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If Bitcoin breaks $73,000, mainstream CEX total short liquidation volume will reach 429 million.

2 hours ago

**March 15th** Per Coinglass data: - If Bitcoin breaks above $73,000, total short liquidation intensity across major centralized exchanges (CEXs) will hit $429 million. - Conversely, if Bitcoin drops below $70,000, total long liquidation intensity across major CEXs will reach $459 million. **BlockBeats Note** Liquidation charts do NOT show the exact number or value of contracts being liquidated. The bars on these charts reflect how important each liquidation cluster is relative to adjacent clusters—they measure *intensity*, not raw volume. In short: The chart indicates how strongly hitting a specific price level will impact markets. A taller "liquidation bar" signals a more intense price reaction tied to a liquidity event.
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ShapeShift founder has spent 17.75 million USDT over the past 5 days to buy 8576 ETH

As of March 15, LookOnChain monitoring shows ShapeShift founder Erik Voorhees has spent 17.75 million USDT over the past five days to purchase 8,576 ETH at an average price of $2,069. One year ago, he sold 12,886 ETH at an average of $3,324, netting approximately $42.83 million. He currently holds 26.77 million USDT and may continue to increase his ETH holdings.

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Polymarket predicts a 40% chance of "Bitcoin Reaching $100,000 This Year."

March 15: Polymarket odds indicate the following probabilities for Bitcoin this year: - 40% chance it hits $100k - 76% chance it reaches $80k - 53% chance it climbs to $90k - 61% chance it falls to $50k (Note: Uses casual, American English-friendly shorthand like "$100k" instead of "$100,000" for brevity, which is common in financial/ crypto updates; date omits "th" for natural flow in quick updates.)

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The first batch of 86 million barrels of strategic crude oil in the United States will be released to the market using the borrow-and-repay premium model.

March 15 — The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) on March 13 issued a request for bids for crude oil allocations from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR). The first batch of 86 million barrels is expected to hit the market by the end of next weekend. Under the terms, participating companies must return the borrowed crude to the DOE plus an additional amount as a premium. The document notes this measure will both replenish the SPR and stabilize the market. The U.S. government also announced plans to replenish approximately 200 million barrels of the SPR over the next year to uphold U.S. energy security. Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) shows the SPR held 415.4 million barrels as of March 6. (Associated Press Finance)

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「Wood Sister」: It is currently a good time to buy high-volatility stocks, as AI has not yet entered the hype cycle

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Tom Lee: US Stocks May Have Bottomed This Month, Oil Price Rally Actually a Relative Positive for Stocks

On March 15th, Tom Lee—Chairman of Ethereum Treasury firm BitMine—told CNBC in an interview: “I think tech has held up pretty well overall, including software stocks. That makes sense to us, but I’ve got a bit of a counterintuitive take: rising oil prices are actually good for U.S. equities. One reason? The U.S. is a net oil producer. When people worry rising oil will drag on global growth, they gravitate toward growth stocks—and that pushes investors into U.S. markets, since the U.S. is essentially a ‘growth index’ itself, especially with the MAG-7 and software sectors leading. So the current market action checks out. I also think the market could be putting in a bottom this month.” “Private credit issues have been bubbling under the surface for a while—they’re just coming to light gradually now. But I don’t think this is as systemic a problem as the market fears. When problems pop up, people immediately jump to Lehman Brothers and the 2008 financial crisis—but there are key reas

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Gulf Stock Markets Slightly Down as US-Iran Conflict Enters Third Week

Most Gulf stock markets posted slight declines on Sunday, March 15. Saudi Arabia’s benchmark index dropped 0.8% at one point: Rajhi Bank fell 0.9%, while National Commercial Bank (Saudi Arabia’s largest lender) slipped 1.9%. The Qatar index closed down 0.5%, with Qatar National Bank (the region’s biggest lender) dropping 1.3%. Bahrain’s benchmark fell 0.3%, and Oman’s index declined 0.4%. The U.S.-Iran conflict has entered its third week. President Trump has threatened further strikes on Iran’s Kharg Island oil export hub, while Iran has vowed to intensify its response. Additionally, three sources familiar with the situation said the Trump administration rejected Middle Eastern allies’ efforts to launch diplomatic talks to end the U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict. Trump also called on allies to deploy warships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz—a critical global energy supply route. (Golden Finance)

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