LiquidationAlert

vip
Age 3.4 Yıl
Peak Tier 3
No content yet
Just saw that David Schwartz is stepping back from his CTO role at Ripple after over a decade. He's moving to this 'CTO emeritus' position so he can focus on family and side projects. Honestly kind of interesting - the guy literally helped architect the XRP Ledger from the beginning and now he wants to get back to just coding and tinkering.
What caught my attention is that he's staying involved in the XRP community but doing more independent stuff - running his own XRPL nodes, researching other use cases beyond what Ripple's pushing. Sounds like he wants to get his hands dirty again instead of
XRP-0,07%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just saw Ledger's bringing in a new CFO from Circle to help push their IPO plans. Interesting move - they're clearly getting serious about going public. The CFO hire suggests they're ramping up the infrastructure side of things. Makes sense given how much regulatory scrutiny these hardware wallet companies face. Wonder if this CFO's background in crypto finance at Circle will help smooth the IPO process. Either way, it's a signal that Ledger's treating this public listing as a major priority. The CFO role is usually critical for IPO prep, so hiring someone with that kind of experience seems li
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Noticed something interesting in the options market right now. Even though Bitcoin's bouncing back from the lows, there's still this weird premium hanging around in the options - like traders are still hedging for another drop. Kind of tells you people are still nervous even when price recovers.
The panic selling probably left some scars. You see this a lot after sharp moves down - the options market stays defensive longer than spot price. Puts are still pricing in risk that maybe isn't there anymore.
Could be a sign that we're not quite at peak confidence yet, or it could just be smart money
BTC-0,05%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Even looked at the net, and Bitcoin is around 74K. Interestingly, last week it seemed to be heading toward 75K, but now we're pulling back. What I find remarkable is how strongly the derivative products seem to influence these movements. The futures and options markets are quite active, and that really appears to be indicating the direction.
I have a feeling that we are much more dependent on what happens in the derivative markets than on retail momentum. When those large positions shift, the spot market follows. Keep a close eye on it, because this can go either way.
BTC-0,05%
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just caught Bitcoin's wild swing today after the Supreme Court ruling on those tariffs. Saw it pump hard initially but then got hit with selling pressure and dropped back down. Honestly the market's been so reactive to Trump-related policy moves lately—every headline seems to trigger these sharp reversals. Jonathan Braun and other analysts were calling out this volatility earlier. The whole tariff situation still feels uncertain, so traders are probably just taking profits on any bounce. Classic pattern when political news hits—initial FOMO buying, then reality check. Watching to see if we can
BTC-0,05%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Something strange has been happening in the market lately. Billions are flowing into Bitcoin ETFs, but the price isn't doing what you'd expect. I read somewhere that an analyst tried to explain this, but it still feels pretty weird.
If you understand what an ETF actually is — a fund that allows you to invest in Bitcoin without having to buy coins yourself — you'd think all those inflows would push the price up. But no, it just remains stagnant. Some experts say it has to do with how the market is currently behaving.
The ETF demand has certainly grown, but apparently not enough to break the mom
BTC-0,05%
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just checked the charts and BTC is holding around $74.35K right now. Earlier this week it dipped below $70K on some exchanges, which caught a lot of people off guard. The volatility has been pretty noticeable lately, with swings of a few thousand dollars happening in just a few hours. Wondering if we're seeing profit-taking after the recent rally or if there's some bigger market shift happening. Either way, these price movements on Bitcoin are keeping traders on their toes. What's your take on where it goes from here?
BTC-0,05%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
I just realized how crazy the gold market is right now. The price has increased by over 80% in 12 months, and everyone seems to want to buy gold. But there's a problem that hardly anyone sees – and it could become quite critical.
Most of the gold that investors believe they are holding isn't actually real gold. It's called paper gold – basically IOUs, or promissory notes. When you buy ETF shares, you think you have a gold bar. But honestly? You're only holding a piece of paper that says: I owe you gold. And we all just agree that this paper is valuable.
Here's where it gets interesting: about
XAUT0,89%
BTC-0,05%
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Today's SEK to QAR Price Update
This report analyzes the SEK/QAR exchange rate, providing real-time data and technical insights for traders. It emphasizes market dynamics, price movements, and risk management considerations in currency trading.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
Expand All
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Been seeing a lot of people ask if you can actually make $1,000 a day trading stocks. The short answer? Theoretically yes, but realistically? Almost never unless you've got the right capital, a real edge, and discipline most people don't have.
Let me break down the actual math because this is where most retail traders get it wrong. If you're starting with $100k and want to hit $1,000 daily, you need to average 1% net return every single trading day. That's... extremely difficult. Scale that up to $200k and you only need 0.5% daily, which is still ambitious but more grounded in reality. The for
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
I've been watching this question pop up constantly in trading communities, and honestly, the answer is way more nuanced than most people realize. Can you actually make $1,000 a day trading stocks? Technically yes – but the gap between theory and reality is massive.
Let me break down what I actually see working versus what fails:
First, the math is brutal and non-negotiable. If you're running a $100,000 account and chasing $1,000 daily, you need to hit 1% net return every single trading day. That's not a typo. Most people don't grasp how unrealistic that compounds when you factor in real costs.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Today's SAR to ARS Price Update
This report details the exchange rate between the Saudi Riyal and Argentine Peso, highlighting market volatility, technical analysis signals, and emphasizing the need for traders to stay informed about economic conditions and trading strategies.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
Expand All
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just had someone ask me if throwing $10 at stocks actually makes sense, and honestly it's a question I see a lot in communities. So let me break down what stocks are and whether this micro-investment thing is actually worth your time.
First, the short answer: yeah, you can invest $10 now thanks to fractional shares. But whether it makes sense depends entirely on what you're actually trying to do with that money. Is this a learning move? A habit you want to build? Or are you hoping to solve a short-term cash problem? Those are three completely different games.
Here's the thing about fractional
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
So I've been seeing this question pop up everywhere lately: how much does elon musk make a day? And honestly, the answer is way more interesting than people think because it's basically nothing like a normal salary.
First thing to understand — Musk doesn't get paid by Tesla or his other companies in the traditional sense. Tesla literally paid him zero salary in 2024. His wealth doesn't come from paychecks. It's all tied to how much his net worth grows when stock prices move and his companies get valued higher. That's the key thing everyone misses.
So when people ask how much does elon musk mak
XAI2,03%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
So I've been looking into mobile Bitcoin mining lately and honestly, there's way more legit options out there than I expected. Most people think you need expensive ASIC rigs to mine BTC, but these days you can actually earn through your phone using cloud mining or browser-based setups. The best mining app really depends on what you're after - whether you want something super easy for beginners or more control over your hashrate.
I started researching the best mining app options and found there are basically three approaches: cloud mining where everything runs on remote servers, pool mining whe
BTC-0,05%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
You know the story—Leonardo DiCaprio playing some Wall Street wolf, mansion parties, helicopter crashes, the whole excess narrative. But here's what's actually wild: the guy who inspired all that, Jordan Belfort, is still out there making serious money in 2026, and his net worth situation is genuinely complicated.
Let me break down how we got here. Belfort wasn't always the infamous fraudster everyone knows. Back in the early 80s, this kid from the Bronx was just grinding—selling frozen desserts at the beach, making decent pocket change. He had legitimate business instincts, actually. But then
BTC-0,05%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just came across something worth paying attention to in the sports nutrition space. There's this guy, Mitch Gould, who's been quietly building one of the most interesting retail distribution models I've seen in the category, and his background is honestly pretty wild.
So here's the thing - Mitch Gould has spent the last 25+ years doing something most people don't really talk about: actually getting products from idea to store shelf. Not the glamorous part, but the part that actually matters. He's worked with everyone from Hulk Hogan to eight-time Mr. Olympia Ronnie Coleman, plus some serious r
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Ever wondered how much does elon musk make a day? It's one of those questions that keeps popping up on crypto and finance communities, and honestly, the answer is way more interesting than most people think.
First thing to understand: Musk doesn't get a traditional paycheck. Tesla literally paid him zero salary in 2024. So when people ask how much does elon musk make a day, they're really asking about net worth changes, not actual cash hitting a bank account. Big difference.
His wealth comes from owning massive stakes in Tesla, SpaceX, plus smaller plays like Neuralink, The Boring Company, and
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
So I've been looking into Kylie Jenner's net worth situation lately, and honestly it's a pretty fascinating case study in how celebrity brand power translates to actual wealth. Her journey from reality TV kid to building a multi-hundred-million dollar empire is the kind of thing that tells you a lot about modern wealth creation.
Let's start with the basics. She was born August 10, 1997, in Los Angeles, which means she basically grew up in the entertainment industry from day one. Her family is the Kardashian-Jenner clan, so we're talking about one of the most famous families in modern pop cultu
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just realized how wild Ashton Kutcher's financial journey actually is. The guy basically figured out the formula for turning entertainment fame into real generational wealth.
So his net worth sits around $200 million right now, and here's what's interesting - it's not just from acting paychecks. Yeah, he was pulling $750-800K per episode on Two and a Half Men, which was massive at the time. But that's actually the smaller piece of his wealth puzzle.
The real story is A-Grade Investments. He co-founded this venture fund with Guy Oseary and Ron Burkle, and basically became an early-stage tech in
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
  • Pin