Crypto Voters Could Swing UK Elections. Here’s What Politicians Need to Know
Cryptocurrency is no longer just a financial conversation. It’s becoming a political one, and UK parties are starting to feel the pressure.
Cryptocurrency is no longer just a financial conversation. It’s becoming a political one, and UK parties are starting to feel the pressure.
Ethereum is flashing a familiar technical signal. But this time, the setup underneath looks quite different. ETH currently trades near $2,140, sitting about 48% below its January
Bitcoin has dropped more than 40% from its October 2025 peak near $126,000. Institutional investors hold the key to any meaningful recovery. And the signal pointing toward that
Fan tokens finally have a legal address in the United States. And one company has been waiting longer than anyone for this moment.
The crypto industry just learned a hard lesson about political spending. In Illinois’s Democratic primaries, Fairshake and its affiliated PACs dropped nearly $20 million trying
Oman crude hit $167 per barrel. US oil sits at $97. That $70+ gap has no modern parallel, and it’s reshaping everything from European interest rates to American strategic
The debate has been going on for years. Private blockchains versus public ones. Controlled versus open. Compliance versus composability. Institutions weighed both sides carefully
Bitcoin never moves in a straight line. It surges, corrects, and surges again, sometimes all within the same cycle. That makes timing incredibly hard for most traders.
The bets are in, and they’re grim. Prediction markets and professional forecasters are both pointing toward a prolonged US-Iran conflict — and the ripple effects are already
Active crypto traders in the United States have quietly made stablecoin yield a core part of their financial lives. And the numbers back that up in a big way.