Bitcoin Blasts Past $118K as Wall Street and Washington Fuel the Fire
Institutional appetite appears to be doing some heavy lifting. According to Dilin Wu, strategist at Pepperstone, sustained inflows from institutions have underpinned this latest breakout. Meanwhile, corporates aren't sitting still. Strategy (NASDAQ:MSTR) and GameStop (NYSE:GME) continue to add bitcoin to their balance sheets, and this week Trump Media & Technology Group (NASDAQ:DJT) filed to launch a Crypto Blue Chip ETF that could allocate as much as 70% to bitcoin. Bitcoin has also been unusually stable over the past two monthstrading within a narrow $10,000 rangesuggesting that the market may be maturing or at least attracting more disciplined capital.
The next major catalyst may come from Washington. Congress kicks off its long-anticipated Crypto Week on July 14, where lawmakers will debate a stack of bills that could reshape the industry's regulatory environment. One of them, the GENIUS Act, would establish a federal framework for stablecoins. A more defined rulebook could be just what large institutions need to scale their exposure. Circle (NYSE:CRCL), issuer of the USDC stablecoin, is already seeing a bumpits shares are up 500% since debuting on June 5, with another 2% gain Thursday. Meanwhile, trading platforms like Robinhood (NASDAQ:HOOD) and Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) also moved higher, riding the wave of optimism that regulation could finally bring the kind of clarityand capitalthe crypto space has long been waiting for.
This article first appeared on GuruFocus.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Dollar drifts, Asian stocks mixed as markets brace for Jackson Hole
By Kevin Buckland TOKYO (Reuters) -The U.S. dollar hovered below a one-week high on Thursday and Asian stock markets were broadly mixed as investors braced for three days of potentially market-moving news from the Federal Reserve's annual symposium in Jackson Hole. Central bankers from around the world will attend the event, which begins later in the day, although the key focus will be Fed Chair Jerome Powell's speech on Friday as traders look for clues on the chances of a September rate cut. Japan's Nikkei drooped 0.6% in the morning session, retreating further from the record peak reached on Tuesday. Despite a tech-led selloff on Wall Street overnight, Japanese chip stocks were a mixed bag, with Advantest up 3% while Tokyo Electron dropped 2%. South Korea's KOSPI bounced 0.9% after dipping to a six-week low on Wednesday. Australia's benchmark gained 0.6% and renewed an all-time high. Mainland Chinese blue chips gained 0.5%, although Hong Kong's Hang Seng was largely flat. U.S. stock futures pointed lower, with Nasdaq futures sagging 0.2% and S&P 500 futures easing 0.1%. Overnight, the Nasdaq Composite slid 0.7% and the S&P 500 cash index slipped 0.2%. [.N] "There remains a bearish skew for equities at the moment," said Kyle Rodda, an analyst at "Equity prices are beginning to reflect the risk of disappointment at Jackson Hole, with doubts circulating about whether the Fed will pivot as aggressively in the dovish direction implied by rates markets - or even pivot at all." Traders currently lay odds of about 80% for a quarter-point Fed rate cut on September 17, and price in a total of 52 basis points of easing over the rest of the year. This time on Wednesday, the odds for a cut next month stood at 84%. Fed Chair Powell has said he is reluctant to cut rates because of expected tariff-driven price pressures this summer. Minutes out overnight from the Fed's July gathering, when policymakers voted to keep rates steady, suggested that Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman and Governor Christopher Waller were alone in pushing for a rate cut at the meeting. Traders ramped up bets for a September cut following a surprisingly weak payrolls report at the start of this month, and were further encouraged after consumer price data showed limited upward pressure from tariffs. However, a hotter-than-expected producer price reading last week complicated the policy picture. Traders aren't looking at macroeconomic data as the only potential influencer of monetary policy direction, with President Donald Trump again exerting pressure on the central bank overnight. After continuing his attacks on Powell earlier in the week for refraining from cutting rates, Trump on Wednesday targeted Fed Governor Lisa Cook, demanding she resign amid allegations of wrongdoing connected to mortgages on properties she owns in Georgia and Michigan. Cook said she had "no intention of being bullied to step down". Trump's push for more control over the Fed unnerved investors earlier in the year, sending the dollar tumbling. The currency has largely taken the latest developments in stride though, and the dollar index was steady at 98.252 on Thursday, after grinding to the highest since August 12 at 98.441 a day earlier. "The broader implication is rising tensions between the Fed and the U.S. administration," said Rodrigo Catril, a strategist at National Australia Bank. "Trump's push to confirm Stephen Miran could add another vote for cuts in September, and if he was to successfully remove Cook, the Fed Board could end up with four members out of seven supporting his lower rates call." Trump nominated Council of Economic Advisers Chair Miran as a Fed governor earlier this month, following the surprise resignation of Adriana Kugler. U.S. 10-year Treasury yields were steady at 4.2965% in the latest session. Japanese government bond yields edged higher though, with the 20-year yield advancing to 2.655% for the first time since late 1999. Among other things, investors are wary of increased fiscal spending amid growing pressure for the Japanese prime minister to step down. The dollar traded little changed at 147.41 yen. The euro and sterling were flat at $1.1647 and $1.3458, respectively. Bitcoin continued to claw its way back from a 2-1/2-week low reached Wednesday at $112,386.93, edging up to around $114,690. Gold eased slightly to around $3,342 per ounce. Oil prices edged higher as larger-than-expected declines in crude oil and fuel inventories in the U.S. supported expectations for steady demand. Brent crude futures were up 0.5% to $67.19 a barrel, after gaining 1.6% in the previous session. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures rose 0.6% to $63.10, after climbing 1.4% on Wednesday. [O/R]


Digital Trends
4 minutes ago
- Digital Trends
Watch this humanoid robot nail complex tasks and think on the fly
Boston Dynamics' humanoid robot may have skipped the inaugural 'robot Olympics' in China last week, but that doesn't mean the engineers behind the machine have been sitting around watching the world go by. Indeed, a video released by the Massachussetts-based company on Wednesday reveals that the team has been hard at work on Atlas, its advanced and highly talented bipedal bot. Working with experts at the AI- and robotics-focused Toyota Research Institute (TRI), Boston Dynamics has equipped Atlas with a Large Behavior Model (LBM), essentially a sophisticated AI system trained on vast datasets of human actions, aimed at enabling the robots to understand, generate, and adapt complex, human-like behaviors for activities in real-world environments. The video shows Atlas performing a lengthy sequence of complex tasks that force it to combine object manipulation with locomotion. They include walking, crouching, and lifting objects, while at the same time packing, sorting, and organizing. 'By adopting LBMs, new capabilities that previously would have been laboriously hand-programmed can now be added quickly and without writing a single new line of code,' the Massachussetts-based company said in a release. To test its ability to adjust itself, an engineer interrupts Atlas in the way that an annoying co-worker might do, by repeatedly closing the lid of the box from which it's taking things, and by sliding the box across the floor. If Atlas had a voice — and no doubt one day it will — it would probably have said: 'Can you quit messing around — I'm trying to get a job done here.' Atlas passes with flying colors, refraining from decking the troublemaker and instead readjusting its position to continue with the task in hand. 'This work provides a glimpse into how we're thinking about building general-purpose robots that will transform how we live and work,' said Scott Kuindersma, Boston Dynamics' vice president of robotics research. 'Training a single neural network to perform many long-horizon manipulation tasks will lead to better generalization, and highly capable robots like Atlas present the fewest barriers to data collection for tasks requiring whole-body precision, dexterity, and strength.' Boston Dynamics is one of a growing number of tech firms working on humanoid robots, with rapidly advancing technology paving the way for increasingly agile, dexterous, and intelligent bipedal robots that could one day perform a huge variety of activities. Even the laundry …


CNBC
5 minutes ago
- CNBC
Japan's factory activity extends declines in August, PMI shows
Japan's manufacturing activity contracted for the second month in August as U.S. tariffs weighed on overseas demand, a private-sector survey showed on Thursday. The S&P Global flash Japan Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index increased to 49.9 in August from July's final 48.9, but it remained below the 50.0 threshold that separates growth from contraction for two straight months. "The recovery in manufacturing output may be hard to sustain unless we see an improvement in sales in the near-term," said Annabel Fiddes, Economics Associate Director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, which compiled the survey. Manufacturing output showed a modest recovery, with the output index rebounding to growth from a contraction logged in July. However, new orders continued to decline, reflecting weak demand both domestically and internationally. Foreign orders for Japanese goods fell at the fastest pace in 17 months, underscoring the fragility of the export-reliant manufacturing sector. Official trade data showed on Wednesday Japan's exports in July posted the steepest drop since February 2021 given the intensifying impact of U.S. tariffs. The U.S.-Japan trade deal reached last month would lower Trump's tariffs on Japanese goods to 15%. Some manufacturers grew more confident about business conditions but overall remained cautious, a Reuters poll found earlier this month. For manufacturers, input costs also edged up, while selling price inflation eased to its lowest in more than four years, the PMI data showed, indicating higher pressure on profit margins. In the services sector, activity continued to expand but at a slower pace, with the flash services PMI falling to 52.7 in August from July's final 53.6. The composite PMI output index, which aggregates manufacturing and services, rose to 51.9 in August from 51.6 in July to mark the fastest expansion in six months.