OnChainSleuth

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Today's EUR to RUB Price Update
This report highlights the current EUR/RUB exchange rate and market trends, emphasizing the bullish outlook and trading opportunities. It advises traders to monitor support levels and oil price influences on the Ruble's volatility.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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Just spotted something worth discussing—the CME Gap. If you've been trading Bitcoin seriously, you've probably heard traders obsessing over this concept, but what's actually going on?
Here's the deal: CME futures trade during regular US business hours, Monday through Friday from 5 PM to 4 PM CT. The key thing is that it shuts down completely on weekends. But Bitcoin? It never sleeps. The crypto market keeps moving 24/7 while CME is closed.
So when Bitcoin makes a significant move over the weekend—say it pumps from $63K on Friday's close to $65K by Sunday—there's suddenly this gap on the chart.
BTC2,41%
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I've been looking into something pretty fascinating about how Taylor Swift accumulated wealth, and honestly, her financial trajectory is way more interesting than just the typical celebrity net worth story. We're talking about someone whose taylor swift net worth 2025 sits at $1.6 billion—making her the wealthiest female musician ever—but here's what makes it different: she didn't get there through endorsement deals, fashion lines, or anything like that. It's almost entirely music-driven.
What caught my attention first was how she handled the whole masters situation. When Scooter Braun acquire
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I noticed something interesting about the American political timeline. In February, Trump resolved that government shutdown in just 4 days by signing the budget law on February 3, 2026. Nothing extraordinary, we would say, except that this is the second time during his second term that it happens—and much faster than the 43 days of his first term.
The figures are meaningful: 78% of federal operations were blocked, thousands of employees were on leave, but essential services like Previdenza Sociale and national security did not stop. The vote in the House was extremely close, 217-214, with some
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Been thinking about options pricing lately and realized a lot of traders don't really understand what's driving the cost of an option beyond the obvious. The extrinsic value of an option is honestly one of those concepts that separates people who consistently profit from those who just get lucky.
So here's the thing: when you're looking at an option's price, you're actually looking at two different components. There's the immediate value you'd get if you exercised it right now, and then there's everything else. That "everything else" is what we call extrinsic value, or time value. It's basical
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Been noticing a lot of confusion in trading communities about what people actually mean when they throw around terms like stocks, stakes, and shares. They sound similar, but there's a real difference between stake and share that most people don't fully grasp.
Let's break it down. When companies need capital, they can either borrow or issue stock. Stocks are basically ownership pieces of a corporation. When you buy stock, you're not lending money—you're buying a percentage of the company. That's the key distinction. Stockholders get claims on earnings and assets, and some even get quarterly or
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Just realized something interesting while checking crypto performance lately. Everyone's obsessed with what bitcoin to buy, right? But honestly, if you've got $500 to throw in right now, there's actually something that's outperforming it pretty hard. Pax Gold has been crushing it this year with about 58% gains, while Bitcoin is actually down nearly 10%. Wild, I know.
So basically Pax Gold is this gold-backed stablecoin on Ethereum where each token represents actual physical gold stored in a vault. The crazy part is you can trade it 24/7 on crypto platforms, no annual fees like traditional gold
BTC2,41%
PAXG0,32%
ETH3,34%
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Just been thinking about cash dividends lately and realized a lot of people don't really understand how they actually work. It's one of those things that sounds complicated but is pretty straightforward once you break it down.
So here's the deal: when a company pays out cash dividends, they're basically sharing profits with shareholders on a per-share basis. Most companies do this quarterly, though some go annual or semi-annual. The math is simple enough - total dividends divided by outstanding shares gives you the dividend per share. If a company declares $2 million in dividends and has 1 mil
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Just been reviewing some of the moves from Warren Buffett's playbook, and honestly, there's an interesting disconnect between what the market's pricing in versus what's actually happening with certain holdings. The Oracle of Omaha may have stepped back from day-to-day CEO duties, but his fingerprints are all over Berkshire's portfolio right now.
So here's the thing that caught my attention. Consumer debt in the U.S. just hit a record $18.8 trillion, and loan delinquencies are creeping up to near-decade highs around 4.8%. You'd think every lender would be sweating bullets, but that's not the fu
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just realized my landlord can actually require renters insurance even though california doesn't legally mandate it. kinda wild - so do you have to have renters insurance in california? technically no, the state doesn't require it, but if your lease says you need it, then yeah you do. it's becoming way more common now.
the coverage is actually pretty solid though - protects your stuff from theft, fire, that kind of thing, plus liability if someone gets hurt at your place. and honestly the cost isn't bad at all, usually runs like $15-30 a month depending on what you're insuring and your deductib
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Been looking into what retirees can actually afford for housing on Social Security, and honestly the numbers are tighter than a lot of people realize.
Here's the thing: when you're living on a fixed Social Security check, housing costs are probably your biggest monthly expense. If you're not careful about it, rent or a mortgage can swallow your entire payment and leave you struggling with everything else. Financial experts pretty consistently point to one rule: keep your housing costs between 25 to 30% of your total income.
Let's break down what that actually means if you're trying to figure o
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So I've been thinking about the difference between private equity and asset management lately, and honestly it's one of those topics that gets confusing pretty quickly if you're not deep in finance.
Let me break it down the way I see it. Asset management is basically the practice of juggling a bunch of different investments - stocks, bonds, real estate, mutual funds, whatever. The whole idea is to build a diversified portfolio that makes sense for your risk tolerance and timeline. You can do this yourself or hire someone to handle it. The beauty of asset management is that you're spreading you
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Been thinking about how reinsurance actually works in the insurance world, and honestly it's one of those strategies that doesn't get enough attention. Let me break down what treaty reinsurance really is and why it matters.
Basically, when an insurer takes on too much risk across their portfolio, they need a way to offload some of that burden. That's where reinsurance comes in. An insurer transfers a predetermined set of risks to a reinsurer, and in return gets financial protection. The reinsurer covers a portion of losses, which lets the original insurer write more policies without blowing up
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You know what's wild? Warren Buffett became a millionaire at 32, but people always want to know when did warren buffett become a billionaire - the answer is 1985. That's 23 years of compounding between hitting his first million and crossing into billionaire territory. At 93 now with a net worth hovering around $139 billion, he's basically living proof that patience and discipline actually work.
What gets me is how unsexy his approach is. The guy eats McDonald's for breakfast, still lives in the same Omaha house he bought in 1958 for $31,500, and has this almost boring commitment to his core pr
COMP8,65%
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So I was looking at Bitcoin's performance over the last five years and honestly, the numbers are pretty wild. A $1,000 investment back in 2020 would've turned into something like $10,600+ at peak. That's roughly a 10x return if you just held through all the chaos.
The thing is, Bitcoin hit around $126K earlier this year before pulling back. We're sitting closer to $68K now, which is down about 12-13% from that recent high. Looks dramatic if you're checking daily, but when you zoom out over five years, it's just noise. The crypto market has always been like this - wild swings between the peaks
BTC2,41%
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Today's CNY to MYR Price Update
This report details the real-time exchange rate of the Chinese Yuan (CNY) against the Malaysian Ringgit (MYR) and analyzes market dynamics influencing trading opportunities, emphasizing technical signals and economic relations.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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just saw that Senator Tommy Tuberville filed his Q2 fundraising disclosures and there's some interesting stuff in there. dude raised $188.4K which honestly isn't that much compared to other politicians - ranked 33rd for the quarter. but what caught my eye was his cash on hand sitting at $585.1K. kinda lean if you ask me. anyway, his tommy tuberville net worth is estimated around $13M as of mid-2025, which puts him 81st in Congress. not crazy wealthy by politician standards.
what's wild is looking at his stock trading history. the guy's been moving serious money around - we're talking up to $59
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Been doing some digging into where Americans are actually choosing to retire these days, and the patterns are pretty interesting. The Motley Fool ran a solid survey with 2,000 retirees to figure out what makes certain areas genuinely good for retirement, and some of the results surprised me.
They weighted seven key factors: quality of life at 31%, healthcare access at 15%, housing affordability at 13%, crime and safety at 12%, weather at 12%, taxes at 11%, and general cost of living at 6%. Applied all that to data from eight different sources and ranked every US county. Pretty methodical appro
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Just realized how much taxes actually eat into a 100K salary and it's honestly wild how different it is by state. I was looking at some 2025 tax data and a single filer making 100K takes home like $73-78K depending on where they live. That's a $4-5K swing just from state taxes.
Some states are brutal. Oregon? You're looking at taking home only $70,540 from that 100K. Hawaii similar story at $72,579. But then you've got states like Texas, Florida, Nevada with no state income tax - those folks keep $78,736. That's a real difference in actual spending power.
Even within similar regions it varies.
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Just did some quick math on Elon Musk's wealth growth and honestly the numbers are kind of insane. So how much money does elon musk make per day right now? We're talking roughly $698 million daily based on his 2025 year-to-date growth.
Let me break this down because it's wild. Musk started 2025 with about $421.2 billion (end of 2024 net worth), and as of mid-December 2025 he hit $676 billion. That's a $254.8 billion increase in just one year. Divide that by 365 days and you get nearly $698 million per day. Some sources like CoinCodex cite lower figures around $90 million using 10-year averages
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