Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) closed a weekly candle below its 200-week exponential moving average for the first time since October 2023, ending an 882-day uptrend. The break redraws the deck for long-term traders, shifting attention to on-chain cost bases and how Bitcoin has historically interacted with this guardrail during prior cycles. The move underscores the risk of a longer, more drawn-out recovery, even as market focus rests on the asset’s price behavior around key macro and on-chain metrics. Key takeaways Bitcoin closed below the 200-week EMA near $67,628, snapping an extensive uptrend that had persisted since late 2023 and signaling a potential shift in the long-run trend line. Historical recoveries back above the 200-week EMA varied in duration: roughly 14 weeks in 2018, about eight weeks after the Covid liquidity shock in March 2020, and nearly 30 weeks in 2022; the average spell below the EMA has hovered around 17–18 weeks. On-chain momentum has cooled. Liveliness, the metri...
Editor’s note: As the AI boom accelerates, Nvidia sits at the heart of the conversation about how quickly hardware and software teams scale deployment. This editorial provides a concise context for the press release that follows, focusing on the broader market momentum, the role of data centers in AI infrastructure, and the potential implications of forward guidance for investors and traders in tech and beyond. While this note does not add new facts, it frames the lens through which Nvidia’s earnings will be digested by crypto traders and institutional investors who closely watch AI spending trends, capex cycles, and regional risks. Key points Nvidia continues to be a focal point for AI infrastructure spend, with hyperscalers driving data center demand. Rubin, Nvidia’s next-generation platform, is a key area of investor focus alongside the Blackwell ramp and gross margin trajectory. Geopolitical risk remains a consideration, with export controls in China presenting potential ...