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Bitcoin Smashes $75,500 Barrier: Institutional Supply Shock Ignites New Bull Phase
Bitcoin touched a high of $75,921 on Monday, up 4.51% over the previous day and at its highest level in more than 40 days. The action rekindles discussion over whether the flagship cryptocurrency has completed its cycle bottom and started a new accumulation period led by institutional money. The move continues a rebound that has now reached 22.5% from February’s low of $60,000. chart The most obvious factor contributing to Bitcoin’s comeback is a structural change in the buyers and their level of aggressiveness. For the third week in a row, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net inflows of $763–$767 million last ... (full story)
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From financefeeds.com|Mar 16, 2026Metaplanet has raised about $255 million through a private placement with institutional investors, providing fresh capital for additional Bitcoin purchases as the Japanese firm ...
From rba.gov.au|Mar 16, 2026|17 commentsAt its meeting today, the Board decided to increase the cash rate target by 25 basis points to 4.10 per cent. While inflation has fallen substantially since its peak in 2022, it picked up materially in the second half of 2025. Information since the February meeting suggests that some of the increase in inflation reflects greater capacity pressures. In addition, the conflict in the Middle East has resulted in sharply higher fuel prices, which, if sustained, will add to inflation. Short-term measures of inflation expectations have already risen. As a result, the Board judged that there is a material risk that inflation will remain above target for longer than previously anticipated. Higher capacity pressures reflect, in part, the greater momentum in demand in the latter part of 2025. Growth in private demand strengthened substantially more than was expected in mid-2025, although the composition of that growth surprised in the December quarter. Business investment was above expectations and consumption was below expectations. Meanwhile, growth in unit labour costs declined. More recently, the unemployment rate has been a little lower than expected and measures of labour underutilisation remain at low rates. Activity and prices in the housing market grew strongly over the past year, although housing price growth moderated somewhat at the start of 2026. Financial conditions have tightened a little this year, but the extent to which monetary policy is restrictive is uncertain. Credit is readily available to both households and businesses and the effects of interest rate reductions in 2025 are yet to flow through fully to aggregate demand, prices and wages. The exchange rate, money market interest rates and government bond yields have risen over the past month. In large part, higher interest rates reflect expectations for the path of monetary policy, which have risen in Australia and most other advanced economies in response to the expected inflationary implications of the conflict in the Middle East. There are material uncertainties about the outlook for domestic economic activity and inflation and the extent to which monetary policy is restrictive. Globally, the conflict in the Middle East poses substantial risks in both directions. A longer or more severe conflict could put further upward pressure on global energy prices; this will push up near-term inflation and could also increase inflation further out if it impairs supply capacity or price rises get built into longer term inflation expectations. Higher prices and prolonged uncertainty may cause growth to be lower in Australia’s major trading partners and also in Australia. Just in | RBA Reports Significant Decline in Inflation Since 2022 Peak, Yet Notable Increase Observed in Second Half of 2025. Just in | RBA Reports Slight Tightening of Financial Conditions, Uncertainty Remains Over Monetary Policy's Restrictiveness. Reserve Bank of Australia: The ongoing conflict in the Middle East has driven fuel prices sharply higher, which could further boost inflation if sustained. Reserve Bank of Australia: The Board concluded that inflation is likely to remain above target for some time, with risks increasingly tilted to the upside.
From cnbc.com|Mar 16, 2026|2 commentsAustralia’s central bank on Tuesday raised benchmark policy rates for a second straight time, pushing them to their highest since April 2025 at 4.1%. The 25 basis points hike was ...
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