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Home Blog Page 46

Biblical Film David Topping Shows Independent Creators Could Strive Amid Heavy Funded Films

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The animated biblical musical David from Angel Studios opened to an estimated $22 million domestically over its debut weekend of December 19–21, 2025, outperforming The SpongeBob Movie: which opened to about $16 million in the same frame.

This made David the top-grossing family-oriented animated movie of that weekend, beating SpongeBob by exactly $6 million as reported by multiple sources, including Angel Studios’ official announcement, Box Office Mojo, and outlets like Variety, Deadline, and Animation Magazine.

David finished #2 overall behind Avatar: Fire and Ash’s massive $88–89 million debut, while SpongeBob landed at #4. It also set records as the highest-opening faith-based animated film ever. Great win for an underdog story—literally.

The success of Angel Studios’ animated biblical musical David—opening to $22 million domestically and topping The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants ($16 million) as the #1 family/animated film of its debut weekend—carries several notable implications for the film industry, audiences, and cultural trends as of late December 2025.

Strong Demand for Faith-Based and Values-Driven Family Entertainment

David set records as the highest-opening faith-based animated film ever, surpassing Angel’s own The King of Kings, $19.4 million earlier in 2025 and classics like The Prince of Egypt.

This builds on Angel Studios’ track record like the Sound of Freedom, The Chosen, showing a reliable audience for uplifting, family-safe content—especially timed around holidays pre-Christmas here, pre-Easter for King of Kings.

Outlets note families seek alternatives to mainstream Hollywood fare perceived as increasingly explicit or morally ambiguous, with David’s themes of faith, courage, and traditional values resonating strongly.

With David and The King of Kings which grossed ~$61–80 million worldwide, Angel now claims two of the top 10 highest-grossing animated domestic releases of 2025. This marks their best theatrical opening ever around $22M > Sound of Freedom’s $19.6M and validates their crowd-funded, guild-driven model, 1.6M+ members greenlight projects.

It opens doors for more animated projects like the upcoming Animal Farm adaptation and positions Angel as a niche powerhouse challenging major studios in the family space. Search for SquarePants underperformed expectations despite strong reviews highest in franchise history and brand recognition, possibly due to franchise fatigue after 25+ years, oversaturation on streaming platforms like Paramount+, Netflix spin-offs, and direct competition from David for family audiences.

Many families opted for the wholesome biblical story over the absurdist comedy, highlighting a split in the family market: some prefer “safe” values-driven options during holidays.

Even against blockbuster competition, Avatar: Fire and Ash dominated with ~$88–89M, David secured #2 overall and proved grassroots marketing + targeted demographics can drive surprises. Potential for strong “legs” with extended run into the holiday season, similar to past faith hits, with staggered international releases starting soon.

It underscores polarization in entertainment: demand for “light-amplifying” stories is growing, potentially pressuring Hollywood to diversify beyond sequels and IP-heavy tentpoles, many film enthusiasts having to see light in faith based and family films which tends to have more run in the new year due to the current administration focusing on safety entertainment space for minors.

Overall, this is a clear win for independent, audience-funded faith content—proving there’s a substantial, underserved market hungry for family films that align with traditional/religious values, even in a crowded holiday corridor. If David holds well through Christmas and New Year’s, it could further accelerate this trend into 2026.

Deutsche Bank Forecasts S&P 500 to Reach 8,000 By EOY 2026

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Deutsche Bank has forecasted the S&P 500 to reach 8,000 by the end of 2026 next year from the current date of December 27, 2025.

This projection, released in late November 2025, is the most bullish among major Wall Street firms at the time. It implies mid-teens percentage gains around 15-20%, depending on the exact starting point in late 2025, when the index was trading around 6,600-6,900.

Continued rapid investment and adoption of artificial intelligence (AI), driving corporate earnings growth and market sentiment. Robust S&P 500 earnings per share (EPS) growth to $320 in 2026 (a ~14% increase). Broadening of earnings strength beyond mega-cap tech stocks. Supportive factors like shareholder buybacks, capital inflows, and investor positioning.

Double-digit gains expected broadly. Deutsche Bank’s call stands out as particularly optimistic, betting on sustained AI-driven productivity gains and economic resilience despite potential risks like policy uncertainty or volatility. While forecasts vary, most strategists anticipate another positive year for U.S. stocks in 2026, though with potentially higher volatility than recent years.

Deutsche Bank’s heavy emphasis on artificial intelligence (AI) in its bullish S&P 500 forecast for 2026 (targeting 8,000) stems from the belief that AI is a transformative structural force driving sustained economic and corporate growth, rather than a short-lived hype cycle.

Strategists, led by chief U.S. equity strategist Binky Chadha, explicitly stated that “rapid AI investment and adoption will continue to dominate market sentiment” through 2026. This reflects confidence that investor enthusiasm for AI will persist, supporting elevated valuations and inflows into equities.

Productivity and Earnings Boost

AI is seen as a major driver of productivity gains across the economy, translating into robust corporate earnings growth. Deutsche Bank projects S&P 500 earnings per share (EPS) to reach $320 in 2026, a ~14% increase, with AI enabling stronger margins, efficiency, and revenue for companies adopting the technology.

Initial concentration in mega-cap tech, then broadening: The rally has been led by mega-cap tech giants like Nvidia, Microsoft, Alphabet due to massive AI-related capital expenditure (capex). However, the bank expects the benefits to broaden beyond Big Tech in 2026, with AI adoption spreading to other sectors, leading to wider earnings participation and reducing concentration risks.

Deutsche Bank views AI as a fundamental technological shift not just speculative, capable of reshaping industries and delivering meaningful productivity improvements for years. This supports their view of “mid-teens” market returns and elevated P/E multiples remaining justified.

While acknowledging high valuations in AI-related stocks, the bank argues that as long as AI capex remains strong and delivers real earnings, concerns about an “AI bubble” bursting are overdone. They draw parallels to past booms like dot-com era that lasted 3-5 years.

AI is the core growth engine in Deutsche Bank’s outlook, underpinning their most optimistic Wall Street target amid a resilient U.S. economy. This contrasts with more cautious views from firms worried about valuation contraction or economic polarization.

AI stocks will fly as the race for supremacy persists amid broader crypto weakness and privacy vs hack attributed to lack of advanced technologies sometimes meant to combat crypto-related scam and phishing which could be seen in the recent Trust wallet chrome extension breach which $7M was stolen by hackers, this shift underscores crypto’s high risk factors.

BTC Flashed Down to $24k on Binance’s BTC/USD1 Pair Due to Thin Liquidity During Christmas

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On Christmas Day, Bitcoin briefly flashed down to around $24,000–$24,111 on Binance’s BTC/USD1 spot trading pair.

This was a classic flash crash caused by extremely thin liquidity in that specific pair during holiday trading hours. USD1 is a relatively new stablecoin issued by World Liberty Financial backed by the Trump family, with much lower trading volume and order book depth compared to major pairs like BTC/USDT.

A large sell order or cascade of orders swept through the thin buy-side liquidity, causing a sharp downward wick on the chart. The price recovered almost instantly within seconds as arbitrage bots bought the dip and normalized it back to the global market price ~$87,000–$88,000.

This event was isolated to the BTC/USD1 pair and did not affect broader Bitcoin markets or major pairs e.g., BTC/USDT on Binance or other exchanges remained stable above $86,000. CoinDesk confirm It was due to low holiday volumes and order book mechanics.

No significant liquidations were triggered from this wick, as it didn’t impact leveraged futures pricing broadly. Similar incidents have occurred before on illiquid pairs.

Recent daily liquidations have been in the hundreds of millions at most, not billions from this flash wick, with no ongoing exploit or massive liquidation cascade. Flash crashes on illiquid pairs highlight risks in newer/low-volume markets, but this was not an exploit or systemic issue affecting BTC overall.

The flash wick to ~$24,000 was confined to Binance’s low-volume BTC/USD1 spot pair. Major pairs (e.g., BTC/USDT) remained stable above $86,000–$88,000. No significant liquidations occurred—unlike larger 2025 events (e.g., October’s $16–19B cascade).

CoinGlass data shows typical daily liquidations in the hundreds of millions, not billions tied to this. Arbitrage bots normalized the price in seconds. As of December 27, 2025, Bitcoin trades steadily around $87,400–$87,600, with no lingering sell-off.

Holiday Amplification: Thin liquidity during Christmas low trading volumes exaggerated the wick from a single large sell order or cascade. Newer/illiquid pairs like BTC/USD1 are prone to extreme volatility. A Binance 20% APY promo on USD1 deposits surged demand, draining order book depth and creating a premium—then a market sell order swept bids.

Stick to high-volume pairs (USDT/USDC) for execution. Use limit orders over market orders in thin markets to avoid slippage. Similar wicks happened before (e.g., December 10, 2025, on the same pair). Binance (via CZ) noted no involvement in trades and no index-linked liquidations.

Events like this may prompt better price protection mechanisms or warnings for new pairs to reduce “fat finger” errors and FUD. USD1 hit $3B+ market cap shortly after, showing strong adoption. Promotions and integrations like replacing BUSD collateral drive inflows, but expose growing pains in liquidity.

Ties to the Trump ecosystem amplify visibility—and conspiracy claims e.g., manipulation theories on X/Reddit. Most evidence points to organic liquidity issues, not coordinated dumps. Could fuel regulatory debates on stablecoin oversight.

Its reinforces need for deeper order books in emerging assets. As stablecoin market caps swell ($310B+ total), similar events may recur until infrastructure matures. Positive spin: Quick arb recovery shows market efficiency.

Overall, this was a non-event for Bitcoin’s fundamentals—more a reminder of microstructure risks in niche pairs than any systemic threat. Bitcoin remains resilient in a consolidating market post-2025 highs. Trade cautiously in illiquid environments.

Why Bitcoin is Likely to Outperform Gold and Silver in 2026

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Bitcoin is likely to outperform both gold and silver in 2026 percentage returns. Bitcoin is trading around $87,000–$88,000 after a disappointing 2025 down ~7% YTD from earlier highs near $125,000 in October. This followed the April 2024 halving, but Q4 saw ETF outflows, options volatility, and risk-off sentiment.

Gold: Near record highs at ~$4,530–$4,540/oz, up ~70–74% YTD—its best year since 1979, driven by central bank buying, geopolitical tensions, and de-dollarization. Silver’s explosive rally to ~$75–$79/oz, up ~150–170% YTD, fueled by industrial demand due to solar, EVs, AI and safe-haven flows.

Precious metals have dominated 2025 performance, while Bitcoin has lagged. 2026  Analyst consensus points to strong rebound potential: Bullish targets: $150,000–$250,000 from Bernstein, Standard Chartered, Fundstrat, J.P. Morgan ~$170,000.

Moderate: $110,000–$160,000 average ~$135,000. Potential returns: +70% to +180% from ~$87,000 base case ~+100–150%. Post-halving bull phase— historical cycles show major gains 12–18 months after halving; current cycle peaked early but could extend, ETF/institutional inflows resumption, regulatory clarity, and risk-on recovery.

Gold continued upside but moderating gains: Targets: $4,500–$5,000 major banks average, up to $6,000. Potential returns: +0% to +30% from ~$4,530 base case ~+10–20%.

Central bank demand, lower rates, geopolitics—but already at extremes, overbought RSI, massive 2025 run. Silver rally is trong but likely less explosive after 2025’s surge: Targets: $56–$80 bank averages ~$60–70. Potential returns: -20% to +5% or up to +30% in bullish scenarios from ~$77.

Industrial demand persists, but parabolic 2025 gains suggest consolidation and pullback risk. Bitcoin typically delivers its strongest gains in the year following halving; 2020–2021 cycle: massive run post-2020 halving. 2025 was anomalous, early peak, then correction; 2026 aligns with the “extended bull” phase many analysts now expect.

BTC is down YTD while metals are at ATHs—Bitcoin has more room for catch-up growth. If macro improves like rate cuts, institutional flows, BTC; correlated to equities and tech rebounds sharply; metals may consolidate after outsized 2025 gains.

Recent data shows gold/silver pulling safe-haven flows while BTC underperforms short-term, but forecasts flip this for 2026. Persistent recession or tighter policy could favor metals as pure safe-havens. However, evidence from cycles, analyst targets, and supply/demand dynamics supports Bitcoin delivering superior percentage gains in 2026.

Key Drivers for Bitcoin Outperformance in 2026

Bitcoin’s potential to outperform gold and silver in percentage gains stems from its position in the post-halving cycle, combined with maturing institutional adoption and a likely shift in macro conditions.

The April 2024 halving reduced daily supply issuance by 50%, historically triggering major rallies 12–18 months later. While 2025 saw an early peak ~$126,000 in October followed by a correction to ~$87,000–$88,000, many analysts view this as an anomaly.

The traditional 4-year cycle is evolving into a longer, liquidity-driven pattern due to institutional involvement. Forecasts suggest the bull peak extends into 2026, with new all-time highs possible in H1.

Spot Bitcoin ETFs hold over $100B+ in assets. After 2025 outflows during risk-off periods, renewed inflows are expected as regulatory clarity improves, like bipartisan support for crypto legislation and macro stabilizes. Corporate treasuries and nation-state adoption add structural demand.

Bitcoin correlates with equities and tech. If Fed cuts rates further markets price ~2 in 2026 amid softening growth, risk assets rebound. Lower opportunity costs favor non-yielding assets like BTC over consolidated precious metals.

Only ~1.5M BTC left to mine by late 2026; mining difficulty up 25%. This creates tighter scarcity than gold/silver, whose supplies grow annually. Analyst consensus targets: $135,000–$250,000, Fundstrat $200K–$250K, J.P. Morgan ~$170K, Bernstein/Standard Chartered $150K–$170K.

From ~$87,500 current, this implies +50% to +180% returns base ~+100%. Precious metals dominated 2025, gold +70–74%, silver +150–170%, reaching extremes that suggest consolidation. Central bank buying, geopolitics, de-dollarization, lower rates. But after record highs (~$4,530/oz), overbought conditions (e.g., highest monthly RSI since 1980) point to moderation.

2026 targets: $4,600–$5,000 average according to RBC, Goldman Sachs ~$4,900–$5,000. Returns: +2% to +10% base, up to +20–30% bullish. Silver; Industrial boom (solar/EVs/AI, 95M oz deficit), safe-haven flows. Parabolic 2025 run ($77–$79/oz) risks pullback. Targets: $56–$80 averages ~$60–75, some outliers higher. Returns: -10% to +10% base, potential +20–35% if demand persists.

Metals benefit from persistent uncertainty but lack Bitcoin’s asymmetric upside from cycle extension and risk recovery. Capital rotation from overextended metals to Bitcoin as risk appetite returns, boosting BTC while capping metals.

Market Sentiment Shift — Validates Bitcoin as “digital gold” in growth phases, accelerating adoption. BTC leadership could lift alts/ETH, contrasting metals’ more isolated safe-haven role. Strong BTC gains signal improving liquidity/risk-on environment; metals consolidation suggests easing extreme fear.

Persistent recession, tighter policy, or renewed geopolitics could favor metals as pure safe-havens. Some forecasts warn of BTC correction to $60K–$75K early 2026 before rebound.

Overall, cycle dynamics, valuation reset; BTC down YTD vs. metals at ATHs, and analyst distribution support Bitcoin delivering superior percentage returns in 2026 ~+80–150% base vs. +10–20% for metals.

What Does $1 Trillion in Interest Payments of US Public Debts Mean for Crypto?

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The U.S. federal government’s net interest payments on the public debt crossed $1 trillion for the first time in fiscal year 2025 ending September 2025, up from about $970 billion in reported net interest figures and roughly triple the $345 billion paid in FY 2020.

This milestone reflects a national debt exceeding $38 trillion as of late 2025, combined with average interest rates around 3.4% on marketable debt—higher than the low-rate era of the 2010s.

Fiscal Strain and Broader Economic Effects

This level of interest expense consumes a growing share of federal revenue around 19% in FY 2025 and crowds out spending on other priorities like infrastructure, defense, or social programs. Persistent deficits—projected at $2 trillion annually—could push interest costs toward $1.8–$2.2 trillion by 2035, risking a “debt spiral” where borrowing costs compound.

In traditional markets, high debt servicing can pressure Treasury yields currently around 4.1–4.2% for the 10-year note as of late December 2025, potentially limiting the Fed’s ability to cut rates aggressively and contributing to tighter financial conditions.

Dollar-pegged stablecoins, like USDT, USDC are increasingly backed by short-term U.S. Treasuries. Regulations like the 2025 GENIUS Act mandate high-quality reserves, turning stablecoin issuers into major Treasury holders— Tether alone holds over $135 billion.

Analysts project stablecoin demand could absorb $1–$1.6 trillion in T-bills over the coming years, helping finance U.S. debt as foreign buyers from China reduce holdings. This bolsters dollar dominance via crypto infrastructure and creates symbiotic growth: fiscal needs drive stablecoin adoption, which supports Treasury markets.

Bitcoin as a Hedge

Unsustainable debt raises long-term inflation or devaluation risks, strengthening Bitcoin’s “digital gold” narrative. With fixed supply— 21 million cap, BTC appeals as a non-sovereign store of value amid fiat debasement concerns. Institutional inflows via spot ETFs and corporate holdings continue despite volatility.

Crypto correlates with equities during “risk-off” periods. High interest costs signal fiscal weakness, potentially leading to higher yields, reduced liquidity, or recession fears—all bearish for speculative assets like Bitcoin currently trading around $87,000–$88,000 after pulling back from October highs near $126,000.

Recent market weakness, crypto cap down over $1 trillion since peaks ties partly to funding costs and outflows, amplified by debt-related uncertainty. Overall, $1 trillion in annual interest payments highlights U.S. fiscal challenges but paradoxically creates opportunities for crypto.

Stablecoins help fund the debt, while Bitcoin benefits from hedge demand. Long-term bullish for adoption and dollar-linked crypto; short-term volatile as a risk asset. This dynamic explains why policymakers under the current administration have embraced pro-crypto policies to leverage digital assets for Treasury demand.

Higher Treasury yields; 10-year currently ~4.13–4.15% limit Fed rate cuts and increase funding costs. Crypto, as a risk asset, has shown sensitivity: Bitcoin trades around $87,000–$88,000, down from October highs near $126,000, amid ETF outflows, thin holiday liquidity, and broader market weakness.

Recent volatility includes flash crashes on thin pairs and correlation with “risk-off” moves, where debt uncertainty amplifies sell-offs in speculative assets. This creates downward pressure on crypto prices in risk-averse environments, as seen in recent pullbacks tied to macro fears.

Paradoxically, unsustainable debt levels ~124% of GDP and rising interest costs projected $1.5–$2.2 trillion annually by 2035 bolster crypto’s role in the financial system.

Stablecoins as Treasury Demand Engine

Major issuers like Tether ~$120–$135 billion in Treasuries and Circle are already significant buyers of short-term U.S. debt. With regulations e.g., advancing frameworks like the GENIUS Act mandating high-quality reserves, stablecoin growth could drive $1–$1.6 trillion in T-bill demand over the next few years—potentially absorbing much of new issuance and replacing retreating foreign buyers.

This symbiotic relationship: U.S. fiscal needs fuel stablecoin adoption, reinforcing dollar dominance via on-chain infrastructure. Bitcoin fixed supply (21M cap) positions BTC as “digital gold” against potential inflation, currency weakening, or debt monetization risks. Institutional narratives strengthen amid $2 trillion annual deficits, with spot ETFs and corporate treasuries providing inflows despite volatility.

Pro-crypto policies under the current administration leverage digital assets to sustain Treasury markets, potentially accelerating mainstream integration. Hedge narrative strengthens; institutional inflows. Overall Crypto is bearish in recessions/funding squeezes. Bullish for adoption, utility in payments/debt financing.

$1 trillion+ interest burdens highlight U.S. fiscal challenges, creating short-term headwinds for crypto as a risk asset but long-term tailwinds via stablecoin Treasury absorption and Bitcoin’s store-of-value appeal. This dynamic supports growing crypto integration into global finance.