Wall Street builds crypto infrastructure while traders drown in data. AI agents cut through market noise to execute smart trades while you sleep. Opinion by: Gracy Chen, CEO, Bitget Crypto traders are drowning in information. Live prices flicker by the microsecond, wallet trackers ping fresh whale moves, and sentiment on X pivots by the minute. For the average retail investor, keeping up means decoding all this through pro-level dashboards — often after clocking out from a full-time job. That’s the real pressure point shaping crypto’s next evolution — not another institutional product like BlackRock's ETH staking app. AI trading agents offer a practical solution to that challenge. They compress the flood of market data into a single, actionable recommendation that only needs a simple input from the user. Say someone sets the instruction: “Lock in gains if BTC drops 5% while I’m asleep.” The AI agent pulls the trigger for them and re-hedges before the user’s alarm goes off. Read more
China defended on Thursday its decision to invite the leaders of Russia and North Korea to World War II commemorations, which President Donald Trump accused them of using to conspire against the United States. Trump wrote a testy Truth Social post addressing his Chinese counterpart after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russia’s Vladimir Putin flanked Xi Jinping at a massive parade in Beijing showcasing Chinese military hardware. “Give my warmest regards to Vladimir Putin, and Kim Jong Un, as you conspire against The United States of America,” Trump wrote. Asked about Trump’s post, Beijing’s foreign ministry said on Thursday “foreign guests” had been invited to commemorate 80 years since the end of World War II. “It is to work together with peace-loving countries and peoples to remember history, cherish the memory of the martyrs, cherish peace, and create the future,” spokesman Guo Jiakun told reporters. “China’s development of diplomatic relations with any country is never directed against any third party...
Bitcoin shows signs of exhaustion with the recent drop to $107,000, but a break above $112,000 might confirm last week’s lows as the BTC price bottom. Key takeaways: Bitcoin has dropped 14% from its $124,500 all-time high, which led to a drop in BTC supply in profit, signalling market exhaustion. The $112,000-$116,000 supply zone must be overcome to start the next leg higher. Read more