CandleLibrarian

vip
Age 0.2 Year
Peak Tier 0
Collect various metrics and research reports, but trust my own backtesting more; I like to treat the market as an archive, slowly uncovering patterns.
The regulatory framework is finally starting to be seriously discussed. If BRCA can be implemented, the industry will at least have a clear set of rules to follow.
View Original
CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld News reports, citing Cointelegraph, that White House officials, legislators, and law enforcement agencies held a meeting to discuss the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act and cryptocurrency crime enforcement tools.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
BNB looks like it's about to surge, I'm following along.
BNB-0.94%
View Original
CryptoZaggy
BUY BNB NOW!
SL 593
TP 610
Let's go ✌
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Pause ≠ End, the powder keg is still there
View Original
CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld News: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu issued a statement on the 8th saying that after Iran stops firing at Israel, Israel will temporarily halt attacks on Iran, but he warned that if Iran resumes attacks on Israel, Israel will respond forcefully.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
I only take one note: The biggest change that modular blockchains bring to ordinary people is not "more advanced," but that in the future, your single transaction might actually involve several layers of outsourcing (execution/settlement/data not all on the same chain). Whether it saves money or not is another matter; if something really goes wrong, you first need to figure out which layer is taking the blame. Recently, AI agents that automatically place orders and interact are quite popular, but I care more about what permissions they actually sign and which bridges they use. Narratives can b
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
I’ve been organizing my transaction records lately, and I honestly advise myself not to wait until the end of the year to deal with it—otherwise you’ll end up going through old accounts until you start questioning your life… My current rough-and-ready method is: every time I deposit or withdraw funds, exchange coins, or transfer on-chain, I take screenshots and export a table, then drop everything into the same folder by month. For naming, use something like “2026-06_ExchangeA/WalletB”. Don’t chase perfection—what matters most is that you can actually find it. On-chain, those endless little in
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
These past two days, I’ve been going back through my backtesting records again. I found that stop-loss really is like a breakup… dragging it out without admitting it, and that little bit in the books that says “maybe it will come back” gets harder and harder to resist the more I look—then the trading fees, the time cost, and even the “emotional interest” all start compounding together. The longer I delay, the more it hurts. On the other hand, admitting the loss sooner and taking more time to split and handle the position does a lot to clear my head, and afterward I’m even more willing to execu
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Over the past couple of days, I’ve seen a whole bunch of “yield on yield” from re-pledging and “shared security.” To be blunt, what I’m most afraid of isn’t the risk stacking on top of itself—it’s the illusion that stacks on top of it… The curves that look so beautiful in backtests are, in many cases, just the same tail risk wrapped in a different shell and kept getting amplified. Especially when you realize the underlying security is actually propped up by the same batch of collateral—if something goes wrong in one part, it can trigger a chain reaction, and the profits can get liquidated or c
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Is the extended triangle drawn by Old Blunt indicating a breakout at 74K or a bottom at 56K? Which side are you betting on?
View Original
BlockBeatNews
Peter Brandt: Bitcoin is currently forming an expanding triangle pattern, and the bottom could be at around $56,000.
BlockBeats reports that renowned trader Peter Brandt has pointed out that Bitcoin is forming an expanding triangle, which is generally more reliable. According to measurement rules, the breakout point is approximately $74,000, and the target projected downward from the triangle's height is about $56,000.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
The average price of the WLD short position was 0.33, now it's 0.39, with a floating loss of -143%, yet it can still withstand until the liquidation price of 3.30. This position management is quite skillful.
WLD5.31%
View Original
CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld News reports that the WLD short position has reduced by 1,173,562.40 tokens, approximately $9,847.26. The current position size is $1,765,452.65, with an average price of $0.33. The current profit and loss is -$253,802.61 (-143.76%), with the current token price at $0.39 and the liquidation price at $3.30. This address shorted ZEC starting at $184, once experiencing an unrealized loss of $21 million, later turning profitable, and recently becoming the largest long position in the S&P 500, with a scale exceeding $70 million.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Lately, the more I look into what’s been going on-chain with RWA (Real-World Assets), the more it looks like rummaging through an archive and finding a pile of “seemingly liquid” folders: there are token shares on-chain and transaction records, but when it’s time to actually redeem, the terms are written more convolutedly than KYC… To put it plainly, liquidity is often just an illusion—someone is taking the other side in the secondary market. Whether the underlying assets can be redeemed on time and whether they can be unlocked when pressure hits is what really matters.
Over the past couple of
RWA-0.37%
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
From a cliff-like drop from 60.5% to 39.5%, the narrative of $80,000 in April is collapsing, and market confidence is more fragile than I imagined.
View Original
Original content no longer visible
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Brazilian publicly traded companies are also starting to hoard cryptocurrencies; is institutional FOMO just beginning?
View Original
MarsBitNews
OranjeBTC, a publicly listed company in Brazil, purchased 20 Bitcoins, bringing its total holdings to 3,762 Bitcoins.
Brazilian publicly traded company OranjeBTC disclosed an increase of approximately 20 Bitcoins, investing about $1.51M, with an average purchase price of around $75,346, and repurchased 289,100 shares of OBTC3 during the period. Currently holds 3,762 Bitcoins, with a total cost of approximately $395.33 million, and an average price of about $105,085. Since the beginning of the year, BTC has a return of 2.2%, with a second-quarter return of 2.01%.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Cryptographic linked bonds issued by banks account for 42%.
This number warrants careful consideration—institutions take the big share, retail investors get the leftovers, it's the old story.
View Original
WuSaidBlockchainW
According to Bits media, the Russian Central Bank said in its latest report that Russian residents currently hold about 3.8 billion rubles (about 52.62 million US dollars) in crypto-linked financial instruments. This figure is almost unchanged from 3.7 billion rubles in October last year, showing that residents’ interest in crypto investments has not increased. The report also shows that retail investors have put 1.7 billion rubles into crypto-linked corporate bonds. Including corporate investors, the bond market tied to cryptocurrency exchange rates totals 4.1 billion rubles, of which retail investors account for 42%. These bonds are mainly issued by large banks.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Traditional financial giants are finally doing serious accounting: by 2030, 10% of U.S. Treasury bonds will be on the blockchain, and stablecoins will need to absorb a demand of 1 trillion dollars in government bonds. This is not a prediction; it's a roadmap.
View Original
BlockBeatNews
Citibank: The tokenized securities market size may reach $5.5 trillion in the 2030s
Citigroup predicts in the report "Tokenization 2030: Wall Street On-Chain" that the real-world asset tokenization market will grow from approximately $17 billion to $5.5 trillion by 2030, with a scenario range of $2.7 trillion to $8.2 trillion. By 2030, about 10% of short-term U.S. Treasury bonds and 3% of publicly traded stocks will be tokenized; expansion of stablecoins could generate an additional demand of about $1 trillion for U.S. Treasuries, and if 10% of retail investors shift to digital trading platforms, demand for digital stocks could increase to approximately $2.6 trillion. Citigroup states that tokenization is expected to serve as a bridge between Wall Street and blockchain infrastructure, driving the digitalization of global capital markets.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
The Revolutionary Guard makes bold threats, and the market trembles first—this script has been seen too many times.
View Original
CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld News: Iran's Revolutionary Guard: Any further U.S. attacks will trigger a "more decisive" response.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
The president's veto, the implementation of MiCA in Poland is again on hold, and the struggle of small countries caught between regulations is quite real.
View Original
Original content no longer visible
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
The pragmatic Nordic countries are beginning to shift, and AI collaboration is a warning shot.
View Original
Original content no longer visible
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
The Black Sea Grain Corridor has been hit again, and supply chain risks are accumulating.
View Original
CoinNetwork
CryptoWorld News reports that the local government stated that a drone attack targeted the Izmail port area in Odessa, Ukraine.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
I looked into LSTs and re-staking materials last night, and the more I read, the more I feel that the returns basically boil down to two things: one is genuinely people paying for security / ordering rights / services (you bear the risk for them); the other is actually "subsidies" or valuation premiums supporting it, which looked very attractive early on. The risks are also pretty straightforward: penalties and discounts on the underlying staking layer, and layering re-staking adds another counterparty and rule change risk. If the contract/operation goes wrong, you simply won't have time to re
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
I feel like more people have been looking at whale addresses recently, but my own conclusion is still pretty cautious: don’t rush to copy trades. First figure out whether the other party is accumulating positions or hedging—otherwise you’re very likely to get pulled into “fake moves.” The reason is simple too: many large inflows into exchanges / big openings look like they’re about to surge, but in reality, the other side may already be holding spot assets and is just using contracts to lock in risk; or during staged accumulation they deliberately create a bit of noise to attract attention.
Th
MEME7.33%
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share