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$BTC This message is more mood-driven: Watcher.Guru just posted, and Michael Saylor also hinted that buying Bitcoin could continue. His exact words were: “We’re gonna need more charts.”
This isn’t the kind of hard-good news that you can just chase the moment it comes out; it’s more like adding fuel to the bulls’ sentiment. Binance spot BTC is currently around $60,090, up slightly by 0.23% over the last 24H, with trading volume about $665 million. The chart still hasn’t fully pushed out of a strong bullish candle.
My take is simple: signals like Saylor’s are better used as a sentiment thermometer—not as a button to mindlessly chase orders. If it can hold above 60,000, the bulls still have room to tell a story; if it drops back below, treat it as sentiment fading triggered by the news.
The latest entry from WuBlockchain is a bit uncomfortable: from June 22 to 26, the U.S. stock spot $BTC ETF saw net outflows of $1.79 billion, already the third-highest weekly net outflow on record.
I won’t use this kind of data to call for a short directly, but it at least indicates one thing: the buy-side demand in the ETF market isn’t going smoothly. On Binance, BTC is currently around 59,830, down slightly 0.52% over the past 24 hours; the intraday range is 58,900–60,545. The 1H MA20 is around 59,796—price is basically grinding right along the moving average.
My view is simple: only if it can reclaim and hold above 60,500 will the ETF outflow pressure be considered digested by the price action; if 58,900 gets broken down again, don’t rush to buy—first see whether stop-loss orders keep coming out.
Wus Shu cited SoSoValue statistics: over the week from June 22 to 26, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net outflows of $1.79 billion, the third-highest net outflow in a single week on record.
Spot ETH ETFs also saw outflows of $273 million, marking 7 consecutive weeks of net outflows.
What’s interesting is that funds aren’t pulling out across the board. Spot XRP ETFs had net inflows of $22.99 million, and the HYPE spot ETF had net inflows of $111 million.
I won’t just take this as the end of a bull market, but chasing longs in the short term does require picking your spots more carefully. Money is withdrawing from BTC/ETH, but on the other side smaller themes are drawing in funds—price action looks more like a rotation and divergence rather than the whole market going dark at once.
$BTC This looks more like an emotional signal, not a technical one.
WatcherGuru posted 14 hours ago: Michael Saylor is hinting again that he wants to buy more Bitcoin—the exact line was “We're gonna need more charts.”
The remark itself isn’t complicated. It’s just that the Strategy/MicroStrategy storyline is still sending confidence to the market. But the chart hasn’t immediately turned exuberant: Binance BTC spot is currently around 59,528, down -0.99% over the past 24 hours, and even the 1H close is still below the MA20 at about 59,820.
So I’ll treat this as a mildly bullish sentiment reminder—not a reason to chase longs right away. For BTC to reclaim the 59,800–60,500 range first, Saylor’s “adding-more” hint is more likely to translate into actual buying on the chart. If price continues to stay pinned below the MA20, the market may only be reacting to the hype.
Watcher.Guru 13 hours ago, that one was very straightforward: Michael Saylor is again implying that we should buy more Bitcoin. The exact quote is “We're gonna need more charts.”
I wouldn’t treat this kind of message as a short-term entry point, but it does indicate one thing: the BTC holding narrative from Strategy hasn’t exited the stage yet. Right now on Binance spot, it’s around 59.4K, down about -1.3% over the past 24h. The intraday low is 58.9K, and the price is still below the 1H MA20.
So I’d rather take it as a sentiment anchor: only if it manages to get back above 60K / 1H MA20 will the market seriously trade the idea of “continuing to accumulate.” If 58.9K breaks again, even Saylor’s meme won’t stop short-term stop-loss selling.
Saylor is implying again that we need to buy BTC. Watcher.Guru reposted his exact words 12 hours ago: “We’re gonna need more charts.” These kinds of lines can’t be taken as a buy signal, but at least it shows the Strategy line hasn’t been turned off.
The market isn’t cooperating: Binance spot BTC is around $59,464, down 1.13% over the past 24h, trading in the range 58,905–60,545; the 1H close is still below the MA20 of about 59,860.
My understanding is simple: the news is somewhat bullish, but the price hasn’t caught up yet. If it can reclaim the $60,000 level, Saylor’s narrative is more likely to turn into capital chasing; if it gets pushed back down near 58,900 again, don’t treat the four words “keep buying” as a protective charm.
$LRC This message is a bit like the settlement notice from an old project.
WuBlockchain just posted it. Loopring has announced that the Loopring DEX will be shut down immediately, and the relayer will be taken offline. The team’s explanation was also pretty straightforward: early on, they did prove that ZK can scale Ethereum, but it wasn’t an EVM architecture, adoption wasn’t enough, BD was weak, and on top of that, in 2026 LRC was delisted from several exchanges—so in the end, they could only shut it down.
Nothing to worry about on the chart either: Binance spot LRCUSDT is down about -6.24% over 24h, trading in the range of 0.01830–0.02200, with a trading volume of roughly 2.89 million USDT. At this level, I don’t really want to gamble on a “bad news already priced in.” At minimum, we should first see whether it can reclaim and hold above 0.020; if it can’t, then it’s more likely that existing funds will just keep withdrawing from one another.
The old ZK narrative can still be traded, but when the project shuts down its own DEX, that signal has to be respected.
Watcher.Guru’s message from 10 hours ago was pretty straightforward: Michael Saylor is once again hinting that we should keep buying Bitcoin. His exact words were: “We’re gonna need more charts.”
I’ll treat this as a signal of sentiment rather than a direct buy point. On Binance spot, when $BTC posted, it was around 59,397. In the last 24h: -1.33%. The intraday low had just barely been reached at 59,270. The 1H 20 moving average is around 59,977, and it hasn’t been fully reclaimed yet.
So this headline is somewhat bullish, but the price action hasn’t caught up. If we really want to see buying narratives like Saylor’s “cook” and mature, at the very least we should first re-establish support around the 60k area. If it keeps grinding at the 59.3k lower zone, don’t treat a single call-out as proof of follow-through.
The Novogratz line about Galaxy is a bit harsh: for this round of BTC pullback, he didn’t just blame the macro environment—he specifically pointed out that confidence in the MicroStrategy track is loosening, and the market has started repricing the “buy-coin company premium.”
$BTC Spot is currently around 59,650 on Binance, down 1.06% in the last 24 hours. The intraday low just barely hit 59,270; on the futures side, 24-hour trading volume is still $5.3 billion—it's not that nobody is trading. Everyone is watching whether the 60k area can hold.
So I don’t really want to treat every time Saylor hints at adding more as a straight-up positive signal. This feels more like a sentiment test: if it can reclaim and stay above 60,500, then the selling pressure can be considered to ease for a moment. If it continues to grind around 59,000, don’t rush to call for a reversal.
Watcher.Guru posted it about 8 hours ago: Michael Saylor hinted again that we might continue buying Bitcoin. His exact words were: “We're gonna need more charts.” The market can easily interpret it as: the Strategy side still has additional buying/adding positions.
But I won’t chase longs just because Saylor said a line. Binance spot is currently around 59,443, and the 24h price is still down by about 1.27%. The price is close to the intraday low around 59,404, and it hasn’t yet regained the area near the 1H MA20 around 60,041.
My view is a bit bullish, but the conditions are strict: first reclaim the 60,000–60,100 zone, then we can talk about sentiment repair. If 59,400 can’t even be held, then this message looks more like giving the bulls another breath—not an immediate reversal.
Watcher.Guru just posted a quote: “Michael Saylor is once again hinting that we need to buy more Bitcoin—‘We need more charts.’”
I don’t want to force an interpretation that this means a dump is coming right away. $BTC is currently around 59,615 on Binance; the last 24h is down 1.5%. The intraday low is near 59,404, and the 1H MA20 is sitting above 60,070. In other words, buy-the-hint signals like Saylor’s can boost sentiment, but the price action hasn’t yet repaired the weakness.
For the short term, I’ll watch whether it can reclaim 60,000–60,100. If it can’t get back above that level, then it’s just news driving sentiment. If it does reclaim it, only then will the shorts start to feel pressure. Long-term positions are a different story—don’t chase entries based on a single celebrity tweet.
WuBlockchain commented on Novogratz’s remarks: this round of $BTC retraces— the core issue isn’t that one ugly candlestick, but that the market’s confidence in the MicroStrategy leveraged/holdings narrative has begun to loosen. From this angle, it’s more biting than just looking at the drawdown.
On Binance, spot BTC is around $59,600, down about -1.6% over the past 24 hours. Perpetual volumes are close to $4.88 billion, and the funding rate is only 0.000773%—not yet the kind of sentiment bottom you get after long positions are completely squeezed out.
So I’m in no rush to translate this selloff into “cheap.” If 59.5K can’t hold, the market may continue cutting the valuation of the MSTR/high-leverage BTC story. Only if it can reclaim above 60.6K should we discuss whether this was a false drop.
First, look for confidence to recover—don’t rush to bottom-fish.
$BTC Don’t chase this as a bottom-calling hype for now—it’s more like a risk warning.
WuBlockchain relays what Galaxy Digital CEO Mike Novogratz said: Recently, BTC has pulled back, and part of it comes from the market’s confidence in the MicroStrategy-related narrative weakening. He also mentioned two things: U.S. monetary policy is leaning hawkish, and sentiment in the crypto market has cooled.
Right now, Binance spot BTCUSDT is around 59,900, down 1.3% in 24h. Price is sitting just along the 60,000–59,000 support band he mentioned. If this area holds, the bears haven’t broken through the chart yet. If it breaks down, he warns that the next risk zone is 45,000.
I don’t want to loudly call a bottom around 59k. Look for follow-through first. If there’s no support, don’t rush to treat “belief” as your position.
$BTC In this round of pullback, Mike Novogratz’s take is pretty straightforward: it’s not just macro panic—confidence in the market’s “coin-buying financing machine” story led by MicroStrategy/Strategy first loosened, and that dragged Bitcoin down with it.
In a paraphrase from Wu Blockchain, the original line is probably something like “MicroStrategy-led breakdown in confidence,” which is creating selling pressure. Put in order-book language, it means people are starting to reassess BTC’s treasury-stock bid, leverage premium, and follower pricing.
I don’t see this as a long-term bearish signal. More like a short-term credit discount. Binance spot BTC is currently around $59,900, down 1.47% over 24h, with a low near $59,750; if it can’t hold above $60,000 next, the market will first watch for support in the $59,000 area. Only if it can reclaim $61,000 can we say this wave of sentiment has been pressured and stabilized.
$XAUT This one is more interesting than ordinary gold-trading callouts.
CoinDesk just mentioned that Tether is moving its roughly $23 billion gold reserve out, Ledn has already started supporting a tokenized gold product, XAUT, and later plans to launch gold-backed loans.
I won’t interpret it as XAUT about to pump immediately. Binance spot is currently around 4070.6 USDT, with only about -0.09% over the last 24 hours; contract volume is also just a few million USDT, so the short term isn’t particularly hot.
But it shows one thing: the tokenization of gold on-chain isn’t just sitting there telling a story—it’s starting to move into lending, collateral, and yield. If you really want to be bullish, you still need to see whether XAUT/USDT can expand along with trading volume; if it’s only hype and the price doesn’t move, chasing it can be frustrating.
$ETH This Base recap, I think, is more useful than a single K-line.
Today, Wu said that on June 25 and 26, Base’s mainnet experienced two separate outages lasting about 116 minutes and 20 minutes, respectively. Base’s own recap says that both times were caused by the same sequencer block construction bug: after a failed transaction, the old journal state wasn’t cleared, and in the end blocks were produced that contained invalid state transitions.
The funds weren’t affected, and the bug has already been fixed.
But this can’t just be taken as, “Once it’s fixed, we move on.” The bigger L2 gets, the more the sequencer, monitoring, and recovery mechanisms resemble an exchange’s matching system—normally nobody praises it, but once it goes down, any weakness gets amplified.
So I won’t use this to chase shorts on ETH. Still, it does serve as a reminder: in the Base/Ethereum ecosystem ahead, what matters isn’t only TPS and TVL, but also stable delivery. Sooner or later, the market will reprice this variable.
Watcher.Guru just posted: Michael Saylor seems to be implying again that Strategy should continue buying BTC. The line he paired it with is “We’re gonna need more charts.”
I’ll treat this as a sentiment signal, not as an entry point. Right now Binance spot BTC is about 60,274, and over the past 24 hours it’s down only 0.13%. Contract trading volume over 24h is about 4.82 billion USDT. Price is hovering around the 1H MA20 (around 60,221), grinding up and down. The funding rate at 0.0065% isn’t especially extreme.
So this isn’t a “go all-in” signal; it’s more like another appearance from the Saylor-fund narrative. If I’m bullish, at least we need to see whether it can keep holding near 60k. If it falls back below 59,700, I’ll treat this move as only news sentiment and won’t chase.
$BTC Today this call is more eye-catching than ordinary ones: WuBlockchain cites a remark by Zach Pandl, the head of Grayscale Research. Under Strategy, if next week only increases STRC’s dividend by 50 basis points, then over the next two years there would likely be about $100 million more in dividend pressure—and the market may not necessarily accept that.
His tougher proposal is: sell more than $3 billion worth of BTC, cover most of the cash obligations in the next two years first, and doing so may actually be more able to repair confidence.
This isn’t saying that Strategy will definitely crash the market, nor is it encouraging people to blindly short BTC. My understanding is that what the market is watching now isn’t only the positioning story—it’s whether the cash flow can hold up. BTC spot is currently about 60,136; the 24h low is 59,753 and the high is 60,941. Volatility is still hovering around the 60k area. As long as expectations of this kind of “forced selling of coins” haven’t been priced in, don’t be too quick to treat any rebound as a trend reversal.