Japan's pension fund crypto allocation signals growing institutional acceptance, highlighting crypto's evolving role as a strategic asset class.
The post Japan’s National Business Corporate Pension Fund plans 1% crypto allocation by fiscal 2026 appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Progress in US-Iran talks could stabilize Middle Eastern geopolitics, impacting global energy markets and potentially easing oil prices.
The post Iranian negotiators report progress in US peace talks, boosting Asian markets appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
China's AI investment surge may boost tech growth but also risks speculative bubbles, necessitating careful regulatory oversight to ensure stability.
The post Chinese AI stocks surge on policy support, demand optimism appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Trump's tariff strategy shift may lead to broader trade conflicts, requiring legislative support or new legal frameworks to sustain tariffs.
The post Trump rolls out new tariff tools after Supreme Court ruling strikes down IEEPA trade powers appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The closure highlights geopolitical tensions' impact on global trade, energy prices, and the increasing role of cryptocurrencies in statecraft.
The post Iran’s Strait of Hormuz closure sends ship traffic plummeting, rattles oil and crypto markets appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

JPMorgan: Bitcoin Mining Costs Have ‘Worsened’ as BTC Trades Below Production Cost
Bitcoin has traded below the estimated cost to mine it for five straight months, according to JPMorgan analysts, leaving roughly one in five miners unprofitable and pushing publicly listed operators to sell a record volume of coins.
In a client note circulated this week, analysts led by managing director Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou said bitcoin mining economics have “worsened” in 2026. JPMorgan places the current all-in production cost of bitcoin at about $78,000, a figure derived from electricity, hardware depreciation, and overhead expenses across public miners.
With bitcoin trading near $63,000, the gap between spot price and breakeven has created a sustained squeeze across the sector.
One of the most notable shifts JPMorgan flags is a structural change in how the Bitcoin network itself responds to price movements. The beta of mining difficulty to BTC prices — a measure of how much difficulty moves for a given move in price — has risen to 0.62 over the past six months. That figure reflects a network in which a higher share of miners sit at or near their cost floor, switching machines on or off as prices shift rather than maintaining consistent operations.
The pattern became visible in early June, when mining difficulty fell 10.09%, its second-largest single decline of the year. Bitcoin’s hashrate dropped 12% in June, according to Galaxy Research. A comparable 10% difficulty drawdown occurred in January, marking two episodes of this scale within one calendar year.
The financial strain has pushed publicly traded miners into a corner. Operators including MARA, CleanSpark, Riot Platforms, Cango, Core Scientific, and Bitdeer sold a combined 32,000 bitcoin in Q1 2026 alone to fund operating expenses, according to data from TheEnergyMag cited in the JPMorgan report. That figure surpasses those companies’ total bitcoin sales for all of 2025, and it sets a new quarterly record — eclipsing the previous high of 20,000 bitcoin set in Q2 2022, during the bear market that followed the Terra-Luna collapse.
Hashprice, a metric that captures mining revenue per unit of computing power, sits at roughly $33 per petahash per second per day, according to Hashrate Index. That level places approximately 20% of the global mining industry in unprofitable territory, per CoinShares’ Q1 2026 Bitcoin Mining Report, which JPMorgan cited in its analysis.
Despite the grim conditions, JPMorgan’s analysts stopped short of a bearish conclusion. The team noted that weak market sentiment of this kind has, in past cycles, served as a contrarian indicator for future price appreciation.
They expect elevated hashrate sensitivity and larger difficulty adjustments to persist as long as BTC remains well below its production cost.
Further capitulation among higher-cost operators is possible in the first half of 2026 without a material price recovery. Miners collectively held approximately 1.8 million bitcoin at the time of publication, down from 1.86 million at the end of 2023, a sign that treasury drawdowns are an ongoing feature of the current environment.
This post JPMorgan: Bitcoin Mining Costs Have ‘Worsened’ as BTC Trades Below Production Cost first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Prediction Market Kalshi Eyes IPO as Revenue Hits $2 Billion
Kalshi, the prediction markets platform that has become the dominant force in U.S. event contracts, is in informal talks with investment banks about a potential initial public offering, The Information reported Thursday, citing sources familiar with the company’s financials.
The disclosure caps a period of rapid transformation for the four-year-old company. Kalshi’s annualized revenue has crossed $2 billion — triple its November 2025 figure — after spikes in trading tied to the NBA playoffs and the FIFA World Cup drove volume to record levels.
In May, the platform recorded $16.81 billion in monthly trading volume, up from $14.81 billion in April.
The IPO conversations remain at an early stage, and no listing is expected before late 2027 or 2028. As part of the discussions, Kalshi is asking prospective bank advisers to integrate with its platform, a move designed to give institutional clients of those banks direct trading access.
The news lands weeks after Kalshi closed a $1 billion Series F round led by Coatue at a $22 billion valuation — double the company’s valuation from January. The round drew participation from Sequoia Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, Paradigm, IVP, Morgan Stanley, and ARK Invest.
Kalshi commands more than 90% of U.S. prediction market activity. Its annualized trading volume climbed from $52 billion to $178 billion over the past year, and institutional trading on the platform jumped 800% in the six months ended in early May.
Those numbers have drawn attention from Wall Street firms looking for new venues to deploy capital.
The company was founded in 2020 by Tarek Mansour and Luana Lage, graduates of the MIT and Y Combinator programs, to build a regulated exchange where users can trade on the outcomes of real-world events — from Federal Reserve decisions and economic indicators to sports results and political races.
For years, Kalshi waged a legal battle against the CFTC for the right to list political event contracts. It prevailed in late 2024 when a federal court ruled in the company’s favor, unlocking a market that now generates billions in annual trading volume.
Kalshi plans to deploy its latest capital toward institutional expansion, including block trading capabilities, new risk products for hedge funds, asset managers, and insurers, and upgrades to its core trading infrastructure.
IPO timing will depend in part on broader market conditions and the durability of Kalshi’s growth. The prediction market space has attracted a wave of competitors, including Polymarket, but Kalshi’s status as a CFTC-regulated exchange gives it advantages in institutional adoption that decentralized rivals cannot replicate.
Should Kalshi go public in 2027 or 2028 at a valuation near its last private round, it would rank among the largest U.S. fintech IPOs in recent years.
This post Prediction Market Kalshi Eyes IPO as Revenue Hits $2 Billion first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Kevin Warsh Still Needs to Manage the Dollar, While Bitcoin Runs Automatically
Kevin Warsh chaired his first Federal Open Market Committee meeting this week and immediately showed his hawkish colors. Rates stayed steady, but the new Fed Chair made it clear he intends to prioritize price stability and reduce loose forward guidance. While Warsh is focused on managing the dollar’s ongoing challenges, his debut actually highlights something much deeper: the dollar still requires constant human intervention to avoid dilution and debasement.
Bitcoin, by contrast, has a hard-capped supply and predictable issuance that no chairman can change. Warsh’s first meeting as Fed Chair makes the advantage of Bitcoin’s fixed supply more obvious than ever.
Warsh inherited a central bank that must constantly adjust the money supply to balance inflation and employment.
This is not a temporary problem. Its built into how fiat currencies operate. The Federal Reserve can expand or contract the money supply at will, and history shows it tends to expand over time.

Since the U.S. left the gold standard in 1971, the dollar has lost roughly 88% of its purchasing power. A dollar from that era now buys what about twelve cents buys today.

U.S. M2 money supply has grown from hundreds of billions of dollars to more than $22 trillion. Every major expansion represents dilution for existing holders.
Even a disciplined and hawkish chairman like Warsh must work inside a system where the money supply is discretionary. Policy decisions, political pressures, and economic shocks all influence how much new money enters circulation. This creates recurring cycles of inflation and erosion of purchasing power. Bitcoin removes this discretion entirely.
Bitcoin has a hard cap of 21 million coins. New supply is issued on a transparent schedule that halves every 210,000 blocks, roughly every four years, until issuance approaches zero around 2140. No individual, committee, or government can increase that total.

This creates a level of monetary predictability that fiat systems cannot match. The rules are enforced by code and network consensus rather than policy statements. Once a block is sufficiently confirmed, the transaction history becomes practically immutable.
Warsh’s emphasis on price stability and reduced forward guidance is an attempt to bring more discipline to the current system. That effort itself reveals the core difference: the dollar needs active management to prevent excessive debasement. Bitcoin’s supply rules do not require ongoing intervention or trust in any central authority.
A hawkish Fed Chair trying to restrain inflation is not a threat to Bitcoin’s long-term case. It is evidence that the fiat system continues to need restraint. Bitcoin was designed so that restraint is built into the protocol from the start.
| Feature | Fiat (USD) | Bitcoin |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum Supply | None — can be expanded | Hard cap of 21 million |
| Issuance Control | Discretionary (Fed policy) | Algorithmic and transparent |
| Ability to Change Rules | Relatively easy through policy | Extremely difficult (requires consensus) |
| Inflation Trajectory | Managed target, often missed | Predictable decline toward zero |
| Transparency | Partial | Fully verifiable on-chain |
Warsh’s first FOMC meeting shows a serious attempt to manage the dollar responsibly. At the same time, it underscores why a money with truly fixed and unchangeable supply rules offers a fundamentally different foundation.
Bitcoin does not promise stable prices in the short term. It promises something narrower but more powerful: a monetary base that cannot be diluted by policy decisions. In a world where even committed central bankers must constantly fight against expansion, that fixed supply stands out as the clearest structural advantage.
For public companies and operators sitting on large cash reserves, this reality carries direct consequences. Cash sitting in bank accounts or short-term instruments continues to face gradual erosion through inflation, even under a more disciplined Fed Chair. Warsh’s emphasis on price stability is welcome, but it does not change the fundamental design of fiat — where the supply can still expand when policymakers decide it must.
Many CFOs are now quietly reevaluating what it means to hold hundreds of millions, or even billions, in a currency whose value is subject to ongoing management. Bitcoin’s fixed supply offers a fundamentally different option: an asset that cannot be diluted by policy decisions and whose scarcity is guaranteed by protocol rather than promise.
For operators thinking beyond the next few quarters, treating a portion of treasury reserves as a long-term store of value rather than pure liquidity is becoming a more serious strategic consideration.
Disclaimer: This content was prepared on behalf of Bitcoin For Corporations for informational purposes only. It reflects the author’s own analysis and opinion and should not be relied upon as investment advice. Nothing in this article constitutes an offer, invitation, or solicitation to purchase, sell, or subscribe for any security or financial product.
This post Kevin Warsh Still Needs to Manage the Dollar, While Bitcoin Runs Automatically first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Nick Ward.
Bitcoin Magazine

Franklin Templeton Files for Two ETFs That Reinvest Stock Dividends Into Bitcoin
Franklin Templeton has filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission to launch two exchange-traded funds that channel corporate dividend payments directly into bitcoin, the latest sign of Wall Street’s push to embed cryptocurrency into traditional investment structures.
The Thursday filing registers the Franklin US Equity Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF and the Franklin US Innovation Bitcoin DRIP Index ETF, with an effective date as early as Sept. 1, 2026.
The “DRIP” name borrows from dividend reinvestment plans — a mechanism long used by investors to compound stock positions over time — and repurposes it to accumulate bitcoin rather than additional shares.
Both funds launch with a 95% allocation to U.S. large-cap equities and a 5% allocation to bitcoin. The first tracks the VettaFi US Large-Cap 500 Bitcoin DRIP Index, offering broad market exposure across approximately 498 securities with market caps ranging from $7.5 billion to $4.9 trillion, while the second tracks a VettaFi innovation-focused variant concentrated on growth companies.
Under the index methodology, dividends generated by the underlying stock portfolios flow into bitcoin-linked instruments — including spot bitcoin exchange-traded products, futures contracts, options, and in some cases a wholly-owned subsidiary in the Cayman Islands — rather than being redistributed to investors or reinvested in equities.
The structure creates what one analysis described as “an automatic, low-maintenance 5% bitcoin feed funded entirely by equity dividends.”
Quarterly rebalancing rules would trim bitcoin allocations above 5% back to 4.5%, while a hard cap limits bitcoin exposure to 20% of the portfolio between rebalancing periods. No fees have been disclosed in the preliminary filing.
The proposal arrives amid a wave of crypto ETF innovation following the SEC’s publication of generic listing standards for crypto-linked funds in late 2025.
Bitwise predicted more than 100 such ETFs could launch in 2026, and Bloomberg Intelligence counted well over 100 filings in the pipeline at the end of last year. Franklin Templeton’s dividend-into-bitcoin design is the latest variation on a theme that has produced covered-call income products and other structured wrappers competing for assets beyond plain spot exposure, where BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust dominates with tens of billions in net assets.
The filings extend a broader digital asset buildout at Franklin Templeton.
In May, Franklin Templeton entered a partnership with Payward — the parent of crypto exchange Kraken — to tokenize traditional investment products and offer its BENJI tokenized money market fund on Kraken’s platform as a collateral management tool for institutional clients. Earlier this month, Franklin Templeton integrated BENJI into MoonPay Trade, enabling institutional users to swap between stablecoins like USDC and USDT and the tokenized fund through MoonPay’s on-chain infrastructure.
This year, Franklin Templeton also launched a dedicated Franklin Crypto division through its acquisition of CoinFund spinoff 250 Digital, and struck a separate agreement with Ondo Finance to offer tokenized versions of its ETFs for 24/7 trading from crypto wallets, targeting investors outside the United States. Taken together, the moves position the $1.5 trillion asset manager as one of the most active traditional finance firms in the digital asset space.
The new Franklin Templeton DRIP ETFs join a broader institutional push into bitcoin at a moment when the asset is under price pressure. BTC trades below $62,700 as of Friday morning, off more than 50% from its October 2025 peak near $126,000.
Just this week, BlackRock launched the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA), a new fund that holds exposure to Bitcoin through IBIT while selling covered-call options on 25–35% of its holdings to generate monthly income, targeting annual yields of 15%–25%. BlackRock ETF executive Jay Jacobs said the product is designed to attract traditional investors by turning Bitcoin’s volatility into a source of income, while offering a lower-volatility alternative to holding Bitcoin directly.
This post Franklin Templeton Files for Two ETFs That Reinvest Stock Dividends Into Bitcoin first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

BlackRock Executive Calls Bitcoin “Too Big to Ignore”, Discusses New Bitcoin Premium Income ETF
BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager with more than $10 trillion under management, has launched a new Bitcoin exchange-traded product designed to generate monthly income for investors — a move the firm’s top ETF executive says is aimed at pulling in a wave of traditional investors who have kept their distance from the asset due to its volatility.
Jay Jacobs, BlackRock’s US Head of Equity ETFs, spoke to CoinTelegraph to discuss the launch of the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, ticker BITA, which began trading this week. The product represents a departure from conventional Bitcoin exposure by layering a covered-call strategy on top of the firm’s existing iShares Bitcoin Trust, known as IBIT.
“You can think about this as a hybrid strategy for investors,” Jacobs said. “You both have upside opportunity in Bitcoin, as well as the ability to generate income off of Bitcoin.”
BITA holds exposure to Bitcoin through IBIT and sells call options at the money on approximately 25 to 35% of the portfolio. The premium collected from the sale of those options is distributed to holders as income.
Jacobs said the strategy targets an annual yield of between 15 and 25%, though the actual figure will depend on Bitcoin’s volatility at any given time — a direct application of the Black-Scholes options pricing model, where higher volatility produces higher premiums.
The trade-off is a cap on upside participation.
If Bitcoin rises 10%in a year and the fund is selling roughly 30%of that upside through options, the fund’s price return would be approximately 7 percent. Add the 15% income component, and total return reaches around 22% — a figure that Jacobs noted would outperform spot Bitcoin in that specific scenario.
In a major Bitcoin rally, the math tilts the other way. If Bitcoin gains 100% in a year, BITA holders would see roughly 70%in price appreciation plus 15% in income, totaling approximately 85%. That underperforms a straight long position, but Jacobs framed that outcome as an accepted trade-off, not a flaw.
One of the central themes of Jacobs’ conversation was the idea that Bitcoin’s long-criticized volatility is precisely what makes a product like BITA viable. Options prices are a function of volatility, and Bitcoin’s high historical volatility means the premiums available from selling covered calls are substantial.
“You’re monetizing volatility by selling options that are primarily driven by that volatility,” Jacobs said. For investors who have seen Bitcoin’s price swings as a barrier to entry, the product offers a different frame: volatility as a source of income rather than a source of risk.
Jacobs outlined several distinct investor profiles for BITA. Income-oriented investors seeking yield across asset classes represent one group. Long-term Bitcoin holders in a bear or sideways market represent another — people who remain bullish on the asset but want cash flow in the interim.
A third group, which Jacobs described as more institutional in character, is made up of portfolio managers who have historically required cash-flow-generating assets to justify an allocation.
“Assets that don’t have any cash flows associated with it had always been somewhat difficult, if not impossible, to put in those portfolios — Bitcoin, gold, silver — the cash flow is zero,” Jacobs said. BITA is designed to change that calculus for those investors.
Jacobs also addressed the broader trajectory of IBIT since its launch roughly two and a half years ago. He said approximately three quarters of IBIT buyers were purchasing an iShares product for the first time, indicating that Bitcoin ETFs have functioned as an on-ramp into the broader ETF ecosystem rather than just a new wrapper for existing investors.
Financial advisors on major bank platforms, who were restricted from accessing digital assets until those platforms opened up access to IBIT, represent a segment Jacobs called out as a source of growing momentum — one that is intersecting with generational wealth transfer as millennials enter higher earning years and accumulate investable assets.
This post BlackRock Executive Calls Bitcoin “Too Big to Ignore”, Discusses New Bitcoin Premium Income ETF first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Calais Digital Assets has turned UBS uMINT collateral into a live trading workflow on Bybit, giving tokenized money-market funds a concrete margin use case rather than another issuance milestone.
The setup runs across Bybit, ByCustody, and DigiFT, with the uMINT position remaining in custody while it is recognized as exchange collateral.
The June 18 deployment is important because collateral that would typically sit as idle cash or cash equivalent can still earn money-market yield while supporting trading activity.
For tokenized real-world assets, that shifts the discussion from issuance volume to market plumbing. The question is whether these instruments can become useful enough to replace idle margin inside real trading operations.
Calais, a Singapore-headquartered quantitative investment fund, is using UBS uMINT as off-exchange settlement collateral in active trading operations.
The off-exchange settlement collateral transaction runs through a three-party setup: DigiFT provides regulated access and distribution for uMINT, ByCustody holds the asset, and Bybit accepts the custodied position as collateral on its exchange infrastructure.
That changes the economics of margin. Traditional collateral arrangements often require a trader to park cash, stablecoins, or other eligible assets in a form that protects the trading venue while limiting what the fund can earn on those assets.
In DigiFT's description, Calais can keep exposure to a money-market product while using that same position to support trading.
The distinction is operational rather than cosmetic. A tokenized fund that exists on-chain is useful as a settlement asset only if venues, custodians, distributors, and legal structures agree on how it can be held, valued, and controlled.
A tokenized fund that can also satisfy exchange collateral requirements starts to behave more like a working balance-sheet tool.
| Question | Traditional idle margin | uMINT as OES collateral |
|---|---|---|
| Where the asset sits | Usually posted or reserved for the trading venue | DigiFT says Calais's uMINT remains in ByCustody |
| Yield treatment | Cash or cash equivalents may stop earning for the trader | DigiFT says Calais maintains yield while trading |
| Exchange utility | Collateral backs trading directly | Bybit recognizes the custodied uMINT as trading collateral |
| Remaining risk | Venue, custody, and margin terms remain central | Haircuts, redemptions, liquidation rights, and legal treatment remain key questions |
The comparison is the core capital-efficiency claim. The tokenized position can be recognized by an exchange while remaining within a custody arrangement designed for institutional use.
That is where the deployment reaches beyond another RWA announcement and becomes a live test of RWA collateral inside exchange margin infrastructure.

It also shows why token issuance alone is only the first layer. The trade requires a distributor, custodian, and exchange to agree on custody, recognition, and operational control before the fund position can function as collateral in practice.
The Calais deployment follows earlier plumbing. In October 2025, Bybit, DigiFT, and UBS uMINT introduced institutional access to collateral for the tokenized fund.
That earlier announcement established the basic institutional pitch: shares of UBS's tokenized money-market fund, distributed through DigiFT, could be used as collateral on Bybit.
In November 2024, uMINT launched as UBS's first tokenized investment fund. UBS described the UBS USD Money Market Investment Fund Token as a money-market investment built on Ethereum distributed ledger technology.
The product is designed to give tokenholders access to institutional-grade cash management backed by high-quality money-market instruments.
Those details are central because uMINT is being positioned as a conservative cash-management exposure rather than a volatile crypto margin exposure.
The Calais use case is about capital efficiency: a fund wants collateral that remains suitable for trading operations while still staying productive on the balance sheet.
CryptoSlate has already covered the original uMINT launch and the broader trend toward tokenized income products becoming more than passive holdings.
The new step is the specific exchange-margin workflow. The live peg is that an institutional trading client is now using the fund token as recognized collateral inside a Bybit, ByCustody, and DigiFT stack.
The current scale of uMINT still argues for restraint. The uMINT asset page identifies UBS USD Money Market Investment Fund Token as a U.S. Treasury asset on UBS Tokenize, with UBS Asset Management (Singapore) Ltd. as manager and Ethereum as the native ERC-20 network.
On June 21, the total asset value was around $18.7 million, 176,116 tokens, and 29 holders.
Those numbers make the product live but early. They show a real tokenized money-market product with visible on-chain scale wired into an institutional collateral workflow, while broad adoption and standardization across crypto venues remain to be seen.
The business issue sits in market structure, rather than price action. CryptoSlate's aggregate market pages can provide broad context for the size of the crypto market, but the operational driver is whether tokenized funds can be made useful inside repeatable trading processes.
Those processes include custody, collateral recognition, settlement, valuation, liquidity, and risk control.
If the model spreads, the impact would be practical. Funds would have a stronger path to hold yield-bearing cash-management products while posting trading collateral.
Exchanges could compete on the quality of the assets they recognize as margin, as well as on liquidity and fees. Custodians and distributors would become part of the trading stack, rather than only post-trade infrastructure.
The same features that make the Calais setup interesting also leave several unresolved questions. Public details released for the deployment omit the haircut Bybit applies to tokenized money-market fund collateral, the valuation source, the frequency of collateral marks, and the liquidation waterfall if losses outpace redemption or transfer processes.
Liquidity timing is another pressure point. Money-market funds are designed for cash-management stability, but they can behave differently from stablecoins during a fast exchange-stress event.
RWA.xyz's product page lists subscription and redemption fields, while trading firms still need to understand what happens when margin calls, exchange risk systems, and fund liquidity windows collide.
Legal treatment is equally important. Segregated custody can reduce one class of venue risk, while bankruptcy, control, and enforceability questions remain across a multi-party stack.
A fund using the structure still needs confidence about who can move collateral, under what conditions, and what happens if the exchange, custodian, distributor, or another intermediary fails.
Eligibility will also shape adoption. DigiFT's materials state that the product and services are available only through authorized and regulated intermediaries to eligible investors.
That points to a professional and institutional lane before any use of retail margin. If the model expands, it will likely do so first through qualified clients, approved custodians, and venue-specific collateral rules.
The Calais deployment is best read as a first-client implementation with meaningful implications. It shows a concrete path from token issuance to trading utility: a UBS money-market token distributed through DigiFT can sit in ByCustody and still count as collateral on Bybit.
The deployment reaches a pain point institutions understand. Idle margin is expensive. Yield-bearing collateral is attractive.
But the model only becomes durable if the operational controls can survive the moments when collateral is most important: market volatility, forced deleveraging, liquidity stress, and counterparty failure.
The next signal is whether more funds, more eligible assets, and more venues adopt similar terms with transparent haircut, redemption, custody, and liquidation rules.
Until then, the Calais trade marks a live proof point for tokenized money-market collateral, and a reminder that the real test for RWAs is whether they can do useful work once they get on-chain.
The post Wall Street’s UBS uMINT yield-bearing collateral has reached Bybit – but there’s a catch appeared first on CryptoSlate.
GoMining's GoBTC Pay Bitcoin checkout system now has a live integration surface for its biggest claim: BTC payments that feel instant when settlement is routed through the miner running the rails.
The company said its Gen1 SDK and API are live on June 19, giving merchants and wallet providers a path for Bitcoin checkout through a miner-operated settlement system.
The design keeps BTC as the payment asset at the point of sale while routing acceptance and settlement through GoMining's mining infrastructure. The Lightning Network, wrapped BTC, sidechains, and forced fiat conversion sit outside the path GoMining describes.
The tradeoff is concentration. Merchants can get instant confirmation, users can spend BTC without a direct transaction fee, and wallet providers can plug into an open API.
The first version also asks participants to rely on a payment rail where the miner behind the product helps control the route from checkout to final Bitcoin settlement.
GoMining says the rollout starts with up to 10 merchants and ecosystem partners, with thousands on the waiting list. That makes Gen1 an early controlled deployment built to measure whether miner-run settlement can attract wallets, merchants, and shoppers into a Bitcoin checkout loop.
GoBTC Pay's product page frames the system as a Bitcoin payment protocol for merchants and wallets, with early access open, merchant onboarding forms, a wallet and platform request flow, and access to API documentation.
The roadmap on the same page lays out a staged path for merchant POS, a dashboard, SDK support, merchant discovery, broader e-commerce support, P2P payments, fiat off-ramp tools, and spending controls, from wallet features to open payment rails.
Developers, wallets, and merchants can now evaluate the GoBTC Pay SDK and API rather than only the product concept.
The product page says payments are confirmed instantly at checkout, settle in Bitcoin, charge zero direct user fees, and avoid payment channels, wrapped tokens, sidechains, and fiat conversion at the point of sale.
Its FAQ says a customer payment is broadcast to GoMining's dedicated pool, which prioritizes it for inclusion in a block.
That setup creates a split experience. The merchant sees the transaction immediately enough to finish the sale. Final settlement follows later on Bitcoin, with GoBTC targeting an average on-chain settlement time of about 12 hours through GoMining's pool.
Merchant acceptance can feel instant while final settlement remains tied to the miner-operated route.
| GoBTC claim | Mechanism | Disclosure still needed |
|---|---|---|
| Instant checkout confirmation | GoBTC routes the transaction through GoMining's payment and pool infrastructure. | How merchants price the gap between checkout acceptance and final Bitcoin settlement. |
| On-chain Bitcoin settlement | Transactions are targeted for settlement through GoMining's dedicated pool. | Pool hashpower, block-production variance, and real performance under merchant volume. |
| Low merchant fee | GoBTC lists a 0.2% merchant fee split between pool miners and the initiating wallet provider. | Whether wallet providers and merchants see enough value in the 0.1%/0.1% split. |
| Non-custodial design | GoBTC describes a 2-of-3 multisig model involving the user, GoMining, and an independent recovery custodian. | The custodian's identity, recovery process, and third-party wallet implementation details. |

GoBTC's fee design is the clearest sign that GoMining is trying to solve payments through incentives as well as user experience. The company says users pay no direct transaction fee, while merchants pay 0.2%.
For third-party transactions, GoMining says half of that fee goes to miners in the GoBTC pool, and the other half goes to the wallet provider that initiated the payment.
That fee split turns each transaction into a small distribution event. Miners receive a reason to support settlement, and wallets receive a reason to bring users and merchants into the network.
GoMining says it does not charge a fee on third-party transactions, framing the model as a way to drive adoption rather than lock every payment in its own app.
GoBTC also compares its merchant pitch with card-payment costs and settlement windows. That comparison should stay attributed to GoBTC, but the broader merchant backdrop is real: Visa's 2024 merchant settlement release shows that interchange rates and point-of-sale flexibility remain active pressure points for card networks.
Recent Bitcoin payment coverage has also framed lower-fee checkout as a merchant adoption pitch.
GoBTC is competing for attention with instant checkout acceptance, BTC-denominated settlement, and a fee split that rewards the wallets and miners needed to make the system useful.
Adoption remains unproven. GoMining says the first rollout will begin with up to 10 merchants and ecosystem partners, though the company has not named those initial participants.
A waiting list in the thousands shows interest. Merchant willingness to hold BTC from checkout sales, wallet provider integration priority, and real shopper spending volume will determine whether the rail moves beyond early access.
That makes the payment economics useful as a framing device rather than as evidence that the rail has already found product-market fit.
A merchant may like a 0.2% fee and faster checkout feedback, but the model still needs actual checkout volume, wallet distribution, and BTC treasury tolerance. Those operating decisions will determine whether the fee split becomes meaningful.
The same design that makes GoBTC different also creates a main operating risk. GoMining says most Bitcoin payment companies rely on external mining pools, whereas it can prioritize GoBTC transactions because it mines blocks itself.
For merchants, that can sound practical: checkout feels fast, and final settlement still moves through Bitcoin.
For Bitcoin users, the architecture concentrates responsibility. A payment rail built around a miner-operated pool reduces one type of friction by placing more weight on GoMining's pool operation, transaction prioritization, settlement performance, and recovery design.
Miner-run settlement then becomes the central due diligence question for any wallet or merchant considering the rail.
The Stratum V2 mining protocol specification describes mining work that can be distributed by a pool or coordinated with job declaration and template distribution mechanisms.
Bitcoin Optech's pooled-mining background treats Stratum V2 as part of the broader architecture for coordinating miners. The impact of decentralization depends on implementation: who selects transactions, who controls block templates, and how much influence the pool operator retains.
GoBTC Pay's public page states that payments are routed through GoMining's private or dedicated pool. That mechanism supports a simpler merchant experience while concentrating due diligence on pool governance, transaction selection, and settlement authority.
The custody model adds another layer. GoBTC describes a 2-of-3 multisig setup in which one key is with the user, one is held by GoMining as a co-signer, and one is held by an independent recovery custodian.
The company says GoMining cannot move funds unilaterally and that the custodian provides a recovery path if a user loses access.
That model sits between custodial wallet convenience and pure self-custody. The missing disclosures are practical: the custodian's identity, the recovery process, third-party wallet implementation, outage handling, and how merchants account for the roughly 12-hour settlement target while accepting payments instantly.
Those are integration details with operational consequences. Merchants need predictable checkout confirmation, custody handling, recovery procedures, and settlement timing for daily operations.
Wallets need sufficient fee share and customer demand to justify routing users into a payment flow tied to a single miner-operated settlement path.
GoBTC Pay's Gen1 launch gives Bitcoin payments a path built around direct BTC settlement through GoMining's pool. The protocol now includes SDK and API access, merchant onboarding, wallet-platform requests, and an early-access funnel for a first group of partners.
External participation is the main adoption hurdle. If outside wallets integrate, named merchants go live, and settlement performance holds up through real payment volume, GoBTC Pay could become evidence that mining infrastructure can play a direct role in Bitcoin commerce.
If adoption remains within GoMining's own ecosystem, or if merchants hesitate due to delayed settlement and dependence on pools, the product will look more like a miner-controlled shortcut around Bitcoin's old point-of-sale problem than a broadly adopted payment rail.
The June 19 launch makes that tradeoff concrete: Bitcoin payments that feel simpler at checkout, paired with new reliance on the miner running the rail.
The post Instant Bitcoin checkout arrives, but risk now shifts to settlement control appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The banking group, ICBA, is asking the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City to turn Kraken's Fed account into an active renewal test before the initial one-year term expires.
In a June 18 letter, the community-bank trade group urged the Kansas City Fed to immediately review whether Kraken Financial's limited-purpose account remains consistent with the Fed's account-access guidelines and to consider further restrictions, suspension, non-renewal, or termination if warranted.
The request changes the tone around a limited-purpose Fed account that Kraken had framed in March as a direct-settlement milestone for crypto.
The Kansas City Fed approved Wyoming-based Payward Financial, dba Kraken Financial, for an initial one-year limited-purpose account under the Fed's Tier 3 review process.
Publicly described conditions grant Kraken Financial access to Fedwire Funds, excluding intraday credit, discount window credit, interest on balances, and use by the Kraken exchange or other subsidiaries within the Payward Group.
That combination makes ICBA's letter more than routine bank-lobby criticism. It creates a serious path toward tighter conditions or non-renewal because the account is already time-limited, risk-scored, and subject to restrictions.
The operative path is Kansas City Fed discretion over the account's conditions and renewal, with no automatic removal mechanism disclosed in the public record.
ICBA's core claim is that the existing account conditions do too little to address operational, legal, reputational, illicit-finance, and precedent-setting risks for a crypto-affiliated uninsured entity without consolidated federal supervision.
The letter asks the Kansas City Fed to scrutinize whether Kraken Financial's account remains consistent with the Fed's account-access guidelines and whether additional limits, suspension, non-renewal, or termination are warranted.
The practical target is in the renewal window. The Kansas City Fed approved the account for an initial one-year term, giving the Reserve Bank a defined point in time to reassess whether the experiment remains acceptable.
ICBA is trying to move that reassessment forward by linking the account to recent crypto-kiosk reporting and to the Fed Board's separate payment-account proposal.
The strongest version of ICBA's argument is procedural. The letter cannot force an outcome on its own, yet it provides the Kansas City Fed with a public record of objections from the banking sector before the first-year term expires.
For crypto firms, the stakes are direct access to settlement and reduced dependence on intermediary banks. For bank groups, the stakes are whether those rails open to firms outside the full bank supervisory perimeter without stronger off-ramps.
| ICBA pressure point | KC Fed control or review lever |
|---|---|
| Operational and legal risk for an uninsured crypto-affiliated entity | Tier 3 review and an initial one-year term |
| AML and fraud exposure tied to crypto-kiosk liquidity allegations | Ongoing risk assessment, added restrictions, suspension, or non-renewal |
| Precedent for other crypto firms seeking payment access | Reserve Bank discretion and the Fed Board's pending payment-account policy |
| Payment-system and credit exposure | Fedwire Funds-only service, no intraday credit, no discount-window credit, a balance limit, and no interest |

The Kansas City Fed's supplemental account notice is the main counterweight to ICBA's warning.
It frames the approval as Fedwire Funds access only, excluding intraday credit, discount-window credit, and interest on balances.
It also states that Kraken Financial is distinct from the Kraken exchange and other Payward Group subsidiaries, which have no access through the account.
Those details keep the approval from becoming a blank check for the broader Kraken business. They also show why the account is attractive to crypto firms.
Kraken described the March approval as a historic milestone that could provide it with direct payment infrastructure, improve Fedwire settlement, and reduce its reliance on intermediary banks.
CryptoSlate's March coverage treated Kraken's approval as a working example for stablecoin issuers and payments firms watching direct Fed access.
The June 18 letter tests that model from the other direction. A one-year, Fedwire-only account can be described as a controlled exception.
It can also be described as the first step toward broader access. ICBA wants the Kansas City Fed to treat the first description as binding and the second as a risk to be contained.
ICBA's escalation draws its urgency from ICIJ's reporting that major crypto firms supplied bitcoin liquidity to crypto ATM operators while authorities were scrutinizing scam risks.
ICIJ reported that Kraken transferred at least $1.1 billion worth of Bitcoin to crypto ATM operators in recent years, including more than $700 million to Coinhub and at least $245 million to Byte Federal.
Kraken told ICIJ that it maintains robust compliance controls.
Those figures should be read as transaction-tracing claims, rather than adjudicated regulatory findings. They still give ICBA a way to connect the Kraken Fed account debate to crypto ATM fraud risk without treating the reporting as a finding against Kraken Financial.
The trade group is arguing that a limited-purpose account should be judged against the real-world risks posed by crypto liquidity flows, customer scams, and monitoring obligations related to suspicious activity.
Federal and state records make the kiosk concern easier to understand. The FBI's 2025 IC3 report showed 13,460 cryptocurrency ATM and kiosk complaints with about $389 million in losses, up 23% in complaints and 58% in losses from 2024.
Victims age 60 and older accounted for roughly $257.5 million of those losses. FinCEN's August 2025 notice linked convertible virtual currency kiosks to fraud, cybercrime, drug trafficking, and non-compliant operators that may mislead exchanges and depository institutions.
The state-level record remains mixed by legal posture. The DC attorney general alleged that 93% of Athena Bitcoin ATM deposits in the District during the relevant opening period were scam-related.
Missouri issued civil investigative demands to kiosk operators including Athena and Byte Federal. California said Coinhub must pay $675,000, including $105,000 in restitution, after kiosk-law violations.
Those actions address the kiosk ecosystem, not Kraken Financial's account compliance. They still explain why ICBA is treating kiosk liquidity as a Fed-rails issue.
If the Kansas City Fed views crypto liquidity relationships as relevant to account-access risk, the first-year review becomes a test of whether disclosed guardrails can absorb new fraud-risk evidence after approval.
The timing also helps ICBA. On May 20, the Fed Board requested comment on a payment-account proposal for legally eligible institutions that are not federally insured.
The proposal would preserve eligibility rules while adding standard terms, including no intraday credit, no discount-window access, no interest on balances, overdraft controls, and illicit-finance risk mitigation.
It also encouraged Reserve Banks to temporarily pause Tier 3 access decisions while policy work continues.
Governor Michael Barr dissented from that proposal, saying the safeguards were insufficiently specific and robust against money-laundering and terrorist-financing risks at institutions the Fed does not supervise.
He cited the absence of Fed examination and inspection provisions for AML and Bank Secrecy Act procedures.
That dissent gives the ICBA letter a regulatory echo inside the Fed's own policy process.
Alongside warnings that crypto firms may gain direct Fed payment access, the bank group is pressing the same unresolved issue that Barr flagged: how the Federal Reserve can control illicit-finance risk for institutions outside its consolidated supervisory reach.
Market prices are background to that policy fight. CryptoSlate's market pages put total crypto market capitalization around $2.17 trillion and BTC near $63,500 on June 22.
The dispute around Kraken Financial is small compared with that market scale, yet large as infrastructure precedent. A tightly conditioned Fedwire account can serve as a template for other crypto-facing firms to reference when seeking similar access.
The ICBA letter creates a serious path toward tighter restrictions or non-renewal, but that path runs through Kansas City Fed review and discretion.
The public record shows a pressure campaign, a limited account, an active Fed policy debate, and a set of fraud-risk allegations around the crypto ATM ecosystem.
No public source shows that the Kansas City Fed has opened a termination process or found Kraken Financial out of compliance.
That distinction will shape the next stage. If the Kansas City Fed leaves the account unchanged, Kraken Financial's approval becomes stronger evidence that limited-purpose accounts can withstand objections from the banking sector when controls are tailored to the applicant.
If the Reserve Bank adds conditions, suspends access, or declines renewal, direct Fed-rails access for crypto may stay case-by-case and constrained.
For now, the June 18 letter changes the story from an access milestone into a live supervisory test.
The next concrete signal is whether the Kansas City Fed responds publicly, asks Kraken Financial for additional information, changes the account limits, or lets the one-year term proceed toward renewal under the existing guardrails.
The post Kraken Fed account fight could shape how crypto firms get direct payment access appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Europe's Bitcoin treasury trade is moving from accumulation headlines into financing design.
Capital B now has shareholder authority for a huge capital and credit toolkit, while BTC AB is testing investor demand for a preference-share structure before its June 30 subscription deadline.
The shared promise is higher Bitcoin per fully diluted share. The shareholder risk is that dilution, credit capacity, preference dividends, and redemption terms become the story before any added Bitcoin improves the per-share claim.
For Bitcoin treasury companies, the financing structure now matters as much as the size of the Bitcoin stack.
That test sharpened this week after Capital B said shareholders approved all resolutions at its June 17 annual ordinary and extraordinary general meeting, including authority for up to EUR 5 billion in nominal capital increases and EUR 100 billion in nominal credit instruments tied to its Bitcoin treasury strategy.
One day earlier, BTC AB opened the subscription period for a Class A preference-share rights issue that could raise about SEK 23.4 million before costs if fully subscribed.
Both companies tie the activity to the execution of the Bitcoin treasury. Investors now have to judge which capital structures they will tolerate as those companies try to raise, borrow, and dilute their way toward higher Bitcoin per fully diluted share.
Capital B's approval gives management a larger financing menu before any specific issuance or borrowing is priced. It also gives shareholders a clearer reason to focus on terms instead of headline capacity.
Shareholders approved a maximum capacity of EUR 5 billion in nominal capital increases and EUR 100 billion in nominal credit instruments. The board report treats those amounts as authorization limits, with actual financing still dependent on later terms and execution.
The distinction affects the equity case because capacity gives the company optionality before any balance-sheet Bitcoin appears. It gives the company room to issue securities or take on credit instruments later.
The effect on Bitcoin per fully diluted share depends on pricing, timing, costs, debt terms, and the number of new claims ahead of or alongside existing shareholders.
The metric appears in Capital B's strategy language. The company says its Bitcoin Treasury Company strategy focuses on increasing the number of BTC per fully diluted share over time.
A separate response to shareholder questions described accretion as an objective rather than a commitment. That caveat fits the core issue: Bitcoin per share carries weight only when financing is cheap, well-timed, and disciplined.
New shares, debt claims, or discounts can absorb the benefit of any Bitcoin acquired.
The vote results support treating the authorizations as approved resolutions while leaving the financing choices for later. A shareholder mandate can expand management's room to act before future issuance, or borrowing shows its cost.
| Company | Current action | Status | Scale | Investor question |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capital B | Capital increase and credit instrument authorizations | Approved by shareholders on June 17 | Up to EUR 5 billion in nominal capital increases and EUR 100 billion in nominal credit instruments | Can future financing add Bitcoin faster than it adds dilution or credit risk? |
| BTC AB | Class A preference-share rights issue | Subscription period opened June 16 and runs through June 30 | Up to 195,078 preference shares at SEK 120, or about SEK 23.4 million before costs | Will investors accept preference-share claims as a way to fund the treasury strategy? |

BTC AB is smaller in scale, but its financing is more immediate. The company said the rights issue comprises up to 195,078 Class A preference shares at SEK 120 per share.
Existing Class B shareholders received one subscription right for each Class B share held on the June 12 record date, and four rights allow the holder to subscribe for one preference share.
The subscription period runs from June 16 through June 30, with trading in subscription rights on Spotlight Stock Market through June 25. BTC AB expects to announce the outcome around July 2, followed by estimated first trading in the preference shares around July 20.
That calendar gives investors a near-term signal on shareholder appetite while Capital B's broader authorization package still awaits actual financing terms.
The early support has two tiers. BTC AB disclosed subscription undertakings totaling about SEK 6.4 million, representing roughly 27.2% of the rights issue.
It also disclosed non-binding intentions to subscribe from all board members and certain management members of about SEK 2.4 million, equal to roughly 10.2%. The first category is committed support. The second indicates insider interest, and the company describes it as non-binding.
BTC AB said the issue is intended to strengthen the capital base and support continued execution of its Bitcoin treasury strategy. The company's simplified information document sets out preference-share terms that can affect that strategy's economics.
Preference shares fund the treasury through claims that differ from those of ordinary common shares, and they introduce their own obligations. Preference dividends, redemption mechanics, payment capacity, and the fixed issue price all affect how much value remains for existing shareholders if the company later grows its Bitcoin holdings.
A May 27 operational update gives the market a baseline. Before the June subscription window opened, BTC AB reported 171.33 Bitcoin and 0.00021957 Bitcoin per B-share.
The July 2 outcome will show how much capital the preference-share structure attracts and how heavily funding mechanics weigh on investor attention.
The wider corporate Bitcoin treasury trend has increasingly involved debt, preferred equity, at-the-market issuance, and Bitcoin-per-share benchmarks.
Strategy-style preferred financing has also put pressure on how investors value instruments built around a corporate Bitcoin stack. European issuers are adapting that financing model to different markets, listing venues, investor bases, and securities structures.
For Capital B and BTC AB, Strategy supplies context while current European disclosures carry the news. A company can say it wants more Bitcoin per fully diluted share. Shareholders then have to decide how the terms used to fund that goal affect their claim.
The two disclosures belong together despite their different sizes. Capital B has the larger mandate, but the capital has yet to be raised.
BTC AB has the dated subscription process, but the amount is modest, and the outcome is pending. One shows shareholder tolerance for a huge financing toolkit. The other shows whether a smaller Bitcoin treasury company can sell a preference-share structure to fund execution now.
For investors, the central question is how the design of financing can make Bitcoin exposure better for shareholders after every new share, preference dividend, redemption feature, and credit claim is accounted for.
The next signal is BTC AB's subscription result around July 2. For Capital B, investors should watch the terms of any actual use of the approved authorization.
Future issuance or borrowing that increases Bitcoin per fully diluted share after costs could make these structures look accretive. Financing that leaves dilution and corporate risk to absorb the gain would make the market treat them as Bitcoin exposure with extra corporate baggage.
The post Bitcoin treasury companies in Europe struggle with shareholder cost issues appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Europe's MiCA deadline is turning access and infrastructure into the same question: which crypto apps remain available, and who controls the rails underneath them?
BitGo Europe GmbH announced a partnership with Bielik.io, a Warsaw-based crypto trading platform, to support regulated trading access across the EEA by integrating BitGo Europe's Crypto-as-a-Service infrastructure.
Through that integration, eligible Bielik.io users are expected to access deposits, supported digital asset trading, and custody via Bielik's mobile app, while BitGo Europe provides the regulated infrastructure beneath.
The deal is small enough to look like a normal platform partnership. It is also specific enough to show one route smaller European platforms may take as MiCA deadlines replace old national regimes.
If those platforms cannot build a full regulated operating stack before national permissions expire, the survival path may be to keep the customer-facing app and move the regulated core to a licensed provider.
That makes the BitGo-Bielik announcement different from standard MiCA access issues. Many platforms are being asked whether users will still be able to open their app after July 1. They may not be asking who holds custody, onboarding, transfer, trading, settlement, and policy controls once the app keeps working.
ESMA has said the MiCA transitional period expires across the EU on July 1, 2026. After that date, entities providing crypto-asset services to EU clients without a MiCA license are in breach of EU law and must stop offering those services, according to the regulator's April statement.
That moves MiCA out of the realm of policy design and into the operating model of every exchange, broker, wallet, and app serving the bloc. A platform can seek its own MiCA CASP authorization, wind down, transfer users, withdraw from Europe, or find a licensed infrastructure partner that can lawfully provide the relevant services.
ESMA's statement sets a boundary for outsourcing. It says CASPs cannot outsource or delegate custody to entities that are not themselves authorized CASPs, and it warns against arrangements that route EU clients through unauthorized third-country entities.
In practice, crypto custody outsourcing and routing must remain within the regulatory perimeter for the services being performed.
BitGo Europe is positioning itself directly in that gap. A day before the Bielik partnership announcement, the company described MiCAR-compliant CaaS infrastructure for eligible VASPs, fintechs, and digital asset platforms as they navigate the transition from national registration regimes to MiCA.
The product set includes custody, wallet APIs, onboarding and KYC, trading and settlement, transfer services, SEPA on- and off-ramps where available, policy controls, implementation support, and insurance for BitGo custodial wallets subject to terms.
The offer combines technology with a regulated operating path: a platform can preserve its front-end relationship with users while moving regulated functions into another company's stack.
For a smaller platform, the appeal is clear. Building the full set of regulated capabilities alone means carrying the burden behind custody, wallets, onboarding, trading, settlement, transfers, and policy controls.
Embedding a licensed provider may allow the platform to retain its brand, user experience, and customer relationships while the provider handles the infrastructure for those functions.
For users, the change can be harder to see. The same app may offer deposits and trades, but the entity providing custody or transfer services may be different from the brand on the home screen.
Where the provider is authorized for the relevant services, that model can support compliance while preserving access through a familiar interface.
Still, a customer-facing platform that depends on another company for custody, wallets, trading, settlement, and onboarding has less operational independence than a platform that runs those functions itself.
Its continuity depends on the provider's license scope, service availability, supported assets, and policy controls for the functions it provides.

That is the concentration issue MiCA may be creating beneath the market. The regulation may also keep some smaller platforms alive by shifting their operational core toward larger regulated providers.
BitGo Europe's own regulatory position helps explain why it can play that role. France's AMF lists BitGo Europe GmbH as a Germany-licensed MiCA CASP authorized in France under free provision of services.
The listed services include custody and administration; exchange of crypto-assets for funds; exchange of crypto-assets for other crypto-assets; order execution and transmission; and transfer services.
In a single-market framework, that passporting logic is valuable. It lets a provider authorized in one member state become part of the infrastructure answer in another, subject to the service scope and notification process.
For smaller platforms in markets where the domestic path is messy or late, that can become more than a convenience.
Poland is the clearest immediate pressure point in this story because the BitGo-Bielik partnership is tied to a Warsaw-based platform and the July 1 deadline is arriving with unresolved national implementation questions.
The Polish government's Katowice notice for clients of entities on the virtual-currency activity register states that, after July 1, 2026, a Polish register entry will not authorize virtual-currency activity in Poland or abroad.
It said crypto-asset services after that date require valid MiCA authorization, and it directed clients to check ESMA's public list.
Poland's legislative backdrop adds to that pressure. The Polish president's refusal to sign the May 15, 2026 crypto-assets market act left implementation unresolved.
UKNF has separately said that because the relevant national act had not entered into force, no Polish competent authority had been formally designated for certain MiCA functions relating to crypto-asset service providers.
Poland remains inside MiCA, but its domestic transition is awkward. UKNF said MiCA-authorized CASPs from other member states may provide services in Poland under cross-border rules after notifying their home authority, and they do not need a physical presence in the host state.
Lithuania gives an earlier view of the same kind of pressure. Its CASP transition period ended on Dec. 31, 2025, and the Bank of Lithuania said providers that did not plan to continue needed to wind down smoothly, return client assets, or transfer custody to client-designated custodians or self-hosted wallets.
It said that about 30 companies had applied for a CASP license at the time, while more than 370 had declared crypto-asset services, and only 120 were actually operating based on revenue and financial statement activity.
The pattern is consistent: national VASP regimes created large populations of registered or declared providers, but MiCA authorization is a higher bar.
As that bar bites, platforms have to decide whether they are regulated operators, wind-down candidates, or front-end brands relying on someone else's regulated infrastructure.
The most visible MiCA pressure remains user access. Recent CryptoSlate coverage on Binance access, USDT liquidity, and possible exchange cutoffs shows how quickly compliance decisions can reach users.
The infrastructure issue sits one layer below that. If more platforms preserve access by embedding licensed CaaS providers, Europe's crypto market could maintain a diverse app layer while more of the custody and compliance layers are handled by fewer providers.
A tradeoff can still support the regulation's compliance goals. MiCA raises authorization requirements across the bloc, and a platform that uses an authorized custody and onboarding provider may be better positioned to continue serving users lawfully than one that relies on an expiring national registration.
But what control does the market give up in exchange?
If integrations concentrate among fewer providers, those providers could gain more influence over which assets are supported, how quickly platforms can onboard users, how transfers are monitored, which jurisdictions receive service first, and how quickly a platform can recover if its provider changes terms or exits a line of business.
Market scale explains why the issue extends beyond one Polish app. On June 22, CryptoSlate's market pages showed total crypto market capitalization around $2.15 trillion, Bitcoin near $63,500, and USDT still a roughly $186 billion liquidity rail.
MiCA's infrastructure choices sit beneath a market large enough to make custody, onboarding, and transfer control strategically important operational functions.
At this stage, the concentration thesis is an emerging pressure awaiting market-wide measurement. The BitGo-Bielik deal shows one concrete route: a local platform preserving access through regulated infrastructure from a larger licensed provider.
ESMA's deadline and outsourcing rules show why that route is consequential. Poland and Lithuania show why the timeline is urgent.
The next signal is whether more European platforms announce similar CaaS integrations before and after July 1. If they do, MiCA's first visible result may be a cleaner, more compliant market.
Its second result may be that fewer companies control the rails beneath it.
The post MiCA deadline likely to shift smaller crypto apps into licensed custody rails appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Ethereum is entering a critical short-term zone as its price struggles around a rising trendline that has supported the recent recovery attempt. $ETH is currently trading near $1,726, with the intraday range moving between roughly $1,716 and $1,743, showing that volatility remains limited but pressure is building.

The next move could be decisive. If Ethereum fails to break back above the trendline and hold it as support, sellers may regain control and push ETH toward lower support levels. However, if buyers manage to reclaim the trendline with strength, Ethereum could attempt another recovery toward the recent resistance zone.
The latest Ethereum price action shows ETH attempting to stabilize after a sharp rejection from higher levels. The price recovered from the recent low zone near $1,520–$1,550, then climbed steadily along an ascending trendline. That trendline has now become the most important area to watch.
Ethereum is currently trading close to this line, but the reaction is not yet strong enough to confirm a bullish reversal. The market needs a clear move above the trendline, followed by a successful hold, before bulls can argue that momentum is shifting back in their favor.
Without that confirmation, ETH remains vulnerable to another leg lower.
**CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 74% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
For this $Ethereum price prediction, the main bearish scenario starts if ETH fails to reclaim and hold the trendline. In that case, the first support area to watch is around $1,695–$1,700. A break below this zone could open the door for a move toward $1,665, followed by $1,635.

If selling pressure becomes stronger, Ethereum could revisit the broader support region between $1,575 and $1,550. This area previously acted as a recovery base, which makes it important for buyers to defend. Losing it would weaken the short-term structure and increase the risk of a deeper correction.
In simple terms, ETH needs to avoid turning the trendline into resistance. If the market rejects from this level, the chart could shift from a recovery setup into a continuation of the recent downside.
For Ethereum to regain strength, ETH needs to break above the trendline and hold above it with convincing buying volume. The first upside target would be around $1,760–$1,780, where sellers may try to defend the recent recovery zone.
A stronger breakout above that area could send Ethereum toward $1,815–$1,835, which was the last major rejection region. If ETH clears that resistance, the market could begin pricing in a more bullish continuation toward the $1,850–$1,900 area.
However, this bullish scenario depends on confirmation. A small move above the trendline is not enough if ETH quickly falls back below it.
Ethereum is currently in a neutral-to-bearish short-term position. The price has not fully collapsed, but it has also failed to show enough strength to confirm a clean recovery. This makes the trendline the key decision point.
As long as ETH remains below or struggles at this level, downside risk remains active. A confirmed reclaim would improve the outlook, but until then, the market may continue to favor caution.
Ethereum’s next move depends on whether ETH can break above and hold the rising trendline. A successful reclaim could push ETH back toward $1,760, $1,815, and possibly $1,850. But if ETH fails at the trendline, the price could slide toward $1,700, $1,665, and $1,575.
For now, Ethereum is at a make-or-break technical level. The trendline reaction could decide whether ETH begins a fresh recovery or prepares for another downside move.
The crypto price today shows a market that is trying to stabilize, but next week could become decisive. Bitcoin is trading around $64,143, Ethereum is holding near $1,730, and Solana is one of the strongest major assets with a 3.41% gain over 24 hours and 8.06% over the past 7 days, based on the latest market snapshot.

However, the bigger story is not only the current crypto prices. It is the return of geopolitical risk after Iran announced another closure of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the most important global energy chokepoints. Reuters reported that Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters announced the closure of the Strait of Hormuz to vessel traffic, while other reports noted uncertainty over how fully the move is being enforced on the ground.
This matters because the Strait of Hormuz is not just a regional shipping route. The U.S. Energy Information Administration describes it as the world’s most important oil transit chokepoint, with oil flows through the strait historically representing a major share of global petroleum liquids movement.
The current crypto market is not showing panic yet. Instead, prices suggest cautious positioning before a potentially volatile week.
Next week could be decisive because the market is now facing two opposite forces.
On one side, crypto prices are holding relatively well. Bitcoin has not broken down sharply, Ethereum is still positive on the weekly chart, and Solana continues to outperform. This shows that buyers are still present.
On the other side, the Strait of Hormuz situation could quickly bring back volatility. If the closure disrupts oil flows or raises energy prices, traditional markets may shift into risk-off mode. In that case, crypto could face pressure as investors reduce exposure to volatile assets.
Even if Iran later decides to reopen the strait, the uncertainty itself can still move markets. Traders do not only react to actual closures; they also react to headlines, shipping risk, oil price expectations, and fear of escalation. That means Bitcoin, Ethereum, and major altcoins could see sharp moves in both directions.
A Strait of Hormuz crisis usually affects oil first. If oil prices rise, inflation fears can return, and that can make investors nervous about risk assets. For crypto, this creates a difficult setup.
Bitcoin is sometimes described as a hedge against uncertainty, but in moments of sudden geopolitical stress, it often trades like a risk asset. That means BTC could drop if traders rush into cash, the U.S. dollar, or safer assets.
However, if the market believes the shock will push central banks toward easier policy later, crypto could recover quickly. This is why the next few days matter. The first reaction may be volatility, but the second reaction will depend on oil prices, global market sentiment, and whether the Strait of Hormuz crisis escalates or cools down.
Bitcoin holding above $64,000 is important for market confidence. As long as $BTC remains near this level, the broader crypto market may avoid a deeper correction.

But if geopolitical tension increases and Bitcoin loses this zone, traders may start watching lower support levels. A break below current levels could pressure altcoins, especially weaker performers like DOGE, BNB, and XRP.
On the bullish side, if the Strait of Hormuz situation calms down and Bitcoin stays above $64K, the market could attempt a rebound. In that case, Solana and Hyperliquid may continue to attract attention because they are already showing stronger weekly momentum.
Among the major cryptocurrencies, Solana is currently the strongest performer, gaining more than 3% in 24 hours and over 8% weekly. TRON is also positive, trading at $0.3266, up 1.09% in 24 hours and 2.92% over 7 days.
Hyperliquid remains the strongest weekly performer in the screenshot, with a 12.44% gain over 7 days, even though it is down on the day.
The weaker side includes Dogecoin, which is down both daily and weekly, and BNB, which remains under weekly pressure despite a small daily recovery.
The crypto market is not crashing today, but it is also not fully bullish. The current prices show stability, while the geopolitical background suggests that volatility could return quickly.
If the Strait of Hormuz closure becomes more serious, oil prices and global risk sentiment may dominate crypto price action. If the closure is reversed or softened, crypto could benefit from relief buying.
For now, the crypto price today shows a market waiting for confirmation. Bitcoin is holding near $64K, Ethereum is stable, Solana is leading, and Hyperliquid remains one of the strongest weekly performers. But next week may decide whether this is the start of a broader recovery or only a pause before another volatile move.
Japan’s National Business Corporate Pension Fund is preparing to take a rare step for the country’s retirement sector: allocating part of its assets to cryptocurrencies. According to recent reports, the Okayama-based corporate pension fund plans to invest around 1% of its assets into crypto assets during fiscal 2026.
At first glance, the headline looks bullish. A Japanese pension fund entering the crypto market gives digital assets another layer of institutional credibility, especially in a country where pension capital is often seen as conservative and long-term. But the real question is whether this move is big enough to move Bitcoin, Ethereum, or the wider crypto market.
The National Business Corporate Pension Fund reportedly manages around ¥21.3 billion in total assets. A 1% allocation would therefore represent roughly ¥213 million.
In US dollar terms, that equals approximately $1.3 million, depending on the exchange rate. This means the direct capital entering the crypto market from this allocation is relatively small.
To put it into perspective, the global crypto market is currently worth more than $2 trillion, while daily trading volume across the market often reaches tens of billions of dollars. Against that backdrop, a $1.3 million allocation is not large enough on its own to create a major price move in Bitcoin, Ethereum, or the broader crypto market.
The short answer is no, not directly.
A ¥213 million allocation is too small to shift the global crypto market in a meaningful way. Even if the entire amount were invested in Bitcoin alone, it would represent only a tiny fraction of Bitcoin’s daily trading activity. If the investment is spread across several cryptocurrencies through passive funds, the impact on any single coin would become even smaller.
That means traders should not expect this allocation to trigger a sudden Bitcoin rally, an Ethereum breakout, or a broad altcoin pump by itself.
However, the symbolic impact could be more important than the actual money involved.
The bigger story is not the size of the investment. It is the type of investor making the move.
Pension funds are usually conservative institutions. Their job is not to chase short-term gains, but to preserve and grow retirement assets over long periods. When a pension fund decides to add even a small crypto allocation, it suggests that digital assets are slowly becoming part of the institutional diversification conversation.
Reports also indicate that the fund’s goal is not aggressive speculation, but currency-risk diversification. This is important because it frames crypto less as a high-risk trading bet and more as a portfolio tool. That shift in language matters for institutional adoption.
Japan has also been moving toward a clearer digital asset framework, while major financial groups such as Nomura and Laser Digital have already been building institutional crypto products. This creates a more favorable environment for traditional investors to explore crypto exposure in a regulated and risk-managed way.
This is where the story becomes more interesting.
One small pension fund allocating 1% to crypto will not move the market. But if this becomes a model for other pension funds, asset managers, or corporate retirement schemes in Japan, the cumulative effect could become much larger.
For example, if larger Japanese pension investors were to consider even small allocations to digital assets, the numbers could change quickly. A 1% allocation from a small fund equals around $1.3 million. A 1% allocation from a much larger institutional investor could mean hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars.
This is why the market may treat the news as a signal rather than a liquidity event. The fund itself is not big enough to move prices, but it may show that institutional crypto adoption in Japan is entering a new phase.
For $Bitcoin, the news supports the long-term institutional adoption narrative. BTC remains the most likely first choice for conservative crypto exposure because of its liquidity, market size, and role as the leading digital asset.
For $Ethereum and major altcoins, the impact depends on how the passive funds are structured. If the investment goes into a multi-coin crypto fund, Ethereum and other large-cap cryptocurrencies could also receive small allocations. Still, the amounts would likely be too limited to have a visible short-term price effect.
The more important takeaway is that crypto is becoming easier for traditional institutions to access through professional investment vehicles, rather than direct token buying. That could support long-term adoption, especially if more pension funds prefer passive and regulated products.
This news is bullish, but it should not be overhyped.
It is bullish because a Japanese pension fund entering crypto adds credibility to the asset class and shows that institutions are still exploring digital assets despite volatility. It also reinforces the idea that crypto is increasingly being considered as part of diversified portfolios.
But it is not bullish in the sense of immediate price pressure. The allocation is too small to move the market today. The real impact will depend on whether this becomes an isolated case or the beginning of a broader institutional trend in Japan.
Japan’s National Business Corporate Pension Fund allocating 1% of its assets to crypto is not large enough to move the crypto market directly. With total assets of around ¥21.3 billion, the planned crypto allocation is roughly ¥213 million, or about $1.3 million.
Compared with a global crypto market worth more than $2 trillion, this is a very small amount.
Still, the news matters because of what it represents. A pension fund entering crypto, even cautiously, signals that digital assets are becoming more acceptable within traditional investment portfolios. The short-term market impact may be limited, but the long-term signal could be significant if more institutions follow.
Crypto prices are caught in a familiar trap: every time the Middle East situation looks like it's calming down, a fresh headline flips the script. The latest twist landed today. Iran says it closed the Strait of Hormuz again over Israel's strikes in Lebanon, while US Vice President Vance says there is "no evidence" the strait is closed.
That direct contradiction — one side declaring a shutdown, the other flatly denying it — captures exactly why crypto prices have been whipsawing. Markets hate uncertainty, and right now there's an abundance of it. This is the same waterway that has been at the center of a months-long crisis, and traders have learned that each "closure" or "reopening" headline can swing risk assets in minutes.
The backdrop matters. Just days ago, the situation looked like it was de-escalating. Trump announced on Sunday that the US and Iran had reached a deal, the memorandum of understanding was read to reporters on Wednesday, and both presidents signed it that day. Optimism was building that the worst was over.
Then the ceasefire wobbled. Israel and Hezbollah exchanged fire despite the ceasefire, possibly prompting the Hormuz Strait closure. Iran's response was to once again declare the strait shut — but as has happened repeatedly through this crisis, Washington disputes that any real closure is in effect.
There's a near-term catalyst to watch closely: technical-level talks to implement the US–Iran deal are scheduled for June 21 in Bürgenstock, Switzerland, with Pakistani and Qatari mediators participating. That's tomorrow — meaning the situation could shift again within hours.
Despite the noise, crypto prices have so far held up better than you might expect. Here's where the major coins stand as of June 20, 2026:
The total crypto market cap sits around $2.18 trillion, well off its highs but stabilizing. Notably, prices are green on the day even amid the closure claim — a sign markets may be treating today's Iran headline with skepticism, much like the US response suggests they should.

For readers wondering how a Middle East shipping lane affects Bitcoin, the link runs through oil and risk sentiment. The Strait of Hormuz normally carries around one-fifth of the world's oil and LNG. A genuine closure spikes energy prices, which feeds inflation, which in turn pushes back expectations for interest-rate cuts — a chain reaction that tends to hurt risk assets like crypto.
The transmission works like this:
This is why crypto has been so reactive to every Hormuz headline. Bitcoin in this cycle has behaved less like a geopolitical safe haven and more like a high-beta risk asset — selling off on fear and rallying on relief, much like tech stocks.
Given the conflicting reports, two clear scenarios are on the table:
If the closure proves real (or the ceasefire breaks down):
If it's another false alarm (as the US suggests):
The fact that prices are holding green today hints the market is leaning toward the second scenario — but that can change the instant a headline confirms or denies the closure.
In a yo-yo environment like this, the headlines are the market. Key signals to monitor:
Bitcoin is having a rough stretch. The asset is trading around $63,600, a far cry from its October 2025 all-time high near $126,000 — a drawdown of roughly 50% from the peak. But the price alone doesn't tell the full story. The more significant development is where the selling is coming from: the spot Bitcoin ETFs that were supposed to be crypto's steady institutional anchor.

Those ETFs have been bleeding capital at a historic pace. The recent weeks have seen one of the most sustained institutional withdrawals since these products launched in 2024 — a clear signal that big-money sentiment has turned defensive.
The numbers are striking. Spot Bitcoin ETFs recently posted their longest losing streak on record. From May 15 to June 3, spot bitcoin ETFs faced their longest outflow streak since their 2024 launch — 13 consecutive trading days, losing $4.33 billion, roughly 59,400 BTC.
The pressure didn't stop there. For the week ending June 6, US spot bitcoin ETFs posted $1.72 billion in net outflows — the largest weekly outflow since February 2025 — marking a fourth consecutive week of outflows totaling $5.4 billion. Even the biggest fund wasn't spared: BlackRock's IBIT led the outflows, losing $1.34 billion for that week.
The cumulative effect on assets under management has been severe. Total assets in bitcoin ETFs fell to $80.40 billion from $104.29 billion at the start of the streak, with fund holdings dropping to 1.277 million BTC, about 7.2% below the October 2025 peak.
The exodus isn't really about $Bitcoin itself — it's largely a macro story. The main driver is a shift in interest-rate expectations:
In other words, this looks like a capital rotation driven by the rate environment rather than a collapse in Bitcoin's fundamentals.
Market psychology has turned deeply negative — arguably to an extreme. The Crypto Fear and Greed Index sat at just 8 points, deep in the "Extreme Fear" zone, as of June 8, 2026.
Historically, readings this low are notable for a counterintuitive reason: extreme fear has often coincided with local bottoms rather than the start of deeper crashes. It's not a guarantee — fear can always get worse — but it tells you sentiment is washed out, and a lot of weak hands may have already sold.
Balance matters here, and there are genuine counterpoints to the gloom. Several analysts frame the current drawdown as a normal, even healthy, part of the cycle rather than a structural breakdown:
The bullish interpretation is that this is a redistribution phase — speculative money exiting while patient, long-term capital quietly accumulates.
With ETF flows now a primary market driver, the signals to monitor are clearer than ever:
Bitcoin's record ETF outflow streak is a real and significant development — billions in institutional capital have exited, AUM has fallen sharply, and sentiment is at extreme-fear levels. The honest read is that the near-term picture is genuinely weak, driven mostly by a macro environment where delayed rate cuts make Bitcoin less attractive than yielding alternatives.
But the same data carries a more constructive subplot: this may be a rotation rather than an exit, with speculative holders giving way to long-term accumulators, and pockets of selective institutional buying already appearing. For traders, the key isn't to pick a side on conviction alone — it's to watch ETF flows and Fed expectations closely, since those are the forces that will likely decide whether this drawdown becomes a bottom or a longer downtrend.
Both models trade word-by-word generation for parallel denoising. Only one of them does it without losing intelligence in the trade.
New research outlines how chatbot behaviors, including personalization, mirroring, and excessive agreement, reinforce delusions.
OpenRouter's compound-model API stacks budget AI models—and beat GPT-5.5 and Claude Opus 4.8 outright in benchmark testing.
Activity on the Bitcoin network is surging, CryptoQuant said, but it's not correlating with price movement for its native asset.
Global financial institution Charles Schwab is the latest firm hoping to steal a piece of the growing prediction market pie.
Ethereum is facing the very real possibility of recording three consecutive losing quarters for the first time ever.
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson hints at a potentially big future ahead, and AI seems to be part of it.
On Sunday, the executive chairman hinted at another major Bitcoin acquisition by posting a tracker chart of the company's holdings.
Zcash co-inventor shares direct take on second largest cryptocurrency Ethereum (ETH) amid recent Ethereum Foundation concerns.
Shiba Inu community awaits next move amid general market quiet.
TLDR:
XRP changed hands at $1.13, down 1.06% over 24 hours. Trading volume hit $868.27 million, a jump of 4.83%.
The token has now fallen 68% from its cycle high of $3.66. That high was set during a previous rally phase. The pullback has reset trader expectations across social media.
The $1.10 to $1.30 range has become a focal point for traders. Crypto commentator Diana, who posts as @InvestWithD on X, said this zone represents an accumulation area. She argued the broader weekly chart structure still points upward despite the drop.
Diana outlined several upside levels in her post. She cited $2.00 to $2.50 as first resistance, and $3.66 as a retest of the previous cycle high. In addition, she highlighted the $5.00 to $6.00 price zone as a possible range for price discovery.
She also flagged $8.17 as a Fibonacci extension target. A further level near $17.15 appeared in her post as a long-term channel projection. Diana described $0.40 to $0.60 as a deeper macro support zone if the current range fails.
Separately, an account posting as @Cryptollica framed the current setup differently. The post claimed XRP has only seen this level of washout three times in 13 years. It suggested past instances of heavy pessimism preceded later rallies.
Circulating supply for XRP sits at 62.05 billion tokens, against a max supply of 100 billion. Total supply stands at 99.98 billion. The token’s fully diluted valuation reached $113.44 billion based on current pricing.
Holder count data places active addresses at 536,410. That figure offers a snapshot of distribution across the network. Volume relative to market value sat at 1.23% over the past day.
Neither Diana nor Cryptollica cited specific on-chain metrics to support their projections. Their posts relied on chart pattern interpretation rather than fundamental data. Social sentiment around XRP has fluctuated through the corrective phase.
Price action over coming sessions may test whether the $1.10 floor holds. Traders following the accumulation thesis are watching that range closely. Others remain cautious given the scale of the recent pullback.
The post XRP Holds Key Support After 68% Drop, Traders Eye Next Move appeared first on Blockonomi.
HYPE ETFs recorded stronger relative inflows than Bitcoin and Ethereum over the past week, according to reported market data. The token attracted $31.4 million in net ETF inflows, equal to 0.208% of its market capitalization.
Bitcoin and Ethereum both registered negative readings over the same period, while Solana posted weaker positive inflows.
The divergence has placed HYPE ETF activity under closer attention as capital flows shift unevenly across major crypto assets.
Data from Hyperliquid Hub and Henry Vo TTT showed HYPE ETF inflows reached $31.4 million over seven days. The figure represented 0.208% of total market capitalization, positioning HYPE ahead on a relative inflow basis.
Solana recorded 0.016% inflows, significantly below HYPE’s absorption rate across the same reporting window. The gap highlighted uneven ETF demand intensity across mid-cap and large-cap crypto assets.
Bitcoin posted a negative 0.011% reading during the same period, based on reported ETF flow data. Ethereum followed with a negative 0.007% figure, signaling net outflows across its ETF exposure.
Both assets faced weaker capital participation compared to smaller-cap tokens in the same cycle. This divergence pointed to shifting allocation behavior across crypto-linked investment products.
Relative comparisons showed how ETF flows scale differently across market capitalizations.
Smaller assets like HYPE reflect sharper percentage movements even with lower absolute inflows.
Larger assets require significantly higher capital to shift their ETF flow percentages meaningfully. The structure of ETF exposure continues to amplify differences between major crypto assets.
HYPE’s smaller market capitalization amplified the effect of ETF inflows on circulating supply dynamics. A $31.4 million inflow represented a larger proportional absorption compared with BTC and ETH flows.
This structural difference explains why relative inflow metrics often favor mid-cap crypto assets.
ETF demand therefore appears more visible in tokens with lower overall market value.
Market participants have tracked whether the inflow trend continues beyond a single weekly cycle. Sustained ETF demand typically signals more consistent capital allocation across crypto investment products.
Short-term spikes remain common, but continuity determines long-term market interpretation.
The latest figures place renewed focus on comparative ETF activity across major tokens.
Future reporting periods will determine whether HYPE maintains its inflow advantage over larger assets. Bitcoin and Ethereum flows will also remain key benchmarks for market-wide ETF sentiment.
Solana’s relative positioning adds another layer to ongoing capital rotation patterns. ETF flow divergence continues to shape how traders interpret crypto market strength.
The post HYPE ETF Defies Market Gravity as BTC and ETH See Net Outflows appeared first on Blockonomi.
Bitcoin traders are increasingly focused on the possibility of a deeper market pullback, with many pointing to the $40,000 to $50,000 range as a preferred entry zone.
At the same time, fresh attention has turned to Strategy after Michael Saylor shared another update tied to the company’s Bitcoin holdings. The developments surfaced across crypto social media as investors weighed future market direction.
Together, they highlight the ongoing debate between waiting for lower prices and accumulating Bitcoin at current levels.
Discussion around Bitcoin price expectations intensified after comments from crypto analyst Michaël van de Poppe circulated across social media. He argued that increasingly popular downside targets often fail to materialize once they become widely expected.
The $40,000-$50,000 range is an attractive area for traders to enter Bitcoin, according to Van de Poppe. He said that was similar to the times when investors were anticipating that Bitcoin would go back to $60,000, and it was trading at around $85,000.
The broader message centered on how crowded expectations can influence trader positioning.
Bitcoin’s recent market behavior has kept traders divided between waiting for a larger correction and maintaining exposure at current levels. The debate has become a recurring theme across crypto trading communities.
Social media discussions showed strong engagement around the proposed buy zone. The comments did not contain any predictions on prices, but they were about the psychology of the market.
A number of participants were interested in the possibility of widespread expectations lowering the chances of a substantial drop.
As market participants kept their eyes on macroeconomic trends and institutional movement, the conversation developed as they did. Bitcoin continues to be the biggest digital asset on the market by market cap and can influence the overall crypto trading market.
Attention also shifted to Strategy and its Bitcoin accumulation strategy. Michael Saylor posted a chart featuring the company’s Bitcoin tracker alongside the message that it looked better with more dots.
The post quickly attracted attention because similar tracker updates have often preceded announcements of new Bitcoin purchases. Crypto Patel highlighted the development while sharing updated figures related to Strategy’s holdings.
According to the data shared, Strategy currently holds approximately 846,842 Bitcoin. The position was reported to be worth roughly $54.3 billion based on current market values.
Crypto Patel stated that the company’s average acquisition price stands near $75,658 per Bitcoin. The reported total investment reached approximately $64.07 billion.
The figures indicate an unrealized loss of about $9.7 billion, or roughly 15%, based on the data provided. Despite that position, Strategy remains one of the largest corporate holders of Bitcoin globally.
The latest tracker update has renewed focus on the company’s accumulation strategy. Market participants now await any official disclosure regarding additional Bitcoin purchases.
The post Bitcoin Pullback Bets Build as Saylor Signals Possible MSTR Accumulation appeared first on Blockonomi.
The perpetrator of the Humanity Protocol exploit has started transferring some of the funds in the victim’s wallet around the crypto industry. The blockchain data indicates that some assets were converted to stablecoins before being sent to KuCoin.
The transactions come weeks after a major security breach that compromised administrative controls and led to significant token losses. Recent on-chain activity provides new insight into how the attacker is handling the stolen assets.
Lookonchain’s blockchain analytics service said wallets used by the Humanity Protocol exploiter recently switched a portion of the funds they had stolen into USDC. These money was then moved to KuCoin via public blockchain records.
The tracking data shows that the attacker had distributed assets in multiple wallets before transferring such. There were several ETH transactions that ranged from 10 ETHs to 50 ETHs in the transfers.
There was also a bigger move of around 500 ETH that has been seen in the wallet transfers.The transfers followed a pattern commonly observed after major crypto exploits.
Lookonchain noted that the exploiter conducted several token swaps before sending funds to the exchange. The transactions included conversions into USDC and USDT.
The movement of funds extended beyond direct wallet transfers. On-chain records showed activity involving decentralized exchanges such as Uniswap and PancakeSwap.
Those platforms allowed the attacker to exchange assets while retaining control of the funds. Routing transactions through multiple addresses also made blockchain tracking more complex.
The latest transactions indicate that at least part of the stolen crypto has entered a more liquid form. Stablecoin conversions often play a key role in post-exploit fund movements.
The Humanity Protocol exploit occurred on June 8. Reports indicate that a project director received a phishing email disguised as a message from a major South Korean crypto exchange.
The email contained a malicious attachment that installed malware on the recipient’s device. The software enabled the attacker to gain remote access and obtain sensitive credentials.
According to information surrounding the incident, the attacker extracted private keys and wallet data. That access opened a path to critical administrative accounts connected to Humanity Protocol.
After gaining control, the attacker upgraded smart contracts on Ethereum and moved approximately 141 million H tokens. The compromise also extended to a ProxyAdmin contract on BNB Smart Chain.
Control of that contract enabled unauthorized minting of additional H tokens. The newly created and stolen tokens were later sold through decentralized exchanges.
The selling activity increased pressure on the token market following the breach. Humanity Protocol subsequently froze its Ethereum contract and secured remaining assets through an unaffected multisignature wallet.
Recovery efforts remain focused on affected users and ecosystem participants. The BNB Smart Chain deployment continues to face challenges linked to the exploit.
The post $36M Humanity Protocol Exploit Enters New Phase as Funds Hit KuCoin appeared first on Blockonomi.
A Japanese pension fund is preparing to enter the cryptocurrency market through a dedicated portfolio allocation in fiscal year 2026. The move marks one of the first known crypto investments by a pension fund in the country.
The decision follows several years of internal research and a broader review of diversification strategies. It also arrives as Japan’s financial sector explores new digital asset products and regulatory changes.
The Nationwide Business Corporate Pension Fund plans to allocate approximately 1% of its assets to cryptocurrency next year. According to reports from Nikkei, the fund manages roughly ¥21.3 billion, equivalent to about $130 million.
The pension fund serves around 1,200 small and medium-sized businesses across Japan. Rather than purchasing individual digital assets directly, it intends to invest through a passive fund managed by a large hedge fund.
The selected investment vehicle holds multiple cryptocurrencies. The approach allows exposure to the broader crypto market rather than relying on a single asset.
Diversification sits at the center of the strategy. Information shared by Sui Intern and details reported by Japanese media indicate the fund aims to reduce its dependence on traditional currency exposure.
Currently, around 80% of assets are linked to the Japanese yen. Another 15% is tied to the U.S. dollar, while the remaining 5% covers other currencies.
Beginning in fiscal 2026, the fund plans to reduce yen exposure to 70%. It will also introduce allocations to developed market currencies, emerging market currencies, gold, and cryptocurrencies.
According to fund executive director Ayumi Kiguchi, the organization views digital assets as a potential diversification tool due to their lower correlation with some traditional currency holdings.
The decision follows nearly six years of research into cryptocurrency markets. During that period, the fund monitored industry development, investor participation, and market maturity before proceeding.
Pension fund involvement in crypto remains uncommon in Japan. While some institutions have explored the sector, direct allocations have remained limited.
The fund is also studying additional crypto-related opportunities. Reports indicate it is examining arbitrage-focused investment strategies that seek to capitalize on price differences across digital assets.
Broader industry developments are unfolding at the same time. Japanese regulators continue reviewing rules that could expand access to crypto investment products.
The Osaka Exchange is reportedly considering the introduction of Bitcoin futures contracts in 2028. Exchange officials have linked those discussions to future regulatory developments.
Major securities firms are also evaluating crypto-related offerings. Reports have named SBI Securities and Rakuten Securities among companies considering new digital asset products.
Other financial institutions, including Nomura Securities and Daiwa Securities, are also reviewing future opportunities tied to cryptocurrency markets. These developments coincide with a gradual increase in institutional participation across Japan’s digital asset sector.
The post Japanese Pension Fund Makes Historic Crypto Move After 6 Years appeared first on Blockonomi.
Crypto markets spent the weekend in the red as hopes for a peace deal between the US and Iran remain fragile.
US equity market futures have opened lower as investors await details of US-Iran talks in Switzerland, according to the Kobeissi Letter.
Meanwhile, President Trump has ramped up the rhetoric again, posting on Truth Social on Sunday:
“Iran must immediately stop their highly paid proxies in Lebanon from causing trouble. If they don’t, we’ll hit Iran very hard again, just like we did last week, only harder!!!”
The week kicks off with June’s S&P Global PMI data on Tuesday, and May’s new home sales figures are out on Wednesday.
However, all eyes are on the May Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) report, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure, due on Thursday.
The data follows last week’s FOMC meeting, where policymakers held interest rates steady while signaling a more inflation-focused monetary policy stance.
If PCE comes in hotter than expected, which is likely given that energy prices are rising, markets could price in fewer rate cuts, and risk assets may face pressure.
“The June FOMC meeting, with half of the committee leaning toward a tighter policy path, sent a hawkish jolt through markets,” said Bloomberg analysts.
“Even though Warsh didn’t submit his own dot for the dot plot, his tone at the news conference seemed notably hawkish to us. A hot PCE inflation reading will likely reinforce that hawkish message.”
The current odds for a rate hike at the Fed’s next meeting in late July are around 40%, according to the CME Fed Watch tool.
More economic data follows on Thursday with the US first-quarter GDP report, shedding light on the rate of economic growth.
June’s Michigan consumer sentiment data and inflation expectations data are due out on Friday, rounding off a busy week for economic reports.
Key Events This Week:
1. June S&P Global PMI data – Tuesday
2. May New Home Sales data – Wednesday
3. May PCE Inflation data – Thursday
4. US Q1 2026 GDP data – Thursday
5. June MI Consumer Sentiment data – Friday
6. June MI Inflation Expectations data – Friday
The…
— The Kobeissi Letter (@KobeissiLetter) June 21, 2026
Crypto markets spent the weekend mostly flat, with total capitalization hovering around $2.3 trillion. More volatility is expected this week, and the path of least resistance is downwards.
Bitcoin has been trading tightly around $64,000, where it is at the time of writing on Monday morning in Asia. There has been a quick dip towards $63,000, but it recovered quickly. The weekly close was at $63,267, forming a support base.
Ether prices remain at multi-year lows, struggling to make any headway above $1,700, while most altcoins are still in retreat.
The post 4 Things That Could Move Crypto Markets This Week appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The Proof-of-Stake (PoS) blockchain network, Algorand, has revealed that it is pushing toward becoming quantum-resistant by the end of 2027. The announcement comes as concerns about the post-quantum threat rise in the crypto space.
According to a blog post by the network’s team, the quantum threat has been deemed a serious risk to the security of blockchain technology. Hence, Algorand has outlined a roadmap detailing its efforts, plans, progress, milestones, and ongoing research in the area of post-quantum cryptography (PQC).
Google Quantum AI recently identified Algorand among a set of smart-contract platforms that can achieve PQC. The blockchain already executed its first PQC-secured transaction in 2025 and intends to complete the full PQC transition in less than two years.
“Post-quantum migration is a balancing act. Moving too slowly leaves systems exposed to future quantum attacks, but moving too quickly can mean relying on algorithms and implementations that have not yet been sufficiently battle-tested,” Algorand’s team explained.
The first step in the roadmap is introducing support for native post-quantum accounts in the protocol release scheduled for the third quarter of 2026. Previously enabled Falcon accounts via the Algorand Virtual Machine (AVM) currently demonstrate the viability of post-quantum signatures on the Algorand protocol, but these are not natively supported by the ledger. The introduction of native post-quantum account support will give room for network-level support for multiple concurrent signature schemes.
After the Algorand team establishes a clear direction for standardizing a new derivation scheme for lattice-based post-quantum keys, the network will implement PQC updates to its tools. These include legacy software development kits (SDKs), hardware wallets, and the AlgoKit. Eventually, the network will introduce support for additional signature schemes on traditional Ed25519 accounts.
While implementing these upgrades, Algorand intends to create an environment that enables the integration of future advances with minimal protocol disruption.
“Building on our robust history of native multisig, the arrival of cryptographic agility and native post-quantum accounts enables us to deploy native multisig support for multi-cryptography schemes by the end of 2026. We view this as an essential advancement for institutional operations, treasury management, and high-stakes financial applications,” the team explained.
One of the final steps in the roadmap explores post-quantum multisignatures as a generic policy layer over independently verifiable signatures. This will allow for weighted approvals, hybrid combinations of classical and post-quantum signers, and future PQC signature algorithms as standards develop. This step will ensure protection against both classical and quantum-era threats.
Meanwhile, Algorand is not the only blockchain network pushing for quantum resistance in the coming years; Ethereum and Ripple are working towards the milestone as well.
The post Algorand Reveals Plans to Become Quantum Resistant by 2027 appeared first on CryptoPotato.
After Bitcoin’s decisive breakdown from a multi-month rising channel, the largest crypto is still under immense pressure. While buyers managed to defend the $60K support region and trigger a short-term rebound, the broader structure still favors the sellers unless BTC can reclaim several important resistance levels overhead.
On the daily timeframe, BTC recently confirmed a bearish breakdown below a large ascending channel, accelerating selling pressure and pushing the asset toward the major support zone around $60K, where buyers stepped in and halted the downtrend.
The selloff also drove Bitcoin well below both the 100-day and 200-day moving averages. These MAs are currently positioned around $72K and $76K, respectively. The loss of the 100-day moving average, which was supposed to act as a dynamic support level, signals a significant deterioration in the broader market structure and suggests that sellers continue to control the trend.
Following the sharp decline, BTC found demand near $60K and staged a modest recovery toward the $64K region. However, the rebound remains relatively weak compared to the magnitude of the preceding drop.
The first major resistance now sits between $65K and $68K, where a previous support area has turned into supply. Above that, the more critical resistance zone is located around $72K to $75K, which coincides with the 100-day moving average and the lower boundary of the broken ascending channel. A successful reclaim of this area would be the first indication that the recent breakdown may have been a bear trap.
On the downside, the $60K region remains the most important support level. Losing this zone could expose Bitcoin to a deeper correction toward lower liquidity clusters and potentially trigger another wave of capitulation.

The 4-hour timeframe provides a clearer view of the recent breakdown and subsequent consolidation phase. After losing the $72K to $74K support zone, BTC experienced an aggressive selloff toward the $60K demand area. Since then, the price has formed a short-term ascending channel, indicating a corrective recovery rather than a confirmed trend reversal.
However, the recent rejection from the upper boundary of this channel and the subsequent breakdown suggest that bullish momentum remains limited. Although BTC managed to stabilize and reclaim the mid-$64K area, it continues to trade beneath the key resistance block between $65K and $68K.
As long as the price remains below this supply zone, the current rebound appears corrective in nature. A successful breakout above $68K could open the door for a move toward the larger resistance cluster at $72K to $74K. Conversely, another rejection from current levels would increase the probability of a retest of the $60K support zone.
The RSI on the 4-hour chart has recovered into neutral territory, reflecting improving short-term momentum. However, it has not yet entered strongly bullish conditions, which supports the view that the ongoing move remains a relief rally within a broader bearish structure.

The funding rate chart offers an important insight into current derivatives positioning. Funding rates remained predominantly negative throughout much of the recent decline, indicating that short positions dominated the market during the selloff. This persistent negative funding reflected bearish sentiment and aggressive short exposure as BTC traded lower.
More recently, funding rates have shifted back into positive territory, currently hovering around 0.004. This transition suggests that market participants are gradually rebuilding long exposure following the bounce from the $60K support area.
From a contrarian perspective, the normalization of funding after an extended period of negative readings can be viewed as a constructive development. The market has already undergone a substantial deleveraging event, and the recovery in funding suggests improving confidence among futures traders.
However, the current funding levels remain far below the overheated conditions seen during previous bullish phases. This indicates that while sentiment is improving, leverage remains relatively contained and does not yet confirm the beginning of a sustained uptrend.
Overall, the derivatives data suggest that bearish pressure has eased following the recent liquidation event, but Bitcoin still needs to reclaim the $68K and $72K-$74K resistance zones before a broader bullish recovery can be confirmed. Until then, the rebound from $60K appears more consistent with a relief rally within a weakened market structure.

The post Bitcoin Price Analysis: Here’s BTC’s Most Likely Path This Week appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Despite the bears still being in control, the Bitcoin network is seeing a surge in transaction activity. Given the nature of this network activity, market participants may wonder whether the development is a bullish signal or a cause for concern.
According to this week’s CryptoQuant report, record-high transaction counts are driving the surge in Bitcoin network activity. The only issue is that these transactions have little, non-significant economic value.
CryptoQuant analysts explained that Bitcoin’s network activity turned sharply positive and broke above trend for the first time since late 2024. This is evident in the CryptoQuant Network Activity Index, which has been rising steadily since the beginning of this year. However, the index noted a major regime shift from March 2026, drawing a sharp contrast with bitcoin’s ongoing price decline.
Currently, the Bitcoin network activity is roughly 7% below its all-time high reached in September 2024. Both total daily transactions and average transactions per block are near their all-time high. Daily transactions have surged to levels above 800,000, hovering near readings of the 2023-2025 bull cycle.
“Mean transactions per block (right chart) have also risen sharply, reflecting high and sustained block utilization from the transaction count perspective. Both metrics have maintained elevated readings for several weeks, confirming the surge is structural,” analysts explained.
Although these transactions are reaching yearly peaks, their economic content is significantly lower than surges from previous high-activity periods. About 80% of these micro-transactions are below 0.01 BTC, up from 50% in 2023. The sub-0.001 BTC cohorts have also skyrocketed in 2026, approaching prior peaks of 2024. The current dynamic reflects protocol-driven activity where volume is high but transferred value per transaction remains low.
Notably, the micro-transaction surge correlates with a rise in OP_RETURN opcode usage, which is used by data-inscription protocols like Runes and Ordinals. The opcode, which embeds up to 100,000 bytes of data without creating spendable outputs, has spiked to near-record levels this year. The protocols associated with the opcode generate high volumes of dust-value transactions, so this explains the low-value cohort surge.
Meanwhile, the surge in both micro-transactions and OP-RETURN has pushed the Bitcoin mempool to its highest transaction count since late February 2025. Analysts worry that this sustained expansion in non-financial on-chain activity could increase block space competition and raise fees for economic transactions.
The post Bitcoin Records Surge in Network Activity – Bullish Signal or Cause for Concern? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
In times when investors are pulling funds out of the spot exchange-traded funds tracking ETH and especially BTC, their behavior toward XRP, HYPE, and SOL has been entirely contrasting.
The ETFs following the three altcoins’ performances continue to see more net inflows even as the market stagnates and uncertainty builds.
CryptoPotato has repeatedly reported on the Ripple ETFs’ impressive performance over the past several weeks, in which most assets, including XRP, recorded fresh losses and dipped to multi-year lows. However, investors using the Wall Street-trading financial vehicles have remained active, with net inflows dominating for months. In fact, there have been only two weeks in the red since mid-March.
The last one, which had only four trading days, also ended in the green. The ETFs attracted $2.82 million on Monday, $5.30 million on Tuesday, and $2.55 million on Thursday. Since Wednesday was a $0.00 day, according to SoSoValue data, that means that the week ended with net inflows of $10.66 million. The cumulative net inflows have tapped a new all-time high of $1.45 billion.
The Solana ETFs also attracted over $7 million in net inflows in the past week, following a red one with $2.58 million in net outflows. HYPE and its ETFs continue to be the current market superstar. The funds saw their third-best week to date, with almost $28 million entering. Moreover, the HYPE ETFs have been on a six-week streak of net inflows since their inception in mid-May.
Their performance has been particularly promising since they have attracted nearly $185 million in net inflows in six weeks. The same six weeks have been highly emotional and full of FUD for the entire crypto market, especially June’s start when most assets tumbled to multi-year lows.

And while the aforementioned altcoins continue to enjoy fresh ETF capital, the same cannot be said for the funds tracking the two largest cryptocurrencies by market cap. As reported earlier, the spot BTC ETFs bled more than $226 million in the past week, and are down by roughly $5 billion in the same six weeks in which the HYPE and XRP ETFs have been only in the green.
The spot Ethereum ETFs are in no better shape. In fact, they are on the same six-week negative streak, pushing the total inflows down by nearly $1 billion. So the question now is whether investors are simply seasonally rotating from larger-cap digital assets into smaller altcoins, or have they completely abandoned BTC and ETH for the new kids on the block.
The post Why Capital Is Flowing Into XRP, SOL, and HYPE Instead of BTC and ETH appeared first on CryptoPotato.