@Adam_Xrp_ It’s a set up for the double bottom about to happen. This week should be a blood bath once oil reserves finally enter the equation. They have been artificially keeping oil low, it needs to be in the $150-$200 range then all hell will break loose and RCT unwinds
🚀 THE GREAT RESET IS LIVE! 🚀
🚨 BREAKING: The CLARITY Act hits the Senate for markup on JUNE
8th! This is the kill switch for "regulation by enforcement." 🏛️📉
The lines are being drawn
@Steph_iscrypto In reality, it highlights a fundamental difference in network architecture, economic design. On Stellar, a single "transaction" envelope can contain up to 100 separate "operations" (like managing offers on its native Decentralized Exchange).
@VinnysCorner1 Matt Flynn: In Week 17 of the 2011 season, the Green Bay Packers rested Aaron Rodgers. Backup Matt Flynn stepped in and threw for 480 yards and 6 touchdowns in a single game. That lone, legendary performance parlayed into a massive $26 million contract
@DaphneCoslin How can you push an ocean through a firehouse? You need a super big pipe like a really big pipe. Value will be past $750 once fully adopted and used and clarity has passed
A friend of mine who is a staunch supporter of $XRP often tells me:
If XRP is indeed widely adopted for global cross-border payments in the future, the price per XRP might need to reach hundreds or even thousands of dollars.
His reasoning is:
"Market cap doesn't matter, liquidity is the key."
He argues that if the price of XRP were only a few dollars, the network would struggle to efficiently handle the massive capital flows envisioned by Ripple, a higher price, however, means each XRP can settle a greater amount of value, thereby enhancing liquidity efficiency.
I’ve heard this argument many times, but I’ve never fully grasped it.
So, I’d like to ask everyone:
Does XRP really need a very high unit price to support large scale cross border settlement?
Or is this just a narrative that has been over-circulated within the community?
I’d love to hear your thoughts.
🚨 EVERYTHING JUST BROKE AT ONCE
TRILLIONS were just wiped out in a single trading session.
Stocks.
Gold.
Silver.
Bitcoin.
Everything got hit.
And the reason is much bigger than one bad day on Wall Street.
The official story is that a strong jobs report spooked markets.
Because it puts pressure on the Fed to keep interest rates high.
More jobs = more inflation.
That’s true.
But it’s only part of the story.
The deeper problem is that America is drowning in debt. Inflation is still running hot. Oil is climbing.
And interest rates need to stay elevated to stop prices spiralling even higher.
The problem?
The entire economy is addicted to cheap money.
For over a decade, governments, corporations, and investors lived in a fantasy world of near-zero interest rates.
Money printing became normal.
Debt became normal.
Asset bubbles became normal.
Now we’re returning to reality.
Then we have the AI bubble….
The one thing holding up the market.
The one story everyone believed could justify trillion-dollar valuations.
And suddenly investors started asking the question they should have always been asking:
What if we’re paying too much? This is what just happened with Broadcom earnings.
What if the AI revolution is real… But the valuations are insane?
That’s when panic starts.
Markets don’t collapse when everyone is pessimistic. They collapse when people realise the story they’ve been telling themselves no longer makes sense.
America is approaching $40 trillion in debt.
If rates stay high, debt servicing explodes.
If rates fall, inflation explodes.
They’re trapped.
This is why I keep saying the same thing:
The biggest threat to the Western financial system isn’t China.
It isn’t Russia.
It isn’t Iran.
It’s the mountain of debt that can never realistically be repaid. It’s a system that survives on money printing, asset inflation, and kicking the can down the road.
Every year that becomes harder, the crisis becomes larger, the rescue becomes more expensive and the lies become more obvious.
This wasn’t just a bad day in the market.
It was another crack in a financial model that’s reaching its limits.
And that’s why the shift toward a multipolar world is accelerating.
Not because BRICS is forcing it.
But because the old system is breaking under its own weight.
Thats said. Markets are going to new highs before they crash apocalyptically. Mark my words on that. Not investment advice.
@Ross_ptm DCA- you always layer in and you also always layer out. Never try to time it perfectly, just try to get in during the right windows of time not the absolute low or high, nobody’s can time a market perfectly like that
@StealthQE4 It’s all to move to a world wide digital currency. In Japan they are hurting bad and about to sell US bonds (largest holder at 1.4 trillion) this will cause a liquidity crisis and digital ledger and currency will be the solution they present to solve making us beg for it.Covid2.0
“We had 50 players in the draft this year that were over 25-years-old competing against 17 and 18-year-olds...” - Nick Saban
Why’s that important? Well… here’s Will Anderson Jr. at 17-18 years old (left) versus Will Anderson Jr. at 25 years old (right) 😂