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16:36

Analysis: Institutional investors sold $11 billion worth of U.S. stocks last week and are now shifting to a wait-and-see stance.

Last week, institutional investors sold a net of $11 billion in U.S. stocks, the largest single-week sell-off in nearly five weeks. Hedge funds, on the other hand, bought a net of $1.8 billion, ending four weeks of selling. Overall, U.S. stocks experienced a net outflow of $9.3 billion, with a total outflow of $25.5 billion over 16 weeks, indicating that institutional investors are gradually shifting to a wait-and-see stance.
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12:07

ETF funds are beginning to flow back, what is BTC missing to truly recover?

Awaiting Liquidity By Chris Beamish, CryptoVizArt, Antoine Colpaert, Glassnode Compiled by AididiaoJP, Foresight News Bitcoin has stabilized around $70,000 with some improvement in capital flow and easing selling pressure. However, spot trading volume remains low, and supply pressure above the market indicates that stronger demand is still needed to sustain a lasting recovery. Summary == - Bitcoin gradually stabilized after a sharp sell-off that pushed it to around $67,000, rebounding to near $70,000, but the upward momentum remains hesitant. - Not
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BTC-2,77%
10:07

QCP: Macroeconomic and geopolitical situations still dominate market sentiment; Bitcoin remains resilient amid panic.

QCP Capital reports that Bitcoin is fluctuating around $70,000. The market reacts quickly to inflation shocks, but geopolitical risks still suppress risk appetite. Bitcoin shows resilience, with outflows indicating tokens being moved rather than sold off. Overall market sentiment is cautious; dips are being accumulated but there’s no chasing of rallies. It is expected to remain in a range and fluctuate in the short term.
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BTC-2,77%
05:36

Morgan Stanley: Liquidity Deterioration, Violent Liquidation of US Treasuries Underway

Morgan Stanley rate strategists point out that the US Treasury market experienced a sell-off this month, primarily driven by traders abandoning expectations for rate cuts and instead pricing in rate hikes, which caused two-year Treasury yields to rise sharply. The decline in liquidity, coupled with rebounding trading volume, reflects that most transactions were driven by necessity.
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