Anon4461

vip
Age 10.7 Year
Peak Tier 4
No content yet
Pin
FET (Artificial Superintelligence Alliance) Historical Price and Return Analysis: Should I buy FET now?
This article reviews the price fluctuations and bull-bear cycles of FET since 2021, evaluates the potential returns of buying 10 tokens, and answers whether it should be purchased. Opening at approximately $0.629 in 2021, down 9.89% for the year; in 2022, down 80.35%; in 2023, rising to $0.6723, up 381.07%; in 2024, increasing, with declines so far in 2025-2026. Conclusion: Long-term pressure remains, and whether to buy depends on risk tolerance and fundamental analysis.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
FET-1.01%
View Original
Expand All
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
So Michael Saylor just dropped 'Think Even Bigger' on X and yeah, everyone's reading between the lines right now. Strategy apparently already scooped up nearly 14k Bitcoin last week for around a billion dollars, averaging like $71,902 per coin between April 6-12. Now he's hinting the next move could be way larger.
Here's the thing about Saylor's playbook - he posts those Orange Dots charts tracking Strategy's BTC purchases, and then boom, a buying announcement drops usually by Monday. It's become pretty predictable at this point. Last week it happened, week before that too with that $330M buy.
BTC0.7%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just caught something interesting about Cardano lately. The price is sitting at $0.27 right now (up 1.57% in 24 hours), but what's got my attention isn't just the chart action—it's what's actually happening behind the scenes with the network.
The Cardano Foundation just cut audit costs in half for institutions using their Leccia product, and get this: over 7,000 transactions have been verified on-chain by Grant Thornton already. Then there's this reinsurance deal—a $100 million product backed by Hannover Re got tokenized on Cardano and listed on the LSE's Ark platform. That's not just testing
ADA-1.69%
ARK-1.02%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just found out Clix's real name is actually Cody Conrod – been wondering what is clix's real name for a while lol. The guy's only 21 and already sitting on like $27 million net worth, which is absolutely insane for someone his age. Started from Connecticut, got serious about Fortnite as a teenager, and boom – qualified for the World Cup in 2019. That's when everything changed for him.
What's crazy is how he built this whole empire. Tournament winnings, YouTube (over 3 million subs), Twitch streams, brand deals, merchandise – basically every revenue stream you can think of. Makes around $1.1-1.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Saw that Dutch market maker IMC Trading just brought on Alex Casimo as Chief Commercial Officer for their crypto division. Pretty interesting move - Casimo's joining them in London and comes from Portofino Technologies where he was co-founder and COO, plus he has that Citadel Securities background. IMC's already massive in this space, trading across 50 exchanges with like $3 billion in daily volume. With Alex Casimo now heading up their institutional crypto expansion, they're probably looking to scale that even more. The whole traditional finance push into crypto keeps accelerating - better re
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Gold price has been getting hammered for a while now, and honestly it's one of the more interesting market dynamics playing out right now. We're hovering around that $4,700 level that everyone keeps watching, but the pressure just won't let up.
Here's what's actually happening: you'd normally expect Middle East tensions to push gold higher, right? That's the classic safe-haven trade. But this time it's completely different. The geopolitical friction is actually driving money into US Treasuries and the dollar instead. It's like the market is choosing the yield and liquidity of the dollar over t
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Been diving into Florida's software development scene lately and it's actually impressive how much talent has concentrated in places like Miami, Orlando, and Tampa over the past few years. Makes sense though - companies building serious products need reliable partners who understand both startups and enterprise-level complexity.
If you're looking at software development companies in Florida, there are definitely some solid options worth knowing about. I've been tracking a few that seem to consistently deliver.
RAAS Cloud out of Orlando has been around for a while now with over 50 engineers on
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Ever spent an hour wondering why a website won't load when your internet connection is clearly fine? Yeah, I used to think the same thing until I realized the real culprit was usually DNS, not my connection.
So I started digging into Chrome Net Internals and noticed something interesting - there are actually two DNS sections that sound almost identical but do completely different things. I'm talking about DNS Cache and DNS Events. Most people don't realize they're working with two separate tools here, and that's where things get confusing.
Let me break down what I found. DNS Cache is basically
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Been watching the DeFi security situation unfold this year and honestly it's looking pretty grim. We're not even halfway through 2026 and the numbers are already staggering - over $137 million stolen across 15 different protocols in just the first few months. What's worse? Only $9 million has been recovered. That's a recovery rate most people wouldn't accept at a traditional bank, let alone in an industry that's supposed to be trustless and transparent.
The damage is spread across some pretty major names. Step Finance took the biggest hit at $27.3 million after a private key got compromised. T
RESOLV3.08%
IOTX2.59%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just realized so many people are struggling with pak game withdrawals and honestly, I was there too when I first started. The whole process seemed confusing at first, but once you get it down, it's actually pretty straightforward if you don't rush things.
So here's the thing - most withdrawal issues happen because people either ignore the rules or don't verify their accounts properly. I learned this the hard way. The minimum balance thing is real, and you definitely can't withdraw below that no matter how badly you want your money. With pak game, you need to pick between Easypaisa or JazzCash,
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just saw a ranking of fintech PR agencies, and what's interesting is that these firms' client lists are really impressive. For example, MarketAcross has been around for nearly ten years, with clients including a bunch of well-known large exchanges and blockchain projects, and I heard their content quality is pretty good.
Clarity and Vested are two that are quite interesting—one started out working with traditional fintech companies (like Monzo, Wise), and the other has a strong background in wealth management (like Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley). Now both are involved in crypto and fintech. It
View Original
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
You know what's interesting about the NFT marketplace space right now? What started as a niche experiment has basically reshaped how we think about digital ownership. Back in 2017, CryptoKitties came out of nowhere and actually congested the entire Ethereum network just from people buying and selling digital cats. That alone told you something was happening.
The whole concept of an NFT marketplace is pretty straightforward on the surface—it's just a platform where you can trade these unique digital tokens that represent ownership of something. But what's wild is how far this has expanded beyon
ETH0.74%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just looked into this whole Andrew Tate net worth thing and honestly it's wild how much the numbers vary. Like, Romanian authorities say $12.3 million but some claim he's sitting on $400-700 million? That's insane range. The guy went from being a kickboxer to running online courses and casinos, and apparently made serious money from it.
His Hustler's University thing alone supposedly pulls in millions monthly with 100k+ subscribers paying $50 each. Add in the War Room community, crypto holdings (has like 21 Bitcoin), luxury car collection worth millions... yeah I can see why people are obsesse
BTC0.7%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just been watching the regulatory momentum building around the CLARITY Act and honestly, this could be a pretty significant moment for where crypto policy is heading in the US. Some major industry voices have been pushing lawmakers to move this forward, and the calls for "marking it up" (basically getting into the detailed review and amendment phase) suggest we're entering a critical window.
Here's what's interesting about this: for years, the crypto sector has been operating in this weird gray zone where compliance requirements were unclear and constantly shifting. That uncertainty has been a
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just came across Egrag Crypto's latest technical breakdown on XRP and honestly, the chart structure he's laying out is pretty interesting. Instead of chasing random price movements, he's focused on what he calls 'battle zones' - specific support levels where buyers and sellers actually contest. The guy identifies the Orange Line and Red Line as key support areas, plus something called the ATLAS Line that acts as a foundational base. These aren't random picks; they're levels where price has historically found stability.
What caught my attention is how Egrag Crypto frames this whole thing around
XRP0.07%
ATLAS0.05%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just looked back at silver's move over the past year and it's been pretty wild. XAG/USD pushed toward $76 at one point, and honestly the whole rally made sense when you break down what was happening in the markets.
The main thing driving it was obvious - people were scared. Geopolitical stuff in Eastern Europe and the Middle East had investors rotating out of riskier assets and into anything that felt safe. Silver benefited big time from that, same as gold, but silver actually outperformed by a good margin because it's more volatile. When capital flows into safe havens, the moves tend to be sh
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just noticed LeMaitre Vascular (LMAT) hit a golden cross setup - that 50-day moving average just crossed above the 200-day, which is usually a pretty solid bullish signal. The stock's been up about 27% over the last month, so it's already showing some momentum. For those not familiar, a golden cross typically signals a potential trend reversal from downtrend to uptrend, and historically these setups can lead to solid breakouts when the fundamentals back it up. What's interesting here is that earnings expectations have also been moving in the right direction - consensus estimates have been rais
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just caught up on Sony's earnings from a couple months back and there's actually some interesting dynamics worth unpacking here. The company came in below expectations on the EPS side—34 cents versus prior year, down pretty significantly—but the real story is how different business units are playing out.
Game and Network Services has been the bright spot. PlayStation 5 monthly active users hit 119 million, which is solid growth year-over-year. The subscription tier migration and stronger first-party releases are clearly working. You're seeing real momentum there that's supposed to offset some
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just been digging through some of Buffett's current positions and there's something worth paying attention to right now. His portfolio fingerprints are still all over Berkshire's holdings even though he stepped back from day-to-day decisions.
Here's what caught my eye: household debt in the U.S. just hit a record 18.8 trillion, with delinquencies climbing to nearly 5% — a level we haven't seen in close to a decade. Most lenders should be sweating this. But not all of them.
American Express is actually sitting pretty despite the macro headwinds. Yeah, it's down almost 20% from its December peak
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Caught the Lemonade drama this morning - stock opened up nearly 14% on solid Q4 earnings, then tanked 6.8% within 90 minutes. Classic pump and dump? Not quite. The company actually crushed it: revenues jumped 53% YoY to $228M, gross profit surged 73%, and they're finally narrowing losses to $0.29 per share. Free cash flow also improved to $37M. Problem is, the market already priced in perfection before earnings dropped. Trading at 8.9x sales while competitors like Kinsale sit at 4.7x - that's a massive premium for an insurance stock. Management hyped their new Tesla autonomous vehicle insuranc
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Just caught Nexi's FY25 results and the net profit story is interesting. Their normalised net profit hit 783.3 million euros, up 7.2% year-over-year, which shows solid growth in their core operations. EBITDA also climbed 2.3% to 1.9 billion euros, and revenues pushed to 3.58 billion euros (+2.1%).
But here's the thing—the actual net profit attributable to the parent dropped dramatically to a 3.4 billion euro loss, compared to 167 million profit last year. That's a wild swing. The normalised net profit metric looks healthier, but the bottom line loss is hard to ignore.
Stock's down 19.73% at 2.
NEXI6.6%
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
  • Pin