
No More Digging for the Latest XRP News: All-in-One Source Is Finally Here
Staying informed with the latest XRP news today is everything. That's especially true for XRP – one of the most followed and hotly debated tokens in the digital asset space. Between market developments, legal battles, partnerships, and new listings, Ripple-related news can change direction within hours. But with so many sources and mixed signals, how can investors and enthusiasts reliably track what matters?
The answer lies in simplifying the noise.
Instead of jumping from site to site, monitoring X threads or filtering through Reddit speculations, there's now a dedicated place where XRP followers can find a real-time stream of reliable news, gathered from the most trusted crypto publications.
All the latest XRP insights, in one place
This new platform was built with one goal: deliver only the most relevant XRP headlines, as soon as they go live.
Pulling directly from top-tier sources like Cointelegraph, CoinDesk, Crypto.news, and Coinpaper.com, the site aggregates stories as they're published ensuring you're always one step ahead. Whether it's a price analysis, an update from the SEC case, or Ripple's newest partnership in Asia, it's covered.
And it's more than just a news feed. The platform is curated to surface content that XRP investors actually care about, with no clickbait, fluff, or off-topic noise.
Discover it for yourself.
Designed for XRP holders, traders, and researchers
Whether you're an investor, a journalist, or simply someone who believes in the future of Ripple, this resource is built for you. There's no need to create an account, download an app, or set up filters—it just works. Clean interface, fast updates, and a singular focus: XRP.
You can check it out here: xrptoday.news
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Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Asia Morning Briefing: BTC Reclaims 100K as Markets Shrug off Iran Strike
Welcome to Asia Morning Briefing, a daily summary of top stories during U.S. hours and an overview of market moves and analysis. For a detailed overview of U.S. markets, see CoinDesk's Crypto Daybook Americas. As Asia begins the trading week, BTC is trading above $100,500 as the initial volatility from news over the weekend that the U.S. struck some of Iran's nuclear facilities begins to subside. While prices briefly dipped below six figures on Sunday in a risk-off reaction, markets have since stabilized. Equity futures are flat, and gold is up only marginally, suggesting that traders are not yet pricing in a broader escalation. The lack of follow-through in traditional markets may reflect expectations that Iran's response will be contained or delayed, rather than immediate and destabilizing. Crude oil is holding its gains near $76 per barrel after spiking nearly 4% Sunday evening on fears that Iran could block the Strait of Hormuz, a key chokepoint for global oil shipments. Still, commentary from U.S. officials and muted early-week trading suggest that investors remain in a wait-and-see mode. In crypto markets, altcoins that had mirrored BTC's weekend drop, like ETH, XRP, and SOL, are also clawing back losses. For now, the market appears to be treating the U.S.-Iran clash as a geopolitical flashpoint, not a structural break. Crypto exchange OKX is considering a public listing in the U.S., according to a report from The Information. Earlier this year, the exchange announced a U.S. expansion after settling with the Department of Justice over accusations that it operated in the country without a money transmitter license. Among other crypto-linked companies, Bullish, a competitor to OKX and the parent company of CoinDesk, is also said to be considering an IPO given investors' appetite for companies with exposure to digital assets. OKX told CoinDesk it had no comment on the matter. Polymarket bettors are cooling to the idea that the U.S will hit Iran a second time before the end of the month. The 'yes' side of a contract asking if the U.S. will conduct another military action on Iran by June 30 is now trading at 54%, from 74% in the hours after the initial strike on Iranian nuclear sites. There appears to be a growing market belief that deconfliction – on both sides – is on the agenda, as evidenced by another contract asking bettors about the likelihood of Iran closing the Strait of Hormuz, which is currently trading at 49% down from 52%. BTC: Bitcoin rebounded to $101,419 after a volatile 4.5% intraday swing, finding strong support at $99,000 amid geopolitical tensions and surging institutional buying interest, according to CoinDesk Research's technical analysis data. ETH: Ethereum fell 2.3% to $2,237 amid U.S.-Iran tensions, breaking a six-week consolidation pattern despite over $500 million in institutional accumulation. Gold: Bank of America analysts predict gold could hit $4,000 an ounce within a year, an 18% jump, driven less by geopolitical tensions and more by mounting U.S. fiscal debt and a global shift by central banks away from the dollar toward gold. Nikkei 225: Asia-Pacific markets fell Monday as the U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites fueled oil price spikes and fears of broader Middle East escalation, with Japan's Nikkei 225 down 0.56%. Texas Governor Greg Abbott signs strategic Bitcoin reserve bill into law (The Block) Which Crypto IPOs Could Be Next Following Circle? (Decrypt) What Are Savvy Bitcoin and Ether Traders Preparing For as Summer Approaches? (CoinDesk)


Buzz Feed
7 hours ago
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17 Times Rich People Used Their Money To Say F**** You
There's nothing quite like a petty wealthy person, and these stories prove it. Recently, Redditor u/NeoAstral asked those in the Reddit community to share the best examples of "fuck you" money they've ever witnessed or experienced, and I can't believe some of these are real: "A family friend of ours owns a very successful national company. His wife's Jaguar was stolen out of their driveway; he'd noticed it at about 6 a.m. when he got up for work. He called the Jaguar dealer principal and had a new replacement car there by lunchtime in exactly the same color and trim. His wife apparently didn't notice until about four days later when the police turned up with what was left of her original Jaguar." —goss_bractor "The CEO of my company is actually a super solid guy. He hates one of our competitors so much that he bought a billboard right outside their office and kept our ad up until they changed locations." "I'm an employment and contract attorney. In my younger days, I was corporate counsel for a large hospital. We were in the midst of a fundraising campaign and were a few million dollars from our goal. We got a call from a wealthy, youngish guy who offered to cover the remainder, plus 10%, with two stipulations. He used to work at the hospital when he was younger and made it rich with a medical device company he started. He wanted a voting-member board seat and wanted to fire this vice president, who was his supervisor when he worked there and had made his life miserable. The vice president was the reason he'd quit and eventually created his own business." "Billionaire Howard Hughes reserved the top two floors of the Desert Inn in Las Vegas for 10 days. When his 10 days were up, the hotel asked him to check out. He wasn't ready to leave, so he bought the hotel and stayed there for four years." —SaucyFingers "My uncle made a bunch of money in investment banking. 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CNBC
7 hours ago
- CNBC
Bitcoin sinks below $99,000 as U.S. strikes on Iran trigger crypto market sell-off
Bitcoin fell to its lowest level since May over the weekend, as rising tensions in the Middle East and renewed inflation fears triggered a sharp selloff across digital assets. Bitcoin dropped below the $99,000 mark on Sunday — its lowest point in more than a month — as the crypto market became the first to react to escalating geopolitical risk. Bitcoin is trading around $99,380, down more than 2% over the past 24 hours, while ether has dropped 5% to below $2,200. Solana, XRP, and dogecoin also posted sharp losses, dragging the entire crypto complex deep into the red. The selloff appears to be a combination of geopolitical shock and macroeconomic concern. Iran has reportedly threatened to block the Strait of Hormuz — a vital shipping lane that handles about 20% of global oil supply. JPMorgan warns that a full closure could drive oil prices as high as $130 per barrel. One prominent macro research firm notes that such a spike could send U.S. inflation back toward 5% — a level not seen since March 2023, when the Fed was still actively raising rates. That outlook has traders reassessing the path of interest rates — and rotating out of speculative assets like crypto. While bitcoin is often pitched as an inflation hedge, it's currently behaving more like a high-beta tech stock. According to crypto data provider Kaiko, bitcoin's correlation with the tech-heavy Nasdaq has climbed sharply in recent weeks, after hitting a multi-month low earlier this year — a period that coincided with surging inflows into spot bitcoin ETFs. Institutional positioning also appears to have shifted. More than $1.04 billion flowed into spot bitcoin ETFs from Monday through Wednesday last week, according to data from CoinGlass. But those inflows collapsed heading into the weekend, with zero net movement Thursday and just $6.4 million on Friday — coinciding with President Donald Trump's early G7 departure and the announcement of a two-week review of U.S. options on Iran. The technical breakdown added fuel to the selloff. CoinGlass research shows bitcoin's drop below $99,000 triggered forced selling across offshore derivatives platforms like Binance and Bybit. At its peak on Sunday, more than $1 billion in crypto positions were liquidated during a 24-hour span — with over 95% coming from long bets, underscoring just how overexposed the market was heading into the weekend.