
Crypto Firm Exodus Drains 63% Of Its Bitcoin Reserves As Q1 Loss Doubled Year Over Year
Exodus Movement sells over 1,000 Bitcoin, reducing reserves by 63% as revenue drops significantly.

The hantavirus has recently caused fatalities on a cruise ship, prompting the emergence of related meme coins in the crypto market. Some believe a potential outbreak could positively impact the crypto sector.
The crypto community, especially some dealing with meme coins, has a strange sense of humor and often tries to capitalize on events that pose real danger to humanity.
The hantavirus, which killed some people on a cruise ship recently, is just another example. Meme coins related to the infection have already begun to surface, while certain market observers believe a potential outbreak could actually be a bullish factor for the crypto sector.
The conflict in the Middle East has recently been overshadowed by other major news – the hantavirus, which has so far claimed the lives of three people. A Dutch-flagged cruise ship that departed from Argentina and traveled through the Atlantic Ocean experienced an infection cluster of the Andes strain, which first appeared when a Dutch passenger fell ill and later died on board.
Several others disembarked at St. Helena and other locations, and some developed symptoms after flying home, leading to additional deaths and hospitalizations. The ship eventually reached Cape Verde and later the Canary Islands, while multiple countries, such as the USA and the UK, isolated former passengers due to the virus’s rare ability to spread between people. What makes the situation even more concerning is that the infection (which was likely transmitted from rats) has a mortality rate of around 40%.
And while the world hopes this doesn’t turn into a new COVID-19 disaster (or even worse), some members of the crypto community reacted rather strangely to the threat. X users idontpaytaxes and edward, for instance, assumed that a potential outbreak of the hantavirus could shut down everything, triggering “a meme coin supercycle.”
For their part, the one using the moniker Orange hopes this infection won’t spread and push the world into another lockdown. Should that happen, though, they suggested that “crypto volume would probably go absolutely crazy” because everyone will be stuck at home and looking for distractions.
In light of recent events, it is important to remind how the market reacted to the coronavirus at the beginning of 2020. In mid-March that year, the World Health Organization declared the spread of the disease a global pandemic, causing Bitcoin to crash by around 50%. However, the primary cryptocurrency quickly recovered from the knockdown and in the following years experienced a major bull run.
The hantavirus is a viral infection primarily transmitted from rodents, with rare human-to-human transmission reported.
Three people have died from the hantavirus outbreak linked to the cruise ship.
Meme coins are cryptocurrencies that often capitalize on trends or events, and some have emerged in response to the hantavirus outbreak.
Some market observers believe that the potential outbreak could act as a bullish factor for the cryptocurrency sector.

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Another thing savvy crypto enthusiasts tend to do during such unsettling periods is launch trending meme coins to earn quick gains. Data show that tokens like HANTA (whose logos feature rodents) have already popped up, with some amassing market caps in the millions.
HANTA Meme Coins, Source: GeckoTerminal
Over the years, meme coin creators have even capitalized on the deaths of public figures, including Hulk Hogan and Queen Elizabeth, to make easy money.
The hantavirus is indeed much more dangerous than the coronavirus, which crippled normal functioning worldwide in the early 2020s. It kills 4 out of 10 infected people, while the original COVID-19 strain had a fatality rate of roughly 1%.
However, the hantavirus is far less contagious than the other infection, as it requires very close, prolonged contact with a diseased person to transmit it. Additionally, people can mainly spread the virus only when they are very sick, not before symptoms.