Pirow
@DanielPirow
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Crypto enthusiast | Entrepreneur | Investor | Trader | Sharing insights on blockchain, DeFi and market trends
Crypto Jungle
Joined May 2020
No noise. No hype. Just pure alpha. Join Crypto Oracle for elite-level signal flow: • #Chart – BTC/ETH key zones & breakouts • #AltRadar – Altcoins primed for moves • #SignalDrop – Real-time trades w/ logic • #Liquidity – Heatmaps, traps & liquidations • #BotAlert –
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PEPE/USDT The ABC read is plausible but still unproven. Price rotated back into former supply, not through it. That’s reaction, not control. The bounce from 0.00000026–0.00000030 shows seller fatigue, but memes bounce hard even inside broader markdowns. Without acceptance above
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U.S. Attack on Venezuela — Market Lens Treat this as conditional geopolitics, not a confirmed regime shift. Markets will price scope, duration, and legitimacy, not the headline itself. The first reaction is about volatility; the second is about what actually gets hit. If action
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$ETH Update ETH held the green demand zone, but holding support alone doesn’t confirm accumulation. The bounce toward $3.1K is reactive, not impulsive, which keeps this move unproven. The $3.18K–3.38K area is real supply from the prior breakdown. Until price accepts above it,
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$SOL update Price is back inside the former supply zone, but this is re-entry, not a reclaim. SOL already proved it can trade below this box, so structure remains damaged. The $120–125 base stopped downside, but it hasn’t produced impulsive upside. That’s defense, not control.
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$BTC Holding $86K–88K alone doesn’t mean accumulation. Repeated tests can be absorption, but without upside displacement they also weaken support. The push toward $90K is controlled and slow, not impulsive. $90K–93K is still dominant supply. Until price accepts above it, upside
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$SOL lost $155–160 and failed the reclaim, that’s real structural damage. Since then, $120–125 isn’t being defended, price is just sitting there. Acceptance without strong buying usually resolves lower. $105–110 is the next area that might matter, but it comes from an old regime
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US 2Y–10Y Yield Curve Explained The US 2Y–10Y yield curve compares short-term rates (Fed policy expectations) with long-term rates (growth and inflation expectations). Normally, 10Y > 2Y. When 2Y > 10Y, the curve inverts and markets warn that the future may be weaker than the
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$ONDO is bringing tokenized US stocks & ETFs to Solana (early 2026). You’ll be able to trade US equities 24/7 from a Solana wallet, with seconds-level settlement and custody backed by regulated US broker-dealers. Over 100 stocks and ETFs are already live on other chains, $SOL
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$ONDO is sliding into its final major support after an ~86% drawdown, a zone where risk-reward historically flips toward long-term accumulation. Momentum is still bearish, but downside pressure looks exhausted as the Market Risk Indicator flashes buy-side opportunity.
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10/10: In short, this hike ends an era of easy yen money, potentially rippling through currencies, stocks, and bonds worldwide. Keep an eye on USD/JPY below 140 could signal big trouble. Thoughts?
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9/10: Broader economy: Higher Japanese rates might slow yen-funded investments in emerging markets, affecting growth there. It could also pressure the Fed and ECB if yen strength makes exports cheaper, fueling inflation elsewhere. A full unwind risks a “global bond crisis” if
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8/10: Impact on the world? Unwinding carry trades means investors rush to sell foreign assets to repay yen loans, sparking volatility. We saw glimpses in August 2024 when a prior hike triggered a global stock sell-off. Reduced demand for US Treasuries could push up global
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7/10: Now, with the BoJ hiking to 0.75% and signaling more increases, borrowing yen gets pricier. The yen strengthens (less “free” to borrow), eroding the interest differential and potentially causing losses if the yen appreciates rapidly.
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6/10: This worked for decades because Japan’s rates stayed low, and the yen weakened (from ¥100/USD in 2012 to ¥160/USD peaks), amplifying profits on currency conversion back to yen. US and other investors (not countries per se, but institutions) essentially got cheap funding
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5/10: Convert to USD and buy US Treasury bonds yielding 4%. Annual return: $666,667 * 0.04 = $26,667. Subtract borrowing cost: Net profit ~$26,000 per year, plus any yen depreciation boosts it when repaying. Scale this to billions, and it’s a massive “free” gain for hedge
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4/10: How does it work? Simple math example: Suppose in 2024, you borrow ¥100 million (about $666,667 at USD/JPY=150) at 0.1% interest from a Japanese bank. Annual cost: ¥100,000 (or ~$667).
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3/10: Enter the yen carry trade: Investors borrow yen at low rates, convert it to another currency (like USD), and invest in higher-yielding assets abroad, pocketing the interest difference. It’s like arbitraging global interest rates. This “hack” has fueled trillions in trades
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2/10: For context, Japan’s interest rates have been rock-bottom for years, often near zero or even negative since the 1990s, to combat deflation and spur growth. This made borrowing in yen incredibly cheap, almost “free money” for investors. Meanwhile, rates in places like the
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Bank of Japan’s and recent interest rate hike! Let’s dive 👇🏻 1/10: On December 19, 2025, the BoJ raised its key short-term policy rate by 25 basis points to 0.75% the highest level in 30 years. This move was widely expected, driven by persistent inflation and a strengthening
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US Jobs Data Update US unemployment rose to 4.6%, slightly above the 4.5% expectation. A softer labor market increases pressure on the Fed and keeps the door open for more rate cuts ahead.
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