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經翻譯
Is there anyone here live in Hong Kong? Are you using VPN?
Is there anyone here live in Hong Kong? Are you using VPN?
經翻譯
Can I make my 4$ a 100$? How?
Can I make my 4$ a 100$? How?
經翻譯
Hi is this possible to earn 50$ from my 4$?
Hi is this possible to earn 50$ from my 4$?
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#BinanceEarnYieldArena 幣安收益競技場於2025年3月19日推出,憑藉超過100萬美元的獎勵引起了轟動,增強了加密貨幣的被動收入選項。這個中心提供以ETH/SOL爲基礎的質押、雙重投資和靈活/鎖定產品等活動,年收益率高達19.9%(例如,USDC,PEPE)。通過幣安收益標籤可以訪問,跨設備用戶友好,吸引尋求收益的HODL者。X上的帖子突出了它的吸引力——用戶如@CryptoBull009讚揚投資組合的增長,儘管@nade_zhada敦促謹慎,強調風險和可持續性。在關稅和市場波動的情況下,這可能是一個黃金機會還是一個風險投資?你怎麼看?
#BinanceEarnYieldArena 幣安收益競技場於2025年3月19日推出,憑藉超過100萬美元的獎勵引起了轟動,增強了加密貨幣的被動收入選項。這個中心提供以ETH/SOL爲基礎的質押、雙重投資和靈活/鎖定產品等活動,年收益率高達19.9%(例如,USDC,PEPE)。通過幣安收益標籤可以訪問,跨設備用戶友好,吸引尋求收益的HODL者。X上的帖子突出了它的吸引力——用戶如@CryptoBull009讚揚投資組合的增長,儘管@nade_zhada敦促謹慎,強調風險和可持續性。在關稅和市場波動的情況下,這可能是一個黃金機會還是一個風險投資?你怎麼看?
經翻譯
Let’s dive into the recent buzz around CPI (Consumer Price Index) and Jobless Claims, especially since it’s April 11, 2025, and the economic landscape feels like a rollercoaster with all the tariff talks and market reactions lately. These two indicators—CPI as a measure of inflation and Jobless Claims as a pulse on the labor market—are critical for understanding where the U.S. economy stands right now, and people are definitely watching them closely. Starting with CPI, it’s the go-to metric for tracking inflation how much prices for everyday goods and services are changing. Posts on X from yesterday, April 10, suggest the March CPI data came in cooler than expected: a month-over-month drop of -0.1% (versus a forecasted +0.1%) and a year-over-year rate of 2.4% (below the 2.5% consensus). Core CPI, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, also undershot at 0.1% month-over-month (versus 0.3% expected) and 2.8% year-over-year (versus 3.0%). This softer-than-anticipated inflation could signal that price pressures are easing, which is music to the Federal Reserve’s ears—they’ve been aiming for that 2% sweet spot. But with tariffs in the news (think Trump’s recent trade policies), some might argue this cooling could be temporary if import costs spike later in 2025. What do you think—could tariffs throw a wrench into this disinflation trend? Now, Jobless Claims tell us how many people are filing for unemployment benefits, a real-time peek into labor market health. The latest figures from April 10 posts on X show Initial Jobless Claims at 223K for the week ending April 5, right in line with expectations, and Continuing Claims at 1,850K, a bit better than the 1,880K anticipated. Trading Economics reported a slight uptick from 219K the prior week, but nothing dramatic. This stability suggests the labor market’s holding steady despite economic headwinds—like those tariffs hitting the S&P 500 hard (down 13.53% YTD per Investing.com). Still, with claims not surging, it’s not screaming recession yet. #CPI&JoblessClaimsWatch
Let’s dive into the recent buzz around CPI (Consumer Price Index) and Jobless Claims, especially since it’s April 11, 2025, and the economic landscape feels like a rollercoaster with all the tariff talks and market reactions lately. These two indicators—CPI as a measure of inflation and Jobless Claims as a pulse on the labor market—are critical for understanding where the U.S. economy stands right now, and people are definitely watching them closely. Starting with CPI, it’s the go-to metric for tracking inflation how much prices for everyday goods and services are changing. Posts on X from yesterday, April 10, suggest the March CPI data came in cooler than expected: a month-over-month drop of -0.1% (versus a forecasted +0.1%) and a year-over-year rate of 2.4% (below the 2.5% consensus). Core CPI, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, also undershot at 0.1% month-over-month (versus 0.3% expected) and 2.8% year-over-year (versus 3.0%). This softer-than-anticipated inflation could signal that price pressures are easing, which is music to the Federal Reserve’s ears—they’ve been aiming for that 2% sweet spot. But with tariffs in the news (think Trump’s recent trade policies), some might argue this cooling could be temporary if import costs spike later in 2025. What do you think—could tariffs throw a wrench into this disinflation trend? Now, Jobless Claims tell us how many people are filing for unemployment benefits, a real-time peek into labor market health. The latest figures from April 10 posts on X show Initial Jobless Claims at 223K for the week ending April 5, right in line with expectations, and Continuing Claims at 1,850K, a bit better than the 1,880K anticipated. Trading Economics reported a slight uptick from 219K the prior week, but nothing dramatic. This stability suggests the labor market’s holding steady despite economic headwinds—like those tariffs hitting the S&P 500 hard (down 13.53% YTD per Investing.com). Still, with claims not surging, it’s not screaming recession yet.

#CPI&JoblessClaimsWatch
經翻譯
I’m new here, help me please I want to learn
I’m new here, help me please I want to learn
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