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Just saw some wild numbers on Elon Musk's wealth that made me do a double-take. The guy's net worth is sitting at $676 billion as of late 2025, which is absolutely bonkers — Larry Page at Alphabet is the next closest with $254.2 billion, but that's literally less than half what Musk has. So naturally, I got curious about how much does elon musk make a day, and the math is honestly insane.
Different sources give different takes on this. CoinCodex calculated it at around $90 million daily based on his 10-year wealth trajectory. But if you look at it from a 2025 perspective — Musk closed 2024 wit
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Been seeing a lot of conversations lately about what your net worth should actually look like when you hit your 30s. Honestly, it's one of those questions that doesn't have a one-size-fits-all answer, but there are some solid frameworks worth considering.
First, let's get clear on what net worth even means. It's basically everything you own minus everything you owe. Simple math, but it actually tells you way more about your financial health than just looking at your income. You could be earning six figures and still be broke if you're drowning in debt.
So what should my net worth be at 30? Acc
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Been seeing a lot of questions about selling naked calls lately, so figured I'd break down what's actually happening with this strategy and why brokers are so paranoid about it.
So here's the thing - when you're selling naked calls, you're basically betting that a stock won't move past a certain price. You sell the call option, collect the premium upfront, and if the stock stays put, you pocket that money. Sounds simple enough, right?
But that's where the complexity kicks in. Unlike covered calls where you at least own the underlying shares, with naked call selling you're completely exposed. I
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I noticed an interesting move in the Indian energy market that will probably go unnoticed by many. The country's main gas suppliers, GAIL and Indian Oil Corporation, have started cutting natural gas supplies to domestic customers since Monday. This is not a random decision, according to Jin10.
This reduction in gas suppliers comes at a time of broader restructuring in the energy sector. What’s striking is that the impact could be anything but marginal. We’re talking about entire industries that rely on natural gas to operate, so the consequences could be significant.
Analysts suggest that behi
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I noticed that Phala Network (PHA) has been back in discussion lately, especially considering how the landscape has changed since it launched Phala 2.0 at the end of December. If you're wondering what pha actually is, it's basically a blockchain platform that combines AI and privacy, allowing intelligent agents to interact directly with blockchains. Technically interesting, but the price tells a different story compared to a few months ago.
When it was listed on various exchanges in December, PHA experienced a significant pump, reaching $0.51 with a +300% increase in one week. Now it's April 2
PHA-0,57%
ETH0,92%
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Been thinking about this whole situation lately. Robert Granieri at Jane Street basically shaped SBF's early career - took him under his wing straight out of college, taught him the fundamentals of trading. That kind of mentorship is supposed to set someone up for success, right? Except... one of them ended up in prison for fraud while the other's firm is now dealing with its own insider trading lawsuit.
It's actually kind of striking how two people from the same starting point took such wildly different paths. Granieri built Jane Street into one of the most respected quantitative trading firm
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I've been watching crypto long enough to know that most people completely misunderstand how blockchain upgrades actually work. They think networks just smoothly implement changes and everyone moves forward together. That's not how it works at all. When major protocol disagreements happen, you get blockchain forks explained in the starkest way possible: the network literally splits into separate chains with different tokens, different rules, and wildly different values. It's one of those things that sounds theoretical until you're actually holding both versions of a token and trying to figure o
BTC1,05%
ETH0,92%
ETC2,77%
BCH1,47%
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Just been thinking about the W pattern lately - it's honestly one of those chart formations that can really shift your perspective on spotting reversals. Most traders call it the double bottom, and once you see it, you start noticing it everywhere.
So here's the thing about the W pattern. You're looking at a downtrend, right? Price drops to a low, bounces back up, then drops again to roughly the same level. That middle spike? That's just the market catching its breath. The real signal comes when price decisively closes above that neckline connecting both lows. That's when things get interestin
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Watching Ripple make a serious institutional play with the XRP Ledger and I have to say, the blueprint they're laying out is pretty thoughtful. They're basically building DeFi coins infrastructure from the ground up with compliance baked in rather than bolted on afterward.
Here's what caught my attention: XRP's being positioned as the core settlement and bridge asset across this whole ecosystem. We're talking forex rails, stablecoin corridors, tokenized collateral - basically all the infrastructure that institutions have been saying they need to actually move onchain. The identity and control
XRP4,95%
WAXL21,91%
PENDLE10,78%
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Been thinking about the macro headwinds hitting Bitcoin right now, and there's something that doesn't get enough attention in crypto circles.
So here's the thing - Trump's been pushing this narrative about stabilizing the oil market, right? Classic geopolitical play. But Ukraine keeps throwing wrenches into those plans, and that's creating this weird tension that's rippling through asset classes way beyond energy futures.
Why does this matter for Bitcoin? Because macro risk is macro risk. When you've got uncertainty around oil market dynamics and geopolitical flashpoints, institutional money g
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Just noticed BTC broke through the $70K barrier again, now hovering around $73.9K. Pretty interesting timing with all the geopolitical noise lately, but honestly the stock market's been giving it the shruggie copy treatment. Like, you'd think major global tensions would move things more, but equities are barely reacting while crypto's doing its thing.
The disconnect is wild. Could be institutional money quietly rotating into Bitcoin as a hedge, or maybe everyone's just numb to headlines at this point. Either way, watching how BTC holds above these levels while traditional markets stay flat is
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Morgan Stanley is now also entering the Bitcoin ETF market and is going directly for aggressive pricing. The low costs they offer could significantly shift the playing field. This is interesting because traditional financial institutions are now seriously operating in this space.
CoinDesk reports that this is an important step for institutional adoption. It’s remarkable how quickly major players are launching approved ETF products. Competition on cost levels is becoming increasingly fierce, which is actually good for investors.
The connection between CoinDesk and Bullish is interesting — they
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I noticed that around $9 billion has flowed out of Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs over the past four months. It’s a fairly significant movement that makes us reflect on where capital is shifting. Meanwhile, artificial intelligence ETFs continue to attract investments, while those on Bitcoin and Ether are experiencing these substantial outflows. The contrast between the decline in crypto ETFs and the ongoing growth in other sectors like AI ETFs is interesting. It seems investors are repositioning their portfolios, at least regarding direct exposure to Bitcoin and Ether through these instruments. Is
BTC1,05%
ETH0,92%
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Been thinking about what Bitcoin ETFs really mean for the broader asset allocation picture. One of the more interesting takes I've seen is from the institutional side - essentially, spot Bitcoin ETFs have opened a door that was previously closed for a lot of traditional money managers.
The argument goes like this: when you make Bitcoin accessible through familiar ETF wrappers, you're not just adding another investment option. You're creating a direct alternative to gold in institutional portfolios. And that substitution is already happening.
What's key here is that this isn't about Bitcoin rep
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I read something interesting about prediction markets that made me reflect.
If we think about how these markets work, the fundamental problem is quite obvious:
when someone has the power to influence the outcome of a prediction, that thing shouldn't be tradable.
It may sound trivial, but it's the core of the issue.
Imagine what would happen if the market operator could manipulate the result to their advantage.
It's not just a theoretical conflict of interest; it's a real risk that undermines the entire credibility of the system.
Prediction markets should operate based on informatio
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BTC is hovering around 74.35K right now, down slightly over the last day, and honestly it feels like everyone's holding their breath before the U.S. jobs report drops later today. Unemployment's supposed to stay at 4.3%, but if those nonfarm payroll numbers come in weaker than expected, we could see more downside pressure. The broader market's already in risk-off mode - you can feel it. Oil prices are climbing hard, pushing past 83 a barrel on Iran tensions. When geopolitical stuff like that spikes energy costs, it usually means traders are getting defensive. The dollar's strengthening too, wh
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Just noticed something interesting in the Korean crypto market - stablecoin holdings have taken a sharp major hit, down over half recently. At the same time, there's been a noticeable shift with more money flowing into traditional stock markets instead.
It's kind of a double whammy for the crypto side. You've got people pulling liquidity out of stablecoins while simultaneously diversifying into equities. Makes sense given market conditions, but it does paint a picture of where capital is moving right now.
Worth keeping an eye on - when you see this kind of sharp major reallocation happening in
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How Much Is Kai Cenat Really Worth in 2026? The Streaming Economy's Biggest Success Story
If you've been following the streaming space lately, you've probably noticed something wild happening. A generation of creators who started posting comedy skits online are now sitting on net worth figures that rival traditional entertainment executives. Kai Cenat stands right at the center of that shift, and his financial trajectory tells you everything you need to know about where digital entertainment is heading.
Let me break down what we're actually looking at here with Kai Cenat's 2026 net worth and w
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Just had someone ask me again: can you actually make $1,000 a day trading? The honest answer is yes, but the real answer is almost always no for most people trying online trading. Let me break down what I've learned watching this space.
The math seems simple at first. Want $1k daily? If you have $100k, you need 1% per day. Have $200k? You only need 0.5%. Sounds doable until you run actual numbers and reality hits different.
Here's what kills most traders: costs. Everyone forgets about commissions, spreads, slippage, and margin interest until they backtest properly. I've seen strategies that lo
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Looking for a bitcoin mining app that actually works for beginners in 2026? The cloud mining landscape has shifted dramatically. What used to require expensive hardware and massive electricity bills can now be done through your phone with renewable-energy backed operations.
Let me break down what's changed. Short-cycle mining contracts are now the standard instead of those risky long-term lockups. Most legit platforms run 1-5 day cycles, which means you're not exposed to sudden difficulty spikes or market crashes. The renewable energy angle is also real now—hydro, geothermal, and wind farms ha
BTC1,05%
DOGE3,72%
LTC2,37%
ETC2,77%
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