Aliens Didn’t Build This Chinese Chip. You Won’t Believe the Numbers!
If you’re into numbers, at raw throughput it clears the Visa and MasterCard benchmarks during their busiest hours. Not my business, but not tiny either.
If you’re into numbers, at raw throughput it clears the Visa and MasterCard benchmarks during their busiest hours. Not my business, but not tiny either.
Markus Infanger, a leader at RippleX, has been explaining that traditional financial systems like SWIFT are designed for sending messages, not actually moving money.
Mike Selig, chairman of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), declared that blockchain-powered prediction markets might just be the panacea for our era’s most pressing ailment: the rampant spread of falsehoods. A veritable alchemist’s dream, where the very fabric of truth is woven through the arcane dance of decentralized ledgers and speculative contracts.

Solana ETFs, it seems, are the toast of the town among institutional investors, while XRP funds content themselves with the rambunctious company of retail traders. A new report from Bloomberg Intelligence analysts James Seyffart and Sharoon Francis reveals this curious dichotomy.

The week unfurled like a tragic opera, with Bitcoin, the indomitable protagonist, reclaiming its throne, while the chorus of altcoins wailed in discord. Spot Bitcoin ETFs, with their $167.03 million in net inflows, reversed the fleeting humiliation of last week’s outflows. Blackrock’s IBIT, ever the opportunist, seized $109.31 million, while Fidelity’s FBTC trailed with $60.09 million, and Vaneck’s HODL, the humble servant, added $4.87 million.

Over the past several months, XRP has struggled to regain bullish momentum. The asset has been trading in a descending structure marked by lower highs and repeated failures at resistance zones. Even now, the broader trend indicators remain positioned above the current price, reinforcing the idea that the market has been under sustained pressure. However, the latest price behavior suggests that the pace of decline is beginning to slow.
In a tale that would make even the most seasoned Wodehousian eyebrows raise, the Gwangju District Prosecutors’ Office concluded a most peculiar episode of Bitcoin retrieval. The booty, totaling 320.8 BTC, was sold at market prices, netting a tidy sum of roughly 31.59 billion won-about $22 million for those keeping score in dollars rather than wonky units.
Yet, for all its pretensions, AI remains but a squire to the knight of human traders, offering counsel from the shadows rather than wielding the sword of direct action. The core trading infrastructure, that ancient fortress of human control, remains unbreached by these digital sycophants.

Crypto market strength extended into Tuesday, with bitcoin gaining by 3.9% since midnight UTC to trade at $71,000 while ether (ETH) is back above $2,000, a level it recently had problems surpassing. Oh, here we go again-crypto’s version of a yo-yo diet.

The rebound also pushed Bitcoin above its Exponential Moving Average (EMA9) near $68,428, signaling short-term bullish momentum. Or, as I like to call it, “the market’s version of a confidence boost after a bad day at the office.”