# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Crypto

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Crypto", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

When Prediction Markets No Longer 'Predict', But 'Leak the Truth': BlockBeats Officially Launches Prediction Market Coverage

For a long time, prediction markets were seen as rational arenas where people bet on future outcomes based on public information, with prices reflecting collective consensus. However, over the past year, it has become increasingly clear that many prediction markets are not actually "predicting the future." Instead, they are exposing outcomes that have already been determined and are known to a select few, even before official announcements. When an outcome is certain but not yet public, prediction markets become a powerful and unsettling mechanism for leaking information. The movement of money itself acts as a signal—no explicit爆料, anonymous tips, or statements are needed. Key signals include unusually large bets on specific options, addresses consistently placing winning bets during critical periods, and accounts that repeatedly "predict" correctly ahead of time. This phenomenon is changing how secrets are kept and revealed. Examples include plot twists in TV shows, results of award selections, upcoming product launches or regulatory decisions, and governance votes in crypto protocols. In traditional contexts, this would be considered insider information. But in prediction markets, the mere act of betting can reveal what is known to a few. The article also highlights how prediction markets can influence reality itself, not just reveal it. A notable example is from a Coinbase earnings call where CEO Brian Armstrong used specific words that were the subject of active prediction market bets. His utterance led to immediate market settlements, rewarding those who had bet on those words being spoken. This shows that prediction markets can create a "reality distortion field," where betting activity may actually shape outcomes. As platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi grow, the issues raised by prediction markets—information leakage, insider advantage, and potential manipulation—will have increasingly significant real-world impacts.

marsbit12/22 04:04

When Prediction Markets No Longer 'Predict', But 'Leak the Truth': BlockBeats Officially Launches Prediction Market Coverage

marsbit12/22 04:04

Reviewing Major Institutions' 2025 Bitcoin Price Predictions: Almost All Failed

Review of Major Institutions' Bitcoin Price Predictions for 2025: Nearly All Failed In late 2024 and early 2025, the crypto market consensus was highly unified: post-halving momentum, ETF-driven institutional adoption, and favorable regulatory expectations were seen as key drivers for further gains in BTC and risk assets. Against this backdrop, multiple institutions and prominent figures issued aggressive year-end price targets, particularly in the $200,000–$250,000 range, while others focused on structural industry changes like expanded compliant product offerings and the mainstreaming of exchanges and crypto companies. A review of 2025's actual performance shows that price point predictions普遍 (universally) overestimated the strength and sustainability of the rally. In contrast, judgments related to regulation and industry structure were more likely to be at least partially realized. Most price predictions failed significantly. For instance: - KuCoin Research predicted a peak near $250,000; BTC's actual peak was ~$126,000, falling to ~$88,000 by year-end. - Tom Lee and H.C. Wainwright cited factors like regulatory tailwinds to forecast $250,000 and $225,000, respectively; these targets were vastly unmet. - Matrixport's more conservative $160,000 target and VanEck's detailed cycle path (peak of ~$180,000) also went unfulfilled. - Bitwise's prediction of BTC above $200,000 failed, though its call for Coinbase's entry into the S&P 500 proved correct. The common failure was underestimating the market's sensitivity to macro risks and leveraged positions at high valuations, triggering significant drawdowns and deleveraging instead of a continuous narrative-driven price ascent. Predictions focused on industry structure and regulatory/product development fared better: - KuCoin, Bitwise, Bloomberg, and others correctly anticipated the approval and sequential rollout of spot ETFs for assets like Solana (BSOL) and XRP (XRPC) throughout 2025. - Predictions about increased institutional participation, regulatory progress, and the expansion of stablecoins and tokenized assets (RWA) were directionally accurate, even if specific growth targets (e.g., stablecoins reaching $400B) were overly optimistic. In conclusion, the more a prediction relied on a specific, extreme price point, the more likely it was to fail. Predictions focused on regulatory processes, product supply, and structural industry trends were more reliable. The market of 2025 was characterized by high volatility—repeated macro shocks and deleveraging interrupted trends, preventing "correct logic" from translating into year-end price targets. Structural changes in the industry's foundation proved more verifiable and stable.

marsbit12/22 03:16

Reviewing Major Institutions' 2025 Bitcoin Price Predictions: Almost All Failed

marsbit12/22 03:16

Looking Back at 2025: The Top Ten Influential Figures of the Year in the Crypto Industry

Reflecting on 2025: Top 10 Influential Figures in the Crypto Industry In 2025, the crypto industry saw clearer regulations, deeper traditional finance integration, and rapid tech advancements. Key figures driving these changes include: 1. **Donald Trump**: As U.S. President, he issued pro-crypto executive orders, promoted dollar-backed stablecoins, banned CBDCs, and launched his meme coin TRUMP and DeFi project WLFI, though both saw significant price drops. 2. **SEC Chair Paul Atkins**: Introduced Project Crypto, clarifying that most digital assets are not securities, ending investigations into firms like Coinbase, and fostering a pro-crypto regulatory approach. 3. **Vitalik Buterin**: Led Ethereum’s Pectra and Fusaka upgrades, enhancing scalability and efficiency, and focused on privacy with tools like Kohaku and donations to decentralized messaging apps. 4. **Michael Saylor**: Strategy acquired over 224,868 BTC, raising holdings to 671,268 BTC. He defended the company against MSCI index removal risks and advocated for Bitcoin-backed digital banking systems. 5. **Paolo Ardoino (Tether CEO)**: Attempted to acquire Juventus FC, expanded USDT as a fiat-referenced token in Abu Dhabi, launched mobile payment app Oobit, invested in digital lending platform Ledn, and supported AI and robotics ventures. 6. **Larry Fink (BlackRock CEO)**: BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) led the market with $70.84 billion AUM, strengthening crypto-traditional finance integration. 7. **Tom Lee (BitMine Chairman)**: Pushed BitMine to hold 3.97 million ETH, aiming to become "the MicroStrategy of Ethereum" and generate significant staking income. 8. **Changpeng Zhao (CZ)**: Received a pardon from Trump, ending legal challenges and pledging to advance crypto adoption in the U.S. and globally. 9. **Jeremy Allaire (Circle CEO)**: Circle’s successful NYSE IPO surged 168% on debut, highlighting stablecoin utility and potential for programmable digital dollars. 10. **Xiao Feng (HashKey Chairman)**: Led HashKey to a landmark IPO on the Hong Kong Exchange, marking a key step in crypto compliance and mainstream capital market acceptance.

marsbit12/21 23:33

Looking Back at 2025: The Top Ten Influential Figures of the Year in the Crypto Industry

marsbit12/21 23:33

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