⚡️Moonpillow⚡️ retweetledi
⚡️Moonpillow⚡️
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⚡️Moonpillow⚡️
@williamting1980
BULLieve in Crypto...
X Katılım Mart 2012
629 Takip Edilen94 Takipçiler

@BullTheoryio This will end the wars...but sacrifice is huge...10 millions people's will effect in Iran and leave iran
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BREAKING: Russia warns US and Israel to stop attacks on Iran’s Bushehr nuclear plant.
Yesterday, Iran’s Foreign Minister also warned that strikes on Bushehr nuclear plant could trigger radioactive fallout and that it would end life in GCC countries as well.
Trump has also admitted to a nuclear disaster openly and said Iran’s nuclear sites were hit so hard they’re buried under NUCLEAR DUST, making them inaccessible for months.
If this escalates, it is a risk to the entire world.


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@TedPillows i love bull but i don't like some influences keep giving fake bull run hope...
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@TedPillows @TedPillows BTC $76000 - $80000 is still valid?
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@TedPillows hopefully i'm not follow wrong person @TedPillows
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🚨 THE WORLD'S BIGGEST ASSET MANAGER, BLACKROCK, IS IN TROUBLE.
BlackRock’s HPS Corporate Lending Fund, which manages about $26 billion, received $1.2 billion in withdrawal requests this quarter. That equals roughly 9.3% of the fund’s assets.
But the fund only allows 5% of assets to be redeemed each quarter.
So BlackRock paid out about $620 million and restricted the remaining withdrawals.
This type of limit is built into many private credit funds.
It exists because the underlying assets are long-term loans to companies, and those loans cannot be sold quickly when investors want their cash back.
Private credit has grown rapidly since the 2008 financial crisis.
When regulators forced banks to reduce risk, large asset managers stepped in to provide loans directly to companies. Today the sector has expanded to around $2–3 trillion globally.
These funds lend to:
• mid-sized companies
• private equity backed businesses
• highly leveraged borrowers
• firms that cannot easily get bank financing
Investors were attracted because the loans often pay 8%–12% yields, which is much higher than traditional bonds.
But the structure has an important weakness.
Investors can request withdrawals periodically, yet the underlying loans often last 3–7 years and are not traded on public markets.
That creates a liquidity mismatch.
If many investors request their money at the same time, the fund cannot easily sell the loans to generate cash.
BlackRock’s situation is not isolated.
Earlier this week, Blackstone also faced elevated withdrawal requests in its private credit vehicle and increased its redemption limit while injecting $400 million of internal capital to meet demand.
Another large player, Blue Owl, has also dealt with redemption pressure in a similar type of fund.
These developments come at a time when investors are becoming more cautious about credit risk.
Some borrowers funded by private credit lenders have already faced bankruptcies, including companies in sectors such as auto parts and subprime auto lending.
At the same time, several macro factors are creating uncertainty for corporate borrowers:
• higher interest costs
• slowing economic growth expectations
• geopolitical tensions affecting markets
• technological disruption affecting some industries
Private credit now plays a large role in corporate financing.
Insurance companies alone hold about $1.8 trillion in exposure to this market.
Because of that size, analysts and regulators closely watch signs of stress in the sector.
BlackRock limiting withdrawals does not mean the system is failing, but it definitely shows weakness.
The broader question investors are now asking is whether this is simply a temporary reaction to market volatility or the early stage of a larger credit cycle slowdown.
Private credit expanded rapidly over the last decade.
Events like this are the first real test of how the system behaves when investors start asking for their money back at the same time.


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@DrProfitCrypto i'm trade short-term long and short-term short on $btc
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#Bitcoin: The crowd’s average IQ on this platform is shockingly low. I bought at 68k for a quick gain and made it crystal clear that my short from 125k remains fully open. Those are two completely different positions. Anyone with a functioning brain should understand that.
Second: I never said I longed at 68k. I said I bought spot using available stablecoins to secure some percentage gains. That is not the same as opening a leveraged long. The fact that this needs to be explained shows exactly the level of understanding we are dealing with.
Yesterday I posted about the Great Financial Crisis starting. That is a long-term macro view. It has absolutely nothing to do with short-term price action or a temporary spot position taken at 60k–68k.
Yet people immediately panic and scream: “But yesterday you said you longed at 68k.”
No. You simply cannot read.
It was never a long, it was spot accumulation for a short-term move, and I explained this very clearly. I also said that after this short-term bullish trap / relief rally, the bear market continues. If that basic market structure already overwhelms you, trading is probably not the field you should be in. We are within a strong bear market for Bitcoin but for the short term there is a lot of upside potential and potential to reach even 88k. I will not sit out on this opportunity and grabbing a spot position while the big short position from 125k remains fully open and untouched.
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@GordonGekko @GordonGekko don't lie...altcoin season will not happen...btc go up again...btc.d will continue go up...
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