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Bitcoin traders are predicting flash BTC price moves despite almost unanimous market predictions as to what the Fed will do next.

The movement is the latest in a trend of early buyers and holders moving their tokens to new wallets after several years of inactivity.

The market is waiting for the Fed’s next move, or clarity around an ETF, say analysts

DOGE jumped 10% on Tuesday, its biggest single-day percentage gain since April 3.

Even with a price correction to $29,000, several Bitcoin price metrics show traders casting bets on a quick rebound.

Need to know what happened in crypto today? Here is the latest news on daily trends and events impacting the Bitcoin price, blockchain, DeFi, NFTs, Web3 and crypto regulation.

ETH’s technical and on-chain indicators point toward further downside, but there is a silver lining.
Wednesday’s Federal Reserve likely decision to raise the interest rate 25 basis points appears to be priced into crypto markets

Lending platform Maker’s governance tokens soared to near one-year high prices last week prior to the sales.

Dogecoin price hits a two-month high amid speculations that Twitter’s rebrand to X would add a DOGE payment option.
- 19:29Stablecoin market capitalization fell 0.11% over the past 7 daysAccording to Jinse Finance, data from DefiLlama shows that the current total market capitalization of stablecoins across the network stands at $276.439 billion, down 0.11% over the past 7 days, with USDT accounting for 60.36% of the market share.
- 18:53Bitmine Invests $45 Million to Acquire 9,613 More ETH, Now Holds $7 Billion Worth of ETHAccording to a report by Jinse Finance, Arkham's monitoring shows that Bitmine spent $45 million to acquire an additional 9,613 ETH 32 minutes ago, bringing the total value of its ETH holdings to $7 billion.
- 18:43Data: 62% of Americans expect the unemployment rate to rise in the next 12 monthsAccording to a report by Jinse Finance, The Kobeissi Letter stated that 62% of Americans now expect the unemployment rate to rise over the next 12 months, marking one of the highest levels since the 2008 financial crisis. This proportion has doubled in less than a year, and such a high percentage has never been seen during non-recession periods. Interestingly, households in the top 33% income bracket are more pessimistic than those in the middle- and low-income groups. In previous economic cycles, a shift in expectations of this magnitude has, in 100% of cases, signaled a surge in unemployment rates.