All Activity
- Past hour
-
Revolut + Ethereum: Smooth Payment Processing Revolut uses non-standard smart contracts for Ethereum payments, which can sometimes cause delays or processing errors. At Apirone, these transactions are processed automatically — just like regular transfers. We are fully adapted to work with this platform, so your customers won’t face long waits or unconfirmed payments. Sincerely, the Apirone tech team. Accept crypto payments in ETH with Apirone. Crypto payment gateway | Business solutions for accept crypto
-
Racer490 started following Crypto Market Divergence: XRP Weakens, DAM Gains Attention
-
The market is showing two very different stories today. XRP continues to struggle, weighed down by macro uncertainty, increased selling pressure, and slowing on-chain activity. Technical indicators remain weak, and support levels are being tested. At the same time, $DAM drew interest with a notable +60% move on BingX before stabilizing. DAM is tied to Reservoir, a decentralized stablecoin protocol on Ethereum aiming for scalability and steady yields. Its products rUSD, srUSD, and trUSD are backed by a mix of digital and real-world assets, providing diversification that could stand out in the stablecoin space. It’s a reminder of how quickly narratives shift in crypto while some assets face pressure, others emerge with new momentum. What’s your take do projects like Reservoir point toward the future of stablecoins, or is the market still too early to tell?
- Today
-
Crypto markets are buzzing with BTC, ETH, and SOL still trending, and altcoins in AI and DePIN categories gaining traction. Within this momentum, RICE/USDT debuted on BingX, spiking from $0.01 to $0.0649 before consolidating near $0.048 (+385%) on 1.3M volume. The token is backed by Rice Robotics, a 2020-founded company designing AI-driven service robots. Their tokenomics aim to create a decentralized marketplace for robotics data rewarding contributors and supplying enterprises with training datasets. It’s rare to see a robotics-focused token launch with both strong liquidity and a real-world utility angle. But as always, the challenge is execution: turning early hype into sustained adoption. Do you think RICE has the potential to join the next wave of AI infrastructure tokens, or will this listing just be another quick cycle?
-
VPSLab joined the community
-
lisapecor joined the community
-
TREVO 076 joined the community
-
🐟 Drippy Fish – The Meme Coin Making Waves 🌊 🚀 The tide is rising, and Drippy Fish is leading the wave! Built on memes, community, and pure drip energy, this isn’t just another coin – it’s a movement 🌊🐠 💎 Early holders are already stacking, and the ocean is only getting deeper. Are you ready to swim all the way to the moon? 🌕🚀 🐟 Join the Drip. Ride the Wave. 🐟 👉 Join us on Telegram: https://t.me/drippyfish
-
NotGuru started following ETH Staking Gets a Boost with Fixed Term Plans
-
We’ve seen ETH go from a DeFi engine to a slow but steady store of value. But now there’s something new, Fixed Term wealth products offering 100% APR to new users on BingX. It caught my eye while looking for ways to put idle ETH to work. Compared to staking or providing liquidity on some Solana DEXs, this seems simpler and lower risk, especially if you're just sitting on ETH and not actively trading. Has anyone here tested these fixed APR products lately? How’s it working out?
-
RiceAI introduces a new way to merge blockchain with robotics by enabling users to remotely control robots for data collection. From vision to joint movements, the gathered data trains robotics foundation models, rewarding contributors with RICE tokens. At the time of writing, RICE is trading at $0.046 on BingX with strong activity. The token also acts as a governance asset and benefits from a burn mechanism through network fees, which supports its long-term supply and value proposition. This kind of utility-driven AI token raises an important thought. Could platforms like RiceAI become the standard for tokenized contributions in robotics and AI?
-
official Primedice.com - Crypto Casino
SymphonizedBM replied to SymphonizedBM's topic in 🎱 Crypto & WEB3 Games
How was your experience with Primedice during these years? No Races Currently -
Hey guys, Whitescale here I want to share a method that made me over $3,000 in a 3 days. When using https://swapzone.io (a crypto exchange aggregator) to swap Bitcoin into another cryptocurrency, there's a way to boost your payout by around 37% due to a miscalculation on one of their partner exchange offers - ChangeNOW. For example, swapping $2000 worth of BTC can return $2740 worth of any other coin, instantly locking in a ~$740 profit. The trick is to force Swapzone to route the ChangeNOW offer through their older backend node (version 1.9), which is still connected to the aggregator but no longer used on ChangeNOW's main website. This older node calculates BTC to ANY conversion using an outdated formula that inflates the payout. Full instructions for loading the node are here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Y8BdJ0anbSdNVSbqFb7evKPYYSstO7yLwJW_6Rsfmnw/edit?usp=sharing Tips: After each transaction wait at least 2 hours before starting the next one because of AML policy. If you do it more frequently they could keep your funds until you verify your identity. If you wait 2 hours it will not happen.
-
official Daily Market Analysis From Forexmart.eu
KostiaForexMart replied to Andrea FXMart's topic in Forex News & Analysis
European Futures and Wall Street Strengthen, Oil Loses — What's Happening in the Markets? Global equities extend their rally Stock markets remain buoyant. Japan and Taiwan posted fresh record highs, while China's blue chips reached their strongest levels in ten months. Earnings season lifts Europe and Wall Street European futures added around 0.2 percent, mirroring gains in US contracts. Investor sentiment was boosted by a robust reporting season. According to Goldman, earnings per share for the S&P 500 grew 11 percent year-on-year, with 58 percent of companies raising full-year forecasts. Retail giants in the spotlight This week will shed light on consumer spending trends as Home Depot, Target, Lowe's and Walmart release their quarterly results. Spotlight on Jackson Hole The highlight for monetary policy watchers will be the annual Federal Reserve symposium in Jackson Hole. On Friday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell is expected to deliver remarks on the economic outlook and monetary stance. A Q&A session, however, does not appear to be on the agenda. The event will also feature European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde and Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey in panel discussions. Rates and bond market tensions Futures currently price in roughly an 85 percent chance of a Fed rate cut in September. Any shift toward a less dovish tone from Powell could weigh heavily on bond markets. While short-term yields remain elevated due to Fed expectations, long-term investors continue to worry about inflation, fiscal deficits and the politicization of monetary policy — concerns that are steepening the yield curve. European bonds react to rising defense costs Yields on European government bonds continued to climb, partly reflecting expectations that governments will need to borrow heavily to finance expanding defense budgets. Asia opens the week with cautious optimism Asian equity markets posted modest gains on Monday ahead of a week expected to be pivotal for US interest rate policy. Oil prices, meanwhile, slipped as the perceived risks to Russian supply appeared to ease. Record highs in Japan and Taiwan A stronger appetite for risk pushed Japanese and Taiwanese stock benchmarks to fresh all-time highs. In China, blue chip shares advanced to their strongest level in ten months. Fed rate cut expectations Investors currently assign about an 85 percent probability to a quarter-point cut at the Federal Reserve's September 17 meeting, with further easing anticipated by December. Cheaper borrowing supports equities The prospect of lower global borrowing costs underpinned stock markets. Japan's Nikkei gained 0.9 percent, reaching yet another record high. Mixed moves across Asia The MSCI Asia-Pacific ex-Japan index edged lower after touching a four-year peak last week. Chinese blue chips rose another 1 percent, extending their quarterly gain to nearly 8 percent. European and US futures extend gains Eurozone futures showed modest strength, with EUROSTOXX 50 and FTSE both up 0.2 percent and DAX futures advancing 0.1 percent. US markets mirrored the trend: S&P 500 futures rose 0.2 percent, while Nasdaq futures gained 0.3 percent, hovering near record territory. Earnings season boosts market confidence Investor sentiment was bolstered by a strong earnings season. S&P 500 companies reported an 11 percent year-on-year increase in earnings per share, with 58 percent of firms raising their annual forecasts. Tech giants keep outperforming According to Goldman Sachs analysts, the earnings of the largest technology companies remain outstanding. Even before Nvidia publishes its results, the so-called Magnificent Seven are estimated to have boosted earnings per share by 26 percent year-on-year in the second quarter, beating pre-season consensus forecasts by 12 percent. Spotlight on consumer demand This week will be crucial in assessing household spending power, with key earnings reports expected from Home Depot, Target, Lowe's and Walmart. Bond markets under pressure Expectations of a Federal Reserve rate cut have capped short-term Treasury yields, while long-term bonds remain under pressure from stagflation concerns and the mounting budget deficit. This dynamic has created the steepest yield curve since 2021. European debt markets are facing similar challenges. Anticipation of heavier borrowing to fund defense budgets has pushed German long-term bond yields to their highest levels in 14 years. Dollar weighed down by Fed expectations The prospect of looser Fed policy weakened the US dollar, which slipped 0.4 percent against a basket of major currencies last week to 97.851. The greenback firmed slightly versus the yen to 147.46, while the euro held steady around 1.1701 after gaining 0.5 percent in the previous week. The dollar performed strongest against the New Zealand currency, amid expectations that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will cut rates to 3 percent on Wednesday. Commodities show mixed signals In commodities, gold hovered at 3343 dollars per ounce after a 1.9 percent weekly loss. Oil prices faced resistance after Donald Trump backed away from threats to impose new restrictions on Russian exports. Brent crude slipped 0.2 percent to 65.74 dollars a barrel, while US crude eased 0.1 percent to 62.76 dollars. More analytics on our website: bit.ly/3VobLUv