I don't trade much; I focus more on project research and narrative analysis. I like to piece information together into a single chart, making it easy for people to see at a glance where the hype is coming from.
An average price of 0.51 has yielded a current unrealized profit of 191%. The operations of well-known traders are indeed stable, but how long can the narrative of Worldcoin last?
CryptoWorld News reports that well-known trader Loracle has increased his long position in WLD by 1,367,407.20 tokens, approximately $2,069,148.25. Currently, the position size is $6,195,900.40, with an average price adjusted from $0.52 to $0.51. The current profit and loss stand at +$1,184,445.66 (+191.17%), with the current token price at $0.64 and the liquidation price at $0.
CryptoWorld News reports that the prediction market shows the chances of the California billionaire wealth tax going to a vote are rapidly decreasing, currently at only 27%. California Governor Gavin Newsom is working to stop the proposal before the June 25 deadline.
I’ve been watching the 65,000 level all morning, and I finally waited until the big shot spoke up and confirmed it.
View Original
TeacherAbu
Still a perfect prediction!! Keep holding the long positions, during the day BTC might retrace to 65,000 and ETH to 1705, which are also opportunities to enter long positions. This wave of rally is not over yet. #我的Gate交易时刻
$12.6M in sell orders stayed unfilled for 15 hours—are the market makers waiting for a bite? The liquidation heatmap shows 63k–63.9k stacked like a sandwich; the current price is 62910—one bullish candle could trigger a chain reaction.
View Original
AriaNaka
$BTC Large Limit Order Alert A $12.60M ask wall sitting at 63,022 on Hyperliquid. Placed 15 hours ago — still 0% filled. Look above it. The liquidation heatmap shows a massive cluster stacked between 63,000–63,900. Stops, liquidations, orders — all piled into the same zone. Price is at 62,910. One push away.
BTC buying pressure is quite strong, but with such a large order gap, the main players can withdraw at any time. Don't just get carried away by the data.
CoinWorld News, according to early issuance data from A, the total trading volume of BTC and ETH main forces in the past 24 hours is as follows: BTC has a total transaction of $1.95B, with $1.23B in buy transactions and $713 million in sell transactions, with a trading difference of $520 million. ETH has a total transaction of $1.11B, with $645 million in buy transactions and $464 million in sell transactions, with a trading difference of $181 million. The latest data shows that the main forces still have positions at key price levels: BTC net order difference is $2.41B, ETH net order difference is $2.19B. Main force orders may withdraw or execute at any time; the data is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice.
Recently, I saw everyone discussing modular blockchains and asking what it really means for ordinary users. To put it simply, you won't suddenly earn twice as much just because it's "more modular." The two things that users can truly perceive are: avoiding high fees and delays when transferring or interacting; and not feeling like you're moving across countries when switching between different applications. Actually, modularity is more like breaking up the backend and reassembling it, which results in a more stable experience, faster confirmations, and a feeling of "using one account everywher
Surface wealth ≠ real gold and silver; if the major manufacturers in 2025-2026 simultaneously lack liquidity, can the market handle it?
View Original
CoinNetwork
Dario: The AI bubble may burst due to cash flow pressure rather than technological failure
Ray Dalio warns that the AI investment frenzy could collapse when cash is needed, and the bubble will end when paper gains turn into real cash. The risk lies in how the market funds the rapidly growing wealth, as investors often equate wealth with cash. In 2025-2026, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft will spend approximately $410 billion to $650 billion on AI infrastructure. If the growth of paper wealth outpaces the money supply, debt, taxes, or withdrawals will force assets to be sold.
Recently helping a friend with on-chain operations, I found that everyone’s tangled up mainly in just two words: save money and save hassle. When mainnet gas is cheap, of course that feels great, but you’ll never be able to wait for the “perfect” timing. Layer 2 feels much smoother, but the moment you transfer in, you end up wincing over the fees plus the wait for confirmation. My compromise is pretty straightforward: for everyday small interactions and things like claiming airdrops, I stick with L2; if I’m really planning to hold long term and interacting with high-permission contracts, I’d r
Recently reviewing a few DAO proposals, I feel a bit emotional: on the surface, they are discussing "whether to do X," but underneath, they are actually reallocating who can make decisions and who can receive ongoing budgets. To put it simply, the more detailed the incentives are written, the more it resembles turning voting into a predictable power structure: who has a low proposal threshold, who has veto power, who can receive "maintenance fees" long-term. In the end, it's not about the philosophy, but about each person's position in the same chart... On the macro side, there's also debate a
Last night, while looking at on-chain data, I thought again that many people think it's done once they click "Send," but actually, the transaction first goes into the mempool to queue, similar to the rush hour subway. During congestion, your transaction either slowly moves to the back of the line or gets pushed back by others with higher fees, or even gets stuck until timeout or discarded (the money isn't necessarily lost, mainly because you're the one getting impatient). What's more awkward is that some contract operations can fail directly due to state changes, wasting some gas, which is qui
Just now I got the itch to chase again, and ended up closing the order screen. I asked myself one thing first: what new information did I actually get, or am I just watching the green-and-red candlesticks bounce around and getting restless too? In plain terms, if the information can be written into a few verifiable points, then all that’s left is “fear of missing out.” I usually start with a very small amount to test the waters—like 50 bucks—mostly to remind myself not to get swept up emotionally. Recently, all that noise around privacy coins and coin-mixing has been arguing hard about the com
Multiple agents can modify CI and write features independently without interfering with each other, and they can also create separate branches for each conversation—GitHub. This is turning the IDE into an AI collaboration hub.
Lately I’ve been a bit annoyed by the blockchain “coincidental transfers”… Once people see Wallet A send money to Wallet B, they start imagining some behind-the-scenes cooperation. To put it simply, many things have an explainable path: the same source of funds gets distributed → it goes through an aggregator/router → it enters an exchange’s hot wallet → then it’s withdrawn to a bunch of new addresses, with cross-chain bridges and fund/address consolidation in between—so in the end, it looks like they “know each other.” Now I’ve gotten into the habit of drawing the path first and labeling the
From conditional openness to Russian involvement in nuclear issues, the chip exchange behind this ceasefire is much more complicated than it appears. Lasting peace? Let's see who blinks first.
Crypto World News: HYPE long positions' unrealized profits have narrowed to $35.52M (up 199.78%), with the current coin price at $64.41, liquidation price at $50.70, and position size at $88.89M. This address heavily went long before HYPE was listed on Robinhood and is now the largest HYPE long holder, having previously suffered significant unrealized losses.
CryptoWorld News: HYPE long positions have increased their unrealized profits to approximately $35.5 million, a rise of 199.74%. The current HYPE price is $64.40, with an average price of $38.68, a liquidation price of $50.71, and a position size of about $88.88 million. This address heavily increased its long positions before HYPE was listed on Robinhood and is now the largest HYPE long holder, having previously suffered significant unrealized losses.