Nike's potential Dow removal highlights shifting economic narratives, while Berkshire's entry could signal a new era of market influence.
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Increased Bitcoin inflows to Binance signal heightened market volatility and potential prolonged price instability amid investor uncertainty.
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AgentKit's expansion could redefine online interactions by ensuring AI agents act on behalf of verified humans, mitigating bot-related abuses.
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Palo Alto Networks' robust growth underscores the critical role of AI and strategic acquisitions in shaping the future of cybersecurity.
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Uniswap's fee switch enhances UNI's value proposition, transforming it into a revenue-generating asset, impacting investor strategies.
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Law Enforcement, Catholic Groups Send Letters to U.S. Government Warning CLARITY Act Would Create Crypto Crime Loopholes
A coalition of four major law enforcement organizations and a separate group of nearly 100 Catholic leaders sent letters Tuesday warning that a provision in the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act would weaken the oversight tools investigators and prosecutors rely on to combat financial crime.
The law enforcement letter, addressed to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and Patrick Witt, executive director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, came from the National District Attorneys Association, the National Association of Assistant United States Attorneys, the International Association of Chiefs of Police, and the National Sheriffs’ Association.
Together, the groups represent more than 70,000 prosecutors, sheriffs, chiefs of police, investigators, and other law enforcement professionals.
Their central concern is Section 604 of the bill — a provision that incorporates the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act, or BRCA, which would establish that a developer or infrastructure provider who cannot move or control a user’s digital assets is not a money transmitter under federal law.
Proponents argue the language is essential to protect software developers from criminal prosecution. Law enforcement groups counter that the exemptions are too broad.
“As currently drafted, Section 604 risks creating gaps in oversight and accountability that could impede those efforts,” the groups wrote, adding that their concern is “not with individuals who merely write or publish software code, nor with responsible technological innovation,” but rather with exemptions that could shield actors who facilitate the movement of digital assets while obstructing investigators.
The groups also contend the bill falls short on anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism requirements, pointing out it does not establish suspicious activity monitoring and reporting obligations comparable to those applied to traditional financial intermediaries. They warned that certain provisions could exempt mixers, tumblers, and some decentralized finance businesses from AML and know-your-customer requirements.
The other letter, sent to Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Senate Democratic Leader Charles Schumer, carried signatures from roughly 80 organizations and leaders, including the Alliance to End Human Trafficking, the Jesuit Conference’s Office of Justice and Ecology, and dozens of Catholic sisters and survivor advocates.
“Human traffickers are quick to exploit new technologies when oversight fails to keep pace,” the groups wrote, arguing that the bill’s regulatory gaps could make it harder to trace financial flows tied to trafficking, child exploitation, and organized crime.
H.R. 3633, the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, is the most significant piece of crypto legislation to advance in Congress in years. The House passed it 294-134 in July 2025. The Senate Banking Committee cleared the bill 15-9 in May 2026, placing it on the Senate Legislative Calendar eligible for a floor vote.
The bill divides oversight of digital assets between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, creating a framework for crypto exchanges, brokers, stablecoin issuers, and DeFi participants.
The Trump administration has made the legislation a priority, and crypto industry groups have pushed to keep Section 604’s developer protections intact.
To advance in the Senate, the bill needs 60 votes — a threshold that gives moderate Democrats significant leverage. Senators Mark Warner of Virginia and Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada have both tied their support to law enforcement’s sign-off on Section 604, making the opposition letters a direct threat to the bill’s prospects.
Yesterday, Congress scheduled a July 17 hearing in New York on the CLARITY Act, a major crypto market structure bill that would divide oversight between the SEC and CFTC, as lawmakers push toward potential passage later this year.
This post Law Enforcement, Catholic Groups Send Letters to U.S. Government Warning CLARITY Act Would Create Crypto Crime Loopholes first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Strategy (MSTR) Stock Falls Below $100 for First Time Since March 2024
Shares of Strategy Inc. (NASDAQ: MSTR) crossed below $100 on Wednesday for the first time since March 2024, extending a collapse that has erased more than 80% of the stock’s value from its all-time high of approximately $474 reached in November 2024.
The breach of the $100 threshold carries weight beyond the number itself. Strategy, the Bitcoin treasury company led by Executive Chairman Michael Saylor, built its investment thesis around the premise that its leveraged exposure to Bitcoin would generate returns that outpace traditional assets.
That thesis is now under pressure as Bitcoin trades near $61,000 — well below the company’s average acquisition cost of roughly $75,656 per coin.
Strategy holds 847,363 BTC across its treasury, a position valued at approximately $53 billion at current prices. Against an average cost basis implying a total investment closer to $64 billion, the company is sitting on an unrealized paper loss of more than $11 billion. That gap between cost and market value has become a weight on the stock.
The decline accelerated through a series of events over the past six weeks. In May, Strategy used cash reserves to repurchase $1.5 billion in convertible bonds at a discount, cutting its dividend coverage buffer from a target of 24 months down to roughly six months at the low point.
On June 1, the company sold 32 BTC — its first Bitcoin sale since 2022 — to demonstrate that it could cover dividend obligations through asset liquidation if needed. MSTR shares fell nearly 6% on that news.
The company’s preferred stock, STRC, has also come under pressure. The instrument fell to a record low of $83 in mid-June, far below its $100 par value. Strategy has since increased STRC dividend frequency to twice per month and rebuilt cash reserves to approximately $1.1 billion, but the market has not yet returned the preferred stock to par.
Speaking at The Bitcoin Conference, Saylor said Strategy’s STRC preferred stock has become one of the fastest-growing credit products globally, attracting billions in retail capital by offering an 11.5% dividend while leveraging Bitcoin as its underlying capital base.
He argued, at the time, that scaling Bitcoin-backed digital credit products like STRC could significantly expand Bitcoin adoption and drive future price appreciation.
Strategy has not stopped buying Bitcoin. The company added 1,587 BTC for $100 million earlier in June and 520 BTC for $35 million on June 22. But continued accumulation at prices above the current market value has done little to restore confidence among common shareholders.
Shares of Strategy are currently at $98.83.

This post Strategy (MSTR) Stock Falls Below $100 for First Time Since March 2024 first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Price Crashes Toward $61,000 as Bloodbath Engulfs Crypto Stocks
Bitcoin price is trading near $61,500 today, extending a decline that has erased more than half its value since the token hit a record high in October 2025. The sell-off is rippling through publicly traded crypto companies, where losses have at times outpaced Bitcoin itself.
The token fell to $61,877 earlier this week — its lowest level since June 11 — before sliding further. Bitcoin price briefly broke below $60,000 on June 5, a level not seen since late 2024, before a partial recovery that has since stalled.
Deutsche Bank attributed Bitcoin’s weakness to a convergence of institutional pressures. A shift in Federal Reserve expectations — the bank now forecasts two rate hikes in 2026, reversing earlier expectations for cuts — has removed a key pillar of institutional demand. Higher rates make risk assets less attractive relative to cash and bonds.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen six consecutive weeks of net outflows totaling roughly $6 billion, with $2.4 billion leaving in June alone. Deutsche Bank analyst Marion Laboure described Bitcoin as “increasingly trading like an institutional risk asset,” with the marginal buyer now an ETF allocator or corporate treasury rather than a retail participant. When those buyers exit, the price follows.
Competition from artificial intelligence has added pressure. U.S. tech giants are on track to spend more than $700 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026, and investors are treating Bitcoin and AI-linked equities as competing destinations for speculative capital. A tech stock sell-off that began Monday pulled Bitcoin price lower in tandem, with the Nasdaq 100 falling as much as 3.4%.
The pain has been acute for companies that built their business models around Bitcoin accumulation.
Strategy, the largest corporate Bitcoin holder, has fallen for five consecutive trading sessions and is down more than 20% over the past week.
The stock is off 26% over the past 30 days. A major catalyst came in late May when Strategy sold 32 BTC for approximately $2.5 million — its first Bitcoin sale since 2022 — to cover distributions on its preferred stock. The move shattered the company’s “buy only, never sell” identity and spooked investors.
Strategy carries five series of preferred stock with combined annual dividend obligations estimated at $750–$800 million, and its cash reserves have fallen from $2.25 billion at the start of 2026 to around $900 million.
Strive, the Bitcoin treasury company backed by Vivek Ramaswamy, has also taken a hit. The company purchased 2,500 BTC for $185 million at an average price of $74,092 — well above current levels — leaving it sitting on paper losses. Shares of Strive (ASST) dropped after the purchase was disclosed, a sign that investors are skeptical of aggressive accumulation strategies at elevated cost bases.
Strive now holds roughly 19,864 BTC valued at approximately $1.3 billion, and like Strategy, carries preferred dividend obligations that must be paid regardless of where Bitcoin price trades.
Coinbase fell 2.5% on Tuesday. Stablecoin issuer Circle dropped more than 4%.
At the time of writing, the bitcoin price is $61,205.

This post Bitcoin Price Crashes Toward $61,000 as Bloodbath Engulfs Crypto Stocks first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
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Strive (ASST) CEO Says Company Is Buying Bitcoin ‘Hand Over Fist’ as Treasury Hits 19,864 BTC
Strive Inc. CEO Matt Cole said his company is purchasing Bitcoin at an aggressive pace, telling Bloomberg that the firm is buying “hand over fist” as prices decline.
The statement came as Strive disclosed its latest acquisition: 759 BTC purchased between June 15 and June 21 at an average cost of $65,850 per coin, bringing the company’s total treasury to 19,864 BTC — the seventh-largest corporate Bitcoin position in the world.
The company has built that position from zero in under a year. In June alone, the company made three separate purchases — 759 BTC, 73 BTC at $63,646, and 32 BTC at $63,900 — as Bitcoin prices fell. An additional $185 million in Bitcoin was acquired across May and late spring, including 2,500 BTC at an average of $74,092 and 1,109 BTC at $76,989.
Before joining Strive, Cole managed a $70 billion portfolio at CalPERS and worked with the Federal Reserve and Treasury during quantitative easing. He has positioned the company around the thesis that Bitcoin should function as the hurdle rate for all capital allocation decisions — meaning every investment the company makes is benchmarked against Bitcoin’s performance.
The company reported a Q1 2026 Bitcoin yield of over 15%.
In January 2026, Strive completed the acquisition of Semler Scientific in an all-stock deal — the first instance of a publicly traded Bitcoin treasury company acquiring another publicly traded Bitcoin treasury company. The transaction added 5,048 BTC from Semler’s balance sheet to Strive’s holdings, pushing the combined entity past Tesla and Trump Media in the rankings of corporate Bitcoin holders.
Following the close, Strive paid off Semler’s legacy debt and deployed an additional $29 million into Bitcoin. The company has indicated plans to monetize Semler’s operating business within 12 months of the transaction.
Strive has announced plans to raise up to $4.2 billion in new capital — $2.1 billion through its Class A common stock (ASST) and $2.1 billion through SATA, its Variable Rate Perpetual Preferred Stock instrument. SATA is designed to give investors exposure to Bitcoin yield through a structured preferred equity instrument.
At launch, the product absorbed an estimated 490 BTC in a single day — a volume that exceeded the entire global daily Bitcoin mining supply.
Strive was the second public company to launch a publicly traded perpetual preferred equity instrument of this kind. The capital raised through both programs is intended to fund continued Bitcoin acquisitions.
With 19,864 BTC on its balance sheet and $4.2 billion in potential purchasing power, Strive has positioned itself as one of the more active institutional accumulators in the current market cycle.
This post Strive (ASST) CEO Says Company Is Buying Bitcoin ‘Hand Over Fist’ as Treasury Hits 19,864 BTC first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

BlackRock Tells Investors to Put Bitcoin in Their Portfolios
BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager with $14 trillion under management, now recommends that investors allocate 1–2% of their portfolios to Bitcoin — a position the firm says can boost return potential without destabilizing overall risk.
The guidance came from Michael Gates, BlackRock’s lead portfolio manager for model portfolios, who framed Bitcoin as a “complementary diversifier” in multi-asset contexts. “A modest allocation could potentially have an impact on portfolio returns without dominating day-to-day risk,” Gates said.
In a traditional 60/40 portfolio, BlackRock notes that a 1–2% Bitcoin position carries risk comparable to a single large-cap technology stock.
Bitcoin’s low correlation to equities and fixed income means the exposure can lift risk-adjusted returns without a proportionate expansion of volatility — a consideration that matters for advisors managing conservative to moderate mandates.
The firm is clear that the recommendation is not a speculative call; it is a structural one rooted in diversification logic.
To act on the recommendation, BlackRock points to its own iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT), which it has added to its model portfolios for the first time. Launched in January 2024, IBIT has become one of the most successful ETF debuts in years, accumulating nearly $49 billion in assets under management and holding over 765,000 BTC in custody.
IBIT now commands close to 50% of all RIA-allocated crypto ETF capital. That market share reflects both the trust institutional investors place in BlackRock’s custody arrangements and the absence of a credible rival at scale. The fund carries a 25 basis point annual fee as of 2026.
BlackRock’s Bitcoin ambitions reach beyond IBIT. The firm recently launched the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA), a covered-call product that holds IBIT exposure while selling options on 25–35% of the portfolio to generate monthly income. BITA gives risk-conscious investors a yield-oriented path into Bitcoin — and signals that BlackRock sees the asset as “too big to ignore” inside institutional allocations.
The firm also operates a Bitcoin ETP on the London Stock Exchange, extending its Bitcoin infrastructure into global markets and giving European investors access to the same thesis.
Back in February, a BlackRock executive said that if financial advisors across Asia allocated just 1% of client portfolios to crypto, it could drive nearly $2 trillion of new capital into digital assets, citing the region’s roughly $108 trillion in household wealth. He also noted strong Asian participation in U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, as markets like Hong Kong, Japan, and South Korea moved toward broader crypto ETF adoption.
This post BlackRock Tells Investors to Put Bitcoin in Their Portfolios first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin’s sustained price correction is deepening as demand from US investors weakens, leaving the world’s largest cryptocurrency increasingly exposed to leveraged positions clustered below $60,000.
According to CryptoSlate's data, the top crypto traded at $59,800 at press time, down 16% this month. This decline has brought the asset closer to price levels where forced liquidations could intensify selling pressure.
Record withdrawals from US spot exchange-traded funds, deteriorating performance during American trading hours, and defensive positioning in the options market suggest buyers have yet to regain control.
Without a recovery in spot demand, Bitcoin risks drifting toward a critical test of support below $60,000.
The clearest sign of weakening American demand has emerged during US trading hours, a period that previously benefited from stronger exchange activity and purchases by institutional funds.
Data from Velo showed that Bitcoin’s cumulative return during the American session was about -15% over the past month. A strategy that held Bitcoin only during those hours would therefore have recorded a 15% loss, indicating that the US session has become a source of selling pressure rather than support.

That performance contrasts with the country’s increasingly favorable stance toward the cryptocurrency industry.
Over the past year, President Donald Trump’s administration has introduced a more supportive policy environment than its predecessor, strengthening expectations that the US would become a leading center for digital asset investment.
However, that political shift has not translated into sustained buying during Bitcoin’s latest decline.
Evidence of this weakening in BTC demand can also be seen in flows into regulated investment products.
US-listed spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds recorded net withdrawals of about $6.35 billion over the past 30 days, according to Galaxy Research data. This is the largest outflow among the 582 rolling 30-day periods covered by the firm’s analysis.

While the withdrawals do not necessarily indicate that every ETF investor has turned bearish, the scale of the redemptions has weakened a source of demand that helped absorb Bitcoin supply during earlier rallies.
Moreover, the Coinbase Premium Index has also remained negative at about -0.13. The measure compares Bitcoin’s price on Coinbase with prices on offshore exchanges and is commonly used to gauge relative demand from US investors.
The reading has improved from a late-February low of about -0.25, suggesting that selling pressure is less severe than it was then. Its failure to return to positive territory, however, shows that buyers on Coinbase are still unwilling to pay more than traders on offshore platforms.
Together, these data points show a broad retreat in US demand rather than an isolated decline on one exchange.
With spot demand subdued, the market has become more sensitive to leveraged derivatives positions.
João Wedson, chief executive of analytics platform Alphractal, identified $57,300 as a significant liquidation level after examining data from 30 exchanges over the previous 30 days.

Liquidation levels are price levels at which leveraged traders may no longer have sufficient collateral to maintain their positions. Exchanges can then automatically close those trades, adding market sell orders during a decline and potentially increasing volatility.
The concentration around $57,300, therefore, represents a risk if Bitcoin falls below $60,000 and continues losing strength.
Notably, derivatives traders on the options exchange Deribit are actively positioning for this downside scenario.
According to the firm's data, about $1.1 billion in positions are concentrated at $60,000, making that level an immediate area of interest. Another $1.4 billion was positioned across the $50,000 and $55,000 strikes.

The figures show substantial derivatives exposure below the current price, though the supplied data does not establish that all of the positions represent outright bearish bets. Options can be used to hedge existing holdings, generate income, or build strategies involving multiple strikes.
Even so, the accumulation highlights how much attention has shifted from recovering previous highs to managing the possibility of a deeper decline.
Bitcoin’s market structure suggests buyers have yet to return with sufficient force to reverse the current decline, leaving short-lived recoveries vulnerable to renewed selling.
CryptoQuant analyst Axel Adler pointed to the Net Taker Volume Oscillator, which measures the difference between market buys and market sells and smooths the result with a 30-day moving average.
The indicator helps show which side is trading more aggressively because market orders are executed immediately against available liquidity.
The oscillator remained firmly positive two months ago and climbed to about 1.7% in mid-May, when aggressive buying helped push Bitcoin toward local highs. It later fell to -0.9% during the early-June selloff before recovering to the zero line.

While the return to zero suggests that the earlier dominance of market sellers has eased, it does not show that buyers have regained control.
A stronger recovery would require the oscillator to move decisively above zero and remain there, signaling that traders are once again willing to buy at prevailing market prices.
Adler said the current reading instead reflects a balance, with insufficient demand-side initiative to support a sustained rebound.
Liquidation activity strengthens that assessment. CryptoQuant’s liquidation oscillator stood at 18.4%, showing that long positions accounted for the larger share of forced closures. That marks a sharp reversal from mid-May, when the indicator fell to about -13% as rising prices forced short sellers out of their positions.
The shift means leveraged buyers are now absorbing more of the market’s losses. It also raises the risk that brief rebounds will attract new long positions that could be liquidated if Bitcoin resumes its decline.
Block Scholes’ risk-appetite indicators point to a broader retreat. Its Bitcoin measure has moved closer to the -1.0 threshold associated with weak risk appetite, having previously shown greater resilience than ETH.

Indeed, Ethereum had already entered weak-risk territory, but Bitcoin’s continued deterioration has narrowed the gap between the two assets.
The convergence suggests investors are reducing exposure across the cryptocurrency market rather than treating Bitcoin as a relative refuge.
Together, the indicators show that selling pressure has eased without producing a meaningful return of buyers.
Until market-order demand strengthens and long liquidations subside, Bitcoin’s rebounds are more likely to provide temporary relief than mark the start of a durable recovery.
The post America’s Bitcoin buying turns negative as BTC drifts closer to the $57,300 liquidation trap appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Arthur Hayes outlined a path to $1 million Bitcoin price built around AI absorbing liquidity, the buildout collapsing under debt, authorities printing, and capital rotating into crypto.
Hayes made the argument on Bankless, saying that AI became the dominant capital sink, and his Substack essay noted that roughly $1.5 trillion in AI-related debt was issued between November 2022 and mid-2026.
The amount nearly matches the $1.5 trillion rise in the M2 money supply over the same period, with newly created dollars absorbed by data centers and GPU clusters before reaching Bitcoin's bid.

Luke Gromen, founder of Forest for the Trees, arrived at the same diagnosis from a different entry point. Speaking on the Coin Stories podcast in June, he described the current market structure as unhealthy beneath record equity indices, with AI-related names concentrating the gains while breadth deteriorated.
Gromen said:
“AI is sucking all the oxygen out of the room, all the liquidity out of the room, and I think that's happening to Bitcoin as well.”
He called Bitcoin “one of, if not the last functioning smoke alarm of liquidity,” a signal asset that warns investors about the broader liquidity picture before other markets confirm it.
Gromen sold most of his Bitcoin position near the top and has only nibbled back in, a stance consistent with Hayes' near-term bearishness on crypto.
He extends the argument to AI infrastructure accounting, where companies book revenue upfront while spreading construction costs over time, inflating reported earnings and masking the moment when a buildout slowdown forces a sharp deceleration in cash flows.
Apollo's chief economist Torsten Slok wrote that the top 10 companies in the S&P 500 are more overvalued than the top 10 were during the 1990s tech bubble.
Those 10 names now represent roughly 40% of the index, meaning that $100 invested in the S&P 500 is a bet that the AI story will continue. A broad correction in that group spreads to every passive portfolio worldwide.
The Bank for International Settlements published a 2026 bulletin documenting what Hayes describes, with central bank credibility behind the warning. The BIS found that AI infrastructure investment is moving from internal cash flows to external debt as the scale of required investment overwhelms hyperscalers' free cash flow.
Private credit outstanding to AI-related companies had grown from near zero to over $200 billion, with that share of total private credit climbing from below 1% to almost 8%.
The BIS flagged credit-standard and financial stability risks when expected returns fall short, and found that hyperscalers are also moving AI infrastructure debt off their balance sheets through special-purpose vehicles and operating leases, which the BIS calls “shadow borrowing.”
These moves strengthen links between tech companies and non-bank investors, creating new channels for the transmission of shocks if sentiment reverses.
Once AI infrastructure carries more than $200 billion in private credit with five-to-seven-year maturities, an AI slowdown becomes a credit-market risk rather than a narrow tech-sector problem.
| Risk layer | Evidence in the article | Why it matters for Bitcoin price thesis |
|---|---|---|
| Liquidity drain | Hayes and Gromen argue AI absorbed capital that might otherwise have supported Bitcoin price | Explains why BTC can lag despite money supply expansion |
| Equity concentration | Apollo says the top 10 S&P 500 names are more overvalued than during the 1990s tech bubble | A correction in AI-heavy mega caps would hit passive portfolios globally |
| Debt-funded buildout | BIS says AI infrastructure financing is shifting from internal cash flow to external debt | Turns AI from a tech-stock story into a credit-market story |
| Private credit exposure | BIS says AI-related private credit has grown from near zero to more than $200B | Creates non-bank transmission channels if AI returns disappoint |
| Shadow borrowing | BIS flags SPVs and operating leases used to finance infrastructure off balance sheet | Makes the true leverage behind AI harder to see |
| Policy response | Hayes argues a collapse would force authorities to print | Bitcoin price upside depends on whether rescue liquidity seeks scarce assets |
Lyn Alden's framework provides Hayes with the financial backdrop and stops at a far less dramatic conclusion.
In her February and March newsletters, Alden described the Fed as entering what she calls a “gradual print,” consisting of balance sheet expansion aligned with nominal GDP growth, running between $220 billion and $375 billion in 2026, far below the scale of any prior crisis QE.
Her threshold for calling it a genuinely big print is $2 trillion or more. Hayes is describing a future crisis response that would clear that bar, while Alden is describing the current base case, which lands around $300 billion.
Bitwise's 2026 advisor survey found that out of 299 financial advisors surveyed, 32% allocated to crypto in client accounts in 2025, the highest rate in the survey's eight-year history.
Among those tracking crypto themes, “digital gold” and fiat debasement ranked second at 22%, behind stablecoins and tokenization at 30%. The debasement narrative is already distributed through ETFs and embedded in professional portfolios.
If the Fed response becomes the market story, Bitcoin already has the institutional argument preloaded inside existing allocations.
Hayes acknowledged on Bankless that in a broad risk-off event, correlations compress toward one and investors sell everything.
Bitcoin price fell roughly 50% from its October 2025 peak at $126,000, even as the money supply expanded.
An AI credit event would produce the same first-phase response: Bitcoin sells with risk assets, banks pull back on lending, and liquidity tightens before policymakers respond.
Hayes' actual trade is the policy response that follows a crash, and whether investors who watched AI destroy capital would put freshly printed money back into the same sector.
The liquidity-drain analysis, the BIS debt data, and the Apollo valuation warnings document the setup. Capital destination is a decision made within the crisis itself, and those sources stop at its edge.
The bull case depends on Hayes' full sequence arriving intact. AI financing stress hits banks and private credit, policymakers inject major liquidity, and investors who watched $1.5 trillion in AI debt destroy value seek scarce assets detached from the failed trade.
Bitcoin price at $1 million per coin implies a fully diluted network value of roughly $21 trillion, a figure that would require crypto-native capital and a major reallocation of global macro portfolios.
Alden's gradual-print environment provides the directional support; only Hayes' crisis-scale injection produces the magnitude.

The bear case is that emergency liquidity flows first toward the safest collateral, such as Treasuries, cash, bank reserves, and gold. Surviving AI winners attract capital from investors seeking the sector's strongest projects, keeping money within tech.
Bitcoin's correlation with risk assets during the early phase of a credit event runs counter to Hayes' destination, and the rescue money could remain in Treasuries, gold, and bank reserves for months before reaching crypto.
Hayes' setup of AI debt, valuation excess, and liquidity distortion may prove entirely accurate. His destination is the part that depends on investor behavior inside a crisis, and that part is still open.
The post Arthur Hayes says AI rescue liquidity could send Bitcoin price to $1,000,000 appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Cardano has opened public testing for a major throughput upgrade and advanced a mainnet hard fork, pushing forward the blockchain’s most consequential architectural changes in years.
These milestones are arriving alongside a sharp decline in ADA and a multimillion-dollar wallet exploit, widening the divide between Cardano’s engineering progress and the condition of the ecosystem built around it.
Data from CryptoSlate shows that ADA, the network’s native token, was trading near $0.14, its lowest price level since 2020. ADA has fallen more than 55% this year and risks falling out of the top 20 crypto assets by market capitalization if its poor price performance continues.
Still, CoinGlass data show that traders betting on ADA are leaning toward a rebound, though the size of their positions suggests limited conviction.
According to the crypto analytical firm, Binance had about 2.1 long ADA accounts for every short account, while the ratio among the exchange’s top traders stood near 2.49. OKX showed about 1.46 long accounts for every short account.
However, the aggregate positioning among Binance’s top traders was almost evenly divided. The position ratio stood at 0.9754, leaving the group marginally net short despite the much larger number of accounts betting on a recovery.
This imbalance suggests that many traders are attempting to catch a bottom with relatively small long positions while fewer participants maintain larger bearish bets.
Essentially, this resembles cautious bottom fishing after a severe sell-off rather than a decisive return of speculative demand.
That pressure has already forced contractions in Cardano’s economy, with projects like TapTools and JPG Store scaling back or shutting down operations this year.
That fragility came into sharper focus when SecondFi, the successor to the Yoroi wallet, disclosed a failure involving software used to generate Cardano wallets.
In an X statement, SecondFi said its platform users lost roughly 16 million ADA across 374 addresses. At ADA’s recent price, the stolen assets were worth about $2.4 million.
Engineers initiated emergency rescue measures during the exploit and secured about 129 million ADA before attackers could drain it, the company said. Those assets were being transferred to an independent third-party custodian to be held on behalf of affected users.
Mitchell Amador, CEO and Founder of blockchain security firm Immunefi, told CryptoSlate that:
“SecondFi's wallet software exposed the private keys it generated, and our research has been tracking exactly this move for two years. Key compromises inside DeFi protocols dropped to 8.1% of losses by 2025 because teams hardened their key management.
The attackers didn't quit. They moved to where keys are held in bulk: exchanges like Bybit, custodians, and now wallet generation code itself.”
As of press time, the wallet provider said it had identified the source of the vulnerability and patched accounts that had not been affected. It also warned customers against restoring compromised recovery phrases in other Cardano wallets, as doing so would not eliminate the underlying risk.
SecondFi has hired an external accounting firm to conduct a special audit of the recovered funds and opened a process through which customers can submit claims.
Amid this external turbulence, Input Output, the research and engineering company behind Cardano, launched the Musashi Dojo public testnet to test Ouroboros Leios under realistic and adversarial conditions.
Leios is designed to address one of Cardano’s longest-running technical criticisms: that the network’s base layer cannot process enough transactions to support widespread activity.
The upgrade introduces a second block type alongside the existing Praos block. The two block types perform different roles, allowing Cardano to increase transaction throughput without replacing the consensus system that has secured the network since its Shelley era.
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson described the Leios testnet as the culmination of about a decade of research into whether probabilistic proof-of-stake systems could provide mathematical security assurances comparable to those associated with Bitcoin.
Input Output estimates that the architecture could increase throughput by five to 20 times at the consensus layer.
The public testnet does not carry real ADA. Its purpose is to test, parameterize, and validate the design rather than produce headline performance figures.
Independent stake pool operators, developers, and other community participants will be asked to stress the network, identify weaknesses, and attempt to break the system under demanding conditions. The results will help developers refine the software before deciding whether it is ready for mainnet deployment.
The testnet will progress through five phases named Earth, Water, Fire, Wind, and Void after sections of Miyamoto Musashi’s “The Book of Five Rings.”
Developers aim to complete repeated rounds of testing by the end of the year, though Input Output has not announced a firm date for deploying Leios on the main network.
Cardano is also advancing the Van Rossem hard fork, formally known as Protocol Version 11.
The initiation proposal was submitted to Cardano’s mainnet governance system on June 16 during Epoch 637 after weeks of testing and infrastructure preparation across the Preview and Preprod networks.
Van Rossem is an intra-era hard fork, allowing Cardano to introduce new features without immediately moving into a new development era. That approach is intended to reduce disruption for exchanges, wallets, decentralized applications, and stake pool operators.
The upgrade also prepares Cardano’s architecture for the Dijkstra era, in which Leios is expected to eventually move toward mainnet integration.
Van Rossem and Leios occupy different positions in that roadmap. Van Rossem is the near-term protocol transition moving through governance, while Leios is the broader scaling system that has only entered public testing.
Intersect, the member-based organization supporting Cardano’s development, said 86% of block production was running on node version 11 as Epoch 638 approached its end. Exchange readiness stood at 50.24% when measured by liquidity.
The figures show that adoption among block producers has progressed further than readiness among trading platforms. The hard fork remains subject to Cardano’s governance process and has not yet been activated on the main network.

Cardano’s next test will be turning its expanding technical roadmap into activity that investors can measure.
The immediate focus is the Musashi Dojo testnet, where successful testing would move Cardano closer to addressing a long-standing concern that its base layer lacks the capacity to support activity at a competitive scale.
Meanwhile, the network's roadmap extends beyond scaling.
Hoskinson has cited Peras, intended to accelerate transaction finality; Chronos, a system designed to reduce dependence on external time synchronization; Crypsinous, a privacy-focused protocol; and Minotaur, a consensus design that could draw security from multiple sources.
Those projects remain at different stages of research and development, leaving their deployment schedules and eventual market impact uncertain.
Together, the initiatives outline Cardano’s plan to become faster, more responsive, and better able to support a broader range of financial applications.
However, their effect on ADA sentiment will depend on whether technical improvements translate into a return of developers, users, transactions, and capital to the network.
That conversion has yet to happen. This year, Cardano has aggressively pursued new partnerships and integrations while ADA’s price and parts of its application ecosystem have contracted. The SecondFi incident has also raised the threshold for rebuilding confidence by showing that protocol security must be matched by safer wallets and applications.
A sustained improvement in market sentiment would therefore require more than successful hard forks.
Investors will be watching for Leios to withstand public testing, for exchanges and stake pool operators to complete the Van Rossem transition, for affected SecondFi users to recover their assets, and for Cardano applications to attract durable activity after the downturn.
Evidence of rising network usage alongside stronger wallet safeguards could prompt traders to reassess ADA after its five-year decline. Without that follow-through, the upgrades risk remaining engineering achievements that produce little immediate change in demand for the token.
The post Cardano’s scaling overhaul hit by a user confidence gap widened by ADA’s slump and wallet exploit appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The House Financial Services Committee has scheduled a July 17 field hearing in New York on the CLARITY Act, giving the bill another public stage while the Senate floor vote that would decide its immediate path remains unscheduled.
The CLARITY Act cleared the House in July 2025, with 78 Democrats joining the majority, establishing the baseline that Senate negotiators have worked from ever since.
Senate Agriculture advanced the Digital Commodity Intermediaries Act on Jan. 29, building on the House text and extending new CFTC authority over digital commodity spot markets.
Senate Banking worked through the SEC-facing portion in multiple drafts before a May 14 markup, where the CLARITY Act advanced 15-9.
All 13 Republicans were joined by Democrats Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks, both of whom immediately conditioned their committee votes on further negotiations before any Senate floor commitment.
Between the May 14 markup and the July 17 hearing date, the political picture tightened considerably. Galaxy Research head Alex Thorn cut his 2026 passage estimate from 75% to 60% on June 5, citing the Senate calendar as the primary constraint.
His note identified two compounding factors: the FISA reauthorization fight consumed floor time the week of June 8, compounding a week already lost to the anti-weaponization fund debate, and no visible progress emerged on the ethics and illicit-finance provisions that Democratic crossover votes require.
JPMorgan issued a parallel warning about the narrowing legislative window, and Stifel's Brian Gardner wrote that a realistic 2026 path requires the bill to clear the Senate by the end of July.
Senator Alsobrooks has stated publicly that she will withhold floor support until a provision covering government officials' crypto holdings is added, a direct response to the President Donald Trump family's extensive crypto activity, ranging from stablecoins to memecoins to mining operations.
Democrats also pressed for stronger AML language, and Senator Jack Reed filed roughly 20 amendments before the May 14 markup alone.
The Senate needs at least seven Democratic votes to clear a motion to invoke cloture. Gallego and Alsobrooks are the only Democrats on the committee publicly on record, and both flagged their support as contingent.
Five or more additional Democratic votes are the arithmetic still unresolved heading into the July 17 hearing.

The bill's most consequential market-facing dispute centers on Section 404, which prohibits digital asset service providers from paying interest or yield solely for holding a payment stablecoin, while preserving activity-based rewards and incentives tied to transactions, payments, transfers, platform use, loyalty programs, liquidity, collateral, staking, governance, or other ecosystem participation. The provision leaves disclosure rules to joint rulemaking by the SEC and the CFTC.
Six banking trade groups, including the American Bankers Association and the Bank Policy Institute, called the language insufficient at the May 14 vote, warning that stablecoin offerings would draw deposits away from banks and undermine local lending.
Their position is that the passive yield prohibition needs tighter technical language to close perceived loopholes.
The crypto industry largely accepted the Tillis-Alsobrooks compromise text, while banks continued pressing for a stronger standard. That gap led to over 100 amendments being filed before the markup, and no public resolution has emerged since.
Regarding exchanges, stablecoin issuers, and competition between crypto platforms and traditional bank deposits, Section 404 is still open to legislative action.
| Section 404 issue | Crypto industry position | Banking industry concern | Why it matters for markets |
|---|---|---|---|
| Passive stablecoin yield | Accepts ban on deposit-like interest if usage-based rewards remain allowed | Worries loopholes could recreate interest-like products | Affects Coinbase, Circle, USDC rewards, and exchange incentive models |
| Activity-based rewards | Wants flexibility for rewards tied to transactions, usage, or platform activity | Argues the distinction may be too easy to game | Determines whether crypto platforms can compete with bank deposits |
| Deposit competition | Frames stablecoins as payment and settlement infrastructure | Says yield-like rewards could pull deposits from community banks | Links crypto market structure to bank lending and credit availability |
| Regulatory rulemaking | Supports joint SEC, CFTC, and Treasury implementation | Wants tighter statutory language before agencies interpret it | Determines whether Section 404 is settled in law or fought later in rules |
| Political risk | Views compromise as necessary to keep CLARITY moving | Continues pressing senators for stronger language | Keeps the bill exposed to amendments before a floor vote |
The Senate Banking Committee's CLARITY draft initially included the Build Now Act as Section 904, a housing-supply incentive provision unrelated to digital assets, added as political packaging around the bill.
Congress then moved the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act separately: the Senate approved the package 85-5 on June 22, and the House gave final approval on June 23, sending it to Trump’s desk. Tim Scott chaired the committee that drove both pieces of legislation.
Therefore, the housing scaffolding no longer needs to ride inside CLARITY. It also showed that the Senate Banking Committee can still secure bipartisan majorities on mainstream financial policy even as digital-asset negotiations remain unresolved.

A 15-9 committee vote is real momentum toward a much harder standard, since the bill now requires 60 votes, Republicans hold roughly 53 seats, and the two Democrats who voted yes in committee have both publicly conditioned their floor support on further negotiation.
Senator Cynthia Lummis has described an August recess floor vote as more realistic and warned that a 2026 failure would push the next viable legislative opening to 2030.
The bull case is that the July 17 hearing gives industry and Republican leadership a fresh public stage in New York's financial center, Democratic holdouts secure enough movement on ethics and AML language to commit to floor votes, and the Senate clears cloture before the August recess, with a presidential signature arriving in August.
That outcome would compress the legal-risk premium on exchanges, stablecoin issuers, and token networks still caught between SEC and CFTC jurisdiction.

The bear case is that the Senate calendar beats the bill before the recess, the July 17 hearing adds public testimony to a bill still awaiting floor time, and CLARITY enters a fall schedule running straight into midterm campaigning.
Gardner's warning was specific: missing the recess would see the bill's prospects “deteriorate materially.”
Exchanges and altcoins would carry market structure-related uncertainty as a sustained risk premium, while the EU's MiCA framework and Hong Kong's stablecoin licensing regime continue to set the international standard.
Seven Democratic votes are the variable that determines whether CLARITY becomes law in 2026 or becomes a record of legislative momentum that ran out of time on the Senate floor. The July 17 hearing matters only if it changes that count.
The post Crypto finally has a CLARITY Act date – delivery now depends on seven Senate Democrats appeared first on CryptoSlate.
On June 23, the US Treasury sanctioned nine individuals and 26 entities linked to the Prince Group transnational criminal organization and proposed expanding its Huione Group rule to include H-Pay Service PLC and any successor entity, tying both actions to Southeast Asia scam networks that cost Americans at least $10 billion in 2024.
OPSeC, announced by the DeFi Education Fund in partnership with Security Alliance (SEAL) and Asymmetric Research, frames itself as the credible internal answer to that convergence.
The same day, OPSeC went public with a pledge to harden the industry's protocols, signing practices, and infrastructure.
In Washington's legislative vocabulary, crypto fraud, DeFi exploits, stablecoin rails, and laundering infrastructure collapse into a single risk category the moment a bill is being drafted.
Treasury described digital asset investment fraud as one of the most common and lucrative schemes run by these operations, and its 2026 National Money Laundering Risk Assessment explicitly flags the sector.
FinCEN described Huione Group as a key node for laundering proceeds from cyber heists and virtual currency investment scams, and policymakers writing broad illicit finance rules have consistently grouped under-secured protocols alongside the scam operators that exploit them.
The coalition's pledge positions operational security as both an engineering discipline and a policy-facing standard.
Its stated workstreams include a shared security resource hub, regular convenings of protocol teams and security firms, and a direct bridge to policy through lawmaker-facing educational events as crypto legislation moves through Congress.
OPSeC is trying to make DeFi's security posture legible to policymakers before those policymakers define it for them.

April 2026 made it harder to argue against a coalition like OPSeC, with nearly $630 million drained across at least 27 reported DeFi exploits, led by Drift and KelpDAO and concentrated in signer, bridge, and infrastructure failure points.
The $285 million Drift Protocol hack, the largest DeFi exploit of 2026, grew out of a six-month social engineering operation that took just 12 minutes to execute once the groundwork was in place.
Attackers attributed with medium-high confidence to the North Korean state-sponsored group UNC4736 attended crypto conferences in person, built genuine professional relationships with Drift contributors, and manipulated real Security Council members into pre-signing hidden authorizations.
A zero-time-lock governance migration three days before the drain eliminated the protocol's last intervention window.
The forensic review identified three intrusion vectors: a malicious code repository cloned by a contributor, a fake TestFlight application, and a VSCode/Cursor vulnerability that executed arbitrary code silently when the repository was opened, all operating entirely outside the scope of smart contract audits.
| Old DeFi security frame | New threat vector | Example from article | Why traditional audits miss it |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smart-contract bugs | Social engineering | Drift attackers built relationships with contributors and council members | Human trust exploitation occurs outside contract logic |
| Smart-contract bugs | Compromised signers | Hidden authorizations were allegedly pre-signed | Valid signatures can execute malicious outcomes |
| Smart-contract bugs | Malicious developer tooling | Fake TestFlight app, malicious repo, VSCode/Cursor execution path | The exploit path begins on contributor devices |
| Smart-contract bugs | Governance/timelock failures | Drift’s zero-timelock migration removed intervention window | Governance configuration is operational architecture |
| Smart-contract bugs | Bridge verifier weakness | KelpDAO’s single-verifier LayerZero bridge route | Cross-chain validation risk sits above individual contract audits |
| Smart-contract bugs | RPC / infrastructure compromise | KelpDAO manipulation of validation logic through infrastructure | Infrastructure trust assumptions are not always audited like code |
TRM Labs attributed roughly $577 million in stolen crypto through April 2026 to North Korean hackers, equivalent to 76% of all global cryptocurrency hack losses in that period, concentrated in just two attacks.
The $292 million KelpDAO breach took a different technical route, exploiting a single-verifier design in a LayerZero bridge by compromising RPC infrastructure and manipulating cross-chain validation logic, but it operated on the same human and infrastructural layer that code audits were never built to reach.
OpenZeppelin’s own analysis argues that recent losses increasingly originate in the operational layers around protocols, including signing infrastructure, governance, cross-chain dependencies, and human controls, rather than contract code alone.
SEAL's certification framework, launched in 2026 through accredited auditors, was built around that breakdown. It evaluates whether a protocol can defend itself, detect incidents, and respond when things go wrong by covering multisig operations, treasury management, incident response, DNS security, DevOps infrastructure, and identity and account controls.
OPSeC's policy function provides a venue for those standards to become legible to legislators rather than remain internal industry infrastructure.
Two credible, opposing readings of DeFi's defensibility have been running through the security community since late May.
On May 26, Manuel Aráoz, co-founder and former CTO of OpenZeppelin, declared that he considers all of DeFi unsafe, citing AI coding agents that are “superhuman at finding vulnerabilities,” and advised friends and family to exit positions in Aave, MakerDAO, and Compound.
He argues that defenders must close every exploitable flaw, while attackers need only one, and that AI agents have made that asymmetry unmanageable by running vulnerability searches in parallel, around the clock, across thousands of contracts simultaneously.
OpenZeppelin's current CEO, Demian Brener, publicly distanced the company from Aráoz's exit thesis, framing AI as a defensive capability alongside an offensive one, and reaffirming the firm's commitment to continuous, AI-augmented security.
OpenZeppelin's own analysis similarly argues that the most significant losses of the past two years increasingly originated in operational layers around protocols, including social engineering, signing infrastructure, governance, and cross-chain dependencies.
AI agents are nonetheless moving the remaining technical attack surface toward attackers, and Aráoz's directional read holds even if his conclusion overstates it.
An AI-accelerated code exploitation environment adds a layer that certification programs covering DNS security and multisig operations cannot close on their own; together, these two framings define the outer boundaries of what OPSeC can and cannot accomplish.
SEAL Certifications set a deliberately demanding standard of six domains covering multisig governance, treasury architecture, incident response playbooks, DNS registry controls, DevOps infrastructure, and identity management, assessed by accredited auditors and recorded as on-chain attestations.
Most protocols undergoing certification will identify gaps that require remediation before they pass. A certification framework that demands a signer registry, tested incident response drills, and DNS configuration records is an enforceable bar.
OPSeC's value over the next twelve months will be determined by whether that bar gets enforced.
The bull case is that OPSeC connects with SEAL Certifications to build a security-premium market. Protocols demonstrating operational discipline through phishing-resistant signer controls, time-locked governance, 24/7 incident monitoring, and DNS registry locks trade at a lower risk discount than protocols that rely solely on code audits.
Capital follows attestation, and the standard becomes self-enforcing because it becomes economically meaningful.
| Scenario over next 12 months | What would confirm it | Market implication | Policy implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bull case: security premium forms | OPSeC signers adopt SEAL-style certification, publish attestations, and remediate gaps | Certified protocols trade at lower risk discounts; capital favors verifiable security | Industry gets evidence that self-regulation can work |
| Base case: coordination improves, but enforcement stays soft | OPSeC becomes a policy and education hub, but compliance data remains limited | Security becomes a narrative differentiator, not a pricing standard | Lawmakers still view DeFi risk through mixed evidence |
| Bear case: pledgeware narrative wins | Another nine-figure signer, bridge, or social-engineering exploit lands before measurable standards emerge | DeFi risk premium widens; BTC and simpler exposures outperform complex protocols | Treasury/FinCEN framing dominates legislative debate |
| Black swan: AI-assisted exploit links to sanctioned laundering rails | Major exploit is tied to state actors, scam-compound infrastructure, or sanctioned payment networks | Broad crypto selloff; exchanges and stablecoin issuers de-risk aggressively | Washington folds DeFi security, AML, and sanctions into one enforcement category |
The bear case is that a fresh nine-figure signer exploit lands before OPSeC produces measurable compliance data, policymakers treat the coalition as pledge language, and the illicit-finance legislative debate hardens around the worst-case assumptions Treasury's June 23 action put back on the table.
The contest is over who defines what “securing DeFi” means: the industry through verifiable operational standards, or Washington through enforcement categories that fold a compromised multisig signer and a scam compound in Cambodia into a single regulatory risk class.
Treasury has stated that it will continue to take aggressive steps against illicit abuse in the digital asset industry. OPSeC's window to answer with evidence is open, and it has a closing time.
The post US Treasury’s $10B scam warning shows why crypto is racing to police itself appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The Trump administration is pushing hard to get the crypto market structure bill across the finish line before lawmakers leave town. Negotiations have continued as Republicans aim to put the crypto bill on the floor ahead of Congress's August recess, even after the talks hit repeated snags over how much authority state attorneys general should have to enforce ethics rules.
For traders, this isn't just political theater. The CLARITY Act is widely seen as the single biggest regulatory catalyst hanging over the market right now — and the next few weeks could decide whether it becomes a price driver or another disappointment.
The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act — formally H.R. 3633 — is the framework meant to finally answer the question that has haunted US crypto for years: who regulates what. The legislation draws a line between the SEC's jurisdiction over securities and the CFTC's oversight of commodities as those categories apply to digital assets, and also tackles token classification, DeFi oversight, and consumer protections.
The bill has already cleared major hurdles. The CLARITY Act passed the House 294-134 in July 2025, and the Senate Banking Committee advanced it 15-9 in May 2026. On June 1, 2026, it was placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar, making it formally eligible for full Senate floor consideration.
Timing is everything here. More than 200 organizations, including Coinbase and Ripple, have urged the Senate to act before recess, warning that delay could effectively kill the bill's chances in this session.
The math is brutal. Once the legislation is finished — combining the banking and agriculture committee versions and adding an ethics provision — Senate leadership would need to set aside floor time, potentially a full week out of the handful remaining before the August break. Miss that window, and the next realistic shot slips toward September or the unpredictable post-election "lame duck" session.
The single number that matters most: the full Senate floor vote requires a supermajority of 60 votes to overcome a filibuster. Committee approval doesn't guarantee that.
Here's where it gets interesting for anyone watching their portfolio.
Markets are currently in wait-and-see mode. $Bitcoin has been consolidating near the low-$60K range as traders hold off on fresh positioning until the Senate delivers a verdict, with participants stuck in a cautious hold pattern heading into the vote. That kind of compression often precedes a sharp move once the uncertainty resolves — in either direction.
The bullish case is significant. Analysts argue a clean passage would remove one of the biggest overhangs on the market:
Price targets reflect that optimism. One intelligence outfit placed its 12-month Bitcoin trading band at $95,000 to $130,000 in the base case, anchored to Citi's $112,000, Bernstein's $150,000 target, and JPMorgan's $170,000 framework — with the most bullish scenarios reaching $200,000.
The downside is just as real. A failed or stalled vote could send Bitcoin back toward the $75,000 region, while a successful one would strengthen institutional confidence. And the odds are far from a lock — Polymarket has priced 2026 passage at around 67%, down from 82% in February.
The sticking point remains the ethics language. The conflict-of-interest section meant to limit government officials from profiting off crypto has been contentious, partly because its genesis traces back to President Trump's own wide-ranging crypto interests — and White House officials have repeatedly said they won't tolerate a bill that targets the president. No ethics deal, no 60 votes.
The CLARITY Act is shaping up as a binary catalyst. A floor vote before the August recess could be the green light institutional money has been waiting for, potentially uncorking the compressed range Bitcoin has been stuck in. A miss pushes the timeline into a far murkier window and risks a sentiment unwind.
For now, the market is holding its breath. Keep an eye on the 60-vote count and any ethics compromise language — those are the two dominoes that decide which way prices break.
Here's where it gets interesting for anyone watching their portfolio.
Markets are currently in wait-and-see mode. $Bitcoin has been consolidating near the low-$60K range as traders hold off on fresh positioning until the Senate delivers a verdict, with participants stuck in a cautious hold pattern heading into the vote. That kind of compression often precedes a sharp move once the uncertainty resolves — in either direction.
The bullish case is significant. Analysts argue a clean passage would remove one of the biggest overhangs on the market:
Price targets reflect that optimism. One intelligence outfit placed its 12-month Bitcoin trading band at $95,000 to $130,000 in the base case, anchored to Citi's $112,000, Bernstein's $150,000 target, and JPMorgan's $170,000 framework — with the most bullish scenarios reaching $200,000.
The downside is just as real. A failed or stalled vote could send Bitcoin back toward the $75,000 region, while a successful one would strengthen institutional confidence. And the odds are far from a lock — Polymarket has priced 2026 passage at around 67%, down from 82% in February.
The sticking point remains the ethics language. The conflict-of-interest section meant to limit government officials from profiting off crypto has been contentious, partly because its genesis traces back to President Trump's own wide-ranging crypto interests — and White House officials have repeatedly said they won't tolerate a bill that targets the president. No ethics deal, no 60 votes.
The CLARITY Act is shaping up as a binary catalyst. A floor vote before the August recess could be the green light institutional money has been waiting for, potentially uncorking the compressed range Bitcoin has been stuck in. A miss pushes the timeline into a far murkier window and risks a sentiment unwind.
For now, the market is holding its breath. Keep an eye on the 60-vote count and any ethics compromise language — those are the two dominoes that decide which way prices break.
Ethereum is back under pressure as ETH trades near $1,660, falling by more than 5% in the last 24 hours. The move comes during a wider crypto market selloff, with Bitcoin, Solana, XRP, BNB and Dogecoin also trading in the red.
However, Ethereum now has an additional story weighing on sentiment: the Ethereum Foundation has reportedly cut around 20% of its workforce as part of a wider internal restructuring. For traders, this creates a difficult question. Is ETH only falling because the entire market is weak, or is the Foundation’s shake-up adding extra pressure to Ethereum’s short-term outlook?

The Ethereum Foundation has concluded a months-long reorganization process, cutting 54 staff members and moving into a new structure based around five major clusters. These include areas focused on the protocol layer, access layer, user layer, community layer and institutional layer.
The Foundation says the goal is to become leaner, more focused and better aligned with Ethereum’s long-term development priorities. In theory, that could be positive if it helps the organization execute faster and reduce internal complexity.
But markets rarely react calmly to staff cuts, especially when they happen during a major price correction. For ETH holders, the concern is simple: if Ethereum is already struggling against competitors and weaker market sentiment, does a smaller Foundation make the roadmap stronger — or does it create more uncertainty?
Ethereum remains the largest smart contract blockchain, but its market position has been under pressure for months. Solana has gained attention for speed and user activity, Bitcoin continues to dominate institutional narratives, and newer chains are competing for liquidity, developers and users.
That is why the Ethereum Foundation’s restructuring matters. The Foundation is not Ethereum itself, and the network does not depend on one centralized company. Still, the EF plays a major role in supporting research, protocol development, ecosystem coordination and long-term direction.
When investors see leadership changes, staff reductions and restructuring all happening at the same time, it can create uncertainty. And in a weak market, uncertainty often turns into selling pressure.
The bearish view is clear. Cutting 20% of staff during a difficult market could be seen as a warning sign. It may suggest that the Foundation is under financial pressure, needs to reduce spending, or is trying to regain control after months of criticism around direction and execution.
The bullish view is different. Ethereum may be entering a necessary reset phase. A leaner Foundation could become more disciplined, more focused on core protocol development and less distracted by broad ecosystem responsibilities. If the new structure helps Ethereum improve scalability, user experience and institutional adoption, the current weakness could eventually be seen as a painful but useful transition.
In other words, this is not automatically a disaster for Ethereum. But it does come at a dangerous time for ETH price action.
ETH is now trading close to an important short-term support zone. The first level to watch is around $1,600. If Ethereum holds above this area, buyers may try to defend the market and push ETH back toward $1,700.
A move above $1,700 to $1,750 would be the first sign that ETH is attempting to stabilize. From there, Ethereum would need stronger volume and a broader crypto recovery to challenge higher resistance zones.
But if ETH loses the $1,600 area, the next downside risk could open toward $1,550 and then $1,500. A clean break below $1,500 would likely confirm that panic selling is still active, especially if Bitcoin remains weak and stock market pressure continues.
For now, ETH is not in a strong recovery setup yet. The price is still reacting to fear, market-wide selling and now internal Ethereum Foundation headlines.
Ethereum can recover, but the market needs two things. First, the broader crypto market must stabilize. If Bitcoin continues to fall, ETH will likely struggle to build an independent rebound.
Second, investors need clarity from the Ethereum Foundation. The market will want to see whether the restructuring actually improves execution or simply adds more uncertainty. If the Foundation communicates clearly and the ecosystem continues building, the negative reaction could fade over time.
The biggest risk is that ETH remains stuck between two bearish forces: weak macro conditions and confidence questions around Ethereum’s leadership structure.
Ethereum’s latest drop is not only about price charts. ETH is falling during a wider crypto selloff, but the Ethereum Foundation’s decision to cut around 20% of its staff adds a deeper layer to the story.
For traders, the key question is whether this is a warning sign or a reset. If ETH holds above $1,600 and reclaims $1,700, the market could treat the restructuring as short-term noise. But if Ethereum breaks below $1,600, the selloff could deepen toward $1,550 or even $1,500.
Ethereum is still one of the most important assets in crypto, but right now, confidence is being tested from both the market and the Foundation itself.
Markets are flashing red across every asset class. In a matter of hours, more than $3 trillion in value has evaporated, and the damage is not confined to one corner of the market — equities, crypto, gold and silver are all falling together. The synchronised drop is what has investors rattled, because it points to forced selling and liquidity stress rather than a single bad headline.
Here's where things stand:
South Korea took the hardest hit. The losses were severe enough to trigger a 20-minute trading halt on the Kospi, the fourth such suspension this year, leaving the index down 10% on the day. South Korean chip giants SK Hynix and Samsung tumbled more than 12% each to drag the Kospi index down by 10%, after Monday finished at a record high.
After a blistering 2026 rally, investors are cashing out of the trades that drove the gains. The latest selloff reflects a sharp unwinding of crowded AI and semiconductor trades that have dominated Asian equity performance for much of 2026. Valuations had simply run too far, too fast, and the bar for justifying them kept rising.
With USD/JPY hovering near 161–162, the same dynamic that crushed markets in August 2024 is back in play. Investors borrow cheap yen, sell it for dollars and buy higher-yielding assets, including equities, credit and other risk-sensitive assets. When the yen rises quickly, those trades become expensive to maintain, forcing traders to sell assets to raise cash and repay yen liabilities.
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Stronger US data and a hawkish tone from policymakers have gutted rate-cut expectations. The sector was hit by heavy profit-taking as investors sold on fears of higher U.S. interest rates this year, with heavyweights including Alphabet and SpaceX logging deep losses.
This isn't just one asset cracking — everything that rallied is now being sold. Gold, silver, bitcoin and US equity futures unwound all of Monday's US-Iran relief rally, while WTI held its lows around $73/bbl. When safe-havens like gold fall alongside risk assets, it's a classic sign investors are raising cash, not rotating into defensives.
This ranks among the worst sessions in years for Korean equities. The KOSPI experienced its second-worst session since 2008. The contagion has already crossed into Europe, where chip names like ASML, Infineon and STMicroelectronics have shed between 5% and 8%, and US premarket pointed to a bruising open.
The key variable is the yen. A further sharp move higher would force more carry-trade unwinding and deeper deleveraging across crypto and equities alike. For now, the market is in a position-reduction phase — and as one analyst put it, there may still be considerable selling pressure waiting in the wings before investors are willing to step back in.
Julian Hosp is an Austrian medical doctor who became a crypto entrepreneur, bestselling author, and YouTube personality after buying Bitcoin early. He is one of the most recognizable — and most polarizing — figures in the German-speaking crypto scene. A former competitive kitesurfer, he reinvented himself around the goal of making people "cryptofit," publishing widely-read books and building a large following across YouTube and X.
That same decade has been shadowed by repeated controversy. Hosp's name is attached to a string of high-profile projects that generated enormous attention — and, for many of their investors, painful losses.

TenX, Cake DeFi (later Bake), and DeFiChain are the three crypto ventures that define Julian Hosp's track record — and all three ended in controversy or steep losses for investors. To understand the current debate, you have to understand this history.
The Cake chapter ended bitterly. Co-founder U-Zyn Chua filed to wind up the company in late 2023 amid a shareholder dispute, and reporting at the time detailed allegations around financial management and use of company funds — claims Hosp's side contested. Bake was eventually sold to a subsidiary of GSTechnologies, and Hosp signaled he would step back from the crypto spotlight.
Hosp has long disputed the harshest framings of these events, attributing failures to market conditions, partners, or broader industry turmoil rather than wrongdoing on his part.
The current controversy stems from Julian Hosp's early-2025 decision to exit crypto, short Bitcoin, and move into stocks (QQQ) — after years of promoting Bitcoin as a transformational asset. The flashpoint isn't a failed project; it's the pivot itself.
In early 2025, Hosp announced he had exited most of his crypto positions, at one point even going short, and rotated into other asset classes, notably the Nasdaq-100 ETF (QQQ). He framed crypto as having less and less real-world utility and called it "pure speculation."
Since then, he has become one of the most vocal Bitcoin skeptics in the German-language space. Through 2025 and into 2026 he repeatedly warned of further large declines — at various points floating scenarios of Bitcoin falling toward $20,000–$30,000 or even lower — while citing structural concerns like weakening institutional demand, quantum-computing risk, and over-reliance on a handful of large buyers such as Michael Saylor's Strategy. He has also stated that since selling near the end of January 2025, his QQQ-led portfolio outperformed Bitcoin with lower volatility and better risk-adjusted ratios.
For a man who built his fortune and fame on $Bitcoin, that reversal is exactly what lit the fuse.
The dispute has played out publicly on X, where critics accuse Hosp of hypocrisy and ingratitude, while Hosp dismisses them as bitter "Bitcoin socialists" who missed his calls. The exchange captures the two camps cleanly.
A critic, posting as mgp.eth, summed up the resentment many longtime followers feel. Paraphrased: Hosp went from kitesurfer and doctor to crypto millionaire purely because he bought Bitcoin early and built TenX and Cake with it — and without Bitcoin he'd "probably still be an accident surgeon in Innsbruck." Instead of gratitude, the critic argues, Hosp now trashes Bitcoin in almost every video, scares people, and plays the "concerned warner." The charge: that's not critical thinking, it's ingratitude and hypocrisy — and someone who'd have remained a nobody without Bitcoin shouldn't ruin the entry for those still trying to get in.
Hosp's response was equally pointed. Paraphrased: he mockingly rewrote the critic's complaint as sour grapes — that he made a fortune in Bitcoin from 2014 to 2025 and told everyone, then switched to QQQ in 2025 and told everyone that too; the critic was "too greedy," didn't listen, is now down significantly versus Hosp's returns, and rather than admitting Hosp was right is whining on X for engagement. He dismissed the critic as a "Bitcoin socialist" who wants redistribution and "never sees the fault in themselves."
Whether Julian Hosp is a smart investor who timed his exit or a polarizing figure who profited and then pulled the ladder up depends on how much weight you give his track record versus his returns. His story sits on a fault line that runs through all of crypto: the gap between conviction and salesmanship, between changing your mind and abandoning the people who believed you.
What's not in dispute is that he remains one of the most-watched voices in the space — and that his Bitcoin skepticism, right or wrong, will keep generating debate for as long as he keeps posting.
Julian Hosp is an Austrian medical doctor turned crypto entrepreneur, author, and YouTuber, best known for co-founding TenX and Cake DeFi (Bake) and for becoming a prominent Bitcoin critic after exiting crypto in 2025.
TenX raised around $80 million in a 2017 ICO for a crypto payment card, but the product failed to deliver on its goals. Hosp left in January 2019 after an internal dispute, and the project is widely viewed in the industry as a failure.
Hosp said he exited most of his crypto positions in early 2025 — even shorting Bitcoin for a period — because he saw declining real-world utility and viewed the market as "pure speculation." He moved into other asset classes, primarily the Nasdaq-100 ETF (QQQ).
Yes. In January 2022, Germany's financial regulator BaFin announced an investigation into Cake DeFi for operating in Germany without the required license.
There is no consensus, and no criminal conviction has been established in the matters discussed publicly. Critics point to his track record (TenX, the BaFin probe, the DeFiChain collapse) and accuse him of self-serving behavior; supporters argue he is a transparent investor who simply changed his strategy. Readers should research the facts and form their own view.
He continues to publish crypto and macro commentary on YouTube and X, runs paid education offerings, and remains a vocal Bitcoin skeptic while favoring tech-stock exposure such as QQQ.
SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) is having a brutal start to the week. On Monday the stock fell as much as 10% intraday, its third straight session of losses, trading back down toward the $165 area after closing the prior week near $185.
That puts SPCX roughly 27% below its all-time high of $225.64, set just days earlier on June 16. The slide follows a retreat of more than 8% across the previous Wednesday and Thursday, before US markets paused for the Juneteenth holiday. In other words, much of the euphoric post-IPO rally has now been unwound — though the stock still trades comfortably above its $135 IPO price.

SpaceX listed on the Nasdaq on June 12 in the largest IPO in history, raising about $75 billion at a $135 offer price and debuting at a valuation near $1.77 trillion. The first week was pure mania: shares popped 19% on day one and ripped to $225.64 by June 16, briefly vaulting SpaceX past Amazon and Microsoft to become the world's fifth-most-valuable company.
Retail investors drove the move, buying more SPCX than any other stock on the market for several consecutive sessions. Then the music stopped — and a thin, sentiment-driven stock started falling as fast as it rose.
The decline isn't a single scandal. It's a stack of pressures hitting a richly valued stock at the same time.
Not in the underlying business, according to most analysts. Starlink remains profitable and growing, with over 10 million subscribers, $11.4 billion in 2025 revenue and a 63% adjusted EBITDA margin, while the launch business set records in 2025. The pullback reflects an expensive stock and a tiny float — not a deterioration in operations.
That said, the caution is real. One widely-shared note this week projected SPCX could fall 50% or more by year-end as the hype fades. Morningstar's fair value estimate sits near $63, while the Wall Street consensus average is around $164 — close to where the stock trades today.
**Investments carry risks. Trade responsibly.
Two mechanical catalysts dominate the near-term picture. Around early July, expected Nasdaq-100 inclusion could trigger an estimated multi-billion-dollar wave of forced passive buying from index funds — demand driven by rules, not sentiment. Then the first post-IPO earnings report, due in early September, will deliver the market's first hard fundamental checkpoint, alongside the end of the underwriters' quiet period and a flood of fresh analyst coverage.
Until those arrive, expect more of the same: a thinly-floated, sentiment-led stock capable of swinging double digits in a single session — in either direction.
While SPCX bleeds, the crypto market is holding up far better — a useful contrast for anyone weighing where to put risk capital. As of Monday, June 22, the picture looks like this:
The total crypto market cap sits near $2.21 trillion, up about 0.4% over 24 hours, with $Bitcoin dominance remaining strong as investors favor the larger caps.
The takeaway for investors is the difference in character. SpaceX is a brand-new, thinly-floated single stock swinging 10% in a session on bond-sale headlines and lockup fears. Crypto majors — far more mature markets with deep liquidity — are absorbing the same hawkish-Fed macro backdrop with relative calm. Both are volatile asset classes, but right now the volatility is concentrated in SPCX, not in BTC or ETH. For those building a diversified risk book, that contrast matters: a falling stock and a steady crypto tape can present very different entry points at the same moment.
For long-term investors, a sharp pullback in a high-conviction name is often where opportunity lives. The logic of buying the dip is simple: if your thesis on the underlying business hasn't changed, a lower price means you're buying the same company for less. SpaceX's pullback hasn't been driven by a broken business — Starlink is profitable and scaling, the launch business is setting records, and the AI segment is expanding. What's fallen is the price, not the fundamentals.
Several factors make this dip worth a closer look:
That said, dip-buying is not risk-free. SPCX remains expensive on any traditional metric, and lockup expirations later in 2026 could add supply. The point isn't to catch a falling knife — it's to accumulate a quality asset at a discount if you believe in the long-term story.
If you want to act on the dip, XTB is one of the most accessible ways to do it — offering real SpaceX (SPCX) shares, not synthetic exposure, so you actually own the equity listed on the Nasdaq.
Here's why XTB stands out for trading SpaceX:
Getting started is simple:
👉 Buy SpaceX (SPCX) shares on XTB →
**Investments carry risks. Trade responsibly.
As Bitcoin falls below the $60,000 mark, 21Shares said that its prediction that BTC breaks the historical four-year cycle hasn't come true.
Following a series of setbacks for South Korea, a delegation from one of Asia's most active crypto markets met with the SEC's task force.
Built with Broadcom, the LLM-focused accelerator is the first step in OpenAI's effort to design the hardware behind ChatGPT and beyond.
President Trump said he won’t sign the popular bill until Congress passes a controversial bill restricting voting rights.
Bitcoin fell to a two-week low price Wednesday as Strategy shares dove below the $100 mark for the first time since March 2024.
A massive 600% inflow spike pushes SHIB exchange reserves back to 80 trillion tokens.
BlackRock continues selling Bitcoin and Ethereum as ETF performances remain weak amid sustained market volatility and bearish on-chain movements.
Shiba Inu burn rate was down across nearly all timeframes, with the market now paying attention.
Inside Ripple's historic Japan listing, the bitter Bitcoin split over BIP-110, and the technical setup backing a July SHIB reversal.
XRP Ledger is set to welcome a new generation of lending and yield products as its ecosystem continues to expand amid growing adoption.
Artificial intelligence remained front and center across financial markets today. Between quarterly earnings announcements and a blockbuster listing reveal, semiconductor companies commanded attention from traders and investors alike.
Market participants track Micron carefully since its memory products power AI servers and data center infrastructure. Robust performance in these segments indicates continued aggressive spending by hyperscalers on artificial intelligence capabilities.
Anticipation ran high ahead of the announcement. Micron shares had delivered solid returns throughout 2026, leaving Wall Street eager for validation that high-bandwidth memory sales momentum persisted.
The implications extended well beyond a single company’s performance. Positive figures would reinforce optimism about semiconductor industry health. Disappointing numbers might trigger concerns about the actual pace of AI capital expenditure growth.
Few quarterly reports this season attracted comparable investor scrutiny.
Following recent pressure, semiconductor equities rallied meaningfully.
Nvidia, [[LINK_START_1]]Broadcom[[LINK_END_1]], and Intel all posted gains as capital flowed back into AI-linked stocks. The price action indicated many market participants viewed the recent selloff as an entry point rather than a fundamental warning.
AI-related capital spending continues representing one of the market’s most powerful tailwinds.
Hyperscale cloud providers maintain multi-billion-dollar commitments to data center expansion, advanced processors, and networking infrastructure. Today’s recovery demonstrated that underlying conviction in the sector remains intact.
Volatility has increased noticeably, yet demand emerged swiftly at lower price levels.
The session’s most significant corporate development originated from SK Hynix.
The South Korean memory manufacturer disclosed intentions to pursue a United States listing in a transaction potentially generating approximately $29 billion. Upon completion, this would represent one of the largest public offerings on record.
[[LINK_START_2]]SK Hynix[[LINK_END_2]] specializes in high-bandwidth memory production, a critical component enabling contemporary AI system performance.A U.S. market presence would provide investors with direct exposure to one of the most sought-after segments within the semiconductor value chain. The announcement underscores extraordinary investor appetite for AI-connected equity opportunities.
The [[LINK_START_3]]Nasdaq[[LINK_END_3]] index posted positive returns following multiple consecutive down sessions.
Technology shares paced the advance as market participants grew increasingly comfortable with current valuations after the recent correction. While inflation and monetary policy concerns persist, buying interest nonetheless materialized.
The rebound indicates investors remain prepared to add exposure when high-quality technology companies experience pullbacks.
Semiconductors, AI infrastructure providers, and cloud computing firms continue leading broader market performance over the trailing twelve months.
The firm produces processors engineered exclusively for artificial intelligence computing tasks. Its financial performance offered visibility into demand patterns for specialized hardware operating outside Nvidia’s ecosystem.
The report contributed additional data points suggesting AI hardware investment remains broadly distributed rather than concentrated among just a handful of suppliers.
Investors continue monitoring emerging players like Cerebras to gauge the true breadth of AI infrastructure deployment.
The quarterly figures reinforced that artificial intelligence maintains its position as the defining investment theme propelling technology sector allocation as 2026 progresses.
The post Wall Street AI Watch: Micron (MU) Results, SK Hynix $29B Listing, and Chip Stock Recovery appeared first on Blockonomi.
SpaceX (SPCX) stock experienced a significant decline of roughly 10.6% following news of a massive $6.3 billion computing agreement with Reflection AI — an AI startup that has yet to launch a commercial product or generate any revenue.
Space Exploration Technologies Corp, SPCX
CNBC broke the story on June 22. According to the agreement’s structure, Reflection AI will gain prompt access to Nvidia GB300 processors located within SpaceX’s Colossus 2 Memphis data center. Monthly installments of $150 million commence on July 1, 2026, with the contract extending until 2029.
If executed in full, the arrangement would generate roughly $6.3 billion in total payments. Both parties retain the option to terminate with 90 days’ notice following an initial three-month period.
Neither SpaceX nor Reflection AI provided responses to Reuters’ inquiries.
Reflection shared on LinkedIn that “additional compute capacity enables us to further advance the boundaries of open models,” offering no additional specifics.
SpaceX has been methodically assembling an impressive collection of high-profile computing clients at its Colossus facilities. Anthropic secured exclusive access to all of Colossus 1 for approximately $1.25 billion monthly. Google subsequently committed to $920 million per month for transitional capacity while constructing its proprietary data centers, with service beginning October this year and continuing through June 2029. Reflection represents the fourth major tenant in a portfolio that emerged from nothing within the past year.
Reflection was established in early 2024 by co-founders Misha Laskin and Ioannis Antonoglou, both alumni of Google DeepMind. Laskin previously directed reward modeling efforts for Gemini. Antonoglou co-developed AlphaGo. The startup completed a $2 billion funding round last October at an $8 billion valuation, with Nvidia serving as the lead investor. By spring 2026, industry reports suggested its valuation had climbed toward $20 billion. The company has not yet released any public model.
The organization has established itself as an open frontier laboratory concentrating on government and national security applications, including initiatives connected to the Department of Energy’s Genesis Mission and various Pentagon AI contracts.
Despite securing billions in guaranteed recurring revenue from an additional tenant, SPCX shares fell approximately 10.6% on announcement day — marking the sharpest single-day decline since the company’s June 11 public debut at a $1.77 trillion valuation.
The market reaction surprised several analysts. SpaceX is securing guaranteed, recurring payments against existing infrastructure assets. The Colossus 2 agreement alone contributes $1.8 billion in annual contracted revenue. This financial dynamic doesn’t immediately explain the negative market response.
The agreement features a 90-day termination provision following the initial three-month period, meaning the critical evaluation point arrives around late October. Should Reflection choose not to exercise this exit option, the lease essentially transitions from potentially temporary to confirmed long-term demand.
Reflection’s LinkedIn communication mentioned advancing the frontier on “open models.” The company has not disclosed a timeline for any public product release.
SpaceX, Reflection AI, and Nvidia had not provided additional comments by publication time.
The post SpaceX (SPCX) Stock Plunges 10.6% Despite Securing $6.3B AI Computing Contract appeared first on Blockonomi.
Shares of ASML (ASML) experienced a sharp decline on Tuesday, closing at $1,778.46—a 7.82% drop that significantly outpaced the broader market’s losses. While the S&P 500 shed 1.44% and the Nasdaq fell 2.22% during the same trading session, ASML’s pullback was notably steeper.
ASML Holding N.V., ASML
The semiconductor equipment manufacturer’s slide followed reports that U.S. officials have raised concerns about possible export control violations involving the company’s business with China. Compounding investor anxiety, a bipartisan legislative proposal now threatens to completely prohibit deep-ultraviolet (DUV) lithography equipment shipments to the Chinese market.
The stakes are substantial: China is projected to contribute approximately 20% of ASML’s total revenue stream in 2026, making this exposure a critical focal point for market participants.
ASML issued a formal denial of the allegations, clarifying that no extreme ultraviolet (EUV) systems were shipped to China in breach of existing controls. While this statement may mitigate some reputational risk, regulatory scrutiny appears likely to intensify.
Beyond the immediate allegations, market participants are increasingly concerned about potential restrictions on software updates, spare parts, and maintenance services for equipment already deployed in China. This ongoing service revenue has represented a significant, albeit understated, contributor to ASML’s financial performance.
Competitive dynamics add another layer of complexity. Nikon has been expanding its presence in mature-node immersion lithography systems, while Chinese domestic manufacturers continue advancing their indigenous capabilities—developments that could exert downward pressure on both pricing and profit margins in ASML’s lower-tier product segments.
Despite Tuesday’s selloff, ASML’s fundamental performance metrics remain robust. The company is scheduled to report quarterly results on July 15, 2026. Wall Street analysts project earnings per share of $7.98, representing a substantial 75.38% year-over-year increase.
Second-quarter revenue estimates stand at $10.28 billion, reflecting 17.83% growth compared to the prior-year period. Full-year consensus forecasts call for EPS of $36.69 and revenues of $45.35 billion—representing increases of 31.27% and 22.67%, respectively.
In the most recent quarter, ASML delivered EPS of $8.28 on $10.15 billion in revenue, achieving a return on equity of 48.69% and maintaining a net profit margin of 27.65%.
The stock currently trades at a forward price-to-earnings multiple of 52.58, above the industry average of 47.43. Its price-to-earnings-growth (PEG) ratio of 1.55 also exceeds the sector norm of 1.48.
Despite the recent volatility, analyst sentiment remains generally supportive. Wells Fargo elevated its price objective from $1,750 to $2,200 while maintaining an overweight rating. Bank of America similarly increased its target price and retained a Buy recommendation.
Morgan Stanley and Barclays have both reaffirmed overweight ratings in recent research updates.
The Street consensus stands at Moderate Buy, comprising four Strong Buy ratings, 20 Buy recommendations, five Hold ratings, and three Sell calls. The average price target of $1,772.62 closely aligns with Tuesday’s closing price.
However, not all institutional investors are holding steady. Riverbridge Partners LLC reduced its ASML position by 40.3% during the first quarter, divesting 1,201 shares. Following this reduction, the firm maintained 1,781 shares valued at approximately $2.35 million.
From a technical perspective, ASML’s 50-day moving average sits at $1,610.59, while the 200-day moving average stands at $1,411.79, suggesting the stock retains a cushion before testing long-term support levels. The 52-week trading range spans from $683.48 to $1,959.04.
ASML currently carries a Zacks Rank of #3 (Hold), with earnings per share estimates revised downward by 1.11% over the past month.
The post ASML (ASML) Stock Plummets 8% Amid U.S.-China Export Control Tensions appeared first on Blockonomi.
Kalshi launches legal action against Illinois over state prediction market licensing requirements.
New Illinois statute mandates state licenses for prediction market operators.
Platform argues existing CFTC regulation preempts state-level requirements.
Company requests injunction before July 1 implementation date.
Legal battle intensifies ongoing disputes over sports prediction market jurisdiction.
The prediction market platform Kalshi has initiated legal proceedings against Illinois officials, contesting recently enacted licensing legislation governing prediction markets and imposing fees on specific digital asset activities. The platform maintains that its event-based contracts fall under exclusive federal jurisdiction via the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The company is pursuing court intervention to prevent the regulations from becoming operational on July 1.
This week, Kalshi submitted its legal filing to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The defendants include Governor JB Pritzker, Attorney General Kwame Raoul, and additional state officials. The case targets specific sections of SB3019, legislation that Pritzker approved as part of a comprehensive budget and revenue package.
Under the statute, operators of prediction markets must secure state authorization before conducting business with Illinois residents. Additionally, the legislation implements a 0.2% fee on designated digital asset transactions and associated services. Kalshi contends these mandates undermine a regulatory domain that Congress designated for federal oversight.
The platform functions as a designated contract market with CFTC registration under the Commodity Exchange Act. Kalshi maintains that Illinois lacks authority to establish an independent licensing framework for its federally supervised event contracts. The company asserts that such measures generate contradictory obligations and undermine consistent standards for nationwide derivatives platforms.
According to Kalshi, the Commodity Exchange Act grants the CFTC sole jurisdiction over contracts executed on registered exchanges. State authorities, however, classify certain sports-related event contracts as gambling instruments subject to state gaming statutes. This fundamental disagreement has generated multiple legal confrontations between prediction platforms and state enforcement agencies.
The company indicates that adhering to state requirements would necessitate discontinuing specific sports contracts for Illinois customers. Such action could potentially violate federal uniformity standards applicable to products on designated contract markets. Kalshi would also incur significant expenses for geographic restriction technology, regulatory compliance infrastructure, and jurisdiction-specific product modifications.
A jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction regulatory approach could compel nationwide platforms to customize offerings based on individual customer locations. As a result, operators might require distinct licenses, contract portfolios, and access management systems across multiple states. Kalshi contends that Congress established federal derivatives oversight specifically to avoid such fragmented market conditions.
Kalshi has filed for a temporary restraining order preventing Illinois from implementing the challenged provisions. The company also pursues preliminary and permanent injunctive relief pending resolution of its federal preemption arguments. The platform asserts that enforcement would inflict immediate business damage and generate irreversible operational costs.
This legal challenge emerges amid broader litigation concerning sports-focused prediction markets and federal regulatory jurisdiction. The CFTC has contested measures by nine states, including Illinois, while asserting its authority over registered exchanges. States maintain that local consumer safeguards and gaming statutes govern sports outcome contracts.
Illinois officials have previously stated their intention to uphold state authority and pursue consumer protection efforts within their borders. Neither Pritzker nor Raoul have provided immediate statements regarding Kalshi’s current legal filing. The judiciary must now determine whether federal derivatives legislation supersedes the newly established state licensing requirements.
The post Kalshi Files Federal Lawsuit Against Illinois Prediction Market Regulations appeared first on Blockonomi.
Cathie Wood’s investment management firm, ARK Invest, executed several strategic transactions on Tuesday, June 23, acquiring positions in prominent technology companies while simultaneously reducing exposure to Roku.
The firm liquidated 327,053 Roku shares distributed across ARKK, ARKW, and ARKF ETFs, generating approximately $44.2 million. This continues a pattern of Roku position reductions throughout the previous week.
Meanwhile, ARK deployed close to $49.3 million in new acquisitions across various holdings.
ARK accumulated 81,254 shares of Palantir valued at $9.48 million, distributed across ARKK, ARKW, and ARKF portfolios. This acquisition reverses previous divestments of the data analytics company. Palantir currently ranks as the 16th-largest position in the ARK Innovation ETF, representing 2.58% of holdings.
Palantir Technologies Inc., PLTR
The investment firm also secured 41,141 Amazon shares for $9.63 million across identical fund allocations. Amazon maintains the 18th-largest position in ARKK, accounting for 2.36% of total assets.
Additionally, ARK increased its Tesla holdings by 21,226 shares worth $8.1 million. Tesla represents the dominant holding in the ARKF ETF at 9.73%.
The firm obtained 23,603 Alphabet shares valued at $8.17 million. Alphabet comprises 1.92% of the ARK Innovation ETF portfolio.
ARK secured 76,195 CoreWeave shares for $8.06 million. CoreWeave stands as the 17th-largest holding in ARKK, representing 2.57% of the fund.
The firm also purchased 25,795 Cerebras Systems shares totaling $5.85 million. The semiconductor manufacturer completed its public debut on May 14. This transaction preceded Cerebras announcing better-than-expected Q1 revenue figures following Tuesday’s market close.
Cerebras presently accounts for only 1.22% of the ARK Innovation ETF, indicating ARK may be gradually accumulating this position.
One day earlier, ARK had acquired $32.4 million in SpaceX shares across four ETFs, purchasing following a 16% stock decline. ARK had previously acquired 3.3 million SpaceX shares on its public trading debut.
ARK liquidated hundreds of millions in various positions during the weeks preceding SpaceX’s IPO to generate capital for that investment.
Tuesday’s trading activity demonstrates ARK’s strategic reallocation from Roku into artificial intelligence-centric enterprises and Magnificent 7 technology stocks.
The post ARK Invest Snaps Up Palantir (PLTR), Amazon (AMZN) and Big Tech Giants appeared first on Blockonomi.
DeFi has long promised open and self-custodial finance. But for most users, actually using it still means juggling through wallets, dApps, bridges, pools, approvals, and risks that are very hard to understand in real time, especially for someone who’s relatively new to the industry.
CoinFello believes that the experience is ready for a major shift. With Fello 1, the company is building a self-sovereign AI agent designed to help users interact with DeFi through plain language while keeping complete control over their wallets and keys.
In the following interview with the founder, we go through why agents could become the primary interface for onchain finance, how controlled delegation can make automation a lot safer, and why liquidity provision is one of the first major frontiers for agent-powered decentralized finance.

CoinFello is positioning itself as a self-sovereign AI agent for DeFi. In simple terms, what problem are you trying to solve that wallets and dapps have not solved yet?
CoinFello is a completely new way to understand, use, and automate smart contracts.
The previous paradigm required users to create a wallet, navigate many disjointed websites, connect that wallet to a website, and then almost blindly trust that the smart contracts on that website do what the website promises they do. This made DeFi inaccessible, extremely complicated, and dangerous, and was one of the primary barriers to broader DeFi adoption.
CoinFello’s approach is to give users an agent that can interface directly with the smart contracts through a Claude-like user experience that people are familiar with. The agent isn’t just easier to use, it also opens up new frontiers of automation, where agents can act on behalf of users to accomplish virtually anything in DeFi: batch swap multiple tokens and bridge them across networks, discover advanced yield strategies, optimize existing deposits, take out a loan and automate payments, and a whole lot more. CoinFello makes doing these things super simple.
Fello 1 is described as a general-purpose DeFi agent rather than a narrowly integrated assistant. Why is general-purpose execution important, and what does it unlock for users that protocol-specific interfaces cannot?
DeFi is not one app or use case.
DeFi is an ecosystem of contracts, protocols, pools, vaults, bridges, and networks that constantly change.
Unfortunately, most of the crypto AI agent products on the market are just trading bots connected to some centralized API. If an agent only works through narrow integrations, it will always be limited to a few narrow use cases. That’s not how people use the internet (web browsers), their phones (extensible smartphones), AI agents, or even Ethereum itself. All of the great innovations were fundamentally extensible.
General-purpose execution means Fello 1 can reason about and interact with EVM-compatible smart contracts more broadly, instead of being locked into a small set of pre-built workflows. That unlocks all kinds of use cases that we ourselves never anticipate or integrate with. New pools, new protocols, and new opportunities can become accessible faster, without waiting for a dedicated front end or a code release for every specific action.
For the user, the benefit is simple: they do not need to jump between ten different interfaces to complete one DeFi strategy. They can describe what they want, review the steps, and execute across protocols from one agentic interface.
One of CoinFello’s core promises is that users can interact with DeFi through plain language while keeping custody of their wallets and private keys. How do you balance ease of use with the security expectations of self-custody?
We’ve tried to bring self-custody principles to the agentic era. This means that funds must remain in a self-custodied wallet, and agents should have guardrails enforced on them that define what funds they can access, in what ways those funds can be used, and for how long that agent has access to those funds.
With Fello 1, users keep their wallets and private keys. The agent operates through limited permissions that the user chooses to grant, and users review and approve transactions before execution. Plain language is the interface layer, not a replacement for consent. We fundamentally disagree with the approach of transferring funds to a centralized trading bot and hoping for the best.
The goal is to reduce cognitive overload without reducing user sovereignty. Fello can do the math, explain the route, surface the risks, prepare the transaction, and monitor positions, but the user remains in control of what permissions exist and what actually gets executed.
The Fello 1 launch puts a lot of emphasis on liquidity provision, including Uniswap V2, V3, and V4 positions, fee tiers, impermanent loss, and live position monitoring. Why did you choose LP management as such an important use case for the product?
Liquidity provision is one of the best examples of DeFi’s promise and its complexity. Concentrated liquidity can be a powerful yield opportunity, but it asks a lot from the user. You need to understand price ranges, ticks, fee tiers, pool selection, position sizing, impermanent loss, and when your liquidity is in or out of range.
That is exactly the kind of experience where an AI agent can create real value. Fello 1 can handle the mechanical and analytical parts: identifying LP strategies, doing the math, monitoring the position, explaining whether it is in range, showing the real return, and helping the user understand the trade-offs.
We chose LP management because it is not just a button-clicking problem. It is a decision-support problem. If we can make LPing understandable and manageable for more users while keeping them self-custodial, that is a major step toward making DeFi more mainstream.
AI agents in crypto are often associated with automation, but CoinFello says Fello 1 is not designed as an autonomous trading bot and that users still review and approve transactions. Where do you draw the line between helpful automation and too much delegation?
To be clear, we are building for automation, and we deeply believe users should be able to delegate approval for tightly defined automations to their agent. These are very complex problems to solve, so we’ve been working to expand the agent’s capabilities and the kinds of automation the user can create through the permissions and delegations we’ve been championing.
You previously led operations at MetaMask, one of the most important wallet products in crypto. What did that experience teach you about user behavior, wallet UX, and self-custody that directly shaped CoinFello?
MetaMask had a very radical vision in the early days of Ethereum. Most people at the time were building “use case wallets” with a handful of brittle integrations. MetaMask sought to do something else: create a permissionless and extensible wallet that could be used with any smart contract protocol.
We’ve brought the same radical values and vision to CoinFello that we previously used to build MetaMask. While most in the agent space are building narrow “use case bots,” our goal is different: to bring users onchain, and give them access to the entire decentralized web.
We also learned about the limitations of trying to solve the safety and user experience problems at the wallet layer. Wallets are forced to maintain endless integrations with third party protocols, and these integrations make their products slow to innovate, highly prone to bugs, and generally dangerous because the wallet still can’t understand what a smart contract *actually does.*
CoinFello is how we will solve these problems for the next wave of on-chain innovation.
CoinFello relies on a delegation model where users grant agents limited permissions that can be modified or revoked. What does a safe permission system for onchain AI agents need to look like as these tools become more powerful?
A safe permission system needs to be specific, limited, transparent, and revocable.
Users should not have to grant broad, unlimited authority over funds to an agent. Permissions should be scoped by action type, asset, protocol, amount, duration, and any other relevant rule the user cares about. The user should be able to see what permissions exist, understand what they allow, and revoke or modify them at any time.
As agents become more powerful, permission design becomes one of the most important parts of the stack. The future is not giving the AI your keys. The future is controlled delegation, where the agent can help execute within boundaries that the user defines. That is how we get the benefits of automation without sacrificing self-sovereignty.
Looking ahead, do you think the future of DeFi will still be built around users manually navigating dapps, or will agents become the primary interface for onchain finance?
I think dapps will still matter, but agents will become the primary interface for most users.
Today, DeFi still looks like the early internet in some ways. Users manually navigate different websites, learn different interfaces, and stitch together actions themselves. That works for power users, but it does not scale to broader adoption.
Agents change the interface from navigation to intent. Instead of asking users to know exactly which protocol to use and which buttons to click, they can say what they want to accomplish, compare options, understand risks, and approve execution.
The future of on-chain finance will still be open, composable, and self-custodial. But the way users access it will become much more conversational, automated, and personalized. Our view is that agents will become the execution layer that makes DeFi usable for the next wave of users.
Disclaimer: The content shared in this interview is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice, investment recommendation, or endorsement of any project, protocol, or asset. The cryptocurrency space involves risk and volatility. Readers are encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with qualified professionals before making any financial decisions. This interview was conducted in cooperation with CoinFello, who generously shared their time and insights. The content has been reviewed and approved for publication in mutual understanding. Minor edits have been made for clarity and readability, while preserving the substance and tone of the original conversation.
The post From Wallets to Agents: CoinFello’s Bet on the Future of DeFi (Interview) appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The world’s largest crypto exchange has recently faced significant regulatory challenges that could ultimately force it to stop serving clients in the European Union.
Earlier this month, Reuters reported that the company’s application through Greece’s Hellenic Capital Market Commission (HCMC) is expected to fall short: a development that may strip Binance of the license it needs to stay in the bloc after the June 30 deadline.
The firm assured that it remains fully committed to securing the necessary MiCA approval. Speaking on the matter was CEO Richard Teng, who said:
“Binance is dedicated to Europe. We are committed to our European users and to operating under a clear, fair, and harmonized MiCA framework. We are dedicated to securing our MiCA license and remain ready to operate under a fair, predictable, and genuinely harmonized European framework. We will continue to keep users updated as we make progress.”
Just recently, Reuters revealed that the exchange will make a fresh push for permission to operate in the EU. Gillian Lynch, Binance’s head of Europe and the United Kingdom, reportedly said that the firm “may just have a different pathway to being authorized,” adding that “if it is not Greece, I’m looking at other alternatives.”
According to the media, Binance has already held talks with regulators in Ireland, Latvia, and Greece but has been rejected in all three nations due to concerns such as the company’s past penalties for money laundering and its complex international structure.
Lynch said the exchange had contacted several regulators in the European Union but made only one application, to Greece. She is unaware why the Greek authorities refused approval, arguing that Binance has no outstanding issues related to the filing.
The post Binance Makes a New Push to Secure EU Approval appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The company recently secured a key regulatory approval, which is vital for its operations in the European Union, while institutional interest in XRP remains solid.
Despite these positive developments, Ripple’s cross-border token hasn’t managed to rebound and is down nearly 70% from its all-time high registered last summer.
Earlier this week, Ripple obtained preliminary approval for a Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license from Luxembourg’s Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation.
It was granted through a Green Light Letter and remains subject to final conditions. If fully confirmed, it would enable the company to offer regulated cryptocurrency services across the entire EEA, which consists of 30 countries. Commenting on the matter was Cassie Craddock, Managing Director, UK & Europe at Ripple, who said:
“Financial market infrastructure is moving on-chain – from cross-border payments and settlement to collateral management and tokenized assets – and banks and fintechs are actively building the digital asset capabilities they need to remain competitive. With our growing European presence, regulatory track record and institutional-grade infrastructure, we’re ready to meet the moment and support that transition at scale.”
Over the past several weeks, institutional investors have drastically reduced their exposure to Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH). However, this is not the case for Ripple’s native token, which continues to attract substantial capital.
SoSoValue’s data shows that inflows into spot XRP ETFs have surpassed outflows, with the last red day being March 6. The financial giants offering such products include Canary Capital, Bitwise, Franklin Templeton, 21Shares, and Grayscale, while the cumulative net inflow generated to date exceeds $1.45 billion.

The inflows into spot ETFs require the issuers of these investment vehicles to purchase real XRP on the market, which could positively impact the price.
Nonetheless, the asset remains heavily suppressed during the prolonged bear market and currently trades at around $1.10, representing a 20% decline on a monthly scale and a whopping 70% crash from the historic peak reached in 2025.
It’s worth noting that the steep decline hasn’t dampened the strong optimism shared by some analysts. A few days ago, X user Tom claimed that the token has formed a pattern similar to its 2024 run, which took the price from $0.50 to $3.30. This time, though, it could result in a major upswing to $8.42.
JAVON MARKS was even more bullish, arguing that “XRP’s breakout stands, which means the measured move target near $17 does as well.”
The post Ripple (XRP) News Today: June 24 appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Meta is reportedly developing a prediction markets app that it’s calling Arena, which would allow users to place bets on real-world outcomes with points rather than actual money.
The app would be separate from Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger, the New York Times says, and Meta plans to grow it by channeling its existing social audience to the new product.
In a June 23 exclusive, the NYT, citing sources with knowledge of the project, said that while Arena was experimental, it is a top priority for Mark Zuckerberg. If it comes to fruition, it would not require users to wager real money, at least initially, with a video game-style points system being the likely starting model. However, the sources did not rule out real-money betting for a later stage.
The app is one of several standalones that Meta is developing, with another called Meta Photos that uses AI to generate new types of media also in the pipeline. This push toward standalone apps reflects a bigger problem for the multinational tech company, as Facebook and Instagram have shifted heavily toward video, leaving fewer spaces inside those platforms to test new product ideas, thus forcing Meta to look outward.
It isn’t the first time Zuckerberg is dabbling with prediction markets. In 2020, his company released Forecast, a crowdsourced prediction market app built around the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic that used almost the same points-based structure. However, it shut down in 2022.
Meta has also been chasing emerging social trends with varying results in the last few years, including copying features from Snapchat and TikTok with mixed outcomes, as well as producing apps around podcasts, travel, and matchmaking that largely went nowhere.
The timing feels different now, though, with prediction markets growing at a pace that’s hard to ignore, with Kalshi and Polymarket combining for $51 billion in trades in 2025. That figure is even higher this year, having already hit $130 billion.
Meanwhile, Kalshi completed a $1 billion funding round that valued it at $22 billion, while Polymarket was in talks in April for a $400 million raise at a $15 billion valuation, with Bernstein projecting that by 2030, the total prediction market volumes could hit $1 trillion annually.
Meta is not the only company eyeing a slice of the prediction market space, with several crypto companies already getting a head start. In March, Binance added a prediction market functionality to its wallet, while Hyperliquid launched macro prediction markets to its own offerings the following month. Furthermore, Coinbase and Crypto.com also have products in the category, and Trump Media has also announced plans for the same.
However, the sector has also attracted legal heat, with federal prosecutors charging a US Special Forces soldier with using classified information to place bets on Polymarket about a secret plan to capture Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro, which netted him $400,000.
There’s also been added scrutiny around data quality and trading behavior on some platforms, with blockchain investigator ZachXBT warning in June that Rain Protocol, a prediction market project valued at close to $9 billion, was showing signs of on-chain price manipulation.
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[PRESS RELEASE – Ras Al Khaimah, UAE, June 24th, 2026]
Fintech developer Virell Trade has officially announced the launch of Stabliq Wallet, a secure, non-custodial cryptocurrency wallet engineered specifically for the management of stablecoins across the Ethereum and TRON networks. Designed to enhance digital asset security and accessibility, the application provides comprehensive storage, transfer, and exchange capabilities for major stablecoins, including USDT and USDC.
To mitigate the complexities typically associated with decentralized finance (DeFi), Stabliq Wallet introduces a specialized architectural design that appeals to both institutional digital asset managers and retail users entering the Web3 ecosystem.
Key Infrastructure and Technical Features Include:
By focusing on the dual infrastructure of Ethereum and TRON — the two largest networks for stablecoin volume — Stabliq Wallet directly addresses the market’s demand for high-throughput, secure, and cost-effective digital asset management.
“Stabliq Wallet uses a non-custodial architecture, meaning users have full control over their private keys. Security features include Face ID, password protection, and seed phrase backup”, said the company.
About Virell Trade
Virell Trade is a digital asset technology company based in Ras Al Khaimah, UAE. The firm specializes in developing secure Web3 infrastructure, decentralized financial applications, and consumer-focused blockchain tools designed to enhance efficiency and security in the global digital economy. For more information, users can visit the official Stabliq Wallet platform.
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