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Fed to End QT: Could this Trigger Multi-Year Altcoin Rally Akin to 2019-2022?
Fed to End QT: Could this Trigger Multi-Year Altcoin Rally Akin to 2019-2022?

The end of the Federal Reserve’s quantitative tightening (QT) program on December 1, 2024, marks a pivotal shift for crypto markets. Despite this milestone, experts note that visible impact could take time. Balance sheet expansion may be delayed until early 2026 due to treasury settlement lags, mirroring past cycles. Historical Patterns Link Fed Policy to

BeInCrypto·2025/11/30 21:07
Yen Carry Crypto Trading Over? Japan Signals Rate Hike
Yen Carry Crypto Trading Over? Japan Signals Rate Hike

Japan’s 2-year government bond yield surged to 1% on December 1, its highest since 2008. Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda signaled a possible interest rate hike at the December 18-19 monetary policy meeting, sending ripples through global financial markets. This development could mark the end of three decades of ultra-low interest rates that fueled

BeInCrypto·2025/11/30 21:04
The Transformation of the Xerox Campus in Webster, NY: An Overlooked Prospect in the Industrial Property Market
The Transformation of the Xerox Campus in Webster, NY: An Overlooked Prospect in the Industrial Property Market

- Webster , NY's Xerox campus redevelopment transforms a 300-acre brownfield into a high-tech industrial hub via $9.8M infrastructure upgrades and public-private partnerships. - Strategic alignment of road, sewer, and grid improvements with private projects like the $650M fairlife dairy plant creates "shovel-ready" conditions for advanced manufacturing. - Municipal coordination with NY Forward Program and Xerox's $1.8M road funding demonstrates how infrastructure investments drive 10.1% annual residential

Bitget-RWA·2025/11/30 20:50
The ChainOpera AI Token Collapse: Widespread Dangers and Investor Reactions in AI-Powered DeFi
The ChainOpera AI Token Collapse: Widespread Dangers and Investor Reactions in AI-Powered DeFi

- ChainOpera AI token (COAI) collapsed 96% in late 2025 due to governance centralization, opaque AI algorithms, and regulatory uncertainty. - Ten wallets controlled 87.9% of COAI supply, enabling panic selling during liquidity crises and eroding trust in decentralized governance. - Unaudited AI models and smart contracts caused stablecoin depegging, while regulatory ambiguity accelerated investor exits amid compliance risks. - The crash exposed systemic risks in AI-DeFi ecosystems, highlighting contagion e

Bitget-RWA·2025/11/30 20:50
Flash
01:51
FedEx Freight expects revenue to grow by 4% to 6% for the remainder of this year.
Glonghui, June 26 | FedEx Freight noted that demand in the industrial sector has improved and expects revenue to increase by 4% to 6% in the seven months ending December 31, with adjusted operating profit growing by 0.8% to 7.5%. This comes just weeks after it completed its spin-off from parent company FedEx.
01:51
Zabi: Bluewater has acquired Suilend, and I will serve as Suilend CEO
Bluefin founder Zabi stated on the X platform that Bluewater has acquired the Sui ecosystem lending protocol Suilend, and Zabi will serve as Suilend CEO. Zabi plans to introduce institutional capital, RWA integration, deeper liquidity, and next-generation retail lending products into the Sui ecosystem, with several institutional partnerships already underway. Suilend will operate as an independent platform, maintaining its own brand, community, and product direction; Bluefin will continue to operate independently, and Zabi’s core focus on Bluefin remains unchanged.
01:43
Oil prices erase all war premiums in 11 days, with Brent falling below pre-war levels; however, inventory shortages may trigger a rebound.
BlockBeats reported that on June 26, international oil prices quickly fell back to pre-conflict levels between the US and Iran, with the entire conflict-driven gain erased in just 11 days, surprising the market. On Thursday, Brent crude once fell to $72.06, breaking below the pre-war last trading day’s closing price of $72.48, and has dropped over 39% from the March high of $118.35; WTI crude closed at $71.92, down about 36% from its high. This round of decline has been much faster than expected. Previously, industry consensus was that clearing mines in the strait would take time and Gulf production recovery would take several months, but reality progressed significantly faster. JPMorgan analysts pointed out that the market has rebalanced through a "remarkably different combination of demand loss and inventory drawdown," far from the initial assumptions. However, such a quick easing may not be stable. S&P Global data showed that on Wednesday, 78 oil tankers passed through the Strait of Hormuz, setting a new high since the conflict, but this still only amounted to 57% of pre-conflict levels, with a large portion being previously trapped shipping capacity departing together. The head of commodities strategy at TD Securities warned that the market may be overestimating the speed of supply and inventory recovery. Inventory pressure has become a key variable. US Cushing inventories fell to 19 million barrels last week, about 1 million barrels below the level needed to keep the system stable; TD Securities expects that the world may need to draw an additional 600 million barrels from inventories by October, and once inventories fall below the critical threshold, oil prices could quickly rebound. Regarding the outlook, Mizuho Securities analysts believe the market is now in an "oversold" state and predict oil prices could rebound to the $80 range in the coming weeks. Full recovery of production in countries such as Iraq and Kuwait is expected only by this fall, which could lead to another shift in the supply and demand picture by then.
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