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XRP Leverage Builds Without Overheating: Open Interest Climbs And Volatility Spikes
newsbtc21d ago

XRP Leverage Builds Without Overheating: Open Interest Climbs And Volatility Spikes

XRP lost the $2 level after the broader crypto market suffered sharp declines on Monday, dragging price action back into a fragile zone. While the move rattled traders, Binance derivatives data suggests the sell-off has not triggered an extreme leverage unwind yet. Instead, the market appears to be entering a transitional phase where risk is rising, but speculative behavior remains relatively controlled. Related Reading: Trade War Headlines Trigger $800M In Liquidations Overnight: Longs Get Wiped Out Across Crypto Markets Open interest metrics show a delicate balance between positioning and price weakness. Total XRP open interest on Binance climbed to roughly $566.48 million, pushing above the 30-day average near $528.84 million. This spread implies that fresh positions are still being added despite the downturn, but the pace looks measured rather than euphoric. In other words, traders are stepping in cautiously, not flooding the market with aggressive leverage. The 30-day rolling Z-Score framework helps contextualize this shift. With open interest expanding while volatility stays contained, XRP may be building the conditions for a larger move ahead. For now, however, price remains vulnerable, and the next direction will likely depend on whether liquidity returns or fear deepens. Open Interest Volatility Rises as XRP Builds Toward a Bigger Move Arab Chain’s CryptoQuant read shows the most important shift isn’t the headline open interest figure, but the instability underneath it. The 30-day standard deviation of XRP open interest (oi_std30) has climbed to roughly $65.7 million, marking its highest level since November. That matters because it signals open interest is starting to swing more aggressively around its average, a pattern that often shows up before price leaves a tight range and enters expansion mode. At the same time, the leverage signal still looks contained. The Z-Score holds near 0.57, signaling an elevated but not extreme level. In practical terms, positioning is growing, but it doesn’t look like the market is overheating or entering the kind of reckless leverage phase that typically leads to instant liquidation cascades. That combination—rising volatility in positioning while the Z-Score remains moderate—suggests momentum is building without a clear directional commitment yet. This puts XRP in a “risk-on, but cautious” environment. Traders are adding exposure, volatility is creeping higher, and the setup is becoming more reactive. From here, oi_std30 becomes a key metric to track alongside price structure, because whichever way price breaks, the market is increasingly positioned for a larger move. Related Reading: XRP Longs Get Wiped: Binance Leads $5M Liquidation Wave XRP Slides Back Toward $1.90 as Bears Keep Control XRP remains under heavy pressure, with the chart showing price slipping back toward the $1.90 zone after failing to hold the $2 level. The market is printing a clear sequence of lower highs and lower lows, confirming that the broader trend is still bearish despite several short-lived rebounds over recent weeks. Each time XRP attempts to recover, sellers quickly step in and cap momentum before it can reclaim key resistance levels. The latest move highlights this weakness. XRP briefly pushed higher in early January but immediately rolled over, showing that demand is still too soft to sustain a breakout. The $2.00 region has now flipped into overhead resistance, and price will likely need a strong bullish catalyst to break back above it with conviction. Related Reading: Monero Triggers Retail Alert That Preceded ZEC And DASH Drops As Privacy Coin Hype Returns From a structure perspective, the current support area sits around $1.85–$1.90, which has acted as a short-term floor during the recent consolidation. If this zone fails, XRP could quickly revisit lower liquidity pockets, extending the downtrend. Volume also reflects uncertainty. Activity remains erratic despite occasional, isolated spikes. This suggests the market is still reacting to fear-driven flows rather than steady accumulation. Price stalls in a fragile consolidation phase. And bulls need to reclaim above $2 to shift the short-term narrative back in their favor. Featured image from ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com

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“Study Challenges More AI Agents for Better Performance”
dailydhakatimes21d ago

“Study Challenges More AI Agents for Better Performance”

In a recent study conducted by Google Research, Google DeepMind, and MIT, it has been discovered that the assumption that more AI agents lead to better performance is not always accurate. The study, titled ‘Towards a Science of Scaling Agent Systems’, involved testing 180 different configurations across various tasks such as financial analysis, web search, [...]The post “Study Challenges More AI Agents for Better Performance” appeared first on Daily Dhaka Times.

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2026 Personal Websites Renaissance: Ditching Social Media for Privacy
webpronews21d ago

2026 Personal Websites Renaissance: Ditching Social Media for Privacy

In 2026, tech enthusiasts like Alan W. Smith are leading a renaissance of personal websites, shifting from algorithm-driven social media due to privacy concerns and content control issues. This movement embraces decentralized tools, innovations, and community efforts for sustainable, owned digital spaces. It promises a more human-centric web.

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From Vietnam Boat Refugee to Reliability Engineering Scholar
ieee_spectrum21d ago

From Vietnam Boat Refugee to Reliability Engineering Scholar

Hoang Pham has spent his career trying to ensure that some of the world’s most critical systems don’t fail, including commercial aircraft engines, nuclear facilities, and massive data centers that underpin AI and cloud computing.A professor of industrial and systems engineering at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J., and a longtime volunteer for IEEE, Pham, an IEEE Life Fellow, is internationally recognized for advancing the mathematical foundations of reliability engineering. His work earned him the IEEE Reliability Society’s Engineer of the Year Award in 2009. He was recognized for helping to shape how engineers model risk in complex, data-rich systems.Hoang PhamEmployerRutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J.Job titleProfessor of industrial and systems engineeringMember gradeLife FellowAlma maters Northeastern Illinois University, in Chicago; University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; and SUNY Buffalo.The discipline that defines his career was forged long before equations, peer-reviewed journals, or keynote speeches. It began on an overcrowded fishing boat in 1979 when he was fleeing Vietnam after the war, when survival as one of the country’s “boat people” depended on endurance, luck, and the fragile reliability of a vessel never meant to carry so many lives. Like thousands of others, he fled from his war-torn country after the fall of Saigon, which was controlled by communist North Vietnamese forces.To mark the 50th anniversary of the fall of Saigon in 1975, Pham and his son Hoang Jr.—a Rutgers computer science graduate turned filmmaker—produced Unstoppable Hope, a documentary about Vietnam’s boat people. The film tells the stories of a dozen refugees who, like Pham, survived perilous escapes and went on to build successful lives in the United States.Growing up during the Vietnam WarPham was born in Bình Thuận, Vietnam. His parents had only a little formal education, having grown up in the 1930s, when schooling was rare. To support their eight children, his parents ran a factory making bricks by hand. Despite their limited means, his parents held an unshakable belief that education was the surest path to a better life.From an early age, Pham gravitated toward mathematics. Computers were scarce, but numbers and logic came naturally to him. He imagined becoming a teacher or professor and gradually began thinking about how mathematics could be applied to practical problems—how abstract reasoning might improve daily life.His intellectual curiosity unfolded amid frequent danger. He grew up during the Vietnam War, when dodging gunfire in his province was routine. The 1968 Tet Offensive exposed the full scale of the conflict, making it clear that violence was not an interruption to life but a condition of it.Pham recalls that after the Communist takeover of South Vietnam in 1975, conditions worsened dramatically. Families without ties to the new government, especially those who operated small businesses, found it increasingly dangerous to work, study, or apply for jobs, he says. People began vanishing. Many attempted to escape by boat, knowing the risks: imprisonment if caught or potentially death at sea.A successful escapeIn June 1979, at the height of Vietnam’s typhoon season, Pham’s mother made an agonizing decision. She placed Pham, then 18 years old, onto a small, overcrowded fishing vessel in the hope that he might reach freedom.The boat, which was designed to carry about 100 people, departed with 275.Pham’s 12-day journey was harrowing. He was confined to the lower deck, which was packed so tightly that movement was nearly impossible. Seasickness overwhelmed many passengers, and he remembers losing consciousness shortly after departure. Food was scarce, and safe drinking water was nearly nonexistent. Violent storms battered the vessel, and pirates loomed.“Every moment felt like a struggle against nature, fate, and internal despair,” Pham says.The boat eventually washed ashore on a remote island off the Malaysian coast. Arriving at a refugee camp offered little relief; food and clean water were scarce, disease spread rapidly, and nearly everyone—including Pham—contracted malaria. Death came almost nightly.After two weeks, Malaysian authorities transferred the refugees to a transit camp, where the United Nations provided basic rations. Still, the asylum seekers’ futures remained uncertain. It is estimated by the U.N. Refugee Agency that between 1975 and the early 1990s, roughly 800,000 Vietnamese people attempted to escape by boat. As many as 250,000 did not survive the harrowing journey, the agency estimates.Starting over with nothingIn January 1980, at age 19, Pham learned that someone in the United States had agreed to sponsor him for entry, he says. He soon boarded an airplane for the first time and landed in Seattle.His troubles weren’t over, however. He arrived in a city blanketed by snow, wearing thin clothing and carrying only a spare shirt. The frosty weather was not his greatest concern, though. During his first two months, he spent most of his time in a hospital, recovering from malaria and other diseases. And he spoke no English.Still, Pham—who had been a first-year college student in Vietnam—refused to abandon his goal of becoming a teacher, he says. He enrolled at Lincoln High School in order to gain English proficiency and position himself to enter an American college. One teacher allowed him to test into a calculus class despite his limited English—which he passed.“That moment told me I could survive here,” Pham says.Within months, he learned he could attend college on a scholarship. He moved to Chicago in August 1980 to study at the National College of Education, then he transferred to Northeastern Illinois University, also in Chicago, earning bachelor’s degrees in mathematics and computer science in 1982.Encouraged by mentors, he earned a master’s degree in statistics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1984, followed by a Ph.D. in reliability engineering at the State University of New York at Buffalo in 1989.When failure is not an optionPham’s research direction crystallized in 1988 while searching for a dissertation topic. He was reading the January 1988 issue of IEEE Spectrum and had a flash of inspiration after seeing a classified ad posted by the U.S. Defense Department’s Naval Underwater System Center (now known as the Naval Undersea Warfare Center). The ad asked, “Can your theories solve the unsolvable?” It focused on the reliability of undersea communication and combat decision-making systems.The ad revealed to him that institutions were actively applying mathematics and statistics to solve engineering problems. Pham says he still keeps a copy of that Spectrum issue in his office.After completing his Ph.D., he joined Boeing as a senior specialist engineer at its Renton, Wash., facility, working on engine reliability for the 777 aircraft, which was under development.He worked there for 18 months, then accepted a senior engineering specialist position at the Idaho National Laboratory, in Idaho Falls, where he worked on nuclear systems.His desire to become an instructor never left him, however. In 1993 he joined Rutgers as an assistant professor of industrial and systems engineering.Today his research focuses on reliability in modern, data-intensive systems, including AI infrastructure and global data centers.“The problem now isn’t getting data,” he says. “It’s knowing which data to trust.”Charting his IEEE journeyPham joined IEEE in 1985 as a student member and credits the organization with shaping much of his professional life. IEEE provided a platform for scholarship, collaboration, and visibility at critical moments in his career, he says.He served as associate technical editor of IEEE Communications Magazine from 1992 to 2000, was a guest editor for a special issue on fault-tolerant software in the June 1993 IEEE Transactions on Reliability, and was the program vice chair of the annual IEEE Reliability and Maintainability Symposium in 1994. In 2024 he returned to Vietnam as a plenary speaker at the 16th IEEE/SICE International Symposium on System Integration.In addition to being named a distinguished professor at Rutgers, he served as chair of the industrial and systems engineering department from 2007 to 2013.“If my journey holds one lesson,” he says, “it is this: Struggle builds resilience, and resilience makes the extraordinary possible. Even in darkness, perseverance lights the way.”

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Outback town with underground homes named Australia’s top spot for rental yields
realestate21d ago

Outback town with underground homes named Australia’s top spot for rental yields

A quirky outback town where half the population lives underground has stunned property investors by delivering rental returns that dwarf major city performance. See the top 25!The post Outback town with underground homes named Australia’s top spot for rental yields appeared first on realestate.com.au.

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Has Britain’s £25 Million Bet Secured a Landmark Energy Tech IPO?
oilprice21d ago

Has Britain’s £25 Million Bet Secured a Landmark Energy Tech IPO?

Octopus chief Greg Jackson has said choosing London as the destination for the blockbuster IPO of tech spin-off Kraken would be a “no brainer” if the exchange maintains its world-leading performance in 2025 and demonstrates it can lure fresh capital into the UK. In the biggest signal yet that the firm may select London over New York for its eagerly anticipated £7bn IPO of Kraken, Jackson told City AM he would prefer to make his stock market debut in the Square Mile, and keep his “cutting-edge tech company” on British...

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2 undervalued ASX shares worth buying today
fool_au21d ago

2 undervalued ASX shares worth buying today

These quality ASX 200 stocks could offer 50-75% upside.The post 2 undervalued ASX shares worth buying today appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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globenewswire21d ago

Gold medal winner at SIVAL, Amoéba displays its ambitions for its biocontrol solution

Chassieu, Jan. 20, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Chassieu (France), 20 January 2026 – 6:00 pm - Amoéba (FR0011051598 - ALMIB), industrial greentech specialised in the development of natural microbiological solutions based on the patented use of amoebae, recaps its recent participation in SIVAL (International Exhibition of Plant Production Techniques) in Angers (France). During this leading European and global event for the crop industry, Amoéba won the gold medal in the SIVAL Innovation 2026 Competition for its biocontrol solution and announced, together with its partner Koppert, the commercial launch in 2026 of its biocontrol solution for treating vineyards and vegetable crops as soon as market authorisations are obtained in the targeted European countries.

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Gold prices jump by Rs4,300 per tola
nation_pk21d ago

Gold prices jump by Rs4,300 per tola

ISLAMABAD - Gold prices recorded a notable increase in the local market on Tuesday as the price of 24-karat gold per tola surged by Rs4,300 to Rs493,662.

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