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Ethereum’s October Record Says $4,500 Is in Sight—Will History Repeat?
Ethereum’s October Record Says $4,500 Is in Sight—Will History Repeat?

Ethereum could test $4,500 in October as historical gains, shrinking exchange reserves, and surging on-chain activity fuel bullish momentum.

BeInCrypto·2025/10/01 06:30
US Government Shutdown: 3 Altcoins That Will Rewrite History 
US Government Shutdown: 3 Altcoins That Will Rewrite History 

Unlike the 2018 shutdown, these three tokens are showing strength. These altcoins now eye major resistance levels despite uncertainty.

BeInCrypto·2025/10/01 05:13
Bitcoin Price Rise To $120,000 Ahead As Seller Exhaustion Paints Bullish Picture
Bitcoin Price Rise To $120,000 Ahead As Seller Exhaustion Paints Bullish Picture

Bitcoin’s price action shows signs of recovery as seller exhaustion cools selling pressure. A breakout above $117,261 could send BTC to $120,000.

BeInCrypto·2025/10/01 05:00
Flash
01:46
ETH ICO whale transfers 2,000 ETH to multi-signature address, possible sale ahead
According to Odaily, crypto analyst Ai Auntie (@ai_9684xtpa) monitored that the "ETH 1CO 1 million ETH whale" transferred 2,000 ETH, worth about $4.63 million, to a multi-signature address 8 hours ago. On-chain data shows that this receiving address has repeatedly transferred ETH to an exchange after receiving it, and is considered its usual outgoing route. The source address of this transaction has frequent interactions with block builders BuilderNet and Titan Build.
01:46
Circle faces class action lawsuit for failing to freeze stolen funds from Drift Protocol
According to ChainCatcher, as reported by Cointelegraph, stablecoin issuer Circle faces a class action lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts for failing to freeze funds stolen in the attack on Drift Protocol.
01:37
World Central Kitchen founder warns: Disrupted fertilizer supply may trigger a global multi-year food crisis
(1) Chef José Andrés, founder of World Central Kitchen, has warned that supply disruptions of fertilizers caused by the US and Israel's war with Iran could trigger a global food crisis lasting for years. Tensions in the Strait of Hormuz have already driven up energy prices and disrupted global trade. This vital route not only accounts for around 20% of the world’s crude oil exports, but is also crucial for the transportation of nitrogen-based fertilizers.(2) Andrés stated that delays in fertilizer deliveries may lead to missed critical planting windows, which would reduce subsequent harvest yields and set off a chain reaction of lower output and rising food prices. He predicts a significant increase in global famine by autumn 2026 and into 2027. Additionally, the shutdown of several fertilizer plants in the Gulf region has further tightened supply, while nitrogen fertilizers support about half of the world’s food production.(3) Poorer countries—such as Haiti—will bear the brunt of these impacts, Andrés added, suggesting that governments should allocate part of their budgets to food security. A United Nations Development Programme report estimates that as many as 32 million people in 162 countries could fall into poverty due to the economic impacts of the war, with countries reliant on imports facing the greatest pressures. Certain areas of Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and small island nations are expected to shoulder the heaviest burden.
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