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BitMine bought 23,637 $ETH worth $73.28 million today.
Tom Lee has found an infinite money glitch.
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Crypto's full of projects screaming for attention with huge promises and constant noise. Kite doesn't do that. They just focus on building stuff that actually lasts, going deep on infrastructure while everyone else copies whatever's trending. There's this quiet confidence about them—not the fake "we're so simple" thing, but more like they genuinely have your back. The interface is clean, communication stays direct, no jargon or filler. They talk about yield in a real way, no crazy APYs that make no sense, just steady returns that protect your money. And they don't hide the risks either, it's all out there in their docs and conversations. The whole brand feels sharp and purposeful, even the name makes you think of movement and lift. Their community isn't the usual hype crowd, it's builders and people who actually care about how things work. What really sticks is the consistency—every update, every product, same message about efficiency and trust. It doesn't feel like another trend that'll vanish, it feels like something built to stay. @KITE AI #KITE $KITE
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Lorenzo's trying to solve a pretty basic problem in crypto—how do you actually build yield that doesn't fall apart or drain liquidity from everyone using it. Instead of every project making their own messy yield system, they just plug into Lorenzo and it handles the heavy lifting. It's kind of like shared infrastructure for yield, working quietly in the background for DeFi, Bitcoin stuff, gaming, real-world assets, whatever. The cool part is the abstraction—users and devs don't need to stress about where yield comes from, they just deposit and earn. Lorenzo moves idle capital around to where it actually works, sends rewards back, keeps things flowing. Different markets need different things, so it breaks strategies into pieces and matches risk levels. If it actually works the way they're planning, it could just become the standard everyone expects, like how we assume stablecoins and oracles will just be there. @Lorenzo Protocol #LorenzoProtocol $BANK
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MASSIVE: Larry Fink compares the rise of tokenization to the early days of the internet. At the same time, he points to Bitcoin as an emerging store of value within global portfolios. The institutional roadmap is getting clearer.
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Alright, so Lorenzo Protocol is basically trying to make DeFi feel less like a casino and more like actual finance. • Simple vaults vs composed vaults – Simple ones do one thing. Composed vaults mix multiple strategies together and move money around based on rules or market shifts. • Everything runs on smart contracts instead of some fund manager you have to trust blindly. • Why does this even matter? Because most DeFi stuff right now is just chasing short-term yields that disappear fast. • They use actual trading strategies from traditional finance – things like quantitative models, managed futures, volatility plays. Not just farm-and-dump token schemes. • The BANK token isn't just for show. You can vote on which strategies get added, vault settings, where the protocol goes long-term. • Lock your BANK tokens and you get veBANK, which gives you more voting power and better rewards. Keeps people thinking long-term instead of flipping tokens every week. • One big thing here is transparency – you can see exactly where money goes, how returns happen, what the risks are. No black boxes. • These OTFs (On-Chain Traded Funds) work in bull markets, bear markets, sideways markets. They're built to survive different conditions instead of only working when number go up. • It's kind of bridging two worlds. TradFi people get familiar fund structures without middlemen. DeFi people get something that doesn't rely on endless token inflation. • Lorenzo's not just one product, they're setting up infrastructure for more tokenized strategies as institutions start poking around DeFi. @Lorenzo Protocol #LorenzoProtocol $BANK
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People always ask the same question: “How did Jeffrey Epstein actually make his money?” And the uncomfortable truth is… no one has a clean, complete answer. I’ve been digging over the last 12 hours, and I found some very interesting things. What we do know starts here: Epstein began his career in the 1970s at Bear Stearns, working in finance and options trading. He wasn’t a superstar, but he was smart enough to get noticed and, more importantly, well-connected. After leaving Bear Stearns, he suddenly resurfaced managing money for extremely wealthy individuals. In the early 1980s, he set up his own firm, J. Epstein & Co. Here’s where things get strange. His firm didn’t operate like a normal hedge fund. It reportedly had only a handful of clients, all billionaires. Epstein himself once claimed he managed money exclusively for people worth over $1 billion. No public fund, no outside investors, no clear performance records. Just… quiet. One of the most important names tied to his rise is Les Wexner, the billionaire founder of L Brands (Victoria’s Secret, Bath & Body Works). Epstein became deeply embedded in Wexner’s financial life, reportedly gaining sweeping control over assets, properties, and trusts. This relationship alone explains some of Epstein’s wealth, but not nearly all of it. Over time, Epstein accumulated: Multiple private jets A Manhattan mansion worth tens of millions A private island Properties across the U.S. and abroad Access to heads of state, royalty, scientists, and CEOs Yet even financial investigators have said his income sources never fully matched his lifestyle. There were persistent rumors that he acted as a financial fixer, tax strategist, or intermediary for the ultra-rich. Helping them move money quietly, reduce exposure, or solve problems no one wanted on paper. But again: Very little documentation, transparency and very few answers. That’s what makes the Epstein story so unsettling. Not just who he associated with, not just the crimes he was convicted of.
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