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Crypto Industry Set For Big Shakeups, Massive Consolidation Expected: CEO
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Crypto Industry Set For Big Shakeups, Massive Consolidation Expected: CEO

Big players in crypto appear ready to buy up smaller projects, and the shakeup could speed up now that prices have cooled. Related Reading: After Predicting XRP’s Drop, Analyst Says The Bottom May Be In According to Bullish CEO Tom Farley, the same consolidation that reshaped traditional exchanges is likely to play out across digital-asset firms, with acquisitions replacing a long run of stand-alone hopefuls. Farley says overblown price tags kept many weak businesses afloat longer than they should have, and that reality is finally catching up. Bigger Crypto Firms Eye Smaller Players Farley, who led the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) until 2018, said during an interview on CNBC on Friday that many teams mistook products for businesses — a distinction he argues is costly. Companies with modest or stalled revenue were being talked about as if they were ready for blockbuster buyouts. That story, he added, ends when confidence in inflated valuations fades and buyers demand scale and repeatable income. Mergers will pick winners. Some teams will be swallowed; others will vanish. Valuations And VC Discipline Reports say venture capitalists have already tightened their grips. Eva Oberholzer, chief investment officer at Ajna Capital, said last September that VCs are far more selective now, shifting toward projects with steady revenue and clearer business models. That change in funding behavior has left many early-stage plays without the runway they once enjoyed. The money that once chased ideas now chases proof. Bitcoin Price Action Bitcoin’s swings are part of why buyers are cautious. Based on real-time data, BTC has been trading in the $68k-$70k lately, well off the October peak above $126,000. Daily moves of multiple thousands of dollars are common, and traders are jittery as broader markets wobble. Reports note that the recent volatility followed heavy losses across risk assets and a spike in hedging activity, which made short-term momentum hard to read. Related Reading: Breathe... XRP Is The ‘Oxygen’ Of The New Financial System, CEO Says What That Means For Teams And Workers When companies merge, duplication often follows. Engineers, product leads, and support staff may find roles cut as overlapping systems are folded together. Some projects will be integrated and given new life inside larger platforms; others will be wound down. For holders and small investors, the change can be abrupt. Buyers will prize clear revenue lines and strong custody, not dreams of a future payout. Featured image from AFP/Getty Images, chart from TradingView

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Apple is killing the old HomeKit tomorrow - theverge.com

Apple is killing the old HomeKit tomorrow theverge.comApple has given a final warning to its Home app users The AmbientPSA: Check your Apple Home is up to date in the next few days 9to5MacApple Warns Users To Upgrade Home App—What To Do Before the Deadline NewsweekApple Gives Final Warning to Home App Users MacRumors

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PISEN’s Charging Lineup with Qi2 Wireless Innovations, GaN Fast Charging & Certified High-Capacity Power Banks Offers On-the-Go Safer, Faster, and More Convenient Power for Every Lifestyle

From Qi2 MagSafe chargers to 3-in-1 charging stands, GaN wall chargers, and CCC-certified power banks, Pisen’s portfolio delivers reliable performance for home, travel, and in-car use Pisen, a global leader in smart power solutions and mobile accessories, is spotlighting its versatile lineup of five charging products designed to provide dependable and efficient power across all [...]

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Is Open Source in Trouble?
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Is Open Source in Trouble?

BRUSSELS — First, the bad. I would argue that current open source practices and usage are not sustainable, or atThe post Is Open Source in Trouble? appeared first on The New Stack.

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Lead Plaintiff Deadlines in Shareholder Class Action Lawsuits Against Fermi Inc. (FRMI), Ardent Health, Inc. (ARDT), and Varonis Systems, Inc. (VRNS) Announced by Holzer & Holzer, LLC

ATLANTA, Feb. 09, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Holzer & Holzer, LLC reminds investors of the deadline to seek to be appointed lead plaintiff in the following class action lawsuits:Fermi Inc. (FRMI)The shareholder class action lawsuit filed against Fermi Inc. ("Fermi" or the "Company") (NASDAQ: FRMI) alleges that Defendants made materially false and/or misleading statements and/or failed to disclose material facts regarding tenant demand for the Company's Project Matador campus between October 1, 2025 and December 11, 2025. If you purchased Fermi shares during this time period and suffered a significant loss on that investment, you are encouraged to discuss your legal rights by contacting Corey D. Holzer, Esq. at cholzer@holzerlaw.com, by toll-free telephone at (888) 508-6832 or you may visit the firm's website at www.holzerlaw.com/case/fermi/ to learn more.The deadline to ask the court to be appointed lead plaintiff in the case is March 6, 2026.Ardent Health, Inc. (ARDT)The shareholder class action lawsuit ...Full story available on Benzinga.com

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The Inevitable Reversal: When Speculative Narratives Don't Hold
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The Inevitable Reversal: When Speculative Narratives Don't Hold

The Inevitable Reversal: When Speculative Narratives Don't Hold Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,For nearly two years, markets were driven by the same speculative narrative that “this time is different.” Bitcoin, precious metals, and AI-linked equities rose not only because of robust fundamentals, but also because investors clung to powerful narratives about inflation, disruption, and monetary collapse. Those speculative narratives are not only seductive but also contribute to investment behaviors that obscure reality.Bitcoin was cast as “digital gold,” a hedge against a largely false tale of a weakening dollar and fiscal instability. Gold and silver were likewise falsely elevated as defensive stores of value in a monetary regime supposedly at risk of losing purchasing power. AI stocks became shorthand for a new productivity supercycle where profits would follow indefinitely rising valuations. These speculative narratives are fine and drive bull markets in the near term. As John Maynard Keynes once quipped: “Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent,” and those narratives are potent as they frame expectations and justify positions.However, these speculative narratives have little to do with economic or fundamental realities that will ultimately drive outcomes. In markets, stories don’t replace valuation. As I noted previously, when “valuation metrics are excessive... it is a better measure of investor psychology than fundamentals.” That means price becomes more about sentiment than business results, and we see that in the relationship between consumer sentiment about stock prices over the next 12 months and valuations.“This broad wave of bullish behavior isn’t isolated to sentiment surveys. Positioning data, equity fund inflows, and trading behavior confirm the lack of bears in the market. Markets are rising not because of strong earnings or economic acceleration, but because of optimism about future prices. In this environment, price momentum drives buying, not fundamentals. We see that in the overlay of consumer sentiment about higher prices versus valuations. Simply, investors are willing to overpay on expectations that things will continue to improve.”This shift from fundamentals to “belief-based investing” creates a market lubricated by emotion, especially in risk assets with no tangible earnings or cash flow drivers. In AI equities, some names traded on lofty price-to-sales ratios divorced from earnings prospects. In crypto, price discovery was often based on sentiment momentum rather than adoption metrics or utility. Even the spike in gold and silver prices did not reflect changes in industrial demand or monetary policy fundamentals, but the false narrative of a coming “currency collapse.”These speculative narratives are classic hallmarks of a mania: the story, not the data, becomes the primary driver of price.Leverage: The Hidden Engine of ManiaOf course, it is not just faulty speculative narratives that move markets. The narratives only motivate investor behavior, but for that behavior to have an impact, investors must have the capital to invest. Notably, as the narratives take hold, investors put their capital to work. However, as the narratives gain momentum, leverage accelerates those behaviors into extremes. As we noted recently:“However, this surge in allocations has also been accompanied by a massive expansion in leverage. Currently, margin debt as a percentage of real DPI has been reported at around 6.23 %, the highest on record. This ratio also suggests that for every $100 of real DPI, roughly $6 of margin debt is outstanding, a substantial amount. But that number doesn’t include the additional leverage taken on by investors through speculative option trading and 2x and 3x leveraged ETFs, which are also being bought on margin.”However, it is crucial to remember that “margin debt is not a technical indicator... it represents the amount of speculation in the market.” When speculative narratives take hold, margin buying gives investors more purchasing power, driving prices higher, amplifying gains, and leading to further leverage. Unfortunately, the eventual and inevitable unwind also works in reverse, amplifying losses when prices decline.But leverage did not stop at margin balances. Investors embraced:Ultra‐short dated options strategies that carry outsized leverage.Leveraged ETFs offering 2x or 3x exposure to narrow segments of the market.Futures and crypto margin accounts that magnified directional bets.All these instruments enabled investors, particularly vastly inexperienced and unwitting retail traders, to assume exposures far beyond what cash capital would normally permit. The result was, and is always, an increasingly unstable structure in which valuations rose not because of business performance, but because leverage and sentiment chased headlines higher.Unfortunately, in the end, fundamental and economic realities take hold, and speculative narratives fail to hold.The Inevitable Reversal: When Narratives Don’t HoldThere is an old saying that “Markets don’t die of old age—they die of excess.” That statement doesn’t only apply to the stock market; it applies to every market, asset class, and investment. For example, over the last few years, there has been a mad rush by high-net-worth investors to enter private credit markets. As the assets under management for these funds rose, the managers increasingly invested in weaker deals, pushed credit risk limits, and overlooked fundamentals. As we warned last year, the redemptions of private credit are now accelerating as concerns over stability and illiquidity rise.What triggered the reversal last week was not some dramatic policy shift, economic upheaval, or credit-related event, but a gradual shift in conditions that exposed the overextension. Softening economic signals, slowing earnings growth in tech sectors, and fading headline narratives removed the justification for trend extrapolation.As we often discuss with our readers, when speculation is the driver, these reversals are a feature, not a bug, of the system.What we saw last week started in Bitcoin, spread to precious metals, and then jumped into the equities market. As prices fall, margin calls force deleveraging, requiring liquidations to cover positions. Crucially, margin calls force the liquidation of positions regardless of investors’ desire to hold. That’s why downturns in highly leveraged markets tend to be sharp and fast.“When lenders fear they may not recoup their credit lines, they force the borrower to sell assets to cover the debt ... margin calls generally happen simultaneously, as falling asset prices impact all lenders at once.”This sequence flips the entire narrative-driven rally. What was once perceived as a hedge or growth trend becomes a crowded trade that unwinds in chaos. Prices can and often do detach from valuation pressures as forced selling begets further selling.The investor lesson is that speculative behavior always rewards the buyer on the way up, but punishes brutally on the way down.The Real Lessons for Investors—Especially Younger OnesWhat happened should wake up investors, but especially younger ones who have known only bull markets or narrative-driven rallies.Narratives are not strategies.Leverage is not risk management.Volatility is not optional.Valuation matters. Yes, markets move on liquidity and leverage in the short term, but in the long term, prices must align with earnings, cash flows, and economic reality. Investing based on stories of doom, disruption, or currency collapse, without a grounding in fundamentals, eventually leads to capital destruction.Speculation disguised as investing is a losing proposition. Excessive trading, especially in leveraged instruments, turns portfolio management into a directional bet rather than a systematic allocation. When speculative bets in the markets via options, leveraged assets, and margin surge, that is a warning, not a reassurance.For younger investors watching this unfold, there are several enduring principles:Don’t confuse confidence with experience. High conviction during a rally is a natural byproduct. But that conviction often precedes drawdowns, particularly when leverage and risk tolerance are high.Diversification is real only when exposures are uncorrelated. Owning Bitcoin, gold, and AI stocks doesn’t diversify if they all behave like leveraged growth bets driven by the same sentiment.Manage risk first. Heavy allocation to speculative positions without defensive hedges is not investing—it’s gambling.Leverage amplifies outcomes in both directions. You may win big for a time, but the downside can be catastrophic.Accept corrections as necessary. Pullbacks purify excesses and restore market health. Markets that seem like they will never correct often suffer the worst crashes later, think dot‐com and housing bubbles.The lure of quick gains is powerful. However, real wealth accumulates through disciplined risk management, valuation awareness, and systematic portfolio construction. If you are a younger investor, market speculation is a powerful drug when you are successful. However, if you can limit your urges and transition from short‐term performance chasing to a long‐term mindset that prioritizes capital preservation, your ability to accumulate and maintain vast wealth expands.This isn’t bearishness for its own sake. It’s an empirical recognition that markets are cyclical and leverage is structural.The most successful investors are those who prepare for both runs and reversals, not just the runs. Therefore, the next time you scoff at those not “chasing the latest speculative fad,” maybe ask yourself, “Why aren’t they chasing it?”It might just save you from heartache. Tyler DurdenMon, 02/09/2026 - 14:00

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