⛔️ Hyperliquid has started blocking wallets via the web interface that interacted with HTX after British sanctions — the DEX protocol itself remains open, but the main site now filters addresses through risk checks with Chainalysis, Elliptic, and TRM.
🏦 Billionaire Tim Draper believes that quantum computers are more likely to create problems for banks with their outdated infrastructure, rather than Bitcoin.
💳 Mastercard and Ripple are creating infrastructure for AI agents that can pay for services and perform tasks on behalf of businesses.
🤖 Claude Fable 5 suddenly started switching to its own incomprehensible language during training — a mix of symbols, emojis, and something resembling Morse code.
📶 Cardano is accused of possible insider leakage — according to on-chain analysis, in 2021, wallets associated with IOHK may have withdrawn around 1.5 billion ADA at prices between $1 and $3 — at the peak price.
🇷🇺 The European Union is considering sanctions that could force major crypto exchanges to restrict or completely shut down access for Russian users — Bybit, OKX, and Gate are mentioned as being at the highest risk.
🔮 Prediction platform Kalshi tightened control following a series of insider trading scandals — traders on "sensitive markets" are now required to disclose their workplace.
🇺🇸 The Consumer Price Index in the US (CPI), showing inflation, rose to 4.2% — the indicator was 3.8% last month.
☠️ The old Raydium pool on Solana was hacked for $1 ,340,000 — not the entire exchange was affected, but a separate outdated liquidity pool.
One of the biggest misconceptions in crypto trading is believing every Moving Average crossover signals a new trend.
In reality, some of the most expensive losses happen during fake crossovers.
You've probably seen it before:
$BTC starts pumping. MA7 crosses above MA25. Social media turns bullish. Traders rush into longs. 🚀
Then suddenly...
Price reverses. The crossover fails. And late buyers get trapped.
So why does this happen?
📊 Low Volume Traps
A crossover without volume is like a breakout without participation.
Moving Averages are based on past price action. If #BTC rises on weak volume, the crossover may look bullish, but there isn't enough demand to support a sustained move.
The result?
A temporary crossover that quickly disappears once buying pressure fades.
🔹️ Liquidity Manipulation
Markets are driven by liquidity.
Large players know many retail traders enter positions immediately after crossovers.
This creates predictable liquidity zones.
Sometimes price is pushed just enough to trigger: ▫️ MA crossover traders ▫️ Breakout traders ▫️ FOMO buyers
Once those positions are filled, price reverses and liquidity gets collected.
The crossover wasn't the signal.
It was the bait.
🔴 Why RSI Matters
RSI helps determine whether momentum actually supports the crossover.
For example:
🟢 Bullish crossover + RSI pushing above 50 = stronger probability of continuation