🎉 Gate Square — Share Your Funniest Crypto Moments & Win a $100 Joy Fund!
Crypto can be stressful, so let’s laugh it out on Gate Square.
Whether it’s a liquidation tragedy, FOMO madness, or a hilarious miss—you name it.
Post your funniest crypto moment and win your share of the Joy Fund!
💰 Rewards
10 creators with the funniest posts
Each will receive $10 in tokens
📝 How to Join
1⃣️ Follow Gate_Square
2⃣️ Post with the hashtag #MyCryptoFunnyMoment
3⃣️ Any format works: memes, screenshots, short videos, personal stories, fails, chaos—bring it on.
📌 Notes
Hashtag #MyCryptoFunnyMoment is requ
Silver Squeeze? Expert Warns of Global Currency Stress and West-to-East Power Shift
Silver-market veteran David Morgan told ITM Trading’s Daniela Cambone that gold and silver are flashing storm warnings, with a supply crunch and policy shocks setting the stage for a wild finish to this cycle.
Gold’s Barometer Is Screaming, as Policy Shocks Pile Up
Author of “The Silver Manifesto,” David Morgan, told Cambone that this isn’t another isolated currency wobble—it’s global. If the U.S. dollar takes a real hit, he argues, there’s little shelter outside monetary metals. For liquidity, gold and silver remain the go-tos.
He calls gold a barometer rather than a thermometer: It doesn’t tell you how hot it is—it signals what’s ahead. With gold printing record highs, he places markets in an “acceleration phase,” the late stretch where most gains arrive in the least time, and fear of missing out (FOMO) does the rest.
The warning lights aren’t subtle: debt, geopolitics, and aging portfolios. Fear is the stronger catalyst, he says—fear of shrinking purchasing power and pricier groceries.
One tell he flags: stocks and gold rising together. Because gold usually moves opposite equities, a slide in the S&P could send bullion into overdrive. If it’s strong while stocks are strong, he asks, how strong could it be when stocks stumble?
He adds two caveats: exchanges tend to hike margins during moonshots, and shakeouts are standard issue—think a whipsaw from $47 back to $40.
Globally, he says “follow the gold”: flows from West to East hint at a power shift. At home, he laments widening social fractures, arguing that debased money cheapens civic life—and that integrity, not political idols, is the foundation worth defending.
“What made America great, I said this way before the MAGA thing, was that we had high integrity,” Morgan said.
He added: