Coin info
Rank
Market Cap
Volume (24h)
Circulating Supply
Total Supply
Do you think the price will rise or fall?
Rise 40%
Fall 60%
Price perfomance
Depth of Market
Depth +2%
Depth -2%

PRICE
+11.87%
$0.01067

PRICE
+6.08%
$0.1650
PRICE
+5.99%
$0.03204

PRICE
+5.8%
$0.03541
PRICE
+4.61%
$0.04029

PRICE
+3.97%
$0.07738

PRICE
+3%
$1.03

PRICE
+2.39%
$416.58
PRICE
+1.84%
$670.03

PRICE
+1.71%
$2.06

PRICE
+1.7%
$4,724.51

PRICE
+1.62%
$97.34

PRICE
+1.35%
$4,742.99

PRICE
+1.17%
$1.48

PRICE
+0.96%
$0.03431
PRICE
+0.89%
$0.008728

PRICE
+0.67%
$0.057

PRICE
+0.58%
$0.1687

PRICE
+0.55%
$0.1113

PRICE
+0.49%
$8.57

PRICE
+0.42%
$0.3509

PRICE
+0.39%
$101.23

PRICE
+0.39%
$320.25

PRICE
+0.27%
$81,735.7

PRICE
+0.23%
$1.01

VOL24
+22,310.36%
$1.0000

VOL24
+7,091.05%
$1.03

VOL24
+304.75%
$0.9983

VOL24
+241.1%
$0.9996

VOL24
+232.31%
$1.0000

VOL24
+146.16%
$0.07738

VOL24
+105.99%
$0.03541

VOL24
+101.5%
$4,724.51
VOL24
+84.46%
$0.01067

VOL24
+71.7%
$0.07562

VOL24
+69.32%
$4,742.99

VOL24
+67.45%
$416.58

VOL24
+65.03%
$0.9992

VOL24
+61.46%
$1.14
VOL24
+52.57%
$0.03204
VOL24
+46.43%
$0.04029

VOL24
+46.02%
$0.1650

VOL24
+45.61%
$0.4288

VOL24
+42.91%
$2.06

VOL24
+37.51%
$0.9999

VOL24
+36.18%
$0.9999
VOL24
+35.34%
$670.03

VOL24
+31.86%
$60.1

VOL24
+29.65%
$41.93

VOL24
+29.25%
$3.29
PRICE
+11.87%
$0.01067

PRICE
+6.08%
$0.1650
PRICE
+5.99%
$0.03204

PRICE
+5.8%
$0.03541
PRICE
+4.61%
$0.04029

PRICE
+3.97%
$0.07738

PRICE
+3%
$1.03

PRICE
+2.39%
$416.58
PRICE
+1.84%
$670.03

PRICE
+1.71%
$2.06

PRICE
+1.7%
$4,724.51

PRICE
+1.62%
$97.34

PRICE
+1.35%
$4,742.99

PRICE
+1.17%
$1.48

PRICE
+0.96%
$0.03431
PRICE
+0.89%
$0.008728

PRICE
+0.67%
$0.057

PRICE
+0.58%
$0.1687

PRICE
+0.55%
$0.1113

PRICE
+0.49%
$8.57

PRICE
+0.42%
$0.3509

PRICE
+0.39%
$101.23

PRICE
+0.39%
$320.25

PRICE
+0.27%
$81,735.7

PRICE
+0.23%
$1.01

VOL24
+22,310.36%
$1.0000

VOL24
+7,091.05%
$1.03

VOL24
+304.75%
$0.9983

VOL24
+241.1%
$0.9996

VOL24
+232.31%
$1.0000

VOL24
+146.16%
$0.07738

VOL24
+105.99%
$0.03541

VOL24
+101.5%
$4,724.51
VOL24
+84.46%
$0.01067

VOL24
+71.7%
$0.07562

VOL24
+69.32%
$4,742.99

VOL24
+67.45%
$416.58

VOL24
+65.03%
$0.9992

VOL24
+61.46%
$1.14
VOL24
+52.57%
$0.03204
VOL24
+46.43%
$0.04029

VOL24
+46.02%
$0.1650

VOL24
+45.61%
$0.4288

VOL24
+42.91%
$2.06

VOL24
+37.51%
$0.9999

VOL24
+36.18%
$0.9999
VOL24
+35.34%
$670.03

VOL24
+31.86%
$60.1

VOL24
+29.65%
$41.93

VOL24
+29.25%
$3.29
Rise 40%
Fall 60%

$0.00
11 May 2026, 23:31

🚨 Strategy Inc. just bought 535 BTC at $80,340, spending $43 million. Continue Reading: Strategy Inc. buys 535 BTC for $43 million at $80,340 The post Strategy Inc. buys 535 BTC for $43 million at $80,340 appeared first on COINTURK NEWS .
11 May 2026, 23:30

Ethereum is testing resistance as the market heats up and buyers attempt to force a decisive break above the level that has capped the recovery for nearly a month. The price action is building toward a resolution — and top analyst Darkfost has examined the derivatives data behind the current setup in a way that adds structural context to both the consolidation and what it might take to end it. Related Reading: Ethereum Is Going Up While Shorts Are Piling In: Find Out What Usually Follows Ethereum has been trading between $2,250 and $2,450 for close to a month, a range that formed immediately after a 33% rally from the February lows. That rally was not quiet. Open interest increased by approximately $4.5 billion during the move, confirming a significant resurgence in derivatives participation. What Darkfost identifies as particularly revealing is the funding rate picture throughout the same period. Despite the 33% rally, the surge in open interest, and the elevated leverage ratio, funding rates remained mostly negative. The majority of derivatives participants were not riding the recovery. They were betting against it — maintaining bearish positioning even as the price moved significantly higher, accumulating the kind of short exposure that creates structural pressure in the market above the price. The Leverage Has Been Cleared. Now the Real Test Begins Darkfost’s current reading of the leverage ratio adds the forward context that makes the consolidation phase intelligible. The Estimated Leverage Ratio on Binance has declined sharply from its 0.76 peak to 0.57. A significant reduction in the derivatives exposure that had built during the rally. That decline occurred while Ethereum was once again testing the $2,450 resistance level, which creates the specific market structure the analysis examines. The ratio decline has two explanations that reinforce rather than contradict each other. Long positions that had been opened in anticipation of a breakout were closed when ETH pulled back toward $2,350 — traders who positioned for the move took the pullback as their exit signal. Simultaneously, the short positions that had been accumulating during the rally with negative funding were closed or liquidated as the price pushed higher. Both cohorts reduced their exposure during the same period. Darkfost is precise about what that combination means. A declining leverage ratio during a resistance test is not a bearish signal. It describes a market that is becoming structurally cleaner. Less fragile, less vulnerable to cascade liquidations, and more capable of sustaining a genuine move if the right catalyst arrives. The caveat the analysis preserves is the most important forward condition. Derivatives activity clearing out is a necessary but insufficient condition for a breakout. What must replace the leverage as the driving force is spot demand — real buyers committing capital in the actual asset rather than positioning through derivatives. Until spot demand arrives and takes over, the cleared leverage creates the conditions for a breakout without guaranteeing one. Related Reading: 14,600 Bitcoin Sold in Profit in One Day: Here Is How BTC’s Own Structure Broke It Below $80K Ethereum Consolidates Below Resistance As Momentum Slows Ethereum continues trading inside a tight consolidation range around $2,300–$2,400 after recovering sharply from the February capitulation lows near $1,750. The chart shows a market that successfully stabilized after the selloff but has not yet generated enough momentum to transition into a sustained bullish trend. Price is currently compressing directly beneath the 100-day moving average, which continues acting as a key dynamic resistance zone. Multiple breakout attempts above the $2,400 area have failed over the past several weeks, confirming that sellers remain active at higher levels. However, ETH has also consistently defended the rising 50-day moving average near the $2,200 region, creating a narrowing structure between support and resistance. Related Reading: Bitcoin Found Support Where Recent Buyers Can’t Afford to Lose: Discover the Mechanics This compression reflects a market entering a decision phase. Volatility has declined considerably compared to the February-March recovery period, while volume has also moderated. That combination often signals temporary equilibrium between buyers and sellers before a larger directional move develops. The broader structure remains mixed. Ethereum is still trading below the declining 200-day moving average, which continues sloping downward and reinforces the longer-term bearish pressure that began after the rejection from 2025 highs. A confirmed breakout above $2,400 could shift momentum toward the $2,700 region. Failure to hold the 50-day moving average would likely expose Ethereum to another retest of lower support zones near $2,050. Featured image from ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com
11 May 2026, 23:30

Strategy’s Phong Le pushed back against the idea that the company’s Bitcoin identity can be separated from its legacy software business, arguing that the two sides now reinforce each other operationally, financially, and culturally. In a post on X, Le said Strategy’s success is “rooted in more than Bitcoin on our balance sheet,” framing the company’s enterprise software unit as a key part of the infrastructure behind its Bitcoin Treasury Company model . The comments come as the firm continues to be viewed primarily through the lens of its Bitcoin holdings, even as management seeks to highlight the operating business that predates its digital asset strategy. “I’m sometimes asked why a Bitcoin Treasury Company should also operate a software business,” Le wrote. “The two create powerful and unique synergies. I plan to provide more regular updates on Strategy Software, and will start here with a foundational overview.” Why Strategy Thinks Software Gives Its Bitcoin Treasury Model An Edge Le said Q1 2026 was the software division’s strongest financial quarter in a decade. According to his post, software revenue rose 12%, led by 59% growth in cloud revenue, while controllable margin increased 27%. He said that margin expansion helped fund Strategy’s Bitcoin operating expenses, positioning the software business as more than a legacy asset sitting alongside the treasury strategy. “Over the last six years, we transformed the software business while simultaneously becoming a Bitcoin Treasury Company,” Le wrote. The scale of that business was central to his argument. Le said Strategy has 1,500 employees serving more than 3,000 customers, over 500,000 active users, and nearly half of the Fortune 500. Its customer base includes major banks, healthcare companies, retailers, and government agencies. He also pointed to the company’s operating history, noting that it has been in business since 1989, public since 1998, and active in more than 25 countries. For Le, that history matters because it gives Strategy a level of institutional infrastructure that most digital asset firms do not have. He cited the company’s NASDAQ listing, WKSI status, quarterly 10-Q and annual 10-K filings, KPMG audits, and compliance with SOC 2 Type 2, ISO 27001, FedRAMP, PCI DSS, HIPAA, DPF, and GDPR standards. “This directly benefits our Bitcoin Treasury Company,” Le said. “We have world-class software engineers, product managers, customer success teams, cloud and security experts, enterprise sales and consulting professionals, and experienced leaders in operations, finance, legal, and HR. Many employees have been with the company for more than 25 years.” Le added that “no company in the digital asset ecosystem has this depth of institutional experience,” describing Strategy’s organizational maturity as intentional and differentiated in an industry often associated with faster-moving, less established corporate structures. He also argued that the relationship works in the other direction: Bitcoin has helped accelerate the software business . Le said employees have been energized by Strategy’s mission, equity performance, and global community, while customers have moved “from skeptical to curious to supportive” and are increasingly engaged with the company’s digital asset strategy. A large part of the next phase, according to Le, is AI. He said Strategy has built an AI data foundation called “Mosaic,” which integrates LLMs, hyperscalers, and data warehouses into a “trusted, secure, open platform.” The system is designed to provide an AI-driven semantic layer for enterprise data, with AI agents as end users. Le said Strategy is also rebuilding internal systems using multiple AI models. “Over the next year, I expect we will automate many core workflows and replace much of our internal enterprise software,” he wrote. “Our systems and software will become increasingly autonomous, adaptive, self-healing, and self-improving.” At press time, MSTR traded at $187.59
11 May 2026, 23:17

Four months into the war in Iran, the U.S. economy is still on its feet, but the ground beneath it is shifting fast, and both Wall Street and Washington are starting to feel it. Goldman Sachs chief economist Jan Hatzius said Monday that the global economy is holding together, describing its condition as “bending, not breaking.” His note had questions many investors are already asking. Why is the stock market performing well if the mood among market participant is extremely negative. Hatzius has given three reasons for market’s split behavior. Since countries had stockpiled oil ahead of the war, the prives didn’t reach where the anxieties were. It did cause shortage of products like jet fuel, but Hatzius mentioned it as “relatively painless” as airlines trimmed schedules on lower priority routes. Secondly AI boom with massive spending kept the investors distracted with confidence in the markets. This was enough to keep S&P 500 and Nasdaq at theit all time highs. That doesn’t mean if all is well yet, the end will be well aswell. The bank’s yearly recession probability has fallen to 25% from 30% . However it sits 5% above the levels before war. Economists expect for slower consumer spending when the tax refund money dries up. Moreover the gas prices will keep rising and wage growth will be down aswell if the war keeps going on. Hatzius also said that AI won’t keep the markets afloat longer either. Fewer jobs in units of economic growth with higher electronic prices are piling on the inflation pressures which are already getting out of control. Inflation at a two-year high as war costs hit home The damage is already visible at the pump. A gallon of regular gasoline averaged $4.52 on Monday, up from $3.14 a year ago, according to AAA. Prices rose 0.9% in April alone, pushing the annual inflation rate to 3.3%, the highest since April 2024. Americans are spending more on fuel and energy, leaving less for everything else. April’s jobs report offered brief relief. The economy added 115,000 jobs last month while the unemployment rate held at 4.3%. But economists warned against reading too much into it. Joe Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM, described the labor market as a “low-hire, low-fire” situation, stable on the surface but not growing. Guy Berger, chief economist at Homebase, called the report “a signal of what could have been,” adding that he feels “more worried” about what lies ahead. Part of what is keeping unemployment from rising is that the workforce itself has shrunk. The administration’s immigration and deportation policies have removed roughly 600,000 people from the labor pool, which flatters the unemployment rate without reflecting a stronger jobs market. Kathryn Anne Edwards, an economist and co-founder of Optimist Economy, said the labor market is in no position to absorb a new wave of job losses. If that changes, she said, “this would look like a bad recession.” She warned that manufacturers and business leaders are largely just waiting out the uncertainty, and that the Iran war could prove to be “a bridge too far” for hiring and investment decisions. With midterms approaching, Trump’s economic standing is weak For Trump, the numbers are bad. AYouGov poll conducted between May 1 and 4 found that only 38% of registered voters approve of his handling of the economy, while 69% disapprove of his response to rising prices. Democrats need to flip just eight of 18 competitive House districts to take control of the chamber. A surge in unemployment could make that considerably easier. Trump has tried to get ahead of the problem, floating the idea of suspending the federal gas tax and easing restrictions on beef imports. But on Monday he said the ceasefire with Iran is “on massive life support,” sending stocks lower and oil prices higher again. The war that has already bent the economy may yet be the thing that breaks it.