The price of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies fell on Thursday as the president of the Cleveland Federal Reserve, Beth Hammack, said she wouldn’t support cutting interest rates if forced to make a decision tomorrow. “With the data I have right now and with the information I have, if the meeting was tomorrow, I would not
This is a segment from the Forward Guidance newsletter. To read full editions, subscribe. As we reach the end of August, all eyes are once again on the Grand Tetons. Not because of its striking views, but because the annual Woodstock of central banking is about to go down. Tomorrow morning, Fed Chair Jerome Powell
Artificial intelligence and quantum computing are moving from theory into reality, and the tools that protect our data are being put to the test. In response, Asphere and QuStream have joined forces to build a blockchain that’s meant to stand up to the next wave of cryptographic threats, not someday, but from day one. The
Macro conditions suggest Bitcoin (BTC) might face a multi-week performance slowdown if global M2 money supply peaks in September, according to a recent report by Delphi Digital. The BTC-M2 relationship using a 10-week offset shows M2 data already rolling over roughly 8% from projected September highs. Bitcoin has historically followed M2 peaks with performance lags,
State Street, a Boston-based custody bank with $49 trillion in assets under its watch, is pushing deeper into digital assets by joining JPMorgan’s blockchain-based tokenized asset platform Digital Debt Service as the first third-party custodian. The first transaction State Street anchored was a $100 million tokenized commercial paper issuance by the Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation (OCBC),
I hate it when the bitcoin price falls — like it did this week, first from $118,000 to $115,000, and then $115,000 to $113,000 (and then $112,000 while I was writing; rude). It’s nerve-wrecking, terrifying and straight-up infuriating. We’re on this unavoidable monetary revolution and every identifiable sign is pointing in the same, upward direction
Bitcoin traded between $112,800 and $113,200 per coin from 9 to 11 a.m. Eastern on Aug. 21 as derivatives metrics showed steady open interest and heavier put activity over the past 24 hours. Futures Positioning Builds Across Venues; Binance and Bybit Trail CME Total bitcoin futures open interest (OI) stood at 711.18K BTC, equal to
Crypto exchanges Gemini and Bullish recently filed IPO documents, and they weren’t pretty. Despite the market for crypto IPOs being particularly hot in the wake of the blockbuster offering by Circle, these two filings reveal dismal profitability for even major incumbents of the industry. Bullish priced its IPO at $37 per share and it seemed