News
Stay up to date on the latest crypto trends with our expert, in-depth coverage.

1Bitget UEX Daily|Iran Conflict Boosts Oil Prices;U.S. Plans Global AI Chip Controls;Non-Farm Data Imminent (2026-03-06)2Broadcom FY2026 Q1 Earnings: AI Revenue Doubles, Record Results, Strong Guidance, $10B Buyback3If the Strait of Hormuz is closed for another 3 days, 3.3 million barrels of crude oil in the Middle East will be forced to halt production, with Iraq being the hardest hit!

Not Cooling Down After the Election? Prediction Markets Make a Comeback with $2.3 Billion in Funding
Sports has become a lifeline.
ForesightNews 速递·2025/10/15 20:43

"10.11" Survivors' Review and Survival Guide
In the post-crash era, where should cryptocurrency investment head?
ForesightNews 速递·2025/10/15 20:43
Powell Announces Potential End to Balance Sheet Reduction
Coinlineup·2025/10/15 20:33
US Bill Proposes Legal Crypto Investment in 401(k) Plans
Coinlineup·2025/10/15 20:33
Ripple Faces Sell-Off as Whales Exit XRP Market
Coinlive·2025/10/15 20:31
Bitcoin ETF Volume Surges Amid U.S.-China Trade Tensions
Coinlive·2025/10/15 20:31
BlackRock’s Fink Urges U.S. for Crypto Clarity, Innovation
Coinlive·2025/10/15 20:31
Investors Gain 7-14% Amid October Crypto Dip
Coinlive·2025/10/15 20:31
U.S. Seizes $15B Bitcoin from Cambodia-Based Scam
Coinlive·2025/10/15 20:31
MetaMask Integrates Polymarket for DeFi Prediction Markets
Coinlive·2025/10/15 20:31
Flash
11:19
Stablecoin trading volume reached a new monthly record of $1.8 trillion in February, with USDC accounting for about 70%.PANews, March 7th – According to Cointelegraph, Allium data shows that stablecoin trading volume reached $1.8 trillion in February, setting a new monthly record. USDC accounted for about 70% of the total trading volume, reaching $1.26 trillion, while USDT's trading volume in February was $514 billion.
11:18
Next Week Macro Outlook: Stagflation Ghost Returns, CPI and PCE Data Become Key VariablesBlockBeats News, March 7th, as the situation in Iran further deteriorates, the uncertainty surrounding the future direction has led to intense market volatility this week. Recent data suggests that the Fed will have to address the rising inflation and declining employment to curb the risk of stagflation. Here are the key points that the market will focus on in the new week (all times are UTC+8):
Monday 23:00 (UTC+8), US February New York Fed 1-Year Inflation Expectation;
Wednesday 20:30 (UTC+8), US February Non-Seasonally Adjusted CPI YoY, Non-Seasonally Adjusted Core CPI YoY;
US February Seasonally Adjusted CPI MoM, Seasonally Adjusted Core CPI MoM;
Friday 15:00 (UTC+8), UK January Three-Month GDP MoM, January Manufacturing/Industrial Production MoM, January Seasonally Adjusted Goods Trade Balance;
Friday 20:30 (UTC+8), US January Core PCE Price Index YoY/MoM, US January Personal Spending MoM, US Q4 Real GDP Annualized QoQ Revised, US January Durable Goods Orders MoM;
Friday 22:00 (UTC+8), US January JOLTs Job Openings, US March 1-Year Inflation Expectation Preliminary, US March University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index Preliminary.
If Core CPI and Core PCE Price Index MoM are stronger than expected, it may further support the US dollar; conversely, soft data could weigh on the dollar, helping to boost a rebound in spot gold. In addition, Oracle (ORCL.N) will release its earnings report after the US stock market closes on Tuesday. (FXStreet)
10:48
India responds firmly to US waiver order: Buying Russian oil has never required permission from any country(1) In response to the 30-day waiver issued by the United States, the Indian government gave a strong reply on Saturday. In a statement released by the Press Information Bureau of India, it was clearly stated that India will continue to advance its Russian oil imports, while emphasizing that such purchases by India have never required permission from any country. (2) The statement pointed out that India's purchase of Russian oil has never depended on any country's "short-term waivers." Data shows that as of February 2026, India is still importing Russian oil, and Russia remains India's largest crude oil supplier. (3) India's stance clearly delineates the boundaries of sovereignty: the waiver is a unilateral act by the United States, and India's purchase of Russian oil is a decision based on its own energy needs and diplomatic autonomy. Such strong wording is both an explanation to domestic public opinion and a signal to Washington—that India's energy procurement decisions are not influenced by external temporary policies.
News