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Bitcoin Funding Rates Stay Negative Despite Price Gains — What This Means
newsbtc58d ago

Bitcoin Funding Rates Stay Negative Despite Price Gains — What This Means

Bitcoin may be entering a familiar but often misunderstood stage of the market cycle. Even as price action shows resilience, derivatives positioning tells a different story, with funding rates remaining bearish and suggesting many traders are still positioned defensively or betting against sustained upside. Comparing Current Conditions To Previous Bitcoin Recoveries Bitcoin has now entered a disbelief phase as funding rates stay bearish. Analyst Darkfost has highlighted on X that funding rates have remained negative even as the BTC price continues to move higher. Related Reading: Bitcoin Rally Catches Shorts Offside—$200M Liquidated As Price Hits $79,000 Meanwhile, this BTC chart offers a different perspective from what is usually observed. It shows the 30-day cumulative evolution of the funding rates on Binance, offering a clearer view of when funding rates entered a sustained negative trend. The indicator currently sits around -4.5%, underscoring how aggressively traders have continued betting against the market in recent months. For comparison, when BTC began emerging from the bear market in late 2022, funding rates on Binance fell even further, reaching nearly -7% on a 30-day sun basis. Whenever such a strong consensus formed, it would help create a bottom and fuel the rally that was beginning to develop. According to Darkfost, despite the market entering a phase of disbelief, traders still prefer to fight the trend rather than follow it. A trader known as Max Traders on X has also noted that Bitcoin funding rates haven’t been this negative in a long while. Historically, such extremes typically emerge when the market crowd is heavily positioned to one side. Despite BTC’s recent strength, many participants are positioning for a reversal, even as price action continues to suggest a strong short bias. However, this kind of crowded positioning often creates the opposite conditions for moves in that direction. Thus, if BTC price manages to maintain its current levels or push higher, the buildup of short positions could trigger a squeeze that would accelerate the move upward. The Conditions That Could Lead To A Bitcoin Reversal Bitcoin’s recent upside has been largely driven by institutional spot buying pressure over the last few weeks, with each major move higher supported by strong inflows visible in spot volume data. Crypto trader CGT Trader explained that the Coinbase Premium Index has also confirmed the same trend, which recorded a significant spike in institutional demand at the recent local top. Related Reading: Bitcoin Rebounds Strongly — Can Bulls Drive Price Toward $79,000 Since then, the BTC price has continued to grind higher, but the institutional spot buying has failed to make a new high. This creates a growing divergence that suggests a potential reversal. However, if this downtrend continues and large players start selling, the move could be retraced much faster than the recent upward rally. Featured image from Getty Images, chart from Tradingview.com

#TECH
Silver’s Surge: Spot Contract vs. Physical #soundmoney
cbnc58d ago

Silver’s Surge: Spot Contract vs. Physical #soundmoney

The fuse is lit on silver! Discover why physical silver is outperforming digital contracts, even though contracts can be created infinitely. Where tangible meets digital, physical wins. #Silver #Investing #PreciousMetals #Finance #Commodities —- 📅 Schedule your free consultation: https://zangenterprises.info/strategyconsultation_ytshorts_lz 📞 Call us: 833-GLD-ZANG (833-453-9264) 🔗 All of our links in one place: https://zangenterprises.info/m/soundmoney Subscribe and [...] The post Silver’s Surge: Spot Contract vs. Physical #soundmoney appeared first on CBNC .

#TECH
19k-Mile 1999 Ferrari 550 Maranello at No Reserve
bringatrailer58d ago

19k-Mile 1999 Ferrari 550 Maranello at No Reserve

This Blu Tour de France 1999 Ferrari 550 Maranello has a Cuoio leather interior with power-adjustable Daytona-style seats, and it is powered by a 5.5-liter F133A V12 that received a timing belt service in 2026. Showing 19k miles, the car handles shifting via a six-speed manual transaxle and is equipped with a limited-slip differential, a central hood scoop, 18" five-spoke alloy wheels, a Tubi Style exhaust, a diamond-stitched headliner and parcel shelf, a gated shifter, a cassette stereo, and automatic climate control. Acquired out of a private Ferrari collection in 2026 by the selling dealer, this 550 Maranello is offered at no reserve with service records, accessories, a tool kit, VIN-matched owner's manuals, a clean Carfax report, and a clean Texas title.

#TECH
2 Attractively Priced Canadian Stocks That Look Worth Buying Right Now
fool_ca58d ago

2 Attractively Priced Canadian Stocks That Look Worth Buying Right Now

Given their resilient business model, growth initiatives, and recent share price declines, these two Canadian stocks offer attractive buying opportunities. The post 2 Attractively Priced Canadian Stocks That Look Worth Buying Right Now appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada .

#STOCKS
Leading through crisis, from 1997 to the pandemic
mb58d ago

Leading through crisis, from 1997 to the pandemic

The corner office at Globe Tower in Bonifacio Global City (BGC), Taguig City, has long been a vantage point for the shifting skyline of Metro Manila, but for Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala, it was the laboratory. For three decades, the man everyone calls JAZA was at the center of the Philippines’ digital revolution. When he stepped down as chairman of Globe Telecom Inc. this week, it was the closing of a chapter on the most transformative era in Filipino business history. Under JAZA’s watch, a company that began as a sleepy telegraph and cable service became a digital utility so pervasive it now handles the money, the entertainment, and the daily conversations of nearly 90 million people. The Ayala Group did not set out to own the airwaves. Theirs is a 192-year-old story of land and gold—real estate and banking. But in the early 1970s, the conglomerate saw a crack in the door of the local communications sector. Globe’s roots trace back to 1928, when the Robert Dollar Co. was granted a franchise for wireless long-distance messaging. By the time the Ayala family took a 60 percent stake in what was then Globe-Mackay Cable and Radio Corp. in 1974, the business was largely about telegrams—a utility of the past. The true transition, however, happened in 1993. JAZA, then a young executive with a Harvard MBA and a penchant for disruptive thinking before that word became a cliché, helped form a partnership with Singapore Telecommunications Ltd. (Singtel). Together, they rebranded the entity as Globe Telecom, a bet that the future was not in cables buried in the mud, but in signals sent through the air. Era of the underdog When JAZA took the chairmanship in 1996, Globe was the scrappy challenger. The Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT), led by Manuel V. Pangilinan (MVP), held a near-monopoly. PLDT was the entrenched and powerful “Goliath,” while Globe was the “David,” trying to convince Filipinos that they did not need to wait years for a landline when they could carry a brick-sized mobile phone in their pockets. But the challenges at that time were immense. The Asian financial crisis of 1997 nearly choked the company’s capital expenditure just as it needed to build towers. Then came the “texting” revolution. While the rest of the world was looking at voice minutes, JAZA and his team realized that Filipinos—price-sensitive and social—would embrace short message service (SMS). By making texting cheap, Globe survived and democratized the mobile phone. It moved the device from the belts of business executives to the pockets of jeepney drivers and students. But JAZA’s genius lay not in technical wizardry, but in talent spotting. He understood that a legacy conglomerate needed outsiders to move fast. He tapped Gerardo “Gerry” Ablaza Jr., who served as chief executive officer (CEO) from 1998 to 2009. Ablaza was the operational engine that scaled the network from a niche service to a mass-market powerhouse. Under his tenure, Globe overtook PLDT in the mobile space for the first time, a feat once considered impossible. But perhaps the most significant hire came in 2009: Ernest Cu. Cu, a veteran of the outsourcing industry, had no telco background, but that turned out to be exactly why JAZA wanted him. At the time, Globe was losing momentum. The network was creaking under the weight of the smartphone era, and the telco model was dying. JAZA gave Cu the mandate to overhaul the old Globe to build a new one. Together, JAZA and Cu launched their $700 million network modernization program. A painful and expensive transition that saw profits dip and customers complain as the company’s guts were replaced. JAZA held the line with the board and the shareholders that provided the air cover Cu needed to finish the job. Slow burn of GCash Perhaps the most misunderstood part of JAZA’s legacy is GCash. Today, it is the country’s only “double unicorn,” but for nearly 15 years, it was a solution in search of a problem. Launched in 2004, GCash was a pioneer globally. But for over a decade, it languished. Filipinos did not trust digital money. In those early years, GCash was mostly used to buy load or send small remittances via SMS. It was a niche product that many dismissed as a side project. JAZA, however, refused to pull the plug. He saw it as a long-term play for financial inclusion. The breakthrough came only in 2015, when Globe partnered with Ant Financial and its parent, Ayala Corp., to spin off the venture as Mynt. Even then, it took the brutal catalyst of the 2020 pandemic to turn GCash into a national necessity. When the world shut down, JAZA’s 16-year-old experiment suddenly became the country’s de facto central bank for the masses. The transition In recent years, there has been a deliberate Ayala-style succession. The transition began in earnest when JAZA stepped back from the CEO role at the parent company, Ayala Corp., in 2021, handing the reins to his brother, Fernando. Now, the baton at Globe passes to Cezar “Bong” Consing, the former head of Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) and current CEO of Ayala Corp. Consing is a veteran banker, a choice that signals Globe’s future: it will not be just a tower and wire company, but a digital holdings firm managing data, finance, and health. But the leadership on the ground remains stable, with Carl Cruz, who took over as CEO last year, steering the company through its post-pandemic telco-to-techco evolution. But JAZA’s departure from the chairmanship is not a complete retreat, because he remains the chairman of Asiacom, the holding company through which Ayala and Singtel control Globe. He leaves behind a company that is very different from the one he inherited. In 1996, Globe was a speculative bet on a luxury gadget. In 2026, it is the invisible infrastructure of Filipino life. Critics would always point to the perennial issues of internet speed and the duopoly dynamics of the domestic market. But it is hard to argue with the scale of the transformation. JAZA’s legacy is found in the fact that a fisherman in Palawan and a coder in Cebu now use the same platform to get paid, watch videos, and talk to their families.

#COMMODITIES