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Been watching GBP/USD and honestly the momentum shift here is pretty interesting. Recently I caught a solid short setup at that 1.3486 resistance level and it played out well, which got me thinking about price action patterns more carefully.
Here's what I've been focusing on lately - when you're trying to spot a real reversal in the market, you need to see it confirmed on an hourly candle. That's where pin bar formations really shine. A clean pin bar candle closing at that level, or even a doji or engulfing pattern, those are the signals that separate guesswork from actual trading. The pin bar
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Just caught Apple's rough day yesterday - stock took a 5% hit, biggest drop since April. Not great timing with everything else going on in tech right now.
So the apple drop seems tied to two main things hitting at once. The FTC sent a letter to Tim Cook about the Apple News app potentially violating regulations, claiming it pushes left-wing content over conservative outlets. Meanwhile Bloomberg dropped a report that Apple's AI-powered Siri update got delayed, which is adding fuel to the fire that they're falling behind on AI compared to other big players.
With the Trump administration being pr
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Ever wonder why a decent bottle of olive oil costs so much more than vegetable oil? I started looking into this recently and there's actually a lot going on behind those premium price tags.
First, the production itself is just inherently expensive. Olive trees take years to mature, they're only harvested once a year, and here's the kicker - you need about 10 pounds of olives just to make one liter of oil. A healthy tree might only give you 30-50 pounds annually. That's not a lot. Then you've got the labor factor. Quality producers still hand-harvest with poles because it preserves the oil bett
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Been following the fintech automation space closely, and there's something interesting happening with how companies are rethinking their entire approach to month-end closes. Ledge's story is a solid case study here.
So the founder Tal Kirschenbaum built an AI-native platform that basically handles all those repetitive finance tasks that drain teams for days every month. Three years in, they hit $1M+ ARR with 24-36 customers each paying around $3K monthly. Now they're targeting 300% YoY growth with a team of about 35 people. Pretty solid trajectory for a workflow automation play.
What caught my
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Just realized we're already in April and the tax deadline is literally days away. If you haven't thought about your 2025 income and what you actually owe, now's the time. The way Canada's tax brackets work is kind of wild once you actually sit down with the numbers.
So here's the thing about tax brackets in Canada - it's progressive, meaning you don't lose money by earning more. Everyone pays the same low rate on their first chunk of income, then higher rates kick in only on the money above each bracket threshold. Your marginal rate (the rate on your last dollar earned) gets thrown around a lo
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Just checked WLD's volume profile and something interesting is happening here. The 24h volume has actually dropped pretty hard – we're looking at much lower participation than a few weeks ago, which usually means either consolidation or smart money quietly accumulating at these levels.
What caught my eye: price is getting pushed down but volume isn't really confirming the move. Classic accumulation signal if you ask me. The volume profile shows some concentration around the 0.38 range, and there's decent support holding at 0.3672. When you see weak volume during downtrends like this, it often
WLD1,41%
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Been diving into how programmatic ads have basically become the backbone of digital marketing, and it's actually wild how much has changed in just a few years. We're looking at programmatic ads hitting around 25 billion in spend this year, which is like 88% of all digital display advertising. That's not a niche thing anymore—it's just how the game works now.
The thing most people don't realize is how insanely fast this all happens. When someone loads a webpage, there's literally an auction taking place in milliseconds. The publisher's platform sends out a bid request, demand-side platforms eva
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Just noticed something interesting happening with Circle right now. The stock price hit $110 recently, basically doubled from its low point earlier this year. But what's really catching my attention isn't just the chart action—it's the story behind it.
So Circle went public, got caught up in the typical IPO hype cycle, spiked to $260, then crashed to $50. Pretty brutal. But here's where it gets interesting: the company actually switched from being a pure speculation play to having real fundamentals backing it up. Their 2025 revenue hit $2.7 billion, up 64% year-on-year. Q4 alone did $770 milli
SOL1,32%
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Today's SEK to XAF Price Update
This report details the SEK/XAF exchange rate, providing traders with insights into market dynamics, technical analysis, and potential trading opportunities based on current price fluctuations.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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Just saw that ING is making some serious moves into crypto now. Like, one of the biggest traditional banks jumping in with actual partnerships and everything. Kind of wild how even with all the market volatility lately, these major institutions keep doubling down on crypto services instead of backing away.
Think about it - ING crypto initiatives are happening while a lot of people are still skeptical about digital assets. But banks like ING clearly see the long-term play here, not just short-term noise. They're not the first, but seeing major financial players commit to crypto infrastructure t
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Just realized a lot of people are struggling to figure out how to update their SASSA details, especially if you're on the SRD grant. Let me break down what I learned because it's actually pretty different depending on which grant you're getting.
So if you're on a permanent grant like old age or disability, you basically have to go in person to a SASSA office. You can't do it online, which is annoying but whatever. You need your ID, proof of your new bank account (bank statement not older than 3 months works), and then they'll process it. The thing is, they need to verify it with the bank first
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Just looked into something interesting about Solana's creator and how his net worth tracks with the market. Anatoly Yakovenko went from being a solid engineer grinding it out at Qualcomm for over a decade to building one of crypto's most significant blockchains. His story is pretty wild actually.
So here's the thing - Anatoly Yakovenko's net worth is basically tied to two major holdings. First, there's his personal SOL tokens. Based on tracking, he likely holds somewhere north of 100k SOL across multiple wallets, though the exact amount is hard to pin down since he's never publicly confirmed w
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JTO-2,22%
DRIFT-7,72%
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Just noticed Shanghai silver prices hitting $101.48/oz with premiums spiking above 13%—pretty wild. The shanghai silver price surge paired with that kind of premium spread usually signals either supply tightening or heavy domestic demand kicking in. Makes sense given China's massive consumption in solar and electronics manufacturing. Either way, when you see premiums this elevated in a major market like Shanghai, it's worth paying attention. Could be a real demand signal or just temporary positioning, but the data's definitely interesting to watch right now.
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Just checked the latest blockchain data on Vitalik Buterin and his ethereum creator net worth is actually pretty fascinating. The guy still holds around 240,000 ETH across known wallets, which puts him at roughly $467 million at today's prices. That's a solid position for any individual in the space, though it represents less than 1% of total ETH supply now.
What's interesting is how his ethereum creator net worth ties directly to those early 2014 allocations. When Ethereum launched in 2015, founders got a chunk of the initial 72 million ETH supply - over 16% went to the core team. Vitalik's s
ETH-0,43%
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Just looked into Ashton Kutcher's financial story and it's actually pretty wild how he went from being a model in the 90s to becoming one of Hollywood's smartest investors. His ashton kutcher net worth sits around $200 million, which honestly puts him in a different league compared to most actors.
What caught my attention most wasn't his TV gigs, though those definitely helped. Back when he was on Two and a Half Men, the man was pulling in $750K to $800K per episode. That's serious money. During his peak years on the show from 2003 to 2015, he became the highest-paid TV actor at the time. We'r
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Ever tried to explain how long 4 inches actually is? Honestly, it's way harder than you'd think. Numbers don't really stick until you compare them to something real. I was trying to picture 4 inches the other day and realized most people probably overestimate it.
So here's the thing—4 inches is basically 10.16 centimeters. Not huge, not tiny. It's roughly the width of an adult palm or your closed fist. A credit card is like 3.4 inches, so 4 inches is just a bit longer. TV remote? That's basically it. Even your smartphone width is around 4 to 5 inches depending on the model.
What's wild is how
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A detail that has recently been brought up again is that guy Anatoly. As a co-founder of Solana, his net worth is estimated to be between $500 million and $800 million. This figure actually reflects the value creation process of the Solana blockchain from zero to one.
His wealth mainly comes from two sources: early equity in Solana Labs and his holdings of SOL tokens. But what’s truly interesting is his technical background. Before founding Solana, that guy Anatoly worked on high-performance operating system development at companies like Qualcomm, Dropbox, and Mesosphere. These experiences dir
SOL1,32%
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been seeing GOAT thrown around everywhere on sports social media and finally looked it up lol. turns out it's just an acronym - 'Greatest Of All Time'. makes sense i guess?
so apparently only a few athletes in history have actually earned this title. ronaldo and messi are the obvious ones - these two have been going at it for like 20 years straight and basically broke every football record that existed. the commitment is insane, scoring 40+ goals a year for nearly two decades while racking up assists and trophies. no wonder people call them the GOATs.
interesting part though - other sports hav
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I asked myself this question yesterday: how much money is there in the world? The answer turned out to be very interesting.
When calculated in US dollars, approximately $37 trillion is circulating worldwide. This includes physical cash and all money in bank accounts. But this is just the traditional monetary system. If we also include investment instruments, derivatives, and cryptocurrencies, the figure exceeds $1.2 quadrillion. A quite significant difference.
Looking at physical currencies—coins and banknotes—the answer to how much money is there in the world becomes a bit more tangible. Roug
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Just had one of those moments where you really grasp how absurd wealth accumulation can be at that scale. Been thinking about Elon Musk's 1 sec income and honestly, the numbers are almost impossible to visualize.
So here's the thing - based on his wealth figures, Elon Musk makes roughly $3,708 every single second. Let that sink in. That's more than what most people earn in an entire month, just in one tick of the clock. His 1 sec income is basically someone's monthly paycheck.
Break it down further and it gets wilder. Per minute, we're talking about $222,500. That's enough to buy a decent hous
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