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13:00
The International Gold and US Market Capital Flow Thermometer is now available! Weak support at the open, with limited momentum for market extension
According to data as of April 7, 2026, trading volume in the first 15 minutes before the US market opened was at the 3rd percentile, significantly below the 30-day average and indicating an extremely low range overall, which suggests weak trading support during the opening phase. Meanwhile, market momentum was also at the 3rd percentile, similarly below the 30-day average level, remaining at a relatively low level overall and reflecting limited ability for the market to sustain its trend.
13:00
Nobel Physics Prize winner warns: bitcoin faces quantum computing threats, window of opportunity is closing
According to Odaily, former Google Head of Quantum Hardware and 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics laureate John Martinis has warned that Bitcoin could become one of the first realistic attack targets for quantum computing. He stated that Google's recent research shows advanced quantum computers could derive Bitcoin private keys within minutes, greatly reducing the computational security barriers the network currently relies on. Since Bitcoin depends on elliptic curve encryption and network upgrades are slow and decentralized, quantum threats are harder to address than in traditional financial systems. The window in which a public key is exposed when broadcasting a Bitcoin transaction could be exploited by quantum computers to intercept funds before the transaction is fully confirmed. John Martinis emphasized that, although building such quantum computers remains an extremely challenging engineering task, the community cannot afford to be complacent. He suggested planning quantum-resistant upgrades as early as possible, as related threats are expected to gradually emerge within 5 to 10 years. (CoinDesk)
12:54
US core capital goods orders rebound before Iran war
格隆汇 April 7|US corporate equipment orders rebounded in February, indicating that companies were advancing investment plans before the outbreak of the Iran war. Data released by the US Department of Commerce on Tuesday showed that non-defense capital goods orders (excluding aircraft) grew by 0.6% in February, compared with the economists’ median forecast of 0.5% growth. Total durable goods orders fell by 1.4%, mainly reflecting a decline in aircraft orders. Boeing stated that its aircraft orders in February decreased compared to the previous month. The durable goods report showed increases in orders for computers, automobiles, metals, and machinery. Economists expect business investment to remain robust this year as companies continue investing in artificial intelligence and take advantage of more favorable tax provisions. However, it remains unclear how cautious companies may become due to the Iran war.
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