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Bitcoin looked like a stablecoin compared to the U.S. Dollar Index on Oct. 4, with BTC price levels of interest close to the spot price. 2447 Total views 17 Total shares Listen to article 0:00 Market Update Join us on social networksBitcoin (BTC) stayed glued to $27,500 at the Oct. 4 Wall Street open as attention continued to focus on rampant United States yields.BTC/USD 1-hour chart. Source: TradingViewAnalysis: $27,000 now key for BTC price

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView showed a calm day for BTC price action while U.S. dollar volatility ruled.

After its own spate of hectic trading to start the week, Bitcoin was once more seeking direction, with market observers marking out key price points.

Popular trader Skew flagged market takers selling toward $27,600, lending importance to this price level reclaim.

Get that reclaim & decent pop will come, he predicted in part of an analysis on X (formerly Twitter) on Oct. 4.

$BTC
takers selling into $27.6K

adds importance to this price level reclaim

Get that reclaim & decent pop will come

note coinbase CVD (actual buyer led price into $27.6K) pic.twitter.com/Jr6MDb7ru1 Skew ? (@52kskew) October 4, 2023

Fellow trader Crypto Tony additionally highlighted $27,000 as the line in the sand to the downside.

$BTC / $USD – Update

Holding that $27,000 low, so i remain long for the time being and would be shorting if we lose this low here, or pump up and reject hard as suggested on chart below pic.twitter.com/bSDjWWaJEU Crypto Tony (@CryptoTony__) October 4, 2023

Updating his own trading strategy, meanwhile, trader Mark Cullen likewise emphasized $27,000 holding as support.

Bitcoin getting a reaction from its first attempt into my zone & a tap of the break out trendline, hestatedin accompanying commentary. Market conditions in Tradfi aren’t great so pressure’s down. Lets see if BTC can hold this area for a while longer, until other markets stabilize. Holding 27k is key for $BTC!BTC/USD annotated chart. Source: Mark Cullen/XBitcoin bides its time as dollar sees sharp retrace

As Cullen and others explained, the mood on legacy markets was decidedly less stable than Bitcoin on Oct. 4.

Related:Bitcoin analysts still predict a BTC price crash to $20K

This came thanks to U.S. 30-year bond yields surging to 16-year highs something which got commentators wary of a potential meltdown to come.

Skew suggested that this angst over how macro forces would play out was responsible for the lack of significant BTC trading volume.

Not much besides dipping toes in the water kind of bid other than that its perps mostly buying, another X post stated earlier.Market is likely trying to digest everything that is going on terms of risk parameters and exposure. Many are capitulating to cash imo under market distress.

U.S. dollar strength delivered upheaval of its own prior to the Wall Street open, with the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) swiftly dropping from levels not seen since Q4 last year.

As has beencustomary in recent times, BTC/USD continued to shake off snap DXY moves.U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) 1-hour chart. Source: TradingView

Commenting on the situation, Sven Henrich, founder of NorthmanTrader, showed that long-term DXY chart performance was behaving as expected.

Amid all the chaos & volatility one amazingly consistent clean chart: The US dollar respecting the channel trend lines, he told X followers.Negative divergence on recent highs at top of the channel. What happens with this will likely be one of the key market drivers for the rest of the year.U.S. dollar index (DXY) chart. Source: Sven Henrich/X

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision. # Bitcoin # Dollar # Bitcoin Price # Markets

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Salman Rushdie on Charlie Kirk’s murder, surviving his own assassination attempt – and AI

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Salman Rushdie on Charlie Kirk's murder, surviving his own assassination attempt - and AI

Sir Salman Rushdie has told Sky News that Charlie Kirk’s murder was a “consequence of US gun culture”.

In an interview with Sky News lead presenter Wilfred Frost, Sir Salman said he thought the assassination of Mr Kirk, a conservative US activist, was an “appalling act of violence”.

“But it seems to me to be a characteristic or a consequence of America’s terrifying gun culture,” said the Booker-prize-winning author, who survived an attempt on his life at the Chautauqua Institution in New York in 2022.

“When you have a situation where there are more guns in private ownership than there are people in the country, I mean, guns are everywhere.

“When children are brought up being taught by their parents how to use guns, and guns are being left in the home in unlocked cabinets, it’s a country in which violent gun-related crime happens almost every day. And this is one of the most brutal examples of it.”

Sir Salman being interviewed by Sky News lead presenter Wilfred Frost
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Sir Salman being interviewed by Sky News lead presenter Wilfred Frost

The Indian-British author also addressed the attempted assassination of US President Donald Trump, saying: “Well, I guess I’m happy that it failed. Beyond that, I don’t have a lot to say about it.”

Sir Salman was attacked by Hadi Matar, who stabbed him in the head, neck, torso and left hand, leaving him with damage to his liver and intestines as well as blind in one eye. Matar was jailed for 25 years in May.

More on Mornings With Ridge And Frost

He wrote about the attack and his recovery in his 2024 memoir Knife. His new book, Eleventh Hour, is a return to fiction.

Sir Salman Rushdie says Charlie Kirk's assassination was a 'consequence' of US gun culture
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Sir Salman Rushdie says Charlie Kirk’s assassination was a ‘consequence’ of US gun culture

Discussing the book and writing in general, he suggested that he doesn’t think AI would be able to capture emotion, humour and creativity like humans can.

Read more from Sky News:
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“The couple of little experiments that I’ve carried out with AI suggest to me that at least this far, it doesn’t have a sense of humour. And it’s not original,” he said.

“What it can do is to duplicate things that have been fed into it. But good art is original, and I don’t think that AI has an original bone in its body.”

Watch the full interview, including Sir Salman’s comments on book bans and freedom of speech in the US, during Mornings with Ridge and Frost on Sky News.

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Rescue efforts continue across south of Asia as floods death toll climbs

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Rescue efforts continue across south of Asia as floods death toll climbs

Rescue and recovery and efforts are underway in parts of South and Southeast Asia where the number of those killed in devastating flooding continues to rise.

The extreme weather last week has killed at least 334 people in Sri Lanka, 502 in Indonesia, and 170 in Thailand, according to authorities.

Rescuers in Sri Lanka are still searching for 370 people after a cyclone hit the island nation, with downpours flooding homes, fields and roads and triggering landslides in the hilly central region.

Landslides in Sarasavigama village near Kandy, Sri Lanka. Pic: AP
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Landslides in Sarasavigama village near Kandy, Sri Lanka. Pic: AP

A man wades through the flooded street, following heavy rainfall in Wellampitiya, Sri Lanka. Pic: Reuters
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A man wades through the flooded street, following heavy rainfall in Wellampitiya, Sri Lanka. Pic: Reuters

A man uses a makeshift raft at a flooded area, following Cyclone Ditwah in Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. Pic: Reuters
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A man uses a makeshift raft at a flooded area, following Cyclone Ditwah in Kelaniya, Sri Lanka. Pic: Reuters

Nearly a million people have been impacted by the heavy rains and floods, which forced nearly 200,000 into shelters, the country’s disaster management centre said.

People were seen salvaging belongings from flooded homes along the banks of the Kelani river near capital Colombo on Monday.

Meanwhile, train and flight services have resumed after being disrupted last week, but schools stayed closed, officials said.

Cyclone Ditwah was the “largest and most challenging” natural disaster in Sri Lanka’s history, President Anura Kumara Dissanayake said.

More on Extreme Weather

A landslide survivor crosses a section of a damaged road in Sarasavigama village near Kandy, Sri Lanka. Pic: AP
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A landslide survivor crosses a section of a damaged road in Sarasavigama village near Kandy, Sri Lanka. Pic: AP

Landslide survivors salvage belongings at the site of a landslide in Sarasavigama village near Kandy, Sri Lanka. Pic: AP
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Landslide survivors salvage belongings at the site of a landslide in Sarasavigama village near Kandy, Sri Lanka. Pic: AP

A man uses his scarf to protect himself from the rain in the aftermath of Cyclone Ditwah, in Chennai, India. Pic: Reuters
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A man uses his scarf to protect himself from the rain in the aftermath of Cyclone Ditwah, in Chennai, India. Pic: Reuters

The cyclone also brought heavy rain to India’s southern state of Tamil Nadu over the weekend, with authorities saying three people were killed in rain-related incidents.

The storm, which is currently 50km (30 miles) off the coast of the state capital Chennai, has already weakened into a “deep depression” and is expected to weaken further in the next 12 hours, weather officials said on Monday.

Hundreds still missing in Indonesia

In Southeast Asia, close to 700 people were killed as two different cyclones hit the region. Rescuers in Indonesia are still searching for at least 508 people missing, according to official figures.

People have started clearing mud, trees and wreckage from roads on the weekend as recovery operations continued.

More than 28,000 homes have been damaged, with 1.4 million people affected by the rare tropical storm.

The country’s president, Prabowo Subianto, called it a catastrophe and pledged to rebuild infrastructure as he visited the three affected provinces on Monday, where nearly 300,000 people have been displaced by the flooding.

Rescuers search for flood victims in Tanah Datar, West Sumatra, Indonesia. Pic: AP
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Rescuers search for flood victims in Tanah Datar, West Sumatra, Indonesia. Pic: AP

A flooded field in Indonesia's West Sumatra province. Pic: Reuters
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A flooded field in Indonesia’s West Sumatra province. Pic: Reuters

Rescuers search for victims at a village affected by flash flooding, in Agam, West Sumatra, Indonesia. Pic: AP
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Rescuers search for victims at a village affected by flash flooding, in Agam, West Sumatra, Indonesia. Pic: AP

In Thailand, flooding in eight southern provinces affected about three million people and led to a major mobilisation of its military to evacuate critical patients from hospitals and reach people stuck in floodwaters for days.

In the worst-affected city of Hat Yai, a southern trading hub, 335 mm (13 inches) of rain fell on 21 November, its highest single-day tally in 300 years, followed by days of unrelenting downpours.

At least 82 people have died and more than 3 million people have been impacted by floods in 12 southern Thai provinces.
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At least 82 people have died and more than 3 million people have been impacted by floods in 12 southern Thai provinces.

People move a car damaged by floods in Songkhla province, southern Thailand. Pic: AP
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People move a car damaged by floods in Songkhla province, southern Thailand. Pic: AP

Prime Minister Anutin Charnivirakul expects residents to be able to return home within seven days, a government spokesperson said on Monday.

Read more from Sky News:
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The first batch of compensation payments is set to be distributed on Monday, starting with 239m baht (£5.6m) for 26,000 people, the spokesperson added.

In Malaysia there have been at least three deaths and authorities are still on alert for a second and third wave of flooding as 11,600 remain in evacuation centres.

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Intel stock holds 10% rise after analyst predicts major Apple deal

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Intel stock holds 10% rise after analyst predicts major Apple deal

Intel stock held a sharp hike in pretrading on Monday, after the stock surged on Friday when an analyst predicted the chip giant was nearing a deal to supply Apple in 2027. 

Shares in Intel rose 10% on Friday after TF International Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo posted on X that he expected Intel to begin shipping its lowest-end M processor to Apple as early as second or third quarter 2027. 

He said that his latest industry surveys indicate that “visibility on Intel becoming an advanced-node supplier to Apple has recently improved significantly.”

Intel stock fell 0.59% as of 6.26am ET on Monday in early pretrading.

Kuo added that the timeline of the partnership is contingent on the development process after Intel releases its process design kit — the blueprint from which Apple’s engineers can build the chips — which is expected early 2026.

Former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger on Google AI chips: Competition is good for all

Apple’s silicon chips for its iPhone, iPad and Mac products are currently supplied by TSMC.

In his post, Kuo played down the potential Intel-Apple partnership’s impact on the Taiwanese chip maker, saying that Apple is expected to remain “highly dependent” on the company’s advanced nodes for the “foreseeable future.”

“In absolute terms, order volumes for the lowest-end M processor are relatively small and virtually no material impact on TSMC’s fundamentals or its technology leadership over the next several years.”

Kuo added a deal with Intel would signal strong support from Apple for the Trump administration’s push for its homegrown companies to manufacture in the U.S.

Neither Intel nor Apple immediately responded to a request for comment from CNBC.

‘If Intel pulls it off, there is potential to win higher volume and value business from Apple’

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