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Major cryptocurrencies surged on Monday evening as Bitcoins price rally showed no signs of slowing down.CryptocurrencyGains +/-Price (Recorded 9:30 p.m. EST)Bitcoin BTC/USD +8.07%$68,681Ethereum ETH/USD +5.07%$3,659Dogecoin DOGE/USD +30.36%$0.19

What Happened: This led to BTC reaching a new all-time high market capitalization, reaching $1.33 trillion.

Bitcoins market capitalization has surged due to the inflow of funds into spot BTC exchange-traded funds (ETFs), the upcoming halving event, and growing investor interest in the cryptocurrency.

Bitcoins market cap has surged to an all-time high, spurring a surge in investor sentiment towards extreme greed, as indicated by the Crypto Fear & Greed index. On March 3, the level of greed peaked at 90, marking the highest point observed since Nov. 8, 2021.

BTC exceeded the $1.3 trillion market capitalization threshold and is swiftly approaching silvers market cap of $1.4 trillion.

In Mondays trading session, Bitcoin shorts experienced a squeezing effect, leading to the liquidation of approximately $250 million in leveraged bets, primarily shorts, as per CoinGlass data. Within the last 24 hours over 141,175 traders faced liquidation, resulting in a combined liquidation amount of $416.16 million. The most significant single liquidation order, amounting to $8.23 million in BTC-USDT value, occurred on Binance.

Top Gainer (24 Hour)CryptocurrencyGains +/-Price (Recorded 9:30 p.m. EDT)Shiba Inu SHIB/USD +107.66%$0.00004382eCash XEC/USD +82.61%$0.00007883BitTorrent BTT/USD +44.34%$0.000002019

The global cryptocurrency market cap now stands at $2.53 trillion, showing a 6.03% increase in the past 24 hours.

Stocks retreated on Monday, leading to the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite falling from their all-time highs, despite a surge in technology stocks associated with the artificial intelligence boom.

The S&P 500 slightly declined by 0.12% to 5,130.95, with the Nasdaq Composite slipping 0.41% to 16,207.51. Additionally, the Dow Jones Industrial Average concluded the session with a loss of 97.55 points, or 0.25%, finishing at 38,989.83.

This week, traders will eagerly seek hints about the future direction of interest rates from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. The highly anticipated monetary policy updates are slated for delivery to the House of Representatives on Wednesday and to the Senate on Thursday.

The ADP Employment Survey and January job openings data are set to be unveiled on Wednesday, offering additional clarity on the labor market. The manufacturing and nonfarm payrolls data for February are scheduled for release on Friday.

See More: Best Cryptocurrency ScannersLoading… Loading…

Analyst Notes: Cryptocurrency analyst Michael Van de Poppe said that Bitcoin is reaching a new yearly high, with the price edging closer to $65,000.

"I think were close to peaking on the price action and are going to consolidate -> correction to lead later this month/beginning April. Great movements, nonetheless."

Gracy Chen, Managing Director at Biget, in a note seen by Benzinga said, Bitcoin continues to rally, with the current price broken $67,000. We just need about a $2,000 surge to break the all-time high of $69,000. From the recent data on Bitcoin investors, comparatively it seems theyre less sensitive to price and generally see the halving event as bullish."

She adds, "So, if Bitcoin ETF keeps seeing strong net inflows this week, chances are high that we will hit a new all-time high soon. This has proven the resilience of decentralized assets and the value of decentralized ecosystems. Based on our analysis, Bitcoin could potentially hit $120,000 to $140,000 in this bull market cycle.

On-chain analyst Willy Woo predicts that Bitcoin has the potential to surge to a minimum of $125,000 this year, given the allocation of relatively conservative amounts of capital by financial giants BlackRock and Fidelity. According to Woo, a mere 3% rotation of assets to Bitcoin by the clients of these two firms could propel BTC to the $2.5 trillion market cap level.

"BTC price will go past $125k minimum before the end of 2025 just from Blackrock and Fidelity clients if they rotate 3% exposure to #Bitcoin.

Another on-chain analyst Ali Martinez said that the TD Sequential indicator has displayed a sell signal for Bitcoin on the 4-hour chart. The TD Sequential indicator is a technical analysis tool used in cryptocurrency trading to identify potential price exhaustion and reversal points based on a sequence of numbers on a price chart. It comprises a series of count-down and count-up sequences that signal buy or sell opportunities when certain criteria are met.

"Since February 15, every time this indicator suggested selling, the price of $BTC dropped by 1.5% to 4.7%. This trend is something short-term traders should watch closely!"

Photo by CMP_NZ on Shutterstock

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Larson miscue ends in crash at Indy 500 practice

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Larson miscue ends in crash at Indy 500 practice

INDIANAPOLIS — Kyle Larson experienced his first crash at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Thursday, the second day that Indianapolis 500 drivers participated in open testing on the 2.5-mile oval.

The 2021 NASCAR champion spun coming out of the first turn, hit the wall and bounced down to the warmup lane before tapping the wall a second time and eventually rolling to a stop.

Larson blamed himself, saying he forgot to hit the weight jacker going into the turn. But he also tried to find some positive from the incident.

“I’m happy to crash my first Indy car and live through it,” Larson said.

An Arrow McLaren official told The Indianapolis Star that Larson will not take part in the Thursday afternoon practice session due to the crash damage. The team decided not to rush the repairs, which would have left minimal practice time at best, the official said.

Larson is attempting to complete “the double” by racing in both the Indianapolis 500 and NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 on May 25. His first attempt was thwarted by a rain delay in the 2024 Indy 500 that saw him arrive to the NASCAR race just as that race was called off for weather.

He wasn’t the only familiar name to crash Thursday. Two-time Indianapolis 500 winner Takuma Sato crashed shortly after Larson, losing the back end of his car in the first turn and smacking the wall hard in the short chute before rolling to a stop.

“Lost it,” Sato said. “I simply lost it.”

Both drivers were checked at the infield hospital and released.

Graham Rahal also tapped the wall late in Wednesday’s practice.

Series officials added horsepower to the cars for the Thursday morning session as they test the IndyCar hybrid, which makes its IMS debut next month. An afternoon session without the boost closes out the two-day test.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Spire releases crew chief Childers after 9 races

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Spire releases crew chief Childers after 9 races

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Spire Motorsports has parted ways with championship-winning crew chief Rodney Childers after only nine races with the team.

Childers, one of the winningest active crew chiefs in the Cup Series, won the 2014 championship with Kevin Harvick at Stewart-Haas Racing. When that team closed at the end of last season, Childers moved to Spire to crew chief Justin Haley.

Through the first nine races, Haley is 23rd in the Cup standings. His best finish this year is 10th at Homestead, but Haley is coming off a 13th-place finish at Bristol, where he scored a season-high 13 stage points.

The decision to release Childers came after NASCAR’s only off weekend of the season. The team announced Thursday that Ryan Sparks, competition director and former crew chief, will be Haley’s crew chief for the rest of this season.

“NASCAR is an ever-evolving sport and the path to improvement isn’t always comfortable,” Spire Motorsports co-owner Jeff Dickerson said in a statement. “The break in the Cup Series schedule gave us a chance to evaluate where we are as a program. We took the opportunity to discuss the best paths forward for everyone involved and the team and Rodney agreed that it would be best for us to part ways.

“Rodney has worked at the highest level of our sport for 20 years, and he knows what it takes to win championships. With that in mind, we collectively acknowledged challenges with the team dynamic. Having the right combination of talent is just as important as the results on track. As we move in a new direction it is not lost on us that Rodney has been an invaluable asset to our organization, as he will continue to be for others in this sport.”

Childers addressed his departure on social media, writing: “I know this is a shock. But also know that not everything works out perfect all the time. That’s how life works. This was just one of those things that just wasn’t working for either of us. I appreciate my time at Spire, working with JH and the entire 7 team. We did a lot of good that is yet to be seen, and I wish them the best in the future.”

He said he would take some time off, focus on his family and “honestly just see what the racing world holds for me next.”

Childers is tied for second in wins among active crew chiefs. Childers and Adam Stevens each have 40 Cup wins. Paul Wolfe ranks first with 42 series victories.

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The hidden risk of updatable firmware

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The hidden risk of updatable firmware

The hidden risk of updatable firmware

Opinion by: Igor Zemtsov, chief technology officer at TBCC

Crypto security is a ticking time bomb. Updatable firmware might just be the match that lights the fuse.

Hardware wallets have become the holy grail of self-custody, the ultimate safeguard against hackers, scammers and even government overreach. There’s an inconvenient truth, however, that most people ignore: Firmware updates aren’t just security patches.Ā 

They’re potential backdoors, waiting for someone — whether a hacker, a rogue developer or a shady third party — to kick them wide open.

Every time a hardware wallet manufacturer pushes an update, users are forced to make a choice. Hit that update button and hope for the best, or refuse to update and risk using outdated software with unknown vulnerabilities. Either way, it’s a gamble.Ā 

In crypto, a bad gamble can mean waking up to an empty wallet.

Firmware updates aren’t always your friend

Updating firmware sounds like common sense. More security! Fewer bugs! Better user experience!

Here’s the thing: Every update is also an opportunity not just for the wallet provider but for anyone with the power, or motivation, to tamper with the process.

Hackers dream of firmware vulnerabilities. A rushed or poorly audited update can introduce tiny, almost imperceptible flaws — ones that sit in the background, waiting for the right moment to drain funds. And the best part? Users will never know what hit them.

Then there’s the more unsettling possibility: deliberate backdoors.

Recent: Hardware wallet Ledger helps competitor Trezor resolve security vulnerability

Tech companies have been forced to include government-mandated surveillance tools before. What makes anyone think hardware wallet makers are exempt? If a regulatory agency — or worse, a criminal organization — wants access to private keys, firmware updates are the perfect attack vector. One hidden function. One disguised line of code.Ā 

That’s all it takes. Still think firmware updates are harmless?Ā 

Firmware vulnerabilities are already being exploited

This isn’t some far-fetched, doomsday scenario. It has already happened.

Ledger, one of the biggest names in crypto security, had a major security crisis in 2018 when security researcher Saleem Rashid exposed a vulnerability that allowed attackers to replace Ledger Nano S firmware and hijack private keys. Nearly 1 million devices were at risk before a fix was rolled out. The scary part? There was no way for users to know if their devices had already been compromised.

In 2023, OneKey suffered a similar nightmare. White hat hackers demonstrated that its firmware could be cracked in mere seconds. No crypto was lost — this time. But what if real attackers had found the flaw first?

Then came the ā€œDark Skippyā€ exploit, taking firmware-based attacks to an entirely new level. With just two signed transactions, hackers could extract a user’s entire seed phrase — without setting off a single alarm. If firmware updates can be manipulated this easily, how can anyone be sure their assets are safe?

The hidden price of updatable firmware

To be fair, not all firmware updates are security disasters. Ledger uses a proprietary operating system and secure element chips for added protection now. Trezor takes an open-source approach, allowing the community to scrutinize its firmware. Coldcard and BitBox02 give users manual control over updates, reducing — but not eliminating — risk.

Here’s the real question: Can users ever be 100% sure that an update won’t introduce a fatal flaw?

Some wallets have decided to eliminate the risk altogether. Tangem ships with fixed, non-updatable firmware, meaning that its code can never be altered once the device leaves the factory. No updates. No patches.Ā 

Of course, this approach has its trade-offs. If a vulnerability is discovered, there’s no way to fix it. But in security, predictability matters.Ā 

Real crypto security means taking back control

The crypto market was worth $2.79 trillion as of March 2025. With that much money on the table, cybercriminals, rogue insiders and overreaching governments are always looking for weak points. Hardware wallet makers should be laser-focused on security.

Choosing a hardware wallet shouldn’t feel like gambling with private keys. It shouldn’t involve blind trust in a corporation’s ability to push updates responsibly. Users deserve more than vague reassurances. They deserve security models that put control where it belongs — with them.

Security isn’t about convenience. It’s about control. Any system that requires trusting unknown developers, opaque update processes or firmware that can be changed at will? That’s not control. That’s a liability.

The only real way to keep a hardware wallet safe? Remove the guesswork. Strip away the blind trust. Always research the developers’ backgrounds, check their track record for security incidents, and see how they’ve handled past vulnerabilities. Stick to verifiable facts — security should never be based on assumptions.

Opinion by: Igor Zemtsov, chief technology officer at TBCC.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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