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1Bitget Daily Digest (Nov 18) | Fidelity Solana Spot ETF Launches Tonight in U.S. Markets; Public Companies Net-Buy Over $847 Million in BTC Last Week; All Three Major U.S. Indexes Close Lower2Young Bitcoin holders panic sell 148K BTC as analysts call for sub-$90K BTC bottom3Ethereum Falls Under $3,100 Amid Spot ETF Outflows, Viewed as Riskier Than Bitcoin
Flash
- 17:25USD/CHF breaks above 0.8, up 0.5% intradayAccording to ChainCatcher, citing Golden Ten Data, the USD/CHF has risen above 0.8, with an intraday increase of 0.5%.
- 17:04Drift Protocol releases tokenomics: 55.6% of DRIFT is now in circulation, with the main investors' lock-up period having endedChainCatcher news, perpetual contract decentralized exchange (DEX) Drift Protocol has released the latest tokenomics for its governance token DRIFT. As of 2025, 55.6% of the total supply has entered circulation, and all major investors' lock-up periods (cliffs) have ended. Drift Protocol is preparing to launch Drift v3, the next-generation version of its perpetual contracts, which will focus on speed and performance. Meanwhile, the community is conducting governance discussions exploring proposals to use protocol surplus to buy back DRIFT tokens.
- 16:46The Federal Reserve announces major changes to bank supervisionJinse Finance reported that the Federal Reserve has detailed its anticipated “major adjustment” in the way regulators supervise banks, marking the latest significant move by Federal Reserve Governor Bowman to relax and optimize bank supervision. On Tuesday, the Federal Reserve released a three-page memorandum outlining new expectations for its bank examiners, broadly instructing staff to focus primarily on significant financial risks faced by banks and imposing restrictions on the supervision of other matters. The memorandum details several adjustments that could substantially narrow the scope of work for the Federal Reserve’s examiners responsible for ensuring the safety and soundness of banks. Meanwhile, Bowman has initiated plans to reduce the number of Federal Reserve supervisory personnel by 30% over the next year. These adjustments are expected to impact the Federal Reserve’s approach to overall stability in bank supervision but will not change its limited regulatory efforts regarding consumer protection and fair lending laws at small banks.