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Massive HYPE Accumulation Continues: Whale-Linked Wallet Adds $90M In Weeks
Newsbtc·2026/05/19 02:24
Euro weakens below 1.1650 as Iran uncertainty supports US Dollar
FXStreet·2026/05/19 02:09
RBA Minutes: Members see case for rate hike as inflation expectations risk grows
FXStreet·2026/05/19 02:01
Japan's Kiuchi says must stay alert to economic effects from Middle East conflict
FXStreet·2026/05/19 02:00
PBOC sets USD/CNY reference rate at 6.8375 vs. 6.8435 previous
FXStreet·2026/05/19 02:00
South Korea's KOSPI Index Intraday Loss Widens to 4%
BlockBeats·2026/05/19 01:53
Samsung South Korea Labor Union Narrows Some Differences with Management
BlockBeats·2026/05/19 01:10
Bitcoin stalls at $81,000 as ETH and SHIB lose ground
Cointurk·2026/05/19 01:09

Crude above $110 rattles Dalal Street; rupee sinks to lifetime low
EconomicTimes·2026/05/19 01:03

Oil falls over 2% as Trump holds off scheduled attack on Iran
EconomicTimes·2026/05/19 00:54
Flash
03:57
Over 82.2 million dollars flowed out from the US spot BTC ETF marketAccording to AiCoin monitoring, a large amount of capital flowed out of the U.S. spot BTC ETF market yesterday, with a net outflow reaching $82.2 million. The largest outflow was from ARKB, with a single-day net outflow of $43.5 million, followed by IBIT with $30.8 million. According to AiCoin's Spot BTC ETF Tracking live strategy, ETF capital inflows have a significant positive correlation with BTC price; you can subscribe to this indicator, allowing the program to automatically place orders based on the capital flow. Data is for reference only.
03:55
Federal Reserve's hawkish comments spook markets, analysts warn of ‘stagflation-style recession’The Federal Reserve adopts a more hawkish stance, analysts issue a warning about a "stagflation-style recession."
03:54
Bank of Korea: There is a gap between overseas investment income and foreign exchange inflow, providing weaker support for the Korean won than expectedGolden Ten Data reported on June 18 that a study by the South Korean central bank indicated that investment income derived from overseas assets may provide less support for the Korean won than previously expected. This is because a large portion of these funds are retained abroad and continually reinvested, rather than being remitted back to South Korea, resulting in a gap between the headline investment income surplus and actual foreign exchange inflows. As overseas investment continues to grow rapidly, this issue is becoming increasingly prominent. The research suggests that this phenomenon helps to explain why, despite strong South Korean semiconductor exports and the current account surplus approaching historical highs recently, the won remains relatively weak. Since the start of this year, the won has depreciated by more than 5%, making it one of the worst-performing Asian currencies. Therefore, policymakers not only need to focus on the scale of investment income, but also on the proportion that is repatriated. The report estimates that if the scale of overseas investment rises by about 3% relative to the average level, this would push the USD/KRW exchange rate up by approximately 0.7 percentage points, reflecting increased demand for foreign currency; conversely, if investment income rises around 8% above the average, the exchange rate could decline by about 0.4 percentage points.