link:In this post: Moscow entices Washington with a rare earth proposal. Russian official says they can cooperate in nuclear energy as well. Exchange of incentives continues as part of efforts to end the war in Ukraine.

Share link:In this post: Horizon, Aave Labs’ new lending platform, is meant to enable institutions to borrow stablecoins against tokenized real-world assets (RWAs). Chainlink SmartData powers transparency with real-time NAV reporting and Proof of Reserves feeds. Major partners like Circle, VanEck, Securitize, Superstate, Centrifuge, WisdomTree, and Hamilton Lane are on board at launch.
- 16:35Mizuho Bank: The Fed Has Been "Slapped by Reality," Easing Cycle Is About to BeginBlockBeats news, on September 6, Mizuho Bank stated that the US August non-farm employment report further confirmed the weakening tone of the labor market, with employment, working hours, and income growth rates having fallen back to pandemic-era levels. Regardless of inflation, the Federal Reserve is almost certain to cut interest rates at the September meeting. A 25 basis point rate cut is almost a foregone conclusion, but if August inflation is weaker than expected, a 50 basis point cut is even more likely. The Fed's previous inflation forecasts have been "slapped in the face" by reality, and its 2026 unemployment rate forecast now faces the risk of not being fulfilled. Previously, they were too pessimistic about inflation and too optimistic about the labor market. It is expected that the Fed will launch a round of sustained easing, aiming to lower interest rates to what it considers a "neutral level," that is, to around 3% by March 2026. The new Fed chair is likely to further ramp up stimulus measures, bringing rates down to near 2%. However, the risk is that if inflation resurges, at least some of the stimulus measures will be withdrawn by 2027. (Golden Ten Data)
- 16:35This week, the net inflow into US spot Bitcoin ETFs reached $250 million.BlockBeats News, September 6, according to monitoring by Farside Investors, the net inflow of US spot bitcoin ETFs this week was $250 million, including: BlackRock IBIT: + $434.3 million Fidelity FBTC: + $25.1 million Bitwise BITB: - $76.9 million ARK ARKB: - $81.5 million Invesco BTCO: + $2.2 million Franklin EZBC: - $3.2 million VanEck HODL: - $13.2 million Grayscale GBTC: - $69.7 million Grayscale Mini BTC: + $33.2 million
- 16:34JPMorgan strategists: U.S. economic growth is gradually slowing, and they do not believe that Fed rate cuts can boost economic growth.BlockBeats News, on September 6, David Kelly, Chief Global Strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management, stated in a recent interview with CNBC that the weak employment report in August and other economic data indicate that the weakness in the US economy is intensifying. "Although the current economy has not fallen into recession, it is gradually slowing down. All the data consistently show that this already faltering economy—like a turtle that always moves slowly—is now nearly exhausted." Kelly also believes that, given factors such as deteriorating employment data, the Federal Reserve's expected rate cuts will not boost the overall economy. "I see the stock market rising today, which clearly reflects the market's expectation of imminent rate cuts, but this does not solve the fundamental problem. The government needs to recognize that if rates are cut now, it will reduce interest income for retirees and send more signals of rate cuts to the market. In that case, borrowers have no reason to borrow more money. The history of the entire 21st century tells us that rate cuts do not stimulate economic growth. After the financial crisis, rate cuts had no effect at all. Don't expect the Federal Reserve to save the economy."