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Greater geopolitical tensions around the world are drawing investors to safe-haven assets.
ResidentEvil2020777
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Bullish
📌Results of 2025.
Cryptocurrencies became the weakest asset in 2025.
👑Top assets:
Silver — +130%;
Gold — +65%;
Nasdaq — +20%;
S&P 500 — +16%;
Russell 2000 — +13%;
Bitcoin — -6%;
Ethereum — -12%;
Altcoins — -42%.
Did the bull succeed? 😅
#news #WriteToEarnUpgrade #TrendingTopic #Market_Update #BTCVSGOLD
$BTC $ETH $BNB
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#BTCVSGOLD #TrumpTarrifGame Bitcoin is not digital gold Until recently, bitcoin might have been touted as another debasement trade. The cryptocurrency has a capped supply and is beyond the reach of central bankers, so it cannot be devalued as “fiat” currencies can. Those features spurred hopes that bitcoin might become digital gold, offering a hedge against inflation and government profligacy. Investors, it turns out, prefer the real thing. Since the start of 2025 the price of gold has risen by over 60%. Bitcoin, by contrast, is down by 7%, and suffered a peak-to-trough plunge of over 30% in October and November. Rather than looking for digital alternatives to the yellow metal, investors have turned to more traditional substitutes. Silver has done even better than gold (see chart 3), more than doubling in value this year. If bitcoin is not digital gold, what is it? It is often described as a proxy for global risk appetite or investors’ techno-optimism. Indeed, bitcoin’s sharp drop late in the year coincided with falls in Nvidia’s share price and those of tech firms more broadly. Over the course of the year, however, these stocks have far outperformed the cryptocurrency. Bitcoin’s faithful adherents may need a more convincing story if they are not to lose even more. #TrumpTariffs #BTC☀️
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#BTCVSGOLD America’s blockade of Venezuela helped push the price of gold to an all-time high. Greater geopolitical tensions around the world are drawing investors to safe-haven assets. The metal’s price has risen by around 66% this year, putting it on track for its biggest annual increase since 1979. Prices of other metals, including silver, have also risen.
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#FOMCWatch Fed’s Williams: CPI data may have been pushed down a bit The President of the New York Federal Reserve (Fed), John Williams, spoke at an interview conducted by the media channel CNBC on Friday. Key Takeaways Some of the new data has been encouraging and shows more disinflation. CPI data had some distortions, will need more data to get good read on inflation. New jobs data shows steady private sector job gains. Unemployment rate may have been pushed up by distortions, but not a surprising read. 2025 GDP likely 1% to 1.5% but will pick up next year. 2025 GDP likely around 2.25%. Higher productivity growth is a plus for economy. Doesn't see A.I. as a systemic financial sector risk right now. Fed should not try to anticipate market is getting it wrong. Fed is not doing quantitative easing right now with asset buying. Fed bond buying now is about managing reserves, is technical. Current Fed asset buying is not designed to move long-term rates. I do eventually see rates coming down. Fed is in a good position to balance its goal.”
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#USNonFarmPayrollReport More U.S. labor market, inflation data due There are more data releases for traders to digest Thursday, as they try to work out the likely rate of U.S. interest rates in the new year. Data released on Tuesday showed that U.S. nonfarm payrolls rose by 64,000 jobs in November, but the unemployment rate climbed to 4.6%, the highest since 2021. Weekly jobless claims are due later in the session, along with the U.S. consumer price index, and these could provide fresh guidance on the Federal Reserve’s interest rate outlook. “Unless the weekly jobless claims number spikes today, we doubt the U.S. data will move the dollar much at all,” said analysts at ING, in a note. “That includes a reading on the delayed CPI data, where the November headline figure is expected to be 3.1% year-on- year, feeding into the sticky inflation narrative. Yet that looks unlikely to prompt a major re-assessment of the Fed trajectory.” More U.S. labor market, inflation data due There are more data releases for traders to digest Thursday, as they try to work out the likely rate of U.S. interest rates in the new year. Data released on Tuesday showed that U.S. nonfarm payrolls rose by 64,000 jobs in November, but the unemployment rate climbed to 4.6%, the highest since 2021. Weekly jobless claims are due later in the session, along with the U.S. consumer price index, and these could provide fresh guidance on the Federal Reserve’s interest rate outlook. “Unless the weekly jobless claims number spikes today, we doubt the U.S. data will move the dollar much at all,” said analysts at ING, in a note. “That includes a reading on the delayed CPI data, where the November headline figure is expected to be 3.1% year-on- year, feeding into the sticky inflation narrative. Yet that looks unlikely to prompt a major re-assessment of the Fed trajectory.” #USNonFarmPayrollReport #BTC
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