The post Ripple Holders Refuse to Sell, Dogecoin (DOGE) Price Risks Adding Zero, Bitcoin (BTC) to Lose $100,000 — Crypto News Digest appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Ripple’s $1B share buyback sees low participation despite $40B valuation Ripple’s buyback has seen low participation, according to a recent report by The Information. Buyback details. Ripple Labs recently offered to repurchase $1 billion worth of shares at a $40 billion valuation. According to a recent report by The Information, Ripple Labs offered to repurchase $1 billion worth of shares at a $40 billion valuation last month. However, the company reportedly saw the lowest participation rate yet in this tender offer, with many private shareholders choosing not to sell their stakes.  This shows that investors are confident in Ripple’s long-term potential following the company’s victory over the SEC and massive acquisition spree.  Previous buybacks. In January 2024, Ripple repurchased $285 million in shares at an $11.3 billion valuation. In January 2024, Ripple announced a buyback of US$285 million of its shares from early investors/employees that valued the company at about $11.3 billion. However, as reported by U.Today, CEO Brad Garlinghouse then stated that the valuation was too low, citing the company’s vast XRP holdings that surpassed a whopping $100 billion last year.  In June, the San Francisco-headquartered company initiated a significantly larger tender offer of $700 million at $175 per share.  Dogecoin faces bearish setup as analysts warn of potential drop below $0.10 DOGE has formed its weakest setups in months after losing key support, setting the stage for a brutal 40% correction. Price outlook. Dogecoin (DOGE) may be entering a prolonged bearish phase. According to the latest price projections, Dogecoin’s price setup looks like a time bomb with a slow fuse. It turns out the break under $0.18 was not manipulation or an accidental slip but the final line keeping DOGE from reopening the path back toward $0.12. What’s even worse, it may be below $0.10 by the end of 2025.  Analyst insight. Ali Martinez noted… The post Ripple Holders Refuse to Sell, Dogecoin (DOGE) Price Risks Adding Zero, Bitcoin (BTC) to Lose $100,000 — Crypto News Digest appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Ripple’s $1B share buyback sees low participation despite $40B valuation Ripple’s buyback has seen low participation, according to a recent report by The Information. Buyback details. Ripple Labs recently offered to repurchase $1 billion worth of shares at a $40 billion valuation. According to a recent report by The Information, Ripple Labs offered to repurchase $1 billion worth of shares at a $40 billion valuation last month. However, the company reportedly saw the lowest participation rate yet in this tender offer, with many private shareholders choosing not to sell their stakes.  This shows that investors are confident in Ripple’s long-term potential following the company’s victory over the SEC and massive acquisition spree.  Previous buybacks. In January 2024, Ripple repurchased $285 million in shares at an $11.3 billion valuation. In January 2024, Ripple announced a buyback of US$285 million of its shares from early investors/employees that valued the company at about $11.3 billion. However, as reported by U.Today, CEO Brad Garlinghouse then stated that the valuation was too low, citing the company’s vast XRP holdings that surpassed a whopping $100 billion last year.  In June, the San Francisco-headquartered company initiated a significantly larger tender offer of $700 million at $175 per share.  Dogecoin faces bearish setup as analysts warn of potential drop below $0.10 DOGE has formed its weakest setups in months after losing key support, setting the stage for a brutal 40% correction. Price outlook. Dogecoin (DOGE) may be entering a prolonged bearish phase. According to the latest price projections, Dogecoin’s price setup looks like a time bomb with a slow fuse. It turns out the break under $0.18 was not manipulation or an accidental slip but the final line keeping DOGE from reopening the path back toward $0.12. What’s even worse, it may be below $0.10 by the end of 2025.  Analyst insight. Ali Martinez noted…

Ripple Holders Refuse to Sell, Dogecoin (DOGE) Price Risks Adding Zero, Bitcoin (BTC) to Lose $100,000 — Crypto News Digest

2025/11/05 11:05

Ripple’s $1B share buyback sees low participation despite $40B valuation

Ripple’s buyback has seen low participation, according to a recent report by The Information.

  • Buyback details. Ripple Labs recently offered to repurchase $1 billion worth of shares at a $40 billion valuation.

According to a recent report by The Information, Ripple Labs offered to repurchase $1 billion worth of shares at a $40 billion valuation last month. However, the company reportedly saw the lowest participation rate yet in this tender offer, with many private shareholders choosing not to sell their stakes. 

This shows that investors are confident in Ripple’s long-term potential following the company’s victory over the SEC and massive acquisition spree. 

  • Previous buybacks. In January 2024, Ripple repurchased $285 million in shares at an $11.3 billion valuation.

In January 2024, Ripple announced a buyback of US$285 million of its shares from early investors/employees that valued the company at about $11.3 billion. However, as reported by U.Today, CEO Brad Garlinghouse then stated that the valuation was too low, citing the company’s vast XRP holdings that surpassed a whopping $100 billion last year. 

In June, the San Francisco-headquartered company initiated a significantly larger tender offer of $700 million at $175 per share. 

Dogecoin faces bearish setup as analysts warn of potential drop below $0.10

DOGE has formed its weakest setups in months after losing key support, setting the stage for a brutal 40% correction.

  • Price outlook. Dogecoin (DOGE) may be entering a prolonged bearish phase.

According to the latest price projections, Dogecoin’s price setup looks like a time bomb with a slow fuse. It turns out the break under $0.18 was not manipulation or an accidental slip but the final line keeping DOGE from reopening the path back toward $0.12. What’s even worse, it may be below $0.10 by the end of 2025. 

  • Analyst insight. Ali Martinez noted that DOGE now trades within a long-term descending channel.

Thus, prominent analyst Ali Martinez revealed how the DOGE chart now sits inside a prolonged channel, where every rebound runs into the same wall of trapped sell supply, and nothing about the current conjecture suggests the market wants to defend this zone anymore from Dogecoin.

If the projection plays out as it usually does, the next 12 months for Dogecoin will be more painful. A dip to $0.16 looks almost guaranteed this quarter, followed by a slow crawl into $0.14-$0.12 territory through the end of the year. 

Bitcoin nears key breakdown zone as liquidation pressure mounts

Bitcoin is close to losing a fundamental level that investors fought for throughout 2025.

  • Price action. Bitcoin (BTC) continues its steep descent, trading near $104,000.

As the price of Bitcoin hovers around $104,000, close to breaking through a crucial psychological threshold, its steep decline continues. With little structural support left below, concentrated liquidation clusters are visible just below the current price on the most recent CoinGlass BTC/USDT liquidation heatmap. 

  • Market outlook. Analysts warn that if the current zone breaks, BTC could see accelerated downside movement.

A dense liquidity pocket that is presently being tested is shown on the heatmap between $103,000 and $104,000. The next significant liquidation bands, which are probably stacked with more stop-loss orders and leveraged positions, will emerge between $101,500 and $100,000 if this zone gives way. 

Given the increasing downside pressure indicated by both technical and on-chain data, these levels might only offer short-term stabilization.

Source: https://u.today/ripple-holders-refuse-to-sell-dogecoin-doge-price-risks-adding-zero-bitcoin-btc-might-lose-100000

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While the global market is rising, cryptocurrencies are falling. What exactly is the problem?

While the global market is rising, cryptocurrencies are falling. What exactly is the problem?

Author: Jasper De Maere , OTC Strategist at Wintertermute Compiled by: Tim, PANews The macroeconomic environment remains supportive, with positive events such as interest rate cuts, the end of quantitative tightening, and stock indices nearing high levels occurring one after another. However, the crypto market continues to lag behind as post-Federal Reserve policy meeting liquidity is waning. Global liquidity continues to expand, but funds are not flowing into the crypto market. ETF inflows have stagnated, decentralized AI activity has dried up, and only stablecoins are maintaining growth. Leverage has been cleared, and the market structure appears healthy, but a rebound in ETF or DAT funds would be the key signal for a liquidity recovery and the start of a potential catch-up rally. Macroeconomic Status Quo Last week, the market experienced volatility due to the Federal Reserve's rate cut, the FOMC meeting minutes, and earnings reports from several US technology companies. We saw the expected 25 basis point rate cut, officially concluding quantitative tightening, and the earnings of the "Big Seven" US stocks were generally positive. However, market volatility occurred after Powell downplayed the near certainty of another rate cut in December. The probability of a rate cut, which had been priced in by the market before the meeting (95%), has now fallen to 68%, prompting traders to reassess their strategies and triggering a rapid shift towards risk aversion. This sell-off didn't seem driven by panic, but rather resembled position adjustments. Some investors had over-bet on a rise before the event, creating a classic "sell the news" situation, as the market had already fully priced in the 25 basis point rate cut. The stock market subsequently stabilized quickly, but the cryptocurrency market did not see a synchronized rebound. Since then, BTC and ETH have been trading sideways, hovering around $107,000 and $3,700 respectively as of this writing. Altcoins have also exhibited a volatile pattern, with their excess gains primarily driven by short-term narratives. Compared to other asset classes, cryptocurrencies are the worst-performing asset class. From an index perspective, crypto assets in a broad sense experienced a significant sell-off last week, with the GMCI-30 index falling 12%. Most sectors closed lower. The gaming sector plummeted 21%. Layer 2 network sector plunges 19% The meme coin sector declined by 18%. Mid-cap and small-cap tokens fell by approximately 15%-16%. Only the AI (-3%) and DePIN (-4%) sectors showed relative resilience, mainly due to the strong performance of TAO tokens and AI proxy concept coins in the early part of last week. Overall, this volatility seems more like a money-driven phenomenon, consistent with the tightening liquidity following the Fed's decision, rather than caused by fundamental factors. So why are cryptocurrencies lagging behind while global risk assets are rising? In short: liquidity. But it's not a lack of liquidity, but rather a problem of where it flows. Global liquidity is clearly expanding. Central banks are intervening in relatively strong rather than weak markets, a situation that has only occurred a few times in the past, usually followed by a strong surge in risk appetite. The problem is that this new liquidity is not flowing into the crypto market as it has in the past. Stablecoin supply continues to climb steadily (up 50% year-to-date, adding $100 billion), but Bitcoin ETF inflows have stagnated since the summer, with assets under management hovering around $150 billion. The once-booming crypto treasury DAT has fallen silent, and related concept stocks listed on exchanges like Nasdaq have seen a significant drop in trading volume. Of the three major funding engines driving the market in the first half of this year, only stablecoins are still playing a role. ETF funding has peaked, DAT activity has dried up, and although overall liquidity remains ample, the share flowing into the crypto market has shrunk significantly. In other words, the tap for funds hasn't been turned off; it's just that the funds have flowed elsewhere. The novelty of ETFs has worn off, allocation ratios have become more normalized, and retail investors' funds have flowed elsewhere, turning to chase the trends in stocks, artificial intelligence, and prediction markets. Our Viewpoint The stock market performance proves that the market environment remains strong; liquidity has simply not yet been transmitted to the crypto market. Although the market is still digesting the 10/11 liquidation, the overall structure remains robust—leverage has been cleared, volatility is under control, and the macroeconomic environment is supportive. Bitcoin continues to act as a market anchor thanks to stable ETF inflows and tight exchange supply, while Ethereum and some L1 and L2 tokens have begun to show signs of relative strength. While a growing number of voices on crypto social media are attributing the price weakness to the four-year cycle theory, this concept is no longer truly applicable. In mature markets, the miner supply and halving mechanisms that once drove cycles have long since failed; the core factor truly determining price performance is now liquidity. The macroeconomic environment continues to provide strong support—the interest rate cut cycle has begun, quantitative tightening has ended, and the stock market is frequently hitting new highs—but the crypto market has lagged behind, primarily due to the lack of effective liquidity inflows. Compared to the three major drivers of capital inflows last year and in the first half of this year (ETFs, stablecoins, and DeFi yield assets), only stablecoins are currently showing a healthy trend. Close monitoring of ETF inflows and DAT activity will be key indicators, as these are likely to be the earliest signals of liquidity returning to the crypto market.
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PANews2025/11/05 16:50