The rapid advancement of AI models poses significant cybersecurity risks and challenges global regulatory frameworks, impacting national security and market dynamics.
The post Anthropic CEO warns of China’s open-source threat and cyber risks from ‘Mythos-class’ AI appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The anticipated memorandum could stabilize US-Iran relations, impacting global markets and nuclear nonproliferation efforts significantly.
The post Trump anticipates successful US-Iran memorandum signing in Geneva Friday appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
AI's elevation to a geopolitical issue may drive nations to seek tech sovereignty, potentially fragmenting the global AI ecosystem.
The post OpenAI, Anthropic CEOs join G7 leaders for AI talks in France appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Marseille's financial struggles highlight the escalating risks for clubs failing to meet UEFA's stringent Financial Fair Play standards.
The post Marseille fined €10M for breaching Financial Fair Play regulations appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Citi's blockchain platform could reshape private market liquidity, but regulatory hurdles and limited access may delay widespread investor benefits.
The post Citi launches blockchain platform for tokenized private shares as IPO delays mount appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

U.S. Congressman Nick Begich Wants America to Stop Selling Its Bitcoin — And Start Treating It Like Gold
Congressman Nick Begich (R-AK) sat down with the Bitcoin Policy Institute at PubKey in New York for a wide-ranging conversation that touched on his path from startup founder to Capitol Hill, his landmark American Reserve Modernization Act, and the dual promise and peril of artificial intelligence.
The interview offered a window into one of Congress’s more technologically fluent members — a distinction Begich traces not to his political career but to the decades before it.
Begich’s resume reads unlike most of his colleagues. After undergraduate studies in entrepreneurship at Baylor University and an MBA from Indiana University focused on information technology and decision sciences, he spent time at Ford Motor Company before returning to Alaska to found a software development firm.
Starting with a credit card and a laptop, he built the company to roughly 150 employees across three countries, with a practice centered on early-stage startups — helping founders transform PowerPoint pitch decks into fundable products, often in exchange for equity stakes.
That background, he said, shapes how he operates in Washington. “Congress can be a frustrating place,” Begich said. “You’re not a CEO. You can’t say, ‘We’re doing this.'”
He drew a parallel between the consensus-building required in the House and the kind of obstacle navigation that defines startup life — facing capital constraints, entrenched competitors, and perpetual skepticism from investors. The difference, he noted, is that in Congress the runway is measured in election cycles, not funding rounds.
Begich entered Bitcoin in early 2013, operating on the thesis that it could serve as a hedge against dollar depreciation for his business.
He lost roughly 440 Bitcoin in the Mt. Gox collapse — “I got Goxed,” he said — but emerged from the bankruptcy process with what he described as a positive outcome, and his conviction in the asset intact.
That conviction is now law in proposal form. The American Reserve Modernization Act, or ARMA, which attracted significant co-sponsorship, would create a mechanism for the federal government to retain Bitcoin seized through law enforcement rather than auction it off.
The idea, Begich said, stems from a simple question: if Bitcoin can function as a reserve asset for a private company, what could it do for a government?
His argument rests on two properties he considers non-negotiable for reserve assets: scarcity and diffusion. Gold, he said, satisfies both — it is hard to produce, and broad ownership has built consensus around its value over centuries.
Bitcoin, he argued, is approaching that same status within the digital asset ecosystem, representing close to 60 percent of total cryptocurrency market capitalization.
“Once those network effects are in play,” Begich said, “the earlier you are to that cycle, the more advantaged you will be.”
He also framed ARMA as an insurance policy — not a bet on Bitcoin’s dominance, but a hedge against the possibility that the dollar does not remain the world’s reserve currency.
“Every 93 years on average, that reserve currency changes hands,” he noted, pointing to historical transitions through Portugal, Spain, France, and Britain. Holding gold is an acknowledgment of that reality, he argued. Bitcoin should be viewed in the same light.
The conversation shifted to artificial intelligence, where Begich was measured but direct about the stakes. He described two competing visions of an AI future: one defined by abundance — cheaper healthcare, higher productivity, broader access to economic opportunity — and one defined by displacement, where the removal of human roles at scale creates what he called “a disintermediation of purpose.”
On the question of open-source AI models, Begich pushed back against the idea that openness is an unqualified good at advanced capability levels. He cited the logic behind keeping nuclear and certain biotechnology research restricted — some asymmetric risks, once released, cannot be contained.
“The genie is out of the box,” he said of AI broadly, but argued that the full open-sourcing of frontier models, particularly post-AGI systems, hands negative actors a tool with no practical upper bound on the harm they can cause.
He was pointed in his characterization of China’s open-source model strategy, suggesting it is less a gesture of openness than an economic tool — a way to undermine the investment case for American AI development and collapse the domestic ecosystem from the outside.
This post U.S. Congressman Nick Begich Wants America to Stop Selling Its Bitcoin — And Start Treating It Like Gold first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Oman Launches Mandatory National Bitcoin Mining Pool in State-Backed Push for Regulatory Control
Oman has taken one of the most direct steps by any government to bring bitcoin mining under formal state oversight, launching a mandatory national mining pool that licensed operators across the sultanate are required to join.
The pool, Omanhash.com, was launched by Oman’s Ministry of Transport, Communications and Information Technology and will run in cooperation with Frontier Technologies LLC, an Omani blockchain and Web3 company.
Enegix Global, a vertically integrated digital energy and infrastructure company, built the technology platform and liquidity infrastructure behind it. The company called it the official national cryptocurrency mining pool of the Sultanate of Oman.
Under the approved regulatory framework, Omanhash.om is the sole official and mandatory mining pool for all licensed cryptocurrency mining companies in the country. The pool is expected to consolidate roughly 10 exahashes per second of computing power in its initial phase — a measure of the total computational work directed at securing the Bitcoin network and, by extension, minting new coins.
That hashrate matters for Bitcoin in a direct way. The more concentrated and regulated that hashrate becomes within a national framework, the greater the government’s visibility into mining revenue, energy consumption, and the flow of newly minted bitcoin. It seems the country is not trying to ban or restrict the activity — it is pulling it into a structured, trackable system.
The country has been one of the most active jurisdictions in the Middle East for industrial-scale mining investment since 2022, when the ministry launched a $370 million hydro-cooled mining facility in Salalah.
Total investments in mining and data center infrastructure in the Salalah Free Zone have since surpassed $700 million, including two major facilities built in 2022 and 2023. Alps Blockchain, an Italian firm, brought a 150 MW facility in Salalah to full operation in mid-2025. Oman’s Omanhash.om reflects the government’s next phase: pulling that accumulation of capacity into a regulated, transparent national architecture.
For Enegix, the mandate is its second sovereign-pool contract. The company built and operates btcpool.kz in Kazakhstan, where a 2023 digital assets law requires licensed miners to operate through government-accredited pools and report revenue to tax authorities through an automated system.
The addition of Omanhash.om brings Enegix’s combined pool operations to about 25 EH/s across three pools.
“This is our second sovereign mandate, and it validates the model we have been building since Kazakhstan,” said Olzhas Amirov, chief business development officer of Enegix Global in a company press release, noting that licensing frameworks help miners operate within the law, avoid punitive taxation, and communicate with regulators.
Oman’s approach stands as a contrast to jurisdictions that have pushed back against mining with outright bans or heavy tax burdens. Instead, the sultanate has embedded mining within a broader economic diversification strategy — and is now adding a layer of centralized control that keeps bitcoin production inside the country’s regulatory reach.
Enegix said its next target is to grow its combined pool hashrate to 30 EH/s.
This post Oman Launches Mandatory National Bitcoin Mining Pool in State-Backed Push for Regulatory Control first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

79% of Bitcoin Supply Now Locked by Long-Term Holders. Analyst Sees Bear Market Nearing Exhaustion
Bitcoin is showing signs of stabilization after a brutal stretch, and research firm K33 says the on-chain evidence is difficult to ignore. In its latest market report, K33 Head of Research Vetle Lunde pointed to a record share of Bitcoin supply held by long-term holders — a metric that, historically, has preceded the end of every major bear market in Bitcoin’s history.
Long-term holders now control 79% of Bitcoin’s circulating supply, an all-time high that K33 says reflects a continued accumulation trend and a gradual shift toward a more constructive market environment.
That figure carries weight not as a standalone data point, but as part of a broader pattern: in every prior Bitcoin bear market, the circulating supply has tilted toward long-term holders as the market approached its trough.
The data on old coin reactivation reinforces the picture. As of June 6, only 218,421 BTC aged two years or more had been reactivated in 2026 — a near-historic low. The only year with lower reactivation by the same date was 2012, when 70,600 BTC had been reactivated.
The contrast with 2024 is stark: 1.18 million BTC had been reactivated by June 6 of that year, reflecting the heavy distribution that characterized the top of the previous cycle.
Lunde frames the current environment as one where long-term holders show diminished motivation to sell, with patient buyers absorbing whatever supply reaches the market.
Other on-chain and market-structure indicators align with that thesis. Exchange-traded fund outflows — a dominant source of selling pressure in recent weeks — have eased. Trading volume has retreated to yearly lows, a pattern K33 associates with the late stages of Bitcoin bear markets rather than the beginning of fresh sell cycles.
Last week, Lunde noted that 50% of BTC’s circulating supply is now underwater, a level historically reached only within weeks of major bear market bottoms — though often with one final leg lower before a turn.
Not all analysts share K33’s cautious optimism. Wintermute, Glassnode, and Bitfinex have each flagged that ETF flows, stablecoin growth, and institutional demand have not yet reached levels consistent with a durable reversal.
Some forecasts put Bitcoin as low as $30,000 before any sustained recovery takes hold.
Macro conditions add another layer of uncertainty heading into the week. Today’s FOMC meeting — the first under new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh — has drawn close attention from the crypto market.
Rates are expected to hold steady, though markets are still pricing in the possibility of hikes later in 2026. With Bitcoin’s 30-day correlation to the S&P 500 sitting near 0.6, any shift in the Fed’s tone could hit BTC with an amplified reaction, as the asset tends to be more sensitive to macro developments during bear market conditions.
Against that backdrop, BTC posted a 5.5% gain over the past week, clawing back from two consecutive weeks of double-digit losses to trade near the $65,000 region as of this morning, June 17.
Month-over-month, the price remains down roughly 16% from a level near $79,000 in mid-May, and it trades nearly 40% below its all-time high of $126,198 reached in October 2025.
This post 79% of Bitcoin Supply Now Locked by Long-Term Holders. Analyst Sees Bear Market Nearing Exhaustion first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Crypto Industry Slams Illinois’ New Digital Asset Tax as ‘Most Punitive’ in U.S.
Illinois Governor JB Pritzker signed Senate Bill 3019 into law yesterday, making Illinois the first state in the country to impose a transaction-based tax on crypto. This move drew swift condemnation from crypto industry groups who had urged him to strike the provision before his pen hit the paper.
The Digital Asset Privilege Tax Act, tucked inside a 1,624-page revenue bill that forms part of Illinois’ $55.9 billion fiscal year 2027 budget, levies a 0.2% charge on the value of any digital asset involved in an exchange, transfer, custody, or wallet service conducted on behalf of an Illinois customer.
The tax takes effect January 1, 2027, and is projected to generate roughly $60 million annually — a fraction of the more than $800 million in new revenue the broader budget package is expected to produce.
Unlike capital gains or income taxes, Illinois’ new levy does not wait for a profit. It fires on the act of transacting itself — regardless of whether the customer made money. No comparable state financial transaction tax exists anywhere in the country for stocks, bonds, or derivatives.
The Crypto Council for Innovation (CCI), a global industry alliance, called the measure “the most punitive digital asset tax in the country” and warned it would create “a profound chilling effect on digital asset activity in Illinois.”
Miles Jennings, Head of Policy and General Counsel at a16z Crypto, went further, comparing the tax to charging customers extra for receiving an email rather than a letter — singling out the technology used to deliver a transaction rather than the substance of the transaction itself.
CCI’s letter to Pritzker made the same point, arguing that an investor who holds a stock, bond, or derivative on paper faces no equivalent levy, while the same instrument triggers a tax the moment it moves on a blockchain.
The law places collection duties on digital asset brokers — covering exchanges, custodians, wallet providers, and firms that transmit assets between accounts.
Out-of-state brokers are pulled in once their annual receipts from Illinois customers reach $100,000. Brokers must register with the Illinois Department of Revenue before January 1, 2027, file monthly reports, and list the tax as a separate line item on customer bills.
Failure to register is no administrative slip — unregistered brokers face Class 3 felony charges, carrying prison sentences of two to five years and fines up to $25,000.
Chicago is home to prominent crypto and trading firms, including Bitnomial — operator of the first U.S. leveraged retail spot crypto exchange — and Jump Crypto. Industry groups fear firms will relocate to more hospitable states, draining Illinois of the very investment and talent the sector has concentrated in the city.
CCI argued the law arrived at the worst possible moment, as digital asset businesses are already navigating marketplace disruptions stemming from implementation of Illinois’ own Digital Assets and Consumer Protection Act.
The crypto tax is not the only provision in SB 3019 inviting a courtroom challenge. There was also uproar over accompanying social media and digital advertising taxes in the same bill, citing federal preemption and First Amendment concerns.
This post Crypto Industry Slams Illinois’ New Digital Asset Tax as ‘Most Punitive’ in U.S. first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

VanEck: Bitcoin Miners Face $50B Funding Gap as AI Pivot Separates Winners From Losers
A new framework from asset manager VanEck is drawing clear lines between Bitcoin miners that are genuinely transforming into artificial intelligence infrastructure providers and those that are still selling a story. All of it comes with a sobering price tag: a roughly $50 billion near-term funding gap standing between the sector’s pipeline ambitions and actual delivery.
In a research note, VanEck investment analyst Griffin MacMaster and Head of Digital Assets Research Matthew Sigel laid out what they describe as the first structured valuation approach for the increasingly blurry category of companies that straddle both Bitcoin mining and AI data center hosting.
With financial disclosures varying widely across the sector and cash flows still nascent, VanEck argues the cleanest metric available to investors right now is gross energized power — essentially, how many megawatts a company has actually switched on, not just announced.
The gap between those two things is already telling. Companies that have physical leases in hand — including Cipher Mining (CIFR), Hut 8 (HUT), and TeraWulf (WULF) — are commanding valuations above 10x gross energized power.
Meanwhile, names like Marathon Digital (MARA) and CleanSpark (CLSK), which remain more closely tied to Bitcoin mining with limited contracted AI capacity, are trading at just 2–6x that same metric.
“For now, we find that the market is paying for contracted and energized capacity, while discounting everything still in the pipeline,” the analysts wrote.
Signing contracts, VanEck warns, is only the beginning. Across the entire peer group, miners have delivered only approximately 25% of their leased capacity — a figure that the firm expects to decline further before improving, as large-scale construction projects kick off in 2027 and 2028.
That execution gap is expected to become the dominant valuation driver going forward, with companies that miss construction milestones risking what VanEck calls “structural de-ratings.”
The analysts also flag that very few of these companies have any prior experience building out the kind of infrastructure AI customers require — making project management credentials as important as megawatt counts.
VanEck’s deal tracker signals a busy second half of 2026, with multiple companies — including Bitdeer (BTDR), HIVE Digital (HIVE), Riot Platforms (RIOT), and Core Scientific (CORZ) — in various stages of active or advanced lease negotiations. WULF is described as in “advanced negotiations” on a 480MW site in Kentucky, expected to land a customer in the second quarter.
The capital demands of this pivot are staggering. VanEck estimates the sector’s long-term capital expenditure needs approach $221 billion, with near-term needs alone creating a collective funding shortfall of roughly $50 billion above current cash positions.
The dispersion within the group is wide. HIVE faces the most acute strain relative to its market cap, driven by its AI Gigafactory ambitions targeting more than 100,000 GPUs. IREN and KEEL carry the next heaviest near-term loads. By contrast, WULF and CIFR appear relatively better-positioned, having already secured contracted anchor deals that help de-risk their capital raises.
Funding routes vary significantly. Companies with Bitcoin treasury holdings — including MARA (35,303 BTC), CLSK (13,561 BTC), and HUT (13,696 BTC) — can lean on Bitcoin monetization strategies to part-fund construction.
REN, which carries a large near-term funding need with no BTC treasury to draw from, faces a narrower set of options: dilutive equity issuances or incremental debt.
The report also challenges how closely the market links the entire cohort to Bitcoin prices. While the group’s average daily-return correlation to BTC runs around 0.55 year-to-date and average one-year beta sits at approximately 1.05, VanEck argues that dynamic overstates the sector’s true Bitcoin sensitivity for companies that have largely moved on.
Only MARA (with BTC-sensitive value equal to ~98% of market cap), CLSK (~53%), and RIOT (~23%) carry meaningful balance-sheet exposure to Bitcoin price swings. At the other end, CORZ, WULF, APLD, and IREN have effectively decoupled.
The analysis shows that a drop in Bitcoin to $50,000 would erase roughly 45% of MARA’s equity value and nearly 50% of HIVE’s, while shaving just 4% off HUT’s — underscoring how poorly the “single BTC trade” framing captures the increasingly divergent nature of the group.
VanEck expects valuations to eventually migrate away from megawatt counts toward delivery ratios, unit economics, and ultimately discounted cash flow models — at which point these companies will begin to resemble data center REITs more than miners.
The firm anticipates that many could ultimately be sold or converted into REITs as their AI revenue matures.
For now, VanEck sees the greatest re-rating potential in names with the widest gap between ambition and current market pricing — HIVE, KEEL, IREN, and Bitdeer — while acknowledging those same names carry the highest execution risk. Companies with anchor deals already in hand, like WULF, CIFR, and HUT, offer a more conservative path to compounding that advantage into long-term market position.
This post VanEck: Bitcoin Miners Face $50B Funding Gap as AI Pivot Separates Winners From Losers first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Strategy’s (formerly MicroStrategy) flagship dividend-paying preferred stock is trading at its weakest level this year, pressuring one of the company’s most important tools for raising capital to buy Bitcoin.
The $10.5 billion variable-rate perpetual preferred stock, which trades under the ticker STRC, closed Tuesday at $91.79.
The settlement marked its third-lowest close since trading began in July 2025 and left the security well below the $100 level that the Michael Saylor-led firm has tried to keep it near.
Over the past year, STRC has expanded from $2.8 billion to $10.5 billion, adding $7.7 billion through at-the-market issuance. This made it one of the fastest-growing financial products in history.

So, the decline has turned STRC into a live test of investor appetite for Bitcoin-linked income products. Strategy built the instrument to offer a high dividend while giving the company another way to raise capital.
However, the market is now tacitly demanding a higher yield as Bitcoin pulls back, rival preferred stocks offer more attractive terms, and investors reassess the risks attached to Strategy’s expanding capital structure.
STRC’s weakness shows how quickly Strategy’s income products can start trading under the same pressure as the asset underlying the company’s balance sheet.
During the spring, strong demand and a rising Bitcoin price allowed Strategy to keep the STRC dividend rate unchanged at 11.5%. The stock traded close enough to par that management had little reason to raise the payout.
However, that changed as Bitcoin rolled over and investors began asking for more compensation to hold a preferred stock tied to a company whose value is deeply exposed to the cryptocurrency.
Kraken chief economist Thomas Perfumo said about 86% of the variation in STRC’s yield spread can be explained by moves in Bitcoin’s price. His analysis suggests investors are treating STRC less like a stable preferred stock and more like a credit product whose risk premium moves with Bitcoin.

That relationship is not unique to STRC. Other Strategy preferred securities, including STRK, STRD, and STRF, have also shown pressure.
The difference is that investors expect those instruments to move around. STRC was marketed with a stronger price-stability objective, making its extended discount more difficult for holders to dismiss.
The market math is straightforward. STRC pays an annual dividend of $11.50. At a price near $92, investors are earning about 12.6%.
To bring the stock back toward $100, Strategy would likely need to raise the dividend closer to the yield investors are already demanding. Andre Dragosh, Bitwise Europe's head of research, stated:
“Saylor essentially needs to raise the dividend by slightly more than 1$ to pull STRC to par. Equilibrium dividend is at around 12.6$ right now.”
STRC’s design gives Strategy flexibility, but it does not force the market to value the stock at $100.
The product has a stated amount of $100, and Strategy can adjust the dividend rate to encourage trading near that level. But there is no automatic mechanism requiring buyers to step in at par. That distinction has become central to the current selloff.
Parker White, chief operating officer and chief investment officer at DeFi Development Corp., said the product’s soft $100 anchor may have made it vulnerable to short sellers.
He argues that STRC’s retail-heavy investor base expected the stock to stay close to par, so a move even a few dollars below that level can trigger outsized concern.
According to him, short sellers may be able to exploit that reaction because the cost to borrow STRC is relatively low.
White continued that the outright borrowing cost is about 60 basis points, making the trade cheap to maintain compared with similar products. Strategy’s at-the-market issuance program may also limit upside above $100, reducing the risk that short sellers face if they position against the stock.
The theory gives traders a clear pressure point. If investors treat $100 as a promise rather than a target, every move away from that level can weaken confidence.
That risk is more pronounced because some crypto protocols have been built around STRC or use Strategy-linked securities as part of broader yield strategies. A sustained decline could force some holders to reassess collateral values, liquidity assumptions, and expected returns.
White also noted that STRC’s discount has become more visible because a rival product is holding up better.
Strive’s bitcoin-backed preferred stock, SATA, has continued to trade close to its $100 par value while offering a higher annualized payout of about 13%. It also pays dividends daily, rather than monthly or semi-monthly, giving investors faster cash distribution and making the product more expensive to short.
That structure has strengthened SATA’s appeal among income-focused investors. Daily dividends reduce the pressure that often builds around ex-dividend dates, when holders decide whether to collect the payout or rotate elsewhere.
They also increase the carrying cost for short sellers, who must account for dividend obligations more frequently.
White estimated that SATA’s baseline borrowing cost is about 460 basis points. Including the effect of daily dividend obligations, he said the annualized cost to short SATA rises toward 17.6%, compared with about 60 basis points for STRC.
The comparison puts Strategy in a difficult position. STRC still offers a high stated payout, but the market is showing a preference for both higher yield and faster payments.
STRC’s decline has left Strategy with a narrower path to restore confidence in one of its most important funding channels.
White has argued that the company could stabilize the product by raising the dividend to 12%, calling a shareholder vote to move to daily payments, increasing the call price from $101 to at least $110, and rebuilding the cash buffer to $2.5 billion.
According to him, higher dividends and daily payments would make STRC more expensive to short. A higher call price would give the stock more room to trade above $100, increasing the risk for traders betting against it.
Additionally, the larger cash reserve would reduce concerns about dividend coverage and help reassure income-focused investors.
However, each step would carry a significant trade-off that could impact Strategy.
For context, A higher payout could help pull STRC closer to par, but it would also increase Strategy’s recurring cash burden. Daily dividends may improve market confidence, but would require another structural change. A larger reserve could strengthen the credit profile, but may slow the pace of new Bitcoin purchases.
The larger challenge is the investor base. STRC still appears to be owned heavily by Bitcoin-native buyers, who compare the preferred stock with Bitcoin itself.
When Bitcoin falls, those investors can either collect income from STRC or rotate back into spot Bitcoin at lower prices. That competition forces Strategy to offer a higher return than traditional fixed-income buyers might require.
A broader investor base could reduce that pressure. For money-market, preferred-stock, and fixed-income investors, an 11.5% cash dividend remains large.
However, attracting that capital may require stronger proof that STRC can hold its range even during Bitcoin drawdowns.
The post Strategy’s $10 billion STRC Bitcoin yield product sinks to yearly low as market demands higher payout appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin is falling while Brent crude trades below $80 after the US-Iran peace framework.
The oil shock that dominated Bitcoin's 2026 macro trade has eased, yet BTC is still trading near $64,900, down roughly 2.5% over 24 hours on CryptoSlate's Bitcoin price page.
Brent's drop should have given risk assets a cleaner relief trade. Instead, it has exposed the next problem.
The market has moved past the simple oil-up, Bitcoin-down model. Lower crude removes a bearish driver. Restored liquidity support will still have to come from rates, ETF flows, and risk appetite through the end of 2026.
Global oil prices settled below $80 for the first time since the Iran war began, after the US-Iran framework pointed toward reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Ships were still not moving normally through the chokepoint, leaving the peace deal's operational effect unresolved.
President Donald Trump's public message that the Iran deal was complete gave traders the catalyst to remove part of the war premium from crude. Bitcoin's response puts liquidity, rates, risk appetite, ETF demand, and crypto buyers' willingness to step in after the geopolitical pressure at the center of the next trade.
The old Bitcoin trade was coherent. When the Iran war lifted crude prices, it threatened to push fuel costs through supply chains, keep inflation expectations elevated, delay Fed rate cuts, and leave risk assets with less oxygen.
That earlier oil-pressure setup was already evident when Bitcoin fell, as higher oil prices, higher yields, and the vanishing of rate-cut expectations tightened financial conditions. Oil became the first signal because it was the fastest way for the war to reach inflation, yields, and the Federal Reserve.
The Iran-deal rally framework made the same point from the other side. A peace framework could help Bitcoin only if lower crude oil prices translated into real oil flows, lower gasoline prices, softer inflation compensation, and a Fed path that looked less hostile to risk assets.
The first link in the confirmation chain has now moved. Crude has broken lower, and Bitcoin is failing to trade like an asset with a clear path back to upside.
Oil has shifted from main driver to background risk. If Hormuz traffic fails to normalize, or if energy markets reprice disruption, oil can still hurt Bitcoin. If crude keeps falling without a matching improvement in Fed expectations, ETF flows, and risk appetite, Bitcoin has less reason to rally.
The Fed remains central. The April FOMC minutes kept energy-driven inflation risk in view, and the 10-year Treasury yield was around 4.47% in the latest visible data.
That is a restrictive backdrop for a non-yielding asset that still trades like high-beta liquidity in stress periods.
The next Fed communication sits directly in that path. Bitcoin needs the market to believe lower oil will give policymakers room to stop leaning against risk.
A hawkish Fed message, sticky inflation language, or another push higher in real yields would leave the peace deal looking like a crude-market event rather than a Bitcoin liquidity event.
That is why the lower oil print places a different burden of proof on Bitcoin. The next confirmation has to come from the parts of the market that set liquidity: Fed communication, Treasury yields, dollar pressure, equity-risk appetite, ETF flows, and derivative positioning.

Bitcoin ETF flow data showed a small positive daily flow on June 16, but the magnitude is too small to account for the entire regime shift.
Earlier ETF-flow coverage showed how quickly institutional demand can turn from support into a stress point when oil, rates, and risk appetite move against Bitcoin.
That is why the year-end path depends less on one green ETF print than on repetition. Bitcoin needs several sessions in which lower oil is joined by steady ETF demand, softer yields, and a broader risk appetite.
Without that combination, the market may interpret the latest inflow as a pause in de-risking before any new allocation cycle begins.
Crypto-native liquidity is the final test. BTC open interest and futures volume were large enough to make positioning relevant for short-term price transmission, according to CoinGlass data.
Direction still depends on the catalyst. Any surprise from the Fed, ETF desk, or equity market can travel quickly through leveraged positioning.
| Signal | Oil-shock regime | Post-oil regime |
|---|---|---|
| First market question | Will crude keep inflation and yields high? | Will lower crude reach Fed expectations and risk appetite? |
| Bitcoin pressure point | Higher energy costs tightened financial conditions. | Weak liquidity and uneven ETF demand limit recovery. |
| Confirmation signal | Hormuz flows, gasoline, CPI, and Fed pricing. | ETF inflow streaks, softer yields, weaker dollar pressure, and risk-on equities. |
| Failure signal | Renewed crude stress and no rate-cut path. | BTC loses $60,000, yields rise, or ETF outflows return. |
The base case into year-end is a fragile, liquidity-led recovery attempt.
That is a more cautious view than the oil chart alone would suggest. Brent below $80 removes one of the biggest bearish inputs for 2026, but Bitcoin still has to rebuild the demand side.
The asset can recover if lower crude becomes lower inflation expectations, if yields drift lower, and if ETF flows shift from one-off positive days to steady demand.

The recovery lane is straightforward. Hormuz traffic normalizes, gasoline pressure eases, inflation compensation falls, and the Fed gets enough cover to sound less restrictive.
At the same time, Bitcoin ETF flows stabilize, spot demand improves, and BTC reclaims the $66,900 to $70,000 shelf that recent market-structure coverage highlighted as important.
In that lane, oil's job is to prevent the liquidity trade from being blocked. The upside would come from capital returning to Bitcoin as a scarce, liquid risk asset once rates and flows stop arguing against it.
The pressure lane is just as clear. The peace framework can stall at implementation, tanker traffic can remain impaired, or crude can reprice if shippers and insurers lose confidence in the route.
Even with lower oil, Bitcoin can remain pinned if the Fed removes easing hopes, if Treasury yields hold firm, or if ETF flows return to redemptions.
That is the key shift. Liquidity and risk appetite now carry the trade. Bitcoin's next move depends on whether the market sees the peace deal as a real disinflation shock or as a crude reset that leaves rates, dollar pressure, and ETF demand unresolved.
For the rest of 2026, liquidity and risk appetite have outpaced oil. Bitcoin's bullish case is still alive, but it now runs through the Fed, ETF desks, and the willingness of crypto capital to buy the dip after the war premium has already come out of crude.
The post Oil finally loses its grip on Bitcoin – but now liquidity takes over the sell pressure appeared first on CryptoSlate.
A megawatt leased to an AI tenant now commands a different price on Wall Street than a megawatt sitting in a Bitcoin miner's pipeline, and the distance between the two has become the central pricing question for the entire sector.
VanEck's latest framework for valuing publicly traded miners shows that companies with signed AI and high-performance computing leases trade at more than 10 times gross energy output, while miners with little or no contracted capacity trade at roughly 2 to 6 times that metric.
Investors have started treating leased megawatts as a distinct, more valuable asset class than mined Bitcoin or unsold power capacity.
| Metric | VanEck figure | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Miners with signed AI/HPC leases | Above 10x gross energized power | Wall Street is assigning a premium to contracted AI capacity |
| Miners with little or no contracted capacity | Roughly 2x–6x gross energized power | Pipeline alone is worth much less than signed leases |
| Delivered AI/HPC capacity | ~25% of leased capacity | Most contracted capacity still has to be built and delivered |
| Near-term funding shortfall | ~$50B | The sector needs major capital before leases become cash flow |
| Long-term capital need if pipelines convert | ~$221B | The AI pivot could become an infrastructure-scale financing cycleA |
VanEck puts delivered AI and HPC capacity across the peer group at only about 25% of what has been leased. Wall Street is paying for contracts today and for construction outcomes the sector has not yet delivered.
The near-term funding shortfall for that construction totals roughly $50 billion across the group, with long-term capital needs climbing toward $221 billion if the full pipeline of announced projects ultimately converts into built sites.
VanEck's valuation model assumes a baseline net operating income of about $1.5 million per megawatt for AI and colocation sites and applies an enterprise value multiple of 15 times that figure.
The model also offsets the result against greenfield construction costs of roughly $10 million per megawatt, climbing to about $12 million for projects further out as construction inflation compounds.
A single megawatt implies a gross enterprise value near $22.5 million, against a pre-financing value of about $12.5 million after capex, before any probability discount for delivery risk or financing costs is applied.
| Input | Assumption | Implied value |
|---|---|---|
| Net operating income per MW | ~$1.5M | Starting cash-flow base |
| Enterprise value multiple | 15x | Converts NOI into asset value |
| Gross enterprise value per MW | $1.5M × 15 | ~$22.5M |
| Greenfield construction cost | ~$10M/MW | Baseline capex deduction |
| Pre-financing value after capex | $22.5M – $10M | ~$12.5M |
| Further-out project capex | ~$12M/MW | Lower implied equity value if costs rise |
| Main sensitivity | Capex, timing, tenant quality | Small changes can materially alter shareholder upside |
Pushing the capex per megawatt up by a few million dollars, or stretching the delivery timeline by a year, and the equity value attached to that megawatt moves by a proportionally large amount.
VanEck's framework treats a megawatt leased to an investment-grade hyperscaler as supportable at an effective cost of capital between 6% and 10%. A similar megawatt leased to a smaller GPU cloud tenant can warrant a discount rate above 10%, the cost of capital growing directly with tenant risk.
A signed lease and an energized megawatt carry different values once the tenant's balance sheet is factored in. The same power, sold to a weaker counterparty, commands a smaller premium.
Closing a $50 billion near-term shortfall pulls miners toward financing tools drawn from infrastructure and project finance.
Project finance and debt bring fixed obligations onto balance sheets built around volatile mining margins. Bitcoin treasury sales convert an asset some miners spent years accumulating into construction capital, undercutting the original thesis that drew Bitcoin-focused investors into the stock in the first place.
Strategic partnerships and tenant prepayments offer a softer path, but they typically come with terms that shift a portion of the AI-era upside away from existing shareholders and toward whichever partner supplies the capital.
The International Energy Agency projects that global data center electricity consumption will roughly double from about 485 terawatt-hours in 2025 to around 950 terawatt-hours by 2030, with AI-specific data center consumption tripling over the same period.
McKinsey estimates that global data center spending could reach about $7 trillion by 2030, with roughly $5.2 trillion directed toward AI-capable facilities.
KKR's recently launched $10 billion AI infrastructure venture with Nvidia, and Vistra shows large financial institutions treating power-backed AI capacity as its own asset class, with capital scaling at a pace that matches the size of the opportunity miners are chasing.
The market continues to price miners based on Bitcoin's daily swings, even as VanEck's framework describes a business model migrating toward AI leases.
The peer group's average one-year weekly beta to Bitcoin is near 1.05, meaning the typical mining stock still moves in near lockstep with Bitcoin's price, even as its underlying cash flow story shifts toward AI leases.
Meaningful Bitcoin treasury exposure, the kind that would justify that beta, is concentrated in a handful of names.
| Company / group | BTC holdings as % of market cap | What it suggests |
|---|---|---|
| MARA | ~51% | Still meaningfully tied to Bitcoin treasury value |
| CLSK | ~24% | BTC exposure remains material |
| RIOT | ~11% | Some BTC balance-sheet linkage |
| HUT | ~7% | Limited but visible BTC exposure |
| Most other peers | ~1% or less | BTC beta may overstate actual balance-sheet exposure |
| Peer-group average beta to BTC | ~1.05 | Stocks still move almost one-for-one with Bitcoin |
MARA holds Bitcoin worth about 51% of its market cap, CLSK around 24%, RIOT near 11%, and HUT roughly 7%, while most peers hold Bitcoin at 1% or less of their market cap.
AI-focused winners can trade too cheaply during a Bitcoin selloff, while pipeline-heavy laggards can trade too richly whenever Bitcoin rallies.
VanEck's governance scorecard evaluates insider ownership, management KPIs, executive compensation structure, leadership tenure, and related-party transactions, and finds no company in the group scoring close to a perfect mark, with HIVE and BTDR ranking lower on the relative scale.
Funding tens of billions of dollars in AI infrastructure requires investors to trust management teams with capital budgets several orders of magnitude larger than anything a mining-era balance sheet previously demanded.
Governance gaps carried little consequence in a hash-rate business, and real weight in one that sells power to hyperscalers under long-dated contracts.
A bull case for the sector is that miner valuations migrate toward the framework already used for data-center REITs and infrastructure landlords.
Hyperscaler demand for power-dense, interconnection-ready sites stays intense, financing markets open up for creditworthy projects, and the miners furthest along in construction begin reporting delivered megawatts and recurring lease revenue.
Multiple-on-delivered capacity holds near or above the 10x level that VanEck already observes, and the premium the market assigned early is validated by the cash flow that eventually follows.
A bear case has the funding shortfall resolved through dilution, as construction costs climb past the $10 million-per-megawatt baseline due to rising labor, equipment, and grid interconnection expenses.
Debt gets priced for a sector with limited operating history as an infrastructure landlord, pushing miners toward equity issuance or Bitcoin monetization to bridge the shortfall before AI revenue materializes.
Shareholders fund the buildout, and a meaningful share of the eventual upside flows instead to lenders, strategic partners, or the buyers of newly issued equity who priced their entry after the dilution.
The test that decides which case plays out has nothing to do with the size of a miner's next AI announcement.
It comes down to delivered megawatts relative to leased megawatts, the credit quality of the tenant signing each lease, and the actual capex required per megawatt once ground is broken.
It also depends on the financing structure chosen to bridge the distance between today's cash and tomorrow's revenue, and on whether each company's governance can support capital allocation at infrastructure scale.
Wall Street has already decided these companies are worth more as AI infrastructure than as Bitcoin miners.
What remains unsettled is whether investors are paying for AI cash flow that has not yet materialized, or for a construction pipeline that still needs tens of billions of dollars before it becomes AI revenue at all.
The post Wall Street is paying up for Bitcoin miners’ AI infrastructure before most of it is built appeared first on CryptoSlate.
A trading desk facing a possible $1 million loss if a specific tariff takes effect by the third quarter typically hedges that risk through currency or commodity proxies, instruments that move with the broader noise around a tariff decision.
A prediction market contract skips the proxy by letting the desk buy I heard it the other day and can't stop listening to it. “Yes” shares on whether the tariff is implemented by the third quarter, paying roughly $0.10 per share for a contract that pays $1 if the event resolves true.
Offsetting the full $1 million loss on a net basis requires about 1.11 million contracts, for a total cost near $111,000, a calculation that depends entirely on whether the order book can absorb a position that size without moving the price against the buyer first.
| Hedge component | Example value | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Possible corporate loss | $1,000,000 | The exposure the company wants to offset |
| Contract price | $0.10 | Upfront cost per “Yes” share |
| Payout if event happens | $1.00 | Winning binary contract redemption value |
| Net gain per winning contract | $0.90 | $1 payout minus $0.10 cost |
| Contracts needed | ~1.11 million | $1M loss divided by $0.90 net gain |
| Approximate hedge cost | ~$111,000 | 1.11M contracts × $0.10 |
| Key constraint | Order-book depth | The quote only works if size can be bought near $0.10 |
That disconnect between the quoted price and the real cost of a meaningful hedge sits at the center of a move now underway.
Kalshi institutional trading volume rose 800% over six months, alongside the platform's first customized block trade.
Hedge funds and asset managers are exploring contracts tied to scheduled economic releases, such as monthly payroll data, often pairing them with offsetting positions elsewhere in the portfolio.
Combined monthly volume across Kalshi and Polymarket climbed from $7.2 billion in January to roughly $14 billion by June, according to DefiLlama data. The contracts behave like binary options, where a winning share is redeemed for $1 and a losing share is worthless.
| Market signal | Reported figure | What it means for institutional hedging |
|---|---|---|
| Combined Kalshi + Polymarket monthly volume in January | $7.2B | Prediction markets already had meaningful trading activity at the start of the year |
| Combined Kalshi + Polymarket monthly volume by June | ~$14B | Monthly activity nearly doubled, showing rising institutional and retail demand |
| Kalshi institutional volume growth over six months | +800% | Institutions are moving from observation to actual trading |
| Kalshi customized block trades | First customized block trade completed | Block execution is emerging as a way to handle larger institutional orders |
| Liquidity in some top Polymarket markets | ~$30M | A corporate-sized hedge can still be hard to execute without moving the price |
| Core constraint | Depth, not access | The displayed price may not be the true cost of a meaningful hedge |
Marcin Kazmierczak, co-founder at RedStone, described to CryptoSlate the structure as a desk exposed to a specific outcome, a rate decision, a regulatory ruling, or a named corporate event, that can take an offsetting position that pays out precisely when the adverse scenario hits.
A prediction market contract can be written directly against whether a particular regulation passes in a particular quarter, whether a court blocks a specific product, or whether a government shutdown delays a specific data release.
Kazmierczak noted that accessibility is not the institutional barrier:
“The barriers that matter to an institution are not access, they are liquidity depth, legal and counterparty clarity, and settlement integrity.”
Reports noted that shallow order books can make large trades difficult to execute without changing the price, and some top Polymarket markets hold only about $30 million in total liquidity.
Eneko Knorr, chief executive of Stabolut, said that buying a contract tied directly to a bad event removes the guesswork of estimating how that event ripples through a portfolio through proxies and correlations.
He cited Hyperliquid's adoption among professional traders as evidence that decentralized trading tools are already displacing parts of traditional infrastructure. His enthusiasm carries an immediate condition: large asset managers will not accept a system in which a wealthy participant can effectively buy the outcome.
A corporate hedge protects the real balance sheet, which considerably raises the cost of a bad resolution. For a CFO, the expensive scenario involves a hedge that should have paid out under the terms of the underlying event, but did not because the market's resolution process produced a different outcome.
Polymarket settles disputed outcomes through UMA's Optimistic Oracle, a system in which any participant can propose a resolution and dispute it, with the final decision determined by a token-weighted vote among UMA holders.
That design works cleanly when an outcome is unambiguous, but it turned into the headline itself in March 2025, when a roughly $7 million Polymarket contract tied to a Ukraine minerals deal resolved “Yes” after the implied probability surged from 9% to 100%, even as disagreement persisted over whether the underlying agreement had actually been finalized.
A second case is a market exceeding $60 million, asking whether Strategy sold Bitcoin by May 31, and the company's own securities filing confirmed a 32 BTC sale during the May 26-31 window.
The market resolved “No” anyway, tied to how the contract's rules interpreted the timing of public confirmation, highlighting the basis-risk problem in its purest form: a contract's wording diverges from the economic reality it was written to track.
Bloomberg reported that nine wallets accounted for roughly half of all UMA tokens used in Polymarket dispute votes over three years, out of over 6,400 accounts that had participated in at least one dispute.
| Failure point | Example from article | Why it matters for institutions |
|---|---|---|
| Liquidity risk | Large trades can shift prices in shallow order books | A hedge may cost more than the quoted market price |
| Basis risk | Strategy sold 32 BTC, but the market resolved “No” based on confirmation timing | The economic event and contract rules can diverge |
| Resolution risk | Ukraine minerals market resolved “Yes” despite dispute over whether the agreement was finalized | A hedge can fail because of interpretation, not market direction |
| Governance concentration | Nine wallets accounted for roughly half of UMA tokens used in Polymarket dispute votes | A few large holders can dominate contested outcomes |
| Legal/compliance risk | CFTC rules, state pushback, and Kalshi disclosure changes | Corporate use depends on defensible oversight and reporting |
Kazmierczak said the vulnerability lies in the concentration of token-weighted human votes. A handful of large holders can move a contested outcome regardless of how the underlying event actually played out, leaving a resolution risk entirely uncorrelated with the risk a company was trying to hedge in the first place.
His proposed fix consists of markets built around a precisely defined, verifiable data source, leaving a vote with almost nothing to interpret, because the answer comes from the data.
UMA's own move toward a managed, allowlisted proposer model after the Ukraine dispute reads as an acknowledgment that open, token-weighted voting invited such capture.
Knorr's view aligns with the institutional view: asset managers choose venues whose resolution processes are anchored in verifiable data because no risk committee can defend a loss caused by a disputed vote.
The CFTC's June 10 draft rules aim to formalize federal oversight of prediction markets, acknowledging that some sports and event contracts can support legitimate price discovery, even as states, tribes, and gaming interests push back.
Kalshi announced on June 9 that it would require employment disclosures for certain sensitive contracts and would stand up a whistleblower portal, a compliance move aimed at meeting the surveillance expectations that institutional desks already apply to listed markets.

Liquidity could deepen as regulated venues standardize block execution and contract templates, giving risk desks order books wide enough to size real hedges and resolution rules narrow enough to leave little room for dispute.
Objective, data-sourced contracts would become the default for anything carrying institutional weight, and event hedging would graduate from a tail-risk tool used in isolated cases to a standing part of how treasuries manage exposure to regulatory and macro catalysts that traditional derivatives price poorly.
The alternative path keeps adoption capped at the current experimental scale. Firms test contracts on payroll releases or rate decisions, but legal and accounting teams limit position sizes because the instruments sit in a regulatory gray zone, and order books stay too thin to support anything beyond a token allocation.
A single disputed settlement involving a corporate-sized position, resolved against the economically correct outcome because of wording or a concentrated vote, would confirm every reservation a risk committee already holds and push institutional users toward venues that guarantee settlement without a token vote.
Prediction markets need sufficient depth to size a real hedge, sufficient precision in the contract language to match the actual exposure, and sufficient certainty in dispute resolution for a CFO to defend the position to the board.
Institutional volume is climbing, and the open question is whether they can trust what happens when an outcome is contested, and millions of dollars hang in the balance.
The post Prediction markets can hedge corporate losses – Who decides if they pay out? appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Iran's foreign minister said negotiations with the US will begin the same day both countries sign a memorandum of understanding, with a 60-day window afterward to resolve the nuclear issue and secure sanctions relief.
Bitcoin reacted to the framework itself, a memorandum signed before any of its harder terms were settled. Brent crude fell about 5% to $78.96, and WTI settled at $76.05, both near three-month lows, as traders priced in the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and renewed Iranian oil exports.
The Strait of Hormuz carried about 20% of global oil and petroleum product consumption and more than a quarter of global seaborne oil trade in 2024 and early 2025, according to the US Energy Information Administration.
A credible reduction in the odds of disruption there removes one of the market's clearer tail risks, and that removal alone explains the day's crude selloff. The MOU also allows Iran to begin selling oil and fuel under newly issued waivers, adding near-term supply that could keep prices lower if shipments actually move.
| What improves immediately | What remains unresolved over 60 days |
|---|---|
| Lower probability of Strait of Hormuz disruption | Final nuclear terms |
| Brent down about 5% to $78.96 | Full sanctions relief schedule |
| WTI settled at $76.05 | Verification and inspection regime |
| Iranian oil and fuel waivers begin | Durable normalization of Iranian exports |
| Immediate inflation-shock risk falls | Whether lower oil lasts long enough to affect Fed policy |
| Risk assets get a relief catalyst | Whether the MOU becomes a final settlement |
The first phase of the foreign minister's own timeline covers de-escalation steps already underway.
The second phase, the 60 days following the MOU's signing, is when negotiators take up the nuclear question and the schedule for lifting sanctions, the two issues that have the greatest bearing on Iran's long-term oil access and its economic reintegration.
A proposed $300 billion reconstruction fund would only become operational once a final deal is signed, and the current MOU establishes only a planning phase.
CIA Director John Ratcliffe and other senior US officials stay skeptical that Iran will make the nuclear concessions a final agreement would require. The market priced out an immediate energy shock without pricing in a settled outcome, since the negotiation that would produce one hasn't happened yet.
Bitcoin sits downstream of every variable that a Hormuz scare disrupts, despite having no direct exposure to Iranian crude itself.
A Reuters poll found nearly 70% of economists expect the Fed to hold rates at 3.50%-3.75% through the rest of 2026, with no economist surveyed anticipating a cut at the June 16-17 meeting.
A 5% crude price decline in a single session changes the inflation conversation only at the margin, while moving a Fed already on hold requires a sustained, multi-month decline in energy prices.
The chain Bitcoin actually needs starts with durable de-escalation, which would normalize oil flows across the full 60-day window, ease inflationary pressure, soften the Fed's posture, and loosen liquidity conditions that broadly lift risk assets.
| Step | Market variable | Bitcoin relevance |
|---|---|---|
| MOU signed | Geopolitical risk premium falls | Immediate relief bid for risk assets |
| Hormuz disruption risk declines | Oil tail risk falls | Lower chance of an inflation shock |
| Iranian exports normalize | Crude supply improves | Sustained pressure on oil prices |
| Oil stays lower | Inflation expectations ease | Fed has more room to soften |
| Fed tone shifts | Real yields / dollar pressure ease | Liquidity backdrop improves |
| Liquidity improves | Risk appetite rises | Bitcoin gets a stronger macro tailwind |
The June 16 announcement starts that chain, with each remaining link depending on negotiators converting the framework into specific, durable terms over the next two months.
Every update over the next 60 days now carries pricing power over the same trade. News on uranium enrichment levels, the sanctions-waiver schedule, Hormuz shipping volumes, Iranian export data, inspection terms, or congressional reaction in Washington can each reprice crude and, with it, Bitcoin's macro backdrop.
The market has converted Iran risk into a series of checkpoints spread over two months, with the deadline itself serving as a forcing event that could move markets sharply in either direction, depending on what negotiators deliver by then.
Negotiators reach a final agreement within the 60-day window, codifying sanctions relief and normalizing Iranian oil exports on a durable basis, thereby keeping crude structurally lower as supply genuinely returns to the market.
Inflation expectations ease enough for the Fed to soften its tone, real yields drift lower, and the liquidity backdrop supporting Bitcoin and other high-beta assets improves on a fundamentals basis. Under this path, the rally that started becomes the first leg of a longer move.
| Scenario | What happens | Oil / inflation impact | Bitcoin impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Final deal lands | Nuclear terms, sanctions relief, and export normalization are agreed within 60 days | Crude risk premium stays lower; inflation pressure eases | Relief rally can become a broader macro rally |
| Talks drag or stall | Nuclear limits, verification, or sanctions sequencing remain unresolved | Oil risk premium rebuilds; Fed path stays tight | Bitcoin gives back relief gains |
| Partial extension | De-escalation holds, but final terms are delayed | Oil stabilizes but uncertainty remains | BTC trades headline-to-headline |
| Breakdown risk | Talks fail or Hormuz/shipping fears return | Oil spikes; inflation fears return | BTC sells off with risk assets |
The 60 days pass without producing the clarity markets are pricing toward, in the alternative case. Iran and the US continue talking, but uranium enrichment limits, the verification regime, or the sequencing of sanctions relief prove harder to settle than the de-escalation steps that came first.
Oil's risk premium rebuilds as shipping through Hormuz stays only partially normalized, and the Fed's rate path stays exactly where the June poll already placed it, unmoved by a framework that never converted into a final settlement.
Bitcoin gives back some or all of the recent relief gains as the macro variables that justified the rally revert toward their levels before the MOU, and traders who treated the announcement as a clean de-escalation story discover they were trading a deadline.
What negotiators produce by the time the 60-day clock runs out will decide more about Bitcoin's Iran trade than the announcement itself did.
The framework reduced the probability of an immediate oil shock, a smaller achievement than proving Bitcoin has entered a lower-inflation, easier-liquidity macro regime.
That proof, if it arrives, depends on whether the next two months convert a memorandum into a settlement, and until then, every leak out of the negotiating room carries the weight of an unresolved trade.
The post Bitcoin’s Iran rally enters a 60-day test as oil shock fears shift to the Fed appeared first on CryptoSlate.
SpaceX and Ethereum represent two very different bets on the future — one a stake in the most valuable private space and satellite company ever to go public, the other the leading smart-contract network underpinning most of decentralized finance. Over the past year, their performance has diverged sharply. This comparison measures each on a like-for-like basis: an Ethereum position opened one year ago versus a SpaceX position taken at its IPO, both valued against current prices.
The starting and current values for each asset:
In percentage terms, that's roughly −32% for Ethereum over twelve months and +49% for SpaceX in a matter of weeks.
Applying a $5,000 investment to each entry point makes the gap concrete.
Ethereum at ~$2,600:
SpaceX at $135:
On identical starting capital, the two positions are separated by more than $4,000 — the SpaceX holding is worth over double the Ethereum holding.
SPCX's outperformance reflects a combination of structural and market factors:

Ethereum's decline is a function of cycle timing rather than any breakdown in its fundamentals. ETH peaked near $4,950 in 2025 before entering a multi-month correction and consolidation phase, weighed down by tighter macro conditions, moderating institutional inflows, and a broad crypto risk-off period. An investor who entered near last year's elevated levels is therefore underwater today, even though the network continues to settle substantial value and remains central to DeFi and tokenization.

The critical variable is entry timing: an Ethereum position opened two years ago would show a gain today, whereas one opened a year ago, closer to the highs, shows a loss. Volatility cuts both ways depending entirely on the entry point.
A few factors temper the headline result:
Past performance and forward prospects are separate questions. SPCX has delivered the stronger return, but at ~$201 it carries elevated post-IPO risk, and a move back toward its IPO price would not be unusual for a stock that has risen this quickly. Ethereum, at ~$1,760, trades closer to historically oversold territory than to euphoria, which gives it clearer room to recover should the crypto cycle turn on easing macro conditions and renewed risk appetite.
Measured strictly on the trades described, SpaceX is the clear winner, converting $5,000 into roughly $7,444 while the same amount in Ethereum declined to about $3,385. The decisive factors were entry price and timing rather than any inherent superiority of one asset over the other.
The broader takeaway is that returns are driven primarily by entry point, time horizon, and asset type — not by which name carries more momentum at any given moment. SpaceX was the better investment over the past year; the better investment over the next year remains an open question that depends on each asset's distinct trajectory from here.
Two of the most talked-about assets of the past year sit at opposite ends of the performance table right now. SpaceX (SPCX) just completed a record-shattering IPO and has been ripping higher ever since, while $Bitcoin — the original "number-go-up" asset — is actually well below where it traded a year ago. So if you had money to put to work, which one would have rewarded you more?
Let's run the numbers on both, using a clear apples-to-apples comparison: a SpaceX investor who bought at the IPO launch versus a Bitcoin investor who bought one year ago, both measured against today's prices.
*Investments carry risks. Trade responsibly.
Here's where each asset stands today versus its entry point:
On the surface, it's not close: the SpaceX IPO buyer is sitting on a near-50% gain in a matter of weeks, while the year-ago Bitcoin buyer is deep in the red.
Numbers feel more real in dollars. Imagine you put $1,000 into each:
SpaceX at IPO launch ($135):

Bitcoin one year ago (~$106,000):

Same $1,000, wildly different outcomes. The SpaceX position nearly grew by half; the Bitcoin position lost more than a third of its value. The gap between them is over $870 on a $1,000 stake.
SpaceX's debut wasn't just big — it was the largest IPO in history, opening at a ~$1.77 trillion valuation. A few forces drove SPCX higher out of the gate:
Bitcoin's decline isn't a knock on the asset's long-term thesis — it's a reminder of its volatility. The past 12 months saw BTC hit an all-time high near $126,000 in late 2025 before a sharp retracement, dragged lower by tightening macro conditions, ETF outflows, and a months-long geopolitical conflict that crushed risk appetite. At ~$65,200, Bitcoin sits well off both its highs and its year-ago level.
The key nuance: your Bitcoin return depends enormously on when you bought. A buyer from two years ago is still comfortably in profit; the year-ago buyer who caught the top is not. That timing sensitivity is the whole story with a volatile asset.
Before crowning SpaceX, a few critical caveats matter:
If you're scoring purely on the trades described — SpaceX at IPO versus Bitcoin a year ago — SpaceX is the clear winner, turning $1,000 into ~$1,489 while Bitcoin shrank it to ~$615. The IPO buyer caught a once-in-a-generation listing; the Bitcoin buyer caught a cycle top.
But investing isn't about the cleanest backtest — it's about what happens next. SpaceX carries classic post-IPO froth risk at $201, while Bitcoin at $65,200 is closer to historically oversold territory than to euphoria. The better past investment was clearly SPCX. The better future investment depends on your time horizon, your risk tolerance, and whether you believe a hot IPO keeps running or a beaten-down Bitcoin mounts another comeback.
As always: past performance tells you what happened, not what will.
DeFi emerged in 2020 with a vision to build solutions on top of the existing bottlenecks in the centralized financial system. In the last two years since its inception, by riding on some of the unparalleled use-cases like flash loans, liquidity mining, staking, yield farming, and compounding interest rates, the ecosystem exploded to $87 billion. DEXs emerged as the hotspots for witnessing maximum DeFi activities. Some of the users within the ecosystem who had earlier registered on Cex or Centralized exchanges moved their assets to Dex or decentralized exchanges for interacting with the DeFi protocols via wallets.
However, one thing which was like an elephant in the room was inconvenience causing trouble for the users. For example, users had to buy cryptocurrencies on one exchange and transfer the same to another DEX for operation. In this way, the process not only killed a lot of time, wasted their resources and caused inconvenience to users; but also deprived them of a good earning opportunity. Hence, to quicken decision-making, maximize ROIs and fix the fragmented operational process, crypto aggregators are an amenable choice moving forward in 2023.
Crypto aggregators establish a system through the use of Dapps, smart-contract, oracles, and APIs, where data from different DEX and CEX are clubbed together on a single platform with price feeds integrated. In this way, the traders need not have to shuffle between exchanges to find out the best prices for an asset. On the contrary, they can simply log in to the crypto aggregator and trade from those platforms. In some rare instances, some of the crypto aggregators allow trading in cryptocurrencies pairs which are not supported even on some of the renowned exchanges operational across the world.

Crypto aggregators use price oracles that connect to multiple exchanges to provide the latest price feeds. You can take this as an example. Suppose, if you are visiting a holiday destination, there may be multiple hotels available for accommodation. If you have to go and check every hotel to find the best prices, it would take a lot of time and money. However, to ease the process, there’s a website that directly connects with all the hotels present in that holiday destination and tracks all their offers and prices to facilitate quick booking on the go. Using that website, the user can track even the smallest fluctuations in the prices that the hotels provide and grab the opportunity to book their services.
A crypto aggregator works much like the same where it tracks all crypto exchanges through price oracles and APIs to give the latest price for the crypto. Once the user/trader picks up a trade, the protocol runs the trade across all exchanges and swap protocols. Upon finding the best platform for the trade, the protocols execute the trade and the trader ends up making the maximum profit which would have been otherwise impossible without the crypto aggregator’s help.
1inch is the most-used aggregator on EVM chains and the project that popularized split routing back in 2019. It remains the benchmark for anyone trading on Ethereum, BNB Chain, Arbitrum, Base, and the wider EVM ecosystem.
What makes it stand out:
Best for: Most EVM same-chain swaps, multi-hop altcoin trades, and traders who want a single battle-tested router across all the major chains.
Watch for: On Ethereum, gas can be significant, and 1inch sometimes captures value through positive slippage. For large EVM trades, default to Fusion (intent) mode rather than classic routing.
If your assets live on Solana, the choice is effectively made for you. Jupiter is the uncontested default, routing roughly 80% of all aggregator volume on the network — its next three competitors combined don't match its weekly throughput.
What makes it stand out:
Best for: Any swap on Solana, from memecoin trades to stablecoin routing to portfolio rebalancing.
Watch for: Solana has no public mempool in the EVM sense, but it has its own forms of priority gaming — Jupiter's transaction simulation helps, but be mindful on volatile, low-liquidity pairs.
For traders who care more about protection than speed — especially on large orders — CoW Swap is purpose-built. It takes a fundamentally different approach to execution that makes sandwich attacks structurally difficult.
What makes it stand out:
Best for: Large EVM trades, stablecoin swaps at size, and anyone who prioritizes MEV-resistant execution over instant settlement.
Watch for: Batch settlement adds a little latency. If you need immediate execution, a classic router may suit you better — but never publish a five-figure swap to the public mempool without protection.
The simplest way to think about it in 2026:
A few universal tips: going direct to the aggregator's own site usually nets the same or better price than the wallet integration, and unlocks advanced modes (Fusion, batch auctions) that wallets don't always surface. For maximum safety, pair any aggregator with a hardware wallet so you keep full custody of your funds throughout.
The aggregator category is in the middle of an architectural shift toward intent-based trading — you express what you want, and solvers compete to deliver it. By the end of 2026, most retail EVM volume is expected to flow through intent systems like 1inch Fusion and CoW Swap rather than direct router calls, while Jupiter keeps its iron grip on Solana.
For most traders, you don't need to overthink it: pick the leader for your chain, default to intent mode on large trades, and let the aggregator do the work of finding your best price across a fragmented market.
Two markets moved in opposite directions on the same headline. As the United States and Iran confirmed a peace deal to end their nearly four-month war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, crude oil tumbled to a three-month low — while Bitcoin and the entire top 10 crypto market posted a green week. The reason is the same for both: the single biggest geopolitical risk premium weighing on global markets is finally unwinding.
Here's the full breakdown of the oil crash, the latest US–Iran war developments, and how the top 10 cryptocurrencies performed over the past 7 days.
The de-escalation hit energy markets hard. US crude oil closed down 4.8% to $80.75 per barrel, while international Brent crude fell 4.7% to $83.17 — the lowest closing prices for both benchmarks since the first week of March, right after the war began.
The slide was not a one-day event. Oil had already tumbled more than 6% over the prior week in anticipation of an agreement, meaning the market front-ran the news before the official confirmation even landed. Heating oil, a proxy for jet fuel, dropped more than 3.5%, and wholesale gasoline fell more than 2.5%.

The catalyst is the Strait of Hormuz. Roughly 20% of the world's oil supplies passed through the strait before tanker traffic collapsed in early March, and its closure triggered one of the largest oil supply shocks on record. With Trump authorizing the toll-free reopening of the strait and lifting the US naval blockade, traders are pricing in the return of Gulf energy flows.
**CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 74% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
The diplomatic picture firmed up over the weekend but still carries open questions:
The takeaway: the framework is in place and markets are treating it as real, but the June 19 signing in Switzerland is the event that converts intention into commitment. Until then, expect headline-driven volatility in both energy and risk assets.
While oil sank, crypto climbed. The lifting of the geopolitical overhang pushed risk appetite back into digital assets, with every major name green over the trailing 7 days. Here's how the top 10 (excluding stablecoins Tether and USDC) performed:
The pattern is textbook risk-on rotation: the higher-beta, more speculative names (SOL leading at +4.62%) outperformed the steadier large caps (BTC, ETH, BNB), while the broad-market index of the top 20 climbed roughly 5% on the week.

The oil-down, crypto-up split tells a single story: markets are repricing a world with less war risk. Cheaper energy eases inflation pressure at the margin, a lifted naval blockade restores global trade flows, and the removal of the geopolitical premium frees up risk appetite for assets like Bitcoin that sold off hardest during the conflict.
But this is a relief rally built on an agreement, not yet a signature. Three things to watch into the week ahead:
For now, the message from both markets is aligned: the war premium is coming out, and risk assets are breathing again.
After the largest IPO in history, SpaceX stock refused to cool off. On its second trading day, SPCX extended its record debut, climbing through the $180s and pushing to an intraday high of $192.37 — well above its $135 IPO price and the ~$172 first-day peak. The message from the market is blunt: demand for SpaceX shares did not stop at the opening bell.
If you missed the IPO allocation and want exposure to SPCX, this guide breaks down the day-two price action and then walks you through exactly how to trade SpaceX stock, step by step.
The second session was a clean uptrend with two distinct legs. After opening softer in the low $160s, $SPCX dipped toward the $158–160 zone early before buyers stepped in hard. From that intraday low, the stock built a staircase of higher highs and higher lows through the afternoon — pushing past $172, consolidating around $176–180, and then breaking out into the close to tag $192.37, its highest print since listing.

Three takeaways from the chart:
A few forces are stacking in SpaceX's favor heading into day two:
That said, this is still a freshly listed, highly volatile stock. Parabolic post-IPO moves can reverse just as fast as they rise, so position sizing and risk management matter more here than usual.
If you want to trade SPCX without waiting for another allocation, XTB is one of the most accessible regulated brokers for accessing stocks and stock CFDs. Here's the full process from zero to your first trade.
Head to XTB and start the sign-up here:
👉 Open an XTB account
Enter your email, set a password, and select your country of residence. The initial registration takes only a couple of minutes. XTB offers both a live account (real funds) and a demo account, so if you want to practice the SPCX trade first with virtual money, you can start on the demo and switch to live later.
*Investments carry risks. Trade responsibly.
Like all regulated brokers, XTB requires identity verification (KYC) before you can trade with real funds. You'll be asked to:
Verification is typically fast — often completed within the same day. Once approved, your account is ready to fund.
Open the deposit section in your XTB dashboard and choose a funding method. XTB generally supports:
Card and e-wallet deposits are usually credited near-instantly, while bank transfers can take longer. Fund only what you're comfortable risking on a volatile post-IPO stock like SPCX.
Once your balance is live:
That's it — you're trading SpaceX stock. 👉 Get started on XTB here
*Investments carry risks. Trade responsibly.
With SPCX printing fresh highs at $192, the key question is whether momentum carries into day three or whether the stock cools after such a vertical run. Watch a few signals:
For traders, SPCX offers a high-octane way to play one of the most anticipated listings in market history. Just remember that the same volatility fueling these gains can erase them quickly, which is why a regulated broker with proper risk tools matters.
Allbirds, meet Smartbird: The shoe brand has completed its AI pivot, rebranding while hiring a new president and CEO to lead the charge.
A Miami-based man who went by the name “Bitcoin Rodney” pleaded guilty for his role in what prosecutors said was a massive global fraud.
Benchmark-StoneX reiterated a $270 price target for COIN—60% higher than Coinbase’s current share price—following an array of product announcements.
Senators Gallego and Lummis want the chamber on record that the FTX fraudster should get no clemency under any circumstances.
The wall between crypto and TradFi continues to break down as Coinbase ushers in non-crypto products.
On-chain data from blockchain analytics platform CryptoQuant reveals that nearly half of the entire circulating supply of stablecoins has remained dormant on cryptocurrency exchanges.
Eli Ben-Sasson warns of a historic crypto downturn as startups face mass closures, but explains why a market reset is necessary.
RippleX chief engineer Ayo Akinyele breaks down the multi-year strategy protecting XRP Ledger from 9-minute quantum cracks while pioneering AI machine wallets.
The world’s largest Bitcoin treasury firm has begun to pay dividends for its stock two times in a month, offering its shareholders a more frequent payment plan.
Shiba Inu golden cross comes at an inflexion point in the market with altcoin sell pressure reaching rare extremes.
Moody’s has expanded its blockchain strategy by bringing machine-readable credit ratings to Solana through a new integration with Alphaledger.
The move places one of the world’s most widely used credit assessment systems directly on a public blockchain network. It also marks the first time Moody’s ratings can operate at scale on a major permissionless chain.
The deployment adds another institutional finance layer to Solana’s growing real-world asset ecosystem.
According to a release from Moody’s Corporation, Moody’s Ratings has extended its Token Integration Engine, known as TIE, to the Solana network. The integration comes through Alphaledger, a platform focused on tokenized fixed-income assets.
The launch follows a proof-of-concept completed on Solana’s devnet in June 2025. That earlier test explored how credit ratings could become part of tokenized securities issued on-chain.
With the deployment now live, issuers using Alphaledger can choose to attach Moody’s Ratings data directly to tokenized fixed-income instruments. The information becomes available within the asset’s digital infrastructure rather than through separate external systems.
Moody’s stated that the rollout makes its ratings ready for large-scale deployment on a major public blockchain. The company also noted that TIE was designed to function across different blockchain environments rather than a single network.
The development follows Moody’s first blockchain-based ratings deployment on the Canton Network in March 2026. At the time, the company introduced ratings delivery capabilities on a permissioned institutional blockchain.
The latest integration brings Moody’s credit data into Solana’s expanding real-world asset sector. Credit ratings play a central role in traditional fixed-income markets by helping investors evaluate risk.
Moody’s said investors increasingly transact on blockchain networks and require access to independent credit assessments in those environments. The company described TIE as a network-agnostic framework built to support that transition.
Alphaledger stated that embedding ratings directly into tokenized assets removes the need for separate credit lookups. The platform highlighted municipal debt markets as one area where integrated ratings could support institutional participation.
The Solana Foundation also addressed the launch. According to information shared by the foundation, the network now becomes the first public permissionless blockchain capable of supporting Moody’s machine-readable credit ratings directly on-chain.
The release noted that credit information can now travel alongside tokenized assets throughout their lifecycle. Market participants can access independent credit analysis within the asset structure itself rather than relying on disconnected data sources.
Moody’s indicated that additional blockchain integrations remain under consideration as digital finance adoption grows. The company plans to expand TIE coverage across more networks, business lines, and financial instruments over time.
The post Moody’s Credit Ratings Go Live on Solana as Institutional RWA Push Expands appeared first on Blockonomi.
The space industry witnessed a monumental event in June 2026 when SpaceX entered the public markets with a staggering $1.77 trillion valuation. Trading activity quickly pushed the company’s market capitalization beyond $2 trillion, positioning it among the planet’s most valuable enterprises.
Space Exploration Technologies Corp., SPCX
Financial results from 2025 revealed revenues of $18.67 billion, representing substantial growth from the previous year’s $14.02 billion. However, aggressive capital deployment in rocket technology and infrastructure resulted in a $4.94 billion net deficit.
SpaceX has evolved far beyond its original rocket-launching mission. Today’s operations encompass launch services, reusable rocket technology, and the Starlink satellite internet division. Reuters characterizes the company as a comprehensive “space, satellite and AI provider.”
The Starlink division provides SpaceX with predictable, subscription-based income that distinguishes it from traditional aerospace competitors. This broadband operation has achieved meaningful scale, with future expansion tied to Starship advancement, government procurement, and global Starlink deployment.
Investors must grapple with valuation concerns. The current price reflects extraordinary growth expectations despite ongoing profitability challenges.
AST SpaceMobile pursues an alternative strategy. This company develops satellite infrastructure enabling direct communication with standard mobile devices without specialized equipment.
AST SpaceMobile, Inc., ASTS
A SpaceX launch on June 17 deployed three additional AST BlueBird satellites, expanding the operational constellation to nine units. The company projects having 45 satellites operational before 2026 concludes.
First-quarter 2026 financial results showed $14.7 million in revenue alongside a -$0.66 earnings per share. The balance sheet reflects $3.5 billion in cash reserves, with management reaffirming annual revenue projections of $150-$200 million for 2026.
The investment narrative remains speculative. Market participants are wagering on eventual commercialization rather than existing scale.
Despite the recent launch success, uncertainties persist. Barron’s highlighted that investors await confirmation of complete satellite deployment and operational functionality.
The chasm separating these companies centers on operational validation. SpaceX operates an established, revenue-generating commercial space enterprise. AST SpaceMobile continues demonstrating its direct-to-device concept can achieve global viability.
SpaceX delivers greater predictability. It possesses established revenue streams, developed infrastructure, and proven execution. AST SpaceMobile presents superior upside potential should its network achieve commercial maturity, though execution risks remain substantially elevated.
Analyst coverage mirrors this distinction. Eleven analysts track AST SpaceMobile with a Reduce consensus: one buy rating, seven hold recommendations, and three sell ratings. Their average price objective sits at $81.33.
SpaceX’s recent public debut precludes comprehensive analyst consensus, though its immediate post-IPO valuation demonstrates significant investor confidence in its market dominance.
While both organizations operate within the broader space sector, their developmental stages differ dramatically.
Investor selection ultimately hinges on preference: established operations versus speculative growth potential.
The post SpaceX (SPCX) vs AST SpaceMobile (ASTS): A Complete Investment Comparison for 2026 appeared first on Blockonomi.
CrowdStrike (CRWD) unveiled Wednesday a significant expansion of its collaboration with Amazon Web Services, incorporating AWS into Project QuiltWorks while broadening its AI-powered security capabilities to encompass applications developed on AWS infrastructure.
The stock traded 1.1% higher at $687.51 when the partnership expansion was announced.
CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc., CRWD
Project QuiltWorks represents CrowdStrike’s strategic framework built to provide ongoing monitoring and protection for cloud workloads facing AI-specific security threats. With AWS now part of this initiative, the scope of protected cloud infrastructure expands considerably.
The centerpiece of Wednesday’s announcement involves broadening Falcon AI Detection and Response capabilities. This security solution now supports AI applications developed on AWS platforms, specifically Amazon Bedrock, Kiro, and Strands Agents.
The technology delivers immediate security assessment of interactions between agents and large language models. Its primary objective is identifying and stopping prompt injection attacks, unauthorized data exposure, and harmful AI behaviors in real-time.
CrowdStrike has also simplified the onboarding process for prospective clients. Three flagship offerings — Falcon Next-Gen SIEM, Falcon Cloud Security, and Falcon Endpoint Security — can now be accessed via AWS Marketplace featuring 30-day complimentary trials through flexible pay-as-you-go pricing.
This approach creates a frictionless entry point for enterprises looking to evaluate the platform before committing.
For software developers, the company unveiled a Falcon MCP integration compatible with Kiro. This integration enables developers to access CrowdStrike threat intelligence and security information directly within their development environments while building applications.
The integration connects with Falcon Next-Gen SIEM and Falcon Cloud Security to safeguard non-human identities and manage data movement throughout AWS ecosystems.
Network infrastructure receives notable improvements as well. CrowdStrike now supports AWS PrivateLink functionality across multiple regions, enabling companies to keep Falcon platform communications entirely within AWS’s private network infrastructure instead of traversing public internet connections.
Additionally, Quick Start connectors designed for Amazon CloudWatch and Amazon Simple Storage Service access logs are being introduced to accelerate deployment processes.
This AWS partnership enhancement doesn’t exist in a vacuum. CrowdStrike recently secured AWS Agentic AI Specialization Partner designation, and Wednesday’s announcement represents a natural progression of that relationship.
Project QuiltWorks is simultaneously growing beyond the AWS ecosystem. CrowdStrike continues expanding its Falcon AI Detection and Response solution across additional AI gateway collaborators, including Databricks, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure.
The cybersecurity firm has also been strengthening identity protection capabilities. Its recently introduced Continuous Identity for AI Agents functionality provides real-time authorization of AI agent activities based on assessments of agent ownership, calling identity, and device risk profiles.
From an analyst perspective, Piper Sandler maintains an Overweight rating on CRWD. InvestingPro data indicates 27 analysts have recently increased their earnings projections for the company.
CrowdStrike reported $5.1 billion in revenue over the trailing twelve months, marking 23% year-over-year growth, while achieving a gross profit margin of 75%.
The company’s latest announcement acknowledges that certain referenced features remain under development and may undergo modifications.
The post CrowdStrike (CRWD) Stock Climbs on Enhanced AWS Security Integration appeared first on Blockonomi.
Shares of 10X Genomics (TXG) experienced a 3.8% increase on Wednesday after the biotechnology company revealed a multi-year research partnership with Cleveland Clinic focused on bladder cancer investigation.
10x Genomics, Inc., TXG
The equity was changing hands near $31.76 before the announcement, with the news catalyzing upward momentum during the trading session.
The strategic alliance concentrates on discovering biomarkers capable of forecasting patient responses to antibody-drug conjugate therapies — an expanding frontier in oncological treatment.
Researchers will employ 10X Genomics’ single cell and spatial analysis technologies, particularly the Flex Apex, Xenium, and the recently introduced Atera platform.
Tissue specimens from individuals diagnosed with advanced bladder cancer will undergo detailed examination. Investigators aim to decode the tumor microenvironment, immune cell penetration patterns, and mechanisms through which cancer cells either respond to or develop resistance against specific therapeutic interventions.
The investigation will integrate single-cell transcriptomic profiling, spatial gene expression analysis, and protein quantification to construct an extensive clinical database.
Dr. Timothy Chan, MD, PhD, who chairs the Department of Cancer Sciences at Cleveland Clinic, characterized the initiative as “promising work” with potential to “shed new light into the mechanisms underlying therapeutic response in a number of major cancer types.”
The partnership’s aspirations extend well beyond bladder cancer applications. According to 10X Genomics, this collaboration represents a component of its broader strategic initiative to establish relationships with prominent research institutions and develop evidence that may support future diagnostic products across oncology and additional therapeutic areas.
This type of institutional endorsement carries significant weight for an organization still navigating its path to consistent profitability.
TXG currently lacks a P/E ratio due to its negative earnings position. The company’s price-to-sales ratio registers at 6.27, which represents an elevated valuation compared to historical benchmarks — indicating the stock may be trading on anticipated growth that remains unrealized.
The GF Score for TXG registers at 69 out of 100, reflecting moderate expectations for long-term returns. While the company demonstrates solid financial strength with an 8/10 rating, its profitability score languishes at just 3/10.
The organization maintains a market capitalization of roughly $4.03 billion.
A noteworthy concern: corporate insiders have liquidated $1.8 million in stock holdings during the past three months, with no corresponding insider purchases recorded during that timeframe.
While this asymmetric insider transaction pattern doesn’t necessarily indicate fundamental problems, it represents the type of information that draws investor scrutiny.
The Cleveland Clinic collaboration announcement lacks specific revenue projections or commercialization timelines. This remains a research-focused agreement — with potential future diagnostic applications contingent upon successful scientific outcomes.
For the moment, market participants responded favorably to the announcement.
The post 10X Genomics (TXG) Stock Surges 4% Following Cleveland Clinic Bladder Cancer Research Agreement appeared first on Blockonomi.
Aster has expanded its ASTER buyback program with a new mechanism that links platform revenue to both staking rewards and token burns. The update directs nearly all daily platform fees toward buying ASTER from the market while removing an equal amount of tokens from reserves.
The changes took effect at 12:00 PM UTC and introduce a new deflationary element to the token’s economic model. The move also increases reward allocations for veASTER stakers through daily buyback distributions.
According to information shared by Aster on X, 99% of the platform’s daily fees will now fund ASTER buybacks.
The purchased tokens will not return to circulation through treasury holdings. Instead, Aster will allocate them directly to veASTER stakers.
The platform said each epoch will include the existing 300,000 ASTER Loyalty Rewards allocation. Daily buyback amounts will be added on top of that base reward pool.
Reward distribution will continue through the veASTER system. Users receive allocations according to their lock weight within the staking structure.
Aster also stated that buybacks will execute automatically through a time-weighted average price process. The purchases occur throughout the day before settling on-chain.
The company published a dedicated buyback wallet address. That wallet allows users to verify transactions and monitor purchases independently.
The update extends beyond trading revenue. Aster noted that every permissionless token listing on Aster Spot requires a 50,000 USDT fee.
Those listing fees will also support ASTER purchases. The acquired tokens will enter the staking reward system as additional distributions.
Alongside the buyback expansion, Aster introduced a matching burn mechanism tied directly to daily purchases.
For every ASTER token bought through platform fees, the project will burn an equal amount from reserve holdings. The burn operates on a one-to-one basis.
According to Aster, the process begins with tokens allocated to the team reserve. The project launched with a total supply of 8 billion ASTER.
The burn program will continue until total supply reaches 3 billion tokens. That target would remove 5 billion tokens from circulation over time.
Aster stated that both the buyback and burn process remain publicly visible. Users can verify activity through the published wallet addresses and on-chain records.
The update creates a direct link between platform activity and token supply changes. Higher platform usage increases buyback volume while triggering corresponding burns.
The mechanism marks one of the largest token supply reduction targets disclosed by the project since launch. It also formalizes a system that combines staking incentives with ongoing supply contraction.
The post Aster Expands ASTER Buyback Program With Matching Token Burn Mechanism appeared first on Blockonomi.
HYPE – the native token of the decentralized crypto exchange Hyperliquid – has been on a tear lately, hitting a new all-time high even as most digital assets continue to struggle in the prolonged bear market.
It recently surpassed Dogecoin (DOGE) to become the 10th-biggest cryptocurrency, so we decided to ask three of the most popular AI-powered chatbots whether flipping Ripple’s XRP is also plausible sometime this year. Here are their answers.
Earlier this week, HYPE’s price soared to a historic peak of around $77, while its market cap pumped to approximately $16 billion. Despite the substantial increase, it remains far below XRP, whose capitalization currently stands at around $74 billion.
Given the huge gap, ChatGPT described the scenario in which HYPE surpasses its rival as a low probability. At the same time, OpenAI’s platform outlined several catalysts that could help the asset explode to such levels. Some of those include the rising popularity of Hyperliquid and its future expansion to the point where it becomes a Binance competitor, and backing from prominent industry figures.
Recall that Arthur Hayes (co-founder of BitMEX) was heavily invested in the token, yet he recently sold all his positions. Shortly after, the blockchain-tracking platform Lookonchain suggested he might have spent over $2 million to buy back nearly 34,000 HYPE. However, Hayes rejected the claim.
According to ChatGPT, another factor that may have a positive influence is the institutional interest in the coin. Data show that inflows into spot HYPE ETFs have exceeded outflows recently, with cumulative net inflows of approximately $180 million. Still, this figure is far below the $1.44 billion that exchange-traded funds with XRP as the underlying token have attracted since their launch in late 2025.
Perplexity shared a similar theory, saying that such a rise by HYPE is only possible in “a narrow sense.” It noted that, in addition to its market-cap lead, XRP has a vast and devoted community, which could make a potential flip even harder.
“In 2026, HYPE can plausibly flip XRP on price momentum, narrative strength, or even short-term market cap at times, but XRP has a much larger base to overtake, so a full sustained flip is less likely without a major rotation in capital,” it added.
Google’s Gemini was even less optimistic, claiming that the biggest hurdle for HYPE isn’t its utility but pure math. It praised XRP for being “a highly liquid, large-cap legacy asset,” whose market cap hovers in the tens of billions of dollars even during market corrections, “sustained by deep institutional plumbing and international remittance use cases.”
“For HYPE to flip XRP, it would need to see an astronomical influx of capital, multi-billion-dollar daily trading volumes, and massive speculative retail FOMO – all while XRP would have to severely stagnate or decline,” it concluded.
The post Can Hyperliquid (HYPE) Flip Ripple (XRP) in 2026? 3 AIs Weigh in appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The primary cryptocurrency has staged a clear rebound from its multi-year low below $60,000 and is currently hovering around $65,000.
However, a number of analysts believe the cycle bottom has yet to be reached, projecting a plunge under $50,000.
Later today (June 17), the Federal Reserve will announce its decision regarding the interest rates in the United States. Given elevated inflation, it would be surprising if the central bank lowered the benchmark, as most expect the current 3.5%-3.75% range to remain unchanged.
Some analysts, though, have identified a consistent pattern in Bitcoin’s (BTC) reaction whenever the Fed releases its interest rate decision. The popular X user Ash Crypto told their over two million followers that the asset’s price has headed south after each FOMC meeting since July 2025. The biggest slump occurred in January this year when BTC lost more than 33% of its valuation. We have yet to see whether today’s disclosure will finally break the negative streak (at least for the bulls).
Other market observers who also made pessimistic predictions include X users bee and Crypto Lens. The former claimed that BTC is “on the verge of the final flush,” expecting a drop to $51,000-$52,000.
“After that, I expect a rebound to the 55k zone and a few weeks of sideways movement, with the potential for a break below 50k,” they added.
For their part, Crypto Lens envisioned a bearish rejection toward roughly $48,000 in the coming days, followed by a crash to $43,000 by August this year.
Despite pessimism from some analysts, certain indicators suggest BTC may be gearing up for a rally. The amount of coins stored on crypto exchanges, for example, recently dropped to a six-year low of around 2.56 million. This means that many investors continue to abandon centralized platforms in favor of self-custody solutions, thereby reducing selling pressure.
The whales’ actions are the next positive factor. Ali Martinez revealed that this cohort of investors has purchased more than 30,000 BTC (worth more than $1.9 billion) over the past seven days and now controls 4.27 million coins.
Such developments signal that whales are positioning for the next upward move, with some believing they might be acting on inside information that retail investors don’t have. In any case, their buying spree is closely monitored by smaller players who could mimic the move and distribute fresh capital into the ecosystem.
The post Bitcoin in Danger: Here’s Why BTC May Dump in the Short Term appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin’s recovery has slowed after reaching a key resistance cluster, with the asset now consolidating beneath an important supply zone. The latest price action suggests that bulls are attempting to maintain momentum, but the market remains at a critical level where the next breakout or rejection could determine the short-term trend.
On the daily timeframe, BTC is trading around $65K after rebounding from the $60K support region earlier this month. The recovery has brought the price directly into the first major supply zone between $65K and $67K, where sellers have started to emerge.
The most recent candles show consolidation inside this resistance area rather than an immediate rejection, which is generally a constructive sign for buyers. However, BTC still trades below the 100-day moving average near $72K and the 200-day moving average around $77K, indicating that the broader trend has yet to fully recover.
If buyers manage to reclaim the current supply zone, the next upside target would be the higher resistance region between $72K and $74K. This area aligns with the second supply zone, the 100-day moving average, and the lower boundary of the previously broken ascending channel, making it the next major hurdle for the market.
On the downside, the $60K-$62K area remains the key support zone. As long as BTC holds above this region, the recent recovery structure remains intact.

The 4-hour chart highlights the recent rally into the $65K to $67K supply zone following a breakout from the ascending recovery channel. After reaching the upper boundary of the zone near $66.8K, BTC has entered a period of sideways consolidation.
The latest price action suggests that neither bulls nor bears currently have full control. The asset continues to hold above the former breakout region around $64K to $65K, while sellers have so far prevented a decisive move through the supply zone.
A breakout above $67K would strengthen the bullish case and could open the path toward the higher resistance area around $72K. Conversely, losing the $64K support region would likely trigger a deeper pullback toward the $61K to $62K demand zone.
For now, the short-term structure remains constructive as long as higher lows continue to develop above the recent breakout area.

The Binance liquidation heatmap shows a notable concentration of liquidity both above and below the current price, but the nearest and most significant cluster is located between $67K and $69K.
Since BTC is currently consolidating around $65K, this overhead liquidity zone could act as a short-term magnet. A push through the current supply region may trigger short liquidations and accelerate momentum toward the $68K to $69K area.
Meanwhile, a substantial liquidity pocket remains below the market, between $62K and $63K. Should BTC lose the $64K support area, the market could be drawn lower to collect this liquidity before establishing the next directional move.
Overall, the heatmap suggests that the market is currently trapped between two major liquidity pools. Given the proximity of the upper cluster and BTC’s ability to hold within the $65K to $67K resistance zone, the short-term bias remains slightly tilted toward an upside liquidity sweep into the $67K to $69K region before a larger directional decision emerges.

The post Bitcoin Price Analysis: BTC’s Recovery Hangs on One Critical Support Level appeared first on CryptoPotato.
XRP has seen a strong reaction from its major support zone, but the latest price action suggests the rally is now entering a critical phase. After a sharp breakout from short-term consolidation, buyers pushed the asset into a significant resistance area, where momentum has started to cool.
On the daily timeframe, XRP continues to trade within a broader descending channel while remaining below both the 100-day and 200-day moving averages. Despite the larger bearish structure, the recent recovery from the $1.05 to $1.15 demand zone has been encouraging.
The most recent development is the rejection from the 100-day moving average near $1.25. After reclaiming the lower support zone, XRP quickly advanced into this dynamic resistance and has since entered a period of consolidation. The $1.05 to $1.15 region remains the most important support area for the bulls, while the next major resistance sits around the descending channel resistance near $1.3K.
A successful break above this area would represent the first meaningful challenge to the broader downtrend and could pave the way for a move toward higher resistance levels. For now, XRP is attempting to establish a higher low after its recent impulse higher, which is constructive as long as price remains above the recent support region.

The 4-hour chart provides a clearer view of the recent breakout. XRP rallied aggressively from the highlighted demand zone around $1.13 to $1.16 and surged directly into the major resistance area between $1.26 and $1.3.
This zone previously acted as support before the breakdown and is now functioning as resistance. Following the initial breakout, price briefly tapped the lower boundary of the resistance zone before pulling back toward $1.21. The latest candles show consolidation rather than aggressive selling, suggesting that buyers are attempting to hold onto a large portion of the recent gains.
As long as XRP remains above the breakout area around $1.13 to $1.16, the short-term structure continues to favor another attempt at the $1.26 to $1.3 resistance zone.
A successful breakout above this region would strengthen the recovery and potentially open the path toward the next major resistance near $1.52. However, failure to hold above the recent breakout area could trigger a deeper retracement back toward the lower support zone. Overall, the most recent price action remains constructive, with XRP consolidating after a strong bullish impulse and attempting to build a base for another push into overhead resistance.

The post Ripple Price Analysis: Is XRP’s Rally Running Out of Steam After Latest Rejection? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
[PRESS RELEASE – New York, USA, June 17th, 2026]
Nexchain has opened a limited-time $0.05 bonus entry window ahead of a major project update scheduled for next week. The AI-powered Layer 1 blockchain is preparing to share upcoming milestones and launch progress, while the current bonus pricing remains available for a short period before the project moves into its next phase.
The Six-Day Hold Creates A Clear Entry Point
The current token presale stage gives Nexchain a defined price structure before its next phase. The $0.05 entry remains available for six days, freezing Stage 33 lists, which prices 1 NEX at $0.132. This creates a clear difference between the limited entry level and the current stage price.
The stage has also moved close to its USDT target, with $17,135,244 already raised. That figure places the round near its listed $17,475,000 goal. The $0.05 token presale level matters because staged presales usually change access terms as rounds progress.
Nexchain has linked its stages to protocol development and wider network availability. The next project update is expected next week, adding timing to the current pricing structure. This keeps the focus on stage progress, product work, and upcoming access changes.
A Quiet Build Now Moves Toward Public Update
Nexchain has spent recent months building its ecosystem before returning attention to its presale structure. The next update is expected to cover development progress, product preparation, and launch readiness. This gives the token presale a stronger angle than price access alone. It also places the $0.05 entry beside the project’s broader rebuild story.
The current stage therefore carries both timing and product context. The network presents itself as an AI-built Layer 1 blockchain with decentralized security and automation. Its design combines Proof-of-Stake with AI-driven algorithms through a hybrid consensus model.
Nexchain lists 400,000 transactions per second through AI optimization and parallel processing. It also lists transaction fees at $0.001 for transfers and smart contract activity. These details give the token presale a technical base before the next phase begins.
How NEX Powers The Nexchain Ecosystem
The NEX token carries planned utility across transaction fees, staking, governance, and AI service payments. The token presale therefore connects current entry access with listed network functions. NEX can support smart contract interactions, decentralized app payments, validator incentives, and AI model services. Additionally, Nexchain AI lists use cases across finance, healthcare, supply chains, IoT, content, AI services, and administration. These use cases show how NEX fits into the planned ecosystem.
The tokenomics structure lists 2.15 billion NEX as the total initial supply. Public allocation stands at 20%, treasury at 17%, and ecosystem support at 15%. Team allocation stands at 10%, liquidity at 8%, private allocation at 7%, and rewards at 7%. Burn allocation stands at 6%, while seed and marketing each hold 5%.
The token presale also sits beside an initial market cap of $157,057,500 and a fully diluted market cap of $430,000,000. The current token presale stage now centers on three facts: the $0.05 entry, the $0.132 Stage 33 price, and the six-day availability period. Nexchain also lists a planned listing price of $0.30 and an expected ROI of 227% under its stage data.
The coming update will add the next project detail before the phase changes. Market participants can review the token presale terms, compare the current price levels, and assess the next update before the $0.05 entry period ends.
About Nexchain
Nexchain is an AI-powered Layer 1 blockchain built to combine artificial intelligence with scalable blockchain infrastructure. The project focuses on high transaction throughput, AI-driven network optimization, EVM compatibility, and tools designed to support next-generation decentralized applications. With testnet development progressing and audited smart contracts already completed, the team is now entering a more public phase of its launch preparation.
For More Details, users can visit:
Website: https://nexchain.ai/
Telegram: t.me/nexchain_ai/3
X: https://x.com/nexchain_ai
White Paper: https://nexchain.ai/documents/Whitepaper-Nexchain.pdf
The post Nexchain Opens Limited-Time $0.05 Bonus Window Before Major Project Update appeared first on CryptoPotato.