🗞️ Need to catch up on the news? Here's our top 10 from today:
🔸 Solana, Litecoin and Hedera ETFs are set to launch Tuesday, according to Bloomberg’s Eric Balchunas.
🔹 ETHZilla sold $40M in Ethereum to fund $12M in stock buybacks.
🔸 MetaMask registers domain for token claims, hinting its long-awaited airdrop may be near.
🔹 Canada is set to unveil stablecoin rules in its next federal budget to mirror the U.S. GENIUS Act.
🔸 Citi partners with Coinbase to test stablecoin payments for faster cross-border transfers.
🔹 Strategy has added 390 $BTC, bringing its total holdings to 640,808 BTC.
🔸 ClearBank teams up with Circle to scale the stablecoins USDC & EURC in Europe.
🔹 The White House has officially nominated SEC Crypto Task Force Chief Counsel Mike Selig to lead the CFTC.
🔸 IBM unveils Digital Asset Haven, a full-stack platform for institutions to manage digital assets across 40+ blockchains.
🔹 Trump says he’s “optimistic” the US and China will “come away with a deal” after Thursday’s talks.
I am canceling my @RobinhoodApp credit card.
I will sell all crypto on exchanges at the end of the cycle.
I will NEVER use $HOOD again.
Neither should you.
Here’s the kicker:
History favors the bulls!!! 🐂🏆
Markets climb the stairs and take the elevator down.. but they spend most of their time CLIMBING.
👉 Please don’t confuse smart-SOUNDING with actually being right.
@Cointelegraph You forgot to mention that during that time, everyone that wanted to close positions had delayed closings
Meaning if u click close it wont lock in on that specific price instead it would lock in on the price after the delay
This caused some losses to highly volatile pairs
Ya know, Fanny Pack Boy, ~ this is a distraction tactic… you attack me as a person rather than discredit my point. ~ you may have sold your soul to the devil, but I didn’t. F’ off.
$FICO just shook up the mortgage market.
The company launched a Direct Licensing Program that lets lenders access FICO scores without going through Equifax, Experian, or TransUnion. The move aims to cut out bureau mark-ups and give lenders more transparent pricing.
Under the new model, FICO will charge either $4.95 per score plus a $33 fee at loan closing, or a flat $10 per score, roughly in line with today’s bureau pricing but without the middleman.
Shares of the credit bureaus sank on the news, with Equifax $EFX down 11%, TransUnion $TRU off 10%, and Experian lower in London. Fair Isaac rose 5% premarket.
Barclays called the program a “clear positive” for FICO, raising its price target to $2,400 from $2,000, noting the structure could effectively double mortgage revenue per score while shifting economics away from the bureaus.
FICO CEO Will Lansing said the change “eliminates unnecessary mark-ups” and gives lenders real choice in how they use FICO scores.