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15:36
Viewpoint: Bitcoin has entered an undervalued range and will experience several months of sideways movement.
BlockBeats News, February 15, according to CryptoQuant analyst Darkfost's analysis based on the bitcoin 4-year simple moving average (SMA) indicator, the BTC price has now returned to the green (indicating undervaluation) zone and is approaching its 4-year moving average, which is currently around $57,500. Historically, this level has typically marked the final stage of each bear market, with the bitcoin price trading around this level for several months.
15:21
Shenzhen Shuibei remains open during the Spring Festival, with many stores welcoming new customers
Many tourists from other provinces are specifically "flying in" to buy gold, and even list "Shuibei" as a must-visit destination in Shenzhen. According to the manager of a Shuibei gold store, business has been extremely busy recently, with store traffic increasing by more than 30% year-on-year. Experts point out that the combination of Spring Festival shopping demand and the holiday has driven both the volume and price of gold consumption to rise. (Yicai)
15:07
Analyst: AI Risks Dominate the Market as Investors Sell Off Related Stocks
Glonghui, February 15th — Despite strong corporate earnings growth this quarter, executives and investors are entirely focused on another issue: the threat posed by artificial intelligence. Analysis shows that the number of times corporate management mentioned AI disruption risks has nearly doubled compared to the previous quarter. Although AI risks have not yet significantly lowered earnings expectations, investors are no longer waiting on the sidelines and are instead selling off shares of any companies perceived to be at risk. Roberto Scholtes, Head of Strategy at Spain's Singular Bank, stated that the market, as always, shoots first and asks questions later. Investors have decided to shift the burden of proof onto companies, which will continue to suffer heavy losses until they can ultimately prove themselves as winners. Jean-Edwin Rea, fund manager at France's Sunny Asset Management, said the trend is clear: anything digital is vulnerable. From a stock market perspective, the physical world offers more short-term certainty than the digital space.
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