The IAEA's negotiations with Russia could reshape geopolitical dynamics, influencing future U.S.-Iran relations and global nuclear policy.
The post IAEA in talks with Russia on Iran’s enriched uranium transfer appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Yemen's support for Iran complicates regional dynamics, reducing ceasefire prospects and increasing geopolitical tensions and market volatility.
The post Yemen backs Iran, warns US against military actions in escalating conflict appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The reduced parade signals entrenched conflict, diminishing hopes for a near-term ceasefire and highlighting geopolitical instability.
The post Russia scales back Victory Day parade citing Ukraine threat, ceasefire hopes dim appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The divergence between institutional accumulation and trader skepticism highlights uncertainty in Bitcoin's short-term price trajectory.
The post Bitcoin conviction buyers grow 69% in Q1 2026, but $80K target fades appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Rising Treasury yields amid geopolitical tensions highlight inflation concerns, complicating potential Fed rate cuts and impacting market stability.
The post Treasury yields hit highest since 2026 amid US-Iran conflict appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin is Reshaping Traditional Finance, Industry Leaders Say
A couple prominent Bitcoin adoption leaders gathered on the Nakamoto Stage at The Bitcoin 2026 Conference, making the case that an unusual industry dynamic — one where direct competitors openly collaborate — may be the defining feature of the current institutional push into the digital asset.
The panel featured David Bailey, CEO of Nakamoto Inc., Alexandre Laizet of Capital B, and Dylan LeClair of Metaplanet, moderated by George Mekhail of Bitcoin for Corporations.
Bailey started his talk to frame Bitcoin as something closer to a decentralized corporation, arguing that rising valuations at peer companies lift the broader ecosystem rather than cannibalize it. He pointed to UTXO Management’s investments in both Capital B and Metaplanet as a concrete expression of that philosophy — a structure that blurs the line between investor and collaborator.
LeClair echoed the sentiment, arguing that Bitcoin differs from virtually every other industry in that participants actively share strategies and build on each other’s work. Laizet opened his remarks by thanking his fellow panelists and calling them inspirations in advancing corporate adoption — language that would be striking at almost any other industry conference.
Despite the optimism, the panel was candid about the structural obstacles still ahead and firmly made it clear that bitcoin “is still early.” LeClair offered a striking data point: he estimated that 99% of institutional capital cannot currently access Bitcoin or Bitcoin ETFs due to mandate restrictions that confine many funds to fixed income or specific asset classes.
For LeClair, that constraint is precisely what makes the current moment still early — and why infrastructure, not ideology, is the central challenge.
He described hyperbitcoinization not as a singular breakthrough event but as a slow-building process that demands institutional plumbing — custody solutions, compliant products, and regulatory clarity.
He credited Michael Saylor with identifying and beginning to address that gap for traditional finance, and pushed back on what he called a paradox: Bitcoiners who expect extreme price appreciation while simultaneously rejecting the institutional participation that would make such valuations possible.
Bailey reinforced that framing, noting that only a few hundred companies currently hold Bitcoin on their balance sheets, and that Strategy is still in the early stages of charting a path that others are only beginning to follow. He argued that every economic actor will ultimately need to engage with Bitcoin, and that any view excluding a subset of participants runs counter to the asset’s foundational properties.
“For us to have hyperbitcoinization happen… every economic agent in the world is going to have to use bitcoin,” Bailey said.
Laizet laid out Capital B’s approach as one designed to meet institutional investors where they are. He highlighted BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETP and the firm’s growing roster of institutional clients as live examples of European investors gaining meaningful Bitcoin exposure through compliant channels.
For clients unable to tolerate Bitcoin’s volatility directly, he said digital credit products offer an alternative pathway — structured instruments that provide exposure without requiring full price risk.
Laizet was notably bullish on the financial services layer being built around Bitcoin, arguing that holders will increasingly need institutions willing to extend loans against their Bitcoin positions — allowing access to capital without forcing a sale. He framed this as a matter of respect for the asset: users, he said, want financial partners that treat Bitcoin as collateral worthy of retention, not one to be liquidated at the first opportunity.
Bailey offered perhaps the panel’s sharpest rhetorical turn in discussing Bitcoin’s relationship with legacy finance. He argued that because Bitcoin’s underlying technology is immutable, no financial institution — including BlackRock — can alter its properties. The dynamic, he said, runs only one direction: “Bitcoin changes BlackRock,” he said.
He acknowledged a growing divide inside traditional finance between institutions that are embracing Bitcoin and those resisting it, describing advocates as “barbarians at the gate.”
That divide, he argued, makes it urgent to build a large institutional investor base capable of influencing policy and shaping the rules of the financial system in Bitcoin’s favor.
Bailey suggested that critics of BlackRock’s involvement today will face a more formidable challenge when central banks, including potentially the Federal Reserve, begin acquiring Bitcoin.
Mekhail, moderating, added context on the timeline, noting that Bitcoin for Corporations exists to support companies navigating this entry point — and warning that the window to be genuinely early in the corporate adoption cycle is narrowing faster than many realize.
This post Bitcoin is Reshaping Traditional Finance, Industry Leaders Say first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine
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‘This Time Is Different’: A First of Its Kind Documentary Covering Bitcoin’s Four Year Cycle, David Bailey, And Nakamoto in Production
A new documentary is in production that traces the nuances of bitcoin’s four-year cycle and David Bailey — the founder of BTC Inc. and chairman and CEO of Nakamoto Inc. (NASDAQ: NAKA) — through what filmmaker, Parker Worthington, describes as one of the most pivotal chapters in BTC’s history.
“It’s been a long run,” Worthington said on the Bitcoin Magazine live desk at the Bitcoin 2026 Conference.
The documentary is tentatively titled This Time Is Different and was produced in association with Michael Markle. The project began as a focused documentary about Bitcoin payments, with early footage shot in 2024 around open-source payments infrastructure.
But the scope expanded after Worthington began making repeated trips to shoot with Bailey’s team, first in Puerto Rico, where early discussions about taking a company public — at that point still referred to in hushed terms — were just beginning to surface.
Those early rumblings soon became the central thread of the film. What followed was the public launch of Nakamoto Inc., formed through a reverse merger with KindlyMD and backed by a roughly $710 million capital raise — at the time among the largest PIPE financings ever tied to a digital asset company.
The documentary aims to capture the full arc of a four-year cycle, which included the highs and lows of launching a public Bitcoin company, the quietude that comes with SEC obligations, and the resilience required to navigate a bear market while executing a multi-entity consolidation strategy.
“I’m glad you got it on camera so people can see the raw passion that goes into this business,” David Bailey, CEO of Nakamoto, said on the live desk. “A lot of people say that people in bitcoin got lucky…this documentary shows the conviction you need to be in bitcoin.”
Worthington told Bitcoin Magazine that what may look chaotic from the outside reflects a much more deliberate and complex story than any stock ticker alone suggests — pointing to Bitcoin Magazine, UTXO Management, BTC Inc., and Nakamoto’s broader media and investment arms as evidence of an operating business with real revenue and reach.
A release window of winter 2027 has been discussed, though the project could extend into 2028 depending on how the broader crypto market cycle plays out.
The film is expected to be feature-length with potential distribution via a streaming platform. Worthington and the team expressed interest in packaging it as a standalone piece before exploring any series format.
Bitcoin Magazine is published by BTC Inc., a subsidiary of Nakamoto Inc. (NASDAQ: NAKA).
This post ‘This Time Is Different’: A First of Its Kind Documentary Covering Bitcoin’s Four Year Cycle, David Bailey, And Nakamoto in Production first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Strategy’s (MSTR) Michael Saylor Says STRC is ‘Going Viral’ After $8.5 Billion Run‑Up
Michael Saylor, founder and executive chairman of Strategy, took the Nakamoto Stage at Bitcoin 2026 on Tuesday to argue that a nine-month-old preferred stock instrument has become the fastest-growing credit product in the world — and that its expansion is only getting started.
The keynote, framed around what Saylor calls digital credit, was a structured pitch for STRC, Strategy’s Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock, which trades on Nasdaq near its $100 par value and pays an 11.5% annualized monthly dividend.
He opened with a premise that set the tone for everything that followed: “The world is built on capital. The world runs on credit.”
For Saylor, Bitcoin is the capital layer. It is what he calls “ideal capital” — engineered, digital, portable, and historically superior to alternatives. He cited Bitcoin’s roughly 38% annualized return over the past five years against gold, the S&P 500, and real estate, which he described without hesitation as “awful.”
STRC, in his framework, is the credit layer built on top: it strips Bitcoin’s volatility from the equation, routes the excess return to common equity holders, and delivers what he described as a “comfortable ride” to investors who want cash flows rather than price exposure.
The contrast he drew between digital credit and traditional private credit was one of the sharper arguments in the talk. Private credit, he said, is illiquid, opaque, discrete, and burdened with fees — structured primarily around what issuers want. Digital credit, by his definition, is liquid, transparent, homogeneous, scalable, accessible, and carries no fee.
“We designed a digital instrument that is good for the investor,” he said, framing STRC as a structural correction to the incentive problem embedded in private markets.
He placed this in historical context, arguing that preferred capital had a parallel in 19th-century American railroads, where it comprised 20 to 30% of institutional financing before fading from use. Saylor said Strategy has reintroduced the model in the 21st century, built on Bitcoin rather than railroad track.

The numbers he presented at the Nakamoto Stage were the center of gravity for the talk. STRC reached about $8.5 billion in notional value in nine months, a figure that on its own would make it larger than the entire existing universe of monthly-paying preferred securities combined.
He put annual growth for the program at around 350%, said April inflows alone, when annualized, point toward $38 billion a year, and described the product as sitting in “hypergrowth” with no clear end in sight. Liquidity, he said, has grown by a factor of eight in five months.
“This is going viral,” he told the audience.
Part of what drives that velocity, in Saylor’s telling, is accessibility. STRC trades on Nasdaq and is available to any retail investor, while most comparable structured credit products are either locked up in private funds or restricted to institutional buyers.
He said roughly 80% of STRC holders are retail, but that corporate treasuries and institutions are beginning to follow. Strategy’s own data shows STRC has financed the acquisition of approximately 77,000 BTC in 2026 year-to-date, ten times the net inflow of all U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs combined during the same period.
The tax structure was another selling point. STRC dividends receive return-of-capital treatment, which means investors can reinvest cash flows without paying ordinary income tax on the full distribution, letting returns compound over time.
Saylor closed with a vision that was bigger than any single product. He said there is “a great thirst in the crypto economy to generate Bitcoin-backed yield” and that the opportunity is for 1,000 companies to build their own digital monetary and yield instruments on top of the same framework.
“Every dollar that flows into digital credit will flow into digital capital,” he said. “It will flow into the Bitcoin network. As it flows into the Bitcoin network, the price will increase.”
“We expect digital credit to drive the size of the bitcoin network… drive bitcoin to 10M a coin, make bitcoin a 2T dollar network til it grows higher, and give people an alternative to 20th century credit instruments” Saylor said.
He described the movement as “a massively powerful, multi-generational wealth transfer” and said his ultimate goal is for Strategy’s model to “power hundreds of millions of households with a high-yield savings account.”
This post Strategy’s (MSTR) Michael Saylor Says STRC is ‘Going Viral’ After $8.5 Billion Run‑Up first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin 2027 Conference Returning to Nashville, Tennessee
The world’s premier Bitcoin conference is heading back to Music City. BTC Inc confirmed that Bitcoin 2027 will take place July 15-17, in Nashville, Tennessee, marking the event’s return to the city after two consecutive years in Las Vegas. The announcement came on the second day of Bitcoin 2026, which was held at The Venetian Convention and Expo Center in Las Vegas.
Bitcoin 2024 — the last time the conference was held in Nashville — became one of the most storied gatherings in the event’s history, drawing an estimated 35,000 attendees, 444 speakers across six stages, and generating over 1.4 million livestream views over three days.
“Vegas we love you, we miss you,” David Bailey said at the Bitcoin 2026 conference. “We are excited to go home to Nashville.”
That edition was headlined by then-presidential candidate Donald Trump, who used the Nashville stage to pledge a U.S. strategic Bitcoin reserve and declare his intention to make America “the crypto capital of the world”.
Now the Bitcoin conference returns to a city that has become synonymous with the movement’s mainstream moment. Nashville International Airport (BNA) offers direct flights from most major U.S. cities, making it a logistically favorable destination for the tens of thousands of attendees, investors, developers, and policymakers expected to attend.
Tickets for Bitcoin 2027 are already on sale at the Bitcoin 2026 conference.
The return to Nashville also aligns with BTC Inc.’s expanding media presence in the city. Bitcoin Magazine, a BTC Inc. subsidiary and a Nakamoto Inc. company (NASDAQ: NAKA), this week announced the launch of BM TV, a daily live broadcast network debuting Summer 2026 from Nashville. The company reported more than 1 billion total impressions in 2025.
Specific speakers and full programming for Bitcoin 2027 have yet to be announced, with additional information expected to roll out in the months ahead.
This post Bitcoin 2027 Conference Returning to Nashville, Tennessee first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Czech Central Bank Chief Backs Bitcoin as 1% Reserve Slice in ‘Conservative but Innovative’ Strategy
Czech National Bank Governor Aleš Michl used a Bitcoin industry stage in Las Vegas to defend a reserve strategy that mixes strict inflation control with measured exposure to digital assets.
He described the bank’s move to add a small Bitcoin allocation as a way to raise expected returns without increasing overall portfolio risk.
Michl said that when he became governor in mid‑2022, inflation in the Czech Republic was near 20%. He told the audience that the central bank pledged to bring inflation back to 2% within two years and met that goal through discipline, not “magic.”
He said money had been too cheap for too long, the currency had weakened, and there was too much easy money in the system. The bank responded by supporting saving and strengthening the Koruna, and its rule now is “to stay hawkish forever.”
Alongside that stance, Michl highlighted the scale of the Czech National Bank’s balance sheet. He said the institution manages about 180 billion dollars in foreign exchange reserves, equal to roughly 44% of Czech GDP, and described those reserves as among the largest in the world relative to the size of the economy.
The task, he said, is to “build for the future,” think ahead, and invest in a way that protects the country. That has meant shifting away from low‑return bonds and increasing exposure to assets such as stocks and gold through low‑risk portfolios.
Michl said the next question for the bank was whether it could do more to build a stronger portfolio for the long run. That led to an internal debate over Bitcoin. He recalled first using Bitcoin to buy coffee in Prague and acknowledged that its price swings make it look risky, since its value can be higher one day and lower the next. He argued that other assets also move up and down and that the key issue for a central bank is how each asset behaves inside a broader portfolio.
According to Michl, Czech National Bank research found that Bitcoin has low long‑term correlation with many traditional reserve assets and does not move in the same way as them. Over longer horizons, he said, Bitcoin can provide returns that are not closely linked to other holdings. On that basis, the bank introduced a 1% Bitcoin position in its reserves.
In the bank’s analysis, he said, a 1% allocation lifts expected returns in Czech Koruna terms while leaving overall portfolio risk unchanged. “When you add Bitcoin to your portfolio it works better, returns go up and risk stays the same – that is diversification,” he told the audience.
Michl framed the move as part of a broader philosophy for central banking in an era of digital assets. His message to the crowd was to remain “conservative but innovative” in how institutions work and invest.
For the Czech National Bank, that has meant a strict anti‑inflation stance and a strong domestic currency, paired with a controlled experiment in using Bitcoin and other non‑traditional assets to strengthen reserves over time.
This post Czech Central Bank Chief Backs Bitcoin as 1% Reserve Slice in ‘Conservative but Innovative’ Strategy first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin is trading near $76,600 after reversing from an earlier intraday push toward $78,000, while crude oil trades near $103 and the S&P 500 fell as the US stock market opened.
Before the US cash session, Bitcoin rose even as crude oil kept climbing, suggesting crypto-specific positioning was strong enough to resist the oil-inflation trade for part of the day.
After the open, the picture turned back toward equities. The chart below shows Bitcoin rolling over as the S&P 500 moved lower, while crude oil remained elevated.
That leaves two signals in tension: Bitcoin can trade independently of stocks while cash equities are closed, but US equity risk appetite can still pull it back once the main session begins.

Broader market data shows roughly $2.6 trillion in crypto market cap, about $122 billion in 24-hour volume, and Bitcoin dominance near 60%.
CryptoSlate's Bitcoin market page showed Bitcoin in the upper-$77,000s earlier today up about 1.6% over 24 hours, with market cap around $1.56 trillion. The latest chart shows why that intraday strength fell off: the US open turned the move from a simple oil-shock divergence into an equity follow-through test.

The first phase of the session weakened the simple April template that higher oil automatically means lower Bitcoin. Crude oil climbed through the $100 area, yet Bitcoin still moved toward $78,000 before US cash equities opened.
The second phase restored the equity branch of the trade. Once the S&P 500 fell at the open, Bitcoin slipped back toward the mid-$76,000s even as crude oil pushed higher.
Bitcoin showed it can resist the oil shock for part of a session. The same session also showed that the equity open can pull the asset back into the broader risk trade.
This is also consistent with prior CryptoSlate coverage. On Apr. 23, Bitcoin's drop below $78,000 looked more like an equity and risk-appetite impulse than a direct oil move, because crude was comparatively flat while the S&P 500 softened.
Today's chart adds a sharper version of that setup. Oil is rising, Bitcoin initially resisted the pressure, and the S&P 500 open then became the event that pulled Bitcoin lower.
The oil channel has already been built into Bitcoin's April setup. On Apr. 24, Bitcoin held near $78,000 as oil climbed past $100, turning the asset into a test of whether scarce-asset demand could survive a stronger dollar, higher real-yield pressure, and weaker liquidity conditions.
A separate analysis of the global oil shock and the Fed said fuel, freight, and input costs can move from commodity screens into realized inflation.
That channel can keep setting rates and liquidity conditions even when Bitcoin finds a short-term bid.
The official inflation data keeps that risk concrete. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said March CPI rose 0.9% from February and 3.3% from a year earlier.
Energy rose 10.9% on the month, led by a 21.2% jump in gasoline. The New York Fed's March survey then showed year-ahead gas-price expectations at 9.4%, the highest reading since March 2022.
Energy-market structure adds another caveat. The Energy Information Administration described a wider Brent-WTI spread and disrupted navigation through the Strait of Hormuz as part of the global crude-market backdrop. Crude stress can move from commodity pricing into inflation expectations, which keeps the Fed channel open.
The calendar concentrates that pressure. The Federal Reserve calendar places the Apr. 28-29 FOMC meeting directly over this cross-asset move.
The BEA schedule lists Q1 GDP and March Personal Income and Outlays for Apr. 30. That same late-April window had already been framed as a volatility cluster around options, oil, and the Fed.
The next policy and data prints can still decide whether the oil move becomes a persistent financial-conditions problem.
The counterweight is demand. CoinShares' latest weekly report showed digital asset investment products taking in $1.2 billion, the fourth positive week in a row.
Bitcoin accounted for $933 million of that total. CoinShares also said the Apr. 28-29 FOMC decision was likely adding caution at the margin.
On Apr. 28, fund flows and spot demand were strong enough to rebuild the bid, but the Fed still had the next hard test.
That helps explain the pre-open resilience. Bitcoin can rise even while crude oil stays elevated when fund demand, positioning, or crypto-specific liquidity is strong enough for a session. The post-open reversal shows why that alone is incomplete.
CME's E-mini S&P 500 futures remain a strong follow-up check for whether the equity branch supports or undermines the next Bitcoin move.
| Signal | What supports Bitcoin | What pressures Bitcoin |
|---|---|---|
| Crude and inflation | Scarce-asset demand can return during policy stress. | Higher fuel costs can lift inflation expectations, keep the Fed cautious, and tighten liquidity. |
| Flows and positioning | CoinShares reported $933 million of Bitcoin product inflows in the latest week. | Flow strength still faces the FOMC and bond-market test. |
| Equities | S&P 500 and futures follow-through would support a risk-appetite interpretation. | A weaker equity open can pull Bitcoin back into the risk-asset trade. |

The Apr. 22 setup gave this move a useful threshold. It said Bitcoin holding flat or firming around $78,000 while oil stayed high would weaken the war-era template that higher oil automatically means lower Bitcoin.
So far today, Bitcoin met that test before the US equity open and then lost momentum once the S&P 500 turned lower.
A later Apr. 28 bond-market analysis placed the Bitcoin battleground around the $78,100 to $80,100 area.
Below that zone, sellers can argue that the rally is another failed attempt into resistance. Above it, flows have a better chance of turning the recent rebound into a durable demand signal.
CME FedWatch remains the live market-implied check on how rate expectations are moving through that test.
Two scenarios follow from the updated chart. In the flow-led case, crude oil stays elevated but does not accelerate, the S&P 500 stabilizes, and Bitcoin reclaims the upper-$77,000s before testing the $78,100 to $80,100 band.
In the macro-pressure case, crude keeps inflation expectations warm, Fed pricing moves against risk assets, the S&P 500 weakens, and Bitcoin remains below the upper-$77,000s. That would restore the familiar April sequence: oil pressure first, equity stress second, Bitcoin liquidity last.
Bitcoin ignored crude oil long enough to prove the oil shock is not the only intraday force. Once the US market opened, equities became the trigger that pulled Bitcoin back. The regime test now depends on whether flows can rebuild the bid while crude oil and the Fed keep pressure on risk assets.
The post Bitcoin surges alongside oil as BTC price finally decouples from the war narrative… until US markets opened appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Passive investing has become one of the most powerful forces reshaping equity markets, and the evidence is accumulating in the returns data.
Bloomberg Intelligence data compiled by ETF analyst James Seyffart shows stocks with rising passive ownership have dramatically outperformed those losing passive ownership over the past three years.
The market has been rewarding inclusion, ownership, and flow alongside fundamentals. The chart's most uncomfortable implication is that the anti-passive trade has often resembled a junk drawer with small, volatile, newly listed, low-quality names that structural flows have left behind.
Ownership concentration compounds over time, and the stocks inside the passive machine tend to stay there.
Bitcoin is now building a similar infrastructure. The SEC approved spot Bitcoin ETF listings in January 2024, and the two years since have redrawn how institutional capital reaches BTC.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs have accumulated roughly $58.4 billion in cumulative net inflows as of late Apr. 28, with BlackRock's IBIT carrying approximately $61.9 billion in net assets.
Euronext listed BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin ETP in Europe in March 2025, describing it as giving investors access to Bitcoin without the complexity of directly trading and holding it.
Deutsche Börse's Clearstream extended its institutional crypto custody and settlement services to include Bitcoin alongside conventional assets.
Bitcoin has become a wrapper investment accessible through standard brokerage rails, and that access has reshaped who can own it.

Recurring flows into funds holding the same names create a persistent, price-insensitive bid that compounds over time, and that is the engine behind passive equity outperformance.
Bitcoin ETFs work through investor demand, with purchases arriving as creation flows and sales clearing through redemptions on a discretionary timeline, independent of any reconstitution schedule or index mandate.
A BlackRock portfolio note from December 2024 described a 1% to 2% Bitcoin allocation as a reasonable range for multi-asset portfolios for investors who accept the risk of rapid price plunges and believe in wider adoption.
When the world's largest asset manager frames a volatile asset in allocation-sizing terms, it becomes a line item that advisors can discuss in portfolio construction terms.
A 2025 Fed note found that crypto ETP bid-ask spreads are comparable to those of other ETFs and ETPs of similar size. It argued that NAV premiums in crypto funds warrant monitoring as a measure of the extent to which crypto and equity markets have become interconnected.
The flows confirm the plumbing works, as from Apr. 14 through Apr. 24, US spot Bitcoin ETFs added about $2 billion in net inflows, based on Farside Investors' daily totals. Then Apr. 27 produced a $263.2 million single-day outflow.
In two weeks, the same vehicle demonstrated both its capacity to build a structural bid and its capacity to reverse it with institutional speed.
If April PCE and May CPI print near or softer than Cleveland Fed nowcasts, which put April CPI at 3.56% and April PCE at 3.60% year-over-year as of Apr. 28, April payrolls cool without triggering recession fears, the Fed can stay data-dependent through its June 16-17 meeting.
That keeps the 2-year Treasury yield anchored near its late-April level of 3.78%, holds the VIX below 20, and allows advisor and institutional allocations to accumulate through the June Fed window.
In that environment, Bitcoin trades as a portfolio sleeve, receiving recurring flows from model portfolios, registered investment advisors, and institutional mandates that size a position once and let it ride.
BlackRock's Spring 2026 outlook frames the current macro setup as a mild stagflationary trade-off, with the Fed on pause and moving toward gradual easing only if inflation continues to cool or growth moderates.
That is the backdrop where the wrapper bid can compound through steady accumulation by buyers watching portfolio weights, with allocation math as the driver.
If Bitcoin's weight in discretionary model portfolios continues to expand, the next leg could resemble what happens when an asset earns a permanent seat in a standard allocation framework.
The bull scenario puts BTC in an $88,000-$105,000 range into the summer, driven by allocation math alone. IBIT's cumulative net flows stand at $65.37 billion, while GBTC has bled $26.26 billion in cumulative outflows.
The allocation battle inside the Bitcoin wrapper market has already produced a winner, and the winner controls the institutional distribution network.
| Metric | Figure | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF cumulative net inflows | ~$58.4B | Shows scale of institutional adoption through the wrapper |
| IBIT net assets | ~$61.9B | Shows BlackRock’s dominance in institutional distribution |
| IBIT cumulative net flows | $65.37B | Indicates where the structural bid is concentrating |
| GBTC cumulative outflows | -$26.26B | Shows legacy-wrapper capital rotation |
| Apr. 14–24 ETF net inflows | ~$2B | Evidence of a fast-building institutional bid |
| Apr. 27 ETF net outflow | -$263.2M | Evidence the same vehicle can reverse quickly |
The same wrapper that built a $2 billion bid in ten days produced a $263.2 million outflow in one.
If inflation re-accelerates beyond nowcasts, as Cleveland Fed models already put April PCE at 3.60% year-over-year, Treasury yields back up, the dollar strengthens, and risk appetite contracts, ETF outflows can clear Bitcoin's order book at institutional speed and scale.
March CPI already came in at 3.3% year-over-year, core CPI at 2.6%, February PCE at 2.8%, and core PCE at 3.0%.
The inflation data has consistently held above target, and if April's prints land above the nowcasts, the Fed's Apr. 28-29 meeting sets a hawkish tone that runs through June.
In that environment, Bitcoin trades as a high-beta macro asset with a very efficient sell button. The 10-year Treasury yield was 4.31% as of late April, and a move toward or above 4.5% would compress equity multiples and remove the liquidity backdrop that makes small portfolio allocations to Bitcoin comfortable to hold.
Advisory models that sized a 1% to 2% position when risk appetite was supportive face the same rebalancing logic. Whether Bitcoin falls far enough relative to the portfolio, the allocation comes out.
The bear scenario puts BTC in a $60,000-$72,000 range, pulled lower by the same institutional machinery that had been carrying it higher.
The passive equity analogy carries a corresponding implication for the broader crypto market. The anti-passive bucket in Seyffart's data, stocks losing ownership share, has often been home to thinner, more volatile names dependent on stock-picking narratives, with structural flows consolidating around the dominant wrapper.
Bitcoin holds the dominant ETF wrapper and the institutional distribution. The long tail of tokens instead competes for discretionary attention.

If passive logic is genuinely migrating into crypto through the ETF channel, Bitcoin concentrates the structural bid while everything else competes for a shrinking pool of discretionary allocation.
The ETF machine amplifies whatever liquidity the macro environment supplies and directs it through a cleaner, more visible channel into Bitcoin's order book.
If Bitcoin's next move comes from allocation math compounding in a patient macro environment or from institutional exits clearing the book in a hawkish one, it depends on the same sequence of inflation prints, payroll data, and Fed language that governs every other risk asset in the portfolio.
The post Passive money is eating stocks and Bitcoin may be next to get a huge liquidity injection appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin's rebound is running straight into one of the few events it can't price in advance. After climbing back toward $80,000 on the back of renewed institutional buying and a nine-day ETF inflow streak, BTC pulled back to around $76,500 on Tuesday before recovering early Wednesday to around $77,800 as the Federal Reserve began its two-day meeting in Washington.
The policy statement drops today, April 29 at 2 p.m. ET, followed by Chair Jerome Powell's press conference at 2:30 p.m.
The same rally that proved Bitcoin's resilience has now carried it into the exact zone where that resilience gets tested in earnest, with a large share of the investor base approaching break-even just as the Fed prepares to speak.
To understand why $80,000 is drawing so much attention, it helps not to think about it as a price target. Instead, look at it as a threshold that defines what a given investor decides to do next.
Bitwise's recent report identified a cluster of cost-basis measures sitting directly in the current price zone: the short-term holder cost basis near $80,000, the True Market Mean around $79,000, and the average Bitcoin ETF inflow cost basis in the same range.
This means that a meaningful portion of the investor base that's been holding through months of volatility is now approaching the point where it can sell without a loss.
When markets recover to break-even levels, holders face a genuine fork in the road.
They can treat the rebound as evidence that their conviction was warranted, hold their positions, and let the thesis play out over a longer horizon. Or they can use the recovery as the exit they've been waiting for, particularly if macro conditions feel too uncertain to justify continued exposure to a volatile asset.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net inflows for nine consecutive trading days through April 24, adding about $2.12 billion since April 14, a run that suggests the institutional bid remains intact.
The question Wednesday's Fed decision will now have to answer is whether that bid survives the kind of macro event that has historically triggered “sell the news” behavior even when the actual policy decision lands exactly where markets expected it.
The most important structural development of the past two weeks has been the demand composition driving this rally.
Bitwise reported that global ETPs and corporate treasury programs accumulated roughly 92,900 BTC over a 30-day window while on-chain selling pressure slowed, suggesting that larger buyers have been steadily absorbing the supply that was rattling the market earlier in the year.
Whale holdings, a broad term for wallets carrying large positions that tend to belong to longer-term, higher-conviction participants, rose across the same period. Total net assets across US spot Bitcoin ETFs reached approximately $101 billion, equal to roughly 6.57% of Bitcoin's total market capitalization, which represents a meaningful deepening of institutional ownership relative to where things stood even six months ago.
What this means in practical terms is that the rally has a composition that's different from the short-covering spikes that have characterized earlier relief moves in 2026. It's being led by buyers who are unlikely to panic at the first sign of volatility, which lends the move a degree of structural support that shorter-term squeezes simply don't have.
That said, structural support and momentum are two different arguments, and momentum requires fresh buyers. The central risk into Wednesday is that the existing bid absorbs whatever selling emerges at break-even levels, but that's not the same as having enough incremental demand to push BTC cleanly through $80,000 and hold it there.
The Fed has held rates at 3.50%–3.75% since March, and CME FedWatch data shows that 100% of traders expect another hold at the April 28–29 meeting.

That near-certainty about the rate decision is, paradoxically, what makes Powell's language so consequential. With the outcome already priced in, the market's reaction depends entirely on how the Fed frames what comes next.
US inflation hit 3.3% in March, almost entirely driven by surging energy costs tied to the Iran conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Core inflation, which strips out energy and food, came in at 2.6%, below expectations. The Fed is effectively navigating a split screen: headline numbers that look alarming and underlying numbers that argue for patience.
If Powell leans into the hawkish read of 3.3%, Bitcoin gets a macro headwind. If he leans into core's 2.6% and signals that the energy shock is temporary and geopolitically sourced, the market gets the permission it's been waiting for to extend the rally.
Any hint of a hawkish pause, defined as language that opens the door to future hikes, could send crypto into a cooling period, while an acknowledgment of neutral-rate dynamics could push Bitcoin past $80,000.
The Fed's rate decision lands the same afternoon that Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta, and Amazon all report Q1 2026 earnings after the close, with Q1 GDP, PCE inflation data, and the Employment Cost Index all releasing the following morning simultaneously, an incredible sequence of macro information that traders will be interpreting through whatever framework Powell's press conference established the night before.
There's also a longer-horizon variable that the immediate price action has somewhat hidden.
Kevin Warsh is set to become the first Federal Reserve chair with disclosed crypto holdings when Powell's term ends on May 15, and his policy instincts are already being read as more hawkish than his predecessor's on balance-sheet management.
As CryptoSlate has reported, that combination of personal proximity to the asset class and a macro worldview that markets read as structurally tighter creates genuine ambiguity about what the post-Powell era means for Bitcoin: ambiguity that's getting deferred into May but hasn't disappeared.
Bitcoin has recovered enough to test the market's conviction this week, and Wednesday's Fed decision will determine whether that conviction translates into a genuine breakout or another failed run at the level where sellers have been waiting patiently since the start of the year.
The post Bitcoin heads into Fed decision today at the exact price where its strongest holders may finally sell appeared first on CryptoSlate.
“Sell in May and go away” is the idea that stocks reliably underperform between May and October, and it describes a market that might no longer exist.
Bloomberg Intelligence data shows the S&P 500 ETF has closed the May-October period in positive territory in 25 of the last 33 years, with only one negative summer stretch in the past decade.
Bespoke data cited by Bloomberg shows the cumulative return from holding SPY is only in May-October since the ETF's 1993 debut, at roughly 171%. That is real money, just considerably less than the 731% earned by staying long only in November-April.
Despite the seasonal performance difference, the cliché that May automatically means sell does not hold.

The logic behind the old saying is that corporate earnings slow, trading desks thin out, and investors rotate into cash or bonds until autumn.
That playbook worked well enough for decades, built for a market where institutional money moved slowly, and risk appetite followed a predictable rhythm.
Bitcoin has spent two years building direct plumbing into traditional portfolio flows. Data from Farside Investors shows that US spot Bitcoin ETFs pulled in roughly $1.5 billion between Apr. 17 and 24, and cumulative net inflows have reached approximately $58.3 billion.
That market structure has folded Bitcoin into the same risk appetite machinery that drives equities, giving BTC direct exposure to whatever keeps institutional investors willing to hold.
When institutional money does not reflexively de-risk into summer, BTC avoids one of the psychological headwinds that have historically hit speculative assets in May.
The Federal Reserve's own research has flagged that crypto ETP bid-ask spreads are broadly comparable to those of similarly sized equity ETFs and ETPs, and has argued that NAV premiums in crypto funds warrant monitoring as a measure of how interconnected crypto and equity markets have become.
The case for Bitcoin entering summer with fewer headwinds depends almost entirely on what the next six weeks of data deliver.
The Fed's Apr. 28-29 meeting produced a policy decision and a press conference by Fed Chair Jerome Powell on Apr. 29. The Bureau of Economic Analysis releases first-quarter GDP and March PCE on Apr. 30.
April payrolls land May 8, April CPI arrives May 12, and the FOMC minutes from the April meeting come May 20, and the next full Fed meeting runs June 16-17.
| Date | Event | Latest reading / setup in the article | Why markets care | BTC read-through |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr. 28–29 | Fed meeting + Powell press conference | Fed stays on pause unless data force a shift | Sets the tone for rates, liquidity, and how hard the Fed pushes back on cut expectations | A patient, data-dependent Fed supports risk appetite and helps BTC avoid a seasonal de-risking narrative |
| Apr. 30 | Q1 GDP + March PCE | GDPNow estimated Q1 growth at 1.2% as of Apr. 21; February PCE was 2.8%, core PCE 3.0% | Shows whether growth is slowing cleanly or sliding toward stagflation, and whether inflation is cooling enough to keep easing hopes alive | Soft-but-stable growth with contained inflation is constructive for BTC; weak growth plus sticky inflation is a problem |
| May 8 | April payrolls | March labor market was still firm enough to keep the Fed cautious | A cooler jobs print can keep rate-cut hopes alive; a hot print can push yields higher | Cooling labor data without recession fear is bullish for BTC; re-accelerating jobs can weigh on BTC through higher yields |
| May 12 | April CPI | March CPI was 3.3% y/y, core CPI 2.6%; Cleveland Fed nowcast for April CPI was 3.56% y/y | CPI is the cleanest near-term test of whether inflation is re-accelerating | A softer print helps the risk-on case for BTC; a hotter print can revive “Sell in May” through tighter financial conditions |
| May 20 | FOMC minutes | Markets look for detail on how concerned officials were about inflation and cuts | Minutes can reinforce or soften the message from Powell’s press conference | If the minutes show a high bar for cuts, BTC may trade more like a high-beta macro asset |
| June 16–17 | Next full Fed meeting | By then markets will have GDP, PCE, payrolls, CPI, and the April minutes | This is the point where the May data run either confirms or breaks the summer risk-on thesis | If macro stays benign, BTC can hold the $72,000–$85,000 range into this window; if inflation and yields rise, downside toward $65,000–$72,000 becomes more plausible |
That sequence either confirms that “Sell in May” has lost its macro rationale or rebuilds it this time.
Atlanta Fed's GDPNow put first-quarter growth at 1.2% as of Apr. 21, compared with the official GDP of 0.7% for the fourth quarter of 2025.
March CPI came in at 3.3% year-over-year, core CPI at 2.6%, and the energy index jumped 10.9% month-over-month. February PCE was 2.8%, and core PCE was 3.0%.
Cleveland Fed nowcasts as of Apr. 28 put April CPI at 3.56% year-over-year and April PCE at 3.60%. The March Fed SEP raised both 2026 PCE and core PCE medians to 2.7%, and 17 of 19 participants marked inflation risks as skewed to the upside.
Cross-market conditions as of late April are contained. The 2-year Treasury yield was 3.78%, the 10-year was 4.31%, the VIX was 18.02, and BTC was in the $76,000 zone.
BlackRock's spring outlook frames the current setup as a mild stagflation trade-off, in which the Fed stays on pause and moves toward gradual easing only if inflation keeps cooling or growth moderates.
If April PCE and May CPI print close to or softer than current nowcasts, and April payrolls cool without triggering recession fears, the Fed can credibly stay data-dependent.
That keeps the 2-year yield anchored in roughly the 3.65%-3.85% range, VIX below 20, and SPY grinding sideways to higher. In that backdrop, ETF inflows become the marginal driver for Bitcoin.
Institutional allocators who built Bitcoin positions through IBIT and peer funds have no obvious seasonal reason to reduce exposure.
Bitcoin can hold a $72,000-$85,000 range into the June Fed window. If core inflation prints softer than feared while payrolls miss cleanly without alarming growth data, markets can re-price a clearer easing path for the second half of 2025.
A market where SPY has been positive in 25 of 33 May-October periods is one in which the behavioral case for cutting risk in summer is weaker each year.
If PCE or CPI re-accelerate beyond nowcasts, if April payrolls surprise to the upside, or if Powell makes clear at the Apr. 29 press conference that the bar for cuts is higher than markets anticipate, Treasury yields back up.

A 2-year yield pushing toward or above 4% tightens financial conditions, compresses equity multiples, and removes the liquidity backdrop that has supported Bitcoin's ETF-era rally.
In that environment, BTC trades as a high-beta macro asset; a retreat into the $65,000-$72,000 range becomes plausible, pulled lower by the same risk appetite that had been carrying it higher.
The Philadelphia Fed's Anxious Index put the probability of a second-quarter GDP decline at 20.9% in the first-quarter survey, a level elevated enough to keep recession risk alive as a tail risk.
If GDP surprises to the downside while inflation stays sticky, the Fed faces a classic stagflation bind in which neither cutting nor hiking resolves the problem. That stagflation bind is the version that actually bites.
Bitcoin has absorbed Wall Street's infrastructure and inherited its constraints along with its capital. Seasonal folklore has always been a proxy for the idea that summer is when macro imbalances get priced in, liquidity thins at the margin, and investors reassess what they want to own.
The next six weeks will test if the macro regime that carried Bitcoin to record highs can survive inflation data.
The post Established ‘Sell in May’ philosophy looks broken, and that could be good news for Bitcoin appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The CLARITY Act has stalled in Senate Banking deliberations, setting back an array of market rules that would solidify into law most of the pro-crypto stance that took hold in the President Donald Trump administration.
Yet, Congress may have handed crypto markets an unexpected experiment. Galaxy Research puts the odds of enactment this year at roughly 50-50, possibly lower, with unresolved disputes over DeFi provisions, jurisdiction, and stablecoin yield language.
The bill spans token classification, exchange and broker-dealer registration, software carveouts, and DeFi provisions, with the rewards dispute representing one contested layer inside a much larger framework.
On the rewards layer is where Wall Street's most concrete stablecoin-related fear lives, and a stall could let the market answer it before Congress does.
The GENIUS Act explicitly bars stablecoin issuers from paying interest or yield solely for holding a payment stablecoin, resolving the simplest version of the fight.
The harder question is if exchanges and third parties can offer cash back, referral bonuses, or promotional yields without running into the same prohibition.
Both the OCC's March proposal and the FDIC's April proposal extended anti-evasion presumptions to some affiliate and related third-party arrangements, narrowing the lane.
Yet, both documents are still proposed rules pending finalization, and regulators are still defining the practical scope of what counts as prohibited.
Banks have framed this open perimeter as an existential threat to their competitiveness. The ABA's community bank letter cited up to $6.6 trillion in deposits as potentially at risk, warning that exchange-funded inducements could pull savings out of the banking system.
Standard Chartered put a more bounded forecast of up to $500 billion in deposit outflows to stablecoins by the end of 2028, with regional banks carrying the most exposure.
The argument centers on exchange-funded rewards that make stablecoin balances functionally competitive with bank deposits while avoiding the reserve requirements, capital rules, and insurance costs that banks bear.
The White House Council of Economic Advisers published a direct rebuttal in April, finding that eliminating stablecoin yield would increase bank lending by about $2.1 billion, or roughly 0.02%, and impose an $800 million net welfare cost.
The stablecoin market stood at over $320 billion as of Apr. 27, against roughly $19.1 trillion in US commercial bank deposits.
At about 1.66% of the deposit base, stablecoins are large enough to generate competitive friction at the margins and small enough for the system's aggregate funding to hold.

If the stablecoin market grew from $320 billion to $500 billion and every incremental dollar came from bank deposits, the displacement would be roughly 0.96% of current deposits. The amount is enough to test community institutions' pricing power while leaving the system's aggregate funding intact.
If CLARITY stalls and agency rulemaking does not close the rewards lane, exchanges can keep operating in the unsettled perimeter.
In that environment, the rewards market runs long enough to generate observable data, such as flows between bank accounts and on-chain balances, moves in retail cash allocation, and competitive responses from banks on deposit rates.
Congressional hearings have spent eighteen months generating arguments, and a legislative delay could generate evidence. The difference between the ABA's $6.6 trillion alarm and the CEA's $2.1 billion lending effect would begin to fill in with actual data.
The global dimension makes any data that emerges immediately relevant beyond US borders.
MiCA explicitly bars issuers of e-money tokens from paying interest and extends that restriction to crypto-asset service providers. Hong Kong runs a license-based stablecoin-issuer regime.
The BIS noted in April that the main cross-jurisdiction split now centers on whether exchanges and CASPs may offer rewards, with some markets prohibiting them, others restricting retail access, and others leaving no explicit ban.
A BIS working paper published in February found that a $3.5 billion five-day inflow of stablecoins lowers 3-month T-bill yields by 2.5 to 3.5 basis points, providing evidence that stablecoins already connect to the front end of the Treasury curve in measurable ways.
If the US gray area produces deposit-flow data, it becomes the first empirical input into an international policy debate that has run entirely on projections.
| Claim / source | What they argue | Magnitude cited | What a live market test would show |
|---|---|---|---|
| ABA / banks | Rewards could drain deposits from banks | Up to $6.6T at risk | Whether deposit outflows actually appear at scale |
| Standard Chartered | Stablecoins could pull meaningful deposits by 2028 | Up to $500B | Which banks are most exposed, especially regionals |
| White House CEA | Banning yield has limited bank-lending upside | $2.1B lending effect; ~0.02% | Whether actual rewards change deposit behavior more than the model suggests |
| Market reality | Stablecoins already exceed $320B | ~1.66% of deposit base | Whether competition shows up in rates, flows, and retail cash allocation |
Congress or agencies could close the lane before the test generates anything useful.
If the OCC and FDIC finalize anti-evasion rules broadly enough to reach promotional and activity-linked rewards, or if CLARITY passes with hard yield-prohibition language, the experiment ends before it starts.
Banks get the prohibition they sought, the CEA's small-number estimate becomes the only available empirical reference point, and the debate moves forward on the same contested theoretical ground.
The White House CEA's April paper noted that the GENIUS framework becomes effective within 18 months after becoming law, or 120 days past final implementing regulations, whichever comes first. This clock limits how long any gray area can run, regardless of what Congress does with CLARITY.
The delay carries structural costs that compound regardless of what the stablecoin rewards market reveals, such as token classification staying ambiguous, software developers carrying liability risk, DeFi protocols operating under contested regulatory authority, and exchange and broker-dealer registration frameworks sitting in limbo.
Those costs fall on the industry and its users the longer the bill stays idle.

Deposits leaving banks for stablecoin rewards would flow toward reserve assets such as T-bills and repo, redirecting funding from bank balance sheets to the front end of the Treasury curve.
The test reveals if rewards reshape deposit behavior at the margins, and for which depositors.
At the current stablecoin market size, that is a deposit sensitivity check, a real-world measure of bank pricing power and competitive friction that the industry, at this scale, has only modeled.
A CLARITY stall means watching that mechanism either accelerate deposit migration or hold it steady despite every competitive incentive, and either result produces the first real deposit-behavior data a market this size has ever generated.
The post CLARITY’s delay to test Wall Street’s $6.6 trillion stablecoin warning which is at odds with White House view appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Today, Wednesday, April 29, 2026, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will release its third interest rate decision of the year. This specific meeting carries historic weight as it marks the final policy announcement and press conference for Jerome Powell before he concludes his tenure as Fed Chair.
Market participants are currently pricing in a near 99% certainty that the Fed will keep interest rates unchanged at the current target range of 3.50% to 3.75%. However, the "early query" for crypto investors isn't the rate itself, but the language used regarding inflation and the transition to incoming leadership.
Cryptocurrencies are widely categorized as "risk-on" assets. Their prices are heavily influenced by global liquidity conditions, which are directly controlled by the Federal Reserve's monetary policy.
When the Fed keeps rates high, borrowing becomes more expensive, and the US Dollar typically strengthens, which can put downward pressure on $Bitcoin and altcoins. Conversely, if Powell’s tone today leans "dovish"—suggesting that the peak of the rate cycle is behind us—it could provide the fuel needed for Bitcoin to break past the $80,000 psychological resistance level.
Historically, the minutes following a Fed announcement see "stop-hunting" behavior, where prices swing wildly in both directions before establishing a trend.
Jerome Powell’s final appearance adds a layer of uncertainty. Analysts at major institutions, such as JPMorgan, suggest he may use this meeting to solidify his legacy as the Chair who tamed the 2020s inflation surge, potentially maintaining a hawkish stance to ensure price stability.
The relationship between Gold and Bitcoin has reached a fever pitch in 2026. Historically, these two assets have been viewed as siblings in the "store of value" category, but their recent price action tells a more complex story of liquidity rotation and market psychology.
When Gold recently peaked at an all-time high of $5,589 per ounce on January 28, 2026, the crypto market didn't celebrate. Instead, Bitcoin [BTC] experienced a sharp -33% correction, sliding toward the $81,000 mark. While this might look like a decoupling, historical cycles suggest this "shakeout" is often the precursor to an explosive bull run for digital assets.
Not "always," but the correlation often turns negative at critical structural peaks. In August 2020, Gold hit what was then a record high, and Bitcoin immediately cooled off with a -21% retracement. Fast forward to January 2026, and we see a similar script: Gold reaches a parabolic peak, and Bitcoin sheds roughly a third of its value.
The pattern indicates that at the height of a Gold rally, liquidity is often "tapped out" or moving into defensive postures before rotating back into higher-risk, higher-reward assets like $Bitcoin.
To understand where we are going, we have to look at where we’ve been. The current market structure bears a striking resemblance to the 2020 cycle.
| Metric | 2020 Gold Peak Cycle | 2026 Gold Peak Cycle |
|---|---|---|
| Gold Peak Date | August 2020 | January 2026 |
| BTC Immediate Drop | -21% | -33% |
| Recovery Catalyst | Stimulus & Halving Lag | Institutional ETF Flows |
| Post-Peak BTC Gain | +559% (238 Days) | TBD (Projected Highs) |
In finance, "Liquidity Rotation" refers to capital moving from one asset class to another. When Gold reaches a "blow-off top" (a rapid increase in price followed by a steep drop), investors often take profits. That "sideline cash" doesn't stay idle for long. In 2020, that capital flowed directly into the crypto market, fueling a 559% rally that took BTC from $11,000 to over $60,000 in less than a year.
The 2026 drop has been more severe (-33% vs -21%) due to the increased presence of institutional leverage and Spot Bitcoin ETFs. However, the fundamental "why" remains the same:

Analysts suggest that the current Bitcoin/Gold valuation is at historic lows. This typically marks a "generational bottom" for the Bitcoin-to-Gold ratio. If the 2020 fractal repeats, the -33% drop we just witnessed is the final hurdle before Bitcoin targets the $150,000 - $200,000 range.
Title: Ethereum vs NVIDIA: Which Asset is the Better Long-Term Investment? slug: ethereum-vs-nvidia-investment-comparison teaser: Ethereum or NVIDIA? We compare the 5-year and 10-year returns of ETH and NVDA to see which asset wins the battle for your portfolio in 2026. keywords: ethereum vs nvidia, eth price performance, nvda stock returns, crypto vs stocks, investing in ai, ethereum investment 2026, nvidia price today
The investment debate in 2026 centers on two powerhouses: Ethereum ($ETH), the backbone of decentralized finance, and NVIDIA (NVDA), the hardware engine of the AI revolution. While both represent "frontier" technology, their returns vary wildly depending on your entry point.
NVIDIA has dominated the last five years due to the AI boom. Conversely, Ethereum remains the superior long-term play for those who entered a decade ago.
Since 2021, NVIDIA has outperformed almost every major asset class, including Bitcoin.
When extending the horizon to 2015, the "crypto multiplier" becomes evident.
While NVIDIA’s 600x return is legendary for a stock, Ethereum’s 4,600x return highlights the asymmetric upside of successful blockchain protocols compared to centralized corporations.
NVIDIA’s current lead is fueled by tangible earnings and the race for "AI Sovereignty." Major tech firms continue to buy GPUs at scale, keeping NVDA margins high.
Ethereum, however, is transitioning from a speculative asset to a utility-driven one. While the exchange comparison shows lower retail trading volume for ETH compared to previous cycles, institutional staking and Layer-2 scaling are at all-time highs. For long-term holders, securing these assets in hardware wallets remains the priority as the network matures.
Dogecoin (DOGE) is currently at a technical crossroads. After months of range-bound trading between $0.086 and $0.118, the world's most famous meme coin is showing signs of a potential "short squeeze." As of April 28, 2026, Dogecoin is trading at $0.099, precisely at a level that has historically acted as both a psychological and technical ceiling.

The daily chart reveals a clear period of volatility compression. Since February, DOGE has been printing higher lows, forming a gradual ascending support structure.
The recent price action isn't happening in a vacuum. Several fundamental catalysts are converging to keep DOGE in the headlines of crypto news.
Speculation is reaching a fever pitch regarding Elon Musk's X platform and its upcoming payment feature, X Money. While initial reports suggest a fiat-based system in partnership with Visa, the DOGE community is betting on a future crypto integration. Historically, any mention of payments on X (formerly Twitter) has led to massive spikes in $DOGE price.
In a surprise move for 2026, institutional interest has shifted toward meme coins. Following the success of Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, Nasdaq began listing the 21Shares Dogecoin ETF (ticker: TDOG) earlier this year. This provides a regulated pathway for institutional capital to flow into DOGE, reducing the "joke" stigma and treating it as a legitimate digital asset.
Elon Musk recently reignited interest in the DOGE-1 mission, a satellite project funded entirely by Dogecoin. During a talk with the Tesla Owners Club, Musk hinted that the project, which faced several delays, is back on track.
For traders looking to capitalize on this movement, the following levels are critical:
| Level Type | Price (USD) | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Major Resistance | $0.118 | The high from early February; breaking this confirms a bull market. |
| Pivot Point | $0.100 | Psychological barrier; requires high volume to break. |
| Immediate Support | $0.095 | Local support to maintain the current short-term uptrend. |
| Critical Support | $0.086 | Must hold to avoid a deeper crash toward $0.07. |
While the $1.00 target remains a long-term goal for the fading "Doge Army," the immediate focus is reclaiming the $0.12 territory. The combination of technical compression and institutional products like the TDOG ETF suggests that Dogecoin is maturing beyond a simple pump-and-dump asset.
Kevin Warsh has emerged as the clear frontrunner to succeed Jerome Powell as the Chair of the Federal Reserve. Warsh is widely considered the most "pro-Bitcoin" candidate to ever be nominated for the role. However, historical data casts a long, dark shadow over Fed leadership changes. In every major transition over the last decade, Bitcoin has suffered double-digit percentage collapses.
To understand the current market anxiety, one must look at the precedent set by previous appointments. Historically, the uncertainty surrounding a new Fed Chair’s "hawkish" or "dovish" stance has triggered massive sell-offs.
| Date | Fed Chair Event | Bitcoin Performance |
|---|---|---|
| Jan 2014 | Janet Yellen takes office | -82.77% |
| Feb 2018 | Jerome Powell takes office | -73.89% |
| May 2022 | Jerome Powell’s 2nd Term | -61.06% |
In 2014, Janet Yellen's arrival coincided with the post-2013 bubble burst and the Mt. Gox collapse. By 2018, Powell took the reigns just as the ICO craze deflated. Most recently, in 2022, his second term confirmation aligned with the start of aggressive interest rate hikes that fueled the "Crypto Winter."
Kevin Warsh is not your typical central banker. A former Fed Governor (2006–2011) and Morgan Stanley veteran, Warsh has a track record of acknowledging Bitcoin as a legitimate financial asset. During his recent confirmation hearings, Warsh stated that "digital assets are already part of the fabric of our financial services industry."
Unlike his predecessors, Warsh’s personal financial disclosures revealed significant exposure to the sector, including holdings in Web3 infrastructure and DeFi protocols.
Key Policy Stances:
While the "Fed Chair Curse" suggests a crash is imminent by May 2026, several factors suggest we might see a "Warsh Pump" instead of a "Powell Dump."
It hasn't been all smooth sailing. Senator Elizabeth Warren and other critics have raised concerns about Warsh’s independence, fearing he may act as a "sock puppet" for the executive branch to facilitate specific crypto ventures. Any perception that the Fed is losing its independence could lead to dollar volatility, which historically sends tremors through all risk assets, including hardware wallets and cold storage holdings.
Crypto payments processor MoonPay is expanding into institutional services with a veteran regulator at the helm.
With four of five CFTC commissioner seats vacant, the decision on whether to lift Polymarket's U.S. ban rests with Chair Michael Selig alone.
Payments giant Visa scales its blockchain settlement infrastructure with five new networks as pilot program shows 50% quarterly growth.
The BlackRock-backed firm was recently selected as by the New York Stock Exchange as a tokenization specialist.
Multiple $3.3 million sell walls sit between $80,400 and $82,000 as oil volatility and rising real rates keep Bitcoin trapped.
A major update from Trust wallet involving the addition of Hyperliquid to its platform has sparked reactions from Binance’s CZ who highlighted Trust Wallet’s growing expansion.
Ripple lists its stablecoin, RLUSD, on major cryptocurrency exchange OKX to boost trading and collateral options among its users.
SHIB may be racing toward an 18% "mean reversion" payday that offers underwater holders a rare tactical window to cut losses at the $0.0000075 resistance.
XRP holds $1 billion AUM in ETFs vs Bitcoin outflows, Dogecoin hits $0.109 after 10% price spike, and Vitalik Buterin offloads Asteroid meme coins.
Meme coins rallied on strong inflows, with Dogecoin and Shiba Inu seeing significant gains.
On Tuesday, Uber and Expedia unveiled a reciprocal collaboration that integrates accommodation reservations within Uber’s platform while embedding ride-hailing services into Expedia’s ecosystem.
The announcement came during Uber’s yearly GO-GET product showcase. American customers now have immediate access to search and reserve from over 700,000 worldwide hotel properties via a freshly introduced “Hotels” section on Uber’s main interface.
An interesting connection exists beneath the surface. Dara Khosrowshahi, Uber’s chief executive, previously led Expedia before transitioning to his current role in 2017. This professional reunion has now materialized into a commercial agreement.
Uber Technologies, Inc., UBER
Those enrolled in Uber One receive premium advantages. Subscribers access guaranteed savings of at least 20% across a rotating portfolio exceeding 10,000 hotels while earning 10% cashback as Uber credits on every accommodation reservation processed through the application.
Customers can sort available properties by cost, guest ratings, and facility features, completing transactions through their established Uber wallet. No additional registration or separate application download is required.
Listings from Vrbo — Expedia’s vacation home rental division — will integrate into the Uber platform during late 2026. This hotel booking capability represents the initial stage of what appears to be an extensive travel expansion strategy.
The collaboration operates bidirectionally. From June onward, Expedia’s application will enable users to schedule Uber transportation. Hotel guests will additionally receive advance notifications prior to check-in dates, encouraging them to arrange discounted Uber trips.
Uber leveraged the GO-GET presentation to introduce multiple capabilities extending beyond lodging services. A newly developed “Travel Mode” provides personalized destination suggestions, dining bookings through OpenTable integration, and direct room delivery options.
The corporation simultaneously introduced “Shop for Me,” which allows customers to request merchandise from retailers not presently available on Uber Eats. Within designated metropolitan areas, passengers reserving Uber Black or Uber Black SUV services can pre-select refreshments or beverages alongside their transportation.
AI-driven voice ordering functionality and a restructured universal search engine — encompassing transportation, dining, and shopping within a single interface — are currently deploying. Uber is unmistakably advancing toward the “super app” framework: a singular platform delivering diverse services.
Uber One’s membership totaled 46 million subscribers at the conclusion of Q4 2025, representing a 55% surge compared to the previous year. This subscriber foundation is fundamental to Uber’s strategy for bundling these expanded benefits.
Expedia CEO Ariane Gorin explained the collaboration links both ecosystems through Expedia’s Rapid API infrastructure, enabling large-scale inventory synchronization.
Expedia’s share price climbed approximately 3.2% following the announcement. The organization maintains a market capitalization near $30.3 billion and generated $14.73 billion in revenue throughout the trailing twelve months.
Jefferies recently elevated Expedia to “Buy” status with a $300 price objective, projecting high single-digit percentage growth in lodging reservations. Morgan Stanley increased its target to $290 after analyzing robust Q4 financial results.
Expedia additionally appointed Derek Andersen as its next CFO, assuming responsibilities on May 11, 2026, replacing Scott Schenkel who exits following the company’s Q1 earnings announcement.
The post Uber (UBER) Teams Up With Expedia to Offer Hotel Reservations In-App appeared first on Blockonomi.
The online marketplace operator delivered first quarter 2026 revenue totaling $631.3 million, exceeding Wall Street’s consensus forecast by roughly $10 million. The upside surprise stemmed primarily from renewed expansion in gross merchandise sales, which climbed 5.5% compared to the year-ago period to reach $2.5 billion across the Etsy platform.
This GMS performance represents a significant inflection point, ending a prolonged period of year-over-year declines. The previous quarter registered a 0.5% contraction, making this the first time in more than 24 months that the company posted positive annual GMS growth.
Etsy, Inc., ETSY
Earnings per share from continuing operations registered $0.89, significantly outpacing analyst expectations of $0.62. Continuing operations generated net income of $104.7 million, marking a dramatic reversal from the $35.1 million net loss recorded in the same quarter last year, when results were impacted by a $101.7 million asset impairment charge.
Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations totaled $184.7 million, translating to a margin of 29.3%. The organization also executed approximately $145 million in share repurchases throughout the quarter, reducing the outstanding share count by roughly 2.7 million.
Chief Executive Kruti Patel Goyal characterized the quarter as displaying “encouraging signals” that strategic growth initiatives are gaining traction, expressing heightened confidence in the company’s capacity to convert recent progress into sustained long-term expansion.
The platform recorded sequential growth in active buyers for the first time in two years. Spending per active buyer on a trailing twelve-month basis hit $122 — marking the first year-over-year increase since late 2022 and the fourth consecutive quarter of sequential gains.
Transactions conducted via mobile applications rose 11.2% year-over-year, with app-based purchases accounting for approximately 47% of total gross merchandise sales.
Chief Financial Officer Lanny Baker informed Reuters that consumer demand across Etsy has remained consistent regardless of income bracket, despite ongoing concerns about inflation and tariff-related economic uncertainty affecting consumer spending power. He emphasized that the company faces minimal direct tariff exposure, given that roughly 90% of materials utilized by sellers in production are obtained from domestic sources.
Traffic driven by artificial intelligence tools continues expanding on the marketplace, though Baker acknowledged it currently represents only a low single-digit percentage of overall platform activity, limiting its near-term financial impact.
For the second quarter of 2026, the company projected marketplace GMS in the range of $2.48 billion to $2.53 billion, implying year-over-year growth of 3% to 5%. Management anticipates a take rate of roughly 25.7% and adjusted EBITDA margin between 27% and 29%.
For the complete fiscal year, the company now forecasts low single-digit GMS growth for the Etsy marketplace — representing an upgrade from previous guidance — while reaffirming its full-year adjusted EBITDA margin target of 28% to 30%.
Management indicated it anticipates positive year-over-year GMS growth throughout each quarter of 2026.
The company ended the first quarter holding $1.6 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments.
These financial results do not incorporate Depop, which the company agreed to divest to eBay for $1.2 billion in a transaction announced in February. The sale is anticipated to finalize by the conclusion of the third quarter of 2026.
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Bullish (BLSH) experienced a significant decline to $37.51, representing a 5.78% decrease, following a breach of the $39 technical support threshold during mid-session activity. Simultaneously, Mezo revealed Mezo Prime, an institutional-focused Bitcoin yield solution. The platform’s introduction, supported by Anchorage Digital Bank’s infrastructure, contributes additional market pressure amid evolving investor sentiment.
Bullish, BLSH
Mezo unveiled Mezo Prime to deliver on-chain yield and borrowing capabilities for corporate Bitcoin holders. The offering connects seamlessly with Anchorage Digital Bank’s custody infrastructure. Consequently, institutional participants can pursue yield opportunities while preserving regulated custody standards.
The system introduces isolated vault structures called Enclaves designed for institutional Bitcoin storage. Each Enclave segregates assets according to individual depositors, eliminating commingling and rehypothecation exposure. This architecture reinforces enhanced compliance, reporting capabilities, and operational oversight.
Bitcoin deposited into these Enclaves generates returns through protocol engagement. Participants can convert BTC into veBTC to collect fees or utilize it to borrow MUSD. This framework enables corporations to monetize dormant Bitcoin without transferring assets beyond custody boundaries.
Mezo developed this offering to address the substantial volume of inactive corporate Bitcoin reserves. Publicly traded corporations currently maintain over one million BTC across balance sheets. Yet, the majority of these assets remain unproductive due to risk management and custody limitations.
The solution synchronizes yield generation with institutional mandates rather than adapting existing DeFi protocols. Thus, Mezo Prime emphasizes security, transparency, and unmediated protocol interaction. This methodology establishes the product within the expanding institutional cryptocurrency infrastructure landscape.
Anchorage Digital Bank delivers Mezo Prime through its current client portal. This arrangement enables institutional customers to access the platform without supplementary onboarding procedures. The integration facilitates accelerated adoption among existing custody service users.
Bullish entered Mezo Prime as the inaugural institutional user and foundational client. The organization allocated 250 BTC to the platform concurrent with the product introduction. This deployment represents a portion of Bullish’s treasury directed toward Enclave-based yield mechanisms.
The exchange maintains operations within Anchorage’s custody and regulatory framework. This arrangement preserves regulatory conformity while facilitating yield generation activities. The structure minimizes operational complexity for institutional engagement.
Bullish incorporates Mezo Prime within its comprehensive treasury optimization approach. The company emphasizes merging institutional compliance standards with blockchain-native financial instruments. This allocation demonstrates a strategic pivot toward productive Bitcoin deployment.
The wider market landscape reveals accelerating institutional Bitcoin accumulation patterns. However, yield-generating opportunities remain constrained within compliant operational environments. Mezo Prime seeks to address this limitation through structured custody-integrated frameworks.
The debut follows Mezo’s broader expansion of its Bitcoin-centric financial infrastructure. This encompasses fixed-rate BTC lending products, the MUSD stablecoin offering, and cross-chain compatibility features. The platform consequently constructs a more comprehensive ecosystem surrounding Bitcoin functionality.
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Shares of Western Digital rallied approximately 10% during Wednesday’s trading session, bouncing back from a steep decline experienced the previous day amid anxieties surrounding AI-related capital expenditures.
Western Digital Corporation, WDC
The recovery materialized after competing hard-drive manufacturer Seagate Technology delivered quarterly results exceeding analyst projections and provided optimistic guidance for the upcoming period, alleviating concerns regarding data storage market demand.
Seagate shares themselves skyrocketed 20% during the session, closing at $691.18.
The storage industry experienced significant selling pressure on Tuesday following a Wall Street Journal article indicating that OpenAI had fallen short of critical expansion objectives. This news rattled investors holding positions in AI infrastructure-related equities, including Western Digital.
WDC commenced Wednesday’s session at $390.75, advancing to $432.90 during morning trading hours — representing an increase of approximately 10.9%.
Sandisk shares climbed 8.2% while Micron advanced 4.5%, with D.A. Davidson launching coverage on Micron at a Buy rating and establishing a $1,000 price objective.
The investment community has expressed growing optimism regarding WDC in anticipation of its forthcoming Q3 earnings announcement slated for April 30. Cantor Fitzgerald elevated its price target to $500, while Bank of America increased its objective to $495, both firms highlighting constrained HDD supply dynamics and strengthening NAND flash pricing trends.
Wells Fargo adjusted its target upward from $260 to $335. Both Rosenblatt and Wedbush continue to maintain Buy-equivalent recommendations. Currently, twenty analysts have assigned Buy ratings to the stock, with four recommending Hold positions. The consensus price target stands at $320.38.
Options market activity suggests an anticipated volatility of approximately 11.6% following the earnings release — indicating significant investor expectations in either direction.
Western Digital’s most recent quarterly performance exceeded analyst forecasts. The company delivered earnings per share of $2.13, surpassing the consensus estimate of $1.93. Revenue totaled $3.02 billion, representing a 25.2% year-over-year increase and exceeding the anticipated $2.93 billion.
Pictet Asset Management expanded its WDC position by 62.1% during the fourth quarter, acquiring an additional 131,247 shares to bring its total holdings to 342,516 units, valued at approximately $59 million at that time.
Institutional investors currently control 92.51% of the company’s outstanding shares.
Melius Research analyst Ben Reitzes launched coverage of both Micron and Sandisk with Buy ratings on Monday, characterizing memory technology as “existential” to the artificial intelligence revolution. He conveyed to investors that demand trajectories are positioned to grow “exponentially.”
Western Digital has appreciated 127% year-to-date through Tuesday’s market close. Sandisk has surged 322% during the identical timeframe. Seagate and Micron have gained 110% and 77%, respectively.
Company insiders have divested 92,711 shares valued at approximately $24.3 million throughout the previous quarter. Chief Executive Officer Irving Tan sold 20,000 shares on February 2nd at an average transaction price of $255.44.
WDC’s 50-day moving average currently registers at $309.01, while its 200-day moving average sits at $230.51. The stock achieved a 52-week peak of $416.37 prior to Wednesday’s trading session.
Analysts are forecasting full-year earnings per share of $8.52 for the current fiscal period.
The post Western Digital (WDC) Stock Surges 10% Following Seagate’s Bullish Earnings Report appeared first on Blockonomi.
WHITE TECH, part of the W Group ecosystem and majority-owned by Volodymyr Nosov, Founder and CEO of WhiteBIT, has received authorization from the Croatian Financial Services Supervisory Agency (HANFA) to operate as a crypto-asset service provider (CASP) under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation.
Within the W Group ecosystem, WHITE TECH serves as a core infrastructure component, focusing on crypto exchange services, enabling seamless conversion between crypto-assets and fiat, as well as the execution of crypto-asset transfers for businesses and users.
The authorization enables WHITE TECH to provide a range of regulated crypto services, including the exchange of crypto-assets for fiat currencies and other crypto-assets, transfer services, as well as custody and administration of crypto-assets. The company will operate under HANFA supervision, in line with MiCA’s requirements for governance, risk management, and user protection.
WHITE TECH is among the first companies in Croatia to receive authorization under MiCA, entering the EU’s unified regulatory framework at an early stage. MiCA establishes consistent rules across member states, aimed at increasing market transparency and strengthening trust in the crypto-asset sector.
The milestone reflects the company’s continued growth trajectory as part of the broader W Group ecosystem, reinforcing its commitment to regulated markets.
About W Group
W Group is a global fintech ecosystem that makes blockchain and crypto easy, secure, and accessible for everyone. It is built on the values of security, professionalism, and innovation, serving 35 million users across 150 countries worldwide. At the center of W Group is WhiteBIT, the largest European crypto exchange by traffic, offering over 900 trading pairs, 340+ assets, and supporting 8 fiat currencies. WhiteBIT collaborates with Visa, FACEIT, FC Barcelona, Juventus FC, and the Ukrainian national football team.
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Despite the growing criticism from some Pioneers about certain shortcomings, such as token migration and failed KYC procedures, the team behind Pi Network continues to implement protocol upgrades, outline new features, and highlight big milestones.
The latest, announced yesterday, involves the growing number of millions of tasks completed by a million humans.
After acknowledging the rapid advancements in AI technology, the team’s blog post explained that the “hardest part of building reliable systems” is still “deeply human.” This is why they continue to rely on human input to improve their models, true inference quality, and scale data labeling and evaluation.
They believe that human input and AI work best together, and they combine them to enhance their product line and user experience. Its solution, as explained in the statement, is: “introducing the large-scale, globally distributed workforce of identity-verified human participants already active inside the Pi ecosystem.”
One of the examples of Pi Network’s success in this area came in the form of the completion of over 526 million validation tasks on the network by one million verified individuals. These tasks were part of the protocol’s native KYC system, and the validators’ work was paid directly in the underlying asset.
“Unlike many other KYC tools, Pi’s KYC uniquely combines AI automation with the power of its massive distributed human workforce to accomplish accurate and efficient verification for over 18 million people in over 200 countries and regions. The over 18 million identity verified people, in turn, may alo further join the marketplace of such a workforce.”
Although it has turned red on a daily scale as of press time, Pi Network’s native token went on an impressive run in the past couple of weeks. It surged from a local low of $0.165 to $0.20 earlier today, its highest price in about a month and a half. The last time it traded at such levels was after the rally propelled by the Kraken listing and the subsequent crash.
PI has solidified its position within the top 50 alts by market cap, as its own has neared $2 billion as of press time on CoinGecko. Data from PiScan shows that May 1 will see the release of almost 21 million tokens, which could intensify the selling pressure, but the average daily unlock number should ease to 6.7 million for the next month.
Meanwhile, some analysts remain highly optimistic about PI’s future, predicting massive price pumps of up to 1,400%.
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Bitcoin’s attempt to overcome $78,000 ahead of today’s FOMC meeting was halted in its tracks, perhaps due to the latest reports on the war against Iran, and the asset dipped by $1,500 in minutes.
At the same time, oil prices surged once again, with USOIL jumping to $105 for the first time since April 13. This came shortly after reports emerged claiming that the US President Donald Trump had discussed with US oil companies the possibility of extending the naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.
BREAKING: US oil prices extend gains to $105/barrel as President Trump prepares to extend the US “blockade” of the Strait of Hormuz for months. pic.twitter.com/RIuUti8xMt
— The Kobeissi Letter (@KobeissiLetter) April 29, 2026
Previously, the WSJ reported that the POTUS has already instructed his aides to prepare for an “extended blockade” of the Strait. Meanwhile, Iranian state media warned of “unprecedented military action” if US seizures of Iranian-linked vessels continue.
Separately, Walter Bloomberg noted that Israel’s Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is planning a potential trip to Washington to discuss the war front.
Unlike oil, BTC’s price dipped immediately after the reports about the potential blockade extension, dropping from nearly $78,000 to $76,400. Although it has bounced to almost $77,000 as of now, more volatility is expected later today when the US Federal Reserve will conclude its third FOMC meeting of the year.
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Ethereum is trading at $2,340 as April closes out, having quietly done what it failed to accomplish for the better part of six months: break out of the descending channel that has defined its entire corrective structure since October 2025. The breakout is fresh, unconfirmed on higher timeframes, and happening right below the $2.4k resistance zone.
That alone makes this one of the more interesting technical setups ETH has presented in this cycle.
For the first time since the downtrend began, ETH has pushed above the upper rail of the descending channel that contained the price from the late 2025 peak through the February lows. The price is currently just above the 100-day MA, which has declined to approximately $2.2k, meaning the channel breakout and the moving average recapture have occurred simultaneously, giving the current zone dual significance that prior breakout attempts simply did not have. The RSI is also hovering around 55–60 and has not confirmed the price highs with significant momentum, which is a caution flag worth watching.
The immediate overhead test is the $2.4k horizontal supply zone, which has rejected ETH on every approach since mid-March. A clean daily close above it would be the first genuine structural shift of the cycle, opening the path toward the $2.8k resistance area, where the 200-day MA is also located. On the downside, the reclaimed channel boundary and the 100-day MA near $2,200 form the new line of defense.

On the 4-hour chart, the structure is arguably more constructive than the daily timeframe. After tagging $2.4k in mid-April, ETH has carved out a falling wedge, which is a tightening descending pattern with converging trendlines, that has historically resolved to the upside when it forms following an impulsive move higher.
The price has recently rebounded from the lower boundary of that wedge around $2,250, and the RSI has also recovered above 50, which indicates that a retest of the upper boundary of the pattern and the $2.4k supply zone is highly probable.
As the projected breakout target from the wedge, which is marked by the grey arrow on the chart, shows, the market is likely to rally toward the next resistance zone around $2.7-$2.8k in case a breakout occurs. On the other hand, a decisive drop and close below the pattern invalidates it and shifts focus back to the $2k and $1.8k levels below.

The 30-day moving average of the Taker Buy/Sell Ratio across all exchanges has spiked to 1.02, its highest reading in the dataset since late 2023. The raw ratio and its 30-day SMA are both climbing in tandem, and the move is happening alongside price pushing into the $2.4k resistance zone. Historically, readings above 1.0 have coincided with sustained bullish momentum, an optimistic signal for the short term.
This signal could mean aggressive taker buying is about to force the issue and catalyze the breakout, or it could flag overextended short-term demand that fades if $2.4k rejects once more. Either way, it is the most bullish derivatives sentiment reading ETH has produced this entire cycle, and it is hard to ignore.

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Ripple’s stablecoin, which has amassed a market cap of over $1.5 billion in a year and a half after its launch, has received a notable adoption push from one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges, OKX.
The official statement from both parties informed that the addition of RLUSD to eligible markets on OKX will “significantly” expand the underlying asset’s global access, liquidity, and trading utility.
“As RLUSD adoption accelerates, we’re seeing strong demand across both crypto-native and institutional markets, particularly for high-quality collateral. Partnering with OKX gives users more ways to deploy capital efficiently across spot and derivatives, while deepening RLUSD liquidity on one of the world’s largest trading platforms,” commented Ripple’s SVP of Stablecoins, Jack McDonald.
The stablecoin is now available for trading in over 280 pairs on OKX, including against Ripple’s cross-border token, XRP. It can be used as “institutional-grade margin collateral for derivatives, including perpetual futures where available.”
The statement noted that deposits and withdrawals will be powered via the XRP Ledger (XRPL), with “direct minting and redemption ensuring consistent access to liquidity.”
RLUSD has grown to a $1.5 billion asset and has neared the top 50 cryptocurrencies by market cap in less than 18 months since its launch in December 2024. It’s currently the eighth largest stablecoin by that metric, according to data from CMC and CoinGecko.
RLUSD can be used to trade and collateralize positions across both spot and derivatives markets on OKX using the exchange’s Unified Order Book, which consolidates all eligible pairs into one liquidity pool, interface, and price discovery mechanism.
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Ripple’s cross-border token has dropped by 4% over the past week, but the latest actions by large investors suggest a more substantial plunge could be on the way.
On the other hand, there might be a silver lining as institutional interest is growing, but let’s examine.
The renowned crypto analyst Ali Martinez revealed that whales have sold or redistributed 1.1 billion XRP over the last seven days. The USD equivalent of this stash is more than $1.5 billion and should serve as a warning to the bulls.
After all, this cohort of investors rarely makes major sales or purchases without a purpose, and some believe they move early because they know something the rest of the market doesn’t.
This kind of behavior could signal reduced confidence in the asset and possible volatility ahead. It may also spread panic across the community and cause smaller players to cash out too. Following the latest sell-off, whales now control less than 7.9 billion XRP, representing 12% of the asset’s circulating supply.
This isn’t the first time Martinez has commented on the coin lately. At the start of the business week, he estimated that XRP had consolidated in a triangle pattern and had touched its apex, which means “the probability of a large price move increases.” It is important to note that the breakout could be in either direction.
Meanwhile, XRP holders have been intrigued by the US SEC’s recent proposal as it could reshape the regulatory view of the token.
Spot XRP ETFs have seen serious inflows lately, meaning that institutional investors, including hedge funds and pension funds, have increased their exposure to the asset. In fact, the last day when outflows dominated was April 9. This can be interpreted as a bullish driver, given that issuers of these products must back the shares they sell with real tokens.

The first spot XRP ETF debuted in November last year and was introduced by Canary Capital. Later on, Bitwise, Franklin Templeton, 21Shares, and Grayscale followed suit. Recently, the cumulative total net inflows of these investment products surged to а new all-time high of almost $1.3 billion.
That said, both of these are lagging indicators, meaning that they precede price action. They do not directly predict future events, but can be used to estimate probabilities. If institutional flows remain strong, this could create a more solid foundaiton for XRP’s price, making it more challenging for sellers to push the price lower.
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