Traders still riding on âhot altcoinsâ despite Bitcoin pullback: Santiment
Sand, XLM and Ether are leading discussion topics among traders at the moment, according to data from analytics platform Santiment.
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While Bitcoin has pulled back from its all-time highs, traders are still hot on several altcoins, according to Santimentâs social sentiment tracker.
In a Nov. 26 post to X, the onchain analytics platform said that while Bitcoin BTC$92,926 fell under $93,000 on Nov. 25, âTraders are still riding the hot altcoins and discussing specific stories surrounding under-the-radar opportunities.â
According to Santiment, metaverse cryptocurrency Sandbox SAND$0.6418, Stellar XLM$0.4636 and Ether ETH$3,362.86 are leading the altcoin trend social discussions among traders at the moment, with most of the conversations bullish in nature.
Top of the list is SAND, which the analytics platform said is experiencing an uptick because of a notable resurgence in metaverse-related investments, with âgrowing confidence among investors in SAND and related tokens.â
In the summary on its dashboard, Santiment noted that there is bullish sentiment in the market about metaverse tokens despite previous downturns.
âSpeculation about the reasons behind this trend and the future of these cryptocurrencies is also prevalent,â it noted.
Meanwhile, XLM is receiving âinterest from Korean investors following a political eventâ and is âassociated with price surges and market analysisâ on social media.
Rounding out the top three most talked about tokens is Ether, which Santiment notes is being discussed in contrast to other cryptocurrencies, especially its price performance.
Users are reportedly âexpressing bullish sentiments about Ethereumâs potential to outperform other large caps, especially given favorable market conditions.â
Related: Bitcoin analysts call recent $93K dip the âlast flushâ before the rush
According to Santimentâs social tracker methodology, the tracker trawls through crypto-specific social media channels such as X and Telegram for the top 10 words that have seen the most significant increase in social media mentions compared to the previous two weeks.
In the summary on its dashboard, Santiment notes conversations emphasize Etherâs âhistorical performance and ecosystem value, indicating an interest in its future prospects.â
At the same time, the analytics platform shared that several coins, including Pleasure Token (NSFW), Tornado (TORN) and Axie Infinity AXS$7.24 have experienced âthe highest 24-hour rises in social volume.â
Despite the discussion around altcoins, the wider market was hit with mass liquidations in the last 24 hours.
CoinGlass data shows over $518.8 million of crypto positions were liquidated in the last 24 hours, with long liquidations accounting for $389.3 million and short positions for $129 million. Altcoins made up the vast majority of wiped positions.
A crypto trader with the X handle Moustache speculated that despite the drop, âAltcoins are just warming up here,â and the âreal partyâ will start soon.
Another trader, Eugene Ng Ah Sio, said in a Nov. 26 post on X that they would be âwatching & waitingâ for now because the market was becoming too hard to predict.
âThis has been the most challenging bull market altseason I think Iâve experienced,â he said, adding:
âCapital flow doesnât make a ton of sense to me and degree of moves are very difficult to predict.â
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Swan Bitcoin sues its lawyers for picking up Tether as client
Swan Bitcoin sued former employees it alleged got help from Tether, and now accuses its own law firm of malpractice after it picked up the stablecoin issuer as a client
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Bitcoin financial services company Swan Bitcoin has sued Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, a law firm it still retains, after it hired a lawyer representing stablecoin issuer and rival crypto firm Tether.
Swan sued Gibson in Californiaâs Superior Court on Nov. 22, accusing it of legal malpractice, claiming it âwooed and won Swanâ to represent it against âformer-partner-turned-adversaryâ Tether before the law firm âembraced Tether as a client and told Swan to get lost.â
Swan claimed one of Gibsonâs lawyers called its CEO Cory Klippsten to warn that Swan would need to find other counsel, because the law firm hired lawyer Barry Berke, who represents Tether, and there could be a conflict of interest.
In September, Swan â with Gibson as its legal counsel â sued a group of its former employees, accusing them of stealing software code to form a crypto-mining company called Proton Management.
Swan claimed Proton had convinced Tether to cut ties with Swan and back Proton instead â allegations that Proton denied. Tether was not named as a defendant in Swanâs lawsuit.
On Nov. 24, Gibson filed to withdraw as Swanâs lawyers in its case against Proton, saying âthere has been a complete breakdown of the attorney-client relationship.â
It pointed to Swanâs suit against the law firm and claimed Swan told it that âit will âneverâ pay the legal fees it owesâ and âdemanded millions of dollarsâ not to oppose Gibson withdrawing from the lawsuit.
Related: Court prolongs Tornado Cash developer Pertsevâs pre-trial detention
On Nov. 25, Swan asked the Superior Court of California for a temporary restraining order to stop Gibson from withdrawing from its case against Proton and block it from bringing on Tether as a client.
It claimed Gibson is âin clear violation of the âHot Potatoâ Rule in attorney ethicsâ â a rule saying lawyers canât drop a client by withdrawing from a case to avoid a conflict of interest.
A hearing for the restraining order is scheduled for Nov. 26.
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