Asset manager VanEck filed an application with the Securities Exchange Commission on Jan. 15 for an "Onchain Economy" exchange-traded fund (ETF) that, according to the filing, will invest in cryptocurrency companies across the industry, including software developers, mining companies, cryptocurrency exchanges, infrastructure builders, payment companies, and other businesses in the cryptocurrency space. The asset manager will manage these...
Spot gold broke through $2,710 an ounce for the first time since November 8, up 1.52% on the day.
According to Watcher.Guru, the total transaction value of the spot bitcoin ETF on November 6 exceeded $6 billion. Among them, BlackRock's spot bitcoin ETF traded more than $4.10 billion on November 6, setting a new high.
Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas posted a chart to X on August 13 showing that the ETF currently holds 909,700 bitcoins, which are worth around $55.10 billion at current prices of around $60,500. They are approaching Satoshi's estimated 1.1 million BTC reserve. On average, Bitcoin ETFs add about 37,510 BTC to their holdings each month, and at this rate, their holdings could exceed Satoshi's holdings in January, a year after their initial launch.
Ethereum experienced a 10% pullback between July 31 and August 2, returning to the $3,000 support level for the first time since July 8. The move far outpaced the overall cryptocurrency market, which fell 6.8% over the same period. However, Ethereum futures unpositioned squaring contracts still rose to their highest level in seven months, leading traders to speculate on whether the next move could be up to $3,600.
The dollar index fell to 104, its lowest level since June 8.
July 16 news, according to Farside Investors monitoring, July 15 spot bitcoin ETF BTCO net inflow of 7.90 million dollars.
According to on-chain analyst @ali_charts, between July 5 and July 7, the spot bitcoin ETF bought $438 million worth of BTC.
According to 2miners data, between July 2 and July 4, the Bitcoin Cash network hash rate skyrocketed, rising from 3.6 EH/s to a yearly high of 9.4 EH/s, before falling back to a weekly average of 3.3 EH/s as of press time. The Bitcoin Cash Podcast attributed the surge to a new miner called "Phoenix", which captured most of the new Bitcoin Cash supply. The data shows that the miner produced about 90% of the blocks in the two days, though its dominance has dropped to 29% as of press time.