Bitcoin’s Back, Baby! $72K? More Like $72K-nificent!

Bitcoin rallied to $71,800, basically flipping the bird to the risk-off sentiment that’s been cramping everyone’s style in U.S. equities. Take that, pessimism!

Bitcoin rallied to $71,800, basically flipping the bird to the risk-off sentiment that’s been cramping everyone’s style in U.S. equities. Take that, pessimism!
Apparently, spot Bitcoin ETFs are the new black, with five straight days of inflows because, you know, who doesn’t love a good financial trend? Binance’s buy-to-sell ratio hit 1.18, which is basically the equivalent of a standing ovation in the crypto world. Volumes are soaring past $1 billion per hour, which is more than I’ve spent on Amazon this month (but just barely).
Ah, the crypto market-a grand ball where Bitcoin reigns as the aging but reliable duke, while Ethereum, the once-promising heir, stumbles over its own feet. Solana, ever the ambitious newcomer, lingers by the punch bowl, and XRP, the distant cousin no one invited, sneaks in through the back door.
That staggering loss has stirred conversations more acutely than a scandal in a velvet drawing room, as a major token unlock approaches like a melodramatic curtain.
Bitgo Europe GmbH, a name that rolls off the tongue with the gravitas of a Napoleonic decree, has declared its dominion over the European Economic Area (EEA) as of March 2026. The proclamation allows the grandees of European banking and the upstarts of fintech to herd their flocks into the fold of the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulatory framework. A bureaucratic triumph, no doubt, but one that speaks to the inexorable march of progress, or perhaps, the inevitable surrender to the whims of the market.
Bybit says it prevented $300 million in scam-related losses in the fourth quarter of 2025, marking a major milestone in its AI-driven security overhaul.
The White House, not one to miss a good drama, has chimed in with an “extremely pointed message” to banks, telling them to stop “undercutting The Genius Act” (yes, that’s a real thing) and holding The Clarity Act “hostage.” All this while raking in “record profits,” because apparently, banks are the villains in this financial soap opera. Who knew?

Picture this: Bitcoin, that digital rogue, took a nosedive after the U.S. and Israel decided to play a game of “who strikes first” with Iran, sending shockwaves through every market like a catapulted cow. Prices plummeted to $63,000 before deciding to bounce back toward $67,000-because why not? Traders, caught between geopolitical jitters and their own hefty bets, were left scrambling like chickens with their heads cut off. Meanwhile, energy markets reacted faster than a dog chasing a squirrel, while equities and crypto floundered in a sea of confusion. According to the wise folks at Wintermute, it seems our dear digital assets are more influenced by global turmoil than by the coins themselves.

Behold the plaintiffs, a troupe of investors led by Nessa Risley, who, in April 2022, stormed into court like a drunken troupe of actors. They accused Uniswap, its founder Hayden Adams, and certain venture capitalists of enabling rug pulls and pump-and-dump schemes-claims as flimsy as a paper crown in a rainstorm. Their efforts were as futile as a court jester’s attempt to serenade a stone wall.

Mike McGlone, the senior commodity strategist with a knack for turning spreadsheets into soap operas, took to social media platform X on March 3 to spill the tea. Apparently, the world’s favorite safe-haven asset is feeling a bit like yesterday’s news. “Gold pillars crumbling?” he mused, probably while sipping a latte and staring dramatically out a window. “Crude spike on Iran could fuel sales.” Because nothing says “buy oil” like a little international drama.