Most stablecoin yield setups I’ve evaluated tend to force a compromise — capped returns, restricted liquidity, or strategies that demand constant monitoring.
What caught my attention with USDD is the attempt to remove those frictions. The structure leans toward uncapped participation, no lock-up constraints, and a more continuous yield approach, which keeps capital flexible while still productive.
From an analyst perspective, that balance between accessibility and sustainability is what makes ...
‼️ This sounds crazy, but here’s what most people don’t know about Bitcoin’s early days:
The original code reportedly had a total supply close to 2 billion coins, not the 21 million we know today.
Block rewards were massively higher too — around 10,000 BTC per block instead of just 50.
And get this — Satoshi Nakamoto didn’t even refer to it as a “blockchain” at first.
The term he used? “Timechain.”
Then, just weeks before launch, everything changed.
Supply was slashed by about 99%, block r...
$APE is being heavily injected with liquidity and its price is being driven up so that it can be sold off later. Most large projects are currently under close scrutiny, and if a project doesn't demonstrate liquidity or anything else, it will likely be delisted. This is why NFT projects are highly vulnerable to delisting. Therefore, I see any strong upward movement in any cryptocurrency currently as simply an upcoming sell-off. If it reaches 0.5000 or 1.0000, it's most likely a sell-off, but thr...
People keep asking if crypto is still profitable…
Just look at #BTC year-by-year since the beginning 📊
→ 2008: $0 (no price, just a whitepaper)
→ 2009: $0
→ 2010: ~$0.003
→ 2011: ~$1
→ 2012: ~$5
→ 2013: ~$140
→ 2014: ~$500
→ 2015: ~$250
→ 2016: ~$450
→ 2017: ~$1,200 → peak ~$20K
→ 2018: ~$6,000
→ 2019: ~$5,000
→ 2020: ~$7,000
→ 2021: ~$50,000+
→ 2022: ~$20,000
→ 2023: ~$28,000
→ 2024: ~$60,000+
→ 2025: $126,000 ATH
→ 2026: $78,000
Now step back and look at the pattern 👇
→ Explosive rallies
...
Rising tensions around the Strait of Hormuz are creating a geopolitical boost for $FROG 🚢. Concerns over potential disruptions have reduced vessel traffic, increased voyage durations, and tightened tanker availability. As a result, VLCC spot rates are climbing, bringing companies like Frontline back onto traders’ watchlists.
However, this advantage may be temporary—any meaningful easing of tensions or normalization of shipping routes could quickly reverse the trend.
Not financial advice. Alway...