FIFA's crypto partnerships reflect a trend where sports organizations leverage digital assets for fan engagement while avoiding direct issuance.
The post FIFA’s World Cup officiating picks highlight crypto’s growing role in global sports appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Crypto's integration into mainstream sports via World Cup sponsorships could accelerate digital currency adoption and reshape sports marketing.
The post The World Cup meets crypto as Mexico and England clash in round of 16 appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The integration of tokenized equities on Robinhood Chain could revolutionize global trading by enabling 24/7 market access and new yield strategies.
The post Tokenized $COIN now available on Robinhood Chain as platform bridges equities and DeFi appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Misleading TPS claims can skew investor perceptions, highlighting the need for verified data to assess blockchain performance and potential.
The post Sui public mainnet peaks at 6M+ TPS: What the numbers actually show appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Aave's rapid success on Monad highlights the potential for strategic multichain expansion, but long-term growth hinges on sustainable demand.
The post Aave’s Monad market tops $100M in deposits two days after launch appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Exchange Inflows Spike to 49,000 BTC in a Day, Signaling More Volatility is Coming: Report
CryptoQuant’s weekly report, “Incoming Volatility?”, makes a clean, data-backed case that something is about to break.
Bitcoin exchange inflows spiked to roughly 49,000 BTC on June 30 — an extreme reading seen only four other times in 2026. Ethereum inflows blew past 1.25 million ETH the same week. Altcoin deposit transactions hit nearly 45,000 a day, the highest in two months and the exact pattern that front-ran Bitcoin’s slide from $82K in early May to below $58K in late June.
Every one of those signals has historically preceded a directional move, usually down.
And yet, as of Thursday morning, Bitcoin is trading around $61,600 — back above the $60K support the report frames as the line in the sand, and up several thousand dollars from Wednesday’s print near $58,600. The chain is screaming risk-off but the price just shrugged it off.
The most bearish detail in the report isn’t the raw inflow volume — it’s the composition. The average deposit size doubled from 1 BTC to 2 BTC. That’s not retail panic-selling in dribs and drabs; that’s whales and institutions deliberately repositioning coins onto exchanges.
As CryptoQuant’s Julio Moreno notes, a jump in average deposit size is a more bearish tell than high volume alone, because it signals intent rather than noise. When large holders queue up to sell, they usually know something, or think they do.
So why did price go the other way? Because the flows aren’t happening in a vacuum. Bitcoin’s June bleed had less to do with anything crypto-native than with capital rotating out of digital assets and into the semiconductor trade, U.S.-Iran tensions stoking inflation fears, and Strategy trimming its stack.
Mt. Gox moving 10,422 BTC last month revived creditor-selling anxiety ahead of the October repayment deadline. Spot Bitcoin ETFs, meanwhile, have bled billions across a double-digit streak of outflow sessions.
The whales moving coins to exchanges may simply be positioning for that same macro storm and not really causing it.
Thursday’s bounce came courtesy of dovish Fed commentary that eased rate-cut fears. That’s the tell within the tell: in this market, macro is the dog and on-chain flows are the tail.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading at $61,469.98, up $1,322.54 (+2.2%) on the day after bouncing off a 24-hour low of $59,520 and peaking near $62,148 around 10 a.m.
The recovery back above $60,000 — with $32.49B in daily volume and a $1.23T market cap — lines up with the report’s read that $60K is the battleground level, and today the bulls are holding it.
This post Bitcoin Exchange Inflows Spike to 49,000 BTC in a Day, Signaling More Volatility is Coming: Report first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Wavespace Launches MiCA-Compliant Self-Custodial Bitcoin Debit Card Powered by Lightning and NWC
Wavespace, a Bitcoin neobank serving the Eurozone, has announced MiCA compliance of its ‘self-custodial’ debit card. The young fintech company is at the cutting edge of Bitcoin payments technology in Europe, with support for the Lightning Network, and auto DCA to self-custody.
Debit cards in the Bitcoin and broader crypto industry have traditionally worked by preloading custodial accounts with bitcoin or stablecoins. The process of preloading was usually on-chain, taking time to settle and requiring manual input from the user to send from self-custody wallets or cold storage. If the preloaded balance ran out on the card, spending would not be possible.
Wavespace’s self-custody debit card solves these problems with a novel Bitcoin technology called Nostr Wallet Connect, or NWC for short. This protocol, documented in NIP-47, allows users to connect a service like this debit card to a self-hosted Lightning node. The user sets a minimum balance, say $200 and every time the user spends from the card via the VISA network, Wavespace pulls sats from the user’s self-custodial wallet to top up the card. This process minimizes custodial exchange risk while maximizing user exposure to the asset and automating away the friction to spend bitcoin.
NWC is a technology developed by the Nostr ecosystem, a high-tech niche within the Bitcoin industry that is branching out into social media and other communication protocols.
As a high-tech neobank, Wavespace gives users a personal IBAN account, which they can send fiat to, to purchase Bitcoin. Their automated DCA services can be set to withdraw bitcoin upon purchase to a selected Bitcoin address.
The company is MiCA compliant, making it one of the few surviving Bitcoin exchanges in Europe, as the complicated crypto regulations came online.
On the privacy front, the deep Lightning network integration of Wavespace lets user get access to the banking system in a clear and compliant manner, without exposing all their payment data on the Bitcoin blockchain. Since Lightning payments are off-chain, there is no single public record that leaks user data; instead, transactions move through payment channels between various user services, leaving no obvious public trace. The result is a growing compromise between the high privacy, cypherpunk values that created the Bitcoin and crypto industry, while also unlocking access to the legacy financial system, and compliant integration with regulation-heavy areas like Europe.
In an interview with Bitcoin Magazine, Eivydas Račkauskas, Chief Orange Pill Giver at Wavespace, said that 70% of the payments made on the platform use the Lightning Network and that the company is looking into the ARK protocol for further self-custody-oriented payments integrations. He also revealed that the company is integrated with Lightspark and is ready for an expansion into the USA, though he did not reveal further details on the matter.
Wavespace has been almost entirely bootstrapped and self-funded, according to Račkauskas, except for an early Relai angel investor who supported them in 2025. They are currently in the middle of another fundraising round.
This post Wavespace Launches MiCA-Compliant Self-Custodial Bitcoin Debit Card Powered by Lightning and NWC first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Juan Galt.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitget Bolsters Stock+ Platform With U.S. Stock Options Trading
Crypto exchange Bitget has launched US stock options, allowing users to trade options on US-listed companies.
The company described itself in a note to Bitcoin Magazine as the world’s largest Universal Exchange and states that it is the only major crypto exchange offering US stock options alongside crypto and contract-for-difference markets in gold, forex, commodities and indices.
The initial release includes long call and long put strategies for eligible users. A call option lets a trader take a bullish position on a stock, while a put option allows a trader to express a bearish view or manage downside exposure.
Risk for buyers is limited to the premium paid, and an option can expire without value if the expected price movement does not occur.
The launch expands Bitget’s stock product line.
The company’s earlier products include tokenized stocks and pre-IPO access to private market opportunities. Stock options join the Stock+ offering, which the company positions as a direct-access venue for US equities built for traders familiar with established stock market products and regulated market infrastructure.
Bitget stated that the addition supports its goal of combining crypto, stocks, commodities and other assets in one trading environment.
Demand for listed options has reached record levels. The US options market processed more than 15.2 billion contracts in 2025, an average of about 60 million contracts per trading day. The figures reflect wider use of options among retail and institutional participants for directional trading, hedging and capital management.
“We have moved first to connect stock opportunities with our users,” said Gracy Chen, CEO of Bitget. “From tokenized stocks to now options, we are executing on convergence. Our products provide advanced trading access to stocks, gold, crypto and worldwide assets.”
The first release focuses on single-leg options buying to provide an entry point for users. The company plans additional functionality, including multi-leg strategies, as the Stock+ options product develops.
For the launch, eligible users who complete a first US stock options trade may receive $15 in NVIDIA stock, subject to campaign terms and regional availability.
Bitget said they have more than 125 million users and access to over two million crypto tokens, along with 500-plus tokenized stocks, ETFs, commodities, foreign exchange and precious metals such as gold.
The company holds partnerships with MotoGP and UNICEF, the latter to support blockchain education for 1.1 million people by 2027. Bitget states that it leads the tokenized traditional-finance market across 150 regions.
This post Bitget Bolsters Stock+ Platform With U.S. Stock Options Trading first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

FBI Director Kash Patel Did Not Disclose Six-Figure Strategy (MSTR) Stake: Report
FBI Director Kash Patel disclosed a six-figure investment in Strategy (MSTR), the world’s largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, more than six months past the deadline set by federal ethics law, according to a report from NOTUS. The lapse has reopened a fight over stock trading by senior government officials and raised questions about a potential conflict of interest.
Patel purchased between $100,001 and $250,000 in shares of Strategy on November 21, 2025. He did not report the trade to federal regulators until May 26, 2026, a gap of more than 180 days. The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act requires senior executive-branch officials to disclose individual stock trades over $1,000 within 45 days of the transaction.
In his May 26 letter to the Office of Government Ethics, Patel said the trade had been “inadvertently omitted” from a prior filing. Two days later, Deputy Assistant Attorney General William Taylor attributed the omission to a miscommunication, and an FBI official told NOTUS the late reporting was “not realized and unintentional.”
First-time STOCK Act violators face a $200 fine. The Department of Justice, which would issue or waive the penalty, has not fined Patel. The bureau said the corrected filing was reviewed and approved by a DOJ ethics official.
Strategy, the firm led by Michael Saylor, pioneered the corporate Bitcoin-treasury model and holds more than 760,000 BTC. The stock functions as a proxy for the price of Bitcoin, which makes it one of the most direct routes to a Bitcoin bet through a brokerage account. Strategy’s shares have lost about half their value since the date of Patel’s purchase.
The identity of the company is the crux of the concern. The FBI, under Patel, plays a central role in cryptocurrency enforcement, and Patel has promoted that record.
In a June 19 post on X, he warned crypto fraudsters that “this FBI will find you, and we will bring you to justice.” Weeks before his purchase, he had touted a case that seized roughly $15 billion
Strategy has done millions of dollars in business with the Justice Department, of which the FBI is a part, along with the Departments of Health and Human Services, Defense, and State, over the past decade, according to the report.
Taylor maintained that Patel’s stake does not create a conflict of interest with his oversight of the bureau.
Patel is not an outlier. Vice President JD Vance disclosed up to $500,000 in Bitcoin, and President Trump and his sons reported more than $1 billion in crypto-related income last year.
This post FBI Director Kash Patel Did Not Disclose Six-Figure Strategy (MSTR) Stake: Report first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Metaplanet Adds 2,823 Bitcoin, Reaches 43,000 BTC and Becomes World’s Third-Largest Corporate Treasury
Metaplanet crossed the 43,000 BTC threshold on July 2, a milestone that places the Tokyo-listed firm as the world’s third-largest corporate Bitcoin holder. The company now trails Strategy and Twenty One Capital across the global corporate ranking, and its climb underscores Japan’s role in the corporate Bitcoin accumulation race.
Metaplanet acquired an additional 2,823 BTC during the second quarter of 2026, a purchase worth about $170.7 million. The buy brought total holdings to 43,000 BTC, valued near $2.6 billion. Shares of the company (ticker 3350) closed 3.5% higher at 207 yen ($1.28) on Thursday following the announcement.
The average acquisition price for the quarter landed at roughly 12.71 million yen (about $80,000) per Bitcoin, according to the company. The effective purchase price fell to around 12.09 million yen (about $77,000) once income from the firm’s Bitcoin Income Generation business is counted.
That segment produced approximately 1.75 billion yen ($10.85 million) in operating revenue for the quarter, lifting first-half revenue to about 4.72 billion yen. On a trailing 12-month basis, the division’s revenue reached about 11.4 billion yen.
Metaplanet’s total Bitcoin investment now stands at approximately 659.25 billion yen (about $4.2 billion), with holdings valued near 409 billion yen (about $2.6 billion) as of June 30. The overall average cost basis sits at 15.33 million yen (about $102,500) per BTC.
The company reported a BTC Yield of 6.6% for the quarter ended June 30, 2026, a metric that tracks growth in Bitcoin per share. That figure remains a core indicator for corporate treasury strategies of this type.
The corporate Bitcoin leaderboard is now well defined. Strategy, the former MicroStrategy, leads with holdings above 847,000 BTC. Twenty One Capital holds second place. Metaplanet takes third, a position that puts it ahead of other large players such as MARA Holdings, according to data tracked by Bitcoin Treasuries.
Michael Saylor marked the occasion on X, tweeting, “Congrats to Metaplanet on reaching ₿43,000 and becoming the #3 corporate Bitcoin treasury in the world. You are proving that the Bitcoin treasury strategy is global.”
Metaplanet has scaled at speed since it adopted the treasury model in 2024. CEO Simon Gerovich has drawn on equity offerings, debt instruments, and options strategies to build the position, an approach designed to limit the shareholder dilution that comes with large corporate purchases. The Bitcoin Income Generation business uses Bitcoin options to create recurring cash flow while the company expands its holdings.
The balance sheet leaves room to grow. Total debt and preferred stock represent about 23% of the net asset value of the firm’s Bitcoin, a cushion that gives Metaplanet capacity to keep buying.
The dual model, one part aggressive accumulation and one part recurring income, cements Japan as a rising force in the corporate push to hold Bitcoin as a reserve asset.
This post Metaplanet Adds 2,823 Bitcoin, Reaches 43,000 BTC and Becomes World’s Third-Largest Corporate Treasury first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Americans are on pace to lose more money on legal gambling this year than at any point in the country's history.
A new analysis by economics writer Joseph Politano projects that the total will exceed a quarter trillion dollars in 2026. Losses have climbed 67% since the start of COVID-19 and another 8% over the past year alone, outpacing any growth recorded between 2000 and 2020.
That figure counts only sportsbooks and casinos, and it excludes the money moving through prediction markets, crypto trading, and stock options, each of which now channels billions of dollars a year into activity that, economically speaking, looks a great deal like a bet.
The gap between what regulators call gambling and what they call investing has become one of the stranger features of American financial life.
A resident of a state where sports betting is illegal can nonetheless open a crypto prediction market app and take a position on whether the Federal Reserve cuts rates in September, whether a hurricane makes landfall in Florida, or which team wins the World Series.
A trader with no view on economic fundamentals can buy an option that expires in six hours and is, both in theory and in practice, a wager on which direction a stock index moves before lunch.
A teenager with a crypto wallet can invest in a token that exists purely because a meme went viral.
Each of these activities involves risking money on an uncertain outcome, but each falls under a different regulator, a different legal standard, and in some cases, no meaningful oversight at all.
The American Gaming Association reported that commercial gaming revenue in the US hit a record $78.72 billion in 2025, up 9.2% from the year before. Sports betting alone generated $16.96 billion in revenue on a total handle of $166.94 billion, an increase of nearly 23% in revenue and 11% in handle over 2024, when Americans had already wagered just under $150 billion legally on sports.
Since the Supreme Court's 2018 ruling in Murphy v. NCAA struck down the federal prohibition on sports betting, 39 states and Washington, D.C. have legalized some form of it, and the industry has expanded every year since.
Politano's analysis highlighted the consequences of such an increase in gambling that extended well beyond sportsbooks' balance sheets. Research cited in his piece found that in states where sports betting is legal, an NFL home team's upset loss raises the rate of intimate partner violence by ten percentage points more than in states without legal betting.
Separate work from New York Fed economists Jacob Goss and Daniel Mangrum, drawing on millions of credit reports, found that debt delinquency rates rose as states legalized sports gambling, with the effect concentrated among men and people under 40. You won't see that in AGA's revenue figures, which measure the industry's growth without capturing the toll it takes on the households funding it.
At the same time, a set of markets that regulators don't classify as gambling at all has grown even faster in percentage terms.
Prediction market activity also surged. Data compiled by Gambling Insider put 2025 notional trading volume across major prediction market platforms at more than $44 billion, with Polymarket and Kalshi together accounting for roughly $38 billion to $39 billion of that total. Polymarket accounted for about $21.5 billion, and Kalshi for $17.1 billion, between January and November 2025.
Options markets and crypto also saw increased retail participation in short-horizon speculation. Total US listed options volume topped 15.2 billion contracts in 2025, a sixth consecutive annual record and a 26% jump over 2024, according to Cboe's year-end report.
Zero-days-to-expiration contracts on the S&P 500, options that are opened and closed within a single day, averaged 2.3 million contracts a day and made up 59% of total SPX volume, with retail traders responsible for roughly half to 60% of that flow.
In crypto, memecoins fell 61% from their early-2025 highs to about $36.5 billion before recovering to roughly $47.3 billion in early 2026. CryptoSlate's own year-end accounting of 2025's worst-performing tokens traced that round trip through a string of celebrity and politically themed launches that left early insiders enriched and late retail buyers underwater.
What makes this collection of activities worth examining together, rather than as separate industries, is that the underlying economic behavior is often identical while the legal treatment is not.
| Activity | Regulator | Legal classification |
|---|---|---|
| Sports betting | State gaming commissions | Gambling |
| Prediction markets | CFTC (Kalshi, Polymarket US) | Financial derivatives |
| Stock options | SEC / CFTC | Investing |
| Crypto derivatives | CFTC | Commodity derivatives |
| Memecoins | Largely unregulated | Digital assets |
A trader who buys a contract on whether the Fed cuts rates in September and a trader who buys an out-of-the-money option tied to the same Fed decision are both using federally regulated market infrastructure to express a short-horizon view.
The sharper contrast is with sportsbook-style event wagers: sports bets routed through licensed books face state gambling rules, while similar event exposure routed through federally regulated prediction markets is being litigated under derivatives law, without the same state licensing, tax collection, or responsible-gambling requirements.
This is the fault line the gambling industry has begun fighting over. AGA estimates that prediction markets offering sports-related contracts have diverted more than $500 million in potential state and tribal betting tax revenue since the start of 2025.
The fight has already produced a tangle of lawsuits and state enforcement actions in Nevada, Massachusetts, Arizona, and Tennessee, all testing whether federal derivatives law preempts state gambling statutes.
The CFTC itself is split on the question along generational lines: former Chairman Gary Gensler filed a brief in June siding with AGA and arguing that Congress never intended his own agency to become a national sports-betting regulator, while the current CFTC has sued states directly to assert exclusive jurisdiction over the same contracts.
The dispute has split the gambling industry itself. DraftKings and FanDuel both resigned from the AGA in November 2025, days before DraftKings launched its own federally regulated event-contract product, after the trade group moved to bar members that operate prediction markets.
Within six months, that product had reached a $3.1 billion annualized trading run rate, a fraction of Kalshi's scale but proof that the state-licensed sportsbook industry now sees more upside in the federal derivatives lane than in the framework it spent a decade building.
The current regulatory framework still depends on legal categories built for different markets: securities law for securities and options on them, commodities law for futures and event contracts, and state gambling law for wagers.
The problem is that newer products and retail trading behavior now blur the practical line between those categories. A same-day option, a sports contract on a prediction market, and a short-lived memecoin trade can expose users to similar loss patterns while triggering very different safeguards.
This produces outcomes that are difficult to justify on any grounds other than historical accident. Depending on platform access and ongoing litigation, a resident of a state without legal sports betting may be able to trade sports-linked event contracts through a federally regulated prediction market with fewer sportsbook-specific restrictions than apply to licensed books in states where betting is legal.
A retail trader can lose a paycheck on a same-day option with the same speed and finality as a losing parlay, but the loss is recorded as an investment outcome rather than a gambling one, exempting it from the responsible-gambling infrastructure states have spent years building.
Meanwhile, a memecoin with no underlying business may avoid meaningful federal oversight unless its launch, promotion, or sale creates securities-law exposure, leaving a large speculative market outside the kind of purpose-built consumer-protection regime applied to gambling.
Economists and gambling researchers who study these overlapping markets tend to argue that regulation should track the risk a product actually poses, factors like leverage, time horizon, addiction potential, and the likelihood of catastrophic loss, rather than which legal bucket a product happens to fall into.
Under that framework, a same-day options contract and a same-day sports bet would face similar scrutiny regardless of which regulator signs off on them, and a memecoin with 99% odds of losing most of its value within two months would not escape oversight simply because it's denominated in stablecoins rather than dollars.
None of this means every dollar routed through prediction markets, options, or crypto tokens represents disguised gambling, and plenty of the activity in each category reflects genuine hedging, price discovery, or long-term investment.
But the country has built an elaborate legal architecture that treats identical economic behavior differently depending on which door a person walks through to place it, taxing and regulating a sports bet made through a sportsbook far more heavily than the same bet made through a federally sanctioned exchange, while leaving an entire category of speculative crypto assets almost untouched.
Americans are losing a historic amount of money across all of these channels simultaneously, and the regulatory system meant to protect them was built for a version of finance that no longer exists.
The post Americans lost hundreds of billions on crypto speculation. Why is only some of it considered gambling? appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Riot Platforms' reported 500 BTC movement to NYDIG Custody gives the market a live signal for how public miners may use coin treasuries as AI and data-center costs rise.
PANews reported the July 3 transfer, citing on-chain monitoring data, and valued the movement at roughly $30.7 million. The available record supports a custody movement, but it does not show an executed sale or sale proceeds.
That distinction makes the signal useful. Riot has already disclosed Bitcoin sales, restricted collateral, negative operating cash flow, and data-center expansion plans, so another large custody movement now lands as a capital-allocation marker rather than routine wallet maintenance.
Riot's first-quarter numbers make the 500 BTC movement harder to dismiss as wallet maintenance. In its Q1 production update, the company disclosed that it produced 1,473 BTC during the quarter and sold 3,778 BTC for $289.5 million in net proceeds, at an average net price of $76,626 per coin.
That means Riot sold more than two and a half times the amount of Bitcoin it mined in the quarter. The company still ended the period with a large treasury, about 15,679 to 15,680 BTC depending on the source line, while 5,802 BTC was described as restricted or held as collateral in Riot's Q1 materials.
Its Q1 results also put cash on hand at $282.5 million, including restricted cash.
The same quarter's 10-Q shows how central those sales were to the cash-flow picture. Riot reported negative operating cash flow of $182.651 million for the three months ended March 31 and $289.484 million of proceeds from Bitcoin sales. The sale line was one of the major cash-flow offsets in the filing.
In that context, another reported 500 BTC movement to NYDIG acts as a live liquidity marker. Sale execution for this batch remains unconfirmed, yet the movement gives the market another treasury-flow datapoint to compare with Riot's production, sales, cash, and restricted-BTC disclosures.
| Riot liquidity datapoint | Reported figure | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 BTC produced | 1,473 BTC | Baseline mining output |
| Q1 BTC sold | 3,778 BTC | Sales exceeded quarterly production |
| Q1 BTC sale proceeds | $289.5 million | Large cash source during the quarter |
| Q1 operating cash flow | -$182.651 million | Pressure before financing and investing flows |
| Quarter-end BTC held | About 15,679 to 15,680 BTC | Riot still had a large Bitcoin treasury |
| Restricted or collateral BTC | 5,802 BTC | Part of the treasury was already tied to financing or restrictions |
| Rockdale land purchase | $96.0 million funded by about 1,080 BTC sold | Direct precedent for turning BTC into data-center infrastructure |
| Latest reported NYDIG movement | 500 BTC, about $30.7 million | New signal to watch, with sale execution unconfirmed |

Riot is positioning itself as a power-heavy digital-infrastructure company alongside its Bitcoin-mining roots. In its Q1 filing, the company described a strategic evolution from a Bitcoin-mining-focused enterprise into a diversified data-center and digital-infrastructure company. The filing specifically references large-scale data-center purposes, including AI and high-performance computing uses.
Riot's January Rockdale announcement tied Bitcoin treasury monetization directly to that expansion. The company said its $96.0 million fee simple acquisition of 200 acres at Rockdale was funded entirely by selling about 1,080 BTC from its balance sheet.
In the same announcement, Riot disclosed a data-center lease and services agreement with AMD for an initial 25 MW of critical IT load capacity, with expansion potential.
By April, Riot said AMD had exercised an option for another 25 MW, bringing contracted capacity to 50 MW. Riot also reported its first quarter of data-center revenue, $33.2 million, made up largely of tenant fit-out services revenue.
That mix changes how miner balances should be interpreted. A Bitcoin miner selling coins to cover routine operating costs sends one kind of signal. A miner mobilizing coins while converting power sites into AI infrastructure sends another. The signal reaches beyond immediate supply pressure into capital allocation.
Recent CryptoSlate sector coverage has tracked the same broader split, with listed miners pulled between Bitcoin exposure, debt-funded AI infrastructure, valuation premiums for contracted power, and treasury monetization.
Riot's new NYDIG-linked transfer is distinct because it attaches that trend to a current wallet-level datapoint and to a company that has already disclosed using Bitcoin sales for Rockdale development.
For Riot, the balance-sheet question is becoming more concrete. The company still has substantial Bitcoin exposure, but parts of that exposure have already been sold, restricted, pledged, or converted into land and data-center capacity. Each new large custody movement therefore arrives inside a capital-allocation story, distinct from a simple mining update.
The easiest mistake is to treat each miner transfer as a hidden sell order. This transfer supports a custody and potential sale-staging signal until Riot or later transaction evidence shows the final use of the coins. The accessible record for this latest 500 BTC movement leaves sale execution open.
Repeated movements of this kind carry more weight when they follow disclosed treasury sales. Riot's Q1 pattern already showed production, sales, collateral, cash needs, and data-center capex interacting in the same balance sheet. If NYDIG-bound transfers become a steady rhythm, the market may start treating miner treasuries as active liquidity infrastructure rather than dormant reserves.
For Bitcoin, that shifts the question from a single 500 BTC movement to the behavior of public miners under capital pressure. Miners sit close to new issuance, carry large power and equipment obligations, and now compete for AI infrastructure capital.
Set against Bitcoin's broader spot market, one 500 BTC transfer is a small signal relative to daily trading volume. A repeated cadence by a large public miner would become harder to ignore.
For Riot, the next disclosure is more important than the transfer alone. A future production update, 10-Q, 8-K, or investor presentation could show whether this 500 BTC ended as sale proceeds, remained in custody, or moved again. Until then, the conditional conclusion is clear: Bitcoin treasuries are increasingly part of the funding stack for miners trying to become AI-era infrastructure companies.
The market can already see why the transfers are being watched. Riot has used Bitcoin to fund the data-center pivot, has sold more BTC than it mined in a quarter, and is operating in a sector where power capacity may be valuable but buildouts still require cash.
The post Reported Riot 500 BTC custody transfer exposes Bitcoin miners’ AI funding pressure appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Crypto was founded on a simple premise: people should be able to send, hold, and manage money without going through a bank. Fifteen years later, some of the industry's most significant developments involve banks doing that, on blockchains, for their own institutional clients.
JPMorgan now settles payments in its own deposit token on a public blockchain. BlackRock's tokenized Treasury fund holds roughly $2.4 billion in assets, with two more products of the same kind already filed with the SEC. Visa and Mastercard let card issuers settle their daily obligations in stablecoins rather than wire transfers.
The industry that set out to disintermediate finance has, in large part, become the infrastructure finance now runs on.
Bitcoin emerged in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis with a unique proposal: electronic cash that required no trusted third party, no bank, no payment processor, and no permission from anyone to move. Satoshi Nakamoto's white paper devoted most of its length to explaining how the third party could be entirely removed from a transaction.
Ethereum extended the idea a few years later, promising programmable money and applications that could run without a company standing behind them. For most of the decade that followed, the industry's public rhetoric stayed loyal to that founding idea.
Conferences were built around the concept of disintermediation, banking people the traditional system had excluded, and constructing a parallel financial rail that bypassed Wall Street altogether.
The target was clear, and it was the same system crypto now depends on to function.
The shift away from that founding idea built up over a long sequence of institutional decisions. Banks started piloting various settlement products, and card networks tested faster clearing methods.
Kinexys, JPMorgan's blockchain unit, is one of the best examples of a successful foray into crypto by incumbent TradFi giants. The bank's dollar-denominated deposit token, JPM Coin, is moving toward native issuance on the Canton Network, a blockchain built specifically for regulated financial markets.
The stated goal is to bridge traditional finance and distributed ledger technology while preserving the privacy and compliance controls banks are required to maintain.
And this isn't a pilot project confined to an innovation lab: Kinexys has processed more than $3 trillion since its 2015 launch and now averages billions of dollars in volume daily. The bank hired Oliver Harris, a former Goldman Sachs executive, specifically to lead the unit, and Harris has been direct about his view of blockchain's purpose: not to dismantle the financial system's back end, but to rebuild it from within.
BlackRock has pursued a parallel strategy with its USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund, known as BUIDL. As of the second quarter of 2026, the tokenized Treasury fund holds approximately $2.4 billion in assets under management, making it the largest tokenized Treasury fund in existence and one of the most closely watched institutional crypto products.
In May, BlackRock filed with the SEC for two additional tokenized fund structures built on the same model, a move described as evidence of acceleration rather than experimentation. The broader category of tokenized Treasuries has expanded significantly, and BUIDL's growth has already reshaped the competitive landscape among tokenized Treasury issuers.
The fund is now integrated into DeFi lending markets and is tradable through Uniswap's request-for-quote system under an allowlist managed by Securitize. Larry Fink has returned to tokenization repeatedly in his public commentary, calling it an upgrade to how asset management already operates.
Payments have followed a similar trajectory, but at a much faster pace. Visa's stablecoin settlement pilot allows select issuers and acquirers to settle their daily obligations using Circle's USDC instead of traditional wire transfers.
According to Visa, participating clients gain faster movement of funds over blockchains, seven-day availability, and greater operational resilience across weekends and holidays, all without any visible change to the consumer card experience.
By April 2026, that pilot had expanded to nine blockchains and a $7 billion annualized run rate. While that's still a small fraction of Visa's total settlement volume, it's growing fast enough to suggest serious potential.
Mastercard has gone even further: as of June 2026, its settlement support covers Circle's USDC, Paxos-issued tokens including PYUSD and USDG, and Ripple's RLUSD. The company continues to add crypto partners across the United States and Latin America.
Stripe has moved at a comparable pace, largely through its 2025 acquisition of Bridge. Stablecoin payment volume reportedly doubled year over year, with most of that growth coming from business-to-business transactions rather than consumer spending.
Most people won't feel this change. From the perspective of an average retail user, this will appear as a small but measurable increase in convenience.
A retail investor can gain crypto exposure through a familiar asset manager's ETF instead of setting up a wallet. A payment app can hold a stablecoin balance behind the scenes without the term ever appearing in its interface.
A cross-border payment can clear in minutes instead of days, with the recipient never needing to know why. The technology has become largely invisible to the end user, which is typically what happens once infrastructure works well enough that people stop thinking about it.
However, that kind of convenience displaces optionality. Self-custody, the ability to hold one's own keys and transact without asking an institution's permission, requires effort and carries risk, and most users, given the choice, will trade that effort for the safety of a regulated intermediary.
Bank-issued deposit tokens, tokenized funds, and stablecoins settled through Visa and Mastercard all reintroduce a trusted third party into a system originally designed to need none.
The blockchain still performs the settlement, but the permissioning layer, the compliance checks, and the custodial relationship all come from the system this technology was built to replace. Access has broadened, but independence, for most users, has narrowed accordingly.
Regulation has been both a cause and a consequence of this shift. The GENIUS Act's stablecoin framework, together with the compliance infrastructure banks are building around their own tokenization platforms, has required crypto firms to construct the kind of legal, audit, and reporting apparatus traditional finance had for decades.
Analysts at CoinShares described 2026 as the year digital assets stopped being peripheral disruptors and became elements genuinely intertwined with the existing financial system. Building that apparatus takes time, which has changed how products now reach the market.
A project could once launch with a whitepaper and an online community. Reaching institutional scale today typically requires legal review, a custody arrangement, and often a banking partner before a single user is onboarded.
The tradeoff for that slower pace appears to be durability. Capital from BlackRock, JPMorgan, and the major card networks behaves differently from the retail-driven capital that defined crypto's earlier boom-and-bust cycles.
A tokenized Treasury fund backed by BlackRock's balance sheet and institutional reputation is a fundamentally different kind of asset than a token backed by a founder's roadmap and a community's enthusiasm.
That stability comes at the cost of concentrating power in the hands of the institutions crypto originally set out to challenge. This is a highly contested issue in the industry, so much so that even JPMorgan has raised it in its own public comments to Congress.
The company argued that digital assets should be regulated based on their functions rather than the technology behind them. JPMorgan's argument implies that a settlement layer operated by large banks and asset managers may prove more resilient under stress than a fragmented network of crypto-native venues.
That would also be considerably more centralized than many early crypto builders would have recognized as a success. The technology has been validated, and now control over it has consolidated among the incumbents best positioned to scale it.
The builders who proved most consequential over the past several years were the ones who learned to operate within compliance, custody, and institutional risk frameworks well enough that banks and asset managers sought out their work rather than needing to be persuaded of its value.
JPMorgan absorbed blockchain talent into its own settlement systems while retaining its core role in finance. BlackRock packaged the yield-bearing appeal DeFi had promised years earlier inside a regulated fund structure under a name investors already trusted.
Crypto changed how money can move, but in the process, the financial system it once set out to replace changed what it's used for.
The post Crypto wanted to replace Wall Street – Instead, Wall Street took over crypto appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Farside Investors' new BIP-110 signaling alerts have put Bitcoin's arbitrary-data dispute on a live deadline, giving exchanges, wallets, miners, pools, and node operators a concrete August window to plan around even while miner signaling remains low.
A July 3 Farside post reported a new BIP-110 signaling block and listed 7 signaling blocks in the current period. Farside's Q&A says its X account will post automatically each time a BIP-110 signaling block is produced.
Miner support remains minimal. BGeometrics' daily API, retrieved July 3 and current through July 2, shows 38 BIP-110 signaling blocks out of 9,066 total blocks since May 1, or 0.42%.
Over the latest seven-day window in the API, June 26 through July 2, the count was 8 out of 1,000 blocks, or 0.8%.
The activation design creates the deadline even while current miner support remains low. BIP-110 has a miner threshold, a mandatory-signaling fallback, and a defined activation path.
The public feed moves those mechanics from forum argument into infrastructure planning before the August window arrives.
BIP-110 remains far from miner-driven lock-in while producing enough signals to create a public record.

Current signaling data puts the campaign far below lock-in: 38 of 9,066 blocks since May 1 through July 2, or 0.42%; 8 of 1,000 blocks in the latest seven-day API window, or 0.8%; 1 of 143 blocks on July 1, or 0.70%; and 2 of 131 blocks on July 2, or 1.53%. Miner lock-in requires 1,109 of 2,016 blocks, or 55%, in a difficulty adjustment period.
The July 3 Farside alert's 7-block period count is best treated as a snapshot unless paired with the number of blocks already elapsed in that retarget period. At the 1,109-block lock-in threshold, 7 signals would still require 1,102 additional signaling blocks before the period closes.
The gap keeps near-term miner activation remote. It also gives the alerts a practical role: every new signal can now be compared with the 55% threshold and with the mandatory-signaling calendar.
BGeometrics said in its June 10 background note that its daily dataset showed zero signaling blocks from May 1 through about May 20, followed by low activity around May 21. It said observed volumes looked consistent with individual miners or smaller operations, with no visible commitment by major pools, and noted that Bitcoin Core had not endorsed BIP-110.
A large-pool move would change the data quickly. BGeometrics pointed to Foundry USA and Antpool as the kinds of pool decisions that could move daily signaling from low single digits into a more meaningful range within days.
Until then, the miner lock-in route remains remote, while the public alert feed keeps the campaign visible.
For an exchange, wallet, pool, or node operator, the decision is whether to wait for a bigger signal or build procedures while the signal is still small. Each alert becomes part of a public record that customers, counterparties, and market infrastructure teams can track.
The BIP text defines the deployment as reduced_data, using version bit 4. Miner-driven lock-in requires 1,109 of 2,016 blocks, or 55%, to signal during a difficulty adjustment period.
The same specification defines a mandatory-signaling period from blocks 961,632 to 963,647, with lock-in no later than height 963,648 and activation one retarget period later at height 965,664.
The BIP-110 site presents that as an August mandatory-lock-in window followed by roughly two weeks before activation, then about one year of active restrictions. The BIP text describes a 52,416-block active duration, after which the rules expire.
For operators, those mechanics carry more weight than the ideological dispute itself. During mandatory signaling, the BIP says blocks that do not signal bit 4 are rejected as invalid by enforcing nodes.
If the deployment becomes active, enforcing nodes apply the new consensus restrictions for the active period.
Exchanges need deposit, withdrawal, confirmation, and chain-risk policies for a contentious activation path. Wallet teams need Taproot and Miniscript compatibility checks because the BIP text says the Miniscript compiler would need changes if the proposal activates and acknowledges very unlikely scenarios in which funds could theoretically be frozen or lost.
Mining pools need a clear version-bit policy. Node operators need to know whether their software is enforcing BIP-110 rules and how that affects block validity during the mandatory-signaling window.
Those decisions can be made while treating activation as uncertain. A consensus dispute with public alerts and fixed block heights can create operational demands before support appears large.
CryptoSlate has already covered the broader fork-risk setup, including Bitcoin being less than 10,000 blocks from the BIP-110 deadline in June and earlier node-support questions around the anti-spam proposal.
Live public alerting now sits on top of the activation design, shifting the audience from developers and policy combatants to infrastructure teams that monitor operational thresholds.
Readiness costs rise even when signaling remains small. If support stays near current levels, BIP-110 remains a loud but weak activation campaign headed toward the mandatory-signaling window.
If a major pool starts signaling, the market's assessment changes quickly because the path to 1,109 blocks per period becomes less theoretical. If exchanges, wallets, or large node operators publicly reject or prepare for the proposal, those statements may carry as much weight as block headers because a contentious soft fork depends on economic coordination.
For now, the numbers point to a small campaign with a large calendar problem. BGeometrics' latest daily data ends on July 2 with support still far below the miner threshold.
Farside's July 3 alert shows the signal continues to appear. The clearest change would be identifiable large-pool behavior or concrete readiness statements from the infrastructure that would have to live with the result.
The post Bitcoin’s BIP-110 fork fight gives exchanges an August deadline before miners signal support appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitget launched US stock options this week and says no other major crypto exchange offers them. The product starts with the simplest version of options trading, where eligible users buy single call or put contracts, with more complex strategies planned as it matures.
It sits alongside Bitget's existing crypto markets, tokenized stocks, and contract-for-difference products in gold, forex, and indices.
The launch follows a record stretch in the options market itself. US listed options volume reached 15.2 billion contracts in 2025, up 26% from the prior year and the sixth straight annual record, with roughly 61 million contracts changing hands daily, according to Cboe.
An exchange that built its business on crypto trading now wants a piece of one of the busiest markets in traditional finance.
A stock option is a contract that gives its buyer the right to buy or sell a stock at a set price before a deadline, and it trades under strict US financial rules. A tokenized stock is a version of a stock, or of the money you'd make or lose on one, recorded on a blockchain instead of in a traditional brokerage. What that token legally entitles you to depends entirely on how the company that created it configured it.
Bitget now sells both within one app, which makes it a pretty good test case for distinguishing between them.
The SEC defines options as contracts that give the purchaser the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a security at a fixed price within a set period.
The way this works is much simpler than the vocabulary used to describe it. Say a stock trades at $100 and a trader expects it to jump after earnings. They can buy a call option with a strike price of $110 for a small upfront premium. The strike is the price the contract is built around, and the premium is what the trader pays for it. If the stock climbs far enough before the option expires, the contract gains value. If it doesn't, the option expires worthless, and the trader loses the premium and nothing more.
A call is a bet that a stock will rise. A put is a bet that it will fall, or a way to protect shares the trader already owns against a drop. For buyers of simple calls and puts, the most they can lose is the premium they paid. Sellers are in a different position because their losses can far exceed the premium they collected, which is why brokerages only allow experienced, approved customers to sell them.
That gap in risk explains why Bitget opened with buying only. More advanced trades, where a user can sell options or combine several at once, stay off the menu for now, so a user's downside is limited to what they spend on the contract.
It's easy to see why options have become so popular. They let a trader control a large stock position for a fraction of what the shares themselves would cost, so a small amount of money rides on a much bigger move. Institutions use them to protect their portfolios, retail traders use them for earnings bets and short-term wagers, and phone-based brokerages put it all a few taps away.
Short-dated contracts drove much of the 2025 record, with same-day options (contracts that expire the day they are traded) making up 24.1% of total US volume, per Cboe and OCC data.
The total value of open Bitcoin options contracts surpassed Bitcoin futures for the first time in January, and demand for these bets continues to reshape what investors actually buy.
The catch is that options are much harder to trade well than they look. An option's price moves with the stock price, the strike, how much time is left before it expires, how sharply the stock tends to swing, and interest rates.
On top of all that, an option loses a little value every day it sits open, simply because the deadline keeps getting closer. A trader can be right about which way the stock goes and still lose money if the move arrives too late or is too small.
Bitget already offers over 500 tokenized stocks. A tokenized stock is not automatically the same as a share sitting in a brokerage account.
Depending on how it is built, the token can stand for a real share that a custodian holds on the buyer's behalf, a claim that simply tracks the stock's price while granting none of the rights that come with owning it, a private deal with the issuer that only copies the price movement, or an official record of share ownership kept on a blockchain.
SEC staff defined this in a January 28 statement, describing tokenized securities as regular securities recorded, in whole or in part, on a blockchain. Their main point was that what a product actually does, not what it is called, decides how it is regulated.
A share stays a share in the eyes of the law whether it sits in a traditional brokerage system or on a blockchain. And a token created by an outside firm that only mimics a stock's price can even count as a security-based swap, a category of contract that US markets keep on a very short leash.
The difference from options comes down to what each product actually is. A stock is a piece of ownership in a company. A tokenized stock wraps that ownership, or just the price, in a blockchain token that can move between wallets and platforms.
A stock option is one more step removed: a contract whose value rides on a stock, with no ownership involved at all. Listed US options also trade inside a tightly supervised system of exchanges, brokers, and clearinghouses, the middlemen who guarantee that trades actually settle.
Tokenized stocks come with open questions that the buyer often cannot see, and the answers change from one token to the next: who actually holds the underlying share, whether the holder collects dividends or gets to vote, whether the token can be traded back for the real share, and what happens to the holder if the issuer or custodian goes under.
Regulators have been struggling to work through that gap. Reuters reported on June 17 that the SEC is preparing an “innovation exemption” that would allow crypto companies to offer tokenized stock trading, with Citadel Securities and the industry group SIFMA pushing back on how well investors would be protected and how the market would hold up.
That exemption could move regular stocks onto blockchain systems and force exchanges to answer what token holders actually own.
Sizing Bitget's new options market is harder than describing it. The company claims 125 million users, but the announcement names no supported stocks, no list of countries where the product is available, no clearing arrangements, and no volume expectations. So the real market is the smaller group of users who get approved for the product, understand the risks, and want US stock exposure inside a crypto account.
Even a small slice of that base could add up to real activity, though how smoothly the options actually trade will depend more on the firms that provide prices and fill orders than on the raw user count.
A standard listed option, settled through the Options Clearing Corporation, as with every contract at a US brokerage, comes with a known set of protections and a clearinghouse standing behind the trade. An option-style product built through other arrangements might behave the same on a good day and very differently on a bad one, and Bitget's announcement doesn't say which one it is selling.
The tokenized stocks carry the same ambiguity, since their value to a holder rests on rights the token may or may not actually grant.
Convergence has made these products easy to buy in a single app, and it has done nothing to make them easy to tell apart. That job still falls to securities law, and for now, the exchanges that put everything on one screen are the ones saying the least about what lies beneath each asset.
The post Crypto exchanges are selling stock options and tokenized stocks but users may not own what they think appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin has staged a solid recovery, climbing back above $62,000 after one of its sharpest pullbacks of the year. The move caps a two-week grind higher off the lows, and the standout feature on the chart is clear: the $58,000 level has now been defended twice, turning what looked like a breakdown risk into a well-defined buying zone.

The recovery lines up with a broader shift in market structure. Buyers stepped in aggressively around $58K–$60K, recovery volume held up, and a short squeeze forced bearish positions to unwind — liquidating hundreds of millions in shorts across the market. Underneath it all sits a slow but real repositioning of flows as European traders migrate away from platforms exiting the EU toward fully regulated, MiCA-compliant venues.
The bounce was driven by a mix of macro relief and forced buying. A softer inflation message from the Fed eased fears of further hawkish policy, prompting a rotation back into risk assets. That macro spark hit a market that was heavily short after the June selloff, and the result was a classic short squeeze — bearish bets getting liquidated and adding fuel to the move up.
But the more structural story is where the buying is coming from. With MiCA now in full force across the EU, unlicensed platforms have pulled back from European users. A wave of traders who had funds on exchanges exiting the region — including many liquidating positions on Binance — have been moving their crypto to regulated alternatives. Some of that migration is showing up as fresh accumulation: as balances get transferred and repositioned on compliant exchanges, a portion is being redeployed into $BTC around the $58K–$60K zone rather than sitting idle.
In other words, part of this recovery isn't purely speculative — it reflects portfolio adjustments and re-entry buying from users relocating their holdings during the regulatory transition.
On the 2-hour chart, the most important structure is the $58,000 support line (yellow). Price tested this zone hard twice — once during the late-June flush and again around the start of July — and buyers defended it aggressively both times (highlighted on the chart). That double defense converts $58K from a nervous line into a confirmed demand zone.
Key areas on the chart:

Momentum has recovered meaningfully. The RSI (14) has climbed to around 65 and is trending above its moving average — no longer oversold, but not yet stretched into overbought territory. That leaves room for further upside before momentum becomes a concern.
The bottom line: $58K holding is the foundation of this recovery. As long as that floor stays intact, dips toward $58K–$60K are being treated as buying opportunities rather than exit signals.
With MiCA reshaping the European landscape, one of the most common questions right now is where to go for a fully regulated, compliant place to buy and hold Bitcoin. For many EU and UK users relocating their holdings, Coinbase has become a leading regulated alternative — publicly listed, licensed, and built around consumer protection.
If you're moving your crypto to a fully regulated exchange, Coinbase is one of the simplest and most trusted places to buy Bitcoin. Here's how to get started step by step:
➡️ Get started on Coinbase now →
Disclaimers:
Ethereum has staged its strongest 24-hour move in weeks, with $ETH jumping more than 5% to reclaim the $1,700 level for the first time since the brutal June selloff. The rally came in lockstep with $BTC, which pushed back above the psychologically important $60,000 mark, dragging the broader market higher with it.

The move looks macro-driven rather than Ethereum-specific. A dovish shift in Fed messaging around cooling inflation risks lit the match, and the sharpness of the bounce off multi-year lows carries the fingerprint of a short squeeze after positioning turned heavily one-sided to the downside through June. $Bitcoin holding above $60K is the cover that gives $ETH room to grind higher — lose that, and the tailwind evaporates fast.
The catalyst was broad risk appetite rather than any change in Ethereum's fundamentals. Easier-sounding Fed commentary on inflation prompted a rotation back into risk assets, and the most beaten-down names bounced hardest because they carried the heaviest short interest. $ETH had bled to multi-year lows in June with negative funding across major venues, so a bullish macro headline into that setup was exactly the kind of spark needed to force covering.
There's a fundamental undercurrent too. ETH spot ETF inflows briefly outpaced Bitcoin ETF flows for two consecutive sessions last week, a sign that institutional sentiment toward Ethereum is quietly turning. That relative strength is what separates this bounce from the failed reclaims seen earlier in the downtrend.
Looking at the 2-hour chart, $ETH has cleanly broken out of the $1,540–$1,600 consolidation range that contained price for most of late June. That range acted as a battleground for nearly two weeks, and the decisive break above $1,600 — followed by a push through $1,700 — flips both of those levels into potential support.

Key areas on the chart:
Momentum is stretched. The RSI (14) is reading around 74 — firmly in overbought territory — which means a short-term cooldown or sideways digestion near $1,700–$1,720 would be healthy rather than alarming. Overbought readings can persist in strong trends, but they raise the odds of a pullback to retest reclaimed support before the next leg.
The line in the sand is simple: $ETH holding $1,600 as support with Bitcoin above $60K keeps the bullish case alive. Break either, and this reads as an oversold relief rally rather than a genuine trend reversal.
Momentum is clearly with the bulls in the short term, but the rally is stretched and macro-dependent. The setup favors patient entries on a pullback to reclaimed support rather than chasing an overbought breakout. As always, position sizing and risk management matter more than the direction of any single candle.
The clock ran out on July 1, 2026. Under the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), any exchange without a Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) licence can no longer legally serve residents of the European Economic Area. The most consequential casualty is the biggest name in the game: Binance withdrew its MiCA application in Greece on June 24 and is now suspending core services for EU users.
If your funds are sitting on Binance — or on Bybit Global, or any other platform that didn't make the cut — you need a new home. And the licensed exchanges know it. What's unfolding is a full-blown land grab: MiCA-approved platforms are throwing cashback, deposit matches, VIP perks and even a €1,000,000 prize draw at anyone willing to move their crypto over. Below is the complete breakdown of who's offering what.
MiCA is the EU's single rulebook for crypto. To legally operate anywhere in the 27-member bloc, an exchange must hold a CASP licence from one member state — that licence then "passports" across the entire EEA. The 18-month transition window closed on July 1, 2026, and ESMA confirmed there would be no extension.
Binance bet on Greece as its entry point and lost, formally withdrawing its application days before the deadline. Of the estimated 1,100–1,300 legacy crypto providers operating in Europe, only around 200 secured a MiCA licence — a clearance rate of roughly 15%. The rivals who cleared the bar are now competing hard for the displaced users, and that competition is good news for your wallet.
A quick but important note: MiCA protection applies to the specific licensed legal entity, not the brand. Bybit Global, for example, is restricting EEA access, while its Austrian-licensed entity Bybit EU remains fully authorised. Always confirm which entity holds your account.
Here's how the six major licensed players stack up right now.
The Austrian veteran is running arguably the most generous package. Move your crypto over using code CRYPTOTICKER and you unlock three rewards at once: 5% cashback in EURCV on your transfer, a €25 welcome bonus in $BTC after your first €100 purchase, and one entry into a 3 $BTC giveaway for every euro of qualifying crypto you transfer. Bitpanda holds BaFin regulation in Germany alongside its Austrian licence, making it one of the most solidly regulated options on this list. The catch: it's strictly limited and first come, first served, running only until July 12.
→ Get started with Bitpanda here
OKX Europe holds MiCA, MiFID and Payment Institution licences via Malta. Opt in through the OKX app and deposit as little as €10 to earn up to 8% on your net deposit, capped at €20,000 in USDC and paid out over 52 weeks. New users get an extra welcome bonus of up to €400, plus a free 30-day VIP upgrade unlocking reduced fees and up to 10% card cashback. The offer runs until July 31. Note: OKX has delisted $USDT for EU users, as Tether doesn't meet MiCA's stablecoin rules — $USDC and USDG are the supported alternatives.
→ Get started with OKX here
Coinbase is keeping it simple: 5% back in $BTC on up to €1,000,000 in crypto transferred to the platform before July 14. You'll need an active Coinbase One subscription to qualify, and only genuine crypto transfers from another exchange or wallet count — fiat deposits, crypto purchases, wire transfers and crypto-to-crypto conversions are excluded.
→ Get started with Coinbase here
New EEA users who register, verify and make a net crypto deposit of at least $10 earn a tiered bonus paid in $CRO — scaling up to 10% on larger deposits, distributed in 12 equal monthly instalments. The campaign runs until July 22 and is capped, so it may close early.
→ Get started with Crypto.com here
Not to be confused with the restricted Bybit Global, Bybit EU operates under an Austrian MiCA licence. New accounts can claim up to €100 in welcome rewards, including €50 in $BTC after a €100 deposit, plus up to €120 in Bybit Card bonuses and first-month subscription cashback. Larger deposits unlock up to 3% annual $USDC cashback and VIP perks. It runs until July 31.4.
→ Get started with ByBit here
Don't take a banner's word for it. Check ESMA's public CASP register, which is updated weekly — if a platform isn't listed, it can't legally serve EU residents after July 1. A properly licensed exchange will also display its CASP authorisation and issuing regulator, usually in the website footer or on a dedicated regulatory page. If an exchange only references an old national registration rather than a MiCA CASP licence, it isn't authorised.
If your exchange lost its EU access, your crypto generally remains withdrawable — but services like trading, deposits and staking may be restricted, so acting sooner rather than later avoids disruption. The practical move is to pick a MiCA-licensed platform, verify your account, and transfer your assets across. Given that every one of these exchanges is currently paying you to do exactly that, there's rarely been a better moment to make the switch. Just read each campaign's terms carefully — most require your funds to stay put for a set period, and several are capped or first-come-first-served.
The bottom line: the MiCA deadline forced the shake-up, but the promo war means EU users hold the leverage right now. Compare the offers, confirm the licensing, and let the exchanges compete for your deposit.
The MiCA enforcement deadline has finally landed, pushing the world's biggest exchange out of the EU. A 140-company alliance just detonated a bomb under the leading regulated stablecoin issuer. And Bitcoin is grinding near its lowest levels in over a year as institutional demand stays soft. Here's what's actually moving the market today.
Sentiment is firmly risk-off. The global crypto market cap sits around $2.11 trillion, down roughly 1.8% over 24 hours, with total trading volume near $76.9 billion. $BTC is trading around $58,500, off about 2.2% on the day, while $ETH is near $1,573, down roughly 1.4%.

The mood gauge tells the story. The Fear & Greed Index has dropped to 11 — deeper into "extreme fear" — down from 15 a day earlier, as total market cap slipped from $2.16T to $2.11T. The backdrop is a persistent bear phase: ETF outflows, worries over a delayed CLARITY Act, and money rotating out of crypto and into AI stocks have all extended the downturn that dragged $BTC to its lowest levels since 2024 last week. Not everything is red, though — Polkadot and the XRP Ledger ecosystem were among the day's biggest gainers, and Stellar's $XLM climbed close to 12%.
Today is the day MiCA gets real. As of 1 July 2026, any crypto firm serving EU residents must hold a MiCA licence — and Binance doesn't. It withdrew its Greek licence application on 24 June, leaving it without authorisation in any EU country, and from today it halts new sign-ups, spot trading, deposits and Earn products for EU users, though withdrawals stay open.
The scale of the regulatory cull is the real headline. Of more than 3,000 firms that were operating across Europe, only around 210 have secured full CASP authorisation — a pass rate near 7%. Rivals like Coinbase, Kraken and OKX cleared the bar; the world's largest exchange did not. For traders, that means hundreds of thousands of users across Spain, France, Italy and Poland are now weighing where to move their funds — a live migration that favours already-licensed venues.
This is arguably the biggest structural story of the week. Circle ($CRCL) shares fell about 16.5% on 30 June after a consortium of more than 140 companies unveiled Open USD (OUSD), a stablecoin built to compete head-on with USDC. The stock traded as low as $63.10 after opening near $72.46, one of its sharpest single-day drops since listing, and is now down more than 40% over the past month.

What makes OUSD dangerous to incumbents is its economics. Launch partners include Stripe, Coinbase, Mastercard, Visa and BlackRock, and the new stablecoin lets partners keep the reserve earnings — striking directly at one of the core economics of today's issuers. Where issuers like Circle earn revenue by investing reserves in short-term Treasuries and keeping most of the interest, OUSD instead distributes that yield to participating businesses, with free, uncapped minting and shared governance. The Coinbase angle stings most: Circle paid Coinbase roughly $908 million in a single recent year in USDC distribution fees — and that partner is now backing a rival. OUSD is expected to go live later this year, initially on chains including Base and Solana.
Several fronts are heating up at once. Jefferies has warned of crypto market volatility as the CLARITY Act faces a key Senate test, noting passage would boost institutional adoption while delays would prolong regulatory uncertainty. Meanwhile, the stablecoin rulebook is diverging across borders: the UK's Financial Conduct Authority has proposed lowering stablecoin capital buffers, undercutting the EU's stricter MiCA requirements. And in Asia, Taiwan has passed a sweeping crypto law introducing licensing, reserve mandates and tough penalties, now awaiting final presidential approval.
Binance is shutting the door on EU customers. From 1 July 2026, the world's largest crypto exchange can no longer offer services to residents of the bloc, after failing to secure a licence under the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) before the transition period closed. If your funds are sitting on Binance, you don't need to panic — but you do need a plan. This guide explains what happened and walks you through moving your crypto to a regulated platform, step by step.
MiCA is the EU's single rulebook for crypto. To legally serve customers anywhere in the bloc, an exchange must hold a Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) licence from one member state — that licence then "passports" across all 27 EU countries and the wider European Economic Area. The transition period that let legacy operators keep working while awaiting authorisation closed on 1 July 2026, the hard enforcement date.
Binance bet on Greece as its entry point. On 24 June 2026, it formally withdrew the application it had filed with the Hellenic Capital Market Commission, citing prolonged review timelines and the absence of any formal decision — just days before the deadline. The exchange says it remains confident it will secure an EU licence in the coming months and intends to approach France next. But any approval will land after 1 July, leaving a gap where Binance is locked out.
The scale of the cull is striking. Of more than 3,000 crypto firms operating across Europe, only around 210 received full MiCA authorisation by the deadline — a clearance rate of roughly 7%. Rivals including Coinbase, Kraken, OKX and Crypto.com cleared the bar; the largest exchange in the world did not.
Yes. This is a suspension and orderly wind-down, not a shutdown or a seizure. From 1 July, Binance halts new spot orders, deposits, sign-ups and Earn, staking and launchpool products for EU residents — but funds remain accessible and withdrawals stay active. The Convert feature stays usable for selling only, so you can wind down positions in an orderly way.
Think of it as closing the register while leaving the warehouse open so you can collect your goods. That said, staying on an unlicensed platform means giving up the consumer protections MiCA was built to guarantee. ESMA has called on unlicensed firms to halt new registrations, restrict activity to asset transfers and account closures, and give customers clear timelines. The sensible move is to migrate to a licensed platform or a self-custody wallet.
Bitpanda is a European-headquartered exchange that is already fully regulated, holding licences with Germany's BaFin, Austria's FMA and Malta's MFSA. It secured MiCA authorisation through Austria, meaning it can legally serve users right across the EU, with a strong focus on capital security and consumer protection. For anyone leaving an unregulated venue, that is exactly the kind of safe harbour the new rules were designed to reward.
One key tip before you move: under MiCA, USDT (Tether) cannot be traded on regulated EU platforms. If you hold USDT on Binance, convert it to a MiCA-compliant asset such as USDC, or to EUR, before transferring — so your funds arrive ready to use.

Sign up here, complete identity verification (KYC) and enable two-factor authentication (2FA). Have your ID ready — verification usually takes only a few minutes.
Convert any USDT to USDC or EUR and consolidate small balances. This avoids assets being unusable on a MiCA-regulated platform and keeps network fees lower.
Choose the asset you want to receive (e.g. $BTC, $ETH or a stablecoin), select Deposit, and copy the wallet address. Make sure you pick the same network you'll use on Binance (e.g. Bitcoin, Ethereum/ERC-20).
On Binance, go to Wallet → Spot → Withdraw. Select the asset and the matching network, paste your Bitpanda address, and double-check it character by character. For transfers above €1,000 you may be asked for Travel Rule details — your own name must match your KYC on both platforms.
Withdraw a small test amount before moving everything. Wait for it to arrive (usually 2–15 minutes depending on the network), confirm it landed correctly, then send the rest.
Once the full balance appears in Bitpanda, you're fully migrated to a regulated EU platform — consumer protections intact and your crypto ready to trade.
The main thing to watch is the USDT conversion — don't transfer Tether and expect to use it on a regulated platform. Beyond that, the usual rules apply: always send a test transaction, match networks exactly, and verify addresses character by character. The market context also matters: with millions of users facing restricted access, capital is expected to shift fast toward compliant platforms, so acting sooner rather than later avoids any last-minute congestion.
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Andy Konwinski used Anthropic's Fable 5 debacle as exhibit A in the case against letting a handful of private labs govern who gets to do AI research.
ChangeNOW CSO Pauline Shangett digs into the infrastructure underpinning the exchange’s simple, streamlined frontend.
Did Claude Fable 5 get dumber? Two benchmarks, two wildly different conclusions—and one routing layer that explains the whole mess.
After President Trump disclosed over $1 billion in crypto-related earnings, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand is calling for a meme coin ban.
Developers say security testing has uncovered no new serious bugs as Zcash's Ironwood upgrade moves toward testnet activation.
Altcoins continue to show strength, with XRP gaining momentum against Bitcoin amid golden cross emergence.
Shiba Inu shows bullish exchange activity as netflow signals increased buying activity among traders, suggesting it may be preparing for a breakout.
Crypto Lawyer Bill Morgan names one XRP feature that changes the game.
Bitcoin ETFs record $221 million in fresh capital as demand returns after two weeks of steady withdrawals and severe price volatility.
Shiba Inu burn rate returns to green with millions of tokens sent to dead wallets.
Remittix has raised the stakes for its community after confirming that RTX will launch on major exchanges at a minimum price of $0.35.
The announcement gives holders a clear launch benchmark as the project moves closer to exchange trading, token distribution and wider platform access. For RTX presale buyers, the reveal is one of the most important updates so far, turning weeks of launch price speculation into a confirmed figure.
The timing has made the update even bigger. Airdrop registration is now live, the Remittix crypto-to-fiat platform is active and in testing, the official platform launch date is expected to be announced over the coming week and the limited time 350% RTX bonus is only available for a few more days before ending completely.
The confirmed $0.35 minimum launch price gives RTX holders a stronger sense of how the token will enter the market once it reaches major exchanges.
For any presale project, launch price clarity is a major milestone. It gives the community a number to focus on, helps frame expectations before trading begins and signals that the project is moving into a more advanced launch phase.
Remittix has now placed that benchmark in front of the market. With major exchange listings ahead, the $0.35 minimum launch price is likely to become one of the biggest talking points around RTX as the project moves toward its public trading debut.
Remittix has also opened airdrop registration through the official Remittix site.
The airdrop is connected to the distribution of RTX tokens purchased during the presale. Holders can register by connecting their wallet, submitting their wallet address and completing the registration page.
Users can also add optional notification details so they can receive future updates linked to token distribution, airdrop progress and launch announcements. Once the process is complete, the page confirms that the holder has successfully registered.
RTX holders should only use official Remittix links when registering. Unofficial websites, direct messages or unknown accounts claiming to offer airdrop access should be avoided.
Beyond the launch price reveal, Remittix continues to build momentum around its crypto-to-fiat platform.
The platform is already live and currently being tested with members of the community. It is designed to let users send crypto while recipients receive fiat directly into bank accounts.
Multiple community members have reportedly received fiat payments through the Remittix system, giving the project practical platform proof ahead of wider public access.
The official launch date for the crypto-to-fiat platform is expected to be announced over the coming week, adding another major update to the current Remittix launch cycle.
The limited time 350% RTX bonus remains available, but only for another few days before it completely ends.
With the $0.35 minimum launch price now confirmed, the final bonus window has taken on even more urgency. Remittix now has several key updates moving at the same time: exchange launch pricing, airdrop registration, token distribution preparation, live platform testing and an upcoming platform launch date announcement.
For RTX holders, the message is clear. Remittix has raised the stakes with a confirmed $0.35 minimum launch price, and the project is now moving closer to one of the most important phases in its roadmap.
Discover the future of PayFi with Remittix by checking out their project here:
Website: https://remittixpresale.io
Airdrop Registration: https://airdrop.remittixpresale.io
What is the confirmed RTX launch price?
Remittix has confirmed that RTX will launch on major exchanges at a minimum price of $0.35.
Is Remittix airdrop registration live?
Yes, airdrop registration is live through the official Remittix site for RTX holders preparing for token distribution.
Is the 350% RTX bonus still available?
Yes, the limited time 350% RTX bonus is still available for a few more days before it ends completely.
The post Remittix Raises The Stakes With $0.35 Minimum RTX Launch Price On Major Exchanges appeared first on Blockonomi.
The Bhutan Bitcoin tansfer has drawn fresh market attention after government-linked wallets reportedly moved 700 BTC to Binance. The transfer was worth about $43.75 million, based on Bitcoin’s price near $62,500.
The move came as BTC reclaimed the $62,000 zone after defending support near $58,000. Traders often watch large exchange deposits closely, as they can signal possible selling.
Still, a transfer to Binance does not always mean immediate liquidation. Large holders may also use exchanges for OTC trading, liquidity planning, or internal treasury movements. Bitcoin traded near $62,500 on Saturday.
The Bhutan Bitcoin transfer involved two separate transactions to the same Binance deposit wallet. The larger transfer moved 634 BTC, valued near $39.6 million. A second transaction moved 66 BTC, worth about $4.12 million.
Together, the transfers brought the total to 700 BTC. That made the activity one of the latest major Bhutan-linked movements tracked by market watchers. Earlier transfers by Bhutan-related wallets also moved large BTC amounts this year.
The wallets are tied to the Royal Government of Bhutan through Arkham Intelligence labels. As reported previously, Bhutan’s Bitcoin holdings came from government-backed mining operations, rather than criminal seizures.
After the latest movement, the wallets reportedly still hold about 1,750 BTC. A prior report in June also showed Bhutan-linked wallets holding nearly 1,749.96 BTC after a Binance transfer. That earlier transfer moved 533 BTC, worth about $34.5 million at the time.
Bitcoin is recovering from recent pressure trading near $62,555, with daily volume above $21 billion. The price rebound followed two defenses of the $58,000 area. That level has turned into a key short-term support zone for traders. Buyers stepped in near that range, while short liquidations helped fuel the recovery.
Meanwhile, macro data added another layer to the move. Softer U.S. labor figures supported expectations that the Federal Reserve may stay less aggressive. Risk assets often respond to that shift, especially when liquidity hopes improve.
Still, large BTC exchange deposits can unsettle traders. A government-linked transfer may raise concerns about supply hitting the market. At the same time, exchange movement alone does not prove a sale.
For now, traders are watching Binance flows, BTC volume, and the $58,000 support zone. A clean hold above $62,000 could keep buyers active. A sharp reversal may bring attention back to the latest Bhutan-linked wallet activity
The post Bhutan Bitcoin Transfer Sparks Selloff Talk as BTC Tops $62K appeared first on Blockonomi.
The technology sector’s reputation once centered exclusively on capital appreciation rather than income generation. This paradigm has fundamentally shifted. Today’s leading technology enterprises produce such substantial cash reserves that they simultaneously pursue aggressive expansion while distributing increasing shareholder payments. Three exceptional opportunities deserve investor attention this July.
Microsoft represents one of the planet’s most financially robust corporations. Through its Azure cloud computing infrastructure, Microsoft 365 productivity ecosystem, and strategic OpenAI partnership, the company occupies a central position within the artificial intelligence revolution.
Microsoft Corporation, MSFT
Despite massive capital allocation toward AI data center infrastructure, the enterprise continues producing exceptional free cash flow volumes. These cash reserves support both dividend distributions and aggressive stock repurchase programs.
For more than twenty consecutive years, Microsoft has increased its quarterly dividend payment. Management maintains a prudent payout ratio, preserving substantial capacity for future increases. While the current yield remains moderate, the powerful combination of consistent dividend escalation and capital appreciation potential creates an attractive long-term investment proposition.
Broadcom has emerged as a semiconductor industry leader. The company provides advanced networking components, customized AI accelerators, and connectivity technologies powering the world’s largest hyperscale data centers.
Broadcom Inc., AVGO
The transformative VMware acquisition introduced substantial recurring subscription-based software revenues. This strategic move enhances business model diversification while strengthening predictable long-term cash flow generation.
Broadcom maintains an impressive history of consecutive dividend increases while simultaneously funding significant growth initiatives. Few semiconductor manufacturers can match its dual achievement of expanding profitability alongside accelerating shareholder returns. Investors seeking artificial intelligence market exposure combined with expanding income streams will find Broadcom particularly compelling.
Qualcomm established its industry leadership through wireless communication chips powering smartphones worldwide. The company now aggressively pursues automotive electronics, edge computing platforms, personal computer processors, and AI-optimized data center infrastructure.
QUALCOMM Incorporated, QCOM
Executive leadership has articulated ambitious expansion plans for its emerging AI data center segment, establishing a promising long-term revenue channel beyond traditional wireless communications.
Qualcomm delivers consistently strong free cash flow performance. With over two decades of uninterrupted dividend increases and ongoing share repurchase activity, the stock currently trades at attractive valuation multiples relative to technology sector peers. This combination enhances appeal for income-oriented investors.
Each equity offers distinctive advantages.
Microsoft provides unparalleled financial stability and deeply entrenched enterprise customer relationships. Broadcom delivers accelerated dividend growth fueled by surging AI infrastructure demand. Qualcomm presents reasonable valuation metrics alongside multiple expansion opportunities.
Holding positions across all three companies creates diversified exposure spanning cloud computing, semiconductor manufacturing, wireless technologies, automotive electronics, and enterprise software solutions—capturing several technology sector growth leaders while mitigating concentration risk.
Technology sector dividends have evolved from negligible considerations to strategic priorities. Microsoft, Broadcom, and Qualcomm have each constructed business models generating the substantial cash flow volumes required to sustain rising dividend payments indefinitely.
Each organization pursues artificial intelligence opportunities through distinct strategic approaches. Each maintains balance sheet strength sufficient to continue rewarding shareholders throughout economic downturns.
For long-term investors seeking simultaneous income generation and capital appreciation within unified portfolios, these three corporations represent the most compelling opportunities currently available in the technology sector.
The post Top Technology Dividend Champions for July 2026: Microsoft (MSFT), Broadcom (AVGO), and Qualcomm (QCOM) Stand Out appeared first on Blockonomi.
Chevron (CVX) advanced 1.6% Thursday following Wolfe Research’s decision to elevate the energy stock to Outperform from Peer Perform, accompanied by a $210 valuation target. Shares began Friday’s session at $169.06, remaining considerably beneath the $214.71 52-week peak.
Chevron Corporation, CVX
According to Wolfe analyst Doug Leggate, fluctuating commodity prices have obscured meaningful enhancements to Chevron’s sustainable cash generation capabilities. He contends the market currently assumes long-term Brent pricing beneath $60 per barrel — significantly lower than the approximately $70 normalized forward pricing curve.
This valuation disconnect, Leggate maintains, presents a compelling entry point.
RBC Capital likewise maintained its Buy stance on CVX this week, contributing to the predominantly optimistic analyst sentiment. The equity currently carries a consensus Moderate Buy recommendation with a mean price objective of $205.71 spanning 26 analysts — comprising 19 Buy, 6 Hold, and 1 Sell ratings.
Mizuho elevated its target from $225 to $230 in late May. Goldman Sachs and UBS both maintain Buy recommendations with targets of $216 and above.
Leggate identifies Guyana as the most significant near-term growth driver. The Uaru development is anticipated to commence operations and achieve a free cash flow turning point during the latter half of 2026, which should bolster CVX’s financial stability even if crude prices remain subdued.
Guyana is also projected to generate sufficient cash to offset the dividend obligations tied to the Hess acquisition — and eventually, Leggate anticipates it becoming Chevron’s largest single source of free cash flow.
This becomes particularly relevant approaching 2033, when the Tengiz partnership in Kazakhstan reaches its contractual conclusion.
Beyond Guyana, Chevron has obtained fresh development rights this year across Venezuela, Libya, and Iraq, with a possible ninth Guyana development phase under consideration. According to Wolfe, these initiatives could sustain production expansion well past 2030.
Institutional activity has intensified concurrent with analyst upgrades. Peregrine Asset Advisers more than doubled its CVX holdings during Q1, expanding its position by 118.7% to 20,344 shares valued at approximately $4.21 million.
CVX most recently disclosed earnings on May 1st, delivering $1.41 earnings per share compared to consensus expectations of $1.00 — exceeding forecasts by $0.41. Revenue totaled $47.56 billion, representing 2.1% year-over-year growth, though modestly trailing the $51.86 billion analyst projection.
The corporation distributed a quarterly dividend of $1.78 per share in June, translating to a $7.12 annualized payout and a 4.2% yield. The current payout ratio stands at 123.4%.
CVX’s Q2 2026 earnings announcement is slated for later this month, with analysts already identifying it as the next potential stock catalyst.
The 50-day moving average rests at $183.31 while the 200-day sits at $180.40, with CVX’s present price of $169.06 positioned below both technical indicators.
The post Chevron (CVX) Gets Bullish Upgrade: Is This Energy Giant Undervalued? appeared first on Blockonomi.
Intel (INTC) received a significant endorsement this week when HSBC analyst Frank Lee established a new Wall Street high price target of $200 for the semiconductor giant, effectively doubling the firm’s prior $100 target while maintaining its Buy recommendation.
Intel Corp., INTC
Shares of INTC began Friday’s trading session at $120.35. The chipmaker’s stock has fluctuated between a 52-week low of $18.97 and a high of $142.35, with the 50-day moving average currently positioned at $115.64.
According to HSBC’s Lee, Intel stands “well positioned to deliver upside” to its 2026 and 2027 server CPU shipment forecasts, primarily fueled by strategic internal foundry capacity realignment.
The analyst revised his 2026 server CPU shipment growth projection upward from 20% to 25% on a year-over-year basis. This adjustment places his DCAI revenue forecast at $24.1 billion, representing approximately 4% above the current Wall Street consensus.
Lee’s optimism extends even further into 2027, where he elevated his shipment growth projection from 20% to 30% year-over-year, contending that market analysts continue to undervalue Intel’s expansion trajectory for that timeframe.
Lee emphasized that Intel’s foundry story is showing meaningful improvement. The company’s EMIB — Advanced Embedded Multi-die Interconnect Bridge — technology represents a potential catalyst for “material upside” within the foundry division.
Given that TSMC’s expanded 3nm production capacity won’t be available until the latter half of 2027, Lee observes that customers are actively seeking alternative foundry solutions. Intel is positioning itself as a leading contender.
Apple and Terafab have already committed as Intel foundry clients. Active discussions are underway with Google and NVIDIA. Lee highlighted that Intel’s EMIB technology can accommodate up to 12x reticle size, substantially exceeding CoWoS-S which maxes out at 3.3x — positioning it as a compelling alternative while TSMC CoWoS capacity remains constrained.
Institutional investors currently control 64.53% of INTC shares. QRG Capital Management increased its stake by 29.2% during Q1, concluding the quarter with 485,549 Intel shares worth approximately $21.4 million.
Norges Bank established a fresh position valued at more than $2.2 billion in Q4. Vanguard maintains ownership of over 404 million Intel shares worth nearly $14.9 billion. Capital Research Global Investors expanded its holdings by 285.9% during Q4.
Intel’s Q1 2026 financial results significantly exceeded Wall Street projections — delivering $0.29 earnings per share versus the consensus forecast of $0.01. Revenue reached $13.58 billion, surpassing the $12.32 billion estimate and representing 7.4% year-over-year growth.
Jim Cramer recently identified Intel as his top stock pick, highlighting CEO Lip-Bu Tan’s transformation strategy and identifying three key growth drivers for the corporation.
The current consensus analyst rating for INTC stands at “Hold” with an average price target of $96.69 — significantly below the stock’s current trading level. The rating breakdown includes two Strong Buy recommendations, 15 Buy ratings, 28 Hold ratings, and four Sell ratings.
Intel has issued Q2 2026 EPS guidance of $0.20, while the full-year analyst consensus projects $0.63 EPS.
The post Intel (INTC) Stock Soars: HSBC Sets Wall Street’s Highest Price Target at $200 appeared first on Blockonomi.
As the world’s most powerful economy and the widely regarded leader of the free world celebrates its 250th Independence Day, various initiatives are emerging to contribute in some way, including one from Ripple.
The company behind the popular XRP altcoin announced that it has joined a nonprofit helping unemployed veterans to get high-quality jobs after their military service.
The organization, called Call of Duty Endowment, said it has already funded over 165,000 veterans, but explained that there’s still a high unemployment rate among the younger generation, which means that there’s “still more work to do.”
It wants to find jobs for 200,000 veterans by 2030, and Ripple has joined the special initiative for the 250th birthday of the US, called Giving4th.
The idea is to make Independence Day a national day of charitable giving. The company said it will match donations made to the Call of Duty Endowment of up to $10,000.
People who want to participate can use cash, stock, or cryptocurrencies, including Ripple’s two native tokens, XRP and RLUSD.
Ripple is joining #Giving4th — @America250‘s new movement to make Independence Day a national day of charitable giving.
We’re matching donations to @CODE4Vets up to $10K. CODE funds the most effective organizations helping veterans get back to work, preparing them for the job…
— Ripple (@Ripple) July 4, 2026
The Fourth of July is known as the United States’ Independence Day and serves as a federal holiday that commemorates the adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776.
The post Important Ripple (XRP) Announcement for July 4: Details appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin might still enter another major bull cycle, but the amount of money needed to fuel it has grown dramatically compared to previous bull markets, according to the CEO of CryptoQuant, Ki Young Ju.
In a recent thread, he argued that the cryptocurrency’s capital efficiency has declined considerably as the asset has matured.
In 2011, he said, roughly $2.7 billion in net capital inflows was enough to drive a rally of more than 55,000%. In the current cycle, however, around $697 billion in inflows produced a return of slightly less than 700%.
The main takeaway is quite simple: Bitcoin is much larger now compared to before, and moving its price requires far more capital.
Market cycles are interesting, and all of them, despite some similarities, are quite different.
According to Ju, in 2011, only $5 million in net inflows was enough to double BTC’s price. In this cycle, that figure increased to roughly $101 billion. He believes that the next parabolic run would likely require trillions of dollars in net capital inflows.
Of course, this doesn’t mean that upside is impossible; it just suggests that the asset may need a deeper institutional bid than in the previous cycle.
The analyst also framed the issue in terms of Bitcoin’s realized capitalization. This is a metric that values each coin based on the price at which it last moved on-chain rather than simply mutliplying the current spot price by its circulating supply.
Ju said that if Bitcoin can absorb upwards of $1 trillion in realized cap, another parabolic rally remains possible. In practical terms, though, this would require the cryptocurrency to move beyond a retail-led ETF trade and become an established macro allocation for funds, corporations, institutions, and possibly even sovereign entities.
He noted that this shift is still early and hasn’t been invalidated yet.
The comparison with gold remains central to Bitcoin’s long-term investment thesis. The current market cap of the precious metal, according to popular estimates, is $29 trillion, although keep in mind that this figure can vary depending on the assumed above-ground supply.
By contrast, Bitcoin’s market cap is $1.25 trillion, at the time of this writing.
This gap remains the reason some analysts still see significant room for Bitcoin to grow as institutional adoption expands. Of course, it also highlights the challenge – every new cycle will likely require considerably larger pools of capital than the last.
The post How Much New Money Does Bitcoin Need to Start a Fresh Bull Run? (It’s a Lot) appeared first on CryptoPotato.
XRP seems to be showing one of the more interesting derivatives setups amongst the large-cap altcoins at the moment. On the surface, the price is climbing slowly, while the open interest is falling.
Normally, this would suggest that traders are stepping away from the market. But when this happens alongside a rising net position delta, it might be time to pay attention.
The current uptrend from the past few days seems to be driven more by the closing of short positions rather than by aggressive new buying, according to an analyst. Put in simple terms, bearish traders seem to be exiting the market, and that short-covering pressure is helping push XRP’s price higher.
This can definitely support a steady move upward, but it is far from being enough for a sustained rally. A true acceleration usually tends to happen when new buyers begin entering the market with conviction.
This is why open interest matters a lot. A decreasing open interest suggests that leverage is being reduced – not added – which is typically a sign of waning conviction.
The daily outlook also supports a cautious bullish bias. XRP closed bullish during yesterday’s trading session, but it still needs to hold it to avoid slipping back into weaker territory. This is why a move toward the resistance at $1.13 remains very important, while stronger momentum could help push it even higher.
That said, the real trigger that traders should watch is the simultaneous increase in both open interest and net position delta. This would suggest that the market is shifting from a state where the increase is driven by closing short positions to one where longs are opening.
If that shift happens, XRP’s price could accelerate even quicker.
Intraday, the cryptocurrency remains relatively volatile and stuck in a range. If it manages to push above and hold $1.18, this could offer an opportunity for buyers to return with force.
For now, the signal remains rather clear. The bears appear to be loosening their grip, but the bulls have not yet stepped in convincingly.
The post Fake Weakness? Could Ripple (XRP) Be Setting Up for a Violent Move? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The cryptocurrency market managed to sustain its recovery over the past 24 hours. Most of the large-cap altcoins are trading in the green. Bitcoin maintained its recent rebound, as some alts delivered even stronger daily gains.
The total crypto market cap also rose as traders returned to risk assets following a volatile start to the month. However, BTC’s dominance remains steady, suggesting that the market recovery is unfolding in a balanced manner.
Bitcoin’s price traded mostly in the green throughout the past 24 hours, staying above the $62K mark after reclaiming it earlier in the week. The asset changed hands at roughly $62,500, up about 1.3% on the day and 3.6% on the week.
BTC moved within a relatively tight daily range, briefly dipping toward $61,500 before buyers pushed it back above, even charting an intraday high around $62,800. The move kept its capitalization around $1.25 trillion.
ETF flows also showed signs of stabilizing. US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded around $220 million in net inflows on July 2nd. Interestingly, most of it came in Fidelity’s products, as BlackRock clients continued to sell and offloaded over $40 million.

The broader cryptocurrency market improved as well, with the total capitalization surpassing $2.2 trillion.
Ethereum traded around $1,754 after gaining more than 2% on the day and roughly 11% over the past week, making it a standout performer. Among the larger altcoins, Hyperliquid’s HYPE was one of those that increased the most over the past 24 hours, rising above $71 and gaining upwards of 6%. Cardano also advanced sharply, while XRP, Stellar, Dogecoin, Solana, and others posted more moderate gains.
The market’s next test is whether Bitcoin can rise above the current area between $62K and $63K, while altcoin momentum continues into the weekend.

The post Bitcoin Holds Above $62K as HYPE, ADA Lead Altcoin Recovery: Weekend Watch appeared first on CryptoPotato.
After several weeks of lackluster performance and a slide to its lowest level since 2024, Bitcoin (BTC) has finally staged a decisive comeback.
The popular analyst Ali Martinez highlighted the resurgence and spotted three bullish factors that could push the price beyond $65,000 in the short term.
The primary cryptocurrency recently surged past $62,500, fueled by geopolitical de-escalation in the Middle East and a long-awaited return of ETF inflows after several weeks dominated by outflows.
The analyst noted that BTC’s 12-hour chart has flashed a cluster of bullish technical cues across several key metrics, suggesting additional upside may be on the horizon. He first pointed out the Tom DeMark Sequential indicator, which has printed a buy signal.
Earlier this week, the analyst emphasized that this metric (when viewed on the monthly timeframe) triggered a synchronized bullish call across BTC, ETH, XRP, and SOL.
“Historically, when multiple assets lock in concurrent monthly buy signals, it indicates seller fatigue and a high probability of a long-term market bottom,” he explained.
The second positive sign Martinez touched on is BTC’s Relative Strength Index (RSI), which has printed a bullish divergence against the underlying price action, while the third is the SuperTrend indicator, which signaled a trend shift.
“If these combined indicators receive validation through sustained spot volume, the immediate target for BTC sits at $65,400 – aligning with the TD setup resistance trendline,” he concluded.
Numerous market observers share Martinez’s bullish outlook, noting that the cryptocurrency has performed quite well in the current month. X user cyclop, for instance, noted that BTC has historically posted double-digit gains in July during bear markets.
The recent whale behavior also reinforces the positive scenario. X user Max Crypto revealed the case of a big investor who opened a $66 million long on BTC that will be liquidated if the price dips to $59.395.
Whales are known as experienced investors who rarely jump on the bandwagon, relying purely on their instincts, and their actions could infuse enthusiasm among smaller players, prompting them to allocate fresh capital to the ecosystem.
Of course, one must tread carefully and keep in mind that the crypto market remains shaky, meaning a renewed pullback in the short term is just as plausible.
The post Bitcoin (BTC) Flashes 3 Bullish Signals: $65K Incoming? appeared first on CryptoPotato.