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Bullish
🚨10K of DOGE are mined per MINUTE? Is it worth mining? Can it reach $100? Will it become an ETF?🧐 ➢ I heard that ELON MUSK mentioned in an interview that 10,000 $DOGE are mined in 1 MINUTE!!! That adds up to approximately 14.5 Million coins in 1 DAY, which totals around 5 Billion coins in 1 YEAR!!!😱 #doge #ElonMuskTalks
🚨10K of DOGE are mined per MINUTE? Is it worth mining? Can it reach $100? Will it become an ETF?🧐
➢ I heard that ELON MUSK mentioned in an interview that 10,000 $DOGE are mined in 1 MINUTE!!! That adds up to approximately 14.5 Million coins in 1 DAY, which totals around 5 Billion coins in 1 YEAR!!!😱
#doge #ElonMuskTalks
Bitdeer Buys 101 MW Gas Power Plant in Alberta, Canada for BTC Mining Bitcoin (BTC) mining company Bitdeer announced today that it had acquired a 101-MW gas-fired power plant near Fox Creek, Alberta, to build a "vertically integrated" BTC mining operation. “We are really excited about planting roots in Alberta, our first site in Canada. This acquisition is the culmination of extensive collaboration with multiple government agencies and the Canadian Blockchain Consortium," Haris Basit, chief strategy officer at Bitdeer, said in a press release. "It marks a significant step in our strategy to become the first fully-vertically integrated Bitcoin miner, giving us unmatched control over costs, energy efficiency, and scalability."#bitcoin
Bitdeer Buys 101 MW Gas Power Plant in Alberta, Canada for BTC Mining
Bitcoin (BTC) mining company Bitdeer announced today that it had acquired a 101-MW gas-fired power plant near Fox Creek, Alberta, to build a "vertically integrated" BTC mining operation.
“We are really excited about planting roots in Alberta, our first site in Canada. This acquisition is the culmination of extensive collaboration with multiple government agencies and the Canadian Blockchain Consortium," Haris Basit, chief strategy officer at Bitdeer, said in a press release. "It marks a significant step in our strategy to become the first fully-vertically integrated Bitcoin miner, giving us unmatched control over costs, energy efficiency, and scalability."#bitcoin
U.S. bitcoin reserve may be comingU.S. Bitcoin Reserve May Be Coming, but States Are Winning the Race Almost half of the state governments in the U.S. are either on a path toward putting some of their money into crypto or already have, and much of a suddenly booming interest in tying their financial futures to the digital-assets markets has come after U.S. President Donald Trump showed support for a national stockpile of digit assets. In the surge of crypto legislative or financial efforts at the state level, 21 states are investing or looking into investing — generally in the industry's leading token, bitcoin (BTC), and sometimes also in less volatile stablecoins that are designed to match the value of the U.S. dollar, according to a CoinDesk analysis. With states such as Arizona, Pennsylvania, Utah and Texas already digging into legislation to open public funds to buy cryptocurrencies, such initiatives may outpace the effort in Congress targeting a so-called Strategic Bitcoin R Sixteen state legislatures are looking at bills to either establish digital assets stockpiles or to allow their state retirement funds to be partially invested in crypto, most of them introduced in recent weeks. Officials in another three states are engaged in serious discussions about joining in, and the money managers for two states — Michigan and Wisconsin — have already dipped parts of their public employees' retirement portfolios into crypto exchange-traded funds (ETFs). If the states begin pouring portions of their public funds into bitcoin and other digital assets, it would potentially lock down billions of dollars of the tokens for extended periods, boosting the value of the assets still openly circulating. Another effect: The states are potentially setting up millions of people to have personal stakes in the health of the crypto sector — whether they want to or not. In several of the proposals, governments are looking to follow in the footsteps of Michigan and Wisconsin in pushing parts of their retirement funds and state pension investments into digital assets. Retired school teachers, law enforcement officers and other public employees will watch some of their financial security become dependent on the fluctuations of the crypto markets. Other pieces of legislation would instruct state treasurers to spend as much as 10% of their public funds on a strategic reserve, with some specifying that qualifying digital assets must have at least a $500 billion market cap, leaving only bitcoin currently meeting the mark. Arizona and Utah are building a lead after getting their efforts passed by legislative committees, but other states weighing some version of a crypto bill also include Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Wyoming. Others, such as Alabama, Florida and Kentucky are considering proposals from state officials or on the verge of pursuing legislation. The states interested in digital assets reserves are predominantly Republican-majority in their politics, and the reasons the lawmakers say they're backing the bills include investment diversity and embracing technological innovation. The amount put away by the states could eventually be overshadowed by the U.S. government's own reserve, if that effort comes to pass. President Trump, in his wider executive order on U.S. crypto policy, called for his administration to "evaluate the potential creation and maintenance of a national digital asset stockpile." The order suggested it may be built from government seizures of crypto in criminal cases. The idea had initially been pitched by Senator Cynthia Lummis, the Wyoming Republican who devotes much of her political bandwidth to supporting crypto and was named as the first chair of the Senate Banking Committee's digital assets subcommittee. Her bill to set up a U.S. reserve calls for the country to obtain about $20 billion worth of the tokens in the first year and to get another 200,000 in each of the next four years, until the U.S. is eventually holding a million bitcoin. While Lummis' pitch has called it a "Strategic Bitcoin Reserve," it's not — like the petroleum reserve — designed for deployment when economic conditions warrant it. It's structured more as a long-term investment, requiring the U.S. to hold the assets for at least 20 years. That would be almost 5% of the eventual, finite supply of global bitcoin going untouched for at least two decades. Combined with whatever the states seek to stockpile, U.S. governments would secure a significant percentage of the asset, in addition to the towering reserves held by the U.S. ETF issuers such as BlackRock and Grayscale and corporate investors led by MicroStrategy. The states' interest in bitcoin potentially lands Satoshi Nakamoto's ultimate exercise of financial outsiders firmly in the realm of the insiders, adding the asset to the core functions of government. The Bitcoin white paper meant to establish a system of transactions outside of the need of financial-firm intermediaries or government oversight. States setting up bitcoin funds managed in part by new laws could become some of the most stable of the industry's institutional investors. And naming bitcoin as a "strategic reserve" puts the digital tokens on par with gold and oil as economic mainstays, despite the very different nature of cryptocurrencies and their practical weaknesses as people or public services; or millions a crypto crash eat into the safety#AITokensBounce #AltcoinRevolution2028 #PolkadotETF #MarketRebound #PCEInflationWatch

U.S. bitcoin reserve may be coming

U.S. Bitcoin Reserve May Be Coming, but States Are Winning the Race
Almost half of the state governments in the U.S. are either on a path toward putting some of their money into crypto or already have, and much of a suddenly booming interest in tying their financial futures to the digital-assets markets has come after U.S. President Donald Trump showed support for a national stockpile of digit assets.
In the surge of crypto legislative or financial efforts at the state level, 21 states are investing or looking into investing — generally in the industry's leading token, bitcoin (BTC), and sometimes also in less volatile stablecoins that are designed to match the value of the U.S. dollar, according to a CoinDesk analysis. With states such as Arizona, Pennsylvania, Utah and Texas already digging into legislation to open public funds to buy cryptocurrencies, such initiatives may outpace the effort in Congress targeting a so-called Strategic Bitcoin R
Sixteen state legislatures are looking at bills to either establish digital assets stockpiles or to allow their state retirement funds to be partially invested in crypto, most of them introduced in recent weeks. Officials in another three states are engaged in serious discussions about joining in, and the money managers for two states — Michigan and Wisconsin — have already dipped parts of their public employees' retirement portfolios into crypto exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
If the states begin pouring portions of their public funds into bitcoin and other digital assets, it would potentially lock down billions of dollars of the tokens for extended periods, boosting the value of the assets still openly circulating. Another effect: The states are potentially setting up millions of people to have personal stakes in the health of the crypto sector — whether they want to or not.

In several of the proposals, governments are looking to follow in the footsteps of Michigan and Wisconsin in pushing parts of their retirement funds and state pension investments into digital assets. Retired school teachers, law enforcement officers and other public employees will watch some of their financial security become dependent on the fluctuations of the crypto markets.
Other pieces of legislation would instruct state treasurers to spend as much as 10% of their public funds on a strategic reserve, with some specifying that qualifying digital assets must have at least a $500 billion market cap, leaving only bitcoin currently meeting the mark.
Arizona and Utah are building a lead after getting their efforts passed by legislative committees, but other states weighing some version of a crypto bill also include Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Wyoming. Others, such as Alabama, Florida and Kentucky are considering proposals from state officials or on the verge of pursuing legislation. The states interested in digital assets reserves are predominantly Republican-majority in their politics, and the reasons the lawmakers say they're backing the bills include investment diversity and embracing technological innovation.
The amount put away by the states could eventually be overshadowed by the U.S. government's own reserve, if that effort comes to pass. President Trump, in his wider executive order on U.S. crypto policy, called for his administration to "evaluate the potential creation and maintenance of a national digital asset stockpile." The order suggested it may be built from government seizures of crypto in criminal cases.
The idea had initially been pitched by Senator Cynthia Lummis, the Wyoming Republican who devotes much of her political bandwidth to supporting crypto and was named as the first chair of the Senate Banking Committee's digital assets subcommittee. Her bill to set up a U.S. reserve calls for the country to obtain about $20 billion worth of the tokens in the first year and to get another 200,000 in each of the next four years, until the U.S. is eventually holding a million bitcoin.
While Lummis' pitch has called it a "Strategic Bitcoin Reserve," it's not — like the petroleum reserve — designed for deployment when economic conditions warrant it. It's structured more as a long-term investment, requiring the U.S. to hold the assets for at least 20 years.
That would be almost 5% of the eventual, finite supply of global bitcoin going untouched for at least two decades. Combined with whatever the states seek to stockpile, U.S. governments would secure a significant percentage of the asset, in addition to the towering reserves held by the U.S. ETF issuers such as BlackRock and Grayscale and corporate investors led by MicroStrategy.
The states' interest in bitcoin potentially lands Satoshi Nakamoto's ultimate exercise of financial outsiders firmly in the realm of the insiders, adding the asset to the core functions of government. The Bitcoin white paper meant to establish a system of transactions outside of the need of financial-firm intermediaries or government oversight.
States setting up bitcoin funds managed in part by new laws could become some of the most stable of the industry's institutional investors. And naming bitcoin as a "strategic reserve" puts the digital tokens on par with gold and oil as economic mainstays, despite the very different nature of cryptocurrencies and their practical weaknesses as people or public services; or millions a crypto crash eat into the safety#AITokensBounce #AltcoinRevolution2028 #PolkadotETF #MarketRebound #PCEInflationWatch
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Bullish
According to CoinDesk, Howard Lutnick, chairman of Cantor Fitzgerald and U.S. President Donald Trump's nominee for U.S. Commerce Secretary, recently faced intense questioning from Senate Democrats regarding Cantor Fitzgerald's involvement with Tether, the issuer of the world's largest stablecoin, USDT. Lutnick appeared before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation on January 29, following his testimony at the Senate Banking Committee. Cantor Fitzgerald acts as Tether's primary custodian for U.S. Treasuries, managing a substantial portion of its reserves and holding convertible debt issued by Tether's parent company. The reserves backing USDT have long been a concern within the crypto industry. In 2023, Lutnick attempted to alleviate these concerns by associating Cantor's reputation with Tether, asserting that as its custodian, he was confident in Tether's financial backing. However, during the hearing, Lutnick appeared to temper his previous statements. Lutnick stated, "Cantor Fitzgerald is not conducting continuous diligence on Tether’s financial statements, but I believe my statements were accurate when made," retracting his earlier assertion that "Tether has every penny, and it can produce liquidity on a moment’s notice." On Polymarket, bettors currently assign a 10% probability of Tether becoming insolvent in 2025 and a 14% chance of it de-pegging during the year, indicating potential issues at the issuer. A contract regarding insolvency for 2024 averaged around 4% in the last quarter of the year. Lutnick also confirmed that "Cantor Fitzgerald made a convertible debt investment in the holding company that owns the Tether stablecoin business in April 2024," clarifying that this does not imply an ownership stake in the stablecoin issuer. "Cantor Fitzgerald’s debt investment in Tether does not constitute an equity Critics of Tether often call for an audit of the company's financial records due to USDT's significant role in the broader crypto ecosystem. While Lutnick acknowledged of for U.S. dollar, , Lutnick denied
According to CoinDesk, Howard Lutnick, chairman of Cantor Fitzgerald and U.S. President Donald Trump's nominee for U.S. Commerce Secretary, recently faced intense questioning from Senate Democrats regarding Cantor Fitzgerald's involvement with Tether, the issuer of the world's largest stablecoin, USDT. Lutnick appeared before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation on January 29, following his testimony at the Senate Banking Committee.
Cantor Fitzgerald acts as Tether's primary custodian for U.S. Treasuries, managing a substantial portion of its reserves and holding convertible debt issued by Tether's parent company. The reserves backing USDT have long been a concern within the crypto industry. In 2023, Lutnick attempted to alleviate these concerns by associating Cantor's reputation with Tether, asserting that as its custodian, he was confident in Tether's financial backing. However, during the hearing, Lutnick appeared to temper his previous statements.
Lutnick stated, "Cantor Fitzgerald is not conducting continuous diligence on Tether’s financial statements, but I believe my statements were accurate when made," retracting his earlier assertion that "Tether has every penny, and it can produce liquidity on a moment’s notice." On Polymarket, bettors currently assign a 10% probability of Tether becoming insolvent in 2025 and a 14% chance of it de-pegging during the year, indicating potential issues at the issuer. A contract regarding insolvency for 2024 averaged around 4% in the last quarter of the year.
Lutnick also confirmed that "Cantor Fitzgerald made a convertible debt investment in the holding company that owns the Tether stablecoin business in April 2024," clarifying that this does not imply an ownership stake in the stablecoin issuer. "Cantor Fitzgerald’s debt investment in Tether does not constitute an equity
Critics of Tether often call for an audit of the company's financial records due to USDT's significant role in the broader crypto ecosystem. While Lutnick acknowledged of for U.S. dollar,
, Lutnick denied
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Bullish
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Bullish
Buying trump now let’s see buying 18 doller hold for 21 doller in perpetual {spot}(TRUMPUSDT)
Buying trump now let’s see buying 18 doller hold for 21 doller in perpetual
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ADA/USDT
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0.974
Can i win this trade ? Let see guys doge entry point 0.3460 long #doge #LONG✅ tp0.3950
Can i win this trade ? Let see guys doge entry point 0.3460 long #doge #LONG✅ tp0.3950
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