Trump is in hot pursuit of Powell, and PIMCO emphasizes that it is crucial for the market to let Powell finish his term. Click to view...
Illuvium, an NFT game project, was restructured and laid off due to poor operations, with some core contributors choosing to take pay cuts or receive their salaries in the form of tokens. The layoffs came last year when Illuvium released three interconnected games: Overworld, Arena and Zero, covering different game genres. Despite Illuvium's ambitious vision, after years of development, the community response has not been very positive. In December, co-founder Kieran Warwick admitted to "...
According to Coindesk, Standard & Poor's Global Ratings said in a report on Wednesday that the lack of regulation of stablecoins in the United States is one of the main obstacles to the adoption of the currency. Analysts led by Mohamed Damak pointed out that the lack of regulation is one of the main obstacles to the adoption of stablecoins in the United States and hinders the wider institutional adoption of stablecoins. Stablecoins will play an increasingly important role in on-chain transaction...
Gold-backed cryptocurrencies have underperformed this week as their prices have fallen sharply after rising more than 10% so far this year. Gold-backed tokens, including Paxos gold (PAXG) and Tether gold (XAUT), have fallen about 1% over the past week and are trading around $2,900, while the overall cryptocurrency market has rallied. The CoinDesk 20 index...
Rich Dad Poor Dad author Robert Kiyosaki took to social media to reiterate his 2013 book's prediction that February 2025 would be the biggest stock market crash in history. He said the crash would lead to a massive flow of money from the stock and bond markets to bitcoin, gold and silver. He predicted significant growth in bitcoin and advised investors to invest in cryptocurrencies and precious metals as early as possible. He stressed that even a small investment such as a Satoshi could bring hu...
Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, tweeted: "What do I think about TRUMP? Nothing. Unfortunately, the entire cryptocurrency world is shifting from'future 'to'farce'. I insist on buying real gold, real silver and real bitcoin. As a personal rule, I don't invest in any ETFs. I'm older and prefer'real '. "
According to River Research, Bitcoin's losses due to self-custody mismanagement have exceeded exchange-related events, totaling about 1.60 million BTC (worth over $1.50 billion), higher than the 1.20 million BTC (over $1.10 billion) losses caused by the Mt. Gox hack and the FTX bankruptcy. The study used a probabilistic model to analyze wallet activity and found that long-term (more than 10 years) unused wallets account for the main share of losses, while short-term inactive wallets have a lower...
According to the internal stock sales disclosed by the top 60 companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index in 2024, about 500 insiders, executives, investors, and other major shareholders collectively sold $36.90 billion worth of company stock, with Amazon Executive Chairperson Jeff Bezos accounting for more than a third of the total ($13.40 billion). Four crypto executives made it into the top 25: Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong at No. 8 with $636 million; MicroStrategy's Michael Saylor at No. 13 ...
Robert Kiyosaki, author of "Rich Dad Poor Dad," wrote on social media platform X, "BlackRock CEO Larry Fink is selling bitcoin, and I like to keep bitcoin in my wallet. I will not trust bitcoin in the BlackRock ETF. BlackRock is driving down the price of bitcoin so that big players can buy bitcoin under $100,000. I will continue to buy more bitcoin because bitcoin will continue to rise. I predict bitcoin will reach $350,000 in 2025."
Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, recently wrote on X: "Q: Is it too late to start buying Bitcoin? A: Not too late. The beauty of Bitcoin's design is that no matter how high the price rises, it's never too late to start buying. Bitcoin was designed to make everyone rich, even those who started late. Just don't be too greedy."