Financial institutions worldwide are accelerating artificial intelligence deployment, and new finastra research highlights how this shift is reshaping strategies, risk management, and customer experience across the sector. Summary AI use now near-universal across financial institutions Customer experience emerges as the primary battleground High confidence despite disruption and rapid transformation AI becomes the core innovation engine

About a week ago, bitcoin $BTC$69,114.30 dropped more than 10% in a day to around $60,000 before rebounding to $70,000 in recent days. The question is, did the slide mark “capitulation,” when holders panic-sell at a loss, exhaust bearish pressure and set the stage for a new bull run? The futures market says no, suggesting

Bitcoin has attempted to recover in recent sessions, but upward momentum has stalled as the market waits for a clearer direction. Price remains range-bound after a sharp correction, frustrating short-term traders. Despite this pause, historical indicators suggest a bottom may be forming. Past cycles show similar conditions often precede renewed recovery phases. Bitcoin Profitable Supply

While Bitcoin (BTC) has recently recovered to $70,000, analysts say this recovery does not represent a trend reversal. At this point, CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju also stated that he agreed, saying that Bitcoin currently has no bullish potential. CryptoQuant CEO X stated in a post on his social media account that there has been

China’s share of the global economy (measured by its proportion of worldwide GDP) has risen to an estimated 19.6%, according to the most recent data. This brings the country close to representing nearly one-fifth of the total global economic output. In the mid-1980s, China’s share was only about 2.9%, meaning its slice of the world

President Donald Trump sparked a viral debate on social media after a February 9 interview on Fox Business’s Kudlow show, where he discussed his decision-making around Kevin Warsh, his nominee for Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair. Short clips circulating on X (Twitter) show Trump saying he “made a big mistake,” fueling confusion over whether he now

Sell-side pressure for Bitcoin, which last week brought the world’s largest crypto to its lowest point since President Donald Trump was elected for a second term, has begun to abate. Analysts point to increasing demand from large buyers, the balance of aggressive buying and selling, and the percentage of supply in profit as evidence that

Bitcoin’s (BTC) latest price correction is reinforcing, rather than undermining, the long-standing 4-year halving cycle that has historically shaped the asset’s market behavior, according to a new report from Kaiko Research. The debate carries significant implications for traders and investors navigating Bitcoin’s volatility in early 2026. Bitcoin Is Following Its 4-Year Cycle Amid Sharp Correction

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has stated that stablecoins come with inherent risks in the financial sector for weaker economies. The latest caution was shared on the IMF’s official X page to highlight the attendant risks associated with the use of stablecoins. IMF warns of currency substitution and capital flight Notably, the IMF has expressed

Researchers are currently in a rush to find new ways to “quantum-proof” Bitcoin. BitMEX Research has proposed a series of technical escape routes that would allow users to recover their Bitcoin even if the network is forced to freeze vulnerable coins to prevent theft. The ‘quantum freeze’ Bitcoin developers might be forced to implement a

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