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1US crypto ETFs are pulling Bitcoiners into TradFi: BlackRock's Jay Jacobs2Accenture stock plummets 18% to near ten-year low under dual pressure from AI impact and Middle East turmoil3Is SpaceX the Ultimate Exit Liquidity for Billionaires?
Bitcoin drops 5 percent to $62,500 after $579 million wiped
Cointurk·2026/06/19 08:12
Forex Today: US-Iran talks called off, US Dollar extends rally to 13-month high
FXStreet·2026/06/19 08:00
Euro: Dollar strength weighs on pair – Deutsche Bank
FXStreet·2026/06/19 08:00

Shiba Inu On-Chain Signal Drops to 5-Year Low, Is a Price Rally Next?
Cryptonewsland·2026/06/19 08:00
New data ranks Bitcoin adoption by US states, and the wealth gap is showing
Cryptobriefing·2026/06/19 07:57
PancakeSwap offers USDC incentives for bridged SOL and jitoSOL on Base
Cryptobriefing·2026/06/19 07:57
USD/JPY Price Forecast: Consolidating above 161.00 amid growing intervention risks
FXStreet·2026/06/19 07:39
Bittensor validator warns Root Reborn proposal carries “substantial” risks
Crypto.News·2026/06/19 07:33

AllUnity debuts SEKAU, a fully reserved Swedish krona stablecoin
Cointelegraph·2026/06/19 07:06
Euro trims losses against British Pound despite bright UK Retail Sales data
FXStreet·2026/06/19 07:00
Flash
08:28
Watermelon prices plunge sharply"Recently, watermelons have become cheaper. Last week, ordinary Meidu Kirin watermelons were over 4 yuan per jin, and premium Meidu Kirin watermelons were over 5 yuan per jin," said a supermarket sales staff. On the Hema App, according to China New Economy and Finance, the Kirin Cream Watermelon is priced at 29.9 yuan per unit, about 3.48 yuan per jin, which is roughly 50% cheaper per jin compared to 60 yuan per unit on March 20.
08:28
Shipowners exercise caution amid sharp decline in shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz on FridayOn Friday morning, no oil tankers were seen leaving the Persian Gulf, but a very large crude carrier appeared off the coast of Muscat, the capital of Oman, indicating that the vessel had completed its passage through the strait. An Iranian-affiliated liquefied petroleum gas carrier and a Norwegian-flagged product tanker entered the Persian Gulf. Meanwhile, four fully laden very large crude carriers, which had been previously stranded inside the Gulf, are heading toward the strait. Two Indian-linked very large crude carriers set sail for the strait on Friday, while two others are moving east within the Gulf, reducing their distance to the strait.As the strait briefly calmed, the market began to question whether the US and Iran could finalize the disputed terms of the memorandum of understanding within the 60-day window. The planned bilateral meeting in Switzerland has been canceled; despite US discouragement, the Israeli military continues to strike southern Lebanon.Marisks, a maritime risk consultancy, stated in a research report to clients on Friday: “The outright cancellation of the first round of planned negotiations is a setback for the stability process in the region. If diplomatic dialogue cannot resume, maritime security conditions may remain volatile and all parties involved in shipping will continue to face uncertainty.”
08:20
Polymarket KOL refutes Bloomberg's "insider trading" report: the wallet belongs to an ordinary user known to them, not an insiderForesight News reported that Polymarket KOL Car posted on Twitter to refute Bloomberg's recent coverage regarding alleged large-scale insider trading on Polymarket. Previously, Bloomberg claimed to have discovered a wallet that made $1.5 million in profits through "insider trading" in Iran-related markets. Car stated that the wallet belonged to an ordinary user known to them, not an insider, and the actual profit was only around $300,000 (not $1.5 million). Bloomberg included the trading volume of this account in the frequent 80% range as profits, causing serious distortion of the data.Additionally, the account previously lost about $120,000 in the "peace agreement" related market, which Bloomberg did not mention. The Polysights data used marked thousands of regular trading accounts (including sports and crypto market traders) as "suspicious", while the vast majority of these accounts were not insider traders.
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