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@berberecho: Pues la verdad, que no se si usted esta hablando de este foro o se esta equivocando con otro, por que si hay algo que no he visto por aqui, es animar a la gente a entrar en cosas... ni alardear de beneficios.Mas bien todo lo contrario, "cuidadin si alguien se ha metido aqui, que vienen olas....".Y ahora que estamos -e.on tocara en febrero 19,748?? -Pharma mar cerrara hoy por encima de 77,698??? prometo no volverlo ha hacer, pase un buen dia...Esto es cachondeo, no una recomendacion de compra Cita de: berberecho en Hoy a las 13:18:08Cita de: Saturio en Hoy a las 12:37:05Al paso que se están desencadenando las cosas por ahí fuera igual va Trump y dice la verdad sin quererlo.Esta madrugada el Bitcoin ha marcado un mínimo de 74500 dólares, ahora ha recuperado y está en 77600. La referencia es que el 7 de octubre estaba 124.310Estoy seguro de que los avispados foreros de Transición Estructural, que siempre vienen lloriqueando porque no se han metido en el adorable bitcoin, han ganado mucho, muchísimo dinero (del malo, del de papel, del fiat). Son tan espabilados que ganan cuando sube y cuando baja. Perdón, cuando sube negativamente.
Cita de: Saturio en Hoy a las 12:37:05Al paso que se están desencadenando las cosas por ahí fuera igual va Trump y dice la verdad sin quererlo.Esta madrugada el Bitcoin ha marcado un mínimo de 74500 dólares, ahora ha recuperado y está en 77600. La referencia es que el 7 de octubre estaba 124.310Estoy seguro de que los avispados foreros de Transición Estructural, que siempre vienen lloriqueando porque no se han metido en el adorable bitcoin, han ganado mucho, muchísimo dinero (del malo, del de papel, del fiat). Son tan espabilados que ganan cuando sube y cuando baja. Perdón, cuando sube negativamente.
Al paso que se están desencadenando las cosas por ahí fuera igual va Trump y dice la verdad sin quererlo.Esta madrugada el Bitcoin ha marcado un mínimo de 74500 dólares, ahora ha recuperado y está en 77600. La referencia es que el 7 de octubre estaba 124.310
Bitcoin bloodbath: Selloff sparks fears of new ‘crypto winter’ after weekend crash hits BTC, XRP, ETH, and othersInvestors in major cryptocurrencies are holding their breaths today in hopes that a weekend collapse of coin prices was a temporary blip.[Photo: Ananass/Adobe Stock]To say it’s been a bad few days for Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies would be an understatement.As of the time of this writing, Bitcoin is trading in the range of $77,000 per coin—a price point not seen since last March, when the world was thrown into economic uncertainty by President Donald Trump’s tariffs.And Bitcoin isn’t the only crypto facing a bloodbath.Other major tokens, including Ethereum and BNB (Binance) are also in free-fall. XRP, the closely watched native token of the XRP Ledger from Ripple Labs, dipped below $1.60 earlier on Monday, a level it hasn’t seen since 2024.Here’s what you need to know.Cryptocurrencies plunged over the weekendNearly all major cryptocurrencies plunged this weekend, with the tokens seeing drastic selloffs, particularly on Saturday.But things are even worse when you look back over the past five days. As of the time of this writing, during that period, many major cryptos have suffered double-digit percentage declines, including:Bitcoin: down nearly 13% over the past five days to $77,843Ethereum: down nearly 24% over the past five days to $2,293BNB: down more than 15% over the past five days to $764XRP: down nearly 15% over the past five days to $1.62And those aren’t the only cryptocurrencies getting hammered—most major coins are, including Solana (down almost 18% over the past 5 days to $102.88) and memecoin Dogecoin (down more than 15% over the past five days to $0.104.)The dramatic fall of major cryptocurrencies have led to fears of a new “crypto winter,” a period when cryptocurrencies across the board see steep selloffs and new investors tend to shy away from adding the coins to their asset portfolios. The last major crypto winter occurred around 2022.Why are cryptocurrency prices sinking?It’s not possible to attribute the exact reason why a volatile asset class like cryptocurrencies rises or falls, as so much of crypto investor activity is driven by greed and fear, which fuel buy-and-sell cycles.However, you can look back over the past five days to when the precipitous drops began and correlate the crypto price declines with external geopolitical and economic news, which is likely contributing to the outflow of investment in digital tokens.The first happened on Friday when President Donald Trump announced that he would nominate former Federal Reserve governor Kevin Warsh as the next chair of the Federal Reserve. That news caused the dollar to surge—and safe-haven assets like gold and silver to crash.Since most cryptocurrencies are bought and sold against the dollar, when the dollar grows stronger, it takes fewer of them to buy the same amount of cryptocurrencies, and some investors may choose to sell their tokens before the dollar’s rising buying power makes their digital assets look any cheaper.Meanwhile, news on the geopolitical front may have also played a role in the crypto selloff. Over the weekend, the U.S. military began moving forces and equipment into the Middle East after President Trump said he is considering a strike on Iran.The potential strike is in response to recent widespread demonstrations in the country, which could signal a strong enough appetite for regime change—something Trump would likely consider very appealing, especially after the president ordered the attack on Venezuela at the beginning of the year to oust its leader.Any potential conflict can be good for the U.S. dollar, but it will also serve to raise geopolitical uncertainty.Investors generally hate uncertainty, and when such conditions arise, they typically dump their more volatile assets so they can park their profits in ones that are more stable. Where does crypto go from here?It is still too early to tell whether the recent cryptocurrency decline over the past five days is a temporary event or is indeed the beginning of another long crypto winter.The good news for investors is that many tokens are already showing signs of a slight recovery as of Monday morning, with Bitcoin up 1.21%, ETH up 1.41%, and XRP up 3.12% over the last 24 hours as of this writing.
Los dos agentes que dispararon a Alex Pretti en Mineápolis son texanos de origen hispanohttps://www.lavozdeasturias.es/noticia/actualidad/2026/02/02/dos-agentes-dispararon-alex-pretti-mineapolis-origen-hispano/00031770047762625539765.htmDe acuerdo con esta plataforma de periodismo de investigación, los registros gubernamentales indican que Ochoa, de 43 años, y Gutiérrez, de 35, fueron quienes dispararon contra Petri, el enfermero de 37 años que fue la segunda víctima mortal de los agentes de ICE tras Renee Good. ProPublica señala que Ochoa es unió a la Patrulla Fronteriza en el 2018 y Gutiérrez se incorporó en el 2014 y trabaja para la Oficina de Operaciones de Campo de la CBP.
What’s Going On with the Dollar?, Barry RitholtzI am always looking for interesting and informative charts, especially ones I can include in my quarterly call that explain something clients are curious about or introduce a lower-profile idea. The call that kicked off 2026 dived into the weakness in the dollar. Given how significant the US Dollar weakness has been, let’s take a look at what has been happening with the world’s reserve currency and why it is significant to stocks, bonds, and commodities.2025 was the year international stocks finally caught up to the US. Since the financial crisis, the US has led the world’s economy and equity markets. That changed significantly last year, as the S&P 500 and even the Nasdaq 100 lagged behind while international stocks gained over 33%. That was about twice the increase we saw in the U.SAnd there’s a simple reason for this: The weakest U.S. dollar since 2017.As the chart at the top of the page shows, every major currency has outperformed the United States currency in 2025 – even Japan.That is not a coincidence. This isn’t partisan; it isn’t politics; it is simply a fact: the dollar was down 9.2%. The last time it was down this much was in 2017, when it fell 9.9%. Both years marked the first term of a Trump presidency; both involved tariffs; both alienated trade partners.Here’s a straightforward explanation: U.S. trading partners are very unhappy with tariffs and defense policies. We are part of a deeply interconnected global economy, and although none of our trading partners has our level of wealth, they are not without options. They don’t support the end of the post-war alliances nor “America First” – and are responding accordingly.1Thus, the trend we observed throughout 2025 was simply a Repatriation Trade. Overseas Investors, including private holdings, sovereign wealth funds, public funds, and other large pools of capital, decided to reduce some US-specific risk. They sold portions of their US holdings in dollars, converted that into their local currencies—euros, pounds, yen, Swiss francs, pesos, yuan—brought the cash back home, and then purchased local stocks and bonds.I cannot imagine any other reason for every single major currency to appreciate so much against the US Dollar without some variation of the above occurring. Traditionally, rates and the dollar move more or less together; when we see this kind of decoupling, it usually means something unusual is going on:This is what happens when your trading partners and our security partners are unhappy with your policies and vote with their dollars. (If anybody has a better explanation as to what’s going on, I’d love to hear it).I am not a catastrophist; I don’t think this is the end of the dollar as the global reserve currency or the end of Pax Americana; it is, however, concerning and warrants attention. If you treat your trading partners poorly, they aren’t just gonna take it; they are going to respond in kind. They bought a chunk of their capital home. As it turns out, repatriating all those dollars made those markets do much better than US markets. Not that plus ~18% is terrible, it’s just relatively, we were the laggard.What will cause this change? I don’t see this administration reversing course unless the Supreme Court forces them to do so. I am genuinely surprised they have failed to do so in what is an obvious case.But that’s how I see the dollar story.
PERO QUE ESTÁ PASANDO....CitarLos dos agentes que dispararon a Alex Pretti en Mineápolis son texanos de origen hispanohttps://www.lavozdeasturias.es/noticia/actualidad/2026/02/02/dos-agentes-dispararon-alex-pretti-mineapolis-origen-hispano/00031770047762625539765.htmDe acuerdo con esta plataforma de periodismo de investigación, los registros gubernamentales indican que Ochoa, de 43 años, y Gutiérrez, de 35, fueron quienes dispararon contra Petri, el enfermero de 37 años que fue la segunda víctima mortal de los agentes de ICE tras Renee Good. ProPublica señala que Ochoa es unió a la Patrulla Fronteriza en el 2018 y Gutiérrez se incorporó en el 2014 y trabaja para la Oficina de Operaciones de Campo de la CBP.A ver si lo entiendo...Dos neonazis descendientes de inmigrantes mexicanos, inscritos en una unidad paramilitar gubernamental, que salen a las calles a cazar inmigrantes como lo fueron sus mayores, armados hasta los dientes, asesinan a un hombre blanco norteamericano por oponerse a que deporten a unos inmigrantes como lo fueron los padres de los dos neonazis que le asesinaron...¿Esta frase tiene sentido?¿Y no es un poco raro que los propios investigados sean los que dirigen la investigación? ¿No lo debería llevar un juez de instrucción?