MEVHunter

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Ever notice PNL popping up everywhere in crypto trading? Honestly, understanding what PNL means is probably the first thing you should nail down if you're getting into this space.
So here's the deal: PNL stands for Profit and Loss. Sounds simple, right? But there's actually a bit more to it, and it matters.
There are two types you need to know. First is unrealized PNL. This is your profit or loss while you're still holding a position. Say you grabbed some ETH at 3,000 and it's now sitting at 3,500. Congrats, you've got an unrealized profit of 500. But here's the thing - it's not actually yours
ETH-0,4%
BTC0,23%
BNB1,06%
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Been seeing "hopium" thrown around way more in crypto communities lately, and honestly it's worth understanding what this term actually means if you're spending time in Discord or Twitter spaces.
So basically hopium is internet slang that combines hope and opium—it's used to describe that specific kind of blind optimism where someone refuses to accept reality about their investments. You know the type: they're holding a dead coin that hasn't moved in years, but they're still convinced it's going to moon eventually. That's pure hopium right there.
What makes the hopium meaning so relevant in cr
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I just saw a list of the richest athletes in the world and, honestly, I’m surprised by who’s at the very top. Michael Jordan with 3.6 billion — that’s wild, considering he hasn’t been actively playing for a long time. The Air Jordan brand likely still brings him massive earnings.
Cristiano Ronaldo and Messi are also on the list, but not quite as high as you might think. Ronaldo sits at around 1.2 billion, Messi at 850 million. LeBron James, The Rock, and Tiger Woods each have 800 million — it’s interesting that non-athletes like The Rock also appear on this list of the richest athletes in the
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Just been digging into how Felix xQc Lengyel actually makes his money, and honestly the breakdown is pretty wild when you look at the actual numbers.
So here's the thing – this guy went from being a pro Overwatch player with insane reflexes to basically dominating Twitch. Like, we're talking record-breaking concurrent viewer numbers. His whole appeal is that mix of high energy and just being genuinely entertaining across basically any game he plays.
The income streams are actually pretty diverse if you break it down. Twitch subs alone are massive – we're talking $4.99 to $24.99 per month, and
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Just been diving into Steve Eisman's track record and honestly, the guy's a legend when it comes to reading market cycles. His net worth sitting around $1.5 billion didn't come from luck—this is someone who called major market crashes before they happened.
What strikes me most about Eisman is how he thinks differently. While most investors were caught off guard, he was positioning himself ahead of the curve. That's the kind of foresight that separates the visionary traders from the rest. His whole approach to market analysis is built on deep fundamental research and understanding when sentimen
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Just noticed something worth paying attention to in the Middle East situation. Israel's keeping its land borders with Egypt and Jordan open right now, which might seem like a small detail but actually signals something important about how they're managing things amid the current regional tensions.
The thing is, these border crossings aren't just about politics. They're critical for trade flow and movement between countries. If Israel had shut these down, you'd see immediate disruption to economic activity in the region. But they're keeping them operational, which suggests a deliberate choice t
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So WERN just popped 6% today and everyone's talking about that FirstFleet acquisition they did. Basically doubled their dedicated fleet which is pretty massive for a freight company. I get why people are excited about the scale play and better margins, but honestly the stock's been all over the place this year. Like 14 different 5%+ swings in the past year alone. That's wild. The thing that got me though - if you'd thrown a grand into WERN five years ago, you'd be sitting on like $890 now. Yeah, down almost 11%. Meanwhile they're at a 52-week high of $36.30 and up 18.6% since January, which so
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Just noticed something really interesting about Ralph Lauren's latest earnings - the margin expansion story here is pretty compelling, and it's not what you might expect from a luxury apparel company in today's environment.
So here's what happened in Q3: RL absolutely crushed it on margins despite all the noise around tariffs and rising costs. Gross margin jumped 140 basis points to 69.8%, operating margin up 200 basis points to 20.7%. But here's the kicker - this wasn't driven by cost-cutting or operational efficiency tricks. It was almost entirely about full-price demand.
Think about that fo
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Just spotted something interesting on chain—an old Bitcoin whale that's been dormant for 8 years just woke up and moved 2,819 BTC. That's roughly $213 million worth of value suddenly in motion after nearly a decade of sitting still. Pretty rare to see these ancient addresses come back to life.
What caught my attention is where the coins went. About 1,500 BTC of that haul got sent to Paxos, which suggests the holder might be looking to either secure it or prep for some kind of move. The rest is scattered across a few addresses. When whales like this break their dormancy, it usually signals some
BTC0,23%
USDP0,03%
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Today's USD to COP Price Update
This report details the USD/COP exchange rate, highlighting its significance for traders. It analyzes market dynamics, price fluctuations, and economic influences on the Colombian Peso, providing insights for trading opportunities.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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Wow, one of the top holders of this meme coin timed it really well. A few months ago, he bought the dip, back then at an average of $390,000. Since then, the guy has an unrealized profit of over $430,000 — not bad considering many people buy meme coins blindly. The market capitalization has now grown to over $35 million, with a 24-hour increase of over 55%. But honestly: many of these meme coins have zero real use cases and are extremely volatile. Anyone actively buying meme coins should be aware that prices can fluctuate wildly. The profit may look impressive, but it's also a gamble. Not ever
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Wait, just checked the charts and meme coins are actually all over the place right now? Some are up, some are down compared to last week, but there's definitely been movement. PEPE showing +2.64% over 7 days, USELESS at +5.21%, though MOG, DOG, BONK and FLOKI seem to have pulled back a bit. Interesting timing.
The whole meme coin sector seems to be in this weird state where sentiment keeps swinging. You've got Bitcoin sitting at $67.11K (down 2.26% weekly), Ethereum at $2.07K (basically flat with +0.16%), and the usual alts like XRP, Solana, and Cardano showing mixed signals too. DOGE is at $0
PEPE-2,79%
USELESS-2,33%
MOG-3,11%
BONK-1,9%
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Just had a thought that won't leave my head: if literally every major country on the planet is drowning in debt, who the hell is actually lending them the money? Sounds like a riddle, right? But here's where it gets wild—the answer isn't some mysterious foreign power or shadowy creditor. It's us. All of us.
Let me break this down because once you see it, you can't unsee it. Take the US with its $38 trillion federal debt. You'd think foreign investors are the main creditors, but nope. The biggest lender? The Federal Reserve itself. The government literally owes money to its own central bank. Th
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Been looking into solar franchise opportunities lately and stumbled on some interesting options in India. The market for renewable energy is actually crazy right now—electricity costs keep going up and more people want solar installations. Honestly, if you're thinking about starting something with decent profit potential and low initial investment, the solar business seems legit.
Green Energy Seva keeps popping up when I research the best solar franchise in india options. They're based in Mumbai and seem to have decent infrastructure—technical support, quality products, the usual franchise mod
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Been diving into the retail tech space lately, and honestly, the landscape has shifted dramatically. What strikes me most is how far we've come from the days when a basic ecommerce site was enough. Today's retailers are dealing with something way more complex – inventory that needs to sync across channels, POS systems talking to accounting, loyalty platforms connected to real customer data. It's all interconnected now.
The companies doing serious work in software application development services aren't just building pretty checkout pages. They're solving actual operational headaches. I've seen
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I encountered the same problem with my Samsung Galaxy A05s. The phone started freezing less than a year after purchase. At first, I thought it was random, but after observing closely, I noticed a clear pattern: apps wouldn’t open, or responded very slowly, sometimes the phone would ring but the caller’s name wouldn’t display, and the screen would freeze as if the buttons weren’t working. I was just standing there, unsure of what to do.
After dealing with this issue for a while, I realized that most Android phone freezes are caused by clear reasons—not because the device is broken or old. A few
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Just checked the latest NFT numbers and there's some wild movement happening. Buyer count literally doubled week over week—236k participants now—but here's the thing: total trades actually dropped 31%. More people buying, more people selling, but fewer overall transactions. That tells me average deal sizes are getting bigger and people are being pickier about what they grab.
Ethereum's still holding strong with $8.69M in weekly sales, up 21%. Bitcoin's cooling off though, down 34% despite attracting more buyers. But Polygon? That's the story. Saw an 800% jump driven almost entirely by the Cour
ETH-0,4%
BTC0,23%
SOL0,17%
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Just caught wind of something interesting happening in South Korea's crypto policy space. The opposition parties over there just dropped a new bill to completely scrap the cryptocurrency tax plan that was supposed to kick in by 2027. Honestly, this feels like a direct response to how broken the original proposal looked to most people.
Here's the thing - their current plan was to hit crypto investment gains with a 22% tax rate, but here's where it gets wild: stock investment gains get a complete pass from income tax. You can see why crypto investors are losing it over this. It's basically sayin
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Been watching USD/CAD bounce around 1.3675 this week and there's some interesting stuff going on beneath the surface. The Loonie's been holding up pretty well despite all the policy uncertainty down south, mainly because traders are pricing in what could be a bigger rate divergence play.
So here's what caught my eye: the market's been waiting on Canada's Q4 GDP numbers and US PPI data dropping later in the session. Meanwhile, Trump's tariff situation is still a total wild card - that Supreme Court ruling last week basically said his emergency powers don't automatically cover his import tax pla
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Just finished reading through some investigative pieces on what went down in late February around Operation Epic Fury, and honestly, the whole thing reads like a masterclass in how modern warfare actually works now—except nobody's really talking about the infrastructure underneath.
Here's what struck me: this wasn't just another military operation. It was basically an AI stress test in a live war zone. The entire thing hinged on compressing what military people call the sensor-decision-shooter loop into minutes, sometimes seconds. Whoever cracks that compression owns the next decade of geopoli
EPIC0,46%
SAAS-2,71%
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