Ser_ngmi

vip
Age 7.9 Year
Peak Tier 2
Full-time crypto doom prophet, part-time actually profitable trader. Perma-bear who secretly buys every dip. Will tell you why your favorite project will fail.
Just checked XRP and it's looking pretty weak right now. The top 100 token dropped to $1.35 today, sitting just above that critical $1.40 support level. Earlier this week it tried bouncing back but couldn't hold above $1.44, and the selling volume was insane - way more than usual trading activity.
What caught my eye is how XRP keeps forming lower highs since early 2025. Every time it tries to recover toward $1.55-$1.60, it gets rejected. The chart pattern is pretty clear at this point - we're in a downtrend until proven otherwise. Right now traders are basically watching if $1.40 holds or if w
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I see that Bitcoin is hovering around $72.77K, but the level of over $75K remains difficult to reach. The SEC and CFTC have recently issued new guidelines on crypto tokens, and that seems to be slowing down the momentum. It feels like the market is waiting for clarity before a real breakout occurs. Regulations around crypto assets are becoming increasingly strict, so traders have become more cautious. Interesting to see how these policy measures are directly affecting the price action.
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I wonder why, while everyone is waiting for the last-minute US inflation data on Friday, the Bitcoin market remains so calm? Due to the Iran war and energy shocks, the March CPI is expected to rise to 3.4%, yet Bitcoin traders are only pricing in a 2.5% move. It seems the market doesn't see this news as a big deal.
Meanwhile, volatility indicators have dropped to their lowest levels in four months. The BVIV index has fallen to 46.5%, meaning the market was expecting a minimum daily move of 2.9%. Normally, this would be around 3.4%. The Bitcoin price is currently at $72.86k, but traders are not
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You know what's wild looking back at 2025? Pretty much every bitcoin price forecast turned out to be completely off. Like, seriously off.
I've been thinking about this lately - all those confident predictions about where BTC price would go in 2025, and reality just went a totally different direction. It's kind of a reminder that nobody really knows what's coming in crypto markets, no matter how much data they throw at it.
The thing is, you see this every cycle. Analysts come out with their year-end targets, everyone gets hyped or scared based on the narrative, and then the market just does its
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Lately, the flow of funds into Bitcoin ETFs has become quite interesting. I saw news that the largest inflow has been coming in since February, and it’s worth watching whether this is just a rebound or the start of a bigger trend.
It's not clear whether institutional investors are regaining interest or if entry through ETFs is becoming more common, but anyway, the increasing inflow into coin ETFs seems to be a positive signal for market sentiment. I’m curious to see if this trend will continue.
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Looking back at Bitcoin's absolutely insane 2017 bull run still gives me chills. From $900 at the start of the year to breaking past $20,000 by year-end - that's a 22x move that basically introduced crypto to the mainstream.
I remember the energy back then. Everyone was talking about it. Your barber, your taxi driver, random people at parties - suddenly everyone had an opinion on Bitcoin. The bitcoin price action in 2017 was relentless. Every dip got bought immediately, and the FOMO was real.
What's crazy is how that cycle played out. The momentum just kept building through the year. Q4 was ab
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Today's INR to XOF Price Update
This report discusses the exchange rate between the Indian Rupee (INR) and the West African CFA franc (XOF), providing real-time data, market analysis, and forecasts to assist traders in decision-making.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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There's something wild about Satoshi Nakamoto's net worth that most people don't fully appreciate. The mysterious creator of Bitcoin is sitting on a fortune that would make them one of the richest people alive — we're talking somewhere north of $80 billion in theoretical wealth — yet they've never touched a single coin or revealed who they actually are.
Think about that for a second. Around 1.1 million BTC, all mined in Bitcoin's earliest days when you could run the entire network on a few laptops. That stash has just been sitting there, completely untouched since 2010. Fifteen years. Nothing
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Just realized Bitcoin Pizza Day is now worth $1.1 billion. Let that sink in for a second - those 10,000 BTC someone spent on pizza back in 2010 would be worth over a billion dollars today. Absolutely wild when you think about it.
I mean, the guy literally paid for two Papa John's pizzas with what's now a fortune. Back then Bitcoin was basically worthless, so it made total sense. But now every May 22 rolls around and the crypto community celebrates this moment like it's a holiday. Bitcoin Pizza Day has become this whole thing - people joke about it, analyze it, use it as a reference point for h
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Just thinking about something that doesn't get enough attention in market discussions. When geopolitical tensions escalate and drag on, capital tends to look for exits. And that's where bitcoin comes into play in ways most people don't fully appreciate.
We've seen this pattern before. During periods of regional instability, investors get nervous about traditional safe havens. They start looking at alternatives that operate outside the traditional financial system. Bitcoin, being borderless and censorship-resistant, suddenly becomes relevant not just as a speculative asset but as actual portfol
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Lately, observing the geopolitical tensions, I’ve discovered an interesting pattern. As the conflict between the United States and Iran is likely to prolong, I believe it’s important to pay attention to the coin market, especially Bitcoin.
Historically, whenever geopolitical instability intensifies, investors tend to shift their focus from traditional financial assets to alternative assets like Bitcoin. The greater the political risk, the higher the value of cross-border assets tends to rise. If this conflict continues for the next few months, the cryptocurrency market is likely to benefit sig
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Just saw that the crypto market structure bill got delayed again. Apparently there's some back-and-forth happening right now over stablecoin yield rules - industries are pushing back on the revised compromise. This is kind of interesting because it shows how much regulatory details still matter for the whole space. Makes you wonder what the final version will actually look like and how it'll affect crypto marketing and how projects can communicate with users. These legislative moves always seem to take forever but they do shape what's possible down the line. Anyone else following this or is it
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Just been looking at Bitcoin's four-year cycle patterns, and honestly the signals are starting to feel concerning. Some analysts are flagging that we could see another 30% drop if this cycle plays out like before. The cryptocurrency crash scenarios keep getting mentioned more often lately, and it's making me think about where the real support levels actually are. Not saying it will definitely happen, but the historical patterns around halving cycles suggest we shouldn't be too comfortable at current levels. Worth keeping an eye on the macro picture here. Anyone else been tracking these cycle p
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Ever wonder what is bitcoin mining and why it's such a big deal? I've been diving into this lately and there's actually a lot more going on than most people realize.
So basically, bitcoin mining is the process where miners use computational power to solve complex mathematical problems on the blockchain. When they crack the code, they verify a block of transactions and get rewarded with newly minted BTC plus transaction fees. Pretty straightforward concept, but the execution has evolved dramatically.
Back when Bitcoin first launched in 2009, anyone could mine from their laptop. Miners were gett
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Just scrolled through some wild data on global political wealth and honestly, it's a bit mind-bending. The richest president in the world right now? We're talking some seriously astronomical numbers that would make most of us do a double take.
So here's what caught my attention. You've got leaders who aren't just running countries—they're basically sitting on financial empires. Putin's estimated net worth supposedly hovers around 70 billion, which honestly feels almost unreal when you think about it. Then there's Trump at around 5.3 billion, and you can see how these numbers just dwarf what mo
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I've been diving deep into trading psychology lately, and there's this story that keeps coming back to me about a Japanese trader named Takashi Kotegawa—most know him by his handle BNF (Buy N' Forget). What strikes me most isn't just the numbers, though $150 million from $15,000 in eight years is objectively insane. It's how he got there that actually matters.
Here's the thing: Kotegawa had nothing going for him on paper. No wealthy family, no Ivy League degree, no connections. Just a $13-15k inheritance after his mother passed and an absolutely relentless work ethic. Most people would've blow
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Just came across an interesting take on semiconductor industry trends that got me thinking. The Long View highlighted something worth paying attention to - how Nvidia, TSM, ASML, AMD, and AVGO are basically dominating the semiconductor space right now.
What caught my eye is how these companies have built serious competitive moats. We're talking about structural advantages that are pretty hard to replicate. Whether it's Nvidia's GPU dominance, ASML's lithography tech monopoly, or TSM's manufacturing capabilities - each of these players has carved out their own fortress in the semiconductor indu
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Been trading crypto for a while now and realized a lot of newer people don't really understand what pnl meaning actually is. Like, it sounds simple on the surface, but there's way more to it than just checking if you're up or down on a trade.
So here's the thing about pnl in crypto. It's basically tracking whether you made or lost money on your positions, but the tricky part is knowing which version matters for what you're doing. You've got realized pnl (money you actually locked in by closing a position) and unrealized pnl (the gains or losses just sitting there while you're still holding). T
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Just caught wind of something that's got everyone watching the clock right now. The Fed is calling an emergency meeting tomorrow at 4 PM ET, and honestly, this kind of thing doesn't happen for routine stuff. When central banks go off-script like this, it usually means they're seeing something in the system that needs immediate attention.
From what's circulating, the focus is on liquidity pressures — basically the Fed's concerned about cash flow through the financial system and might be looking at ways to pump money back in if things get tighter. This isn't your standard policy adjustment. Emer
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Been getting a lot of questions lately about how wallet addresses actually work, so figured I'd break it down.
Basically, a wallet address is just your unique identifier on the blockchain - think of it like an email address but for crypto. Without it, there's no way to distinguish between accounts or send funds anywhere. Each blockchain has its own format too. Bitcoin addresses run 26-35 characters and start with 1, 3, or bc1. Ethereum's are 42 characters starting with 0x. Pretty straightforward once you get it.
What's interesting is how the blockchain uses these addresses to verify transactio
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