在菩提树下

在菩提树下

Accumulate less into more, dormant and wait, Wait for the opportunity and fear the risk. One leaf, one world, one thought and one cause and effect. Copy trading tip: Only trade ETH, open positions in 10 times, limit 15 times. Pay attention to the position value of the copy trade.

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在菩提树下
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Top 10 On-Chain Billionaires in 2026: Satoshi Nakamoto Still at the Top, Multiple Whales Lost Private Keys BlockBeats reports that on May 8, Arkham released the latest report listing the top 10 wealthiest individual cryptocurrency holders traceable on-chain in 2026, estimating net worth based on public on-chain data. The wealth of those at the top mainly comes from early holdings of Bitcoin or Ethereum, with Satoshi Nakamoto still overwhelmingly leading the list. The top spot, Satoshi Nakamoto, holds about $89 billion. The anonymous creator of Bitcoin remains the undisputed richest on-chain holder. All of this wealth comes from Bitcoin mined between 2009-2010, spread across approximately 22,000 addresses. This fortune places him among the top 25 richest people globally. Justin Sun, founder of TRON, holds about $1.5 billion, with addresses containing a large amount of TRX (1.8 billion tokens, about $610 million), stETH, BTC, and other assets. The "tragic figure" James Howells, who lost his keys, holds about $650 million. He is a Welsh IT worker who mined about 8,000 BTC with a laptop in 2010. In 2013, he accidentally discarded the hard drive containing the private keys, which is now buried in a landfill and unrecoverable. Estonian banker Rain Lohmus holds about $589 million. He participated in the ETH ICO in 2014 with $75,000, receiving 250,000 ETH. Due to lost private keys, these assets are visible but inaccessible. Early Bitcoin developer Stefan Thomas holds about $569 million. He earned 7,002 BTC for creating a Bitcoin introduction video. The private keys are stored in an IronKey hardware wallet, but the password paper is lost. He only has two attempts left before the data is permanently erased. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin holds about $533 million, with wealth mainly from ETH allocated at genesis. He also frequently receives large token airdrops from meme coin projects. Irish drug dealer Clifton Collins holds about $447 million. He acquired 6,000 BTC at about $5/BTC between 2011-2012. The private key was hidden in a fishing rod and lost; he was later arrested. In March 2026, one of his wallets suddenly activated, and the police recovered about $35 million in BTC. Cobo co-founder and CEO DiscusFish holds about $213 million, with addresses mainly holding BTC. POAP (Proof of Attendance Protocol) founder Patricio Worthalter holds about $149 million, mainly in ETH and related assets. Famous trader James Fickel holds about $115 million. He bought ETH at a low price in 2016 and still holds about 49,000 ETH. He once lost $43 million betting on ETH/BTC and is now focused on neuroscience funding.
在菩提树下
在菩提树下
📊 Interpretation of US Nonfarm Payroll Data for April 2026 1. Overview of Key Data Indicator Previous Value Expected Value Released Value Market Interpretation Unemployment Rate 4.30% 4.30% 4.3% In line with expectations, overall labor market remains tight Seasonally Adjusted Nonfarm Payrolls (10,000s) 18.5 6.2 11.5 Far exceeds expectations but below previous value, employment growth has slowed Average Hourly Earnings Year-over-Year 3.4% 3.80% 3.6% Below expectations, wage inflation pressure marginally eased Average Hourly Earnings Month-over-Month 0.20% 0.30% 0.2% Same as previous value, below expectations, wage growth cooling 2. Data Breakdown and Market Implications 1. Employment Numbers: Exceed Expectations but Slow Down Nonfarm payrolls increased by 115,000, significantly higher than the market expectation of 62,000, indicating the labor market has not cooled sharply as feared, showing economic resilience; however, compared to March's 185,000, the growth rate has clearly slowed, signaling weakening momentum in employment expansion. This is a "neither hot nor cold" signal: no collapse in employment as feared by the market, nor strong enough to make the Federal Reserve completely abandon rate cuts. 2. Wage Data: Inflation Pressure Eases Year-over-year wage growth at 3.6% and month-over-month at 0.2%, both below market expectations, with the monthly rate unchanged from the previous value, indicating the labor market's transmission of inflation pressure is marginally weakening, providing room for Fed policy adjustments. Wages are a key driver of service sector inflation; cooling wages suggest the stickiness of core inflation may gradually decline. 3. Unemployment Rate: Remains Unchanged Unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, consistent with previous and expected values, with no sharp increase, indicating overall labor market stability and reflecting that changes in labor force participation have not caused significant volatility in unemployment data. 3. Core Market Impact Nonfarm payroll data is a crucial reference for Federal Reserve monetary policy and a "weathervane" for global financial markets. The impact of this data can be divided into several aspects: Federal Reserve Rate Cut Expectations Employment data exceeded expectations but slowed, and wage data cooled, overall a "dovish-leaning" neutral signal. Market expectations for Fed rate cuts this year will not be completely dashed, but the probability of large cuts will decrease, with the timing of the first cut likely still expected in the second half of the year. US Dollar and Treasury Bonds After data release, the US dollar index will likely experience short-term volatility, and Treasury yields may slightly decline because the wage data alleviates market concerns about inflation stickiness, while employment resilience limits a sharp drop in yields. Gold and Commodities Gold pricing centers on real interest rates and the US dollar index. Cooling wage data and ongoing rate cut expectations provide some support for gold; however, employment data exceeding expectations will suppress gold's short-term gains, likely maintaining a volatile pattern overall. US Stock Market Market expectations for a "soft landing" are somewhat validated; employment slowed but did not collapse, inflation pressure eased. This combination is relatively favorable for US stocks, with growth sectors like tech potentially benefiting from rate cut expectations. 4. Key Focus Going Forward Attention should be paid to Federal Reserve officials' comments on this data, especially their interpretation of the employment-inflation balance, which will further clarify the pace of rate cuts. Upcoming inflation data (CPI, PCE) will be critical; if inflation continues to decline, this employment data will not hinder the rate cut process; if inflation rebounds, employment resilience may justify the Fed maintaining high rates. Revisions to nonfarm payroll data also need monitoring, as past US nonfarm data has often been significantly revised downward, affecting market judgments on the true state of the labor market.
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在菩提树下
Why does Iran avoid the US but chase after the UAE? Iran's choice to strike the UAE is not a simple bilateral conflict but a key move in the complex geopolitical game in the Middle East. Behind this lie intertwined military, strategic, and ideological deep motivations. 🎯 Core Motivation: Targeting the US and Israel Iran views the UAE as a "proxy" or "forward base" for the US and Israel in the Gulf region. Striking the UAE is essentially an indirect way to pressure the US and Israel. * Striking the US ally system: The UAE is a core security partner of the US in the Middle East. The Al Dhafra Air Base within the UAE is an important US military command and intelligence hub in the region. By attacking the UAE, Iran aims to send a clear message: any country providing military support to the US will become a target of Iran’s strikes, thereby undermining the US’s Middle East alliance system. * Retaliating against Israeli involvement: The UAE signed the Abraham Accords with Israel, and their relations have grown closer. Israel has deployed the "Iron Dome" air defense system in the UAE and is seen by Iran as participating in military actions against it. Therefore, in Iran’s view, the UAE has become Israel’s "arm" reaching into the Gulf, and striking the UAE is a direct response to Israel. ⚔️ Tactical Choice: Precision Strikes on the US’s "Soft Underbelly" Iran knows it cannot confront the US head-on, so it chooses tactics that maximize its own advantages while causing the greatest trouble for its opponent. * "Strike allies, not US forces": This is a shrewd strategy. Iran avoids directly attacking US military vessels, instead focusing firepower on US allies’ (like the UAE’s) energy infrastructure and oil tankers. This puts the US in a dilemma: if it does not protect its allies, its credibility in the Middle East will be severely damaged; if it directly goes to war with Iran, it could trigger a larger regional conflict, which the US domestic anti-war sentiment and high inflation pressures do not want to see. * Controlling the global energy choke point: The attacks focus on the UAE’s Fujairah port. This port is a key oil export channel built by the UAE to bypass the Strait of Hormuz. By striking this location, Iran intends to declare to the world that all Gulf countries’ oil routes are within its missile coverage, threatening global energy supplies, driving up international oil prices, and thus exerting huge pressure on the global economy and US inflation. 💥 Immediate Trigger: Ceasefire Breakdown and Border Clashes Recent conflict escalation has specific triggering events. * Ceasefire agreement breakdown: After the temporary ceasefire reached between the US and Iran on April 8, 2026, the situation eased temporarily. But negotiations soon stalled, with huge disagreements on core issues like control of the Strait of Hormuz. In early May, the UAE suffered large-scale missile and drone attacks, marking the ceasefire’s collapse. * Strait of Hormuz standoff: The US launched "Project Freedom" aimed at restoring shipping through the strait, which Iran sees as a direct provocation to its sovereignty. In response, Iran issued warnings and took actions against vessels and facilities operating in the area, with the UAE, as a US partner, bearing the brunt. ✨ Deeper Logic: Clash of Two Development Models Beyond strategic considerations, this conflict reflects a confrontation between two fundamentally different national development models and ideologies. * Iran’s model: Centered on revolution, resistance, and confrontation with the West, emphasizing struggle to uphold the dignity of the Islamic world. * UAE’s model: Characterized by openness, modernization, and deep integration with the international community, successfully building a prosperous, stable Muslim society coexisting peacefully with neighbors (including Israel). The UAE’s success is a living refutation of the model Iran advocates. It proves that Muslim countries can achieve economic takeoff by embracing globalization while maintaining their cultural identity, without relying on permanent resentment and confrontation. This fundamental ideological opposition makes it difficult for Iran to tolerate the existence and development of the UAE.
在菩提树下
在菩提树下
📊 Interpretation of US Economic Data on May 7, 2026 1. US Challenger Job Cuts in April Data: Reported 83,387, previous 60,620, a significant year-on-year increase. Interpretation: Challenger job cuts data reflect companies' announced layoff plans. The sharp rise indicates a clear increase in US companies' willingness to reduce workforce, especially ongoing layoffs in tech, finance, and other sectors, signaling a weakening labor market. 2. US Initial Jobless Claims for the Week Ending May 2 Data: Reported 200,000, previous 190,000, expected 205,000, actual below expectations. Interpretation: Although slightly up from the previous week, the figure is below market expectations, indicating the short-term deterioration in unemployment is slower than feared. Continuing claims are also falling, reflecting resilience in reemployment speed; the labor market has not yet experienced a sharp downturn. 3. US March Construction Spending Month-over-Month Data: Reported 0.6%, previous -1.9%, expected 0.2%, significantly above expectations. Interpretation: Construction spending reflects investment activity in the US building sector. The shift from negative to positive and exceeding expectations indicates a recovery in real estate and infrastructure investments, supporting economic growth and confirming the stimulative effect of low interest rates on construction. 4. US EIA Natural Gas Inventories for the Week Ending May 1 Data: Reported 63 billion cubic feet, previous 79 billion, expected 74 billion, inventories significantly below expectations. Interpretation: Lower-than-expected natural gas inventories suggest stronger-than-expected market demand (especially for power generation and industrial use), combined with faster inventory drawdown, providing short-term support for natural gas prices. 5. US New York Fed 1-Year Inflation Expectations in April Data: Reported 3.64%, previous 3.42%, expected 3.5%, inflation expectations slightly up and above expectations. Interpretation: Inflation expectations are a key reference for the Fed's monetary policy. Higher-than-expected data indicates increased market concerns about inflation persistence, potentially delaying Fed rate cuts and putting some pressure on US stocks and bonds valuations. Overall Market Impact Labor Market: Shows "structural divergence"—increased layoff plans but actual unemployment remains low, indicating labor market resilience is not fully broken but downside pressure is accumulating. Inflation and Policy: Inflation expectations rise above forecasts, combined with construction spending data reflecting economic resilience, cooling market expectations for Fed rate cuts this year; the dollar and US bond yields gain short-term support. Commodities: Significant drawdown in natural gas inventories supports prices; meanwhile, the divergence in overall economic data increases short-term volatility in assets like oil and gold.
在菩提树下
在菩提树下
Recently, Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and the U.S. stock market have shown divergent trends. The underlying logic can be understood from two levels: macroeconomic factors and internal dynamics within the crypto market. This reflects that the cryptocurrency market is becoming more complex, and its pricing logic no longer simply follows traditional risk assets. 📈 Decoupling from U.S. Stocks: From "Risk Asset" to "Independent Narrative" In the past, Bitcoin was often viewed by the market as a high-volatility tech stock or risk asset, highly correlated with the Nasdaq and S&P 500 indices. However, in the current environment, this correlation is weakening for the following main reasons: 1. Independent Driving Force of Institutional Capital Institutional capital, represented by spot Bitcoin ETFs, has become a core force influencing the coin price. The inflows and outflows of these funds follow their own rhythm and logic, not entirely synchronized with stock market fluctuations. For example, even if the stock market performs poorly, continuous inflows from ETFs can provide independent buying support for Bitcoin, creating a unique upward momentum. 2. "Safe Haven" Narrative Amid Geopolitical Tensions During periods of geopolitical tension (such as the Middle East situation), Bitcoin exhibits dual characteristics. At the initial outbreak of panic, it is sold off like other risk assets; but as the situation stalemates, its narrative as "digital gold," censorship resistance, and value storage becomes prominent, attracting specific demand-driven capital inflows, thus forming an independent trend distinct from the stock market. 3. Strengthening Endogenous Factors Within the Crypto Market Bitcoin’s price is increasingly influenced by its own ecosystem factors, such as total network hash rate, on-chain activity, and large holders’ (whales’) positions. The importance of these endogenous factors is rising, weakening the absolute dominance of macroeconomic indicators on its price. ⛓️ BTC and ETH Divergence: The Logical Differences Between "Digital Gold" and "Ecosystem Platform" Although Bitcoin and Ethereum are both core crypto assets, their fundamental logics differ essentially, leading to frequent divergence in their market performance. Comparison Dimension Bitcoin (BTC) Ethereum (ETH) Core Positioning Store of value, "digital gold" Decentralized application platform, "world computer" Value Drivers Scarcity, security, institutional allocation demand On-chain ecosystem activity, technological application iteration Capital Nature "Store-of-value" funds inclined to long-term allocation "Growth" funds seeking yield and applications 🔍 Specific Manifestations of Recent Divergence Based on current market data, this divergence is particularly evident: * Institutional Capital Preferences Differ * BTC: Institutional capital has clearly re-entered. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have shown strong net inflows recently, indicating robust institutional demand for Bitcoin allocation. * ETH: In contrast, Ethereum ETF capital recovery appears more fragile and hesitant, with inflow scale and continuity far less than Bitcoin, showing institutions are still probing their stance on Ethereum. * Market Sentiment and Structural Differences * BTC: Market structure is relatively healthy. Despite price increases, some key indicators (such as U.S. institutional buying willingness) show caution, indicating the rise is not driven by a single frenzy. * ETH: There is a risk of "crowded trades" in the market. Data shows Ethereum long positions are overly concentrated, which is usually a contrarian indicator, meaning a price pullback could trigger severe chain liquidations, so its upward quality is considered inferior to Bitcoin. In summary, the current market presents a dual divergence pattern of "crypto market vs. traditional stock market" and "Bitcoin vs. Ethereum." This marks the maturation of the crypto market, where internal asset logic and investment value are being more finely differentiated and priced.
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在菩提树下
Bold Projection: "Austan Goolsbee, current President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and member of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)" speech tonight Tonight (May 7), Goolsbee's speech at the Milken Institute carries a hawkish tone, emphasizing higher interest rates for longer, not ruling out restarting rate hikes, but maintaining a dovish baseline of "cutting rates only after inflation confirmation"[]. 1. Core Tone (in one sentence) Inflation stickiness exceeds expectations + AI/productivity overheating risk + high oil prices = must delay rate cuts, raise rates if overheating[]. 2. Step-by-step Projection (compared to latest stance) 1. Opening: Economic status (cautiously pessimistic) Acknowledges strong growth and stable employment, but inflation rebound is bad news (March PCE 3.5%). Reiterates stagflation-like risk: high oil prices combined with lagged tariff effects suppress growth and push inflation higher[]. Key sentence: "Inflation has not fallen back to 2%, but instead is rising; the situation is not optimistic." 2. Core: Productivity and AI (focus tonight) New view: High productivity growth ≠ automatic rate cuts, two scenarios[]: Unexpected short-term boost → suppress inflation → rate cuts possible; Expected long-term high growth (AI boom) → surge in investment/consumption → push inflation up → possible rate hikes. Warning: "The more hype, the greater the need to raise rates to prevent overheating," directly naming AI bubble risk[]. 3. Policy Path: Higher rates for longer, rate hikes back on the table Clearly opposes "preemptive rate cuts": no rate cuts without sustained inflation decline data[]. Timing expectation: very low chance of rate cuts in 2026, possibly delayed to 2027. Hawkish intensification: if inflation remains high/economy overheats, restarting rate hikes is not ruled out (already mentioned in April). Echoes FOMC division: 4 opposed in April meeting, reflecting increased inflation concerns and breakdown of policy consensus[]. 4. Risk Warnings: Three major "roadblocks" Oil prices: ongoing Middle East conflict → oil prices stay above 90 → inflation entrenched, hard to fall. Service inflation: core service inflation remains high, non-energy components sticky. Market expectations: beware of AI/stock market overheating triggering demand-side inflation rebound[]. 5. Conclusion: Dovish baseline + hawkish stance Baseline: still dovish long-term, targeting 2% inflation, but now is not the time to cut rates. Strong statement: "Better to wait longer for confirmation than risk rate cuts causing inflation rebound." 3. Market Impact Projection Bond market: short-term yields rise (2-year → 4.8%+), long-term pressured, curve flattens. Dollar: strengthens, DXY back above 105+. US stocks: growth stocks (AI) pull back, value/defensive relatively resilient. Gold: under pressure, testing 1980 support. 4. Key Takeaways (3 must-grab sentences) "High productivity growth may require rate hikes, not cuts" (most hawkish statement tonight). "Rate cuts basically impossible in 2026, reassess in 2027" (timing expectation revised down). "Inflation not stable, high rates must be maintained, raise rates if overheating" (policy stance summary)[]. One-sentence summary: Tonight Goolsbee shifts from "cautiously dovish" to "pragmatically hawkish," higher rates for longer is set, rate hike expectations repriced.
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在菩提树下
Xinhua News Agency Cairo, May 7, 16:12: According to Middle Eastern media citing insiders, the US and Iran have reached a consensus on "the US easing maritime blockade and Iran gradually opening the Strait of Hormuz"; the news has not yet been officially confirmed by the US or Iran. US side (Trump, May 6): High possibility of reaching an agreement, possibly within a week, optimistic attitude. Iran (Foreign Ministry spokesperson, May 6): Only received the US proposal, reviewing it, no consensus reached yet, no confirmation given. Oil prices: Short-term plunge, WTI down over 3%, Brent down nearly 3% (later widened to -7%). Gold and silver: Strengthened, spot gold rose above $4750/oz, silver above $79/oz. Will an agreement be reached? Preliminary conclusion: High probability (60%-70%) of signing a "de-escalation memorandum," but difficult to form a long-term stable agreement; the next 48 hours are a critical window. 1. Why this is very likely to "succeed" (three major driving forces) Both sides cannot bear the costs US: Blockade + confrontation push up oil prices, inflation pressure is high; urgently needs "cooling achievements" before midterm elections []. Iran: Sanctions lock down the economy, inflation skyrocketing, rial collapsing; **urgently needs to unfreeze overseas assets (about tens of billions of dollars)** to survive []. Bottom lines highly matched (clear interest exchange) US: Ease maritime blockade + partially unfreeze assets, in exchange for gradual opening of the strait + Iran suspending high-enriched uranium enrichment for 12-15 years. Iran: Preserve regime + resolve economic crisis, in exchange for temporarily not sealing off the strait + phased concessions on nuclear program []. Core: No talk of ultimate reconciliation, only a "ceasefire for breathing room" short and quick deal []. Time window pushed to the critical point News: Iran to respond to key US terms within **48 hours (May 7-8)**; Trump says "may be finalized within a week." Current situation: Hundreds of ships stranded in the strait, global energy supply chain under pressure; all sides pressuring for a quick breakthrough []. 2. Three fatal obstacles (deal can collapse anytime) Huge nuclear issue differences US: Demands 12-15 years suspension of uranium enrichment + removal of high-enriched uranium + strict inspections. Iran: Supreme Leader will never give up nuclear capability, only willing to suspend short-term, refuses long-term freeze []. Sanctions relief pace tug-of-war US: Stepwise, reversible, linked to compliance, fears Iran "taking benefits without action" []. Iran: Demands immediate substantial relief + full asset unfreeze + war compensation, otherwise no signature []. Internal hardliners opposition US: Congressional Jewish lobby, Republican hawks oppose concessions to Iran []. Iran: Revolutionary Guards, conservatives see concessions as "betrayal," threaten to overturn agreement []. 3. Three scenario simulations (probability ranking) Scenario 1: Sign "de-escalation memorandum" (60%-70%, most likely) Time: Signed May 8-10, one page, 14 clauses, 30-day validity [__LINK_ICON]. Content: Open strait navigation, US eases blockade + unfreezes some assets, Iran suspends high-enriched uranium enrichment; no permanent peace, only pause hot war []. Market: Oil prices fall back to $85-90, gold and silver short-term correction but remain strong [__LINK_ICON]. Scenario 2: Talks collapse, confrontation escalates (20%-30%) Trigger: Iran refuses nuclear freeze, US refuses to unfreeze core assets, or internal hardliners sabotage [__LINK_ICON]. Consequence: Strait completely blocked, US military restarts "freedom plan" assault, oil prices soar above $120, gold and silver hit new highs. Scenario 3: Long-term comprehensive agreement (<10%, very low probability) Condition: Both sides fully concede, Israel tacitly agrees, US internal consensus, currently no signs []. 4. Final judgment ✅ Short term (within 1 week): De-escalation memorandum will be signed, strait navigation crisis eased, oil prices fall. ⚠️ Medium term (after 30 days): High probability of breakdown again, nuclear issues, sanctions, internal pressures unresolved, return to low-intensity confrontation []. Essence: This is a "temporary truce for mutual benefit," not the end of peace [].
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在菩提树下
AI Interpretation Michael Saylor breaks his iconic "never proactively sell" stance, viewing Bitcoin as a deployable asset reserve, marking a new phase in the Bitcoin allocation strategy of publicly listed companies. After three consecutive quarters of losses, selling Bitcoin to pay dividends becomes a realistic option to balance financial pressure. The probability of "selling before the end of the year" on Polymarket surged from 12% to 49%, indicating market sensitivity to Saylor's remarks. However, the detail lies in an account betting $83,900 against selling before June 30, with a winning probability as high as 83%. This suggests that savvy investors believe the short-term sell-off risk is overestimated, and Saylor is more likely to structurally adjust holdings in year-end financial planning rather than cash out immediately.
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在菩提树下
May 7, 2026 Global News Brief (Condensed Version) 1. Middle East: Conflict and Detente Coexist Iran strikes Israel: In the early hours of the 7th, Iran launched missiles at military targets in Tel Aviv, Israel, hitting the targets; Israeli air defense systems were activated. Israel airstrikes Iran: The Israeli military deployed about 80 warplanes to strike a military academy in Tehran; air defense alarms sounded across Iran. US-Iran near ceasefire: The White House announced a "one-page memorandum of understanding" with Iran, planning a ceasefire and initiating nuclear talks; Iran will respond within 48 hours. Strait of Hormuz: Shipping risks remain high; Iran strengthens control over the strait to ensure navigation safety. 2. Asia-Pacific: Japan tests offensive missiles abroad Japan breaks restrictions: During US-Philippines military exercises, Japan launched the Type 88 shore-based anti-ship missile overseas for the first time since WWII and deployed 1,400 troops to the Philippines. China's strong response: The Ministry of Foreign Affairs criticized Japan for the rise of "new militarism," escalating regional tensions and threatening peace and stability. India-Pakistan border conflict: India launched 24 attacks on 6 targets inside Pakistan, resulting in 8 civilian deaths and 31 injuries. 3. Europe and America: Trade frictions and political developments US plans to raise EU tariffs: The Trump administration plans to increase EU car tariffs from 15% to 25% next week, citing EU's failure to comply with trade agreements[__LINK_ICON]. France simplifies artifact repatriation: The National Assembly passed a bill to simplify the return process of illegally obtained foreign artifacts, pending Senate review. South Korean political turmoil: The second-instance judge Shen Zongwu in the stock manipulation case involving Yoon Seok-yeol's wife was found dead in court, leaving a suicide note. 4. Domestic key developments Brokerage consolidation: Orient Securities plans to merge with Shanghai Securities; post-merger assets may exceed 600 billion yuan, challenging the industry's top ten. AI computing power expansion: Corning partners with NVIDIA to expand optical interconnect production capacity tenfold to meet the explosive demand for AI computing power. Disclosure regulation: ST Cuihua and Zhuoran Co. are under investigation for failing to disclose financial reports on time; disclosure pressure remains high. Tianzhou-9 departure: The cargo spacecraft completed its mission and left the space station; it will be controlled to re-enter the atmosphere. 5. Crypto and finance US state-level Bitcoin reserve: New Hampshire passed a law allowing public funds to allocate BTC, becoming the first US state-level strategic reserve law. Institutional BTC accumulation: US-listed Thumzup plans to raise $500 million to increase BTC holdings; Japan's Metaplanet invested another $53.4 million to purchase 555 BTC. BTC/ETH strengthen: BTC rose to $81,200 (+1.2%), ETH at $2,370 (+0.8%), hitting new highs for the year. 6. Public health Cruise ship hantavirus outbreak: The Atlantic "Hondius" cruise ship outbreak increased to 8 infections; WHO states global spread risk is low, with no Chinese citizens involved.
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1. Today's Key News (2026-05-07) 1. Middle East: Signs of US-Iran easing, uncertainty remains Foreign media: US and Iran close to reaching a "one-page memorandum of understanding," planning a ceasefire and initiating a nuclear negotiation framework[]. Iran launched missile strikes on Israeli military targets early morning; Israeli military airstrikes hit Iranian military academies; high shipping risks in the Strait of Hormuz. Impact: Crude oil surged then retreated (Brent $108–112/barrel), gold jumped to $4700/ounce, risk-off sentiment initially rose then eased. 2. Asia-Pacific: Japan launches offensive missile abroad, Foreign Ministry responds sternly During US-Philippines military exercises, Japan fired the Type 88 shore-based anti-ship missile overseas for the first time since WWII and deployed 1,400 troops to the Philippines. Foreign Ministry: Japan's "new militarism" is becoming a menace, threatening regional peace. Impact: Asia-Pacific risk premium rises, yen under short-term pressure, military-industrial chain fluctuates, risk assets volatility intensifies. 3. Domestic Finance: Brokerage consolidation + AI capacity expansion + strengthened disclosure regulation Orient Securities plans to merge with Shanghai Securities; post-merger assets may exceed 600 billion yuan, challenging top ten in the industry. Corning × Nvidia expand optical interconnect capacity tenfold, matching AI computing power surge demand. ST Cuihua and Zhuoran Co. were investigated for failing to disclose financial reports on time; disclosure pressure continues. Impact: A-share brokers and AI computing power chains strengthen, ST sector under pressure, market favors low-valuation compliant targets. 4. Crypto Regulation and Institutional Dynamics New Hampshire, USA, passed the first state-level Bitcoin strategic reserve bill, allowing public funds to allocate BTC[__LINK_ICON]. US-listed Thumzup plans to raise $500 million to increase BTC holdings; Japan's Metaplanet invested another $53.4 million to purchase 555 BTC[__LINK_ICON]. 2. Impact on Financial Markets 1. Global Stock Markets US Stocks: Middle East easing + cooling inflation expectations, Nasdaq and S&P 500 slightly up, led by tech and financials[__LINK_ICON]. A-shares: Brokerage merger expectations + AI computing power benefits, market oscillates with a bullish bias; safe-haven sectors (gold, defense) surged then retreated. Hong Kong Stocks: Chinese tech rebounds, financials follow domestic sentiment. 2. Commodities Crude Oil: Middle East conflict and easing expectations play out, high-level oscillation ($108–112), short-term inflation pressure remains[__LINK_ICON]. Gold: Safe haven + geopolitical uncertainty, broke $4700, hitting a new phase high; silver surged 6.36% simultaneously. 3. Forex US Dollar: Declining safe-haven demand + slight rise in rate cut expectations, dollar index slightly weaker; non-USD currencies (euro, yen) rebound. Renminbi: Stable domestic economy + controllable geopolitical risks, steady rise within 6.92–6.95 range. 3. Direct Impact on BTC/ETH (as of May 7, 6:00) 1. BTC (Bitcoin) Current price: $81,200 (24h +1.2%), monthly increase over 20%, new yearly high. Core drivers: Middle East easing → risk appetite rebounds, capital flows into risk assets[__LINK_ICON]. Strong institutional buying: US spot ETF net inflow $467 million, state-level reserve bill enacted, compliant funds continuously entering[__LINK_ICON]. Safe-haven attribute highlighted: strengthens counter-trend during geopolitical tension, becoming a "digital gold" alternative. Key levels: support $79,800–80,000, resistance $83,000. 2. ETH (Ethereum) Current price: $2,370 (24h +0.8%), monthly increase 15%, weaker than BTC. Core drivers: Ecosystem benefits: RWA (real-world asset tokenization) heat rises, DeFi locked value slightly increases. Capital follows: ETH spot ETF net inflow $97.5 million, linked to BTC but with weaker elasticity[__LINK_ICON]. Technical: $2,340 support effective, resistance at $2,450. 3. Short-term Risks and Outlook Upside risks: Formal US-Iran ceasefire, Fed rate cut expectations advance, more states follow Bitcoin reserve bills. Downside risks: Geopolitical conflict resurgence, inflation rebound causing rate hike expectations, regulatory tightening (e.g., enhanced crypto tax/compliance scrutiny in the US). Conclusion: BTC leads strongly, ETH follows but diverges; institutionalization + safe-haven dual drivers maintain high-level oscillation short-term, watch for sudden geopolitical and regulatory risks. 4. Trading Reference (Simplified) BTC: Buy on dips near $80,000, stop loss at $78,500; add positions above $83,000, target $85,000. ETH: Long at $2,340 support, stop loss at $2,270; target $2,450, if broken look to $2,290.