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Shiba Inu Price Prediction: Is SHIB Primed for Its Biggest Rally Since 2021, or Is This $0.035 Crypto the Smarter 2025 Play?

Shiba Inu Price Prediction: Is SHIB Primed for Its Biggest Rally Since 2021, or Is This $0.035 Crypto the Smarter 2025 Play?

Published:
2025-09-21 21:00:41
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Powell says young Americans face toughest job market in years

SHIB holders brace for potential breakout as market momentum builds—but savvy investors are eyeing an emerging $0.035 contender that's quietly positioning for dominance.

The 2021 Shadow Looms Large

Memecoins are heating up again, and Shiba Inu's chart patterns echo its legendary bull run. Trading volumes spike while whales accumulate—classic pre-pump behavior that has the crypto community buzzing.

That $0.035 Dark Horse

Meanwhile, an undervalued project at exactly $0.035 captures institutional attention with actual utility—because apparently, having real-world use cases is now considered a 'feature' in crypto land.

The 2025 Calculus

Pure momentum plays versus fundamentals-based growth—the eternal crypto dilemma. While SHIB rides retail sentiment, its cheaper competitor builds infrastructure that might just survive the next market cycle. Because nothing says 'sound investment' like betting on which dog-themed coin bankers will pump next.

Decline in job reallocation slows opportunities

Goldman Sachs economist Pierfrancesco Mei wrote on Thursday that “finding a job takes longer in a low-turnover labor market.” He examined “job reallocation”, the creation and destruction of roles, and showed it has fallen since the late 1990s, though more gradually in recent years. Today, most movement is “churn,” or switching among existing jobs.

Goldman reported that in 2025 churn sits well below its pre-pandemic pace across industries and states, and the drag “mostly fall[s] on younger workers.” In 2019, a young unemployed person in a low-churn state typically landed work in about 10 weeks; now it takes about 12 weeks on average.

Donovan writes that “it might be tempting to blame technology,” since stories of machines replacing people are common. He concludes, in line with Goldman, that the U.S. pattern “more convincingly fits a broader hiring freeze narrative, affecting new entrants to the workforce.”

Trade careers offer a safer path

Donovan also argues this helps explain why less-educated young workers seem less exposed. Many high school dropouts secure full-time roles earlier, and a number likely did so before the 2025 slowdown set in. With college enrollment trending lower over time, more young people are opting for skilled trades. Some build blue-collar businesses earning six-figure incomes, while classmates take on student-loan debt.

Past experience shows the risks for new graduates during “no fire, no hire” periods. In the Great Recession, when hiring stalled across entire sectors, those finishing college between 2007 and 2011 faced too few entry-level openings.

A Stanford briefing found they earned less than cohorts graduating in normal times, and the gap lingered for 10–15 years.

That history raises the stakes for Gen Z and for minority job seekers now. Economists warn about “scarring effects”, lasting hits to pay, the ability to buy a home, and wealth building. Starting out in a slump often means lower wages and a tougher climb.

Powell, speaking Wednesday, also pointed to other forces weighing on labor supply, including stricter immigration policies, and said minorities are having a harder time finding work in the 2025 freeze.

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