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Wall Street’s New Alpha Gold Mine is The Data Locked Inside Their Own Walls – BlackRock VP

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For years, the savviest hedge funds and asset managers carved out an advantage by tapping so-called alternative data, credit-card receipts, cellphone-tracked foot traffic, satellite images of parking lots, and crop fields that traditional market feeds could never provide.

That edge has now largely disappeared. The information once considered exotic has become table stakes, available to almost anyone willing to pay the right data vendor.

The new frontier for alpha, according to senior executives at some of the world’s largest money managers, lies inside their own organizations: decades of internal research notes, email threads, meeting transcripts, trade rationales, and the accumulated wisdom of veteran portfolio managers and analysts.

Speaking on a panel at the Future Alpha conference in New York on Tuesday, Jacob Bowers, vice president of quantitative research at BlackRock, said: “AI is great at structuring unstructured data,” and “some of the best unstructured data you have is internal.”

Bowers noted that the publicly accessible data that was once cutting-edge is now “commoditized” by AI. BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager with $14 trillion in assets under management, has already begun deploying internal AI agents to scour past communications between investment professionals and old reports on opportunities in search of potential investment signals that competitors cannot access.

The idea of mining internal data goes back years. A 2019 report from consultancy Opimas predicted that large funds might one day sell portions of their proprietary data libraries to generate additional revenue. Robert Frey, a former managing director at Renaissance Technologies who now runs a fund of funds, told Business Insider at the time that his old firm’s biggest advantage was its “massive data library” gathered over decades of trading.

What has changed is the technology. Advances in large language models have made it far easier, and far more powerful, to extract meaningful patterns from the messy, unstructured troves of information that sit inside long-running asset managers.

At Balyasny Asset Management, which oversees about $33 billion, quant Andrew Gelfand said the firm had previously tried to monetize unstructured data within its systems, but recent AI advances have made the effort much more fruitful. The firm now requires analysts to type their research and notes into a centralized portal that his team can access, giving the AI models “reams of text to sift through for potential investment signals.”

Mike Daylamani, who runs a team that blends fundamental and systematic investing at Engineers Gate, stressed the importance of high-quality input.

“You need the feedstock to be high quality,” he said, referring to the data feeds quants use to build their models. He added a broader reflection on the nature of the business itself: “At the end of the day, this is a creative endeavor.”

The shift represents a quiet but profound change in how sophisticated investors hunt for an edge. Public alternative data sets have become so widely adopted that they no longer reliably deliver outperformance. Large language models can now scrape and synthesize enormous volumes of publicly available information almost instantly, further eroding any remaining advantage there.

What remains truly proprietary, and nearly impossible for outsiders to replicate, is the institutional memory, the failed investment theses, the off-the-record conversations, and the nuanced reasoning that seasoned professionals have accumulated over years or decades.

This internal data is often scattered across email servers, shared drives, compliance archives, and forgotten folders. Modern AI tools, however, excel at exactly this kind of problem: turning chaotic text, voice notes, and documents into structured, searchable intelligence.

Funds that can effectively organize and interrogate their own history gain something no vendor can sell: context-specific knowledge shaped by their own investment philosophy, risk tolerances, and hard-won lessons from past mistakes.

The challenge, several speakers noted, is maintaining the quality of that “feedstock.” AI agents are insatiable and constantly need fresh, high-caliber input to keep pace with evolving markets. Without continuous contributions from top analysts and portfolio managers, the models risk learning from stale or mediocre thinking.

For an industry that spent the past decade chasing ever-more-obscure external data sets, the realization that the richest untapped vein may lie inside their own walls marks a significant pivot. Analysts believe the winners in the coming years may not be those with the biggest alternative data budgets, but those who best preserve, organize, and mine the collective wisdom already sitting on their servers.

JPMorgan Chief Dimon Sounds Alarm on War, Inflation, and AI, Calls for U.S. Economic Reset

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JP Morgan Chase puts contents through its CEO account, it goes viral. But the same content via JPMC account, no one cares (WSJ)

JPMorgan Chase chief executive Jamie Dimon has delivered one of his most sweeping shareholder letters in years, weaving together war, inflation, regulation, private-credit risk, and artificial intelligence into a stark warning that the global economy may be entering a more volatile and structurally uncertain phase.

More than a review of JPMorgan’s performance, the annual letter reads as a macroeconomic roadmap from one of Wall Street’s most influential voices, with Dimon arguing that the intersection of geopolitical conflict and technological disruption could shape the next global economic order.

He opens on a note of national purpose, invoking America’s approaching 250th anniversary. Dimon wrote that it is “the perfect time to rededicate ourselves to the values that made this great nation of ours — freedom, liberty and opportunity.”

That appeal, however, quickly gives way to a far more sobering diagnosis of the risks facing both markets and policymakers.

“The challenges we all face are significant. The list is long but at the top are the terrible ongoing war and violence in Ukraine, the current war in Iran and the broader hostilities in the Middle East, terrorist activity and growing geopolitical tensions, importantly with China,” he wrote.

This framing is notable because Dimon is not treating these risks as isolated events. Instead, he presents them as interconnected fault lines capable of feeding directly into inflation, interest rates, credit conditions, and market sentiment.

His warning comes amid the Middle East conflict and its widening implications for inflation. Dimon cautioned that the Iran war could trigger fresh oil and commodity shocks, a development that would quickly feed through to consumer prices and monetary policy.

According to Reuters, he warned that such disruptions could keep inflation sticky and force interest rates higher than markets currently expect.

Markets had increasingly leaned toward expectations of policy easing later in the year. Dimon’s letter pushes back sharply against that optimism, suggesting investors may be underestimating the inflationary impact of war-driven supply shocks.

The risk is not merely higher fuel prices. Energy costs ripple through transportation, manufacturing, food supply chains, and logistics, creating second-round inflation effects that central banks find harder to tame.

This is why Dimon’s line that war is “the realm of uncertainty” carries a broader meaning than a geopolitical observation.

“The outcome of current geopolitical events may very well be the defining factor in how the future global economic order unfolds,” he wrote. “Then again, it may not.”

That ambiguity is central to the report’s uniqueness. Rather than making a definitive forecast, Dimon is underscoring the fragility of current assumptions around growth, inflation, and market resilience.

He also turned his fire on banking regulation, arguing that parts of the post-2008 framework are now impeding productive lending. According to the letter, while the rules introduced after the global financial crisis “accomplished some good things,” they have also “created a fragmented, slow-moving system with expensive, overlapping and excessive rules and regulations — some of which made the financial system weaker and reduced productive lending.”

This is one of the letter’s most politically charged sections.

Dimon sharply criticized the latest Basel III Endgame and GSIB surcharge proposals, saying the revised rules still contain elements that are “frankly nonsensical.” He argued that under the proposed framework, JPMorgan would be forced to hold “as much as 50% more capital across the vast majority of loans to U.S. consumers and businesses when compared with a large non-GSIB bank for the same set of loans.”

He bluntly concluded: “Frankly, it’s not right, and it’s un-American.”

That line is likely to reverberate in Washington. Dimon is effectively making the case that over-calibrated regulation may now be suppressing credit creation just as the economy confronts rising geopolitical and technological risks.

On private markets, his tone is equally cautionary. Dimon flagged concerns over transparency in private credit, a market that has ballooned as non-bank lenders take a larger share of corporate financing.

“By and large, private credit does not tend to have great transparency or rigorous valuation ‘marks’ of their loans — this increases the chance that people will sell if they think the environment will get worse — even if actual realized losses barely change,” he wrote.

This is especially relevant as private funds face redemption pressure and concerns over software-sector loans intensify. Dimon’s insight here is less about immediate systemic risk and more about the danger of opacity. When valuations are not frequently stress-tested by markets, downturns can trigger abrupt repricing.

He also warned that insurance regulators may eventually demand stricter ratings and markdowns, leading to calls for more capital. On trade, the letter offers a subtle but significant commentary on President Donald Trump’s tariff agenda.

Dimon wrote that the world is undergoing a “realignment of economic relations”, adding: “The trade battles are clearly not over, and it should be expected that many nations are analyzing how and with whom they should create trade arrangements.”

That suggests Dimon sees tariff policy not as a temporary negotiation tool but as a catalyst for longer-term shifts in global trade blocs and supply chains. His comments on AI are among the most nuanced parts of the letter.

Rather than dismissing the boom as speculative, he strongly endorsed the long-term investment case.

“Overall, the investment in AI is not a speculative bubble; rather, it will deliver significant benefits. However, at this time, we cannot predict the ultimate winners and losers in AI-related industries,” he wrote.

Dimon is bullish on the technology’s structural value while openly acknowledging that competitive winners remain uncertain. That position mirrors JPMorgan’s own strategy, where AI is being embedded across compliance, analytics, customer service, and workforce planning.

He reinforced that point with another direct statement: “We will not put our heads in the sand. We will deploy AI, as we deploy all technology, to do a better job for our customers (and employees).”

Perhaps the most distinctive feature of the letter is that it ties all these issues together.

War threatens inflation.

Inflation keeps rates elevated.

Higher rates expose weak credit structures.

Trade fragmentation alters supply chains.

AI disrupts labor markets and business models.

Dimon’s central message is that these are not separate market stories. They are converging forces. That convergence, more than any single risk, is what makes this moment uniquely consequential for markets and policymakers.

Anthropic Acquires Coefficient Bio for $400M in an All-Stock Deal 

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Anthropic has acquired the stealth biotech AI startup Coefficient Bio in an all-stock deal valued at roughly $400 million.

The deal, which closed around early April 2026, brings a small team; fewer than 10 people, many former Genentech computational biology researchers from Prescient Design into Anthropic’s growing Healthcare and Life Sciences division. Coefficient Bio, founded about eight months earlier in 2025 and backed by Dimension, was working on AI models tailored for biological research with ambitions toward artificial superintelligence for science. No major public product had launched yet.

This move fits Anthropic’s broader push into life sciences. They previously rolled out Claude for Life Sciences and are integrating domain expertise to accelerate AI applications in drug discovery, disease modeling, and related areas. At Anthropic’s ~$380 billion post-money valuation from its February 2026 Series G, the acquisition is a minor ~0.1% dilution but brings specialized talent in biology-native AI.

Separately and likely unrelated in timing, Anthropic updated its policy on third-party tools: Starting April 4, 2026, Claude Pro and Max subscribers can no longer use their included subscription limits/credits with third-party harnesses or agent frameworks like OpenClaw. Usage through such tools now requires a separate pay-as-you-go option or direct API billing which is token-based.

Anthropic cited heavy compute and engineering strain from these high-volume agentic workflows and a desire to ensure reliable service for direct users. Third-party access itself isn’t banned—just decoupled from flat-rate subscription quotas. The acquisition signals Anthropic doubling down on scientific applications of AI, especially biology and drug discovery, by absorbing a niche team rather than building everything from scratch.

It’s a talent-heavy bet in a hot space where AI is increasingly paired with wet-lab validation. The OpenClaw policy shift is more of a usage and billing clarification. Heavy agentic usage; autonomous coding or research agents that hammer the model with many calls was apparently consuming disproportionate resources compared to typical interactive chats. Similar restrictions are expected to roll out to other third-party tools.

These developments highlight Anthropic’s dual focus: expanding into high-impact verticals like biotech while tightening control over how their models are consumed at scale to protect infrastructure and economics. This all-stock deal (minor ~0.1% dilution at Anthropic’s ~$380B valuation) brings a tiny team into Anthropic’s Healthcare & Life Sciences division. Shifts from adapting general-purpose Claude via “Claude for Life Sciences,” launched Oct 2025 to building biology-native AI capabilities.

The team’s expertise in protein design, biomolecule modeling, and computational biology should help create specialized tools for drug candidate identification, disease modeling, and automated wet-lab integration.
Pays a premium for domain experts and early-stage tech aimed at artificial superintelligence for science. Positions Anthropic to compete more directly with dedicated AI-biotech players and potentially partner with or sell enterprise solutions to pharma giants.

Reinforces Anthropic’s bet that high-value verticals will drive future revenue beyond general chat and coding use cases. Accelerates the trend of frontier labs moving into verticals. Expect faster progress in AI-assisted drug discovery, where models handle molecular-level reasoning alongside experimental validation. Other labs may follow with similar acquisitions.

Validates high valuations for stealth teams with elite scientific talent, even pre-product. Coefficient’s backer (Dimension) saw strong returns. It also raises the bar: general AI wrappers for bio may lose ground to native or deeply integrated solutions. Potential upside in more powerful, domain-tuned Claude variants that reduce R&D timelines and costs. Downside: increased competition and dependency on a few big AI providers.

Integration challenges with such a small team; biology AI still needs real-world wet-lab grounding, which remains expensive and slow. Anthropic decoupled flat-rate Pro/Max limits from external agent frameworks starting April 4, 2026. Users can still access Claude models via these tools, but only through separate pay-as-you-go or direct API billing (token-based). The change is rolling out to all third-party harnesses soon.

Anthropic cited heavy compute strain from high-volume, always-on agentic workflows that bypass normal efficiencies and degrade service for direct users. Heavy OpenClaw and OpenCode-style workloads that previously fit within a $20–$200/month subscription can now cost significantly more. Many are switching to API keys, cheaper alternatives, or Anthropic’s own tools like Claude Code.

Immediate breakage for setups relying on subscription auth. Some users report migrating to other providers or optimizing heavily. Enterprises may absorb the shift via API; hobbyists/small builders feel it more.
Positive for reliability — Reduced abuse/load should improve rate limits and uptime for standard interactive users (chats, coding in the official interface).

Protects margins and infrastructure by charging heavy users closer to actual cost. Encourages direct platform usage (Claude Code, etc.) and reduces telemetry leakage to third parties. Coincides with Anthropic developing its own agentic capabilities; some speculate it pressures tools where key talent has moved. It also signals the flat-rate AI buffet model has limits for agent-scale consumption.

Short-term frustration and migration, but long-term may strengthen loyalty to optimized first-party experiences. Anthropic offered one-time credits and discounts on extra usage as a buffer. May slow adoption of multi-model agents or push innovation toward more efficient prompting, local execution, or alternative backends.

Accelerates the industry shift away from unlimited-ish subscriptions for agentic use toward usage-based or tiered enterprise plans. Competitors could gain if they keep more generous policies. Highlights that scaling autonomous agents requires solving infrastructure economics, not just model intelligence. Could spur better agent optimization or hybrid approaches.

BlockDAG’s $0.00025 Final Round Sees Record Demand Before Exchange Launch; Latest On ETH & HYPE

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The crypto market is heating up, and three names are driving the conversation. Analysts are revising their Ethereum price prediction as ETH climbs back above $2,100 on the back of a bold foundation move. Meanwhile, the hype price is holding steady, quietly supported by a daily buyback mechanism that creates real structural demand.

Both coins are telling interesting stories, but they’re established assets trading within known ranges. BlockDAG (BDAG) is writing a different story entirely. With an presaleprice sitting at $0.000022, an 85x entry against current market pricing, BDAG is turning heads as one of the top crypto coins to watch before its global exchange launch changes everything.

Ethereum Is Recovering, But the Bigger Move Is Still Ahead

After a turbulent early April where macro panic triggered over $1 billion in forced liquidations in a single hour, Ethereum has bounced back. ETH is up to $2,129.96, outpacing Bitcoin in the same window.

The Ethereum Foundation’s decision to stake 45,000 ETH (roughly $143 million) instead of selling it signals long-term confidence and reduces potential sell pressure. Charles Schwab’s move to offer direct ETH trading adds real institutional weight to the recovery.

For those tracking top crypto coins, the Ethereum price prediction among analysts is cautiously bullish. Resistance sits at $2,150; a clean break opens the path toward $2,270. The longer-term Ethereum price prediction points as high as $4,800+. Near-term, though, ETF outflows have been consistently negative since November 2025, and the Glamsterdam upgrade isn’t until June. Patience is part of the ETH trade right now.

Hyperliquid Is Quietly Building, Here’s What’s Actually Driving It

The HYPE price doesn’t make as many headlines as Ethereum, but what’s happening under the hood is worth watching. HYPE is up 3.66% to $36.96 in 24 hours, and this move has a structural engine behind it, not just market sentiment.

Hyperliquid’s protocol uses daily trading fees to buy back and burn HYPE tokens. In the last 24 hours, around 16,362 tokens worth roughly $580,000 were removed from circulation. That’s real, consistent buying pressure every single day, regardless of what the broader market is doing.

Among top crypto coins watched for tokenomics-driven action, HYPE crypto stands out. Key levels to watch: support near $35.70 from the buyback zone, resistance at the March high of $43.77. The HYPE price story is methodical and real, but it remains exposed to broader market swings. If sentiment turns, the daily buyback alone may not be enough to hold the floor.

BlockDAG: The $0.000022 Entry That Won’t Last Much Longer

Among the top crypto coins generating urgency right now, BlockDAG (BDAG) is in a category of its own because the clock on its entry price is actually running out.

BlockDAG’s presale presents a straightforward calculation. At a fixed entry point of $0.000022, the token currently sits roughly 85 times below its open market valuation — not as a projected target, but as straightforward math comparing the presale rate to where the token already trades. That window has an expiration date: the Token Generation Event and exchange activation are imminent, and once they go live, the fixed price disappears for good.

The supply mechanics reinforce the pressure. Access has been tightly managed throughout the presale to limit availability, and with Batch 3 launching next week, the remaining allocation shrinks further. Liquidity has been building ahead of the exchange rollout, a pattern often associated with larger players securing positions before broader access opens. Once the TGE hands pricing over to the open market, newcomers will face whatever demand-driven valuation retail volume dictates.

What makes the timeline particularly compelling is the sequence of catalysts stacked across the summer months. May introduces a decentralized exchange alongside high-yield liquidity pool incentives, establishing the token’s first real utility layer. June escalates with the Super App rollout, integrated lending protocols, decentralized oracles, and a full suite of decentralized applications. Each milestone adds a fresh wave of structural demand.

Entering at the current presale rate means acquiring the asset before any of those catalysts have had a chance to influence the price. Delaying means absorbing the impact of May and June deployments into your cost basis. A gap of this magnitude between a controlled presale price and live market pricing rarely survives once full market dynamics take over.

Takeaway

The Ethereum price prediction points to real upside, but ETH buyers are in for a measured, patient journey. The HYPE price story is structurally sound, but HYPE remains exposed to market-wide corrections. Both are worthwhile assets, and both come with near-term uncertainty.

BlockDAG sits on a completely different timeline. As the top crypto coins list expands heading into Q2, BDAG is forcing its way onto it, not gradually, but with a hard deadline attached. Buyers are already rushing to lock in the $0.000022 aftersale price before exchange trading opens, and that entry is gone. With a three-month roadmap of back-to-back catalysts ahead, the window to get in before the market reprices is measured in days, not weeks.

Presale: https://purchase.blockdag.network

Website: https://blockdag.network

Telegram: https://t.me/blockDAGnetworkOfficial

Discord: https://discord.gg/Q7BxghMVyu

BlockDAG’s $0.000022 Entry for 85x ROI Ends in Hours as Pippin & Dogecoin Flatline

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Market sentiment currently reflects a period of intense caution, yet forward-thinking investors see this as a prime moment for strategic positioning. While some altcoins navigate temporary turbulence, Pippin serves as a notable case study: a 10% dip following whale movements has tested investor resolve, leaving the $0.0427 support level as a vital threshold. Similarly, Dogecoin maintains a steady holding pattern, following a 30% adjustment since February while it waits for a fresh bullish catalyst to ignite.

Neither project has lost its fundamental appeal, but current sideways movement is prompting traders to look toward high-velocity growth. This environment highlights why BlockDAG (BDAG) is attracting such massive optimism. The $0.000022 priority entry window slams shut on April 8. With CoinMarketCap already reporting a $0.40 valuation, a staggering 39,900% gap exists for those who act now. Global debuts on BitMart, Coinstore, and P2B arrive the same day, marking a new era of exchange liquidity. Analysts previously forecasted the $0.30 to $0.40 range; now that this milestone is reached, all eyes have shifted to the $0.70 target.

Pippin Navigates 10% Adjustment During Whale Reallocation

Pippin (PIPPIN), the innovative Solana-based token, recently saw a 10% price correction as some large-scale holders rebalanced their portfolios. On March 29, the asset adjusted 10.52% to $0.0512, while daily volume moderated by 18% to $40.20 million, indicating a brief cooling-off period. Data from Nansen suggests that while some whales reduced holdings by 25%, the broader community of top 100 wallets actually strengthened their positions.

Reports of high-profile figures moving capital into emerging projects like PUNCH suggest a healthy rotation of liquidity. The Pippin crypto price is now actively defending a major support zone at $0.0427, oscillating between $0.047 and $0.0599. A successful defense here paves the way for a strong recovery rally. Short-term volatility remains part of the journey, but the Pippin crypto price continues to show resilience. Investors are focusing on the $0.0467 and $0.0605 levels to define the next successful chapter for the Pippin crypto price.

Dogecoin Reaches Strategic Support Level Awaiting Major Breakout

The DOGE ecosystem stands at an exciting crossroads as its price chart tightens, with the $0.0886 support level proving to be an incredibly sturdy floor. Since the middle of February, DOGE moved from $0.1280 to $0.0905, a 30% healthy correction that sets the stage for the next leg up. Experts suggest that holding this floor could trigger a swift bounce toward $0.1050, though a temporary dip to $0.0820 remains a possibility for late-stage accumulation.

Looking at historical trends, Dogecoin often follows accumulation phases with explosive 190% to 480% gains. This pattern keeps the long-term Dogecoin price prediction looking exceptionally bright. While immediate momentum shows a mix of signals, the overarching Dogecoin price prediction suggests a massive move is brewing once it reclaims its upper trading ranges. Ultimately, the Dogecoin price prediction remains a story of high potential and watchful anticipation.

BlockDAG Positions for a Massive 85x Value Surge

BlockDAG is cementing its status as one of the top crypto gainers this year, fueled by record-breaking price performance and an exclusive entry offer. This $0.000022 priority access is your golden ticket until April 8, potentially unlocking an 85x jump compared to the project’s lowest future open-market floor. With the live CoinMarketCap price hitting $0.40, early participants are witnessing a 39,900% increase from Stage 1 and a 700% surge over the initial listing price.

This vast window between the entry cost and the current market value represents a rare generational opportunity. By securing positions before community deposits open in June, strategic buyers are entering at levels far below the public average.

The world watches as global trading begins April 8, with BitMart, Coinstore, and P2B listings introducing BlockDAG to a global audience of millions. This combination of scarcity and massive exchange visibility has created an unstoppable wave of enthusiasm. Having already smashed the $0.3–$0.4 analyst targets, the project is now charging toward a $1.00 valuation. For those holding the $0.000022 entry, the potential ROI reaches historic proportions as the roadmap unfolds.

Robust network fundamentals drive this success story. Developer activity is surging, mining hardware is set for distribution between April and June, and futures markets are deepening the project’s liquidity. This powerful infrastructure ensures that those entering at $0.40 or lower are positioned to lead the market.

Summing Up

The $0.0427 floor for Pippin is a crucial foundation, and a successful hold will brightly define the Pippin crypto price trajectory for the coming weeks. Dogecoin also remains in a strategic accumulation phase; the Dogecoin price prediction will turn incredibly bullish the moment buyers reclaim their momentum.

BlockDAG remains the most mathematically compelling opportunity available. Securing an entry at $0.000022 while the market already values the asset at $0.40 is a rare “glitch” in the market that will vanish on April 8. Among the top crypto gainers of 2026, very few provide such a clear, time-sensitive path to success. Timing is everything, and the time to act is now.

Presale: https://purchase.blockdag.network

Website: https://blockdag.network

Telegram: https://t.me/blockDAGnetworkOfficial

Discord: https://discord.gg/Q7BxghMVyu