Binance Square

Saadimran1

Open Trade
Frequent Trader
1.5 Years
1.6K+ Following
417 Followers
277 Liked
32 Shared
Content
Portfolio
·
--
sol
64%
bnb
15%
btc
17%
اخرى
4%
75 votes • Voting closed
Title: 🚀 Don't give up One day the market is up 📈 One day the market is down 📉 But: Learning today = Profit tomorrow Patience = Strength Loss is a lesson, not the end Keep going 💪 What is the biggest lesson you learned in crypto? 👇 #تحفيز #Binance
Title: 🚀 Don't give up
One day the market is up 📈
One day the market is down 📉
But:
Learning today = Profit tomorrow
Patience = Strength
Loss is a lesson, not the end
Keep going 💪
What is the biggest lesson you learned in crypto? 👇
#تحفيز #Binance
Title: ⏰ Information in 10 Seconds Did you know? 🔹 Bitcoin has a limited supply 🔹 It is not printed like money 🔹 That's why it's considered a store of value What currency are you following now? 👀 #bitcoin #CryptoNews {future}(BTCUSDT) $BTC
Title: ⏰ Information in 10 Seconds
Did you know?
🔹 Bitcoin has a limited supply
🔹 It is not printed like money
🔹 That's why it's considered a store of value
What currency are you following now? 👀
#bitcoin #CryptoNews

$BTC
gn
gn
Crypto_Alchemy
·
--
Over the past 24 months, the Japanese Yen has been the most resilient among major currencies, and this wave of depreciation has not weakened even as we enter 2026. Last week, the USD/JPY broke through the 159 level, reaching a high not seen since July of last year.
Speaking of the Yen's rebound, there have been a few instances. During the July to August 2024 surge, the Yen appreciated to around 140 against the USD, mainly due to a sudden liquidation of Yen arbitrage trades, triggering panic short covering. Later, there was another decline to 140, driven by safe-haven buying and massive selling of USD assets.
By the first half of this year, the situation looked favorable for the Yen. Data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) showed that the Yen's net non-commercial positions shifted from net short to net long, even reaching a historic high in April. Investor sentiment also changed—bearish views on the Yen weakened, and bullish sentiments emerged. The logic behind this was clear: the Federal Reserve would cut rates significantly, the Bank of Japan would continue to raise rates, and the Japanese government could intervene in the currency market at any time.
The problem is, starting in the second half, the script reversed. The Fed's policies are not as dovish as the market expected. In September last year, expectations were for a cumulative rate cut of 2.5 percentage points by the end of 2025. But what happened? Due to the resilience of the US economy and persistent inflation, the Fed only cut rates by 1.75 percentage points. Looking ahead, the situation is even less favorable for the Yen...
Login to explore more contents
Explore the latest crypto news
⚡️ Be a part of the latests discussions in crypto
💬 Interact with your favorite creators
👍 Enjoy content that interests you
Email / Phone number

Trending Articles

View More
Sitemap
Cookie Preferences
Platform T&Cs