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1Bitget Daily Digest (Dec. 16)|Crypto market sees $508 million in long liquidations over 24 hours; Hassett faces opposition from Trump-aligned senior figures in Fed chair contest2Bitget US Stock Morning Report | US Stocks Fluctuate and Retreat, Tesla Hits New High for the Year, Fed Shows Strong Economic Confidence, Non-farm Payrolls to be Released Tonight, Commodity Prices Fluctuate Violently3Bitcoin sees ‘pure manipulation’ as US sell-off liquidates $200M in an hour
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- 19:22Bitcoin derivatives indicate price will fluctuate between $85,000 and $100,000The Bitcoin derivatives market is showing stability, with strong support at $85,000 and resistance between $95,000 and $100,000. Traders are selling $85,000 put options, indicating confidence that Bitcoin will not fall below this level in the short term, while $100,000 call options are also being sold.
- 19:01OpenAI hires former UK Chancellor to lead "Stargate" global expansion planJinse Finance reported, citing the Financial Times, that OpenAI has hired former UK Chancellor George Osborne to lead the global construction of the "Stargate" project. George Osborne will serve as the head of OpenAI for Countries. This project is the overseas expansion of the $500 billions "Stargate" initiative, which aims to build data centers in the United States. OpenAI's appointment of Osborne follows its competitor Anthropic's move in October this year to appoint former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak as an advisor. In April this year, it was reported that OpenAI was considering expanding the "Stargate" project beyond the United States, and officially launched OpenAI for Countries a month later. Since then, OpenAI has reached agreements with the UK and the UAE, and stated that it is in talks with 50 countries to assist them in developing "sovereign artificial intelligence".
- 18:59The United States threatens to take countermeasures against EU companies over digital tax issuesJinse Finance reported that the US government has threatened to take retaliatory measures against the European Union in response to its taxation of American technology companies, specifically naming well-known enterprises such as Accenture, Siemens, and Spotify, stating that they may become targets of new restrictions or fees. The Office of the United States Trade Representative stated on Tuesday: "If the EU and its member states insist on continuing to restrict, constrain, and undermine the competitiveness of US service providers through discriminatory means, the United States will have no choice but to use all available tools to counter these unreasonable measures." "If countermeasures are necessary, US law allows for the imposition of fees or restrictions on foreign services, as well as other measures." The core of the dispute lies in digital trade regulation, as the EU is advancing its regulation and taxation of US tech giants such as Google, Meta, and Amazon. US government officials have accused the EU of violating the terms of its trade agreement with the United States, particularly the EU's commitment to "address unreasonable barriers to digital trade." Trump has repeatedly criticized such measures as non-tariff trade barriers that harm the interests of US companies and has threatened to impose "substantial" tariffs on countries implementing these measures. Nevertheless, the EU continues to advance the enforcement of its digital regulations, recently issuing hundreds of millions of dollars in fines to Apple, Meta, and Musk's X.
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