image
SOLANA JUST DID SOMETHING IT HASN'T DONE IN 9 MONTHS.
For the first time in nine months, $SOL has closed a monthly candle in the green.
Since bottoming near $60, Solana has rallied 38%.
That's roughly $14 billion added to its market cap.
Momentum is starting to return.
Historically, trend reversals often begin with small changes that most investors ignore.
Is Solana preparing for its next major leg higher, or is this just another relief rally?
image
Is Solana 1000$ possible?
Your thoughts?
image
TOM LEE'S BITMINE JUST BOUGHT $73 MILLION OF ETHEREUM.
BitMine acquired 42,197 ETH worth approximately $73 million.
The purchase comes as institutional demand for Ethereum continues to accelerate.
For years, institutions focused almost exclusively on Bitcoin.
Now, more capital is beginning to flow into Ethereum.
History shows that when institutional adoption starts, it rarely stops after a single purchase.
The bigger question isn't whether institutions are buying.
It's how many are buying before everyone else notices.
Is Ethereum becoming the next institutional trade after Bitcoin?
video
Bitcoin is starting to look eerily similar to 2022.
In 2022, Bitcoin closed below the 200-week moving average before the final capitulation wiped out the remaining sellers.
In 2026, we've now seen another weekly close below the 200W MA.
If history continues to rhyme, this could be the pre-capitulation phase rather than the bottom
itself.
My key zone remains around $48K-$44K, where I believe the final wick could form the market cycle low before the next major expansion.
Markets never repeat perfectly, but they often follow familiar patterns.
Do you think this cycle will rhyme with 2022, or is this time genuinely different?
image
SOMETHING FEELS SERIOUSLY DIFFERENT
Bitcoin Price’s realized profit/loss ratio drops to -0.35, a 43-month low.
What is that supposed to mean?
image
CIRCLE LOST $16 BILLION... OVER NEWS THAT MAY NOT HAVE BEEN TRUE.
Circle ($CRCL) fell 16.5% after Open Standard announced a new stablecoin backed by 140+ companies.
The list included names like:
• Samsung Electronics
• Visa
• Mastercard
• Google
• Coinbase
Investors feared a serious threat to USDC and Tether. Then things got interesting.
Several companies reportedly denied officially joining the alliance.
Samsung said there had been no formal discussions.
Shinhan, Dunamu and K Bank reportedly said they only agreed to review the proposal, not
become partners.
One company even said it first learned it had been listed through the media.
If those reports are accurate, billions in market value disappeared because of a narrative that
may have been incomplete.
Markets don't wait for the full story. They price the headline first.
Do you think Circle's selloff was justified, or did Wall Street overreact?
image
EVERY MAJOR MARKET CRASH LOOKED INVINCIBLE AT THE TOP.
In 2000, investors believed the internet changed everything.
In 2008, they believed housing prices could never fall nationwide.
In 2021, they believed money printing would last forever.
Today, many believe AI will justify any valuation.
The interesting part?
Every bubble had a real innovation behind it.
The internet was real.
Housing demand was real.
AI is real.
But reality doesn't stop markets from overshooting.
The chart shows the Nasdaq trading well above the peak of the Dot-Com bubble.
History doesn't repeat perfectly.
But human psychology does.
Greed. Leverage. Euphoria. FOMO.
The ingredients rarely change.
Markets don't crash because innovation fails.
They crash when expectations become impossible to meet.
The biggest risk isn't AI.
It's believing this time is different.
Do you think we're witnessing another bubble, or is AI creating a fundamentally different market this time?
image
South Korea's currency just hit its weakest level since the 2008 financial crisis.
The Korean won has fallen 7.5% against the U.S. dollar in just two months.
That's not just a currency story.
It's a capital flow story.
Global investors have been pulling money out of Korean markets as concerns around AI valuations and semiconductor growth continue to build.
When foreign investors sell Korean stocks, they also sell the won.
That's exactly what's happening now.
Currencies often reveal stress before equity markets fully do.
Is this an isolated move or another warning that global liquidity is getting tighter?
video
Every Bitcoin bear market has become less severe.
91% → 85% → 83% → 77% → 53% (so far).
As Bitcoin matures, volatility continues to decline.
Each cycle has wiped out fewer weak hands than the last.
The current cycle is still unfolding, but one trend is becoming harder to ignore.
Do you think this bear market follows history, or will this cycle be different?
image
President Trump reportedly generated over $1.4 billion from crypto-related ventures in 2025.
The breakdown includes:
• $635M from the Trump memecoin
• $526M from World Liberty Financial token sales
• $196M from the USD1 stablecoin venture
• $65M from corporate stake sales and buybacks
• $125M in Bitcoin, Ethereum and USDC reserves
Love him or hate him, one thing is becoming clear:
Crypto is no longer a niche industry.
It's attracting presidents, billion-dollar companies and institutional capital.
The question is no longer if crypto becomes part of the financial system. It's how big it becomes
Your thoughts?