Institutional belief in Bitcoin's undervaluation may stabilize prices, potentially spurring market activity and influencing future investment trends.
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Iran's defense stance heightens geopolitical tensions, undermining ceasefire prospects and impacting market stability and diplomatic efforts.
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The DOJ's shift may heighten political tensions, influencing voter mobilization and campaign strategies ahead of the 2026 midterms.
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The drone attack exacerbates regional instability, complicating diplomatic efforts and increasing the risk of prolonged conflict.
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The bombing underscores potential geopolitical tensions, highlighting the influence of Iran-backed networks and complicating regional stability.
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Bitcoin Magazine

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

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

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

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

Czech Central Bank Chief Backs Bitcoin as 1% Reserve Slice in ‘Conservative but Innovative’ Strategy
Czech National Bank Governor Aleš Michl used a Bitcoin industry stage in Las Vegas to defend a reserve strategy that mixes strict inflation control with measured exposure to digital assets.
He described the bank’s move to add a small Bitcoin allocation as a way to raise expected returns without increasing overall portfolio risk.
Michl said that when he became governor in mid‑2022, inflation in the Czech Republic was near 20%. He told the audience that the central bank pledged to bring inflation back to 2% within two years and met that goal through discipline, not “magic.”
He said money had been too cheap for too long, the currency had weakened, and there was too much easy money in the system. The bank responded by supporting saving and strengthening the Koruna, and its rule now is “to stay hawkish forever.”
Alongside that stance, Michl highlighted the scale of the Czech National Bank’s balance sheet. He said the institution manages about 180 billion dollars in foreign exchange reserves, equal to roughly 44% of Czech GDP, and described those reserves as among the largest in the world relative to the size of the economy.
The task, he said, is to “build for the future,” think ahead, and invest in a way that protects the country. That has meant shifting away from low‑return bonds and increasing exposure to assets such as stocks and gold through low‑risk portfolios.
Michl said the next question for the bank was whether it could do more to build a stronger portfolio for the long run. That led to an internal debate over Bitcoin. He recalled first using Bitcoin to buy coffee in Prague and acknowledged that its price swings make it look risky, since its value can be higher one day and lower the next. He argued that other assets also move up and down and that the key issue for a central bank is how each asset behaves inside a broader portfolio.
According to Michl, Czech National Bank research found that Bitcoin has low long‑term correlation with many traditional reserve assets and does not move in the same way as them. Over longer horizons, he said, Bitcoin can provide returns that are not closely linked to other holdings. On that basis, the bank introduced a 1% Bitcoin position in its reserves.
In the bank’s analysis, he said, a 1% allocation lifts expected returns in Czech Koruna terms while leaving overall portfolio risk unchanged. “When you add Bitcoin to your portfolio it works better, returns go up and risk stays the same – that is diversification,” he told the audience.
Michl framed the move as part of a broader philosophy for central banking in an era of digital assets. His message to the crowd was to remain “conservative but innovative” in how institutions work and invest.
For the Czech National Bank, that has meant a strict anti‑inflation stance and a strong domestic currency, paired with a controlled experiment in using Bitcoin and other non‑traditional assets to strengthen reserves over time.
This post Czech Central Bank Chief Backs Bitcoin as 1% Reserve Slice in ‘Conservative but Innovative’ Strategy first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
“Sell in May and go away” is the idea that stocks reliably underperform between May and October, and it describes a market that might no longer exist.
Bloomberg Intelligence data shows the S&P 500 ETF has closed the May-October period in positive territory in 25 of the last 33 years, with only one negative summer stretch in the past decade.
Bespoke data cited by Bloomberg shows the cumulative return from holding SPY is only in May-October since the ETF's 1993 debut, at roughly 171%. That is real money, just considerably less than the 731% earned by staying long only in November-April.
Despite the seasonal performance difference, the cliché that May automatically means sell does not hold.

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

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

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

Deposits leaving banks for stablecoin rewards would flow toward reserve assets such as T-bills and repo, redirecting funding from bank balance sheets to the front end of the Treasury curve.
The test reveals if rewards reshape deposit behavior at the margins, and for which depositors.
At the current stablecoin market size, that is a deposit sensitivity check, a real-world measure of bank pricing power and competitive friction that the industry, at this scale, has only modeled.
A CLARITY stall means watching that mechanism either accelerate deposit migration or hold it steady despite every competitive incentive, and either result produces the first real deposit-behavior data a market this size has ever generated.
The post CLARITY’s delay to test Wall Street’s $6.6 trillion stablecoin warning which is at odds with White House view appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Washington is turning stablecoins into regulated payment instruments while trying to keep issuer-paid yield away from holders. That combination changesthe economics of digital dollars and puts the value of user balances up for grabs across the intermediary stack.
The GENIUS Act bars permitted payment stablecoin issuers and foreign payment stablecoin issuers from paying holders any form of interest or yield solely for holding, using, or retaining a payment stablecoin.
The FDIC's April 7 proposal would turn parts of that law into operating standards for FDIC-supervised issuers, including reserves, redemption, capital, risk management, custody, pass-through insurance, and tokenized-deposit treatment.
That leaves a practical question for a market that reached roughly $320 billion in stablecoin supply in mid-April. If holders cannot receive direct issuer-paid yield, the value created by tokenized dollars still has to land somewhere.
The redistribution runs through the operating stack. The fight shifts to issuers, exchanges, wallets, custodians, banks, asset managers, card networks, and tokenized-deposit providers. They are the parties positioned to collect reserve income, distribution payments, custody fees, payment fees, settlement benefits, loyalty economics, or deposit economics.

The stablecoin framework begins with reserves. GENIUS requires permitted issuers to maintain identifiable reserves backing outstanding payment stablecoins at least 1:1, with reserve categories that include cash, bank deposits, short-term Treasuries, certain repo arrangements, government money market funds, and limited tokenized reserve forms.
It also requires reserve disclosures and redemption policies, restricts reserve reuse, and calls for capital, liquidity, risk management, AML, and sanctions controls.
That makes compliant payment stablecoins look more like regulated cash-management products than free-form crypto instruments. Issuers can hold large pools of income-producing assets. At the same time, the statute blocks those issuers from paying stablecoin holders direct interest or yield merely for holding or using the token.
The economic trade-off looked uneven in the White House's April 8 yield-prohibition note, which estimated a baseline $2.1 billion increase in bank lending from eliminating stablecoin yield, equal to a 0.02% lending effect, alongside an $800 million net welfare cost.
The same note said affiliate or third-party arrangements could remain unless CLARITY variants close that channel.
That caveat is where the post-CLARITY money map starts. A direct issuer-yield ban controls the issuer-holder relationship. It leaves open the harder economic question of how platforms, partners, payment apps, and bank structures treat the same value once it moves through distribution or product design.
CryptoSlate has already explored how the CLARITY fight is tied to stablecoin yield, regulatory control, market structure, and banking-sector pressure.
The commercial layer asks whether the law captures only the obvious form of yield, or also the ways a platform can turn stablecoin economics into something that feels like rewards, pricing power, or bundled financial service access.
The split runs through two layers. One side of the stack is statutory and prudential: reserve assets, redemption rights, capital standards, and supervision. The other side is commercial: distribution, wallet placement, exchange balances, merchant pricing, and settlement liquidity.
The policy debate becomes sharper when those layers are separated, because a ban at the issuer level can still leave value moving through the rest of the stack.
One clear example is USDC. Circle's public filings describe a business built around reserve income, distribution costs, and partner economics. Its 2025 Form 10-K says Coinbase supports USDC usage across key products and that Circle makes payments to Coinbase tied principally to net reserve income from USDC.
The mechanics are more explicit in Circle's S-1/A. The payment base is generated from reserves backing the stablecoin after management fees and other expenses.
Circle keeps an issuer portion, Circle and Coinbase receive allocations tied to stablecoins held in their own custodial products or managed wallets, and Coinbase receives 50% of the remaining payment base after approved participant payments.
That structure is the money map in miniature. A holder may see a stable dollar token. In the reserve and distribution structure, the reserve yield can move through issuer retention, platform-balance economics, ecosystem incentives, distribution agreements, and payments to approved participants.
Coinbase's own filing shows why that channel is economically meaningful. Its 2025 Form 10-K reported stablecoin revenue as a business line and said a hypothetical 150 basis-point move in average rates applied to daily USDC reserve balances held by Circle would have affected stablecoin revenue by $540 million for 2025.
The point is specific: a large platform with distribution, balances, liquidity, and a deep issuer relationship can capture economics that the statute keeps away from holders in direct form.
Asset managers and custodial infrastructure sit on the same map. BlackRock's Circle Reserve Fund showed a 3.60% seven-day SEC yield as of April 27, while Circle's filing describes BlackRock as a preferred reserve-management partner and discusses the reserve-management relationship.
Stablecoin economics can accrue to the reserve stack, the manager, the custodian, the issuer, and the distributor before a user ever sees a token in a wallet.
| Intermediary | Economic lane | User-facing form | Policy constraint |
|---|---|---|---|
| Issuer | Reserve income and issuance scale | Stable dollar token and redemption promise | Issuer-paid holder yield is barred under GENIUS |
| Exchange or wallet | Distribution payments, platform balances, loyalty incentives | Rewards, fee offsets, product access, liquidity | Third-party reward treatment remains the live CLARITY fork |
| Custodian or asset manager | Reserve management, custody, safekeeping | Operational trust and reserve transparency | FDIC and issuer rules shape permitted reserve and custody practices |
| Payment network or app | Merchant fees, settlement speed, treasury operations | Cheaper payments, faster settlement, rewards programs | Payment integration raises intermediation and resiliency questions |
| Bank or tokenized-deposit provider | Deposit economics and insured-bank balance-sheet activity | Deposit-like digital dollars with bank treatment | FDIC says qualifying tokenized deposits would be treated as deposits |
The Fed's April 8 FEDS Note gives the policy version of that table. It identifies complex intermediation chains, vertical integration, and accelerating retail adoption through wallet partnerships as structural stablecoin vulnerabilities.
It also points to integration with payment networks, banks, retail applications, broker-dealer funding, and card networks.
The Fed is studying a market where the issuer is only one node. Wallet providers, infrastructure firms, payment processors, brokers, banks, and card networks can all sit between the reserve asset and the user experience.
PayPal's July 2025 Pay with Crypto announcement shows how that looks commercially.
The company described instant crypto-to-stablecoin or fiat conversion, a 0.99% merchant transaction rate through July 31, 2026, support for more than 100 cryptocurrencies and wallets, and PYUSD rewards for funds held on PayPal at the time of the announcement.
That is a different economic shape from direct issuer yield. The holder sees payment access, merchant savings, wallet connectivity, or rewards attached to a platform. The platform can monetize conversion, distribution, customer balances, merchant pricing, and product stickiness.
Visa's December 2025 USDC settlement launch shows the card-network version of the same intermediary lane. Visa said U.S. issuer and acquirer partners could settle VisaNet obligations in USDC, with Cross River and Lead Bank among initial banking participants.
It described more than $3.5 billion in annualized stablecoin settlement volume as of Nov. 30, 2025, and framed the product around seven-day settlement, liquidity timing, treasury automation, and operational resiliency.
Those benefits accrue through payment networks, issuing banks, acquiring banks, fintech partners, and corporate treasury operations. The user-facing return is payment access, faster settlement, or better pricing rather than issuer-paid yield.
That distinction is central to the policy fight. A yield ban can reduce the visible consumer return on a token while allowing platforms to compete through pricing, access, loyalty, and settlement benefits. The economics remain, but the claim on them becomes mediated by the platform relationship.
The banking lobby understands that channel. The Bank Policy Institute argued in August 2025 that GENIUS's issuer-yield prohibition could be undermined if exchanges, affiliates, or distribution partners are still able to pay interest indirectly on stablecoins.
BPI framed that as a loophole that could increase deposit-flight risk and weaken credit creation.
Crypto trade groups answered from the other side. Their August 2025 response argued that third-party rewards are competitive consumer benefits rather than evasion of the statute.
The dispute determines whether the post-GENIUS stablecoin market becomes a platform-rewards market or a bank-protected payments market.
The FDIC proposal adds the second bank lane. It says tokenized deposits that satisfy the statutory definition of deposit would be treated no differently from other deposits under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act.
That gives banks a cleaner argument if stablecoin rewards face stricter limits: deposit tokens can keep the economics inside the banking perimeter, where interest, insurance, and lending relationships already have a legal home.
CLARITY's market-structure section-by-section summary points to another intermediary layer. Digital commodity exchanges, brokers, and dealers would face registration, listing, custody, segregation, disclosure, and customer-election requirements.
Customers could elect into blockchain services such as staking under conditions, while access to the exchange could not be conditioned on that election.
Those provisions reinforce the same intermediary shift by moving economic activity into supervised channels. The contested issue is who owns distribution, customer balances, wallet access, custody, settlement, and optional services.

As of press time, USDT was around $189.71 billion in market capitalization and USDC around $77.63 billion.
CryptoSlate rankings also showed USDe around $3.79 billion, PYUSD around $3.42 billion, and RLUSD around $1.6 billion. That scale means the issuer-yield rule lands first on the largest payment-stablecoin rails.
The next test is the definition of indirect yield. If lawmakers and regulators allow third-party rewards, the advantage sits with platforms that own users, balances, payments, and distribution. If they limit those arrangements, banks and tokenized-deposit providers get a stronger path to keep digital-dollar returns inside deposit products.
The emerging U.S. framework decides whether stablecoin holders can receive yield and how much of the economics of digital dollars becomes visible to users. The rest is absorbed by the intermediaries that move, custody, package, and settle those dollars.
The post CLARITY Act stablecoin fight shifts from yield to who captures digital-dollar economics appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin 2026 opened at The Venetian on April 27 with the Director of the FBI in the program for a session about code, speech, and enforcement.
The placement turned a conference slot into a live test of Bitcoin's political identity.
The session, titled Code is Free Speech: Ending the War on Bitcoin, took place at 10:30 a.m. on the Nakamoto Stage with Paul Grewal moderating and Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche.
Grewal moderated a virtual discussion with Patel rather than an in-person appearance.
Todd Blanche is the acting attorney general, serving as the 40th deputy attorney general.
The symbolism is clear. Bitcoin 2026 put law enforcement, a senior DOJ official, regulators, politicians, corporate treasury figures, and Wall Street digital-asset leadership inside the same cultural frame as a movement built around direct settlement and self-custody.
After years of Bitcoin being embedded into institutional operations it would be easy to caricature the push back as social-media outrage. Yet, I see a larger operating question.
Bitcoin has gained the type of legitimacy that earlier cycles wanted, including policy attention, public-company balance sheets, ETFs, and US reserve policy. The cost is that the public face of adoption now runs through many of the institutions Bitcoin was designed to reduce dependence on.
The strongest case for the conference lineup starts with enforcement.
Blanche's April 2025 Justice Department memo said the DOJ is not a digital-assets regulator and directed prosecutors away from regulation by prosecution. It also told the department to focus digital-asset cases on investor victims and criminal misuse.
The memo disbanded the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team.
That policy underpins the conference's developer-friendly framing. Blanche and Patel used the Bitcoin 2026 discussion to signal a focus on crime rather than developers or code.
The same enforcement turn was already visible in CryptoSlate's coverage of the administration's deregulation of crypto enforcement, including the end of the national crypto enforcement unit.
Put simply, the government pitch was that developers should face less legal risk when they build neutral tools, while criminals using digital assets remain enforcement targets.
The claim speaks directly to an old Bitcoin concern. The Bitcoin white paper described a peer-to-peer electronic cash system that lets parties transact without going through a financial institution.
A movement built around that idea will always pay attention to where intermediaries re-enter the system. The code-speech session placed the question in legal terms.
Coin Center's April 2026 letter to the SEC drew a speech-protection boundary around publishing software and neutral tools, while treating custody, unilateral control, and client-specific discretion as conduct that can move into regulable territory.
This gives the government side its strongest ground. If federal agencies reduce the risk that builders are treated as proxies for bad users, Bitcoin gains room to develop in the US.
If that legal relief arrives through the same state apparatus that many Bitcoiners distrust, the victory comes with a cultural price. The conference made both takes visible at once.
The distinction also explains why the panel became a flashpoint beyond legal policy. A developer-friendly enforcement posture can still feel like a state-mediated bargain when the venue is a Bitcoin stage.
The White House's 2025 Strategic Bitcoin Reserve order established a US policy for a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a Digital Asset Stockpile.
CryptoSlate market data shows Bitcoin around $76,258 as of press time, with a market capitalization near $1.53 trillion.
Regulated access has also become a major channel.
BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF holds around $62.34 billion in net assets as of Apr. 27, 2026, and Coinbase Institutional lists $300 billion in assets under custody.
On the corporate-treasury side, Strategy announced on Apr. 27 that it had acquired an additional 3,273 BTC to bring its total holdings to 818,334 BTC.
Bitcoin now sits in public-company treasuries, ETF wrappers, custody platforms, and government policy.
A conference built around adoption will naturally pull in the people who operate those channels.
| Channel | Victory signal | Capture concern |
|---|---|---|
| Government | US policy treats Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset. | State validation can shift the public narrative away from self-sovereignty. |
| Enforcement | DOJ language reduces pressure on developers and neutral tools. | Law enforcement becomes a featured voice in Bitcoin culture. |
| ETFs | IBIT gives investors regulated Bitcoin exposure at large scale. | Exposure can grow while direct key ownership becomes less common. |
| Custody | Coinbase gives institutions infrastructure for large positions. | Custody concentrates operational control in regulated intermediaries. |
| Treasuries | Strategy shows corporate balance sheets can absorb large BTC positions. | Corporate vehicles can become louder than individual users. |
The same adoption channels solve real problems and reintroduce old dependencies. That's the structural tension behind the backlash, and it explains why the same data can read as progress to institutions and as drift to self-custody advocates.
Operationally, the tradeoff is visible in how exposure is delivered. More access can mean fewer users holding keys, fewer direct settlement habits, and more reliance on regulated operators.

The official speaker presentation brought regulators, US officials, politicians, Wall Street-linked digital-asset leadership, corporate treasury figures, and Bitcoin-native names into one conference frame.
That breadth can be viewed as proof that Bitcoin won the legitimacy fight. It can also be seen as evidence that the protocol's public culture is being packaged by institutions with different incentives from individual users.
The protocol can remain open while the story around it becomes more centralized.
Two X posts captured that concern in blunt terms.
One post from @BeTheChain, a self-described long-time Bitcoiner, attacked the conference for inviting federal officials. Another from crypto scam investigator, @MastrXYZ framed the speaker list as Bitcoin becoming the system it was built to escape, pointing to corporate balance sheets, regulators, political brands, Tether, Wall Street custody, and mining companies as signs of drift.
Those posts, and the Bitcoiners in the replies, identify a visible criticism lane. The objection is less about any single speaker than about representation.
If the most visible Bitcoin stage is filled by officials, ETF infrastructure, corporate treasury firms, and political brands, critics see a different movement from the one implied by self-custody slogans.
The self-custody dispute around Michael Saylor in 2024 showed how quickly Bitcoin's adoption debate can turn into a fight over who speaks for users.
The strongest reply is practical. Bitcoin adoption at national and institutional scale was always going to involve law, custody, public markets, and politics.
A $1.5 trillion asset has moved beyond retail self-custody culture alone. The question is whether those channels remain access points to Bitcoin or become the venues that define it for everyone else.
Bitcoin 2026 exposed an identity split that has been forming since BlackRock filed for its Bitcoin ETF in 2024 and accelerated when Donald Trump adopted Bitcoin as part of his official campaign strategy in the 2024 presidential election.
Still, two things can be true at once.
Government engagement can reduce legal uncertainty for developers. ETFs and custodians can broaden access. Corporate treasuries can absorb supply and normalize Bitcoin as a reserve asset.
Each of those outcomes looks like adoption working.
However, he same facts also support the capture critique. Regulated products can move users away from direct ownership. Corporate vehicles can dominate public attention.
Political figures can redirect the movement's language into brand and access channels. Law enforcement can enter the cultural center of a movement that once defined itself by routing around state and financial intermediaries.
The practical test after the conference is control.
Users can keep meaningful self-custody, open-source development, and direct settlement at the center, allowing institutional adoption to expand the network without absorbing its core culture.
Convenience and access can also flow mainly through ETFs, custodians, treasury companies, and policy relationships, giving the capture argument more force.

Bitcoin's public win is now large enough to create its own contradiction.
The institutions that users were once told they could route around are now helping explain it to the audience. For some Bitcoiners, that is the victory. For others, it is the warning sign.
Bitcoin 2026 showed that both camps are responding to the same change.
The post What would Satoshi say? Director of the FBI appears at Bitcoin 2026 – Victory or capture? appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Everyone watching Bitcoin this week is watching the Federal Reserve, while the more important tell may be sitting in the Treasury market, where the 10-year yield has compressed into one of its tightest ranges of the year just as a dense macro calendar opens.
Bitcoin's recovery now rests on renewed institutional inflows and the assumption that liquidity conditions will not tighten again. If Treasuries choose a direction before that assumption is tested, the bond market could drive Bitcoin's next move independently of any crypto-specific catalyst.
The 10-year yield spent Apr. 1 through Apr. 24 inside a band of 4.26% to 4.35%, closing at 4.31% on Apr. 24 per FRED data.

Barron's reported that the 10-year Bollinger Bands had narrowed to their tightest since Jan. 16, a classic coiled setup, and Reuters' technical commentary placed the yield inside a larger symmetrical triangle that frequently precedes a sharp directional move.
On Apr. 27, the 10-year had ticked back toward 4.32%, with commodity prices and geopolitical risk feeding inflation expectations, adding inputs to yield direction that run well outside the Fed's control.
A compressed yield range is a market storing energy before a decision.
The event cluster that could release that energy arrives in rapid succession. The FOMC meets Apr. 28-29, the BEA publishes the advance first quarter GDP estimate alongside March Personal Income and Outlays and the PCE deflator on Apr. 30, while the Employment Cost Index also lands that morning.
That is three macro readings in two days, enough to move Treasuries materially in either direction and enough to change the financial conditions backdrop that Bitcoin is currently relying on.
Bitcoin is where a Treasury repricing could first show up, as the crypto bid has rebuilt into an already fragile technical area.
CoinShares' latest weekly report recorded $1.2 billion in crypto investment product inflows, the fourth consecutive positive week and the third straight above $1 billion, with $933 million flowing to Bitcoin, $192 million to Ethereum, and total assets under management climbing to $155 billion.
Farside Investors' daily ETF data show that US spot Bitcoin ETFs posted nine straight positive sessions from Apr. 14 to Apr. 24, totaling over $2 billion in inflows.
The risk is that buyers return just before Treasuries choose a direction. CoinShares' Mar. 23 note shows that weekly inflows slowed sharply and crypto products suffered $405 million in post-FOMC outflows once markets read that meeting as a hawkish pause.
The crypto bid at the time was genuine, and a macro repricing overtook it anyway.
That episode is directly relevant now because Bitcoin is approaching its $80,000 test with the same ingredient in place and the same unresolved variable of what the bond market decides to do next.

Glassnode's Apr. 22 report noted that Bitcoin reclaimed the True Market Mean at $78,100, with the short-term holder cost basis at $80,100 as the immediate resistance ceiling.
ETF flows turned modestly positive again, and spot demand showed early recovery, while the short-term holder realized profit spiked to $4.4 million per hour.
Glassnode also noted that Bitcoin's own implied and realized volatility has compressed, leaving no premium in options pricing. Treasuries and Bitcoin markets are coiled at the same time, and the rates market is the one with more immediate cause to move first, given the macro calendar sitting directly in front of it.
Glassnode's framework gives the battleground its coordinates, as sustained demand through $80,100 would confirm the institutional bid has enough depth to absorb profit-taking.
A failure there that pushes BTC back toward $78,100 would leave the True Market Mean as the last meaningful support before Glassnode's $75,000 downside-acceleration area comes into play.
The bond market's direction will determine which of those outcomes resolves.
The bull case flows from yields moving lower. If the 10-year closes below the April floor near 4.26%, and especially if it breaks through Reuters' 4.23% technical pivot, Bitcoin gets the cleanest macro environment its current rally could ask for.
Falling yields reduce the discount-rate drag on risk assets, support the liquidity trade, and give the $1.2 billion weekly inflow pace a better chance of forcing BTC through the $80,100 resistance ceiling, with enough absorption to hold.
In that setup, the nine-session ETF streak and CoinShares' four consecutive positive weeks would read as early evidence of a durable demand regime, and the rally's test period would be over.
The October 2025 total AUM peak of $263 billion serves as the relevant benchmark for how far the institutional re-engagement has yet to go.
The bear case flows from yields breaking higher. If the 10-year pushes above 4.35% and starts moving toward Reuters' 4.6% upside resolution area, financial conditions will tighten at exactly the moment Bitcoin is pressing into a zone where more than 54% of recent buyers are sitting on profit.
BTC stalls at $80,100, the profit-taking that Glassnode is already flagging at $4.4 million per hour accelerates, and sellers test the True Market Mean at $78,100.
If that level fails, Glassnode's $75,000 downside-acceleration area comes into play, and markets would reframe the entire inflow streak as institutional capital that arrived before the bond market closed the door.
The March precedent makes that sequence concrete, as even $1 billion-plus weekly demand could not prevent $405 million in post-FOMC outflows once the macro read turned hawkish. The same mechanism is available again.
| Scenario | What happens in Treasuries | BTC response | Key levels | What it means |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bull case | The 10-year closes below the April floor near 4.26% and breaks through Reuters’ 4.23% technical pivot | Bitcoin gets the cleanest macro backdrop, ETF and ETP inflows gain support, and BTC has a stronger chance of clearing and holding above $80,100 | 10-year: below 4.26%, then below 4.23% | BTC: clears $80,100 and stays above $78,100 | Lower yields validate the institutional bid and turn the recent inflow streak into evidence of a more durable demand regime |
| Neutral / flow-dependent case | The 10-year stays inside the April range between 4.26% and 4.35% | Bitcoin remains dependent on continued ETF, ETP, and spot demand to absorb supply around resistance, with no clear macro tailwind or headwind | 10-year: 4.26%–4.35% | BTC: holds between $78,100 and $80,100 | Macro stays unresolved, so the rally lives or dies on whether institutional flows can keep doing the work by themselves |
| Bear case | The 10-year breaks above 4.35% and starts moving toward Reuters’ 4.6% upside resolution area | Financial conditions tighten as BTC presses into a profit-heavy zone, Bitcoin stalls at $80,100, sellers test $78,100, and $75,000 comes into play if support fails | 10-year: above 4.35%, then toward 4.6% | BTC: fails at $80,100, loses $78,100, risks $75,000 | Higher yields reprice liquidity, and the bond market turns Bitcoin’s inflow streak into another macro-driven failed rally |
Bitcoin's next move may originate in the Treasury market. The institutional bid has returned across enough channels to confirm a broad recovery in demand.
However, the bid has returned before the bond market has signaled if macro conditions will help or work against it.
If Treasuries fall, Bitcoin's $80,000 test gets materially easier, and the institutional thesis gets its first real macro confirmation. If Treasuries jump, duration repricing becomes the deciding factor and the rally fails on macro grounds alone.
The post Bitcoin’s $80k test should be decided by the bond market this week appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Today, Wednesday, April 29, 2026, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will release its third interest rate decision of the year. This specific meeting carries historic weight as it marks the final policy announcement and press conference for Jerome Powell before he concludes his tenure as Fed Chair.
Market participants are currently pricing in a near 99% certainty that the Fed will keep interest rates unchanged at the current target range of 3.50% to 3.75%. However, the "early query" for crypto investors isn't the rate itself, but the language used regarding inflation and the transition to incoming leadership.
Cryptocurrencies are widely categorized as "risk-on" assets. Their prices are heavily influenced by global liquidity conditions, which are directly controlled by the Federal Reserve's monetary policy.
When the Fed keeps rates high, borrowing becomes more expensive, and the US Dollar typically strengthens, which can put downward pressure on $Bitcoin and altcoins. Conversely, if Powell’s tone today leans "dovish"—suggesting that the peak of the rate cycle is behind us—it could provide the fuel needed for Bitcoin to break past the $80,000 psychological resistance level.
Historically, the minutes following a Fed announcement see "stop-hunting" behavior, where prices swing wildly in both directions before establishing a trend.
Jerome Powell’s final appearance adds a layer of uncertainty. Analysts at major institutions, such as JPMorgan, suggest he may use this meeting to solidify his legacy as the Chair who tamed the 2020s inflation surge, potentially maintaining a hawkish stance to ensure price stability.
The relationship between Gold and Bitcoin has reached a fever pitch in 2026. Historically, these two assets have been viewed as siblings in the "store of value" category, but their recent price action tells a more complex story of liquidity rotation and market psychology.
When Gold recently peaked at an all-time high of $5,589 per ounce on January 28, 2026, the crypto market didn't celebrate. Instead, Bitcoin [BTC] experienced a sharp -33% correction, sliding toward the $81,000 mark. While this might look like a decoupling, historical cycles suggest this "shakeout" is often the precursor to an explosive bull run for digital assets.
Not "always," but the correlation often turns negative at critical structural peaks. In August 2020, Gold hit what was then a record high, and Bitcoin immediately cooled off with a -21% retracement. Fast forward to January 2026, and we see a similar script: Gold reaches a parabolic peak, and Bitcoin sheds roughly a third of its value.
The pattern indicates that at the height of a Gold rally, liquidity is often "tapped out" or moving into defensive postures before rotating back into higher-risk, higher-reward assets like $Bitcoin.
To understand where we are going, we have to look at where we’ve been. The current market structure bears a striking resemblance to the 2020 cycle.
| Metric | 2020 Gold Peak Cycle | 2026 Gold Peak Cycle |
|---|---|---|
| Gold Peak Date | August 2020 | January 2026 |
| BTC Immediate Drop | -21% | -33% |
| Recovery Catalyst | Stimulus & Halving Lag | Institutional ETF Flows |
| Post-Peak BTC Gain | +559% (238 Days) | TBD (Projected Highs) |
In finance, "Liquidity Rotation" refers to capital moving from one asset class to another. When Gold reaches a "blow-off top" (a rapid increase in price followed by a steep drop), investors often take profits. That "sideline cash" doesn't stay idle for long. In 2020, that capital flowed directly into the crypto market, fueling a 559% rally that took BTC from $11,000 to over $60,000 in less than a year.
The 2026 drop has been more severe (-33% vs -21%) due to the increased presence of institutional leverage and Spot Bitcoin ETFs. However, the fundamental "why" remains the same:

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

The daily chart reveals a clear period of volatility compression. Since February, DOGE has been printing higher lows, forming a gradual ascending support structure.
The recent price action isn't happening in a vacuum. Several fundamental catalysts are converging to keep DOGE in the headlines of crypto news.
Speculation is reaching a fever pitch regarding Elon Musk's X platform and its upcoming payment feature, X Money. While initial reports suggest a fiat-based system in partnership with Visa, the DOGE community is betting on a future crypto integration. Historically, any mention of payments on X (formerly Twitter) has led to massive spikes in $DOGE price.
In a surprise move for 2026, institutional interest has shifted toward meme coins. Following the success of Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, Nasdaq began listing the 21Shares Dogecoin ETF (ticker: TDOG) earlier this year. This provides a regulated pathway for institutional capital to flow into DOGE, reducing the "joke" stigma and treating it as a legitimate digital asset.
Elon Musk recently reignited interest in the DOGE-1 mission, a satellite project funded entirely by Dogecoin. During a talk with the Tesla Owners Club, Musk hinted that the project, which faced several delays, is back on track.
For traders looking to capitalize on this movement, the following levels are critical:
| Level Type | Price (USD) | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Major Resistance | $0.118 | The high from early February; breaking this confirms a bull market. |
| Pivot Point | $0.100 | Psychological barrier; requires high volume to break. |
| Immediate Support | $0.095 | Local support to maintain the current short-term uptrend. |
| Critical Support | $0.086 | Must hold to avoid a deeper crash toward $0.07. |
While the $1.00 target remains a long-term goal for the fading "Doge Army," the immediate focus is reclaiming the $0.12 territory. The combination of technical compression and institutional products like the TDOG ETF suggests that Dogecoin is maturing beyond a simple pump-and-dump asset.
Kevin Warsh has emerged as the clear frontrunner to succeed Jerome Powell as the Chair of the Federal Reserve. Warsh is widely considered the most "pro-Bitcoin" candidate to ever be nominated for the role. However, historical data casts a long, dark shadow over Fed leadership changes. In every major transition over the last decade, Bitcoin has suffered double-digit percentage collapses.
To understand the current market anxiety, one must look at the precedent set by previous appointments. Historically, the uncertainty surrounding a new Fed Chair’s "hawkish" or "dovish" stance has triggered massive sell-offs.
| Date | Fed Chair Event | Bitcoin Performance |
|---|---|---|
| Jan 2014 | Janet Yellen takes office | -82.77% |
| Feb 2018 | Jerome Powell takes office | -73.89% |
| May 2022 | Jerome Powell’s 2nd Term | -61.06% |
In 2014, Janet Yellen's arrival coincided with the post-2013 bubble burst and the Mt. Gox collapse. By 2018, Powell took the reigns just as the ICO craze deflated. Most recently, in 2022, his second term confirmation aligned with the start of aggressive interest rate hikes that fueled the "Crypto Winter."
Kevin Warsh is not your typical central banker. A former Fed Governor (2006–2011) and Morgan Stanley veteran, Warsh has a track record of acknowledging Bitcoin as a legitimate financial asset. During his recent confirmation hearings, Warsh stated that "digital assets are already part of the fabric of our financial services industry."
Unlike his predecessors, Warsh’s personal financial disclosures revealed significant exposure to the sector, including holdings in Web3 infrastructure and DeFi protocols.
Key Policy Stances:
While the "Fed Chair Curse" suggests a crash is imminent by May 2026, several factors suggest we might see a "Warsh Pump" instead of a "Powell Dump."
It hasn't been all smooth sailing. Senator Elizabeth Warren and other critics have raised concerns about Warsh’s independence, fearing he may act as a "sock puppet" for the executive branch to facilitate specific crypto ventures. Any perception that the Fed is losing its independence could lead to dollar volatility, which historically sends tremors through all risk assets, including hardware wallets and cold storage holdings.
The judge dismissed the FTX founder’s claims that potential witnesses faced "government threats and retaliation" as "wildly conspiratorial.”
PocketOS founder Jeremy Crane claims a Cursor agent running Claude Opus wiped production data and backups through a single Railway API call.
Federal prosecutors secured a prison term for a Saipan woman who defrauded elderly victims through a fake Bitcoin investment scheme
Red Hat principal engineer and OpenClaw maintainer Sally O'Malley released Tank OS—a tool that sandboxes AI agents in isolated containers, keeping credentials locked and agents from interfering with each other or the host machine.
CFTC Chair Mike Selig has vowed to sue any state that attempts to regulate prediction markets under its own gambling laws.
Ripple CTO Emeritus, David Schwartz joined a commodity versus security debate on social media, adding fresh perspective.
A brief chain split triggered by invalid MWEB transactions exposed both the fragility and resilience of Litecoin.
Relive the 700% XRP rally strategy as analyst DonAlt breaks down why Bitcoin's current $77,000 consolidation is a "healthy reset".
Prominent wealth manager Ross Gerber has lambasted Robinhood as nothing more than a "gambling app" after a staggering 47% collapse in cryptocurrency trading volumes..
Despite the warnings, ASTEROID's saw some serious inflows, but unfortunately things went as expected.
BYD delivered its steepest quarterly earnings decline in six years, yet investors responded positively as the figures exceeded diminished expectations.
The Shenzhen-based electric vehicle manufacturer recorded first-quarter net income of 4.09 billion yuan ($600 million), representing a 55.4% year-over-year decrease. Total revenue reached 150.23 billion yuan, marking an 11.8% contraction and the third straight quarter of declining top-line performance.
While the headline figures appeared bleak, the actual results aligned closely with what analysts had anticipated. Revenue performance actually surpassed consensus estimates hovering around 140 billion yuan. This “less-bad-than-expected” outcome propelled BYD’s Hong Kong-traded shares (1211) upward by 3.9% to HK$107.70 on Wednesday, significantly outperforming the Hang Seng Index’s 1% advance. Shares trading on the mainland exchanges climbed over 2%.
The Chinese home market environment remains challenging. Government authorities have reduced trade-in incentive programs for entry-level electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid models, dampening consumer demand in the affordable vehicle segment — precisely where BYD has traditionally dominated, with the majority of its offerings priced below 150,000 yuan.
Domestic competitive pressures are mounting as well. Industry competitors such as Geely and Leapmotor are aggressively expanding into BYD’s traditional budget-friendly categories, further compressing profit margins already strained by persistent price competition.
BYD experienced declining domestic unit sales for the seventh month running through March.
Eugene Hsiao, who leads China equity strategy at Macquarie Capital, emphasized that BYD requires domestic volume recovery during the second quarter and sustained momentum through Q3 before overall profitability can experience meaningful improvement.
Overseas operations are currently carrying much of the company’s growth momentum. International deliveries comprised approximately 45% of BYD’s total 700,463 vehicle sales during the first quarter — a striking figure that underscores the company’s aggressive international expansion strategy.
BYD has expressed strong confidence in achieving its 2026 international sales objective of 1.5 million units, representing growth exceeding 40% compared to 2025 performance. Morningstar analyst Vincent Sun forecasts export volumes will increase between 25% and 30% this year, with total vehicle deliveries expanding approximately 12%.
Deliveries across Europe, Asia, and Middle Eastern markets have been accelerating, with global expansion remaining a core strategic imperative. The automaker also enjoys enhanced profitability on international transactions, partially because foreign markets haven’t experienced the same intense price competition plaguing the Chinese market.
Nevertheless, Macquarie’s Hsiao cautioned that international growth by itself may prove insufficient to completely counterbalance domestic market challenges if current home-market trends persist.
BYD is simultaneously pursuing upmarket positioning. During last Friday’s Beijing auto show, the company launched pre-orders for its Datang full-size electric SUV, entering a premium segment increasingly populated by Chinese manufacturers challenging established European luxury brands.
The automaker is also investing heavily in ultra-rapid charging infrastructure and technology, an initiative designed to attract gasoline vehicle owners who have hesitated to transition due to charging duration concerns.
BYD surpassed Tesla to become the world’s top-selling EV manufacturer in 2025. Its first-quarter 2026 financial results illuminate the mounting challenge between a contracting domestic marketplace and an accelerating international presence.
The post BYD Stock Rallies 4% as First-Quarter Results Top Grim Market Forecasts appeared first on Blockonomi.
The artificial intelligence revolution has transitioned from a specialized technology sector into a fundamental pillar of modern economic growth. Spanning enterprise applications, cloud computing platforms, healthcare innovations, financial systems, and defense technologies, AI represents an unstoppable wave of transformation that serious investors cannot afford to overlook.
Consequently, stocks tied to artificial intelligence have captured significant market attention. Industry giants are allocating hundreds of billions toward expanding their AI capabilities, while emerging companies across semiconductor manufacturing, data infrastructure, and machine learning applications are rapidly gaining traction. This dynamic blend of established powerhouses and innovative disruptors presents investors with diverse opportunities across multiple market segments.
This comprehensive analysis examines the leading AI stocks positioned for success in 2026, with particular emphasis on current Wall Street analyst perspectives—highlighting where market data, industry trends, and professional sentiment converge.
Nvidia stands as the undisputed leader in artificial intelligence processors and data center infrastructure. The company’s latest fiscal fourth-quarter results showcased revenue reaching $68.1 billion, representing a remarkable 73% year-over-year increase. Within this total, data center revenue alone hit $62.3 billion, climbing 75% annually.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
Analyst coverage remains overwhelmingly optimistic. According to Public.com tracking, 38 financial analysts maintain coverage with a consensus Buy recommendation and an average 2026 price projection of $267.55.
Oppenheimer’s Rick Schafer designated Nvidia as a premier investment opportunity, assigning an Outperform rating alongside a $265 target. Schafer specifically highlighted the company’s Blackwell Ultra GB300 NVL rack systems and its commanding position in both AI training and inference workloads.
The primary skepticism from bearish observers centers on valuation metrics. Nvidia already trades at premium multiples reflecting its status as the presumptive AI winner. Nevertheless, Oppenheimer observed the stock trading around 17 times forward 2027 earnings estimates, actually below the semiconductor sector average of 20 times.
Microsoft deploys artificial intelligence across its entire ecosystem including Azure cloud services, OpenAI partnership, Copilot assistants, GitHub development tools, and productivity applications. Unlike Nvidia’s hardware-focused model, Microsoft generates revenue through cloud consumption, software licensing, and automation services.
Microsoft Corporation, MSFT
Analyst enthusiasm runs high across the board. StockAnalysis.com reports Microsoft earning a “Strong Buy” consensus from 34 analysts, with an average price objective of $583.21. MarketBeat’s compilation shows 38 Buy recommendations against merely five Hold ratings.
UBS analyst Karl Keirstead maintained his Buy stance while reducing his price target from $600 down to $510. Keirstead’s primary concern involves near-term margin compression resulting from substantial AI infrastructure capital expenditures.
The central investment question revolves around whether Microsoft’s aggressive data center and AI model investments will ultimately translate into expanded profit margins. While customer demand remains robust, investors are seeking concrete evidence of scaled profitability.
Alphabet presents the most multifaceted artificial intelligence investment thesis. The company’s AI initiatives span Google Search integration, Gemini AI models, Google Cloud Platform, YouTube recommendations, Android ecosystem, and proprietary Tensor Processing Unit chips. Analysts view AI simultaneously as a significant growth catalyst and potential risk to traditional search advertising revenues.
Alphabet Inc., GOOGL
Wall Street sentiment remains predominantly bullish. MarketBeat data reveals 44 Buy ratings plus three Strong Buy recommendations, establishing a consensus price target near $366.92. Notably, zero Sell ratings exist among the 61 analyst assessments tracked.
KeyBanc analyst Justin Patterson upheld his Overweight rating while elevating his price target from $370 to $380. Meanwhile, Mizuho pushed its target to $420 with an Outperform designation.
Both research firms contend the market significantly underestimates Google Cloud’s growth trajectory. The bearish counterargument focuses on Alphabet’s substantial AI spending while simultaneously attempting to preserve search business margins.
Wall Street currently maintains Buy-equivalent ratings across all three companies, with no prominent sell-side institutions recommending investors reduce exposure to any of them.
These three stocks enter the remainder of 2026 with substantial analyst support behind them. Nvidia delivers impressive growth metrics, Microsoft provides comprehensive enterprise penetration, and Alphabet demonstrates accelerating cloud momentum. Current Wall Street consensus identifies no compelling reason to exit positions in any of these AI leaders.
We actually looked at far more AI companies than the ones included in this article.
The three mentioned here are just a small sample — several others stood out just as much, and in some cases even more, based on trend, growth, and overall market strength.

A few of these are not widely covered yet, which is exactly why they caught our attention during the screening process. Instead of publishing everything publicly, we put together a separate report covering 10 AI stocks that currently look high-potential based on our internal rankings and latest research.
This is the same list we’re actively watching, with charts, key levels, and notes on each company.
If you want to see the full list before it becomes more widely discussed, you can access the AI Stocks report here
Get The AI Stocks Report
The post Top AI Stocks Analysts Are Buying in 2026: Nvidia, Microsoft & Alphabet Lead appeared first on Blockonomi.
Fiverr (FVRR) experienced a dramatic pre-market recovery following its Q1 2026 earnings release, which highlighted robust profitability metrics despite ongoing marketplace challenges. After closing at $10.36 with a 2.54% decline, shares surged to $11.40 in early trading, representing a 9.99% gain. This upward momentum demonstrated investor confidence in the company’s margin expansion and efficiency improvements, even as traditional marketplace metrics showed continued weakness.
Fiverr International Ltd., FVRR
Fiverr posted Q1 revenue totaling $105.5 million, representing a modest 1.6% decline from the previous year’s $107.2 million. Despite this top-line softness, the company demonstrated significant margin improvement with gross margin reaching 82.1%, up from 81.0% year-over-year. Furthermore, non-GAAP gross margin expanded to 84.8%, highlighting successful cost management initiatives.
GAAP net income showed remarkable growth, climbing to $8.6 million versus just $0.8 million in Q1 2025. Basic earnings per share reached $0.24, with diluted EPS landing at $0.23. Additionally, adjusted EBITDA rose to $22.6 million, up from $19.4 million in the comparable period.
Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded substantially to 21.4% from 18.1% a year prior. This impressive 330-basis-point improvement underscored management’s commitment to operational efficiency during its strategic platform evolution. As a result, investors responded enthusiastically, viewing profitability gains as more significant than revenue softness.
The company’s traditional marketplace segment generated $67.1 million in revenue, down 13.6% from the prior year. This contraction highlighted persistent challenges in the freelance marketplace vertical. Nevertheless, management continued executing its strategic pivot toward premium services and complex project categories.
The platform’s annual active buyer base contracted 17.8% to 2.9 million from 3.5 million previously. However, annual spend per buyer jumped 15.4% to $356 from $309, indicating a quality-over-quantity shift. This dynamic revealed fewer total users but substantially higher engagement among retained customers.
Marketplace take rate remained consistent at 27.7% for the trailing twelve months ending March 31, 2026. Conversely, services revenue surged 30.0% to $38.4 million from $29.5 million. Therefore, emerging business segments provided crucial revenue diversification as legacy marketplace performance weakened.
Fiverr characterized 2026 as a transformational period during which the platform evolves beyond simple transaction facilitation. Leadership emphasized building a comprehensive work ecosystem powered by artificial intelligence capabilities. Moreover, the strategy prioritizes sophisticated projects requiring specialized talent matched with enterprise-level client requirements.
For Q2 2026, management projects revenue ranging from $95 million to $103 million. This guidance suggests a year-over-year decline between 5% and 13%. The company simultaneously forecasts adjusted EBITDA between $16 million and $20 million for the upcoming quarter.
Full-year 2026 revenue guidance spans $380 million to $420 million. This outlook indicates a potential annual contraction of 3% to 12%. Nevertheless, projected full-year adjusted EBITDA of $64 million to $80 million reinforces profitability as the cornerstone of Fiverr’s turnaround narrative.
The post Fiverr (FVRR) Stock Surges on Strong Profitability Despite Marketplace Headwinds appeared first on Blockonomi.
NXP Semiconductors delivered a robust first-quarter performance and provided the forward-looking confidence investors had been hoping for.
The chipmaker announced Q1 revenue of $3.18 billion alongside non-GAAP earnings per share of $3.05, surpassing previous projections. Shares responded with an approximately 17% surge.
The primary driver behind the rally was forward guidance. NXP forecasted second-quarter revenue of $3.45 billion, roughly 5% higher than Wall Street consensus estimates.
NXP Semiconductors N.V., NXPI
The automotive sector continues to serve as NXP’s core revenue driver, contributing $1.78 billion during the first quarter. The combined automotive and Industrial IoT divisions posted 18% year-over-year growth and represented one-third of quarterly revenue.
Analysts at Barclays highlighted two key investor concerns that received positive updates — automotive and industrial momentum, plus channel inventory levels. Both issues were addressed favorably. “Both Auto and Industrial guided above seasonal for Q2, while channel weeks remain flat,” the analysts noted.
Capacity utilization metrics are also trending positively. NXP anticipates factory utilization will increase from the low 80% range during the first half to the mid-80s percentage during the second half of 2025.
BofA analysts highlighted strengthening free cash flow margins as another encouraging signal. Margins expanded to 22% on a trailing-twelve-month basis. The investment firm projects a path toward 25-30% by 2027, representing substantial value creation for equity holders.
The company’s GF Score stands at 91 out of 100, featuring profitability ranked 9/10 and growth ranked 8/10. Financial strength registers at 6/10, a metric that warrants monitoring.
Shares currently command a P/E ratio of 29.01x, representing a premium versus historical norms. This valuation indicates investors are betting on sustained operational excellence.
One cautionary signal: company insiders offloaded $2.5 million in shares during the past three months, with zero reported purchases. While not alarming in isolation, it deserves attention.
NXP’s data center operations remain modest but are demonstrating momentum. The segment accounted for 2% of 2025 revenue and is projected to reach 4% in 2026 — representing more than 1.5x year-over-year expansion.
The data center portfolio encompasses microprocessors, microcontrollers, and networking solutions. While not positioned as an AI-centric play like certain semiconductor competitors, it provides an additional growth avenue beyond traditional automotive and industrial end markets.
Analysts from Wolfe Research recognized that NXP carries less AI exposure compared to industry peers and that automotive recovery continues to trail other end markets. However, they emphasized “the company has executed well in a difficult environment, the valuation is attractive, and pricing is starting to improve.”
NXP’s second-quarter revenue guidance of $3.45 billion signals anticipated expansion across all geographic regions and market segments.
The post NXP Semiconductors (NXPI) Stock Soars 17% Following Impressive Q2 Forecast appeared first on Blockonomi.
Goldman Sachs has restricted its Hong Kong-based banking personnel from accessing Anthropic’s Claude AI assistant, according to a source directly familiar with the matter.
Reuters learned from the source that Claude had been accessible to Hong Kong-based employees through Goldman’s proprietary AI infrastructure. This access was terminated within the past several weeks.
Meanwhile, alternative artificial intelligence solutions such as Google’s Gemini and OpenAI’s ChatGPT continue to function on Goldman’s internal system for staff members.
The Financial Times initially broke this story, referencing sources close to the situation. Representatives from Goldman Sachs chose not to provide commentary. Anthropic has yet to respond to media inquiries.
As reported by the FT, Goldman arrived at this conclusion following a rigorous interpretation of its contractual agreement with Anthropic. The financial institution engaged in discussions with Anthropic prior to finalizing its position that Hong Kong-based staff members should avoid using any of Anthropic’s offerings.
An Anthropic representative informed the FT that Claude had never received official designation as “supported” within Hong Kong’s jurisdiction. The firm’s official website excludes Hong Kong from territories where its API or Claude.ai platform are formally accessible.
Hong Kong occupies an ambiguous space regarding American AI technology deployment. While mainland China prohibits AI systems developed by U.S. corporations, Hong Kong has generally maintained openness, with availability determined by individual technology providers.
This development emerges amid escalating friction between Washington and Beijing concerning artificial intelligence capabilities and information security protocols. An anticipated summit between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping scheduled for mid-May is projected to address these concerns.
The United States government released an international advisory last week regarding suspected AI technology theft conducted by Chinese AI development teams. During 2024, OpenAI implemented measures to restrict Chinese traffic to its API interface, citing worries that its systems might be exploited by Chinese rivals for model development purposes.
Reuters was unable to verify whether additional financial institutions or corporations have implemented similar Claude restrictions in Hong Kong.
Goldman’s decision coincides with heightened scrutiny from international banking institutions and financial oversight bodies regarding Anthropic’s most recent AI system, Mythos.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority confirmed to Reuters that it has reached out to numerous major financial institutions to gather information on current developments surrounding Mythos. The regulatory body has also instructed these banks to refresh their risk evaluation frameworks and implement suitable protective measures.
Reuters sources indicate that certain lending institutions were already evaluating additional security protocols in reaction to cybersecurity vulnerabilities associated with sophisticated AI technologies.
During February, Goldman Sachs Chief Information Officer Marco Argenti disclosed that the institution was collaborating with Anthropic on developing AI-enabled agents designed to automate an expanding array of operational tasks.
The Hong Kong government has not provided a response to Reuters’ inquiry for commentary. The HKMA opted against addressing Goldman’s particular action.
The post Goldman Sachs Blocks Anthropic’s Claude AI for Hong Kong Staff – The Inside Story appeared first on Blockonomi.
Bitcoin’s price dipped below $76,000 yesterday as the war uncertainty continues to build up, but has rebounded by over a grand since then, ahead of the FOMC meeting today.
Most larger-cap alts are also slightly in the green today, with ETH reclaiming $2,300 and BNB defending the $625 level. DOGE has surged the most from this cohort of assets.
After it dipped below $74,000 last Monday, the primary cryptocurrency went on an impressive roll, surging to a multi-month peak of $79,500 by Tuesday when the US and Iran extended their ceasefire. Several choppy days of trading followed in which BTC remained in a relatively tight range between $77,000 and $78,500, and even the weekend developments on the war couldn’t really shake it.
The bulls returned on Monday morning somewhat unexpectedly and drove bitcoin to $79,500 once again, only to be rejected instantly. In the following hours, BTC first dropped to $77,500 before it dived to $76,500.
The bears took it a step further yesterday despite Trump’s claims that Iran is in a state of defeat, and BTC slipped to a multi-day low of $75,600. Nevertheless, it has jumped to over $77,000 as of now, but more volatility is expected after today’s FOMC meeting, as many experts believe it would be another correction.
For now, BTC’s market cap stands close to $1.550 trillion on CG, while its dominance over the alts is down to 58%.

Ethereum has recovered nearly 2% of value in the past 24 hours and sits well above $2,300 as of now. XRP, BNB, SOL, TRX, ADA, BCH, and XMR are also slightly in the green. Dogecoin has jumped by over 7% to go beyond $0.105 as of press time.
PUMP, ASTER, TAO, and Pi Network’s PI token follow suit. In fact, PI has jumped by more than 15% in the past week and tapped a monthly high at $0.20 earlier today before it was stopped. Some analysts used this resurgence to outline massive price predictions, including a potential 1,400% pump for PI.
The total crypto market cap has increased by roughly $50 billion from yesterday’s low and is above $2.670 trillion on CG now.

The post Pi Network’s PI Taps Monthly High After Another Surge as BTC Returns to $77K: Market Watch appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Blockchain security firm CertiK reported an exploit involving the Ethereum infrastructure platform, Syndicate, after a compromise of the Commons bridge. According to CertiK, an address acquired around 18.5 million SYND tokens and sold them for approximately $330,000.
The funds were then bridged to Ethereum.
The latest breach had a devastating impact on its native token. Data from CMC revealed that SYND dropped more than 37% in the past 24 hours, falling to $0.021.
Syndicate Network, which develops infrastructure for application-specific blockchains with on-chain sequencers, confirmed the Commons bridge compromise on X and revealed that it is investigating unusual movements in SYND.
As per the latest statement issued, the team is tracing the attack, working with security firms, and has advised users to avoid providing liquidity until the situation is resolved. It also said it is exploring options to compensate affected users and has sufficient token reserves to support those who lost SYND.
The latest breach comes less than two weeks after the KelpDAO attack, one of the largest crypto exploits of 2026, which saw over $293 million drained through a cross-chain bridge vulnerability. Chainalysis had previously stated that it was a sophisticated attack on off-chain infrastructure.
Hackers compromised internal RPC nodes and disrupted external ones using DDoS attacks to send false data to a single-point verification system. This caused the Ethereum contract to release funds tied to a fake token burn. Because transactions looked normal on-chain, standard security checks missed the issue.
More recently, Volo Protocol reported a security breach that resulted in losses of about $3.5 million from its vaults. The exploit affected three vaults holding WBTC, XAUm, and USDC. The team said it detected the incident and responded by notifying the Sui Foundation and ecosystem partners, while freezing the impacted vaults. All vaults were later paused as a precaution during the investigation.
The post SYND Crashes 37% After Syndicate Network Bridge Hack appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin has risen more than 20% from its February lows, trading around $77,000. But market participants are questioning whether the rally can continue.
According to Bitwise Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan, Strategy’s aggressive BTC purchases have emerged as the “single biggest factor” in the recent price surge.
While other factors, such as $3.8 billion in inflows into ETFs since March 1 and renewed accumulation by long-term holders, have supported Bitcoin’s price trajectory, Hougan explained that a significant portion of the recent gains has been driven by purchases from Strategy, which has added about $7.2 billion worth of Bitcoin over the past eight weeks.
These purchases have been funded through the issuance of STRC, a perpetual preferred equity instrument. STRC is a type of preferred stock, combining characteristics of both equity and debt, and is designed to trade at $100 per share while offering a high dividend yield, currently 11.5% annually.
“Strategy tries to maintain that share price by adjusting the yield up or down. If STRC trades below $100, Strategy can increase the interest rate to attract new buyers. If STRC trades above $100, Strategy can either issue more shares or lower the interest rate to drive prices back to $100.”
Since its launch, STRC has generally remained close to its target price, and the dividend rate was raised from an initial 9% to 11.5% to support demand. The primary purpose of issuing STRC is to raise capital for additional Bitcoin purchases, and most proceeds are deployed into the asset. The dividend payments are largely funded by raising capital from new investors, a structure Hougan said is supported by the company’s significant BTC holdings rather than being a Ponzi scheme.
Strategy currently holds around $63 billion in Bitcoin against $8 billion in debt and $14 billion in preferred equity. In a liquidation scenario, debt holders would be paid first, followed by preferred shareholders. This leaves around $41 billion for common equity holders. At current Bitcoin prices, Hougan estimates the company could hypothetically sustain its dividend payments for 42 years, though this assumes no price appreciation during the period.
If Bitcoin were to grow at an annual rate of 20%, the company could continue paying dividends indefinitely. However, Strategy’s ability to meet its obligations depends on both Bitcoin’s performance and the scale of future STRC issuance, as higher issuance increases dividend liabilities and default risk, offset only by gains in BTC’s value. Hougan stated that investor confidence depends on Strategy maintaining a balance between raising capital and preserving balance sheet strength.
He also noted that demand for STRC appears strong and indicated that the company could have raised more capital in its most recent offering.
With junk bond yields below 7% and reduced interest in private credit, STRC’s 11.5% yield has been deemed “attractive.” Strategy’s current obligations amount to $21 billion, or about 33% of its Bitcoin holdings, a level which Hougan believes leaves room for an additional $10 billion to $15 billion in STRC issuance before investor concerns may increase, and further capacity is possible if Bitcoin prices rise.
The post One Company May Be Controlling Bitcoin’s Momentum – Here’s How appeared first on CryptoPotato.
After reposting a video from Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian on the responsibilities of chief executive officers, Ripple’s CEO doubled down that their company’s primary mark remains the native cross-border token, XRP.
The ever-vocal and supportive XRP Army was quick to celebrate his comments under the post as the asset fights to stay above the $1.40 support.
The original video on X, posted by Ohanian, says that a company’s founder or CEO needs to keep telling the same story to their userbase and followers “over and over and over” again. Even as it changes and evolves over time, the fundamentals should remain the same and be frequently revisited.
He added that, as AI and other technologies are incorporated to improve the overall work experience and company growth prospects, effective communication becomes even more important for keeping everyone in the organization operating cohesively.
Ripple’s chief exec agreed and reposted Ohanian’s message, indicating that XRP remains the company’s North Star.
100%
All roads lead back to Ripple’s North Star, $XRP. https://t.co/z7cWxoQN1H— Brad Garlinghouse (@bgarlinghouse) April 28, 2026
The vocal XRP community praised Garlinghouse’s commitment, with some highlighting Ripple’s recent big moves. One of the latest was announced earlier this week, and it involved a partnership with South Korea’s internet-only lender KBank to begin early-stage trials with blockchain remittances via Ripple’s network.
Before that, the firm’s Head of Engineering revealed a collaboration with Project Elevel to introduce a “multi-phase roadmap targeting full readiness by 2028,” an initiative mostly focused on the upcoming quantum threats.
It’s worth noting that Garlinghouse has named XRP as Ripple’s North Star on several occasions in the past, with the latest example coming in late March.
Despite the continuous support from the company behind it, Ripple’s cross-border token has failed to capitalize on the recent notable resurgence of bitcoin. XRP was rejected at $1.50 a couple of weeks ago and has been unable to surpass $1.45 since then, despite making several attempts.
The latest retracement from yesterday pushed it south to a two-week low of $1.37, where it finally found some support and now tests the $1.40 level. Nevertheless, the asset remains deep in the red on a YTD scale, losing roughly 25% of its value since January 1.
Analysts remain confident in a big move ahead for XRP, while a recent SEC proposal has piqued holders’ interest, as it could change how regulators view the token.
The post XRP Is Ripple’s North Star: CEO Garlinghouse Reiterates Company Vision appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Litecoin experienced a significant disruption tied to its MimbleWimble Extension Block (MWEB) privacy layer after a critical validation flaw was discovered and exploited across two separate incidents in March and April 2026, according to a post-mortem shared by developer David Burkett.
The issue originated from a bug in how MWEB inputs were validated during block connection, which allowed a miner to include malformed metadata that did not match the actual unspent transaction output being referenced. This enabled an attacker to construct a block where a relatively small input appeared to justify a much larger withdrawal, known as a pegout, from the MWEB system.
Interestingly, a chain scan revealed that the vulnerability had already been exploited in March at block height 3,073,882, where an attacker generated an inflated pegout of over 85,000 LTC. The funds were initially moved to a transparent address and split across three outputs, which were quickly temporarily frozen by miner-enforced consensus rules.
Developers privately worked with major mining pools to prevent further exploitation and released a series of emergency updates to enforce stricter validation rules while preserving network stability. The attacker later cooperated after being contacted and signed a recovery transaction that returned the majority of the funds, while retaining 850 LTC as a negotiated bounty.
That shortfall was covered separately by Litecoin creator Charlie Lee, and the full recovered amount was pegged back into MWEB. The resulting output was permanently frozen to restore internal balance. No confirmed user funds were lost in the March incident, though the response relied heavily on rapid miner coordination and controlled software rollouts.
A second incident in April exposed additional complications when another actor attempted to reuse the same exploit path. Although updated nodes correctly rejected the malformed block, the handling of mutated MWEB block data caused certain upgraded mining nodes to stall or become unable to continue normal operations. This particularly affected block submission processes.
As a result, unupgraded miners continued extending an invalid chain, which grew to 13 blocks before upgraded participants coordinated to restore the valid chain, which ended up triggering a deep reorganization. This reorg removed the invalid blocks, but not before some third-party systems processed transactions from the bad chain.
External services were impacted, including swaps conducted through NEAR-related infrastructure and THORChain, where assets exchanged on the invalid chain no longer existed after the reorg. Losses tied to these transactions are still being assessed.
The root cause of the April issue was linked to how nodes handled mutated MWEB data tied to identical block hashes, which could interfere with later valid block processing. This behavior has since been addressed in Litecoin Core version 0.21.5.4, which makes sure that corrupted block data is discarded to allow proper validation of subsequent blocks.
Developers also introduced several fixes to strengthen MWEB accounting, enforce correct validation at all stages, and prevent similar denial-of-service or chain-splitting scenarios in the future.
The post Here’s How Litecoin (LTC) Contained a Massive MWEB Exploit appeared first on CryptoPotato.