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Isidra Arndell Gg64
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$XRP is going to $8000
There’s nothing anyone can do about it
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#WORDOFTHEDAY✅ DEAR Friends today again I got two correct words of the day , these are Follow me for more information and updates
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#BigTechStablecoin Big Tech Stablecoins are stable cryptocurrencies developed or backed by major technology companies. Their goal is usually to enable fast, low-cost global payments within a company’s ecosystem — often raising both financial and regulatory attention. Here are the most notable examples: --- 🏦 Major Big Tech Stablecoin Projects 1. PayPal USD (PYUSD) Launched by: PayPal (U.S.) Blockchain: Ethereum (ERC-20) Backing: Fully backed by U.S. dollar deposits, short-term Treasuries. Use case: Peer-to-peer payments, merchant settlements, crypto trading via PayPal and Venmo. Issued by: Paxos Trust Company (regulated entity). ✅ Live since August 2023. --- 2. Facebook / Meta — Diem (formerly Libra) Launched by: Facebook (Meta) Goal: Global stablecoin basket (originally tied to multiple fiat currencies) Consortium: Libra Association → renamed Diem Status: Canceled in 2022 due to regulatory backlash Key issues: Concerns about global monetary sovereignty, user privacy, financial stability. --- 3. Amazon — No public stablecoin yet Rumors: Amazon was rumored to explore digital currencies for internal use or loyalty points. Reality: No official Amazon stablecoin as of 2025. --- 4. Apple, Google, Microsoft None of these companies have issued stablecoins. However, they: Enable wallet support (e.g., Apple Pay / Google Wallet for USDC/USDT via third-party apps). Invest or partner with blockchain firms (e.g., Google Cloud with Solana/Polygon). --- 5. Tencent / Alibaba — CN-based digital currency support In China, tech giants support e-CNY (Digital Yuan) via WeChat Pay, Alipay. Not stablecoins per se, but centralized digital currencies (CBDC). Backed directly by the People’s Bank of China, not the companies. --- 🪙 What Makes a "Big Tech Stablecoin"? Feature Description Stable value Pegged 1:1 to fiat (usually USD). Big tech origin Developed, backed, or launched by a major tech company.
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#CryptoFees101 When you trade cryptocurrency, the platform deducts various fees that influence how you’re taxed. Here's a clear breakdown: --- 🧾 1. Types of Trading Fees 1. Exchange (Trading) Fees Charged by centralized exchanges (like Binance, Coinbase) when you buy or sell. Typically include “maker” (providing liquidity) and “taker” (taking liquidity) fees. 2. Network (Gas/Blockchain) Fees Paid to miners/validators for processing your transaction on-chain (e.g., Ethereum “gas” fees). Fluctuate based on congestion, block size, and transaction priority. 3. Wallet / Withdrawal / Network Transfer Fees Charged by wallets or exchanges when you move crypto off-platform or between wallets. --- 2. How Fees Affect Taxes ✅ A. Buying Crypto **Add fees to cost basis:** If you purchase crypto for $100 and pay a $2 fee, your cost basis becomes $102. 🟰 B. Selling Crypto **Subtract fees from proceeds:** If you sell crypto for $150 and pay a $3 fee, your net proceeds are $147. 🔄 C. Trading One Crypto for Another If you pay fees in either the currency you're selling or another token, the fee counts toward both cost basis and proceeds. E.g., trading BTC for ETH and paying fee in BTC: deduct it from proceeds and add its cost basis. 🚫 D. Transfers Between Personal Wallets Transferring crypto from your own wallet to another isn't a sale—but spending crypto on network fees is considered a disposal and may generate capital gain/loss. E.g., sending 1 BTC and paying 0.001 BTC fee: that 0.001 BTC disposal is a taxable event. --- 3. Why This Matters Benefit Explanation Lower taxable gains By adding buy fees and subtracting sell fees, your reported gain is smaller (or loss is larger). Clear record-keeping Proper documentation ensures accuracy on tax forms (e.g., IRS Form 8949, Schedule D). Different treatment if you're a trader/business Individual investors adjust cost basis; professional traders may deduct fees as business expenses.
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