
Bitcoin (BTC) continues to weaken and decline, currently around $68,880 as of March 27. David Sacks steps down from his roles as White House AI and Cryptocurrency czar; key legislative agenda items remain unfinished. MARA Holdings sold 15,133 bitcoins, totaling approximately $1.1 billion.
Sacks will continue to participate in government as co-chair of the Presidential Science and Technology Advisory Committee, focusing on AI and broader tech policies. He previously stated that market structure and stablecoin legislation could pass within the first 100 days of Biden’s presidency, but the CLARITY Act faced obstacles in Congress. Additionally, plans to establish an industry leader “Crypto Committee” fell through due to internal disagreements, and funding sources for the strategic Bitcoin reserve remain unclear.
“We decided to sell part of our Bitcoin holdings as part of a strategic capital allocation to strengthen our balance sheet and lay the foundation for long-term growth. By repurchasing over $1 billion of debt at a discount, we recovered approximately $88 million in losses, reduced potential shareholder dilution, and used Bitcoin assets to significantly lower our debt-to-asset ratio under our set conditions,” said Fred Thiel, Chairman and CEO of MARA.
A whale opened a long position of 1.38 million HYPE at a high level four months ago, enduring a loss of $26 million before breaking even.
AI company Anthropic considers an IPO as early as October.
The WorldCoin team transferred 89.65 million WLD via new wallets to CEX, worth about $26.17 million.
GameStop converted its $368 million Bitcoin holdings into options strategies.
JPMorgan: During the Iran conflict, Bitcoin outperformed gold as a safe-haven asset.
ARK Invest uses Kalshi’s prediction market data to assist in investment and risk management.
Market panic bets: If the war spirals out of control, the Fed may emergency hike rates within weeks.
Trump delays further strikes on Iran’s energy facilities; next focus on April 6.
David Sacks resigns from White House AI and crypto roles; core legislation remains incomplete.
Latest Bitcoin news: $BTC continues to weaken, currently around $68,880. In the past 24 hours, $99.82 million in liquidations, mostly long positions.
The US stock market’s three major indices closed lower on October 16, with concerns over bad debts at two regional banks raising fears about credit quality, highlighting market fragility. However, the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, mainly chip stocks, remained up. Dow Jones Industrial fell 301.07 points, down 0.65%, closing at 45,952.24; S&P 500 down 41.99 points, down 0.63%, closing at 6,629.07; Nasdaq Composite down 107.54 points, down 0.47%, closing at 22,562.54. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index rose 32.96 points, up 0.49%, closing at 6,800.02.
(Source: Bitcoin CounterFlow)
(Source: Coinglass)
(Source: Coinglass)
Phyrex Ni (@Phyrex_Ni): “Headache. Trump’s actions yesterday were confusing, and today even more so. On one hand, he says Iran is no longer a threat and is seeking peace, even giving a big gift allowing ten ships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz. But right after, he was publicly contradicted. In the last 24 hours, it seems no ships, even paid ones, have passed, though I guess Trump meant these ten ships are phased in.”
“Moreover, Iran shows no signs of seeking peace; instead, it strongly asserts its intention to retain nuclear weapons. The coming days look tough. Trump has twice claimed Iran would negotiate, even TACO’d once, but now Iran is so tough that markets have lost trust. Even if Trump speaks nicely today, markets immediately fell, with the Nasdaq dropping 2%.”
“Oil prices have surged past $95, reflecting market distrust. Ironically, Putin, long considered Trump’s ‘brother,’ is suspected of supporting Iran’s military actions, possibly against the US. Trump and Republicans may face difficulties.”
“Looking at Bitcoin data, turnover has surged today, mainly due to distrust in Trump. Previously, investors believed in negotiations, but now short-term talks seem unlikely. Escalating strikes might push Iran to more extreme actions, making oil prices even more volatile.”
“Since Trump took office, it feels like being led by the nose—tariffs shook markets, Fed’s independence raised doubts, and crypto support has shown little. Falling oil and electricity prices backfired, and now they’re actively striking Iran. It’s complicated.”
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