S&P 500 is trading just 1% below its all-time high. AI-driven tech relief has cut market stress, but BTC strength relies on holding $90k as investors bet on liquidity support amid softer job market data. Bitcoin futures held a 4% premium over spot markets on Saturday, unchanged from the previous week. The lack of appetite for leveraged long positions may …
November is among the worst on record for BTC price action. Bitcoin is repeating its latest bull market bottom with near 100% correlation in 2025. Stocks inflows are picking up and with them the return of institutional capital to crypto ETFs. The Kobeissi Letter announced “massive inflows” for US equities.
Ether's price may rise nearly 7% in the near term, according to Santiment. The stablecoin yields in lending protocols are low, averaging around 3.9% to 4.5%. Market sentiment in the broader crypto market is also showing signs of improvement.
Rising bets on a December Fed rate cut lifted demand for risk assets. US BTC-spot ETF market also snapped a four-week outflow streak. Bitcoin climbed to a Friday, November 28, high of $93,150 before easing back to $90,000.
The recent rebound in Bitcoin wasn't driven solely by a short squeeze, but by an actual rebalancing of risk. Bitcoin has begun to stabilize above its 20-4H exponential moving average and has entered a rising consolidation pattern. Markets tend to trend most efficiently when derivatives positioning is neutral.
Gold remains in a strong structural uptrend supported by a perfect alignment of macro and technical signals. A break above $4,400 would confirm the next leg of the bull market, while a break below $3,900 would warrant a reassessment. The path of least resistance for gold remains higher into 2026.
The next economic crisis can come from anywhere. The best protection for the economy is to protect financial institutions. Trump administration is gutting the rules to keep banks and the financial system safe. The Federal Reserve will reduce its supervision and regulation staff by 30% and the CFPB has shrunk from 437 people to 50.