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May 13, 2025

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Crypto market is facing some pullback today, a day after strong upside on news of US-China trade talks and alleviating trade tensions. While Bitcoin (BTC) price is down by 1%, altcoins like ETH, BNB, DOGE, and others have corrected 2-10% today. Interestingly, this drop comes following a 3.26% surge in the S&P 500 on Monday, showing contrasting behaviour.

Will Crypto Market Catch Up With S&P 500 Gains?

Following President Donald Trump’s announcement of positive developments in the US-China trade talks, the cryptocurrency market witnessed sharp upside on Monday. However, the market today faced some pullback despite a strong upside in US stocks on Monday.

Yesterday, the S&P 500 ended 3.26% up at 5,844.19, reviving hope of greater economic recovery in the market. The Kobeissi Letter stated that the S&P 500 has officially entered a new bull market, closing more than 20% above its April low. The index has gained an impressive 1,000 points over the past month, marking a significant turnaround in market sentiment.

Although the crypto market is lagging to the gains in the US stock indices, analysts remain hopeful for a rally ahead. Blockchain analytics platform noted that the crypto trading volumes have shot up, highlighting strong investor sentiment in the market, amid the US-China trade deal to drop tariffs by 90 days.

Source: Santiment

Santiment stated that the crypto market could catch up soon to the gains of S&P 500. The blockchain analytics firm noted:

“Prices have been lagging a bit compared to the massive +3.1% S&P 500 reaction to the news. But don’t be surprised if cryptocurrency plays a bit of catch-up with rising volumes and institutional investors planning their next moves”.

Bitcoin and Ethereum Could See Brief Consolidation

Glassnode’s latest analysis highlights sustained demand for Bitcoin (BTC), with First-Time Buyers’ RSI holding steady at 100 throughout the week. However, Momentum Buyers remain subdued with an RSI of approximately 11, while Profit Takers are on the rise. Analysts caution that if fresh inflows dwindle, Bitcoin could face a period of consolidation. As per the CoinGape report, Bitcoin price risks losing $100K as liquidations in the cryptocurrency market hit $714 million.

Source: Glassnode

Similarly, the Glassnode report shows that the Ethereum price surge from $1,800 to $2,500 was facilitated by low supply concentration within this range. The rally, however, stalled near $2,580, where 1.3 million ETH was held. This supply has since declined to 1 million, signaling profit-taking as holders exited near their cost basis.

Source: Glassnode

Last week, Wall Street inflows into the crypto market continued as digital asset funds recorded $882 million in inflows last week, marking the fourth consecutive week of positive investments. Year-to-date inflows have now reached $6.7 billion, with Bitcoin leading the charge, contributing $867 million to the total.

The post Why Is Crypto Market Down When S&P 500 Flashes Bull Run Ahead? appeared first on CoinGape.

Chainlink (LINK) is at a pivotal point amid a boom in demand for securities tokenization, which will only increase after the SEC Chair Paul Atkins released a statement saying this industry could help achieve President Trump’s dream for the US to become the “crypto capital.” Atkin’s statement has bolstered a bullish sentiment around Chainlink price, as traders speculate on whether it could finally reach $30.

At press time, LINK price trades at $16.58 after recording a 4% drop in 24 hours, as the crypto market dropped today, May 13, due to a drastic surge in long liquidations.

Chainlink Price Targets $30 as Bullish Pattern Emerges

Chainlink price may be on the verge of a massive upward move after an inverse head and shoulders pattern appeared on the one-day chart, which is an indication that an uptrend is looming that may push LINK to as high as $30 in the near term.

This pattern has an upward sloping resistance, and after breaking above this level, Chainlink is now testing it as support, and if it holds, it may spark a 45% price increase to $23. If bulls maintain control at this price, the token could surge past $30 in May and reach 2025 highs.

The ADX line is tipping north, and this is an indication that the upward trend depicted by this bullish pattern will likely continue, which also makes a bullish case for the Chainlink price.

LINK/USDT: 1-day Chart

The above technical outlook highlighting a bullish Chainlink price forecast will be invalid if LINK price fails to defend the critical support level at $16 and instead dips to $10.

SEC’s Paul Atkins Backs Tokenization – Bullish for LINK?

The current chair of the SEC, Paul Atkins, has backed the concept of asset and securities tokenization in his recent remarks during the recent roundtable event. This move could bode well for Chainlink price, which is currently the largest Real World Asset (RWA) token by market cap.

As Coingape reported, Atkins vows to make the US a crypto capital of the world, and one of the ways to achieve this is via tokenization. He said,

“For the United States to be the ‘crypto capital of the planet, ‘ envisioned by President Trump, the Commission must keep pace with innovation and consider whether regulatory changes are needed to accommodate on-chain securities and other crypto assets.”

Atkins’ recent statement comes on the back of significant growth among RWA tokens, which have surpassed $61 billion in market cap. In the last month alone, the RWA market cap has increased from $47 billion to $61 billion.

RWA Market Cap

Therefore, considering the buzz around asset tokenization and the recent growth in the RWA token market cap, Chainlink price may reach $30 in the near term. This rally may be fuelled by the strong technical outlook depicted on the daily chart as well as the recent statement shared by SEC Chair Paul Atkins.

The post Can Chainlink Price Reach $30 in May as SEC Chair Paul Atkins Backs Tokenization? appeared first on CoinGape.

Dogwifhat (WIF) price at $1.17 shows a 2.74% intraday rise, fueling the 113% rally over the last 7 days, fueled by increased volume in the market. With the bull run, WIF token’s market cap hits $1.16 billion, becoming Solana’s fourth biggest meme coin. The increased optimism around Dogwifhat pumps the Open Interest (OI) to $445 million and risks an $8 million short liquidation if the meme coin hits $1.20. Adding tailwinds to Dogwifhat price, a bullish pattern breakout targets the $2 psychological level. 

WIF Price Analysis Targets $2 

Dogwifhat price reclaims the $1.17 price level last seen on January 31, marking a trend reversal after a brief consolidation under $0.75 supply zone. Bottoming out at $0.3042, the Solana-based meme coin has jumped almost 300% since then. 

During the consolidation phase, the WIF price witnessed an inverted head and shoulders pattern formed as seen in the technical chart. The inverted head is formed at $0.30, with the shoulders forming near $0.51 and a neckline overlapping the $0.75 zone. This pattern is generally considered extremely bullish and known for resulting in upside breakout. 

The bullish pattern’s 157% breakout target is calculated by adding the pattern’s depth to the neckline breakout point, targeting the $2 psychological level. The ongoing rally has already reclaimed the $1 mark and 44% of the projected 157% rally. Additionally, the recovery run has crossed above the 50% Fibonacci level at $1.15 and the 200-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA). 

As the Solana-based meme coin sustains strong momentum, the uptick in 50 and 100-day EMAs nears a positive crossover. The Relative Strength Index has spiked into the overbought zon,e signaling strong underlying bullishness. 

A failure to hold a decisive closing price above the 50% Fibonacci level to retest the $0.75 zone. 

WIF Price Chart

If the WIF price breaks under $0.75, the pattern breakout will be nullified. This will risk the 50-day EMA retest at $0.63, followed by the next support at $0.31. 

Optimistic Bulls Dominate Derivatives as OI Hits $445 Million

Amid the skyrocketing WIF prices, the rising optimism in the derivatives market pumps the Open Interest (OI) to $445 million. This marks a more than 100% surge in seven days from $201 million on May 6. 

WIF Futures Open Interest

Betting big on Dogwifhat, Binance traders anticipate a bullish trend continuation in the meme coin. Based on the Coinglass data, 68.74% of Binance accounts of all accounts trading WIFUSDT futures are holding a long position, pumping the long/short ratio to 2.20. Hence, the derivatives market data aligns with the WIF price prediction of reaching the $2 target. 

Binance WIFUSDT Long/Short (Accounts)

Bulls are dominating the trend control as Dogwifhat exits a strong bullish setup with a 113% weekly rally. With more than 100% surge in Open Interest and 68.74% of Binance traders holding long positions, WIF price shows a strong chance of reclaiming the $2 milestone.

The post Can WIF Price Hit $2? Pattern Breakout and 100% OI Surge to $445M Signal Major Upside appeared first on CoinGape.

Fox Corp. will launch its direct-to-consumer streaming service, to be called Fox One, ahead of the National Football League season later this year.

Fox CEO Lachlan Murdoch unveiled the name and timing of the company’s upcoming streamer during a quarterly earnings call Monday. The exact launch date and pricing will be announced in the coming months.

While Murdoch didn’t give specifics on pricing, he said during Monday’s call it would be in line with so-called wholesale pricing, meaning it would be similar to the cost of the channels for pay tv distributors. Cable TV subscribers will get access to the service at no additional cost, Murdoch said.

“Pricing will be healthy and not a discounted price,” he said.

“It would be a failure of us if we attract more connected subscribers … we do not want to lose a traditional cable subscriber to Fox One,” said Murdoch. He added the company is doing everything “humanly possible” to avoid more subscribers fleeing the cable bundle.

Fox plans to offer the app as part of bundles with other distributors and services, Murdoch said. He added many other streamers had already approached Fox about bundling and said the company “will be moving forward with a number of those relationships.”

On Monday Fox reported fiscal third-quarter revenue of $4.37 billion, up 27% from the same period last year.

Fox’s financials were lifted by the Super Bowl, which aired on the company’s broadcast network and free, ad-supported service, Tubi, during the most recent quarter. Some ads for Super Bowl 59, which attracted roughly 128 million viewers, cost $8 million apiece. Fox reported a 65% increase in advertising revenue during the quarter.

The media company, known for the cable TV channel Fox News and its sports offering on broadcast and cable, had been on the sidelines of streaming compared with its peers. While the company has the Fox Nation streaming app and Tubi, it has yet to offer all of its content in a direct-to-consumer offering.

Murdoch alerted investors in February of the company’s plans to offer the streaming service by the end of this year.

The decision came shortly after Fox, alongside Warner Bros. Discovery and Disney, abandoned efforts to launch Venu, a joint venture sports streaming app. Fox was the only one out of its partners without a subscription streaming app already in the market.

Warner Bros. Discovery offers its live sports content on streamer Max.

Disney’s ESPN has its ESPN+ app and is developing a new flagship streaming app that will reflect the content on its cable TV network. The company will unveil further details on the app this week. CNBC reported last week that ESPN plans to name the app simply ESPN.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS

As struggling drugstore chains work to regain their footing, Walgreens is doubling down on automation. 

The company is expanding the number of retail stores served by its micro-fulfillment centers, which use robots to fill thousands of prescriptions for patients who take medications to manage or treat diabetes, high blood pressure and other conditions. 

Walgreens aims to free up time for pharmacy staff, reducing their routine tasks and eliminating inventory waste. Fewer prescription fills would allow employees to interact directly with patients and perform more clinical services such as vaccinations and testing.

Walgreens first rolled out the robot-powered centers in 2021, but paused expansion in 2023 to focus on gathering feedback and improving performance at existing sites. After more than a year of making upgrades, including new internal tools, the company said it is ready to expand the reach of that technology again.

Walgreens told CNBC it hopes to have its 11 micro-fulfillment centers serve more than 5,000 stores by the end of the year, up from 4,800 in February and 4,300 in October 2023. As of February, the centers handled 40% of the prescription volume on average at supported pharmacies, according to Walgreens. 

That translates to around 16 million prescriptions filled each month across the different sites, the company said. 

The renewed automation push comes as Walgreens prepares to go private in a roughly $10 billion deal with Sycamore Partners, expected to close by the end of the year. 

The deal would cap a turbulent chapter for Walgreens as a public company, marked by a rocky transition out of the pandemic, declining pharmacy reimbursement rates, weaker consumer spending and fierce competition from CVS Health, Amazon and other retail giants.

Like CVS, Walgreens has shifted from opening new stores to closing hundreds of underperforming locations to shore up profits. Both companies are racing to stay relevant as online retailers lure away customers and patients increasingly opt for fast home delivery over traditional pharmacy visits.

The changes also follow mounting discontent among pharmacy staff: In 2023, nationwide walkouts spotlighted burnout and chronic understaffing, forcing chains to reexamine their operational models.

Walgreens said the investment in robotic pharmacy fills is already paying off.

To date, micro-fulfillment centers have generated approximately $500 million in savings by cutting excess inventory and boosting efficiency, said Kayla Heffington, Walgreens’ pharmacy operating model vice president. Heffington added that stores using the facilities are administering 40% more vaccines than those that aren’t. 

“Right now, they’re the backbone to really help us offset some of the workload in our stores, to obviously allow more time for our pharmacists and technicians to spend time with patients,” said Rick Gates, Walgreens’ chief pharmacy officer.

“It gives us a lot more flexibility to bring down costs, to increase the care and increase speed to therapy — all those things,” he said. 

Gates added that the centers give Walgreens a competitive advantage because independent pharmacies and some rivals don’t have centralized support for their stores. Still, Walmart, Albertsons and Kroger have similarly tested or are currently using their own micro-fulfillment facilities to dispense grocery items and other prescriptions. 

Micro-fulfillment centers come with their own risks, such as a heavy reliance on sophisticated robotics that can cause disruptions if errors occur. But the facilities are becoming a permanent fixture in retail due to the cost savings they offer and their ability to streamline workflows, reduce the burden on employees and deliver goods to customers faster.

When a Walgreens retail pharmacy receives a prescription, the system determines whether it should be filled at that location or routed to a nearby micro-fulfillment center. Maintenance medications, or prescription drugs taken regularly to manage chronic health conditions, and refills that don’t require immediate pickup are often sent to micro-fulfillment.

At the core of each facility is a highly automated system that uses robotics, conveyor belts and barcode scanners, among other tools, to fill prescriptions. The operations are supported by a team of pharmacists pharmacy technicians and other professionals.

Instead of staff members filling prescriptions by hand at stores, pill bottles move through an automated and carefully choreographed assembly line. 

Pharmacy technicians fill canisters with medications for robot pods to dispense, and pharmacists verify those canisters to make sure they are accurate. Yellow robotic arms grab a labeled prescription vial and hold it up to a canister, which precisely dispenses the specific medication for that bottle.

Certain prescriptions are filled at separate manual stations, including inhalers and birth control pill packs. Each prescription is then sorted and packaged for delivery back to retail pharmacy locations for final pickup.

There are other security and safety measures throughout the process, said Ahlam Antar, registered group supervisor of a micro-fulfillment center in Mansfield, Massachusetts. 

For example, the robot pods automatically lock and signal an error with a red-orange light if a worker attaches a canister to the wrong dispenser, preventing the incorrect pills from going in a prescription, she said. 

Properly training workers at the centers to ensure accuracy and patient safety is also crucial, according to Sarah Gonsalves, a senior certified pharmacy technician at the Mansfield site. 

She said a core part of her role is to make sure that technicians can correctly perform the different tasks in the process. 

Antar, who has worked at the Mansfield site since its 2022 opening, said Walgreens has made improvements to the micro-fulfillment process after considering feedback from stores and patients during the paused expansion. That includes establishing new roles needed to support the process at the sites, such as a training manager for all 11 locations. 

The facilities also plan to transition to using smaller prescription vials after hearing concerns that the current bottles are too large, according to a Walgreens spokesperson. They said that will allow the centers to ship more prescriptions per order and reduce costs.

Heffington said the automated locations have helped reduce Walgreens’ overall prescription fulfillment costs by nearly 13% compared to a year ago. 

She said Walgreens has also increased prescription volume by 126% year-over-year, now filling more than 170 million prescriptions annually. The company hopes to raise that number to 180 million or even more. 

Heffington added that Walgreens implemented new internal tools to track the work across all 11 centers and provide real-time data on where a patient’s prescription is in the micro-fulfillment process. 

“If a patient called the store and said, ‘Hey, can you tell me where my prescription is today?’ [Workers] can do that with great specificity,” thanks to the new tools, Heffington said. 

Despite the company’s progress, Gates said there is more work to be done with micro-fulfillment centers. 

For example, he pointed to the possibility of shipping prescriptions directly to patients’ doorsteps instead of putting that burden on retail stores. 

“It’s only step one right now,” he said. 

Other improvements may still be needed at facilities, according to some reports. For example, WRAL News reported in April that some customers at a Walgreens store in Garner, North Carolina, say they are only getting partial prescription fills, with several pills missing, or their medicine is being delayed.

A customer views merchandise for sale at a Walgreens store in the Hollywood neighborhood of Los Angeles.

Christopher Lee | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Before Brian Gange’s Arizona store started relying on an automated facility, he walked into the pharmacy every morning knowing that a massive list of prescriptions was in his work queue waiting to be filled for the day. 

Now, with help from micro-fulfillment, that list is significantly smaller each day, according to Gange. 

“We don’t have to spend as much time on just those repetitive fulfillment tasks,” he told CNBC. “It really takes a huge weight off our shoulders.” 

Gange said that gives him and his team time to step behind the pharmacy counter and interact with customers face-to-face, answering questions, providing advice, performing health tests or administering vaccines. 

That kind of attention can make all the difference for a patient.  

For example, Gange recalls stepping away for five minutes to take a patient’s blood pressure despite being overwhelmed with tasks while working at a different Walgreens location several years ago. He ended up sending that person to the emergency room because their blood pressure was “off the charts.” 

That patient’s wife visited the pharmacy the next day to thank Gange, saying her husband “probably wouldn’t be here with us today” without that blood pressure test. 

“I shouldn’t have to question whether I have that five or 10 minutes to check a blood pressure for a patient,” Gange said. “Micro-fulfillment and centralized services are really what are going to allow us to be able to do that, to have that time.” 

“That really allows us to provide better care for them,” he added.

This post appeared first on NBC NEWS