Author: voice

Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko publicly rejected Senator Bernie Sanders’ AI jobs warning. The senator argues artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics could wipe out millions of American jobs. Sanders paired the warning with a renewed call to ban super PACs. Yakovenko answered with a string of posts defending markets, profit, and decentralized finance (DeFi). Sanders’ AI

Bitcoin’s supply in loss has crossed 10.46 million $BTC, a level that has appeared near past market bottoms. At the same time, new buy walls around $59,400-$61,100 suggest buyers are defending support as traders watch a possible move toward $68,500. Bitcoin Supply in Loss Hits 10.46M $BTC as Bottom Signal Returns Bitcoin’s supply in loss

Bitcoin ( $BTC) is trading at $61,822 on June 7, 2026, at 8:35 a.m. EDT, caught between a deeply oversold momentum reading on shorter timeframes and relentless selling pressure from moving averages across the daily chart. The technical picture this weekend is mixed but carries a clear bearish lean, with the $63,000 level standing as

ChatGPT’s simulated investment portfolio has emerged as one of the standout performers in 2026, delivering an approximately 60% year-to-date gain and significantly outperforming the broader stock market. The performance comes from an ongoing paper-trading competition hosted by Rallies AI Arena, where leading AI models manage virtual portfolios using real-time market prices. Starting with a virtual

Bitcoin ($BTC) threatens to “purge further” as realized losses in the 2026 bear market fail to beat records. Key points: Bitcoin realized losses have not yet surpassed the 2022 total despite market cap being higher. History suggests that a fresh round of capitulation should occur before a bear-market bottom appears. Retail investor conviction is still

Michael Saylor may have offered a clue about Strategy’s (MSTR) next move after last week’s surprise bitcoin sale. On Sunday, the company’s executive chairman posted the chart traditionally used to track Strategy’s bitcoin purchases on X, writing: “A good time to add more dots.” Market observers have viewed such posts as a precursor to a

Bitcoin is back to trading at levels seen in early February: near $60,000. But this time, the response from institutions is totally different. Today, they are aggressively selling into the dip, ETF flows indicate, unlike in February, when selling slowed as prices dropped to near $60,000. That marks a fundamental shift in how institutions view

Bitcoin dropping below $60,000 to a fresh cycle low has left investors searching for a culprit. According to Greg Cipolaro, global head of research at NYDIG, there probably isn’t only one. In a report last week, he argued that bitcoin and the broader crypto market is facing several overlapping headwinds that have been weighing on

Bill Barhydt built Abra around a simple idea: Crypto should function like a bank. In 2018, Abra became one of the first companies to offer what Barhydt describes as a full crypto banking service, allowing customers to trade, earn, borrow and make payments from a single platform. Eight years later, as the company prepares to

Bear market comments and speculations have returned to the cryptocurrency space as bitcoin erased over $400 billion from its market cap in weeks, going down from over $82,000 to a Friday bottom of $59,000 on Friday – its lowest position in 19 months. Although it managed to rebound above $60,000 quickly, analysts are now split

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