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Bitcoin, Ethereum Muted, Dogecoin Rallies As Market Maintains 'Greed' Sentiment: Analyst Predicts New Peak For King Crypto As US Elections And Potential Fed Rate Cut Looms – Grayscale Bitcoin Mini Trust (BTC) Common units of fractional undivided beneficial interest (ARCA:BTC)

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Bitcoin, Ethereum Muted, Dogecoin Rallies As Market Maintains 'Greed' Sentiment: Analyst Predicts New Peak For King Crypto As US Elections And Potential Fed Rate Cut Looms – Grayscale Bitcoin Mini Trust (BTC) Common units of fractional undivided beneficial interest (ARCA:BTC)

Bitcoin and Ethereum continued trading flat even as equities notched fresh record highs. However, Dogecoin moved higher on Thursday.

Cryptocurrency Gains +/- Price (Recorded at 9:30 p.m. EDT)
Bitcoin BTC/USD +0.29% $67,713.61
Ethereum ETH/USD
               
-0.46% $2,606.32
Dogecoin DOGE/USD           +8.86% $0.1353

What Happened: Bitcoin wiggled in a narrow range of $66,800-$67,400 for much of the day before kissing $68,000 overnight. The world’s largest cryptocurrency was up over 12% in the last week.

Dogecoin spiked over 8% in the last 24 hours, extending a bullish trajectory that has seen the world’s biggest meme coin gain around 26% over the week. Notably, on Thursday, Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk referenced the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) during a town hall in Pennsylvania, where he expressed support for the GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump

Cryptocurrency liquidations exceeded $168 million in the last 24 hours, with over $121 million in upside bets getting wiped out.

Bitcoin’s Open Interest rose by just 0.53% in the last 24 hours. Additionally, more number of institutional investors and top trader accounts on Binance were shorting Bitcoin than those taking long positions on the asset.

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Market sentiment continued to be one of “Greed,” according to the Cryptocurrency Fear & Greed Index.

Top Gainers (24-Hours)

Cryptocurrency Gains +/- Price (Recorded at 9:30 p.m. EDT)
Popcat (POPCAT) +10.63% $1.35
Dogecoin (DOGE) +8.86% $0.1358
Litecoin (LTC) +4.29% $73.50

The global cryptocurrency stood at $2.32 trillion, following a marginal decrease of 0.05% in the last 24 hours.

Stocks inched higher on Thursday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 161.35 points, or 0.37%, to close at a new record high of 43,239.05. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite closed just above the flatline to hit 18,373.61, while the S&P 500 closed down 0.02% to 5,841.47.

AI juggernaut Nvidia Corp. NVDA ended the day 0.89% higher, likely contributing to tech gains. Nvidia’s rise, in turn, was due to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.’s TSM  stronger-than-expected third-quarter revenue.

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Additionally, retail sales in September bettered estimates, boosting confidence in the state of the economy.

See More: Best Cryptocurrency Scanners

Analyst Notes: Widely followed cryptocurrency analyst Michaël van de Poppe doubled down on his previous bullish estimates for King Crypto, citing U.S. elections and a potential rate cut by the Federal Reserve.

“Just a few weeks shy of the elections and a potential renewed rate cut from the [Federal Reserve]. The ATH for Bitcoin is close,” the analyst projected.

His predictions were echoed by another analyst, Aaron Crypto, who stated that $70,000-$71,000 could be the final resistance level for Bitcoin.

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“IMO, a move towards $71,000 followed by a quick dump and then break the previous ATH is a highly likely scenario. A new ATH is coming soon,” the analyst added.

Photo by Avi Rozen on Shutterstock

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Rumors are swirling about Venezuela holding $60 billion in Bitcoin—but crypto experts are skeptical | Fortune

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Rumors are swirling about Venezuela holding  billion in Bitcoin—but crypto experts are skeptical | Fortune

Following the United States’ capture of Nicolás Maduro over the weekend, a report came out claiming that Venezuela had $60 billion stored in Bitcoin—leading to speculation that the U.S. could lay claim to cryptocurrency as well as oil. Despite numerous reports of the huge Venezuelan Bitcoin stash, however, a crypto forensic firm is skeptical of the claims. 

The news of Venezuela’s Bitcoin holding began to bubble up last Saturday, the same day that Maduro was ousted. The digital publication Project Brazen reported that his regime could control $60 billion in the original cryptocurrency—but offered little in the way of proof.

“The article does not mention any addresses as a starting point, making it difficult to verify any of these speculated claims,” said Aurelie Barthere, principal research analyst at Nansen, about Project Brazen’s report. 

Barthere is not the first person to express skepticism about the country’s purported crypto treasure trove. Mauricio di Bartolomeo, the Venezuelan co-founder of the financial services company Ledn, told Fortune on Wednesday that the level of the country’s corruption makes the figure hard to believe. He expanded his argument in an opinion piece he wrote for Coindesk. 

Estimates of Venezuela’s crypto holdings vary wildly. Bitcointreasuries.net estimates that the country has $22 million worth of Bitcoin. That figure would make Venezuela the government entity with the ninth-most money tied up in the original cryptocurrency, just behind North Korea. 

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While the exact size of Venezuela’s Bitcoin wealth is unclear, the country has long been a player in crypto. Maduro introduced a token called the Petro in 2018, which was shuttered six years later. Its citizens have also turned to stablecoins as a way to fight their currency’s hyperinflation.

Trump has said that he will “run” Venezuela, and some have speculated that includes seizing the country’s Bitcoin holdings. Andrew Fierman, head of national security intelligence at Chainalysis, said he could not speak to the likelihood of such a seizure. He did, however, explain what gaining control of assets might look like. 

A freezing of assets could occur through centralized services, he says. These services would get a court order for an exchange or an issuer like Tether or Circle who could blacklist an address. The second method is through physical seizure. The U.S. could get control of wallets, devices, and keys through compelled cooperation. 

For now, there is unlikely to be a full and accurate account of Venezuela’s Bitcoin holdings until the political situation in the country becomes more stable.

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Pantera Signals 2026 Crypto Breakout After 2025 Quietly De-Risked Markets

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Pantera Signals 2026 Crypto Breakout After 2025 Quietly De-Risked Markets
Crypto’s biggest gains in 2025 weren’t on price charts but in policy, institutions, and infrastructure, as regulatory reversals, Wall Street access, and onchain growth quietly reset the industry’s long-term trajectory, Pantera Capital argues.
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St. Augustine Film Festival will honor creator of film about crypto scams

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St. Augustine Film Festival will honor creator of film about crypto scams
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Ben McKenzie will receive a Career Achievement Award at the St. Augustine Film Festival Jan. 10 prior to the screening of his documentary, “Everyone is Lying to You for Money.”

The former star of “The OC” wrote, directed and produced the film while writing his New York Times bestseller “Easy Money,” which spotlights cryptocurrency as a large-scale scam.

Working in collaboration with journalist Jacob Silverman, the film includes interviews with currently jailed cryptocurrency industry leaders and celebrities now facing trials for misleading the public on the value of cryptocurrencies as virtual money.

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Sporting degrees in economics and political science from the University of Virginia, McKensie traveled to El Salvador – also known as Bitcoin city – and London’s banking district to showcase fraud perpetrated by Alex Mashinsky, the founder and CEO of Celsius Network, who was sentenced to 12 years in prison for one count of commodities fraud and one count of securities fraud.

New York prosecutors accused Mashinsky with deceiving clients about the company’s finances and manipulating the price of Celsius’ token, which caused billions of dollars in losses.

The movie also includes interviews with individuals who were part of the scam before it collapsed, McKensie’s testimony before Congress following the arrest of Sam Bankman-Fried and his trip to El Salvador.

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“I turned the cameras on to document the difference between the marketing campaign and the reality of what was happening on the ground,” he told the St. Augustine Record. “Cryptocurrency was perpetuated by a very small number of people who made a lot of money in an industry rife with fraud, corruption and criminal activity.”

McKensie underscored the film as an unusual comedy that he’s deeply proud of.

“The film highlights the idea of avoiding intermediaries as appealing, but creating a currency that bypasses a banking system would never work,” he said. “The idea of investing in this obtuse thing that was hard to understand evolved/metastasized to exhibit the worst parts of our current system.”

McKensie described the “command tactic” of the get rich scheme as a con man tactic that lured people in as Bitcoin emerged during the wake of a financial crisis.

Bankman-Fried, the founder of the FTX cryptocurrency exchange, was eventually convicted of wire, securities and commodities fraud along with money laundering and conspiracy and sentenced to 25 years in prison.

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McKensie’s involvement was born and bred from COVID, “when I had time on my hands to check the financial markets.”

“I’m not an economist, but I love theory and behavioral economics,” he said. “I especially love the writings of the Nobel Prize winning economist Robert Schiller, who talks about things that were applicable to crypto that naturally occur in Ponzi schemes.”

Convinced that no one was monitoring the “price of a speculative asset rising far beyond what it was worth in terms of practical use in the real world,” McKensie turned to social media as a platform to show that “crypto was getting out of hand.”

Posts connected him to Silverman and together they worked on reporting on the ill-fated concept. It didn’t take long before a book proposal landed on his desk.

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“Then it was off to the races,” he said.

“I’ve met a lot of really interesting people I never would have met if not for the book,” he said. “I’ve never done anything like this before so I’m really glad I did.”

McKensie said that Greg von Hausch, co-founder of the SAFF, was persistent in adding “Everyone is Lying to You for Money” to the festival.

While the success of the book and the film remain paramount to an actor who hedged his bets in New York because of his love of “the art,” the Texas native has a long and successful acting resume that includes stints on Broadway for “Grand Horizons,” which received a Tony nod for Best New Play, an appearance in “Junebug” with Amy Adams and one in “88 Minutes” starring Al Pacino. Other film credits include the indie film “Johnny Got His Gun” and “Some Kind of Beautiful” with Pierce Brosnan and Salma Hayek.

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Other film credits include “Decoding Annie Parker” opposite Helen Hunt and a starring role in the short film “The Eight Per Cent of the 2009” shown in New York’s Tribeca Film Festival.

In 2009, he returned to series television in “Southland,” portraying a patrol officer in Los Angeles. McKensie also starred as Detective James Gordon in the series “Gotham,” detailing Gordon’s rise in Gotham City before Batman’s appearance.

McKensie made his directorial debut in Season 3 of “Gotham” where he met his then co-star and now wife, Morena Baccarin, who is the mother to his two children. The family resides in New York.

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