A potential US-Iran memorandum could stabilize regional tensions, enhance diplomatic relations, and influence global nuclear policy dynamics.
The post US and Iran near memorandum to end war, boost nuclear deal hopes appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Nvidia's declining market share in AI processors signals potential shifts in industry leadership and challenges in sustaining growth.
The post Nvidia faces increased competition in AI processor market, market share declines appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The film's success highlights the power of nostalgia in driving box office sales, influencing future sequel strategies in the industry.
The post The Devil Wears Prada 2 hits $90M-$100M opening weekend target appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The prolonged blockade exacerbates global economic strain and heightens geopolitical tensions, impacting oil markets and diplomatic relations.
The post Thousands of ships stranded as Trump claims US “winning” Hormuz blockade appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Rubio's Vatican mission highlights the complex interplay of international diplomacy and domestic political dynamics amid global tensions.
The post Rubio’s Vatican mission complicated by Trump-Pope clash over Iran policy appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

Sequans Sells Half Its Bitcoin Holdings as Revenue Falls and Losses Mount
Paris-based Sequans Communications sold 1,025 bitcoin during the first quarter of 2026, cutting its digital asset reserves nearly in half as the IoT semiconductor maker grappled with declining revenue and mounting losses tied to a treasury strategy that has turned from ambitious to burdensome.
The sale reduced Sequans’ bitcoin position from 2,139 BTC at year-end 2025 to 1,114 BTC by April 30, marking the second major disposal in six months for a company that less than a year ago proclaimed plans to accumulate 3,000 bitcoin as a “long-term store of value”.
The financial pressure is evident in the numbers. Sequans reported revenue of $6.1 million for the quarter ended March 31, down 24.8% from $8.1 million a year earlier. The year-over-year comparison reveals the company’s vulnerability: the prior-year period included significant license and services revenue from Qualcomm that did not recur, exposing the underlying weakness in product sales.
While product sales did increase 45% from the year-ago quarter, gross margin compressed to 37.7% from 64.5% as lower-margin hardware displaced the lucrative licensing income. For a company burning cash, the shift in revenue mix compounds the challenge.
The bitcoin holdings that CEO Georges Karam once framed as a balance-sheet asset have become a source of substantial losses. Operating losses reached $50.5 million in the quarter, driven by $29.3 million in unrealized impairment charges on bitcoin holdings and $11.7 million in realized losses from selling the digital assets.
The company used bitcoin sale proceeds to redeem convertible debt and fund an American Depositary Share buyback program, a pragmatic move to reduce liabilities but one that underscores how the treasury strategy has shifted from accumulation to liquidation.
The remaining bitcoin holdings are largely encumbered. Of the 1,114 BTC held as of April 30, 817 bitcoin — representing 73% of current holdings valued at $62.3 million — remained pledged as collateral for $35.9 million in outstanding convertible notes. The pledged bitcoin exceeds the debt value, reflecting the over-collateralization required by lenders wary of cryptocurrency volatility.
The remaining debt is scheduled for redemption by June 1, 2026, after which all bitcoin will be unrestricted and available for sale. Whether Sequans will retain those assets or continue liquidating to fund operations remains an open question.
Net loss totaled $54.3 million, or $3.73 per diluted ADS, compared to $7.3 million, or $0.29 per ADS, in the prior-year quarter. Even on a non-IFRS basis—which excludes impairment charges, stock-based compensation, and accounting adjustments related to convertible debt—the net loss was substantial at $20.7 million, or $1.42 per ADS.
CEO Georges Karam framed the bitcoin sales as “decisive steps to simplify and strengthen our balance sheet,” while highlighting momentum in the company’s core IoT semiconductor business.
He cited a growing backlog, maturing design wins, and customer interest in Cat-M, Cat-1bis, and 5G eRedCap connectivity solutions, as well as new RF transceivers for drones and defense applications.
Sequans shares have fallen 51.5% over the past six months to $3.01, reflecting investor skepticism about both the bitcoin strategy and the core business trajectory.
The company ranks 40th among publicly traded firms holding bitcoin, far behind Strategy’s 818,334 BTC and Twenty One Capital’s 43,514 BTC.
This post Sequans Sells Half Its Bitcoin Holdings as Revenue Falls and Losses Mount first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Kraken Partners With MoneyGram to Enable Crypto Cash-Outs at 500,000 Locations Worldwide
Kraken will allow customers to convert cryptocurrency into cash at MoneyGram locations across more than 100 countries, addressing a longstanding gap in the digital asset ecosystem, according to an exclusive report from Fortune.
The partnership gives Kraken users access to nearly 500,000 physical locations worldwide, where they can exchange crypto holdings for local currency. The move targets a key friction point in crypto markets: while digital transfers settle with speed, converting assets into cash often involves multiple steps, limited banking access, or delays.
The initiative reflects rising demand for reliable cash access, driven in part by Kraken’s expanding presence in regions with unstable currencies.
Kraken co-CEO Arjun Sethi told Fortune that demand for reliable cash access has grown alongside the exchange’s international user base, especially in regions with unstable currencies. In those markets, users often treat crypto platforms as alternatives to banks.
“They want to store in USD or USD equivalent,” Sethi said. “They want to get yield. They want to do payments. They want to move money back and forth.”
That usage pattern creates a need for dependable off-ramps into cash. Through the MoneyGram network, Kraken users can bridge digital balances with local currency pickup, paying a variable exchange fee tied to each transaction.
The deal also marks a strategic shift for MoneyGram, a legacy payments company that has worked to modernize its operations after losing ground to fintech firms and digital banks. The company has focused on integrating digital assets into its infrastructure as part of a broader effort to reposition its business.
MoneyGram has spent recent years building crypto infrastructure, including a noncustodial wallet and deeper integration of stablecoins into its payment flows. The company has positioned stablecoins as a backbone for cross-border transfers, aiming to reduce costs and settlement delays tied to traditional rails. A private equity acquisition in 2023 gave the firm room to pursue that transformation outside public markets.
For Kraken, the deal adds to a period of expansion as it prepares for a potential public listing. The exchange has broadened its product suite beyond spot crypto trading, acquiring futures platform NinjaTrader and derivatives venue Bitnomial. Those moves reflect a strategy to compete across asset classes while strengthening its appeal to both institutional and retail users.
Despite its institutional focus, Kraken’s growth in emerging markets has shaped product priorities. Access to cash remains critical in economies where banking infrastructure lacks reach or trust.
The tie-up with MoneyGram signals a convergence between crypto platforms and traditional financial networks, where physical locations still play a key role. It also highlights how adoption depends not only on digital innovation, but on practical access to money in everyday form.
Kraken has not disclosed a full timeline for global rollout or its IPO plans, though it filed draft registration documents in late 2025.
This post Kraken Partners With MoneyGram to Enable Crypto Cash-Outs at 500,000 Locations Worldwide first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

K Wave Abandons Bitcoin Treasury Plan, Shifts to AI Infrastructure Play with $485M War Chest
K Wave Media is abandoning its high‑profile bitcoin treasury plan and recasting itself as an AI infrastructure company, backed by a potential war chest of up to $485 million and a cleaner balance sheet.
The Nasdaq‑listed firm intends to shed its legacy media operations, erase roughly $48 million of debt and pursue a rebrand as Talivar Technologies as it chases stronger margins in data centers and GPU compute.
On Monday, K Wave said its board approved the sale of Play Co., its largest wholly owned subsidiary, back to the unit’s previous owner, a transaction expected to remove about $48 million in debt and related contingent liabilities if shareholders sign off at an annual meeting planned for early July.
Management said the move will leave the company with “minimal remaining liabilities” and far greater flexibility to deploy capital into new lines of business.
That capital will come from an amended securities purchase agreement with Anson Funds, a structured equity financier that last year committed up to $500 million to support a bitcoin treasury strategy at the company.
Under the revised deal, K Wave can now direct the remaining $485 million from future share sales under the facility into AI infrastructure, including data center build‑outs, GPU compute and rental operations, and acquisitions or partnerships across what it calls the AI infrastructure value chain.
The pivot reverses a June 2025 plan that helped send K Wave’s stock soaring after the company said it would emulate corporate bitcoin treasuries using the Anson facility. Less than a year later, that narrative has given way to the market’s current obsession, with AI infrastructure contracts offering reported margins above 85% and multi‑year revenue visibility, compared with bitcoin miners’ production costs near $80,000 per coin in late 2025 and more volatile cash flows.
Public investors have punished the strategic U‑turn. K Wave shares dropped over 25% on Monday and extended losses in premarket trading Tuesday after the company detailed its amended capital plan and AI push. The stock reaction underscores skepticism toward yet another listed firm pivoting from a struggling core business into whatever theme capital markets reward.
Chief Executive Ted Kim framed the overhaul as a necessary reset that could turn K Wave into “a meaningful participant” in the AI build‑out now underway.
The company says it will seek targeted acquisitions and partnerships that support vertical integration across AI infrastructure, aiming to lock in long‑term contracted revenues and structurally higher margins over time.
This post K Wave Abandons Bitcoin Treasury Plan, Shifts to AI Infrastructure Play with $485M War Chest first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Price Rockets Past $81,000 for the First Time Since January
Bitcoin price broke above $81,000 during Asian trading hours and early U.S. hours today, its highest price since late January and the latest sign that the market has moved past a brutal first-quarter stretch that bottomed near $60,000.
The move came on the back of several forces hitting at once: a flood of institutional money into ETFs, a shift in Middle East tensions, and a derivatives market that had been loading up for a run past $80,000 for weeks.
The structural setup for this was built in April. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs pulled in $2.44 billion in net inflows last month — the strongest monthly figure since October 2025, when Bitcoin price hit its $126,000 all-time high. BlackRock’s IBIT alone captured $1.71 billion of that total, a 70% market share that keeps widening the gap between the fund and every other ETF in the space.
Strategy, the Michael Saylor-led firm, also confirmed several massive Bitcoin purchases in April, bringing its total holdings to 818,334 BTC.
The geopolitical backdrop did the rest of the work. Iran has allegedly been charging oil tankers $1 per barrel in Bitcoin to pass through the Strait of Hormuz since mid-March, a toll the country chose in crypto because the funds are harder to freeze under sanctions. A single loaded supertanker carrying two million barrels generates a $2 million transit fee, all settled on-chain.
By Monday, a disputed Iranian missile claim briefly pulled BTC back toward $79,000, but it recovered overnight after Trump’s “Project Freedom” announcement — a U.S. military operation to escort commercial vessels through the strait — cooled the situation and sent crude futures down nearly 5%.
The options market tells a story of traders who saw this coming. Nomura’s Laser Digital flagged in a Tuesday research note that desks had built cheap upside call ratio structures over the past several weeks, and that a sustained break above $80,000 would flip Bitcoin’s risk reversal indicator from negative to positive.
On Deribit, the single largest open interest position across all options contracts is an $80,000 strike call expiring May 29, with 7,493.7 BTC behind it. Calls hold 58.69% of total options open interest versus 41.31% for puts, though near-term put volume has picked up as traders hedge the tail risk.
Two catalysts this week could push Bitcoin price in either direction. Strategy’s earnings release today will give the market its first look at how the company accounts for Bitcoin at current prices, while Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report will shape expectations for Federal Reserve policy through the summer.
Bitcoin price is up 6.2% on the week, currently trading at $81,035.

This post Bitcoin Price Rockets Past $81,000 for the First Time Since January first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Coinbase Cuts 14% of Workforce, Signals AI-Driven Future
Coinbase announced a 14% reduction in its workforce on Tuesday, a decision CEO Brian Armstrong described as preparation for what he called a “new way of working” built on artificial intelligence—not a defensive reaction to market conditions.
In a company-wide email, Armstrong cited two forces behind the move: the persistence of crypto market cycles and a transformation in how AI has changed the pace of internal work.
Engineers at Coinbase use AI to ship in days what full teams required weeks to complete, Armstrong wrote, and the pace of that shift is an acceleration, not a plateau.
Coinbase had 4,951 employees as of December 31, 2025, placing the number of affected workers at an estimated 693 people. Departing U.S. employees will receive a minimum of 16 weeks of base pay, plus two weeks per year of service, their next equity vest, and six months of COBRA health coverage.
Employees on work visas receive extra transition support. System access was cut on the day of the announcement — a practice Armstrong acknowledged as harsh but defended as a matter of customer data protection.
The cuts follow a pattern that traces to 2022. In June of that year, Coinbase eliminated 18% of its workforce — 1,100 roles — as crypto prices fell and recession fears mounted. In January 2023, a second major reduction of 20%, covering 950 employees, followed the collapse of FTX and a prolonged market contraction. Those two rounds cut headcount by more than 2,100 people. Each time, Armstrong positioned the pain as the foundation for a stronger company on the other side.
This round carries a structural argument the prior two did not. The 2022 and 2023 reductions were market responses. The 2026 restructuring is, in Armstrong’s framing, an AI-driven redesign of how the company operates.
He has fired engineers who refused to adopt tools such as GitHub Copilot and Cursor after securing enterprise licenses for both, and has set a target of 50% AI-written code at Coinbase.
The logic of the current cuts extends that mandate: if AI increases the output of a small team, a large team becomes a drag on performance.
The org chart changes Armstrong outlined are broad. The company will flatten to no more than five layers below the CEO and COO. Every leader must carry an active individual contributor role — a “player-coach” model. Cross-functional “AI-native pods” will replace traditional team structures, with experiments in one-person teams that fold engineering, design, and product responsibilities into a single role.
COIN shares trade near $210 in pre-market trading, a fraction of the highs the stock reached in late 2024.
This post Coinbase Cuts 14% of Workforce, Signals AI-Driven Future first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Strategy reported a massive first-quarter loss after Bitcoin’s early-year drawdown overwhelmed its software revenue, even as Michael Saylor pointed to internal Bitcoin metrics showing continued gains in shareholder exposure.
The company, formerly known as MicroStrategy, reported a net loss attributable to common stockholders of $12.77 billion, or $38.25 per diluted share, for the first quarter.
Revenue rose 11.9% year over year to $124.3 million, but the result was dominated by a $14.46 billion unrealized loss on digital assets under fair-value accounting.
That outcome confirms the central tension around Strategy’s model. The company can show rising Bitcoin-per-share metrics while its reported earnings are reshaped by the market price of a single volatile asset.
Saylor’s preferred scorecard shows a company accumulating Bitcoin faster than dilution erodes shareholder exposure. Traditional accounting shows a business whose bottom line can swing by billions of dollars in a single quarter.
Strategy said its BTC Yield reached 9.4% year to date. The metric measures the change in Bitcoin holdings per diluted share, providing a way to assess whether the company is increasing Bitcoin exposure for shareholders even as it issues securities to fund purchases.
He also said,
We'll probably sell some Bitcoin just to inoculate the market.
BTC Gain takes that percentage and turns it into a Bitcoin number. By Strategy’s calculation, the year-to-date increase equals 63,410 BTC.
The company also reported BTC $ Gain of $4.97 billion, a dollar-denominated version of the same internal measure.

For Saylor and his supporters, the figures are evidence that the company’s capital markets strategy is still producing incremental Bitcoin exposure for shareholders.
However, the measure is narrower than earnings, cash flow, or net income. It does not show whether Strategy’s software business is improving, whether dividend obligations are becoming harder to service, or whether the company’s financing costs are rising.
Instead, it answers one specific question: whether the company has increased Bitcoin per share over a selected period.
That distinction now frames the Q1 result. Strategy’s revenue came in at $124.3 million, up from $111.1 million a year earlier, leaving the legacy software unit in the background.
The bottom line was driven by Bitcoin accounting rather than product sales.
Strategy reported an operating loss of $14.47 billion, almost entirely due to the unrealized digital asset loss recorded during the quarter.
That creates a split between economic exposure and reported earnings. Strategy’s Bitcoin metrics improved, but common shareholders absorbed a GAAP loss far deeper than pre-earnings consensus estimates.
The first quarter was a stress test for Strategy’s playbook. Bitcoin fell sharply during the period, yet the company continued to buy Bitcoin.
Strategy ended the period with 818,334 BTC as of May 3, representing a 22% year-to-date increase in holdings.
The company said its Bitcoin position had a market value of $64.14 billion as of May 1, based on a Bitcoin price of $78,374. Its average purchase price was $75,537 per coin, leaving the position modestly above cost at that reference price.
The holdings amount to about 3.9% of Bitcoin’s fixed 21 million token supply, giving Strategy a scale unmatched by any other public company.
That concentration is the source of both the appeal and the risk.
When Bitcoin rises, Strategy’s balance sheet expands quickly, and its stock can move with greater force than the token itself. When Bitcoin falls, the same leverage becomes a liability, creating accounting losses, pressure on the share price, and questions about whether the company should continue raising capital.
The stock’s history shows the size of that swing. Since Strategy began its Bitcoin transformation in 2020, MSTR shares have risen to as high as $500 in 2024, thanks to BTC's rapid rise during the period, but have fallen to as low as $100 earlier this year amid the top crypto's price struggles.
The post-earnings reaction showed how sensitive the equity remains to that balance. Strategy shares slipped after the results, even though the company continued to report growth in Bitcoin exposure.
That market response matters for Strategy’s model. A stronger share price can make equity issuance more attractive, while tighter credit markets or a falling stock can make capital raising more expensive.
Saylor’s strategy depends on Bitcoin’s long-term price and the market’s willingness to keep funding the company along the way.
Strategy’s financing structure has grown more complex as its Bitcoin holdings have expanded. The company has used convertible debt and common stock for years, but its preferred-stock program has become a more prominent part of the machinery.
STRC, Strategy’s variable-rate perpetual preferred stock, has become the clearest example. The instrument gives investors a high cash payout while giving Strategy another route to raise funds for Bitcoin purchases. It also broadens the buyer base beyond investors who want direct exposure to common equity.
Strategy said STRC raised $5.58 billion and had grown 189% year to date.
The preferred stock launched with a 9% annual dividend and has since moved higher after a series of increases designed to keep the instrument trading near par.
Strategy has also proposed a shareholder vote to double the STRC dividend payment frequency from monthly to semi-monthly, a change that would make the product look more like a regular income instrument for yield-focused investors.
The growth has been rapid. Saylor said STRC had scaled to $8.5 billion in market capitalization within nine months of launch, making it one of the company’s most closely watched securities.
It has also started to move beyond traditional markets. Strategy said $270 million of STRC was held across DeFi protocols, including Apyx and Saturn, while another $150 million was held in corporate treasuries.
Chief Executive Officer Phong Le has described STRC as a kind of battery that stores Bitcoin gains and distributes them over time.
The description reflects Strategy’s pitch: Investors in preferred stock receive income, while the company uses the capital to accumulate Bitcoin that could appreciate over the long run.
The structure works best when Bitcoin rises, Strategy’s common stock holds a premium, and investors remain eager to buy the company’s securities.
In that environment, new issuance can fund more Bitcoin purchases, thereby increasing BTC per share and supporting the broader valuation story.
The challenge is that Bitcoin does not produce income. Strategy’s software business still generates revenue, but it is small relative to the size of the company’s Bitcoin holdings and the obligations tied to its financing stack.
That makes the preferred dividend burden a central risk. As Strategy issues more preferred shares, its annual cash obligations rise.
Strategy reported $692.5 million in cumulative preferred dividends and distributions as of the first quarter. It also said it had more than $13.5 billion of preferred equity outstanding.
Those payments must be funded through existing cash, operating income, asset sales, or additional capital raising. The more the company leans on preferred stock, the more important market access becomes.
Strategy reported $2.21 billion in cash and cash equivalents at the end of the quarter, giving it liquidity against near-term obligations but leaving the broader model dependent on continued access to capital markets.
The company argues that its securities are supported by a large Bitcoin reserve. That is true in an economic sense, but the legal structure is more complicated.
STRC is unsecured, meaning holders do not have a direct claim on specific Bitcoin collateral. In a stress scenario, the order of claims across convertibles, preferred shares, and common equity would become critical.
The size of Strategy’s Bitcoin position also creates a market-structure issue. A forced sale by the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin holder would likely affect the price of the asset it is trying to monetize.
That makes the headline value of the holdings different from the amount that could be realized quickly under pressure.
For common shareholders, the risk is subordination. Preferred dividends sit ahead of common equity. If payments are missed, cumulative obligations can build rather than disappear, increasing the claim of senior securities on future value.
That does not mean the model is close to breaking. It means the cost of maintaining it rises as the company scales. Each new financing round can increase Bitcoin holdings, but it can also add obligations that must be serviced before common shareholders benefit.
The Q1 report narrowed the issue. Strategy’s Bitcoin scorecard improved, but its GAAP loss showed how sharply earnings can move against common shareholders when Bitcoin falls.
The next test is whether investors continue to fund that trade after a quarter in which the company reported nearly $5 billion in BTC gain and a $12.77 billion loss attributable to common stockholders.
The post Strategy to “sell some Bitcoin” after posting $12.7 billion Q1 loss as Saylor points to $5 billion Bitcoin gain appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Coinbase will cut about 700 employees, or 14% of its workforce, under a May 5 restructuring plan that the company says will cost $50 million to $60 million.
The company framed the move as a response to two forces: crypto-market volatility and a shift in how artificial intelligence is changing the work inside Coinbase.
Armstrong said in the employee note that the exchange is still positioned for growth in stablecoins, prediction markets, tokenization, and other crypto products, while the business remains volatile quarter to quarter and needs a lower cost base for the next phase.
Coinbase told the SEC that the plan is designed to manage operating expenses under current market conditions and optimize operations for the AI era.
The filing and note make the layoff both a strategy shift and a budget cut. Coinbase is shrinking headcount while pushing for a flatter company structure, pushing managers back into individual contributor work, and testing smaller AI-native teams ahead of Q1 results on May 7.

Armstrong’s internal explanation has two parts. The first is the familiar Coinbase cycle argument: trading activity, asset prices, interest income, staking rewards, and user engagement can move quickly with the broader crypto market.
The company has managed through prior crypto winters, and Armstrong said Coinbase is now in a down market and needs to adjust its cost structure before the next growth phase.
The second reason is AI. Armstrong said engineers are using AI to ship in days what previously took teams weeks, while non-technical teams are shipping production code, and workflows are being automated.
His conclusion was that Coinbase needs to rebuild itself as “lean, fast, and AI-native,” language that turns the layoff into an operating-model reset alongside the budget reduction.
The changes he outlined are specific. Coinbase plans to flatten the organization to no more than five layers below the CEO and COO.
It will require every leader to be a strong individual contributor, ending what Armstrong described as pure management roles. It will also organize around AI-native pods, including experiments with one-person teams in which engineering, design, and product responsibilities can sit in a single role.
For employees leaving the company, the note said Coinbase had already removed system access and would send details to personal email accounts. US employees will receive at least 16 weeks of base pay, two additional weeks for every year worked, their next equity vest, and six months of COBRA coverage.
That operational detail pulls the story out of strategy language. Coinbase is arguing that AI changes how much work a smaller group can do.
The immediate result is that hundreds of people are leaving while the company redesigns the work around the people who remain.
The move will feel abrupt to those affected. Armstrong said system access had been removed because Coinbase has a duty to protect customer information.
The security rationale makes the mechanics of the layoff part of the operating story: the same controls that protect customer information also make the personnel action sudden for departing employees.
The objective case for the cut starts with Coinbase’s own financial disclosures. In its Q4 2025 shareholder letter, Coinbase reported that total revenue fell 5% from the prior quarter to $1.8 billion.
Transaction revenue fell 6%, subscription and services revenue fell 3%, and total operating expenses rose 9% to $1.5 billion.
Full-year figures showed a company still expanding. Coinbase said 2025 revenue grew 9% year over year and highlighted record product breadth, including 12 products generating more than $100 million in annualized revenue.
Expenses grew faster. Full-year operating expenses were $5.7 billion, up 35% from 2024, while full-time employees rose 31% year over year to 4,951.
That contrast is the core of the objective read. Coinbase announced the cuts after a period of expansion, product growth, and higher operating costs, followed by weaker sequential Q4 metrics and a February outlook that pointed to lower Q1 subscription and services revenue.
That makes the workforce cut a cost reset against a company that had been scaling for a broader product set. The February outlook then provided a more immediate pressure point: several subscription and services drivers were expected to come in below the prior quarter, even as Coinbase still expected headcount to keep rising.
For Q1 2026, Coinbase guided subscription and services revenue to $550 million to $630 million, below Q4’s $727 million. It cited lower average USDC market capitalization, lower interest rates, lower average crypto prices, and lower staking protocol reward rates compared with Q4.
The same outlook said technology and development, plus general and administrative expenses, would be roughly flat quarter over quarter, and said headcount was expected to grow at a slightly higher rate than Q4.
Two months later, Coinbase announced a 14% reduction in its workforce. Q1 results are not due until May 7, so the sequence raises a question rather than a settled conclusion.
The open question is whether the company is moving ahead of a visible earnings pressure point, using AI to reset its revenue-per-employee math, or doing both at once.

Coinbase’s annual report supports Armstrong’s broader point about volatility. In its 2025 Form 10-K, the company warned that operating results fluctuate from quarter to quarter because crypto asset prices, trading volume, customer engagement, developer activity, and regulatory conditions can change in ways outside its control.
That risk is structural for Coinbase. A rising market can lift trading activity, assets on the platform, stablecoin balances, staking revenue, and sentiment.
A weaker market can move several of those variables in the opposite direction, even as the company adds products.
The live market picture complicates a clear “down market” explanation. CryptoSlate’s Bitcoin price page shows BTC still 35.32% below its Oct. 6, 2025, all-time high of $126,198.
CryptoSlate’s aggregate coin rankings page shows roughly $2.69 trillion in crypto market capitalization, about $146 billion in 24-hour volume, and Bitcoin dominance near 60.7% in the May 5 snapshot.
That points to a market that has recovered over several recent windows but remains well off the highs that shaped 2025.
The most accurate market framing is post-peak and volatile. The distinction changes the analysis because Coinbase’s revenue is driven by more than the spot level of Bitcoin.
Its filings point to a wider mix of market cap, interest rates, staking rewards, product mix, and trading behavior.
AI adds a second layer to that picture. A March 2026 working paper from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta found that AI productivity gains are expected to strengthen in 2026, with the largest effects concentrated in high-skill services and finance.
It also found little evidence of near-term aggregate employment declines from AI, while larger firms were more likely to expect workforce reductions.
That supports a qualified version of Armstrong’s argument. AI may be changing how much work Coinbase believes a smaller team can handle, especially in high-skill services and finance contexts, where the Atlanta Fed found larger effects.
The more complete take is that Coinbase is combining a cyclical cost playbook with a new claim about AI productivity.
Coinbase has used large layoffs before when the crypto cycle turned against its cost base. Its 2025 annual report says a January 2023 restructuring affected 21% of headcount and resulted in $142.6 million of charges tied to market conditions and business prioritization.
CryptoSlate covered that earlier round as Coinbase cut 950 employees during another downturn.
The 2026 version is different because AI is now part of the official rationale and the operating model. The company is pairing a survival argument with a claim that the work itself has changed enough to justify fewer layers, fewer pure managers, and smaller teams.
That claim can be tested only through future disclosures. The first signal is Coinbase’s Q1 report on May 7, which will be watched for whether the revenue and expense backdrop deteriorated beyond the February outlook.
The second is Q2 and later expense data, where the company’s $50 million to $60 million restructuring charge should start to translate into lower run-rate costs if the plan works.
The third signal is productivity. If the AI-native pod model is substantive, Coinbase should eventually be able to demonstrate it through indicators such as revenue per employee, product-release cadence, customer-support efficiency, or other operating metrics.
Until then, the answer to why Coinbase is cutting staff has two layers. Internally, Armstrong says market volatility and AI require a leaner company.
Objectively, Coinbase is resetting costs after rapid expense and headcount growth, softer sequential Q4 metrics, and a Q1 outlook already pressured by lower crypto prices, lower rates, and lower staking rewards. The May 7 earnings release will determine which side of that explanation carries more weight.
The post 700 people at Coinbase just got fired as CEO blames cost reset on AI and market volatility appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin’s rebound above $80,000 has turned into a live test of market depth, with long-term holders selling into strength while ETF buyers absorb supply.
The result is a high-stakes standoff: seller pressure is rising, but institutional demand is still strong enough to keep a move toward $90,000 in play.
While long-term holders are capitalizing on the recent surge to lock in massive profits, a relentless wave of institutional capital flowing into exchange-traded funds is absorbing the sell-off, keeping hopes for a near-term rally toward $90,000 firmly intact.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency is currently navigating a pivotal transition phase. After months of volatile, largely sideways trading, the market is showing classic signs of renewed bullish momentum.
However, the path upward is being heavily contested by veteran investors who are actively distributing their holdings into the newly generated liquidity.
As Bitcoin spiked from $78,000 to the psychologically significant $80,000 mark over the weekend, on-chain analytics revealed a dramatic uptick in distribution from seasoned investors.
According to Glassnode data, the cohort of holders who accumulated their positions two to three years ago has accelerated profit-taking to a staggering $209 million per hour. These investors are currently realizing gains ranging from 60% to 100%.

This shift in behavior is corroborated by metrics from CryptoQuant, which show that net realized profit and loss across the network has swelled to approximately $1.12 billion. This represents the highest level of realized gains since last December.
Reaching a threshold of this magnitude indicates that traders who accumulated during the bear market depths are now sitting on comfortable cushions, prompting them to rebalance their portfolios and secure actual cash.
While massive sell-offs often trigger alarm bells in traditional equities, this is very different in the crypto world.
Typically, market experts interpret this magnitude of profit-taking amid rising prices as a sign of underlying market health.
Analytics firm Santiment explained that this phenomenon acts as a real-time stress test for the asset. The fact that hundreds of millions of dollars in supply were dumped onto the market, yet the price still breached the $80,000 level, demonstrates formidable underlying demand.

Furthermore, this distribution cycle serves a structural purpose: it effectively resets the market’s cost basis. As older, deeply profitable coins are sold, they are absorbed by new entrants initiating positions around $80,000.
These new buyers are statistically less likely to panic and sell on minor dips to $79,000, thereby establishing a much stronger structural floor underneath the current price action.
Short-term holders, currently holding at a higher cost basis, are exhibiting unusually quiet behavior, with weekly exchange inflows on platforms like Binance hovering near cycle lows.
This suggests a growing expectation of further upside rather than an urge to capitulate prematurely.
The primary engine behind this robust absorption is the continued success of spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
After a period of cooling interest earlier in the year, the appetite for these regulated investment vehicles is surging once again, demonstrating a resilience that is reshaping the market's fundamental architecture.
Data compiled by SoSoValue indicates that in just the first two trading days of May, spot Bitcoin ETFs attracted more than $1.1 billion in fresh capital. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) led the charge, accounting for more than $600 million of those inflows alone.
Industry observers note that the nature of these flows is shifting in a decidedly bullish direction. Outflow streaks are becoming noticeably shorter and less severe, while periods of sustained inflows are stretching longer.
This persistence is crucial; Bitcoin does not necessarily require explosive, multi-billion-dollar daily infusions to appreciate. Rather, it requires the steady, day-after-day bid that continuous ETF buying provides.
As a result, the institutional footprint is radically altering the supply-and-demand calculus. Charles Edwards, founder of Capriole Investments, highlighted that institutional buyers are currently absorbing more than 500% of the newly minted Bitcoin supply generated daily by miners.
“Every time it's been this high before, price has shot up over the next week,” Edwards said in a X post.

He pointed out that historical precedents for this level of supply absorption have yielded average returns of 24% over the subsequent month. Should history rhyme, such a trajectory would propel Bitcoin toward the $96,000 mark by June.
While spot accumulation provides a steady tailwind, the derivatives market is adding explosive upside potential.
Traders betting against the rally have been subjected to a brutal series of liquidations, transforming their underwater positions into rocket fuel for upward price spikes.
According to independent Bitcoin analyst Axel Adler, bearish traders have suffered $7.88 billion in forced liquidations since early February.
Despite repeated punishing squeezes, short sellers continue to establish new positions near the $80,000 resistance level, only to be forcibly closed out by the market.

This dynamic has played out in three distinct waves over the past few months, with forced closures routinely eclipsing half a billion dollars in a single day. Following a period of relative calm in late April, liquidation volumes suddenly jumped to $175 million on May 4.
This localized spike during an otherwise quiet trading week underscores a critical vulnerability: short interest continues to heavily accumulate just below the $80,000 line.
If Bitcoin can definitively conquer and hold this territory, market mechanics dictate that the next wave of liquidations could become entirely self-reinforcing.
The asymmetric setup is not lost on speculative markets. Bettors on the decentralized prediction platform Polymarket currently assign a 62% probability that Bitcoin will clear $85,000 before the end of the month, with a one-in-four chance of hitting $90,000.
Despite the bullish on-chain architecture and institutional appetite, Bitcoin remains inextricably linked to broader macroeconomic forces and the escalating geopolitical landscape.
The asset recently proved its mettle by absorbing a gauntlet of macroeconomic headwinds, including the latest Federal Reserve policy decisions and fluctuations in crude oil prices, all without breaking its overarching uptrend.
Market maker Wintermute noted that Bitcoin’s ability to close near the top of its range for a third consecutive week, despite these external pressures, is a powerful signal of strength.
However, significant technical hurdles remain. Bitcoin has consistently failed to close above its 200-day moving average, currently hovering around $82,000, since late 2025. A decisive break above this line would serve as the first undeniable trend reversal signal of the year.
Trading firm QCP echoed this sentiment, arguing that the true litmus test for the bull case is a clean weekly close above the CME futures gap between $82,000 and $83,000.
Until that materializes, erratic, choppy price action is the most likely outcome.
Moreover, geopolitics and Washington policy will heavily dictate whether that breakout occurs. Recent announcements from the White House regarding the Strait of Hormuz have temporarily injected confidence into risk assets, and falling implied volatility suggests markets are currently pricing in a de-escalation of tensions in the Middle East.
If macroeconomic stability holds and energy shocks are averted, the runway is clear for digital assets to march higher alongside equities.
Adding to the optimism is the impending legislative progress in the United States. The digital asset industry is closely monitoring the CLARITY Act, a landmark market structure bill headed for a bipartisan markup in May. The prospect of regulatory certainty is already thawing institutional hesitance.
Tom Lee, chair of BitMine, said:
“Crypto Spring, in our view, has commenced, and like past cycles, investor sentiment and conviction are muted and bearish even as crypto prices strengthen. We believe the potential passage, or even failure, of the CLARITY Act confirms the arrival of crypto spring.”
Ultimately, the battle at $80,000 is a microcosm of Bitcoin’s broader maturation. The asset is transitioning from a retail-driven speculative vehicle to an institutional staple.
If the steady drumbeat of ETF demand can continue to weather the storm of macro uncertainty and veteran profit-taking, the foundation is set for a historic run toward the $90,000 milestone.
The next test is therefore narrow but decisive. Bitcoin needs to turn the $82,000 to $83,000 zone from overhead resistance into support. Until that happens, the $90,000 target remains possible, but still dependent on ETF inflows, short liquidations, and macro calm arriving at the same time.
The post Bitcoin faces $80,000 seller test as ETF demand keeps $90,000 breakout in play appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitmine has staked more than $10 billion in ETH, making it the largest corporate Ethereum treasury company and a yield-generating bet on the network’s proof-of-stake economy.
On May 4, the Las Vegas-based company said its staked ETH position stood at 4.36 million tokens, valued at $10.2 billion at ETH's average price of $2,336.
The position represents more than 84% of BitMine’s total ETH holdings and gives the company one of the largest visible corporate exposures to Ethereum’s validator system.
BitMine said it held 5.18 million ETH as of May 3, equal to about 4.29% of Ethereum’s total supply. The company also reported 200 Bitcoin, $700 million in cash, an investment in Beast Industries, and a stake in Eightco Holdings, bringing total crypto, cash, and “moonshot” holdings to $13.1 billion.

BitMine said its staking operations are generating annualized revenue of about $297 million, based on a seven-day annualized yield of 2.91%.
Chairman Thomas “Tom” Lee said projected annual staking rewards could reach $352 million once the company’s ETH holdings are fully staked through MAVAN, its Made in America Validator Network, and other staking partners.
The disclosure shifts BitMine’s Ethereum strategy from a balance-sheet-accumulation move to a recurring-revenue test.
Public companies have used Bitcoin primarily as a treasury reserve asset, with Michael Saylor's Strategy setting the template for corporate accumulation. Ethereum gives BitMine a different structure because the asset can be staked directly into the network to earn protocol rewards.
BitMine's scale makes it a public-market proxy for Ethereum’s staking economy. Investors in its BMNR stock are no longer only exposed to changes in ETH’s market price. They are also exposed to the company’s ability to manage validator infrastructure, earn network rewards, and compound its Ethereum position over time.
Notably, BMNR traded an average daily dollar volume of $625 million over five days as of May 1, ranking 173rd among US-listed stocks.
That liquidity gives the company a public equity channel through which investors can express a view on Ethereum accumulation and staking without directly holding the token.
BitMine’s staking push comes as Ethereum’s validator entry queue has grown sharply, signaling renewed demand for ETH as a yield-bearing asset even as the token’s price narrative remains contested.
ValidatorQueue data showed about 3.72 million ETH waiting to enter the validator set, with an estimated activation delay of more than 64 days. About 346,000 Ethereum were waiting to exit, with an estimated wait of about six days.

The network had about 898,000 active validators, 38.6 million ETH staked, and a staking rate of roughly 31.7% of supply.
Ethereum limits how much ETH can enter or leave validation at a time through a churn mechanism designed to protect consensus stability. That throttle can create a long waiting line when new deposits exceed the rate at which validators can be activated.
Meanwhile, the queue does not mean all of that ETH is already earning rewards. Deposited Ethereum must wait for activation before it begins participating in validation.
Still, the imbalance between the entry and exit queues shows that more capital is trying to enter Ethereum staking than leave it.
That is a notable signal for the Ethereum markets. A larger staking base can immediately reduce the liquid supply, while validator rewards turn ETH into a productive asset for holders who are willing to accept lockup, technical, and operational risks.
Ethereum staking differs from crypto lending because rewards come from the protocol rather than from a borrower.
Validators lock ETH as collateral, run software, attest to blocks and help secure the network. They earn rewards when they perform correctly and can lose rewards if they go offline. In more severe cases, validators can be penalized through slashing for harmful behavior.
While that structure has made staking attractive to institutions looking for native crypto yield, it also creates a new category of operational risk for public companies.
This is because a corporate ETH holder that stakes at scale must manage validator uptime, client selection, custody, key management, and exposure to staking partners.
For BitMine, the revenue opportunity is clear. A 2.91% annualized staking yield on billions of dollars of Ethereum creates a material income stream. However, the risk is that staking is not passive, unlike holding spot Ether in a corporate wallet.
The company’s MAVAN infrastructure is central to that strategy. If BitMine continues staking most of its Ethereum, its treasury model will depend not only on ETH's price but also on validator performance and how reliably staking rewards can be generated across market cycles.
That makes BitMine’s model different from a conventional crypto treasury company. It is seeking to hold ETH, earn the digital asset, and potentially increase its share of the asset over time through protocol rewards.
Moreover, BitMine’s staggering ETH holdings also raise a more precise question about decentralization for the blockchain network.
Under Ethereum’s proof-of-stake system, validators stake Ethereum into the network and participate in consensus.
Ethereum.org says that an attacker with more than 33% of staked Ether can interfere with finality, while higher thresholds pose greater risks. Finality depends on a two-thirds supermajority of staked Ether voting on checkpoints.
That means BitMine’s 4.29% share of the total ETH supply is economically significant but does not, by itself, grant control over Ethereum.
Considering this, the more relevant question is how much of the actively staked ETH BitMine controls, whether the stake is spread across operators and clients, and how much of the network becomes dependent on a small group of institutional validators.
Ethereum’s decentralization debate has long focused on staking concentration, liquid staking protocols, centralized exchanges, and client diversity. Large pools and staking providers can influence the network because they operate validators, shape defaults, and coordinate around upgrades.
BitMine’s emergence adds a new corporate layer to that debate. A public company staking billions of dollars of Ethereum can strengthen ETH's security by increasing the value locked into validation.
However, it can also intensify concerns if a growing share of validator power becomes concentrated through a limited set of operators, custodians, or software clients.
The market question is whether BitMine’s strategy will be treated as a leveraged ETH trade, a staking-income vehicle, or a hybrid of both.
If Ethereum rises, the company’s treasury value increases. If staking yields remain stable, BitMine can generate recurring ETH-denominated rewards. If the validator queue remains elevated, the company’s early staking scale may become more valuable because new entrants must wait longer before earning rewards.
At the same time, the opposite risks are also clear. ETH price declines can quickly reduce the dollar value of the treasury.
Staking yields can fall as more Ethereum enters the validation process. Operational mistakes, partner concentration, or client failures can turn a yield strategy into a source of losses.
For Ethereum, BitMine’s move shows how proof-of-stake has changed the asset's role in public markets. ETH is no longer being held only as a speculative token or a reserve asset.
At BitMine’s scale, it is also being used as productive capital that can generate revenue, secure the network, and reshape the debate over institutional participation.
The post Ethereum’s biggest staker has just become a public company with over $10 billion locked up appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin’s hold above $80,000 is turning into a live test of whether BTC can trade on its own macro signal while U.S. stocks weaken.
After months of Bitcoin following the US stock market open in terms of direction, volatility, and stress, it appears to be decoupling from the AI-fed S&P 500.

The contradiction showed up as the usual pressure points moved against equities. Oil jumped after the latest flare-up in the Iran war. Treasury yields moved higher. The dollar firmed. U.S. stocks fell from record levels.
Yet Bitcoin stayed near the $80,000 area instead of following SPY lower in the same way it had during earlier oil spikes.
The data points to a more complicated market than a clean refuge from stress. BTC may now be trading at the intersection of AI-led risk appetite, ETF-linked brokerage demand, and a geopolitical oil shock that is pushing bond markets back into focus.
The next morning made the setup harder to reduce to a single bullish story. Oil eased, U.S. futures edged higher, and the cross-asset split appeared to flip direction.

If Bitcoin can rise while SPY falls, then soften while equities firm, the story may be less about one correlation breaking and more about Bitcoin responding to a different lead market at different times of day.

The May 4 session gave the divergence a credible macro backdrop. The S&P 500 fell 0.4%, the Dow dropped 1.1%, and the Nasdaq slipped 0.2% as Brent crude settled 5.8% higher at $114.44.
The move came after renewed Middle East fighting threatened the Iran-war ceasefire and complicated U.S. efforts to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
Crypto market context put Bitcoin in a different position from equities. Bitcoin trades near $80,743 on May 5, up more than 2% over 24 hours and more than 20% over 30 days.
The broader ranking table shows a crypto market worth about $2.67 trillion, with Bitcoin dominance near 60.6%.
Those numbers set the scale. A BTC move at that size is a market-wide signal, rather than an isolated altcoin rally.
When Bitcoin stops tracking SPY during an oil-and-rates shock, the question becomes whether a new buyer is present, whether older correlations are failing, or whether the market is digesting different sessions in sequence.
The first explanation is tempting because recent CryptoSlate coverage already showed a non-crypto driver in the move. Bitcoin's reclaim of $80,000 began as an Asia-led AI risk trade, with chip stocks and regional equity strength setting the tone before the U.S. session added oil, dollar, and yield pressure.
That sequence changes the interpretation. Bitcoin had one impulse driven by technology risk appetite and another by geopolitical repricing.
The visible break from SPY may have emerged because those impulses overlapped, rather than because BTC cleanly rejected equity-market logic.
This also explains why the morning reversal is part of the story rather than a contradiction to ignore. If U.S. futures can firm while BTC eases after oil cools, the market is signaling that Bitcoin's lead input may have changed.
The same chart can show a correlation break in one window and a different pressure channel in the next.
The Strait of Hormuz is large enough to make a chart pattern into a global macro question. Around 20.9 million barrels per day moved through the strait in the first half of 2025, equal to about 20% of global petroleum liquids consumption and one-quarter of maritime traded oil.
That is why the current market reaction extends beyond crude. A sustained Hormuz disruption changes expected fuel prices, inflation, central-bank flexibility, and the relative appeal of cash and bonds.
It also changes the way risk assets are valued.
The current shock is already large enough to change the macro map. The World Bank projected energy prices to surge 24% in 2026 and described the disruption as the largest oil supply shock on record.
Its April commodity outlook added a scenario range in which Brent could average $95 to $115 this year if the Middle East disruption proves more severe or more persistent than assumed.

For Bitcoin, that creates two very different interpretations of the same price action. Holding $80,000 while oil and yields rise could signal a more durable macro bid.
It could also reflect a lag, with Asia-led risk appetite still supporting BTC before the U.S. rates channel fully hits.
The same oil shock can produce opposite BTC outcomes depending on which transmission line dominates. If investors treat Bitcoin as a liquid way to express fear of monetary disorder, it can catch a bid during inflation anxiety.
If investors treat it as a high-beta asset competing with cash and Treasuries, higher yields and a firmer dollar can work against it.
A prior CryptoSlate analysis framed Bitcoin as a fast market for repricing geopolitical risk, especially when headlines change the path for oil, inflation, rates, and liquidity expectations.
That frame still fits, but May 4 raises the bar. The earlier pattern was simple: escalation hurt, relief helped.
This time, BTC held up while several escalation-linked inputs moved in the wrong direction for risk assets.
That is where the second clock enters. The Asia-led AI trade gave Bitcoin a risk-on impulse before U.S. macro trading became dominant.
ETF wrappers and public-market BTC exposure also mean brokerage-account demand can move Bitcoin alongside the same portfolio screens that move AI equities. At the same time, the oil shock means bond traders are pulling BTC into an inflation and rates debate.
In Asia and Europe trading hours today, May 5, U.S. Treasury yields and the dollar firmed on crude strength while BTC held near $81,000 and Asian chip strength remained part of the risk backdrop.
The result is a market that appears uncorrelated in a single snapshot while still depending on external inputs.
Bitcoin may be following a different lead market first, then catching up to the next macro impulse later.
| Signal | BTC implication | What would confirm the break |
|---|---|---|
| Oil stays above stress levels | Pressure shifts from geopolitics into inflation and rates | BTC holds even as yields and the dollar stay firm |
| Oil eases after Hormuz progress | The rates shock fades and risk appetite can reassert itself | BTC and equities rise together without needing crisis demand |
| AI and chip stocks keep leading | BTC may trade as a brokerage-account risk asset | BTC follows tech strength even when macro headlines are noisy |
| ETF flows and derivatives weaken | The move may be mostly positioning rather than durable demand | BTC loses the $80,000 area as macro pressure returns |
The live geopolitical question is still Hormuz. The U.S. attempt to force open the strait was testing the fragile ceasefire on May 5, with Iran warning against the move and the U.S. saying two American-flagged merchant ships had transited.
If that effort succeeds and shipping normalizes, oil pressure should ease. That would likely reduce the rate shock and let Bitcoin trade more cleanly on ETF demand, technology risk appetite, and the $80,000 level itself.
If the reopening fails or retaliation escalates, the harder test begins. Bitcoin would need to hold up against a more persistent mix of high oil prices, a firm dollar, and elevated Treasury yields.
That would be stronger evidence that BTC has gained a non-equity bid, but even then, the evidence would need confirmation from ETF flows, derivatives positioning, and sustained price acceptance above the low-$80,000 area.
The correlation break carries weight because it suggests that a BTC holder may now be exposed to several macro engines simultaneously.
In one session, Bitcoin can behave like a tech-risk asset. In another, it can act like the fastest market for repricing war risk.
In a third, it can get pulled back into the bond-market math that still governs liquidity assets.
That is the real regime test. Bitcoin's stock link is becoming incomplete as oil, AI equities, ETF wrappers, the dollar, and Treasury yields all compete to set the next move.
The next test is whether Bitcoin can keep accepting prices above $80,000 while oil, yields, and the dollar keep setting the macro tone. A sustained hold would strengthen the case for a real break from the stock-market trade. A quick loss of that level would turn the divergence into a short-lived positioning event rather than a new regime.
The post Bitcoin decouples from S&P 500 as oil, yields, and dollar pressure stocks appeared first on CryptoSlate.
After weeks of stagnant price action and tight consolidation, ADA reclaimed the $0.25 psychological level. As of May 6, 2026, ADA is trading at $0.263. Is this a breakout or a simple price action in a consolidation zone?
The current jump to $0.263 serves as a confirmation of a trend reversal. For the past month, $ADA struggled to overcome selling pressure at the $0.25 mark. By clearing this resistance with a strong 5.7% daily candle, the market has signaled a shift in dominance from sellers to buyers. Analysts are now eyeing the $0.30 mark as the next logical milestone, citing improved on-chain activity and a favorable macroeconomic environment for $Bitcoin and major altcoins.

In technical analysis, a resistance level is a price point where an asset faces significant selling pressure. When ADA "breaks" $0.25, it effectively exhausts the supply of sellers at that level. Ideally, this level will now act as support, meaning if the price dips, buyers are expected to step in at $0.25 to prevent further decline. This "S/R Flip" is often the foundation of a sustained bullrun.
Based on the latest data for ADA/USD on the daily (1D) timeframe, several indicators confirm the strength of this move.

The chart identifies a critical orange horizontal line at $0.2509. ADA spent the latter half of April testing this boundary. The green arrow on the chart highlights the successful breakout, where the price accelerated toward $0.2635. This breakout was accompanied by a noticeable increase in buying volume.
The 9-day and 21-day Moving Averages (MA) have just completed a bullish crossover:
With the price now trading comfortably above both averages, the short-term trend is firmly upward. This alignment is a classic signal used by swing traders to enter long positions.
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is currently at 61.71. This indicates that while momentum is strong, the asset is not yet "overbought" (which typically occurs above 70). This suggests there is still significant "gas in the tank" for ADA to reach higher price targets before a major cooling-off period is required.
| Level Type | Price Point | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Immediate Support | $0.251 | The "Line in the Sand" that must hold to maintain bullish bias. |
| Current Price | $0.263 | The active breakout zone. |
| Target Resistance 1 | $0.300 | A major psychological barrier for the mid-term. |
| Target Resistance 2 | $0.347 | The high-water mark that would confirm a full-scale bullrun. |
Beyond the charts, Cardano's fundamental landscape is evolving. Cardano's Total Value Locked (TVL) in DeFi protocols has seen a 12% increase over the last quarter. The market is also reacting to the progress of the Ouroboros Leios upgrade, which aims to drastically increase the network's transaction-per-second (TPS) capacity.
As the network becomes more scalable, the demand for ADA for gas fees and staking increases. Traders are increasingly comparing Cardano's performance to other Layer 1s in our exchange comparison to determine if it is undervalued relative to its peers.
In a move that has sent shockwaves through both the fintech and crypto sectors, Coinbase (COIN) has announced a reduction of approximately 14% of its global workforce. This decision, affecting roughly 700 employees, marks a significant departure from traditional "bear market" cost-cutting. CEO Brian Armstrong framed the layoffs not just as a response to market volatility, but as a fundamental restructuring toward an AI-native operating model.
The layoffs are primarily driven by the rapid integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into Coinbase’s internal workflows. Brian Armstrong noted that AI tools have revolutionized productivity, allowing "one-person teams" to perform tasks that previously required entire departments. According to the CEO, engineers are now shipping production-grade code in days rather than weeks, rendering many traditional roles redundant.
Armstrong’s vision for the future of the exchange is what he calls "intelligence, with humans around the edge." This strategy involves:
Despite the human cost, the market has responded positively to the news. Coinbase stock (COIN) saw a pre-market surge of over 4% as investors reacted to the projected efficiency gains. The company expects to incur between $50 million and $60 million in restructuring costs, primarily related to severance packages.
Affected employees in the U.S. will receive a minimum of 16 weeks of base pay, plus additional benefits based on tenure. This move mirrors a broader trend in Silicon Valley, where companies like Google and Meta have also pivoted budgets toward AI infrastructure at the expense of headcount.
The cryptocurrency market is currently undergoing a critical test of resilience as Bitcoin ($BTC) stabilizes around the $80,500 mark today, May 5, 2026. After a brief and ambitious breach of the $81,000 psychological resistance earlier this morning, the premier digital asset has slightly retraced as investors digest the implications of renewed hostilities in the Persian Gulf.

The "ceasefire cracks" reported yesterday have materialized into a tangible market shift. Following confirmed missile and drone strikes by Iran against the UAE—specifically targeting the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone—global risk appetite has fluctuated. While traditional equities in Dubai and Europe saw immediate pullbacks, Bitcoin has demonstrated a unique "flight-to-safety" characteristic, maintaining most of its weekly gains despite the localized chaos.
| Asset | Current Price | 24h Change | Sentiment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin (BTC) | $80,512 | +1.12% | Bullish/Neutral |
| Ethereum (ETH) | $2,381 | +1.41% | Steady |
| Brent Crude | $113.50 | +5.10% | High Risk |
| Fear & Greed | 54 (Neutral) | - | Cautious |
Yesterday, May 4, the UAE Ministry of Defence intercepted 12 ballistic missiles and multiple drones, marking the end of a fragile four-week ceasefire. The strike on a Fujairah oil terminal caused an immediate spike in energy prices, with Brent crude briefly touching $115 per barrel.
For the crypto sector, this escalation serves as a double-edged sword. On one hand, rising energy costs typically exert downward pressure on risk assets. On the other, the narrative of Bitcoin as a borderless, decentralized store of value is gaining traction. According to Saxo Bank, the market is currently in a "geopolitical wobble" rather than a full-blown "risk-off" crash, allowing BTC to hold its ground above the critical $80,000 support.
From a technical perspective, the retracement to $80,500 is viewed by many analysts as a healthy consolidation. The breach of $81,000 flushed out late-long positions, and the current price action is building a base above the "bull market support band."
"The fact that Bitcoin hasn't plummeted back to $75k despite missiles flying in the Gulf tells you everything about the current institutional floor," says a lead strategist at Bloomberg.
The decentralized perpetual exchange landscape is witnessing a significant shift as Hyperliquid (HYPE) continues its impressive ascent in May 2026. Following the recent activation of the HIP-4 protocol, which introduced native prediction markets to the HyperEVM, the HYPE token has become a focal point for traders looking for both utility and price appreciation.
The daily chart for Hyperliquid (HYPE) reveals a well-defined ascending structure that has been in play since early 2026. After a period of consolidation around the $23.00 support zone in January, the asset entered a steady markup phase, characterized by higher highs and higher lows.

The recent price action isn't just a technical fluke. Hyperliquid's move into prediction markets via HIP-4 has significantly increased the token's utility. Unlike competitors like Polymarket, Hyperliquid requires users to stake 1 million HYPE to launch a new event market. This mechanism creates a massive "supply sink," effectively removing large quantities of HYPE from the circulating supply.
Furthermore, the protocol’s aggressive buyback program remains a primary driver. Funded by trading fees from its high-volume perpetual DEX, the Hyperliquid Assistance Fund consistently acquires HYPE from the open market, providing a "floor" for the price even during broader market corrections.
The combination of native L1 finality and zero gas fees makes Hyperliquid a formidable competitor to traditional centralized exchanges (CEXs).
As we move through May 2026, the primary focus for HYPE traders is the $45.00 to $46.00 range. A daily candle close above this level would likely trigger a FOMO-driven rally toward the $50.00 milestone.
However, investors should remain cautious of the upcoming token unlock scheduled for May 6. While the protocol’s buybacks have historically absorbed selling pressure, a large influx of supply could lead to a temporary retest of the $38.00 support level.
Bitcoin may be holding near the $80,000 level, but the biggest crypto story today may not be another short-term price move. It could be the quiet institutional shift happening behind the scenes.
DTCC, one of the most important infrastructure players in traditional finance, announced that it is advancing a new tokenization service through DTC. The plan includes initial limited production trades of tokenized securities in July 2026, followed by a broader service launch targeted for October 2026.
This matters because tokenized securities could bring traditional assets such as stocks, funds, bonds, and Treasuries closer to blockchain-based settlement. In simple terms, Wall Street is preparing to test whether real-world assets can move more efficiently on-chain.
DTCC said it is working with more than 50 firms through an industry working group to support the development of DTC’s tokenization service. The goal is to test and prepare tokenized real-world assets for production use, including their ability to operate across different blockchain networks.
The first limited production trades are expected in July 2026, while the wider launch is planned for October 2026. According to DTCC, the service is designed for real-world assets held in DTC custody, meaning investors would still keep the same entitlements, investor protections, and ownership rights as traditional securities.
That detail is important. This is not about creating unregulated synthetic tokens that simply track stock prices. It is about exploring tokenized versions of existing securities within the traditional market infrastructure.
Tokenized securities are one of the biggest narratives in the real-world assets crypto sector. The idea is simple: assets that currently trade and settle through traditional systems could be represented digitally on a blockchain.
This could eventually improve settlement speed, collateral movement, transparency, and market efficiency. Instead of waiting through older settlement processes, tokenized assets could support faster transfers and more flexible use across financial systems.
For crypto, this is important because it shifts the conversation from speculation to infrastructure. The market is no longer only asking whether Bitcoin can break a new resistance level. It is asking whether blockchain technology can become part of the core financial system.
The phrase “stocks on-chain” can sound exaggerated, but DTCC’s move shows that the idea is becoming more serious. If DTC tokenized assets can maintain the same investor protections and ownership rights as traditional securities, institutions may become more comfortable testing blockchain-based market infrastructure.
This does not mean that every stock will instantly trade on public blockchains. It also does not mean that traditional exchanges will disappear. Instead, this could create a bridge between traditional finance and digital asset systems.
That bridge matters. If tokenized securities become part of regulated financial workflows, then crypto adoption could move beyond retail trading, memecoins, and speculative cycles. It could become part of how capital markets operate.
Bitcoin crossing or holding $80,000 is important for market sentiment, but tokenization could have a longer-term impact. Price rallies can fade quickly. Infrastructure changes can reshape markets for years.
DTCC currently plays a central role in securities custody and post-trade market infrastructure. Its involvement gives the tokenization story more weight because it connects blockchain adoption to one of the largest existing financial systems.
This is why the DTCC tokenized securities announcement could be more important than a short-term crypto pump. It signals that the next phase of crypto adoption may come from institutions, not only from retail traders chasing price momentum.
The DTCC news also comes as U.S. crypto regulation appears to be moving forward. Coinbase recently said that a deal had been reached on a key provision of a major crypto bill, which could help the legislation move ahead in the Senate.
This matters because tokenized securities, stablecoins, exchanges, and real-world assets all need regulatory clarity. Without clear rules, major institutions may remain cautious. With clearer rules, more banks, asset managers, exchanges, and infrastructure providers could enter the market.
The timing is important. Bitcoin is strong, stablecoin regulation is evolving, and Wall Street infrastructure is testing tokenization. Together, these developments create a stronger institutional crypto narrative.
For Bitcoin, the impact is mostly indirect. Tokenized securities do not make Bitcoin faster or change its supply. But they can increase confidence in the broader digital asset market. If institutions see blockchain as serious financial infrastructure, Bitcoin may benefit as the leading crypto asset.
For Ethereum, the connection may be more direct. Ethereum and other smart contract platforms are often linked to tokenization, stablecoins, decentralized finance, and real-world assets. If tokenized securities become a major market trend, smart contract networks could benefit from renewed attention.
However, not all tokenization activity will automatically happen on public blockchains. Some institutions may prefer permissioned networks or hybrid models. That means the winners may not be obvious immediately.
The tokenized securities story is bullish for long-term adoption, but there are still risks.
First, the July 2026 trades are expected to be limited. This is not a full market transformation overnight. The real test will be whether the October launch happens as planned and whether institutions use the service at scale.
Second, regulation remains a key factor. If U.S. lawmakers fail to finalise clear digital asset rules, institutional adoption could slow again.
Third, macro risks are still present. Oil tensions, geopolitical headlines, stock market volatility, and interest rate expectations can all affect crypto sentiment. Even strong institutional news may not protect crypto from short-term risk-off moves.
DTCC’s tokenized securities plan may be one of the most important institutional crypto stories of 2026. While Bitcoin near $80,000 grabs headlines, the deeper shift is happening in market infrastructure.
If Wall Street begins testing tokenized securities in production, the crypto market could move into a new phase. This phase would not be driven only by hype, price speculation, or retail trading. It would be driven by regulated infrastructure, real-world assets, and institutional adoption.
The key question is no longer whether crypto can survive outside traditional finance. The bigger question is whether traditional finance is now preparing to move parts of itself on-chain.
$BTC, $ETH
The protocol shift comes as a $71 million court fight continues to unfold.
CME's upcoming futures product will track whether the market thinks the price of Bitcoin is about to swing wildly or stay steady.
Experts warn that AI is exposing software bugs at scale, raising the risk of faster cyberattacks.
Solana's Drift Protocol says most of the stolen funds linked to North Korean hackers remain traceable—and it has a plan to make victims whole.
AI native memes, meet AI-generated frogs and classic Brazilian nursery rhymes.
Robert Kiyosaki warns of a 2026 retirement shift, favoring Bitcoin and Ethereum over failing bonds. Is the traditional 401(k) model dead?
Vitalik Buterin urges substantial changes to the prediction market architecture.
After three months of tight consolidation and repeated rejections at the $1.45 to $1.47 resistance zone, XRP is coiling for what analysts believe could be an explosive breakout.
Executive Chairman Michael Saylor has floated the idea of liquidating a portion of the company's massive 818,334 Bitcoin treasury.
Crypto markets are tilting back toward risk: SHIB regaining momentum, HYPE entering a potential breakout phase, and meme coins outpacing XRP in short-term attention and flows.
Precious metals experienced substantial appreciation during Wednesday’s session, with spot gold advancing 2.3% to settle at $4,662.70 per ounce in New York markets, while futures contracts reached $4,668.80 per troy ounce—marking a 2.2% daily increase. Silver demonstrated even stronger performance, surging 4.2% to $75.91. Both platinum and palladium registered positive movements as well.

The rally followed President Trump’s social media announcement declaring substantial advancement in diplomatic discussions with Iranian leadership, alongside his decision to suspend American-coordinated naval operations intended to escort commercial vessels navigating the Strait of Hormuz during ongoing negotiations.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth validated that the ceasefire initiated approximately one month earlier remained effective. Secretary of State Marco Rubio emphasized that offensive military actions had concluded, with American efforts now concentrated on safeguarding commercial maritime traffic. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi characterized the discussions as “making progress.”
Despite optimistic statements from government officials, reports emerged of a commercial cargo ship sustaining damage from an unidentified projectile one day following confrontations near the strategic waterway—underscoring that regional instability persists.
The U.S. dollar index’s 0.5% retreat contributed additional momentum to gold prices, as dollar depreciation reduces acquisition costs for purchasers transacting in alternative currencies. ING strategists Warren Patterson and Ewa Manthey observed that concerns regarding potential escalation continue sustaining gold’s traditional safe-haven characteristics.
They suggested that a sustained ceasefire arrangement could diminish inflationary pressures and reduce the probability of Federal Reserve monetary tightening—dynamics that would generally favor precious metals. Assets without yield, such as gold, typically perform favorably when interest rate projections decline.
The trajectory for gold remains uncertain. Fixed-income market participants are progressively incorporating expectations that the Federal Reserve’s next policy adjustment will involve raising rather than lowering rates. This sentiment shift is constraining gold’s near-term appreciation potential.
Market observers are intensely focused on forthcoming employment statistics, which may reveal stabilizing workforce conditions—potentially reinforcing inflation-related considerations in Federal Reserve policy deliberations.
Gold has declined more than 12% since tensions with Iran intensified in late February, and market strategists indicate positioning in the precious metal remains complex. Nicky Shiels, head of research and metals strategy at MKS PAMP SA, characterized precious metals as entering the summer season amid a “structural positioning paradox.”
Despite elevated total dollar investments in gold, the actual contract volume and ounce holdings remain comparatively modest. “The medium-term bull case on debasement, supply chain fragmentation, and monetary order breakdown remains intact,” Shiels stated, “but the near-term path to new highs requires generalist institutional capital to step in.”
She noted that seasonal trends combined with what she termed “exhausted retail” participation are insufficient to independently fuel the next significant upward movement.
According to ING analysts, gold’s subsequent primary catalyst will emerge from interest rate expectations—influenced by U.S. Treasury financing strategies and critical economic indicators scheduled for release in coming weeks.
The post Gold Surges 2.3% on U.S.-Iran Diplomatic Progress and Weakening Dollar appeared first on Blockonomi.
Crude oil markets experienced a significant downturn on Wednesday following emerging reports that Washington and Tehran are approaching a diplomatic resolution that could conclude military tensions and restore maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.
Brent crude futures declined 6.2% to reach $103.04 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate contracts fell 6.6% to settle at $95.55. These losses followed a nearly 4% retreat in both benchmarks during the previous trading session.

The market decline accelerated after Axios published details suggesting the White House is finalizing a single-page memorandum of understanding with Iranian leadership. This preliminary agreement would establish the foundation for more comprehensive nuclear negotiations.
Administration officials indicated they anticipate responses from Tehran on critical provisions within the next two days. While no formal agreement has been executed, sources characterized this moment as representing the most significant diplomatic progress since hostilities commenced.
The preliminary framework calls for Iran to halt uranium enrichment activities. Simultaneously, the United States would dismantle sanctions regimes and authorize the release of multiple billions in frozen Iranian assets.
Both nations would additionally remove barriers to maritime commerce through the Strait of Hormuz. This waterway represents a vital chokepoint for international petroleum exports.
Oil prices have surged approximately 50% since conflict erupted in late February. The military confrontation severed access to hundreds of millions of barrels from Persian Gulf producers.
Currently, more than 1,550 commercial vessels carrying approximately 22,000 crew members remain stranded in Persian Gulf waters, according to General Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
President Trump announced the United States would suspend “Project Freedom,” the military escort program for commercial shipping through the strait, during ongoing diplomatic discussions.
“We have mutually agreed that, while the Blockade will remain in full force and effect, Project Freedom will be paused for a short period of time,” Trump posted on his social media platform.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio informed journalists that “Operation Epic Fury is concluded,” 66 days following the commencement of U.S. and Israeli military operations against Iran.
Despite the potential diplomatic breakthrough, energy analysts caution that petroleum supply chains will not recover immediately. “This is not a switch you can just flip,” noted Dilin Wu, research strategist at Pepperstone Group. Stranded vessels require rerouting, insurance markets must reassess risk premiums, and production facilities need gradual restart procedures.
ING analysts cautioned that approximately 13 million barrels per day of disrupted output is currently being compensated by inventory drawdowns. “Tighter stocks will only leave the oil market trading in an ever more volatile manner,” their report stated.
Despite the price decline, domestic supply figures provided some market support. The American Petroleum Institute documented that crude reserves fell 8.1 million barrels during the previous week. Gasoline inventories decreased 6.1 million barrels while distillate reserves dropped 4.6 million barrels.
Official stockpile figures from the Energy Information Administration were scheduled for release later Wednesday.
Saudi Arabia reduced pricing for its flagship oil grade destined for Asian customers in June, although prices remain elevated due to continuing Middle East supply constraints.
The post Crude Oil Plunges 6% on Prospects of U.S.-Iran Peace Agreement and Hormuz Reopening appeared first on Blockonomi.
State Street Investment Management and Galaxy Asset Management have launched the State Street Galaxy Onchain Liquidity Sweep Fund (SWEEP).
The fund gives qualified institutional investors a way to park stablecoins in a yield-generating vehicle. It operates continuously on blockchain infrastructure, unlike traditional money market funds.
The fund launches on Solana and will later expand to Ethereum and Stellar, marking a notable step in institutional blockchain adoption.
SWEEP allows large investors to move in and out of the fund at any time. Traditional money market funds operate only during market hours, creating gaps in cash management.
This new structure removes those restrictions by running on blockchain rails around the clock. Institutions can now earn yield on stablecoins without sacrificing access to their capital.
Galaxy provides the underlying tokenization system powering the fund. Anchorage Digital handles custody of the digital assets held within it.
State Street, meanwhile, oversees the traditional securities in the portfolio. This division of roles brings together established financial and crypto-native firms under one product.
The fund launches on Solana, with expansion to Ethereum and Stellar planned. Each blockchain offers different advantages in terms of speed, cost, and institutional infrastructure. The multi-chain approach broadens the fund’s potential reach across different investor preferences.
Stellar’s inclusion is particularly notable given its focus on asset tokenization and settlement. The announcement drew attention from the Stellar community, reinforcing the network’s growing role in institutional finance.
State Street manages more than $5 trillion in assets, giving SWEEP immediate institutional credibility. For Galaxy, the fund adds to its growing effort to connect crypto markets with traditional finance.
The market for tokenized funds has grown rapidly over the past year. BlackRock’s BUIDL fund, which packages short-term U.S. Treasury exposure into a blockchain token, has attracted billions of dollars.
Franklin Templeton has also built similar products, each testing different blockchains and access models. SWEEP now joins this growing category of blockchain-based financial instruments.
Today, moving cash between accounts often involves delays, cut-off times, and intermediaries. Blockchain-based systems can allow money to move instantly, at any hour.
This removes friction that has long existed in institutional cash management. SWEEP is designed to take direct advantage of that capability.
Access to the fund remains limited to qualified institutional investors for now. This reflects the current stage of onchain finance, where large players lead adoption.
Retail access is not part of the current structure. Firms are still building and testing the compliance and operational frameworks needed at scale.
The two firms have collaborated on digital asset investment products since 2024. This launch represents a deeper extension of that working relationship.
Products like SWEEP suggest that the shift toward on-chain finance is accelerating. Institutional demand for tokenized instruments continues to grow alongside the infrastructure supporting them.
The post State Street and Galaxy Launch SWEEP Tokenized Fund for 24/7 Onchain Cash Management appeared first on Blockonomi.
Arista Networks delivered impressive first-quarter results, yet investors responded with sharp selling pressure. Shares plunged nearly 14% during after-hours trading Tuesday, sliding below $148 after ending the regular session at $170.22, off 1.4%.
Arista Networks, Inc., ANET
The dramatic decline occurred despite the company exceeding both top and bottom-line expectations. First-quarter revenue totaled $2.71 billion, outpacing the consensus estimate of $2.61 billion. Adjusted earnings per share of $0.87 surpassed the prior-year figure of $0.66. Billings growth showed notable acceleration, reaching 54% year-over-year compared to 43% in the previous quarter.
Looking ahead to Q2, the company projected approximately $2.8 billion in revenue alongside adjusted EPS of $0.88 — both figures exceeding analyst predictions. What triggered the selloff?
The culprit was margin pressure. The company forecast an adjusted operating margin between 46% and 47% for the second quarter, declining from Q1’s 47.8% and trailing last year’s Q2 margin of 48.8%. This compression raised red flags among investors.
The more significant headwind emerged from the annual forecast. While Arista lifted its 2026 revenue growth projection to 27.7% from a previous 25% estimate, Morgan Stanley analyst Meta Marshall highlighted that Wall Street had anticipated growth between 28% and 30%, creating a meaningful disconnect that fueled the retreat.
On the innovation front, Arista unveiled XPO high-density liquid-cooled pluggable optics, engineered specifically for next-generation AI data centers. According to the company, XPO reduces networking rack space requirements by as much as 75% while delivering up to 44% savings in floor space compared to conventional pluggable optics.
The company also rolled out what it describes as a “universal AI spine” utilizing its 7800 platform. This system is architected to support massive AI workloads, incorporating capabilities such as Virtual Output Queuing to eliminate bottlenecks during AI traffic spikes.
Chief Executive Jayshree Ullal highlighted the company’s Net Promoter Score of 89, with 94% of customers providing favorable ratings, as validation of robust operational execution.
Notwithstanding the after-hours plunge, Wall Street sentiment continues to skew positive. Morgan Stanley’s Marshall retained his Overweight recommendation, characterizing Arista as among the most compelling opportunities for capturing AI networking expansion. While acknowledging supply chain headwinds, he noted Arista’s superior track record in navigating such challenges compared to competitors.
Additional research firms preserved Buy or Strong Buy recommendations, with several raising price objectives following the quarterly report.
Analysts at Evercore ISI had identified Arista as a potential winner from Alphabet’s new Virgo Network platform prior to the earnings release, observing that Virgo’s design philosophy aligns seamlessly with Arista’s high-radix, high-bandwidth switching solutions.
Despite Tuesday’s sharp decline, ANET remained elevated nearly 30% for the year-to-date period and had rallied more than 87% over the trailing twelve months entering the earnings announcement.
Marshall’s research note captured the current investment debate succinctly: questions surrounding Arista no longer center on demand strength — instead, the focus has shifted to the company’s ability to procure adequate supply.
The post Why Arista Networks (ANET) Stock Plunged 14% Despite Strong Q1 Earnings Beat appeared first on Blockonomi.
Joby Aviation delivered first-quarter revenue that exceeded analyst projections on Tuesday evening, yet shares declined as market participants maintain their singular focus: when will commercial passenger flights finally commence?
In Wednesday’s premarket session, JOBY shares climbed 1.3% to $8.79 after dropping 2% in after-hours trading following the results.
Joby Aviation, Inc., JOBY
First-quarter revenue totaled $24 million, outpacing the Street’s consensus estimate of $20.4 million. However, the operating loss widened to $234 million, exceeding the anticipated $198 million deficit.
The company closed the period with $2.5 billion in cash and investments. Approximately $195 million was consumed during the three-month period.
Management maintained its full-year 2026 revenue outlook at $105 million to $115 million. First-half cash consumption remains projected at $340 million to $370 million, not including an Ohio facility acquisition.
For market watchers, the financial metrics weren’t the primary narrative — regulatory approval progress dominated attention.
Joby reported that its inaugural FAA-conforming aircraft successfully completed its Type Inspection Authorization flight test during Q1. Additionally, the company concluded its SR3 audit with the Federal Aviation Administration, representing the third of four critical checkpoints in the type certification pathway.
CEO JoeBen Bevirt characterized the period as “an extraordinary quarter,” noting the organization now possesses “the clearest path we’ve ever had to beginning passenger operations.”
Regarding production capabilities, Joby indicated that components for eight additional conforming aircraft are currently being manufactured. Composite part production has exceeded 2.5 times the previous year’s volume.
The company’s Ohio manufacturing facility has initiated propeller blade production and now encompasses nearly 1.5 million square feet.
Joby maintained substantial public visibility throughout Q1. The company initiated its 2026 Electric Skies Tour featuring demonstration flights near San Francisco’s iconic Golden Gate Bridge.
Subsequently, operations moved to New York City, where the company executed what it described as the city’s inaugural point-to-point eVTOL flights — traveling from JFK Airport to three Manhattan heliports.
The organization also secured selection under the White House-supported eVTOL Integrated Pilot Program (eIPP), with successful proposals linked to operations in New York, New Jersey, Texas, Florida, and Utah.
Joby continues to target a 2026 timeframe for launching commercial passenger service.
Heading into the earnings announcement, shares had declined 8% during the preceding three-month period and retreated 42% over six months. Nevertheless, the stock maintains a 34% gain over the trailing twelve months.
Analyst sentiment remains mixed on the stock. Among six analysts tracking JOBY, one assigns a Buy rating, three recommend Hold, and two rate it Sell. The consensus price target stands at $12.30, implying approximately 42% potential upside from present trading levels.
The post Joby Aviation (JOBY) Stock Dips Post-Earnings Despite Beating Revenue Expectations appeared first on Blockonomi.
Bitcoin’s price just tapped a new multi-month peak at $82,000, where it faced some resistance but continues to trade close to that level.
Almost all altcoins are in the green today, with ETH inching closer to $2,400 and XRP decisively reclaiming the $1.40 resistance. SOL is up to $90, while ZEC has stolen the show.
The primary cryptocurrency fell hard last week after it was rejected at $79,500, and the culmination took place on Wednesday following the third FOMC meeting for the year. Although the Fed’s decision to maintain the interest rates unchanged was highly expected, BTC still dipped below $75,000.
However, its subsequent rebound has been very impressive. The asset first neared $79,000 on Friday after Iran sent a peace proposal to the US and remained close to that level during the weekend, even though the US rejected it, and the second one, sent on Sunday.
Moreover, BTC rocketed on Monday morning to over $80,000 for the first time since late January. It slipped in the following hours after some confusing reports, but went back on the offensive and quickly reclaimed that level. The bulls kept the pressure on, and the cryptocurrency briefly tapped $82,000 minutes ago to mark a new three-month peak.
It remains close to that level now, with its market cap climbing to over $1.630 trillion and its dominance over the alts standing above 58.5% on CG.

ZEC has reignited hopes of its massive run from several months ago when it exploded from under $80 to over $700 within weeks. Its daily surge of roughly 40% has reminded of that rally, as the asset now sits at $575. The only more notable gainer in the past day is SKYAI, which has soared by over 40% to $0.78.
TON has continued with its massive streak, posting another 25% surge on a 24-hour scale. DASH, ICP, FIL, and NEAR complete the double-digit price pump club.
A lot more modest gains are evident from XRP, BNB, ETH, and TRX, while SOL, DOGE, and ADA are up by almost 5% daily.
The total crypto market cap has added roughly $50 billion in a day and now sits at $2.8 trillion on CG.

The post Massive 40% Gains From SKYAI and ZEC as BTC Taps $82K: Market Watch appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The world’s largest corporate Bitcoin (BTC) holder, Strategy, yesterday released its Q1 2026 financial results, which show a net loss of $12.54 billion.
According to the report, this was mostly due to a $14.46 billion unrealized loss stemming from poor BTC prices during the first few months of 2026.
Operating loss was $14.47 billion, compared with $ 5.92 billion in the prior year. Loss for the quarter attributable to common stockholders was $12.77 billion, or $38.25 per diluted share, whereas a year earlier, it was $4.23 billion.
However, if you strip out the Bitcoin accounting, the underlying software business held relatively steady, with total revenues growing 11.9% year-over-year to $124.3 million, while gross profit came in at $83.4 million.
Furthermore, the company’s actual BTC position kept growing through the quarter. Strategy bought 89,599 BTC in Q1, bringing its total holdings to 818,334 BTC, which is a 22% increase year to date.
The company has raised nearly $12 billion in capital markets activity so far in 2026, including $7.37 billion in Q1 alone through its at-the-market offering program spanning MSTR shares and its preferred stock instruments.
The preferred equity side of the business was a particular focus on the call. STRC, Strategy’s variable-rate preferred stock, has now scaled to $8.5 billion in notional value in just nine months, which the company described as the largest preferred stock by market cap in the world.
According to CFO Andrew Kang, the cumulative dividends declared and paid across all instruments have now crossed $693 million across 23 consecutive distributions.
One of the biggest takeaways from the earnings call was Executive Chairman Michael Saylor’s suggestion that Strategy could sell some of its BTC stash to cover dividend obligations.
“We will probably sell some Bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market and send the message that we did it,” he said.
The statement was notable because Saylor has spent years evangelizing BTC as an asset you never sell, and analyst Jeff Park, who participated in the call, flagged the comment as more material than the company’s previous discussions on the subject.
Park also pointed out that Strategy’s exposure to US interest rates is becoming more relevant given STRC’s nature as a floating instrument, especially when you consider the approaching tenure of Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve chair and the prospect of rate cuts on the table.
A couple of weeks ago, Bitcoin skeptic Peter Schiff held a live X Space, where he called STRC “an obvious Ponzi scheme” and argued that the company had no meaningful income outside its software division and therefore funds dividend payouts by continuously issuing new STRC shares.
Strategy has pushed back on that characterization, pointing to its BTC holdings as a balance sheet backstop.
MSTR shares closed at around $187, down roughly 3.5% in after-hours trading following the earnings release. STRC, meanwhile, is trading just below $100 with an effective annualized yield of 11.5%, with Bitcoin itself holding at around $81,000 at the time of writing.
The post Strategy Posts $12.5B Q1 Loss as BTC Prices Weigh on Results appeared first on CryptoPotato.
One of the largest cryptocurrency conferences of the year takes place between May 5 and 7, and Pi Network’s own Chengdiao Fan and Nicolas Kokkalis will take the stage to deliver speeches.
Perhaps due to the building anticipation and the recent protocol updates, the project’s native token posted a minor gain in the past 24 hours.
Some of the most notable names in the cryptocurrency industry, such as Binance’s Changpeng Zhao, Ripple’s Brad Garlinghouse, and Strategy’s Michael Saylor, will take the main stage during the highly anticipated conference, alongside Eric Trump, Kevin O’Leary, and Grant Cardone. In total, more than 500 speakers will be at the event, and Pi Network’s co-founders will join them today and tomorrow.
Chengdiao Fan will take the stage on May 6 between 11:15 and 11:35 AM EDT. She will speak on “aligning web3, AI, and blockchain for utility” to explore how Pi Network’s infrastructure, verified identity, and “globally engaged network can support utility-driven products and AI-era business models,” according to the team’s X post.
Recall that some of the latest Pi moves in AI and blockchain included completing over 526 million validation tasks by combining the growing technology phenomenon and human input.
Nicolas Kokkalis will join a panel on Thursday between 10:15 and 10:45 AM EDT at the same Convergence Stage, titled “How to prove you’re human in an AI world (without doxing yourself).” The participants will talk about how the Internet’s trust model is breaking as AI systems become capable of creating bots that can generate profiles and interact like real users.
The team said both these sessions will highlight the project’s approach to the AI era:
“Supporting utility-driven products and sustainable business models through blockchain, verified identity, and a globally engaged network, while enabling global identity verification and providing authenticity solutions through Pi’s native KYC solution.”
It’s worth noting that Pi Network’s co-founders made major announcements at previous big conferences, which may be why community members anticipate history repeating itself.
The protocol’s native token rocketed to $0.20 last week, where it was halted and driven south to $0.17 within hours. However, it rebounded swiftly in the following days and earlier today pumped above $0.186. This came following the latest project updates and announcements about the upcoming ones.
Although PI failed to join yesterday’s market-wide revival, in which BTC surged above $81,500 for the first time in over three months, it stands in the green today and has solidified its position as the 45th-largest cryptocurrency by market cap.

The post Pi Network’s PI Reclaims Key Support Ahead of Founders’ Speeches in Miami appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin (BTC) is currently on a roll, surging past the $80,000 mark and touching base above $81,000. While this rally could be a reason for positive sentiment, market experts believe otherwise.
In a weekly report from the crypto exchange Bitfinex, analysts warned that bitcoin’s rally to $80,000 is misleading because the market is not positioned for upside movement. According to the analysts, BTC is currently stuck between bulls and bears, conviction and caution. Considering market conditions, the leading digital asset is likely to lean toward the negative rather than the positive.
To substantiate their claims, the Bitfinex analysts highlighted an improving but uneven demand wave. Based on historical data, BTC rallies have been sustained by strong demand, but that is not the case this time.
Underlying demand is improving with steady inflows from spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and continued accumulation from institutions like Strategy. However, the demand is not strong enough to absorb the overhead supply and confirm a sustained breakout. In fact, BTC is in a fragile yet constructive range, with short-term holders taking profits as they exit positions near breakeven.
“This behavior is a textbook pattern in bear markets: whenever the price approaches the breakeven level of the most price-sensitive cohort, the incentive to exit positions overwhelms incoming demand, exhausting upside momentum,” analysts stated.
Bitcoin requires heavy spot-led demand to sustain a rally. However, with a divided macro environment, no clear liquidity tailwind, and ongoing geopolitical risk in the Middle East, that may seem unlikely in the short term.
Furthermore, bitcoin’s ongoing breakout stalled at the $78,000-$79,000 resistance zone, not because of aggressive selling but due to profit-taking by short-term holders. This zone is dense and defined by metrics like the True Market Mean, the Short-Term Holder Realized Price, and the weekly open. These indicators also double as support and resistance levels.
With the resistance confirming overhead challenges, Bitfinex believes the bias tilts toward further downward pressure. At the same time, analysts see the potential for a breakout from current resistance levels as ETF inflows and institutional accumulation continue.
A failure to reclaim and hold above the current resistance levels will keep the low $70,000s as the next key support zone, sustaining a downward momentum for BTC.
The post Bitcoin Market Not Positioned for Upside Despite Rally Above $80K, Says Bitfinex appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Digital asset funds posted $117.8 million in inflows, continuing a five-week streak, though this was the smallest weekly gain in that period. The overall number indicated a late recovery.
Earlier in the week, from Monday through Thursday, the market saw $619 million in outflows over four consecutive days. A sharp reversal came on Friday, as $737 million entered in a single day, which managed to turn the weekly balance positive.
CoinShares stated that this is one of the largest daily inflows recorded in 2026, “likely reflecting a sharp improvement in risk appetite.” Meanwhile, total assets under management held steady at $155 billion.
Investment products tied to Bitcoin attracted over $192 million in the past week, bringing its total for the year to $4.2 billion. The figure is still below recent weekly averages of close to $1 billion.
A small group of investors still expect BTC to decline as Short Bitcoin products raked in $6 million in inflows. Multi-asset products brought in $3.6 million, while XRP recorded $3 million during the same period. Ethereum, on the other hand, saw $81.6 million exit, as it snapped a three-week streak of gains above $190 million. Solana also followed suit with over $11 million in outflows.
In its latest Digital Asset Fund Flows Weekly Report, CoinShares said,
“The narrowing in participation from nine assets to four this week is the clearest signal that sentiment softened through the working week before recovering on Friday.”
The US brought in $47.5 million, far lower than the $1.1 billion seen a week earlier amid a slowdown in the week. In contrast, Germany amassed $43.8 million, while Canada added $16 million, indicating steadier demand. Elsewhere, Switzerland and Australia recorded smaller inflows of $5.2 million and $4 million.
Bitcoin has entered May on a strong note, after breaking above $80,000 for the first time since January 31. In a recent note to investors, Singapore-based QCP Capital observed that Bitcoin’s correlation with US stocks is rising back toward 2023 levels, in what appears to be a renewed link with broader risk assets.
Interestingly, BTC’s rally came even as Strategy paused its purchases, which can indicate “the market may be drawing strength from a wider base of support beyond that single narrative.” Institutional demand also remains steady. However, QCP noted that holding above the $82,000 to $83,000 range is important for continuation.
Implied volatility is near yearly lows, while the VIX is around 17, which essentially means that markets are largely looking past geopolitical risks. Despite this, the situation remains “fluid.” Upcoming labor data and earnings from Strategy, Coinbase, and Block could lead to choppiness over the coming sessions.
The post How $619M Midweek Bleed Was Erased by Massive One-Day Crypto Inflow appeared first on CryptoPotato.