AirdropHunterWang

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I've noticed an interesting trend in the gaming NFT sector these days. The main tokens are rising, but trading volumes are quite low. At first, it seemed strange to me, but after taking a closer look at AXS, SAND, and ILV, I realize there is solid underlying demand despite the activity decline.
Axie Infinity (AXS), for example, has increased by 3.36% in the last 24 hours and is now at $1.13. The volume has dropped to just 330.85K, yet the token maintains a bullish structure with higher lows. The market capitalization has reached $191.50 million with 169.86 million tokens in circulation out of
AXS-3,46%
SAND-4,54%
ILV-3,3%
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chiayuvip:
Just go for it💪
There is a story circulating in crypto circles for years, and every time I read it again, it fascinates me: that of Erik Finman, the boy who turned $1,000 into millions simply because he had faith in Bitcoin when almost no one took it seriously.
It all started by chance. At 12 years old, Erik Finman was walking with his brother when he saw a man wearing a T-shirt with the Bitcoin symbol on it. Curiosity pushed him to ask for explanations, and from that moment something clicked in his head. He instinctively understood that Bitcoin would become something important—much more important than it was
BTC-1,33%
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Just been scrolling through some NFT history and honestly, it's wild to think about how crazy the valuations got back in the early days. The most expensive nft ever sold still blows my mind - Pak's The Merge at $91.8 million. But here's what's interesting about it: it wasn't some single collector flex. Over 28,000 people bought pieces of it, each getting their own quantity. That's actually a pretty clever model when you think about it.
Before The Merge took the crown, Beeple was dominating the charts. His Everydays: The First 5000 Days went for $69 million back in March 2021 at Christie's. Sta
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Been watching the crypto market lately and something interesting is happening. Yeah, sentiment readings are still pretty dark—stuck in extreme fear territory for weeks now—but Bitcoin just won't break below that $60k zone. It's weird seeing such a disconnect between the fear gauge and actual price action. Usually when everyone's panicking this hard, we see more selling pressure, but that's just not showing up on-chain right now. The data actually tells a different story. Short-term traders have basically disappeared, and the big money is quietly accumulating while retail's sitting on the sidel
BTC-1,33%
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Been thinking about how to create a cold wallet? If you're serious about holding crypto, this is probably the most important move you can make.
Here's the thing - most people keep their assets on exchange wallets or hot wallets because they're convenient. You can buy, sell, and trade all in one place. But convenience isn't the same as security. The moment your crypto is on an internet-connected platform, it's exposed to hacking, phishing, and malware. That's where cold wallets come in.
So what exactly is a cold wallet? Basically, it's a way to store your private keys completely offline. Think
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Been diving into some interesting plays in the tech sector lately, and I wanted to share three tech penny stocks that caught my attention. These are under $1, and while they're definitely high-risk, the potential upside could be substantial if things break right.
First up is Webstar Technology. This is a data communications company working on some solid tech - they've got products like Gigabyte Slayer and WARP-G that are positioning them in the growing data optimization space. Now here's the catch: they're still pre-revenue, which is why this is purely speculative. Market cap is under $22 mill
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Just noticed coffee prices are climbing today. May arabica is up 1.42% and robusta jumped 4.39% to a 2-week high. The shipping disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz are pushing up freight costs and insurance, which means higher import expenses for coffee traders and roasters.
Interesting thing is, while coffee prices are going up in the short term, the longer-term picture looks mixed. Brazil got some decent rainfall last week in Minas Gerais, which improved their crop outlook. Back in early February, Brazil's crop agency projected 2026 production could hit a record 66.2 million bags, up 17.
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So I've been digging into how much Elon Musk actually made in 2025, and the numbers are honestly wild. Everyone talks about his net worth being $430 billion, but that's not really his salary in the traditional sense. His actual elon musk monthly income situation is way more complicated than a regular CEO paycheck.
Here's the thing - Musk doesn't have a standard salary like you or me. Instead, Tesla set up a performance-based compensation structure back in 2018, and for 2025, the preliminary valuation came in at approximately $87.75 billion. That's his elon musk monthly income broken down acros
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So Warren Buffett really went out with a statement. After stepping down as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway on December 31st, 2025, handing things over to Greg Abel, the quarterly filings that just dropped are telling us exactly what the Oracle of Omaha was thinking in his final months running the show.
The big headline? He was aggressively selling stocks. For 13 consecutive quarters leading up to his retirement, Buffett had been a net seller — and that includes some serious Apple liquidation. We're talking about dumping 75% of Berkshire's once-massive stake in the iPhone maker. Back in September 202
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Been watching the crypto market's recent moves, and there's something worth paying attention to here. While most people panic-sold during last year's downturn, Solana and Cardano actually present an interesting asymmetry compared to the bigger names.
Here's the thing: over the past year, SOL dropped around 21% and ADA fell roughly 55%, which sounds brutal. But compare that to how Bitcoin only slipped 9% and Ethereum actually surged 44% — the narrative becomes clearer. Smaller-cap assets got hit harder during the sell-off, which happens every cycle. The institutional money got more conservative
SOL-2,65%
ADA-3,92%
BTC-1,33%
ETH-2,26%
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Just been digging into the recent tech pullback and honestly, there's some interesting opportunities showing up if you're willing to look past the noise. The whole AI infrastructure story is still playing out, and I think people are sleeping on how much capital is actually flowing into this space.
Let me break down what's actually happening. We're looking at hyperscalers planning to drop roughly $530 billion in capex this year alone—that's a massive jump from the $400 billion we saw last year. Taiwan Semi already raised their 2026 guidance to between $52 and $56 billion, and that's just one co
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Just realized something about X - everyone asks how to invest in it but honestly you can't unless you're loaded or running an institution. Elon took it private back in 2022 for 44 billion, which basically means the rest of us are locked out. Before that it was on NYSE as TWTR but once Musk consolidated enough shares through that tender offer thing, boom - it went private. Now it's just held by him and some big firms like BlackRock and Vanguard. The whole point of going private was to avoid SEC requirements and do whatever, but that also means regular people trying to invest in X are just out o
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Just found out something wild - even billionaires like Warren Buffett actually get Social Security checks. Yeah, do millionaires get social security? Apparently yes, if they paid into the system for 30+ years. The thing is, it's not based on their net worth at all, just their salary history. So Buffett's estimated monthly check is around $5,100, even though his net worth is like $165 billion. Kinda crazy when you think about it. The SSA calculates your benefit based on your average earnings over 35 years, then applies a formula. If you wait until 70 to claim instead of 62, you get more each mo
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Recently, I've been looking into investment-related content and noticed that many people are still a bit confused about the concepts of accredited investor and sophisticated investor. In fact, although both types of investors can access some private placement opportunities, the underlying logic is completely different.
First, let's talk about the accredited investor. This type of investor is primarily identified based on financial criteria—an annual income of at least $200,000 (or $300,000 if filing jointly), or a net worth exceeding $1 million (excluding primary residence). The SEC's logic is
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So the market's been hitting new highs and we're seeing solid earnings momentum heading into 2026. A lot of traders are looking at where to put money now, and honestly, there's an interesting play that doesn't get enough attention—finding the best cheap stock to buy now in the sub-$10 range.
Most people sleep on this category. They think anything under $10 is just penny stock noise, but that's not really accurate anymore. The SEC moved the penny stock threshold up to $5, and there's actually a solid middle ground between $5-$10 where you find real companies with institutional backing and analy
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Just noticed Abbott Labs (ABT) took a hit after their Q4 earnings, down 16% over the trailing 12 months. On the surface, looks rough - sales only grew 4.4% to $11.5B, and guidance for 2026 wasn't inspiring either. Two segments stumbled: nutrition and diagnostics both underperformed.
But here's what caught my attention: the core medical device business is actually humming along nicely with 12.3% growth. Their diabetes care unit jumped 14.5% year-over-year, driven by the FreeStyle Libre franchise. They've been smart about expanding beyond insulin-dependent patients - the Libre Rio targets type 2
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Been digging through some older market research and found something worth revisiting. Back in 2022-2023, when everyone was worried about recession and looking for safe bets, there was actually a solid opportunity hiding in plain sight: quality monthly dividend stocks under $5. The idea was simple but effective - get meaningful yield without breaking the bank on share price.
Let me walk through what caught analysts' attention back then. The broader dividend stock category had been outperforming, especially when you factored in reinvestment. CIBC Asset Management showed dividend stocks with rein
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Been tracking what stocks Nancy Pelosi is buying lately, and her recent 2026 moves are pretty interesting. Turns out the congresswoman and her husband Paul just filed disclosures showing they're loading up on mega-cap tech again - we're talking Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, plus some AI plays. Pretty much what you'd expect from someone with a $275M net worth who's been crushing it in markets.
So what stocks is Nancy Pelosi buying exactly? The filing shows she exercised call options on several big names back in mid-January. Nvidia got 5,000 shares (options struck at $80), Alphabet took 5,000 shares
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Just looked into something interesting about wealth distribution in America. The Federal Reserve's latest household survey data shows a pretty clear pattern when you break down net worth by age group, and honestly, it's eye-opening.
So here's what caught my attention: if you're trying to figure out what puts you in the top 10% net worth bracket for your specific age, the numbers vary dramatically. A 25-year-old in the top 10% of their age group sits at around $281k in net worth. Jump to your 30s and that number jumps to $711k. By your 50s? We're talking $2.6 million plus.
The thing is, most pe
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Just looked into something that's been bugging me - what percentage of people make over 100k anyway? Turns out if you're pulling in six figures, you're doing better than most, but the reality is way more complicated than it sounds.
So here's the thing: as an individual earner making $100k, you're crushing it compared to the median of around $53k. But when you look at what percentage of people make over 100k at the household level, it's actually about 43% - which means you're sitting around the 57th percentile if we're talking household income. Not bad, but definitely not rare. The median house
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