Really wish I would've grabbed more Luna.
Wanted to get in when it bottomed out at 0.0000040 but of course all the exchanges stopped it from being traded
Got in for $200 at 0.000054
Damn it hit 0.0000040 and now it’s 0.00018

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Really wish I would've grabbed more Luna.
Wanted to get in when it bottomed out at 0.0000040 but of course all the exchanges stopped it from being traded
Got in for $200 at 0.000054
We just had one with luna... People made out good last weekend.i need a good run by the end of the year.
We just had one with luna... People made out good last weekend.
Start one and I’ll join.Would you guys consider starting a discord to make this easier to follow share amongst the fellas? We could have a stocks, crypto, options channels all on one server.
I'm convinced the powers that be want to drive the price of BTC down to $10k to shake lose all weak hands and swoop in buy up all they can.Im surprised nobody is getting it.
this is a DEFINING moment..
WAR has officially been waged on crypto.. I mean its been waged
years ago, but the plan is in effect..
They are going to throw everything they have..
now all of a sudden the creator of luna
is a felon tax evader, trying to put that criminal element in there..
Its going to be very very interesting to see if Luna turns into
Cryptos Gamestop/AMC battle coin...
stock investors peeped game quick and reacted with their own strategy...
the crypto community's response is going to be interesting..
You gotta really watch this Luna case.
it is the DEFINING moment in crypto!!
Man, it's the same shit. Same damn game. Psychology. Most people ain't meant to make it. War ain't really on crypto. The war is to shake people out of crypto(especially BTC) and stocks. Rich to get richer.Im surprised nobody is getting it.
this is a DEFINING moment..
WAR has officially been waged on crypto.. I mean its been waged
years ago, but the plan is in effect..
They are going to throw everything they have..
now all of a sudden the creator of luna
is a felon tax evader, trying to put that criminal element in there..
Its going to be very very interesting to see if Luna turns into
Cryptos Gamestop/AMC battle coin...
stock investors peeped game quick and reacted with their own strategy...
the crypto community's response is going to be interesting..
You gotta really watch this Luna case.
it is the DEFINING moment in crypto!!
Man, it's the same shit. Same damn game. Psychology. Most people ain't meant to make it. War ain't really on crypto. The war is to shake people out of crypto(especially BTC) and stocks. Rich to get richer.
The gamestop/amc/robinhood shit was telling. Meme coin bullshit. Diamond hand nonsense. Damn near every crypto influencer has had their reps ruined. It's why I said that retail would have to see MAX pain. Can't be regular pain, because retail thought the game was figured out. Us peasants have to be put in our places. The wise among us recognized that there was an epic bitch slap coming.
I don't feel this is a defining moment for crypto. It's a defining moment for retail. Most will be broken by the REAL economy fucking up along with the fugazi(markets) fucking up. They ain't built for this shit. Keep catching falling knives and we ain't even hit the job cutting phase yet. It's literally in the charts that they trying to catch falling knives because they think they got the game figured. Rich can't have that.
Regulations are only meant to hinder retail investors and keep them from making it. So in short, everything is going according to plan.
We still circle back to my point: crypto regulations to keep retail poor. It's the same song and dance. And that's during/after capitulation. They will useHey trust me.. Its a defining moment for crypto,
and as Im doing research.. bruh bruh bruh..
looks like this shit has something to do with
billionaires, the democratic party,
and the Trump campaign..
Somebody is going after Trumps biggest backer
and it must be this guy Oleg deripaska...
the russian oligarch..
seems like the bulk of his money was tied in Luna,
and he was running a company called Luna Services..
bruh this IS A DEFINING MOMENT IN CRYPTO bruh...
had nothing to do with retail.. and everything to do
with democrats and central bankers linking up
to stop, trump and crypto. dont give a fuck bout any
fuckin politician just keep yo tentacles out of my pockets..
Crypto makes that possible..
man get a whiff of this shit..
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FBI raid of homes tied to Russian oligarch follows multimillion-dollar foreign influence effort
FBI searches of property tied to Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska follows his companies' multimillion-dollar foreign influence efforts.www.opensecrets.org
Interesting analysis. Too many poor people getting over so they have to shake the tree a bit. The money interest want to get rid of or control cryptocurrency because it will work outside if it plan economic crash. I will keep up on this thread.We still circle back to my point: crypto regulations to keep retail poor. It's the same song and dance. And that's during/after capitulation. They will use"russia", the mean twitter man, environment, Canadian truckers, luna etc to regulate crypto/stablecoins. Hell, the math on Luna was called out a long time ago. Receipts all on the Internet. Regular screennames on reddit called out an attack plan for it.
Now, a lot of things are going on at once. You're right about that. Corrupt folks doing their usual corrupt shit.
Speaking of folks getting put in check, when El Salvador did what they did with BTC and the IMF was told to go fuck itself, it kind of told me shit was going to be brutal without a blowoff top. I'm pretty sure I mentioned it here. Shit made me nervous for the bullrun. Imagine the messaging had BTC had a blow off top. IMF is just the Chris and Snoop for the U.S. And guess who is going to corner BTC?
A lot of moving pieces, but it all comes down to retail getting max pain. El salvador and others getting taught lessons? We feel it. Corrupt parties attacking other corrupt parties? Guess who feels the most pain eventually. Retail investors just have to not get stepped on while Godzilla, King Kong, Mothra and them fighting.
As we said years ago, self-custody will be under attack. All the 'freedom' aspects under attack. We knew that. But first, max pain. Crypto(much like stocks) will still be a great tool for speculation and getting wealthy. Nothing is changing in a debt-bases system. Just people getting washed out and fear mongering for regulation.
$LUNA flying on the dead cat bounce
We have talked a few times recently about Terra, the blockchain ecosystem whose algorithmic stablecoin blew up earlier this month. One model of Terra goes like this:A proposal by the founder of the troubled Terra ecosystem to salvage the project was approved, averting a total collapse of one of the most-watched experiments in decentralized finance.
Under Do Kwon’s newly approved structure, the original blockchain will be known as Terra Classic, while its native token Luna, which plunged close to zero this month, will be renamed Luna Classic with the ticker LUNC. The new Terra blockchain will start running a coin under the existing Luna name and ticker, and won’t include the TerraUSD stablecoin
Terra’s unraveling, which started earlier this month with the implosion of the algorithmic stablecoin Kwon had touted relentlessly, marked one of the biggest busts in the crypto industry’s history. While the outcome of Wednesday’s vote represents a victory of sorts for Kwon and his supporters, doubts persist about whether Terra can ultimately be revived.
The process means Terraform Labs is effectively abandoning the stablecoin TerraUSD, or UST, which from now on will only trade on the Terra Classic blockchain. Designed to maintain a 1-to-1 peg to the dollar, it traded at around 10 cents on Wednesday.
It is worth thinking about why traditional finance works this way. In traditional finance, “debt” is a well-established concept, and “equity” is a well-established concept, and it is well-established that debt is safer than equity. And so it is relatively easy for companies to borrow: Lenders know that they will get paid back first in a bankruptcy, so they are willing to lend to well-capitalized companies at moderate interest rates. The priority rule of bankruptcy supports the debt market; it gives people more confidence in lending to companies, which makes it cheaper for companies to borrow.From a restructuring lawyer perspective, I would say that the $UST allocation is too low. $UST represents debt of the current ecosystem and according pre-attack $LUNA holders an equal part of the nLUNA pie is inequitable as $LUNA holders are proxy equity bearing de-peg risk.
Nonetheless I accept that as a matter of practicality (both in terms of Web3 and the powers that need to be appeased), this is probably necessary.
New Terra will need buy-in from the same funds that got completely wiped out by the de-peg. It is what it is.
And while we speak of debt and equity, theoretically New Terra can completely wipe out $UST given this is a web3 protocol and not bound by standard insolvency law payments waterfalls. The reason they can't do so is obviously a matter of legitimacy.
In tradfi, I would expect to see the UST debtholders completely wipe out $LUNA bagholders, or at least hold a senior instrument. Given the above considerations, this isn't the case here and probably for good reason.
In broad outlines, some holders of UST got paid roughly $1 for their UST out of the LFG money, and some did not and held through the collapse. If you are a suspicious person, you might ask questions like “wait, were certain favored insiders cashed out at $1 while other retail bagholders got nothing?” But if you are a traditional finance person, you might ask simpler questions like “why should anyone have been cashed out at $1 when there clearly wasn’t enough money to go around?”The collapse of the cryptocurrency TerraUSD has traders wondering what happened to the $3 billion war chest meant to defend it.
TerraUSD is a stablecoin, meaning that it is supposed to keep its value steady at $1. But after a crash earlier this month, the coin is worth only 6 cents.
In roughly two days earlier this month, a nonprofit foundation backing TerraUSD deployed nearly all of its bitcoin reserves in an effort to help it regain its typical level of $1, according to an analysis by Elliptic Enterprises Ltd., a cryptocurrency risk-management company. Despite the massive deployment, TerraUSD deviated further from its intended value. ...
The Luna Foundation Guard said that on May 8, as the price of TerraUSD began to drop, it began converting reserve assets into the stablecoin. In theory, selling bitcoin and other reserves could have helped stabilize TerraUSD by creating demand for the asset as a way to reinvigorate faith. This is similar to how central banks defend their falling local currency, by selling currencies issued by other countries and buying their own.
The foundation said it transferred bitcoin reserves to another counterparty, enabling them to enter into large trades with the foundation. In total, it sent over 50,000 bitcoins, about 5,000 of which were returned, for about 1.5 billion of the TerraUSD stablecoins. It also sold all of its tether and USDC stablecoin reserves for 50 million TerraUSD.
When that failed to support the $1 peg, the foundation said that Terraform sold about 33,000 bitcoins on behalf of the foundation on May 10 in a last-ditch effort to bring the stablecoin back to $1. In return, it got about 1.1 billion TerraUSD. …
Despite the foundation’s timeline, the inherent lack of transparency has caused investor concerns about how the funds were used among some traders.
That does seem to be the general reaction to these pleas: Sure yes of course Glencore paid a bunch of bribes to various government agencies to win business, but now that it has written a check to the US government, it doesn’t have to worry about the bribes anymore, so it’s good for business. The stock went up.Glencore Plc admitted to bribery and market manipulation and said it will pay about $1.5 billion to settle US, UK and Brazilian probes that have hung over the commodities giant for years.
The settlements will help remove a question mark that has long overshadowed the trader’s business. But the charges and admissions of guilt paint a damning, globe-spanning picture of how far the company, founded by U.S. fugitive Marc Rich, has been willing to go in pursuit of profit.
Glencore units agreed to plead guilty to a list of charges that range from bribery and corruption in South America and Africa, to price manipulation in US fuel-oil markets. …
“It’s a good day for them to finally get this done because it’s been hanging over them for a while,” said Ben Davis, a mining analyst at Liberum Capital. “It at least allows them to start to move forward.”
We talk occasionally around here about euphemisms for bribes. My general view is that the terms in these invoices — “marketing services,” “commission,” etc. — are the good euphemisms; you want to be able to say “what, no, we hired an agent to help us find business, and we paid that agent a commission, nothing bribe-y about it,” even if the agent helped you find the business by putting the “commission” in a sack and delivering it to the local Minister of Oil. Whereas the terms in their informal communications — “newspapers,” “chocolates” — are the bad euphemisms; you don’t want to go to trial and have a prosecutor read an email back to you and ask “when you said ‘we have to get 5 million chocolates for the local Oil Minister,’ what sort of chocolates were you referring to?” “Chocolates” might sound cool to you, but it looks really bad to a prosecutor. Whereas if you say in an email “we need to hire a local adviser and pay a $5 million commission” then that sounds defensible! And means “bribe”! The idea is that if you are going to talk about bribes you should try to do it without snickering, because then later you can say “what no those weren’t bribes they were commissions” and maybe a jury will believe you.At various times during the Relevant Period and the Charging Period, Glencore, by and through its traders and agents, made corrupt payments to employees and agents working at SOEs of Brazil, Cameroon, Nigeria, and Venezuela. Glencore or its affiliates made the corrupt payments in exchange for improper preferential treatment and access to trades with the SOEs. Glencore’s conduct was designed to increase Glencore’s profits from certain physical and derivatives trading in oil markets around the world, including U.S. physical and derivatives markets. … The corrupt conduct was widespread within Glencore’s oil business, and supervisors were aware of and at times directly involved in the corruption.
To conceal the corruption, the corrupt payments at times were in large amounts of cash, and in some instances, corrupt payments also were invoiced through third-party companies, with deceptive invoices to Glencore for euphemistic costs or services such as “advance payment,” “marketing services,” or “commission.” Glencore traders and intermediaries at times used coded language such as “filings,” “newspapers,” or “chocolates” when referring to the corrupt payments.
If you have agreed to sell 40,000 metric tons of fuel oil at a spread to the Platts benchmark, and you can push up the benchmark by submitting high bids during the trading window and maybe buying a few thousand tons of oil at inflated prices, that’s a good trade: You lose money on your window trades by paying inflated prices, but you make money on your cargo trade by receiving the inflated price, and as long as your cargo trades are bigger than the window trades — as long as the “off-exchange” market is bigger than the “on-exchange” one — you make a profit overall.During the Relevant Period, Platts generally determined the benchmarks for a given day based primarily on bids to purchase, offers to sell, and trades in the relevant product during a defined period of time called the “window” that Platts-authorized market participants reported to Platts, and which Platts then widely reported to subscribers. ...
Glencore’s physical trading activities included, among other things, large-quantity trades, sometimes called “cargos,” of fuel oil. … Among the cargo trades engaged in by Glencore were numerous cargo trades with a Mexico-based SOE (the “Cargo Trades”), including those for delivery to and from the Los Angeles market. ...
During the Relevant Period, more than approximately 100 Cargo Trades with the SOE were priced by reference to the Platts Los Angeles Bunker Benchmark. The price of the Cargo Trades was determined by the average of the daily benchmark price on specified days (“Cargo Pricing Days”), plus or minus a specified dollar amount negotiated by the parties. ... On Cargo Pricing Days, Glencore’s trading positions generally had significant price exposure to the Los Angeles Bunker Benchmark. When the Cargo Trades were sales by Glencore to the SOE, Glencore’s Cargo Trade position would be more profitable if the average Los Angeles Bunker Benchmark on the Cargo Pricing Days was higher: if the Los Angeles Bunker Benchmark rose, Glencore would sell to the SOE at a higher price. Conversely, when the Cargo Trades were purchases by Glencore from the SOE, Glencore’s Cargo Trade positions would be more profitable if the average Los Angeles Bunker Benchmark on the Cargo Pricing Days was lower: if the Los Angeles Bunker Benchmark fell, Glencore would buy from the SOE at a lower price. …
During the Relevant Period, on hundreds of occasions, Glencore manipulated or attempted to manipulate the Los Angeles Bunker Benchmark ... in order to increase Glencore’s profits (or reduce losses) from its derivatives and physical trades that priced by reference to the benchmark. Such trading conduct was a regular practice at Glencore, and supervisors were aware of and at times directly involved in the conduct. ... Typically, in furtherance of the manipulation, Glencore submitted generally increasing bids or generally decreasing offers to Platts during the trading window, which Platts then reported to its subscribers. In addition, Glencore personnel at times conveyed misleadingly incomplete, “cherrypicked,” or inaccurate information to Platts outside the window, such as information regarding Glencore personnel’s purported views of the market conditions or of supply and demand, knowing that such information could and did influence Platts’s assessment.
What a stroke of luck! If someone hadn’t stolen his ape he’d have to make the show. It would be funny if the liability to make the show went with the ape, like, if the anonymous teen or whoever who tricked Green into giving up his ape (or the subsequent purchaser) now has to write and star in the show. I would probably watch that. No, no, just kidding, I would never watch a Bored Ape show for any reason. Anyway I don’t think intellectual-property law works like … any of this … but I also don’t care. 3 If Seth Green wants to not make a Bored Ape comedy then that’s fine, the system worked.On Saturday, [actor Seth] Green teased a trailer for White Horse Tavern at the NFT conference VeeCon. A twee comedy, the show seems to be based on the question, “What if your friendly neighborhood bartender was Bored Ape Yacht Club #8398?” In an interview with entrepreneur and crypto hype man Gary Vaynerchuk, Green said he wanted to imagine a universe where “it doesn't matter what you look like, what only matters is your attitude.”
Unfortunately for Green, what also matters is copyright law. And when the actor’s NFT collection was pilfered by a scammer in early May, he lost the commercial rights to his show’s cartoon protagonist, a scruffy Bored Ape named Fred Simian, whose likeness and usage rights now belong to someone else.
“I bought that ape in July 2021, and have spent the last several months developing and exploiting the IP to make it into the star of this show,” Green told Vaynerchuk. “Then days before — his name is Fred by the way — days before he’s set to make his world debut, he’s literally kidnapped.” Green did not respond to a tweet from BuzzFeed News regarding the show.
I Just got this email$LUNA flying on the dead cat bounce
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