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Price of bitcoin could go higher or ‘can go to zero,’ says Czech central bank governorThe Czech Central Bank purchased $1 million in bitcoin in October to run tests and conduct a study and found it is more efficient than stocks and gold but much too risky. Michl acknowledged that all assets face the risk of losing their entire value, which is why banks have portfolios. “A stock can go to zero. Even a bond can fail. So for me that is why it is not wise to bet just on one asset.” The first time I used bitcoin, I bought a coffee. Today. that coffee comes to about $350, so it was the most expensive coffee of my life.” However, he insisted that while bitcoin through time shows “very high returns, but honestly it looks too risky.” The Czech National Bank became the first central bank worldwide to purchase bitcoin in November as it announced the creation of a $1 million test portfolio that includes BTC, a USD stablecoin, and a tokenized deposit. Approved by the CNB’s bank a month prior, the pilot was aimed at acquiring hands-on experience with blockchain-based assets, which it said could redefine how the country’s payments and financial systems operate in the future. A CNB study, he said, found that because bitcoin has low long-term correlation with many traditional assets, it does not move in the same direction and that is important. “When you add an asset like this, the whole portfolio can work better. Return can go up and risk stays about the same,” he explained, adding that over the long term, “bitcoin can provide returns that are not closely linked to other assets. In some ways it is similar for me to venture capital but it is much more liquid.” However, despite finding that bitcoin has the potential to drive higher returns with smaller allocations even more so than gold, “the CNB's Bank Board decided not to invest its FX reserves in bitcoin at this time,” the study dated February 2026 states. #LISTAAirdrop #KEEP_SUPPORT #jasmyustd #hottrendingtopics #GoogleDocsMagic

Price of bitcoin could go higher or ‘can go to zero,’ says Czech central bank governor

The Czech Central Bank purchased $1 million in bitcoin in October to run tests and conduct a study and found it is more efficient than stocks and gold but much too risky.
Michl acknowledged that all assets face the risk of losing their entire value, which is why banks have portfolios. “A stock can go to zero. Even a bond can fail. So for me that is why it is not wise to bet just on one asset.”
The first time I used bitcoin, I bought a coffee. Today. that coffee comes to about $350, so it was the most expensive coffee of my life.”
However, he insisted that while bitcoin through time shows “very high returns, but honestly it looks too risky.”
The Czech National Bank became the first central bank worldwide to purchase bitcoin in November as it announced the creation of a $1 million test portfolio that includes BTC, a USD stablecoin, and a tokenized deposit. Approved by the CNB’s bank a month prior, the pilot was aimed at acquiring hands-on experience with blockchain-based assets, which it said could redefine how the country’s payments and financial systems operate in the future.
A CNB study, he said, found that because bitcoin has low long-term correlation with many traditional assets, it does not move in the same direction and that is important.
“When you add an asset like this, the whole portfolio can work better. Return can go up and risk stays about the same,” he explained, adding that over the long term, “bitcoin can provide returns that are not closely linked to other assets. In some ways it is similar for me to venture capital but it is much more liquid.”
However, despite finding that bitcoin has the potential to drive higher returns with smaller allocations even more so than gold, “the CNB's Bank Board decided not to invest its FX reserves in bitcoin at this time,” the study dated February 2026 states.
#LISTAAirdrop
#KEEP_SUPPORT
#jasmyustd
#hottrendingtopics
#GoogleDocsMagic
Bitcoin rises to $77,000 ahead of Fed decision as Trump preps for lengthy Hormuz blockBitcoin is sitting almost still while the rest of the majors give back gains and oil pushes above $111 on reports of an extended U.S. naval blockade against Iran. Iran has said the country is in a "State of Collapse," Trump claimed on Truth Social Tuesday, while Tehran has signaled it may accept an interim deal to reopen the strait if Washington lifts its blockade of Iranian ports. Bitcoin's market dominance is slowly climbing again as a result, which is what tends to happen when macro stress arrives and capital rotates into the largest asset. Ether dropped 2.6% on the week to $2,310. XRP fell 3.8% to $1.39. Solana lost 3.2% to $84.57. BNB shed 2.3% to $625. The exception was dogecoin, up 5.5% on the week to $0.1016, the only top-10 token outside stablecoins to print green over seven days. The supply overhang has finally dried up, and the sellers who were spooked by macro shifts or quantum fears have already exited, leaving the market much thinner on the sell-side than it was just a few months ago," he said to CoinDesk over email. Zaheer Ebtikar, founder of Split Research, said in a note that bitcoin's relative calm was indicative of a change in market strucute. The technical levels are sharper. Analysts at Bitget flagged $75,000 as the line where the upward range that has held since late March breaks, with a clean loss potentially opening room for further downside. Bitcoin is far less sensitive to regulatory noise or central bank policy than people think. Its sensitivity is purely a function of wider volatility, and since we're currently in a quieter trading range, there's no immediate rush for the exits," Ebtikar added. The Fed announces its rate decision later on Wednesday, the ECB follows Thursday, and the U.S. equity market sold off Tuesday on growing skepticism about the payoff from artificial intelligence capital expenditure, with Nasdaq 100 futures clawing back 0.4% in Asian hours. A reversal back toward $80,000 from current levels keeps the rally structure intact and sets up a retest of the resistance that has rejected bitcoin every attempt since February. Brent crude whipsawed between gains and losses but stayed elevated near $111 on the blockade reporting, putting renewed pressure on inflation expectations heading into the central bank decisions. Traders may watch whether bitcoin's apparent supply exhaustion holds against the next macro shock. If Ebtikar's read is correct, the seller base that capitulated through March and April is gone, and bitcoin trades on volatility rather than headlines until something forces a fresh leg of selling. If the read is wrong, $75,000 gets tested quickly and the range break Bitget flagged plays out as drawn. #ArthurHayes’LatestSpeech #jasmyustd #LISTAAirdrop #BinanceHerYerde #CryptoTrends2024

Bitcoin rises to $77,000 ahead of Fed decision as Trump preps for lengthy Hormuz block

Bitcoin is sitting almost still while the rest of the majors give back gains and oil pushes above $111 on reports of an extended U.S. naval blockade against Iran.
Iran has said the country is in a "State of Collapse," Trump claimed on Truth Social Tuesday, while Tehran has signaled it may accept an interim deal to reopen the strait if Washington lifts its blockade of Iranian ports.
Bitcoin's market dominance is slowly climbing again as a result, which is what tends to happen when macro stress arrives and capital rotates into the largest asset.
Ether dropped 2.6% on the week to $2,310. XRP fell 3.8% to $1.39. Solana lost 3.2% to $84.57. BNB shed 2.3% to $625. The exception was dogecoin, up 5.5% on the week to $0.1016, the only top-10 token outside stablecoins to print green over seven days.
The supply overhang has finally dried up, and the sellers who were spooked by macro shifts or quantum fears have already exited, leaving the market much thinner on the sell-side than it was just a few months ago," he said to CoinDesk over email.
Zaheer Ebtikar, founder of Split Research, said in a note that bitcoin's relative calm was indicative of a change in market strucute.
The technical levels are sharper. Analysts at Bitget flagged $75,000 as the line where the upward range that has held since late March breaks, with a clean loss potentially opening room for further downside.
Bitcoin is far less sensitive to regulatory noise or central bank policy than people think. Its sensitivity is purely a function of wider volatility, and since we're currently in a quieter trading range, there's no immediate rush for the exits," Ebtikar added.
The Fed announces its rate decision later on Wednesday, the ECB follows Thursday, and the U.S. equity market sold off Tuesday on growing skepticism about the payoff from artificial intelligence capital expenditure, with Nasdaq 100 futures clawing back 0.4% in Asian hours.
A reversal back toward $80,000 from current levels keeps the rally structure intact and sets up a retest of the resistance that has rejected bitcoin every attempt since February.
Brent crude whipsawed between gains and losses but stayed elevated near $111 on the blockade reporting, putting renewed pressure on inflation expectations heading into the central bank decisions.
Traders may watch whether bitcoin's apparent supply exhaustion holds against the next macro shock. If Ebtikar's read is correct, the seller base that capitulated through March and April is gone, and bitcoin trades on volatility rather than headlines until something forces a fresh leg of selling. If the read is wrong, $75,000 gets tested quickly and the range break Bitget flagged plays out as drawn.
#ArthurHayes’LatestSpeech
#jasmyustd
#LISTAAirdrop
#BinanceHerYerde
#CryptoTrends2024
US judge bars Trump from forcing additional colleges to provide race dataBOSTON, April 24 (Reuters) - A federal judge on Friday expanded the reach of restrictions stopping the Trump administration from forcing universities to turn over sweeping amounts ​of data so it can examine the schools' use of race as ‌an admissions factor. Boston-based U.S. District Judge F. Dennis Saylor said, opens new tab the department could not require the data to be produced by dozens of universities nationally, including Harvard, Yale, Columbia ​University and other members of the Ivy League. The U.S. Education Department ​had sought seven years of admissions data on the race ⁠and sex of students to track compliance with the U.S. Supreme Court's ​2023 ruling ending affirmative action in higher education. Six academic groups including the Association ​of American Universities as well as several individual schools had intervened in a lawsuit by 17 states to secure the same type of relief that Saylor had granted to the states' ​public universities in an earlier April 3 ruling. Saylor cited a failure to consider ​the Education Department's capacity to implement the "massive" data reporting requirement on a rushed timeline as ‌the ⁠Trump administration works to dismantle the agency. The Education Department and a lawyer for the academic groups did not respond to requests for comment. The department requested the data through an Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System survey that it created at ​the direction of ​President Donald Trump. Trump ⁠had cited universities' "rampant use" of "hidden racial proxies." The case is Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. U.S. Department of Education, U.S. District ​Court for the District of Massachusetts, No. 1:26-cv-11229. For the Department of Education: Brittany Bruns of the U.S. Department of Justice #Shibalnu #FactCheck #GamingCoins #HalvingUpdate #jasmyustd

US judge bars Trump from forcing additional colleges to provide race data

BOSTON, April 24 (Reuters) - A federal judge on Friday expanded the reach of restrictions stopping the Trump administration from forcing universities to turn over sweeping amounts ​of data so it can examine the schools' use of race as ‌an admissions factor.
Boston-based U.S. District Judge F. Dennis Saylor said, opens new tab the department could not require the data to be produced by dozens of universities nationally, including Harvard, Yale, Columbia ​University and other members of the Ivy League.
The U.S. Education Department ​had sought seven years of admissions data on the race ⁠and sex of students to track compliance with the U.S. Supreme Court's ​2023 ruling ending affirmative action in higher education.
Six academic groups including the Association ​of American Universities as well as several individual schools had intervened in a lawsuit by 17 states to secure the same type of relief that Saylor had granted to the states' ​public universities in an earlier April 3 ruling.
Saylor cited a failure to consider ​the Education Department's capacity to implement the "massive" data reporting requirement on a rushed timeline as ‌the ⁠Trump administration works to dismantle the agency.
The Education Department and a lawyer for the academic groups did not respond to requests for comment.
The department requested the data through an Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System survey that it created at ​the direction of ​President Donald Trump.
Trump ⁠had cited universities' "rampant use" of "hidden racial proxies."
The case is Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. U.S. Department of Education, U.S. District ​Court for the District of Massachusetts, No. 1:26-cv-11229.
For the Department of Education: Brittany Bruns of the U.S. Department of Justice
#Shibalnu
#FactCheck
#GamingCoins
#HalvingUpdate
#jasmyustd
Trump not happy with latest Iran proposal to end the war, US official saysDUBAI/WASHINGTON, April 28 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump is unhappy with the latest Iranian proposal ​on resolving the two-month war, a U.S. official said, dampening hopes for a resolution to the conflict that has disrupted energy supplies, ‌fuelled inflation, and killed thousands. Iran's latest proposal would set aside discussion of Iran's nuclear program until the war is ended and disputes over shipping from the Gulf are resolved. That is unlikely to satisfy the U.S., which says nuclear issues must be dealt with from the outset, and Trump was unhappy with Iran's proposal for that reason, a U.S. official briefed ​on the president's Monday meeting with his advisers said, speaking on condition of anonymity. White House spokeswoman Olivia Wales said the U.S. "will not negotiate ​through the press" and has "been clear about our red lines" as the Trump administration looks to end the war against ⁠Iran it began in February alongside Israel. A previous agreement in 2015 between Iran and multiple other countries including the U.S. sharply curtailed Iran's nuclear program, ​which it has long maintained is for peaceful, civilian purposes. But that deal fell apart when Trump unilaterally withdrew from it in his first term in ​office. Hopes of reviving peace efforts have receded since the U.S. president scrapped a visit planned for last weekend by his special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner to Islamabad, the Pakistani capital, where Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi shuttled in and out twice during the weekend. Araqchi also visited Oman and on Monday went to Russia, where he met President Vladimir Putin ​and received words of support from a longstanding ally. With the warring sides still seemingly far apart, oil prices resumed their upward march, extending gains ​in early Asia trade on Tuesday. For oil traders, it's not the rhetoric that matters any more, but the actual physical flow of crude oil through the Strait of Hormuz, ‌and right ⁠now, that flow remains constrained," Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at City Index and FOREX.com, said in a note. At least six tankers loaded with Iranian oil have been forced back to Iran by the U.S. blockade in recent days, ship-tracking data showed, underscoring the war's impact on traffic. Iran's foreign ministry condemned U.S. seizures of Iran-linked tankers as "outright legalization of piracy and armed robbery on the high seas", in a social media post. Between 125 and 140 ships usually crossed in and out ​of the strait daily before the war, ​but only seven have done ⁠so in the past day, according to Kpler ship-tracking data and satellite analysis from SynMax, and none of them were carrying oil bound for the global market. With his approval ratings falling, Trump faces domestic pressure to end a war ​for which he has given the U.S. public shifting rationales. Araqchi told reporters in Russia that Trump had requested negotiations ​because the U.S. has ⁠not achieved any of its objectives. Senior Iranian officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters the proposal carried by Araqchi to Islamabad over the weekend envisioned talks in stages, with the nuclear issue to be set aside at the start. A first step would require ending the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran and providing guarantees that the ⁠U.S. cannot ​start it up again. Then negotiators would resolve the U.S. Navy's blockade of Iran's trade ​by sea and the fate of the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran aims to reopen under its control Only then would talks look at other issues, including the longstanding dispute over Iran's nuclear program, ​with Iran still seeking some kind of U.S. acknowledgment of its right to enrich uranium. #StrategyBTCPurchase #GamingCoins #jasmyustd #coinaute #MegadropLista

Trump not happy with latest Iran proposal to end the war, US official says

DUBAI/WASHINGTON, April 28 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump is unhappy with the latest Iranian proposal ​on resolving the two-month war, a U.S. official said, dampening hopes for a resolution to the conflict that has disrupted energy supplies, ‌fuelled inflation, and killed thousands.
Iran's latest proposal would set aside discussion of Iran's nuclear program until the war is ended and disputes over shipping from the Gulf are resolved.
That is unlikely to satisfy the U.S., which says nuclear issues must be dealt with from the outset, and Trump was unhappy with Iran's proposal for that reason, a U.S. official briefed ​on the president's Monday meeting with his advisers said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
White House spokeswoman Olivia Wales said the U.S. "will not negotiate ​through the press" and has "been clear about our red lines" as the Trump administration looks to end the war against ⁠Iran it began in February alongside Israel.
A previous agreement in 2015 between Iran and multiple other countries including the U.S. sharply curtailed Iran's nuclear program, ​which it has long maintained is for peaceful, civilian purposes. But that deal fell apart when Trump unilaterally withdrew from it in his first term in ​office.
Hopes of reviving peace efforts have receded since the U.S. president scrapped a visit planned for last weekend by his special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner to Islamabad, the Pakistani capital, where Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi shuttled in and out twice during the weekend.
Araqchi also visited Oman and on Monday went to Russia, where he met President Vladimir Putin ​and received words of support from a longstanding ally.
With the warring sides still seemingly far apart, oil prices resumed their upward march, extending gains ​in early Asia trade on Tuesday.
For oil traders, it's not the rhetoric that matters any more, but the actual physical flow of crude oil through the Strait of Hormuz, ‌and right ⁠now, that flow remains constrained," Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at City Index and FOREX.com, said in a note.
At least six tankers loaded with Iranian oil have been forced back to Iran by the U.S. blockade in recent days, ship-tracking data showed, underscoring the war's impact on traffic.
Iran's foreign ministry condemned U.S. seizures of Iran-linked tankers as "outright legalization of piracy and armed robbery on the high seas", in a social media post.
Between 125 and 140 ships usually crossed in and out ​of the strait daily before the war, ​but only seven have done ⁠so in the past day, according to Kpler ship-tracking data and satellite analysis from SynMax, and none of them were carrying oil bound for the global market.
With his approval ratings falling, Trump faces domestic pressure to end a war ​for which he has given the U.S. public shifting rationales.
Araqchi told reporters in Russia that Trump had requested negotiations ​because the U.S. has ⁠not achieved any of its objectives.
Senior Iranian officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters the proposal carried by Araqchi to Islamabad over the weekend envisioned talks in stages, with the nuclear issue to be set aside at the start.
A first step would require ending the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran and providing guarantees that the ⁠U.S. cannot ​start it up again. Then negotiators would resolve the U.S. Navy's blockade of Iran's trade ​by sea and the fate of the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran aims to reopen under its control
Only then would talks look at other issues, including the longstanding dispute over Iran's nuclear program, ​with Iran still seeking some kind of U.S. acknowledgment of its right to enrich uranium.
#StrategyBTCPurchase
#GamingCoins
#jasmyustd
#coinaute
#MegadropLista
UNICEF warns Afghanistan could lose up to 25,000 female health workers, teachersApril 27 (Reuters) - Afghanistan is at risk of losing more than 25,000 female teachers and health workers by 2030 if the Taliban-led country's ​restrictions on girls' education and women's employment are not lifted, according ‌to a new UNICEF report released on Monday. The Taliban has banned women from most public sector jobs and limited girls to receiving an education only until the age ​of 12. These restrictions, according to the report, have already affected at ​least 1 million girls - a figure that is expected to ⁠double by 2030 if nothing changes. UNICEF called on the Taliban to ​lift the ban that it imposed after returning to political power in 2021. UNICEF's "The ​Cost of Inaction on Girls' Education and Women’s Labour Force Participation in Afghanistan" report found a rapid decline in qualified women entering the teaching and healthcare sectors. Up to 20,000 ​female teachers and 5,400 health workers could be lost by 2030, ​according to the report, which estimated that this figure is about 25% of Afghanistan's 2021 ‌workforce. ⁠As many as 9,600 health workers could be lost by 2035, it added. Afghanistan cannot afford to lose future teachers, nurses, doctors, midwives, and social workers, who sustain essential services," UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell said. "This will ​be the reality if ​girls continue ⁠to be excluded from education." Female healthcare workers are required to attend to female patients, and female teachers are preferred ​for girls in gender-disaggregated schools whenever possible, the report ​noted. The growing ⁠decrease could have at least a AFN 5.3 billion ($84 million) annual economic impact on Afghanistan's economy, according to UNICEF, which added that this is the ⁠equivalent ​of about 0.5% of the country's gross domestic ​product. Afghanistan's de facto authorities should safeguard skills training and allow women to participate in the ​labor market, UNICEF said. #Kriptocutrader #HalvingUpdate #jasmyustd #cryptouniverseofficial #Dogecoin‬⁩

UNICEF warns Afghanistan could lose up to 25,000 female health workers, teachers

April 27 (Reuters) - Afghanistan is at risk of losing more than 25,000 female teachers and health workers by 2030 if the Taliban-led country's ​restrictions on girls' education and women's employment are not lifted, according ‌to a new UNICEF report released on Monday.
The Taliban has banned women from most public sector jobs and limited girls to receiving an education only until the age ​of 12.
These restrictions, according to the report, have already affected at ​least 1 million girls - a figure that is expected to ⁠double by 2030 if nothing changes. UNICEF called on the Taliban to ​lift the ban that it imposed after returning to political power in 2021.
UNICEF's "The ​Cost of Inaction on Girls' Education and Women’s Labour Force Participation in Afghanistan" report found a rapid decline in qualified women entering the teaching and healthcare sectors.
Up to 20,000 ​female teachers and 5,400 health workers could be lost by 2030, ​according to the report, which estimated that this figure is about 25% of Afghanistan's 2021 ‌workforce. ⁠As many as 9,600 health workers could be lost by 2035, it added.
Afghanistan cannot afford to lose future teachers, nurses, doctors, midwives, and social workers, who sustain essential services," UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell said. "This will ​be the reality if ​girls continue ⁠to be excluded from education."
Female healthcare workers are required to attend to female patients, and female teachers are preferred ​for girls in gender-disaggregated schools whenever possible, the report ​noted.
The growing ⁠decrease could have at least a AFN 5.3 billion ($84 million) annual economic impact on Afghanistan's economy, according to UNICEF, which added that this is the ⁠equivalent ​of about 0.5% of the country's gross domestic ​product.
Afghanistan's de facto authorities should safeguard skills training and allow women to participate in the ​labor market, UNICEF said.
#Kriptocutrader
#HalvingUpdate
#jasmyustd
#cryptouniverseofficial
#Dogecoin‬⁩
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Bullish
JasmyCoin (JASMY): The Data Democracy Champion Market Status: BULLISH Current Price: $0.005915 (+0.54%) JasmyCoin is showing signs of a "Multi-Year Breakout." After transitioning to its own Ethereum Layer-2 (JasmyChain), the token has gained significant utility. The launch of the "MemePad" on its chain—which requires burning JASMY to create tokens—introduces a deflationary mechanic that the market is beginning to price in. Technical analysts highlight a "falling wedge" pattern on the long-term charts, which is a classic bullish reversal signal. With a price target of $0.0578 being floated by AI trading tools, the current price of $0.0059 appears to be a consolidation floor. As long as it holds above $0.0055, the "Bulls" remain in control. #Jasmyusdt⚠️⚠️ #jasmyustd $JASMY {future}(JASMYUSDT)
JasmyCoin (JASMY): The Data Democracy Champion

Market Status: BULLISH

Current Price: $0.005915 (+0.54%)

JasmyCoin is showing signs of a "Multi-Year Breakout." After transitioning to its own Ethereum Layer-2 (JasmyChain), the token has gained significant utility.
The launch of the "MemePad" on its chain—which requires burning JASMY to create tokens—introduces a deflationary mechanic that the market is beginning to price in.

Technical analysts highlight a "falling wedge" pattern on the long-term charts, which is a classic bullish reversal signal.
With a price target of $0.0578 being floated by AI trading tools, the current price of $0.0059 appears to be a consolidation floor. As long as it holds above $0.0055, the "Bulls" remain in control.

#Jasmyusdt⚠️⚠️ #jasmyustd
$JASMY
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Bullish
Thebitcoin537
·
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Bullish
$JASMY
{future}(JASMYUSDT)
JASMY/USDT | 2H
Price is sitting just above a key Demand Zone. No trade yet.
📌 Plan:
If price pulls back into the Demand Zone and forms a bullish confirmation candle → LONG

#JASMYUSDT #thebitcoin537
Fresh EU sanctions set to hit condensate imports from Russia's Yamal LNGMOSCOW, April 24 (Reuters) - New European Union sanctions will ban condensate imports from Yamal LNG and other Russian projects that ​produce the light fuel as a byproduct of ‌their liquefied natural gas production from January 1, 2027, according to the EU's official journal. The European Union on Thursday formally approved a ​90-billion-euro ($105 billion) loan to Ukraine and new sanctions against Russia ​ahead of an informal summit of the bloc's leaders ⁠in Cyprus. The EU is tightening sanctions against Russia ​over the war in Ukraine as U.S.-brokered peace talks have ​been paused, with Washington's focus on the war in Iran. The EU has banned Russia's oil imports since December 2022 and subsequently introduced a ​price cap for Russian oil. The bloc has almost fully ​ended Russian coal, crude oil and fuels imports. In 2021, it ‌imported ⁠43% of its fuels from Russia and 25% of its crude oil supply. Russia produces gas condensate, a type of light oil, at its two LNG-producing projects: Yamal LNG ​and Arctic LNG-2. The ​Yamal LNG ⁠plant in the Arctic exported 1.12 million tons of gas condensate to Rotterdam in ​the Netherlands in 2024, up 16.3% from ​2023. Last year, ⁠the supplies rose by 7.4% to 1.2 million tons. Gas condensate is used as feedstock for production of petrochemical products ⁠as ​well as motor fuel. The EU initially ​excluded gas condensates from sanctions in 2022, citing the need to ensure ​security of LNG supplies. #TerraLabs #FactCheck #ETHETFsApproved #satoshiNakamato #jasmyustd

Fresh EU sanctions set to hit condensate imports from Russia's Yamal LNG

MOSCOW, April 24 (Reuters) - New European Union sanctions will ban condensate imports from Yamal LNG and other Russian projects that ​produce the light fuel as a byproduct of ‌their liquefied natural gas production from January 1, 2027, according to the EU's official journal.
The European Union on Thursday formally approved a ​90-billion-euro ($105 billion) loan to Ukraine and new sanctions against Russia ​ahead of an informal summit of the bloc's leaders ⁠in Cyprus.
The EU is tightening sanctions against Russia ​over the war in Ukraine as U.S.-brokered peace talks have ​been paused, with Washington's focus on the war in Iran.
The EU has banned Russia's oil imports since December 2022 and subsequently introduced a ​price cap for Russian oil.
The bloc has almost fully ​ended Russian coal, crude oil and fuels imports. In 2021, it ‌imported ⁠43% of its fuels from Russia and 25% of its crude oil supply.
Russia produces gas condensate, a type of light oil, at its two LNG-producing projects: Yamal LNG ​and Arctic LNG-2.
The ​Yamal LNG ⁠plant in the Arctic exported 1.12 million tons of gas condensate to Rotterdam in ​the Netherlands in 2024, up 16.3% from ​2023.
Last year, ⁠the supplies rose by 7.4% to 1.2 million tons.
Gas condensate is used as feedstock for production of petrochemical products ⁠as ​well as motor fuel.
The EU initially ​excluded gas condensates from sanctions in 2022, citing the need to ensure ​security of LNG supplies.
#TerraLabs
#FactCheck
#ETHETFsApproved
#satoshiNakamato
#jasmyustd
Exclusive: Trump poised to expand refugee program for white South AfricansWASHINGTON, April 23 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration is considering more than doubling an annual refugee limit to bring more white South Africans into the ​U.S., according to three people familiar with the matter. Trump, a Republican, paused refugee admissions from around the world when he took office in January 2025. Weeks later, ‌he issued an executive order prioritizing the resettlement of European-descended Afrikaners, saying they faced race-based persecution in majority-Black South Africa. South Africa’s government vehemently denies the claims. The U.S. Refugee Admissions Program was formally established in 1980 after hundreds of thousands of people fled wars in Vietnam and Cambodia. The program expanded to provide safe haven to persecuted people around the globe. Trump has used it almost exclusively to bring white South Africans into the U.S., ​part of a broader upending of norms around humanitarian protection, opens new tab. In recent weeks, U.S. officials have discussed expanding the 7,500-person refugee cap by 10,000 to allow more South Africans of ​Afrikaner ethnicity to obtain refugee status, said people familiar with internal planning, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share non-public government discussions. On Thursday, Assistant Secretary of State Andrew Veprek said an increase in the refugee limit was being considered, but did not provide details. "We're looking ​at the pace of resettlement right now and thinking about how quickly it's going, and do we need to increase the ceiling for the current fiscal year as well," he said at ​an event hosted by the Center for Immigration Studies, which supports lower levels of immigration. The ⁠White House referred questions to the U.S. State Department. Blacks make up 81% of South Africa's population, according to 2022 census data. Afrikaners and other white South Africans constitute 7% of the population. During the apartheid era, which ended with the first democratic elections in 1994, South Africa maintained a racially segregated society with separate schools, neighborhoods and public facilities for people classified as Black, colored, white or Asian. Trump set the record-low refugee ceiling of 7,500 for fiscal year 2026, which began October 1, 2025, ‌down from ⁠a ceiling of 125,000 a year under former President Joe Biden. The U.S. ​admitted about 4,500 South Africans as refugees through the first six months of the fiscal year, State Department figures show, on pace to exceed Trump’s existing limits for the program. The only ​refugees other than white South Africans to enter this fiscal year were three Afghans, according to State Department statistics. U.S. officials are weighing whether religious minorities from Iran and countries that used to be part of the Soviet Union could be included under what’s known as the “Lautenberg” program, the person said. The program stems from a 1989 budget amendment introduced by then-U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg that aimed to make it easier for Jewish refugees to resettle in the U.S. The Trump administration is also discussing bringing in refugees of other nationalities, one of the people familiar with planning said. Even as ​Trump looks to further ramp up the entry ​of South Africans, an internal U.S. government ⁠email reviewed by Reuters showed that at least four refugees already in the U.S. have returned to South Africa. One South African who arrived in Minneapolis in late January departed the U.S. less than a month later, the email showed. Case notes said that plans for his daughter and ​grandchildren to join him “fell through” so he returned to his home country. A pair of South Africans who arrived in Twin Falls, Idaho, in ​late January via the ⁠refugee program turned around a week later, saying a parent was ill in South Africa, the email showed Another South African resettled in Moline, Illinois, in mid-March returned home weeks later, the email said. Resettlement occurred quickly, she had not thoroughly thought through the process, and her family in South Africa has decided not to continue their own resettlement process,” case notes said. “Additionally, the client’s age (66) and ability to provide ⁠for herself is ​a concern.” Trump has portrayed South Africa as dangerous and oppressive for whites, yet thousands of white South Africans abroad have ​returned to the country in recent years, Reuters reported in March. U.S. government contracting documents reported by Reuters in February said the U.S. aimed to process 4,500 white South Africans per month through the refugee program. The documents also said the ​State Department paid to install more than a dozen trailers on embassy property in Pretoria to conduct interviews. Reporting by Ted Hesson; Additional reporting by Jonathan Landay; Editing by Craig Timberg and David Gregorio #CHIPPricePump #hottrendingtopics #Notcion #XRPRealityCheck #jasmyustd

Exclusive: Trump poised to expand refugee program for white South Africans

WASHINGTON, April 23 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration is considering more than doubling an annual refugee limit to bring more white South Africans into the ​U.S., according to three people familiar with the matter.
Trump, a Republican, paused refugee admissions from around the world when he took office in January 2025. Weeks later, ‌he issued an executive order prioritizing the resettlement of European-descended Afrikaners, saying they faced race-based persecution in majority-Black South Africa. South Africa’s government vehemently denies the claims.
The U.S. Refugee Admissions Program was formally established in 1980 after hundreds of thousands of people fled wars in Vietnam and Cambodia. The program expanded to provide safe haven to persecuted people around the globe. Trump has used it almost exclusively to bring white South Africans into the U.S., ​part of a broader upending of norms around humanitarian protection, opens new tab.
In recent weeks, U.S. officials have discussed expanding the 7,500-person refugee cap by 10,000 to allow more South Africans of ​Afrikaner ethnicity to obtain refugee status, said people familiar with internal planning, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share non-public government discussions.
On Thursday, Assistant Secretary of State Andrew Veprek said an increase in the refugee limit was being considered, but did not provide details. "We're looking ​at the pace of resettlement right now and thinking about how quickly it's going, and do we need to increase the ceiling for the current fiscal year as well," he said at ​an event hosted by the Center for Immigration Studies, which supports lower levels of immigration.
The ⁠White House referred questions to the U.S. State Department.
Blacks make up 81% of South Africa's population, according to 2022 census data. Afrikaners and other white South Africans constitute 7% of the population.
During the apartheid era, which ended with the first democratic elections in 1994, South Africa maintained a racially segregated society with separate schools, neighborhoods and public facilities for people classified as Black, colored, white or Asian.
Trump set the record-low refugee ceiling of 7,500 for fiscal year 2026, which began October 1, 2025, ‌down from ⁠a ceiling of 125,000 a year under former President Joe Biden.
The U.S. ​admitted about 4,500 South Africans as refugees through the first six months of the fiscal year, State Department figures show, on pace to exceed Trump’s existing limits for the program. The only ​refugees other than white South Africans to enter this fiscal year were three Afghans, according to State Department statistics.
U.S. officials are weighing whether religious minorities from Iran and countries that used to be part of the Soviet Union could be included under what’s known as the “Lautenberg” program, the person said. The program stems from a 1989 budget amendment introduced by then-U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg that aimed to make it easier for Jewish refugees to resettle in the U.S.
The Trump administration is also discussing bringing in refugees of other nationalities, one of the people familiar with planning said.
Even as ​Trump looks to further ramp up the entry ​of South Africans, an internal U.S. government ⁠email reviewed by Reuters showed that at least four refugees already in the U.S. have returned to South Africa.
One South African who arrived in Minneapolis in late January departed the U.S. less than a month later, the email showed. Case notes said that plans for his daughter and ​grandchildren to join him “fell through” so he returned to his home country.
A pair of South Africans who arrived in Twin Falls, Idaho, in ​late January via the ⁠refugee program turned around a week later, saying a parent was ill in South Africa, the email showed
Another South African resettled in Moline, Illinois, in mid-March returned home weeks later, the email said.
Resettlement occurred quickly, she had not thoroughly thought through the process, and her family in South Africa has decided not to continue their own resettlement process,” case notes said. “Additionally, the client’s age (66) and ability to provide ⁠for herself is ​a concern.”
Trump has portrayed South Africa as dangerous and oppressive for whites, yet thousands of white South Africans abroad have ​returned to the country in recent years, Reuters reported in March.
U.S. government contracting documents reported by Reuters in February said the U.S. aimed to process 4,500 white South Africans per month through the refugee program. The documents also said the ​State Department paid to install more than a dozen trailers on embassy property in Pretoria to conduct interviews.
Reporting by Ted Hesson; Additional reporting by Jonathan Landay; Editing by Craig Timberg and David Gregorio
#CHIPPricePump
#hottrendingtopics
#Notcion
#XRPRealityCheck
#jasmyustd
More than 100 crypto firms urge Senate to move on U.S. market structure billKey priorities include defining clear SEC and CFTC oversight roles, protecting non-custodial developers, simplifying disclosure rules, and avoiding a patchwork of state laws. The letter cites the risk of returning to "regulation by enforcement," referring to a series of court cases brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) that defined policy under President Joe Biden. More than 100 signatories are backing the effort. These include high-profile companies including Coinbase, Circle Internet, Kraken, Ripple, Andreessen Horowitz, Paradigm, Consensys, Anchorage Digital and Galaxy Digital alongside developer groups, state blockchain associations and university chapters of Stand With Crypto. The coalition flagged six priorities for lawmakers to address. These include preserving consumer rewards tied to payment stablecoins, defining oversight roles for the SEC and CFTC, and protecting developers who build non-custodial tools. It also called for disclosure rules that are easier to follow and a federal standard that avoids a patchwork of state laws. Other major jurisdictions, such as the European Union, have already enacted comprehensive cryptocurrency frameworks, and the group warned that the absence of U.S. legislation risks pushing investment, jobs and development offshore. America needs clear, comprehensive rules for digital asset markets. It is a global race to the top, and it is important for the U.S. to lead,” Ji Hun Kim, CEO of the Crypto Council for Innovation, in an email. The Senate Banking Committee can build on years of bipartisan work and the GENIUS Act's success by advancing legislation that delivers regulatory clarity, robust consumer protections, and strong safeguards for developers. A markup will move us closer to durable rules that ensure the U.S. sets the global standard for digital asset markets,” Kim said. #ETHETFS #TerraLabs #Robert #jasmyustd #Kabosu

More than 100 crypto firms urge Senate to move on U.S. market structure bill

Key priorities include defining clear SEC and CFTC oversight roles, protecting non-custodial developers, simplifying disclosure rules, and avoiding a patchwork of state laws.
The letter cites the risk of returning to "regulation by enforcement," referring to a series of court cases brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) that defined policy under President Joe Biden.
More than 100 signatories are backing the effort. These include high-profile companies including Coinbase, Circle Internet, Kraken, Ripple, Andreessen Horowitz, Paradigm, Consensys, Anchorage Digital and Galaxy Digital alongside developer groups, state blockchain associations and university chapters of Stand With Crypto.
The coalition flagged six priorities for lawmakers to address. These include preserving consumer rewards tied to payment stablecoins, defining oversight roles for the SEC and CFTC, and protecting developers who build non-custodial tools.
It also called for disclosure rules that are easier to follow and a federal standard that avoids a patchwork of state laws.
Other major jurisdictions, such as the European Union, have already enacted comprehensive cryptocurrency frameworks, and the group warned that the absence of U.S. legislation risks pushing investment, jobs and development offshore.
America needs clear, comprehensive rules for digital asset markets. It is a global race to the top, and it is important for the U.S. to lead,” Ji Hun Kim, CEO of the Crypto Council for Innovation, in an email.
The Senate Banking Committee can build on years of bipartisan work and the GENIUS Act's success by advancing legislation that delivers regulatory clarity, robust consumer protections, and strong safeguards for developers. A markup will move us closer to durable rules that ensure the U.S. sets the global standard for digital asset markets,” Kim said.
#ETHETFS
#TerraLabs
#Robert
#jasmyustd
#Kabosu
A make or break moment: why $79,200 could act as a launchpad or a ceiling for bitcoinTrue Market Mean and Short-Term Holder cost basis form a critical $78.2K to $79.2K range that could define the next major move The True Market Mean filters out lost, dormant, and economically inactive coins, leaving only the cost basis of participants who are actually present in the market, making it a more precise gauge of where real selling pressure resides Just above sits the Short-Term Holder realized price (STHRP) at $79,200, according to checkonchain. This cohort, defined as investors holding coins for fewer than 155 days, tends to be more reactive to price swings. With spot prices below their average entry, these participants remain at a slight loss. Bitcoin tested the STHRP in mid-January around $98,000 and got rejected A sustained move above this zone could shift both levels into support, strengthening bullish momentum. Conversely, failure to reclaim them may prolong bitcoin’s consolidation phase, with potential downside #TrendingTopic #YiHeBinance #UnicornChannel #jasmyustd #Kriptocutrader

A make or break moment: why $79,200 could act as a launchpad or a ceiling for bitcoin

True Market Mean and Short-Term Holder cost basis form a critical $78.2K to $79.2K range that could define the next major move
The True Market Mean filters out lost, dormant, and economically inactive coins, leaving only the cost basis of participants who are actually present in the market, making it a more precise gauge of where real selling pressure resides
Just above sits the Short-Term Holder realized price (STHRP) at $79,200, according to checkonchain. This cohort, defined as investors holding coins for fewer than 155 days, tends to be more reactive to price swings. With spot prices below their average entry, these participants remain at a slight loss. Bitcoin tested the STHRP in mid-January around $98,000 and got rejected
A sustained move above this zone could shift both levels into support, strengthening bullish momentum. Conversely, failure to reclaim them may prolong bitcoin’s consolidation phase, with potential downside
#TrendingTopic
#YiHeBinance
#UnicornChannel
#jasmyustd
#Kriptocutrader
Village hall flooded in break-in during renovationA historical village hall which is currently being refurbished has been badly damaged in a break-in. Burglars broke water pipes and flooded part of the century-old East Boldre Village Hall in the New Forest, its management team said. The vandalism, including damage to wires and cables, will have a "serious impact" on the renovation project, the team added. Hampshire police said items including tools were stolen some time between 17:00 BST on 15 April and 08:30 on 16 April. Trustees raised more than £450,000 for the refurbishment, which began at the start of February. In a Facebook post, they said: "The wanton vandalism damaged the recently installed fire alarm cables and electrical wiring and water pipes were damaged resulting in a flood. This is a serious setback for the works programme in terms of time and cost." The village hall, built in 1918 as an RAF concert hall, is the last remaining building from the World War One Beaulieu Airfields, according to the charity that runs it. #VOTEme #FactCheck #jasmyustd #DelistingAlert #LISTAAirdrop

Village hall flooded in break-in during renovation

A historical village hall which is currently being refurbished has been badly damaged in a break-in.
Burglars broke water pipes and flooded part of the century-old East Boldre Village Hall in the New Forest, its management team said.
The vandalism, including damage to wires and cables, will have a "serious impact" on the renovation project, the team added.
Hampshire police said items including tools were stolen some time between 17:00 BST on 15 April and 08:30 on 16 April.
Trustees raised more than £450,000 for the refurbishment, which began at the start of February.
In a Facebook post, they said: "The wanton vandalism damaged the recently installed fire alarm cables and electrical wiring and water pipes were damaged resulting in a flood.
This is a serious setback for the works programme in terms of time and cost."
The village hall, built in 1918 as an RAF concert hall, is the last remaining building from the World War One Beaulieu Airfields, according to the charity that runs it.
#VOTEme
#FactCheck
#jasmyustd
#DelistingAlert
#LISTAAirdrop
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Bearish
I want help withdrawing this amountI want help withdrawing this amount $BNB #jasmyustd

I want help withdrawing this amount

I want help withdrawing this amount $BNB
#jasmyustd
Pope Leo tells Angola during huge Mass to ‘build hope’Pope Leo XIV has addressed tens of thousands of faithful near Angola’s capital, urging the country to overcome “divisions” and “corruption” during a landmark tour of Africa. Speaking at an open-air Mass on Sunday in the town of Kilamba on the outskirts of Luanda, Leo addressed the country’s civil war-scarred past that he said has brought “enmity and division, squandered resources and poverty”. Today, there is a need to look to the future with hope and to build that hope. Do not be afraid to do so,” Leo said The pontiff arrived in the Portuguese-speaking nation on Saturday for the third leg of a four-nation tour of the continent, which began in Algeria and Cameroon and will also include a stop in Equatorial Guinea. At a meeting with Angolan officials, including President Joao Lourenco, Leo spoke out against the “suffering” and social and environmental “disasters” caused by the rampant exploitation of natural resources. The remarks in Angola, which endured a decades-long civil war that ended in 2002, continued a theme of Leo’s 11-day tour, during which he has delivered pointed warnings against corruption and the plunder of the continent’s resources The first United States-born pope has also delivered remarks seen as critical of the US-Israeli war in Iran and US policy, including calling US President Donald Trump’s threat to end Iran’s civilisation “unacceptable” The pontiff’s rhetoric has put him at odds with Trump, who last week called the Catholic leader “weak” and “terrible for foreign policy” Leo said he is not afraid of the Trump administration and will continue to speak out against war. But travelling from Cameroon to Angola on Saturday, Leo also said he has no interest in starting “a new debate” with the US president Many people who attended the Mass at Kilamba arrived early in the morning in anticipation “The pope coming here is a joy,” said ‌Sister Christina Matende, who arrived about 6am (05:00 GMT). “We are living in a moment of a lot of difficulties, and we are waiting for the blessing of the pope From Kilamba, Leo is to travel 110km (70 miles) by helicopter to the town of Muxima, Angola’s most venerated pilgrimage site, where a 300-year-old church overlooks a river that was once a major slave-trading route The church, with a statue of the Virgin Mary known affectionately as “Mama Muxima”, draws roughly two million pilgrims a year and large crowds are expected to meet the pope there. The pope is then due to travel more than 800km (497 miles) from the capital to visit a retirement home in Saurimo, where he will celebrate another Mass before departing for Equatorial Guinea. Catholic lawyer Domingos das Neves said the pope’s focus on social justice was welcome in Angola, which is struggling with “stark social asymmetries and inequalities” “Angola is in great need of a guiding light to illuminate our collective efforts both within ecclesiastical institutions and the state, so that we do not forget the poor and the destitute,” das Neves told the AFP news agency #ETHETFsApproved #Robertkiyosaki #YiHeBinance #jasmyustd #KEEP_SUPPORT

Pope Leo tells Angola during huge Mass to ‘build hope’

Pope Leo XIV has addressed tens of thousands of faithful near Angola’s capital, urging the country to overcome “divisions” and “corruption” during a landmark tour of Africa.
Speaking at an open-air Mass on Sunday in the town of Kilamba on the outskirts of Luanda, Leo addressed the country’s civil war-scarred past that he said has brought “enmity and division, squandered resources and poverty”.
Today, there is a need to look to the future with hope and to build that hope. Do not be afraid to do so,” Leo said
The pontiff arrived in the Portuguese-speaking nation on Saturday for the third leg of a four-nation tour of the continent, which began in Algeria and Cameroon and will also include a stop in Equatorial Guinea.
At a meeting with Angolan officials, including President Joao Lourenco, Leo spoke out against the “suffering” and social and environmental “disasters” caused by the rampant exploitation of natural resources.
The remarks in Angola, which endured a decades-long civil war that ended in 2002, continued a theme of Leo’s 11-day tour, during which he has delivered pointed warnings against corruption and the plunder of the continent’s resources
The first United States-born pope has also delivered remarks seen as critical of the US-Israeli war in Iran and US policy, including calling US President Donald Trump’s threat to end Iran’s civilisation “unacceptable”
The pontiff’s rhetoric has put him at odds with Trump, who last week called the Catholic leader “weak” and “terrible for foreign policy”
Leo said he is not afraid of the Trump administration and will continue to speak out against war. But travelling from Cameroon to Angola on Saturday, Leo also said he has no interest in starting “a new debate” with the US president
Many people who attended the Mass at Kilamba arrived early in the morning in anticipation
“The pope coming here is a joy,” said ‌Sister Christina Matende, who arrived about 6am (05:00 GMT). “We are living in a moment of a lot of difficulties, and we are waiting for the blessing of the pope
From Kilamba, Leo is to travel 110km (70 miles) by helicopter to the town of Muxima, Angola’s most venerated pilgrimage site, where a 300-year-old church overlooks a river that was once a major slave-trading route
The church, with a statue of the Virgin Mary known affectionately as “Mama Muxima”, draws roughly two million pilgrims a year and large crowds are expected to meet the pope there.
The pope is then due to travel more than 800km (497 miles) from the capital to visit a retirement home in Saurimo, where he will celebrate another Mass before departing for Equatorial Guinea.
Catholic lawyer Domingos das Neves said the pope’s focus on social justice was welcome in Angola, which is struggling with “stark social asymmetries and inequalities”
“Angola is in great need of a guiding light to illuminate our collective efforts both within ecclesiastical institutions and the state, so that we do not forget the poor and the destitute,” das Neves told the AFP news agency
#ETHETFsApproved
#Robertkiyosaki
#YiHeBinance
#jasmyustd
#KEEP_SUPPORT
Article
72-hrs Prediction for JASMYBased on the latest technical analysis from TradingView, JasmyCoin (JASMYUSD) is currently priced at $0.02096, experiencing a significant downtrend of approximately -10.54%. Despite this recent downturn, JASMY has shown a remarkable surge over varying periods: a 29.74% increase over the week, an impressive 281.70% rise over the past month, and a substantial 455.94% gain over the last six months. Year to date, JASMY has appreciated by 222.17%, with a one-year gain of 293.83%. However, it is essential to note that JASMY has faced a decline of -55.64% from its all-time highs, indicating the volatile nature of cryptocurrency investments.The trading volume in the last 24 hours for JASMY has been reported at approximately $394.88 million, with a market capitalization of around $1.04 billion. This significant trading activity underscores the growing interest and liquidity in JASMY trading.Given the current technical indicators and market sentiment, for a detailed 72-hour prediction, it's reasonable to expect continued volatility in JASMY's price. Technical analysis suggests potential fluctuations, with resistance and support levels being key factors in determining JASMY's short-term price movements. Considering the significant recent gains, traders should be prepared for both potential upside momentum and corrective pullbacks as the market digests these movements.Please remember, this analysis is not financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments are highly speculative and come with risks. Always conduct your research or consult with a financial advisor before making investment decisions.#TrendingTopic #jasmyustd $JASMY

72-hrs Prediction for JASMY

Based on the latest technical analysis from TradingView, JasmyCoin (JASMYUSD) is currently priced at $0.02096, experiencing a significant downtrend of approximately -10.54%. Despite this recent downturn, JASMY has shown a remarkable surge over varying periods: a 29.74% increase over the week, an impressive 281.70% rise over the past month, and a substantial 455.94% gain over the last six months. Year to date, JASMY has appreciated by 222.17%, with a one-year gain of 293.83%. However, it is essential to note that JASMY has faced a decline of -55.64% from its all-time highs, indicating the volatile nature of cryptocurrency investments.The trading volume in the last 24 hours for JASMY has been reported at approximately $394.88 million, with a market capitalization of around $1.04 billion. This significant trading activity underscores the growing interest and liquidity in JASMY trading.Given the current technical indicators and market sentiment, for a detailed 72-hour prediction, it's reasonable to expect continued volatility in JASMY's price. Technical analysis suggests potential fluctuations, with resistance and support levels being key factors in determining JASMY's short-term price movements. Considering the significant recent gains, traders should be prepared for both potential upside momentum and corrective pullbacks as the market digests these movements.Please remember, this analysis is not financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments are highly speculative and come with risks. Always conduct your research or consult with a financial advisor before making investment decisions.#TrendingTopic #jasmyustd $JASMY
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Bullish
Eng-CHISONGELA
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⏩️⏩️Back in the Day of 2021 $YFI is Pumped up to $95K, with the impact of asian people indeed is CHINA people was one who did to YFI to reach that price. This time in Bull market it is for $JASMY.
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Am long and strong
👉Buy $JASMY, The Future is Bright and Clear.
See below the 1W time frame for Jasmy that show Triangle of Pump🚀🚀🚀🔥🔥🔥
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