Iran's leadership crisis could lead to increased instability, potential power struggles, and shifts in the political landscape.
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Widening negotiation gaps could prolong regional instability, affecting global markets and diplomatic relations beyond the immediate deadline.
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The diminishing ceasefire prospects heighten the risk of military escalation, potentially destabilizing regional and global security.
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The seminar highlights the growing need for international collaboration on digital asset regulation, impacting global financial stability and policy.
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Khamenei's health issues could destabilize Iran's leadership, increasing regime change risks amid external pressures and internal uncertainties.
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Bitcoin Magazine

Rwanda Reaffirms Crypto Ban After Bybit Adds Franc Support
Rwanda’s central bank has restated its prohibition on cryptocurrency activity involving the national currency after Bybit introduced support for the Rwandan franc on its peer-to-peer marketplace, prompting a swift regulatory response.
In a statement published Sunday, the Centrak Bank of Rwanda said crypto-assets are not authorized for payments, conversions involving the franc, or peer-to-peer trading under the current framework. The central bank warned residents against using such services, citing financial risks and the absence of legal protection in cases of loss.
The clarification followed an announcement from Bybit on Friday that users could buy and sell digital assets using the Rwandan franc through its P2P platform. The exchange did not indicate whether it had secured local regulatory approval before enabling the feature, and it has not issued a public response to the central bank’s statement.
Regulators stressed that the Rwandan franc remains the country’s only legal tender. The central bank also reiterated that financial institutions under its supervision are prohibited from facilitating conversions between the franc and crypto-assets, reinforcing restrictions designed to limit exposure between the domestic financial system and digital asset markets.
Rwanda has maintained a restrictive stance on cryptocurrencies since 2018, when authorities first moved to curb their use in domestic transactions. Policymakers have framed the position as part of a broader effort to protect financial stability and preserve confidence in the local currency.
The latest warning underscores concern that foreign crypto platforms integrating the franc into trading services could bypass existing safeguards. By enabling peer-to-peer transactions denominated in the local currency, such platforms risk creating informal channels that operate outside regulatory oversight.
At the same time, Rwanda is pursuing a state-backed digital currency project, the e-franc, which remains in a proof-of-concept phase. Authorities view the initiative as a way to modernize payments infrastructure while maintaining control over monetary policy and currency issuance. A pilot phase is expected to follow as the project advances.
Regulatory efforts are also evolving beyond outright restrictions. In March, the Rwanda Capital Market Authority released a draft framework aimed at establishing rules for virtual asset service providers. The proposal outlines a licensing regime that would permit regulated activity while maintaining strict limits on how cryptocurrencies can be used within the country.
Under the draft legislation, crypto-assets would not be recognized as legal tender, and several activities would face prohibitions, including mining operations, mixer services, and tokens linked to the Rwandan franc. The framework also introduces oversight measures intended to bring service providers under regulatory supervision.
The approach reflects a broader trend among emerging markets seeking to balance innovation with control over domestic financial systems. While some jurisdictions have embraced digital assets, others have moved to restrict their use to prevent capital flight, reduce exposure to volatility, and safeguard monetary sovereignty.
Data from Chainalysis indicates that Rwanda ranks among lower-adoption markets for cryptocurrency activity across 2024 and 2025, with transaction volumes trailing regional peers such as Nigeria and South Africa.
Limited usage has so far reduced the scale of potential systemic risks, though regulators appear intent on maintaining tight oversight as global crypto platforms expand their reach.
This post Rwanda Reaffirms Crypto Ban After Bybit Adds Franc Support first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Demonstration of “Attack Blocks” On Bitcoin’s Signet Test Network
In two days, on Wednesday April 8th, a handful of Bitcoin Core developers are going to be doing a demonstration of “attack blocks” designed to take an inordinate amount of time to verify on Signet.
The demonstration will take place at 10 AM EST (2 PM UTC). Anyone who wishes to participate can run Bitcoin Core node on Signet and watch the blocks be mined and processed by their node in real-time.
Instructions can be found here to spin up a node and follow along (including how to check your node’s logs to see the verification times for the attack blocks).
The demonstration is not going to show the worst case of the attack (the script and transaction structure required has not been publicly revealed to not give malicious actors even more information about the attack), but it will produce blocks that take orders of magnitude more time to verify than your average block.
The aim of the demonstration is to show users the severity of one of the four severe consensus vulnerabilities that the Great Consensus Cleanup aims to address with BIP 54.
Two more demonstrations will take place at 6 PM EST (10 PM UTC) on April 8th, and at 5 AM EST (9 AM UTC) on April 9th, to allow for Bitcoin users in different global timezones to directly participate as well.
The Signet blockchain is currently at around 32-33 GB, so if you have any device with ample storage space, go ahead and spin up a Signet node to participate.
For your awareness the following software patch was quickly put together for this demonstration and not audited thoroughly (though it is just a basic terminal based-GUI). If you are spinning up a brand new Signet node just for this demonstration on a machine without any funds on it, you should be fine even if you are the paranoid type like me.
For those who don’t want to just poke at log files, AJ Towns provided a patch to the “bitcoin-tui” project, a Terminal based GUI for Bitcoin Core to display the attack blocks during the demonstration. The project creator is working on a proper release in time for the demonstration, but you can also compile it yourself.
Run these commands on Linux (git commands will work on other OSes, and you should be able to find the equivalent CLI commands for your OS easily online):
git clone https://github.com/ajtowns/bitcoin-tui.git
cd bitcoin-tui
git switch 202604-bip54blocks
From there you should be able to just follow the build instructions at the repository here. After compiling, make sure your bitcoind has “server=1” set in the config file, and start up bitcoin-tui. You should find a “Slow Blocks” tab on the right of the top bar.

This post Demonstration of “Attack Blocks” On Bitcoin’s Signet Test Network first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Shinobi.
Bitcoin Magazine

Polymarket Unveils Exchange Overhaul, Native Stablecoin as U.S. Expansion Looms
Bitcoin and crypto focused prediction market platform Polymarket is preparing its most significant infrastructure upgrade to date, rolling out a rebuilt trading system alongside a new native stablecoin designed to replace bridged collateral and streamline on-chain activity.
The overhaul, described by the company as a “full exchange upgrade,” is expected to go live over the next several weeks and includes new smart contracts, an updated central limit order book (CLOB), and a proprietary collateral token called Polymarket USD. The token will be backed 1:1 by USDC and will replace USDC.e, a bridged version of the stablecoin currently used across the platform.
Last month, Intercontinental Exchange, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, made a $600 million direct cash investment in prediction market platform Polymarket as part of a broader equity fundraising round, the company announced.
The shift away from bridged assets reflects a broader effort to reduce reliance on cross-chain infrastructure, which can introduce additional risks and inefficiencies. By moving to a natively controlled collateral token, Polymarket aims to tighten control over settlement, improve liquidity consistency, and simplify the trading experience for users.
At the core of the upgrade is a redesigned matching engine and an improved order book architecture. The new system is intended to deliver faster execution, tighter spreads, and lower operational overhead. According to developer materials, the updated exchange stack reduces the complexity of order structures while introducing support for advanced features such as EIP-1271 signatures, enabling smart contract wallets to interact more seamlessly with the platform.
Polymarket said most users will experience a smooth transition, with the interface automatically handling the conversion of existing assets into Polymarket USD via a one-time approval. However, more advanced traders and developers will need to manually wrap their holdings using a dedicated collateral onramp contract and update integrations to align with the new system.
As part of the migration, all existing order books will be cleared during a scheduled maintenance window, with the company promising advance notice ahead of the transition. The reset is intended to ensure consistency across the upgraded infrastructure and avoid discrepancies between legacy and new systems.
The timing of the overhaul comes amid rapid growth for Polymarket, which has seen trading volumes surge in recent months. The platform reportedly surpassed $10 billion in monthly volume in March, underscoring increasing demand for event-based trading markets across crypto and traditional finance audiences.
Beyond performance improvements, the upgrade signals a strategic shift toward greater vertical integration. Polymarket has historically relied on external systems, including optimistic oracle mechanisms, to resolve market outcomes. However, the company has hinted at future plans for a native token, potentially called POLY, which could play a role in governance and dispute resolution.
If implemented, such a token could allow Polymarket to internalize key functions like market validation and outcome verification, reducing dependence on third-party protocols and giving the platform more direct control over what it defines as “truth” within its markets.
The infrastructure revamp also aligns with Polymarket’s renewed push into the U.S. market. After previously halting domestic operations, the company has since registered with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and is positioning itself to operate within an increasingly defined regulatory framework.
With its latest upgrade, the company is attempting to evolve from a fast-growing crypto application into a fully-fledged exchange platform, combining improved execution infrastructure with tighter control over collateral, governance, and market integrity.
Editorial Disclaimer: We leverage AI as part of our editorial workflow, including to support research, image generation, and quality assurance processes. All content is directed, reviewed, and approved by our editorial team, who are accountable for accuracy and integrity. AI-generated images use only tools trained on properly license material. In Bitcoin, as in media: Don’t trust. Verify.
This post Polymarket Unveils Exchange Overhaul, Native Stablecoin as U.S. Expansion Looms first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Second’s Bark Boasts New era of Bitcoin Payments, drawing in former Blockstream developers
Second, a new Bitcoin development lab, has gained attention recently as it drew in yet another former Blockstream employee known as “Grubles”, with over 8 years of engineering at the company. Bark, Second’s lead product, promises to deliver a next-generation “Fast, low-fee, self-custodial” wallet.
Alongside Grubles, other former Blockstream employees have joined the Second, such as Neil Woodfine (CMO), Steven Roose (CEO), and Erik De Smedt (CTO). The lab is currently focused on the cutting-edge of end-user Bitcoin wallet technology. In this niche of the industry, the Ark protocol is the new kid on the block, a layer two payments protocol that makes different trade-offs than the Lightning Network to deliver end users scalable self-custody and payments features at a low cost. Bark is Second’s custom implementation of the Ark protocol, designed for interoperability with the Lightning Network.
“The technique used for Bark is different from payment channels in Lightning, but the two are actually very complementary.” Grubles told Bitcoin Magazine in an exclusive interview, adding that “At Second, we’ve chosen to build an Ark that is focused entirely on making Bitcoin onboarding and payments excellent.” Their website describes an Ark-to-Lightning bridge that lets users pay Lightning invoices directly from an Ark balance with no channels, liquidity, or LSPs required. Handled atomically.
According to Grubles, the company has raised 5.1M from a private investor, with a team of 11 people working on Bark. Deep technical documentation about the project can be found at second.tech, with the main net launch expected “Soon”.
Interested users can test out making Bark payments on Signet. “I highly recommend doing so since it’s such a shift in the way we can do onboarding and payments,” said Grubles, encouraging early adopters to test out the tech.
The most impressive claim made by Bark is the promise of self-custody at a low cost. While it is relatively trivial to scale Bitcoin payments in a custodial manner, as demonstrated by apps like Wallet of Satoshi, or as is being done now by the payments giant Cash App. Delivering self-custody for relatively small amounts of value to millions of people is another matter entirely.
Onchain Bitcoin can handle roughly 7 transactions per second, which does not scale to too many users if they are all doing maximum self-custody on-chain transactions multiple times a day. To quote Knifefight’s excellent article on the matter on Bitcoin Magazine, tittled “Free As In Freedom Is Not Free As In Beer”; “Bitcoin confirms ~0.4M transactions/day. That’s one transaction/person every ~55 years, assuming no one is born or dies while waiting.” Onboarding users with onchain Bitcoin can also be rather awkward, as wallets correctly signal that deposits made to new users are pending confirmation until confirmed, which can take up to 30 minutes while blocks are mined.
To address the challenges of scaling Bitcoin payments to the whole world, while retaining the cypherpunk and decentralization qualities of onchain self-custody, the Lightning Network was developed, and for the most part, it has worked, but with significant trade-offs. Self hosting a sovereign Lightning node, — while easier than ever today — still requires a significant learning curve, or specialized hardware that pushes all the right buttons for you. Both of these barriers to entry are too much for most people who don’t care about tech and just need to be able to pay a bill securely.
Mobile wallets like Phoenix have taken Lightning Network-style self-custody to end users, but with some caveats. Users need to trust Phoenix with some extreme scenarios, while they also give up a significant amount of privacy, since Acinq, the app developer, needs to know user balances pseudonymously to process transactions. Users are also locked into Phoenix as a liquidity provider, paying often higher fees than custodial lightning alternatives. The app is non KYCed, and offers users self-custody recovery paths, and an excellent feature set, but still falls short of the user experience expected from cash, where onboarding is as easy as handing a new user some paper money — no liquidity challenges, channel managment or onboarding fees — and payment is as easy handing over a bill and calculating the cash back for change.
Phoenix specifically works very well after users have been onboarded, but the process can cost over $10 dollars in SATS and take over 30 minutes, which is too high a cost when trying to sell Bitcoin as digital cash, and trying to onboard new people on the spot.
Other companies have attempted to solve these scaling and user experience challenges by leveraging Blockstream’s Liquid Network, an international federation of Bitcoin corporations that operate an alternative Bitcoin-compatible blockchain with fast block times and much larger on-chain capacity. Wallets like Bull Bitcoin or Aqua onboard users with Liquid’s LBTC, which can take a minute or less to confirm a transaction and then offer them a built-in swap exchange to onchain BTC, or the Lightning Network for payments compatible with the broader Bitcoin market.
Both of these solutions work ok, but Bark believes they can do better. The reasonable self-custody recovery paths that onchain Bitcoin users know and love, with the instant payment velocity of the Lightning Network, are both delivered upon app download to users, without the onboarding roadblocks of a Liquid side chain or Lightning channel management.
“I think the UI for Bark wallets will be simplified in comparison, considering how you won’t need to differentiate between L-BTC and BTC,” said Grubles of current Liquid and Lightning solutions. “This is important when thinking of onboarding new Bitcoin users. You don’t want to bombard them with information that can be confusing.”
“Don’t get me wrong, we love Lightning,” added Grubles, explaining that “Many of us at Second have worked on projects like Blockstream’s Core Lightning or are currently working on things like the rust-lightning library…So I do not say it lightly that Lightning is in Second’s DNA. With a Bark wallet, you can receive some bitcoin and begin doing Lightning payments literally in seconds. All of the liquidity micromanagement is gone. The onboarding potential is huge, and a large reason why I was attracted to Second and the technology in Bark.”
As an implementation of the Ark protocol, Second’s Bark lets users pay each other with Virtual Unspent Transaction Outputs, or vUTXOs. Shinobi, the Technical Writer for Bitcoin Magazine, wrote about the Ark protocol in 2025 in detail, explaining that vUTXOs “are simply pre-signed transactions that guarantee the creation of a real UTXO under the unilateral control of a user once submitted onchain, but are otherwise held offchain.”
“There are other exciting things you can do with VTXOs, such as mass payouts,” said Grubles of the scalability of Bark. “Imagine you’re an employer and need to process payroll. That’s something you can do with instant finality and low fees using Bark. Mining pools could also offer more frequent payouts for their clients instead of forcing them to wait a long time because onchain fees can be high.”
These vUTXOs function in a similar way as Lightning Network transactions, moving offchain with an option to settle to the main Bitcoin blockchain when needed. Though unlike the Lightning Network, each Ark implementation has a centralized coordination server that enhances the service, this is the main trade-off made by Ark-style protocols, and its risks are mitigated by moving all self-custody-related power to the end user in what is often described as “unilateral exit” capabilities.
Shinobi further explained the trade-offs of Ark, saying, “The protocol depends on a central coordinating server in order to function properly, but despite that, it is able to provide the same functionality and security guarantees that the Lightning Network does.” Similar to Lightning, self-custody is governed by a kind of smart contract with multiple people involved and a time constraint, in this case, the Ark operators, each user, and a round to refresh vUTXO’s every month or two. “As long as a user stays online during the required time period,” Shinobi adds, “(unless they choose to trust the operator for short periods of time) every user is capable of unilaterally exiting the Ark system at any time and taking back full unilateral control of their funds on-chain.”
This unilateral exit is the very definition of self-custody in the context of Bitcoin. By enabling it offchain, it bypasses the constraints of Bitcoin’s block size, respecting the decentralization of the network, so users can run full nodes, audit the full supply and integrity of the chain, but also access unprecedented levels of sovereignty over their money, even in a future where the fees are high and the blocks are full.
Grubles believes the time constraint in Bark is not only manageable but more lenient than that of the Lightning Network; “There are real tradeoffs like with any scaling solution. Wallets need to come online at least once a month (though Lightning technically requires always-on to be secure). Emergency exits require multiple onchain transactions and can be expensive, but cooperative offboards are the normal path,” adding that “I think the breakthrough is going to come down to execution. As long as we’re managing our Lightning gateway well and have a reliable SDK, the ingredients are there to deliver a bitcoin payment UX that beats everything else out there. Our expectation is that Bark becomes the default way end users engage with the Lightning Network.”
This post Second’s Bark Boasts New era of Bitcoin Payments, drawing in former Blockstream developers first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Juan Galt.
Bitcoin Magazine

Strive (ASST) Adds 113 Bitcoin at an Average Price of $68,584 per BTC
Strive has expanded its Bitcoin treasury with a new acquisition of 113 BTC, reinforcing a steady accumulation strategy among publicly traded firms increasingly treating Bitcoin as a core balance-sheet asset.
According to a recent filing, the company purchased the Bitcoin for approximately $7.75 million, implying an average price near $68,584 per BTC. The latest addition brings Strive’s total holdings to 13,741 BTC.
The move comes during a period of elevated volatility across digital asset markets, with Bitcoin trading around the $70,000 level. Despite price fluctuations, corporate demand continues to provide a structural bid, particularly from firms pursuing long-term treasury diversification strategies.
Strive’s accumulation pattern reflects a disciplined, incremental approach rather than large one-off purchases.
Corporate Bitcoin adoption, once a niche strategy, has expanded significantly since 2020. Early adopters framed Bitcoin as a hedge against currency debasement and a non-sovereign store of value. That narrative has since evolved into a broader institutional thesis, positioning Bitcoin as a “digital reserve asset” alongside cash and fixed-income instruments.
Firms such as Strategy pioneered the model of converting significant portions of corporate treasuries into Bitcoin, setting a precedent that has influenced a growing number of public companies. Strive’s latest purchase reflects continued adherence to that framework, albeit at a smaller scale.
The company’s total holdings of 13,741 BTC now place it among a cohort of corporate treasuries that collectively control a meaningful share of Bitcoin’s circulating supply.
While still far below industry leaders, the accumulation trend underscores a broader shift in corporate finance, where digital assets are increasingly integrated into capital allocation strategies.
Earlier today, Strategy said they acquired 4,871 BTC for about $329.9 million between April 1–5, bringing its total holdings to roughly 766,970 BTC valued at around $58 billion. The purchases were funded through at-the-market equity programs, including preferred stock (STRC) and common share sales, as the company continues using capital markets to expand its Bitcoin treasury strategy despite ongoing unrealized losses of about $14.46 billion in Q1.
Despite reporting a significant paper loss on its Bitcoin holdings, both Strive and Strategy remains committed to its aggressive accumulation approach, with management reaffirming Bitcoin as its primary treasury reserve asset and investors continuing to treat the company as a leveraged proxy for Bitcoin exposure.
Editorial Disclaimer: We leverage AI as part of our editorial workflow, including to support research, image generation, and quality assurance processes. All content is directed, reviewed, and approved by our editorial team, who are accountable for accuracy and integrity. AI-generated images use only tools trained on properly license material. In Bitcoin, as in media: Don’t trust. Verify.
This post Strive (ASST) Adds 113 Bitcoin at an Average Price of $68,584 per BTC first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Quantum computing has advanced materially over the past 18 months, but the field remains in the transition from noisy hardware to early fault tolerance.
The key shift is away from raw physical-qubit counts and toward logical qubits, gate fidelity, runtime, and error correction. That shift is important for Bitcoin because risk estimates are driven by logical qubits and fault-tolerant operations rather than headline hardware totals.
Progress is visible across three fronts: below-threshold error correction, small logical-qubit demonstrations, and deeper circuits with lower noise.
In late 2024, Google’s Willow chip demonstrated below-threshold error correction, in which error rates fell as the encoded system scaled up. IBM says its current systems can run certain circuits with more than 5,000 two-qubit gates and has published a roadmap to a 200-logical-qubit fault-tolerant system by 2029.
Quantinuum has reported 48 error-corrected logical qubits and 64 error-detected logical qubits from 98 physical qubits, along with 50 error-detected logical qubits on Helios at better-than-break-even performance. Microsoft and Atom Computing reported 24 entangled logical qubits and computation with 28 logical qubits on neutral-atom hardware.
The sector remains short of a large-scale fault-tolerant machine. That is one reason DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative exists.
Its target is a quantum computer whose computational value exceeds its cost by 2033, and the agency is still validating competing architectures rather than certifying that any team has already reached that point.
Today’s systems can do four things with credibility. They can run benchmark problems beyond classical brute-force methods, including Google’s random circuit sampling and more recent work on Quantum Echoes.
They can perform limited, specialized simulations in physics and chemistry, often in hybrid workflows with classical high-performance computing. They can demonstrate logical qubits and fault-tolerant subroutines on small scales. They also function as testbeds for error correction, decoding, and control systems.
What they cannot do today is the part that matters for Bitcoin.
No public system has anywhere near the logical-qubit count, fault-tolerant gate budget, or sustained runtime needed for cryptographically relevant attacks on secp256k1. Google’s Willow contains 105 physical qubits.
The leading public demonstrations of logical qubits remain in the tens, not the thousands. A recent estimate from Google researchers and co-authors puts a Bitcoin-relevant attack in the range of 1,200 to 1,450 logical qubits and tens of millions of Toffoli gates, leaving a large gap between current machines and a cryptographically relevant system.
The critical threshold is a cryptographically relevant quantum computer capable of running Shor’s algorithm against the elliptic-curve discrete logarithm problem on secp256k1.
According to the March 2026 Google paper, fewer than 1,200 logical qubits and 90 million Toffoli gates, or fewer than 1,450 logical qubits and 70 million Toffoli gates, could in principle solve ECDLP-256.
Under superconducting assumptions with 10-3 physical error rates and planar connectivity, the authors estimate that such an attack could be executed in minutes with fewer than 500,000 physical qubits.
That sets the engineering problem. The path forward is not simply a linear climb from about 100 physical qubits to 500,000. The harder challenge is building large numbers of stable logical qubits, sustaining tens of millions of fault-tolerant operations, achieving fast cycle times, and integrating all of that with real-time decoding, cryogenics or photonic interconnects, classical control, and manufacturable modules.
The same paper argues that fast-clock systems, such as superconducting and photonic platforms, are more relevant to on-spend attacks than slower-clock systems, such as ion traps and neutral atoms, because runtime can be decisive within a mempool window.
For Bitcoin, “crack on some level” does not mean breaking the network in one step. The earlier risk is recovering private keys from exposed public keys or attacking spends while public keys are visible.
In its research disclosure on cryptocurrency vulnerabilities, Google says blockchains that rely on ECDLP-256 need a post-quantum migration path and notes near-term mitigation, such as avoiding exposed or reused vulnerable wallet addresses.
This question needs a distinction. In Google’s own language, 2029 is a post-quantum migration target, not a definitive date for a Bitcoin-cracking machine.
On March 25, 2026, Google said it was setting a timeline for the post-quantum cryptography migration to 2029, citing progress in hardware, error correction, and resource estimates.
In a March 31, 2026, research post, the company said that future quantum computers may break elliptic-curve cryptography used in cryptocurrencies with fewer qubits and gates than previously estimated. Those are related, but not identical, claims.
As a migration deadline, 2029 looks aggressive but defensible. As a hard forecast for Bitcoin-breaking capability, the public evidence remains thinner.
Google has meaningfully reduced the attack estimate, and IBM has a public 2029 roadmap to 200 logical qubits and 100 million gates. Even so, IBM’s 2029 target remains well below Google’s latest logical-qubit estimate for attacking secp256k1.
DARPA’s utility-scale benchmark horizon extends to 2033, which is the more conservative reference point. On current evidence, 2029 works better as a preparedness date than as a settled date for Q-Day.
No one has published a definitive public budget for a Bitcoin-cracking quantum computer. The strongest public signals come from capital raises, government packages, and facility buildouts. PsiQuantum raised $1 billion in 2025 for utility-scale fault-tolerant systems and separately secured an A$940 million public package in Australia for its Brisbane build.
Quantinuum raised about $300 million in early 2024 and later announced a further financing round in 2025. Illinois also assembled a $500 million quantum park plan and a reported $200 million tax incentive package around the Chicago site tied to PsiQuantum.
The reasonable inference is that a first-generation cryptographically relevant system sits in the low single-digit billions of dollars, and potentially higher once the full campus, specialized fabrication, packaging, cryogenics, classical compute, networking, control electronics, and multi-year staffing costs are included.
Public and private capital are already converging at that scale. This is now an infrastructure-scale buildout.
The first milestone is the move from tens to hundreds of high-fidelity logical qubits that remain stable long enough to execute meaningful programs.
After that, the next threshold is whether those logical qubits can support millions to tens of millions of fault-tolerant gates with real-time decoding and manufacturable scaling. IBM’s public roadmap frames that progression directly with Starling at 200 logical qubits and 100 million gates in 2029, followed by Blue Jay at 2,000 logical qubits and 1 billion gates in 2033.
The second milestone is architectural validation. The Google attack-resource paper points toward fast-clock architectures as the systems most relevant to on-spend crypto attacks. That places more emphasis on progress in superconducting and photonic systems when assessing near-term Bitcoin risk.
The third milestone is independent verification. DARPA’s QBI and US2QC programs matter because they force companies to convert roadmaps into auditable engineering plans. Microsoft and PsiQuantum have already moved into the final validation and co-design phase of US2QC, while IBM, Quantinuum, Atom, IonQ, QuEra, Xanadu, and others remain in Stage B of QBI.
If one of those programs concludes that a design is constructible as intended, that will carry more weight than a standard corporate roadmap.
The fourth milestone is the cryptographic response. NIST finalized its first three post-quantum cryptography standards in August 2024 and says organizations should begin migrating now, with vulnerable algorithms on a path to deprecation and removal by 2035. For Bitcoin and the wider crypto stack, a credible migration path materially changes the risk profile.
The answer depends on the definition of “first.” If the benchmark is the first public fault-tolerant system with meaningful logical-qubit scale, IBM and Quantinuum have the strongest public case today.
IBM has the clearest long-range public roadmap for hundreds, then thousands, of logical qubits. Quantinuum has some of the strongest public data on trapped-ion logical qubits and break-even.
If the benchmark is the first independently validated route to utility scale, Microsoft and PsiQuantum stand out because DARPA has already moved them into the final validation and co-design phase of US2QC. That does not settle the race, but it does indicate that a serious government review process sees those paths as mature enough for deeper system-level scrutiny.
If the benchmark is the first system plausibly relevant to Bitcoin, fast-clock platforms deserve the closest attention. On current public evidence, which points more toward superconducting or photonic stacks than trapped-ion or neutral-atom systems for the earliest on-spend attack capability.
That keeps Google, IBM, PsiQuantum, and potentially Microsoft’s topological path in the highest-attention group, while still leaving room for a surprise from another DARPA-backed architecture.
The barrier would remain extremely high. Any malicious actor would need access to a facility-scale system, specialized supply chains, advanced control electronics, packaging, cryogenics, or large photonic infrastructure, error-correction software, compilers, and a team that spans quantum hardware, error correction, systems engineering, and cryptography.

The likely cost profile remains in the billion-dollar range, and the engineering footprint would be difficult to conceal. That pushes the first credible threat toward a state, a state-backed program, or misuse of an existing top-tier lab capability rather than an independent criminal build.
There is also a second layer of difficulty. Even after a top lab demonstrates theoretical capability, turning that into reliable illicit use would require stable runtime, enough machine availability, targeting intelligence, and a way to operationalize results before defenders complete migration.
In its responsible disclosure, Google withheld attack details and used zero-knowledge methods to validate claims without publishing an operational playbook. That raises the barrier to reckless replication.
In 1977, Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman argued that a machine capable of brute-forcing DES in about a day would cost roughly $20 million, which placed that capability in state hands.
By 1998, the Electronic Frontier Foundation built Deep Crack for under $250,000 and cracked DES in 56 hours.
By 2006, the FPGA-based COPACOBANA machine pushed that cost below $10,000, showing that a capability once discussed at national-lab scale had moved into the range of commercially available specialist hardware.
The pattern matters more than the exact cipher. Cryptanalytic capability often appears first as an elite-budget possibility, then as a public proof, and only later as something that can be assembled at far lower cost from accessible components.
For Bitcoin, the relevant question is not only when a top lab can demonstrate a cryptographically relevant quantum attack, but also how long it takes for that capability to move down the cost curve into something smaller actors could realistically access and operate.
So even if Google were to create a quantum machine capable of cracking Bitcoin in 2029, following the DES timeline, bad actors may not have access for another 30+ years.
Bitcoin is not under quantum attack today. The threat has moved out of the science-fiction category and into the planning category.
Google’s new estimate reduces the required resources enough to sharpen the central question: whether Bitcoin and the broader cryptographic stack can migrate before fast-clock fault-tolerant systems cross the threshold for cryptographically relevant attacks.
Even if a top lab reaches that threshold sooner than expected, the limiting factor for bad actors is likely to be access, because the first cryptographically relevant systems would still be facility-scale machines with billion-dollar economics rather than tools that can be quietly bought, rented, or assembled at criminal scale.
The post Stop worrying about the Bitcoin quantum threat – Why Google can’t steal your BTC, and bad actors are decades behind appeared first on CryptoSlate.
More than 80 crypto projects formally shuttered or began winding down in the first quarter of this year.
RootData’s “dead-project” archive, which tracks closures, bankruptcies, and chronic project inactivity, logged 86 casualties as of March 20. The pullback has spared almost no corner of the ecosystem, sweeping across digital wallets, NFT marketplaces, decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols, analytics firms, and messaging tools.
Market observers noted that what initially appeared to be a scattered handful of isolated failures has metastasized into a sector-wide reset.
As a result, the industry is facing a broader reckoning over how the industry funds itself and what users are actually willing to support.
A breakdown of shuttered projects showed that the names caught in this wave are prominent enough to underscore the severity of the slowdown.
For context, Magic Eden, the leading NFT marketplace, recently announced it will sunset its wallet by May 1, urging users to use export and migration tools.
Gemini-owned Nifty Gateway shifted to a withdrawal-only mode in February, while Dmail slated its closure for mid-May after conceding its decentralized email model lacked a sustainable path forward.
Meanwhile, the casualties extend well beyond wallets and NFT venues. In March, DeFi platform Balancer Labs announced the wind-down of its corporate entity, citing weak revenue and lingering legal exposure from a 2025 exploit.
Additionally, Tally, a governance platform historically favored by major decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), also signaled a wind-down.
The DNA of these failing businesses tells the story of this cycle. Many were incubated during the 2021–2022 frenzy or the subsequent 2024–2025 rebound. In those eras, user growth was explosive, token emissions subsidized adoption, and capital flowed freely based on the mere promise of cross-chain expansion.
However, as trading volumes cooled and activity consolidated around a handful of dominant venues, the exorbitant costs of maintaining these sprawling platforms became impossible to mask.
For prominent DeFi analyst Ignas, the death knell of these projects confirms that crypto’s “easy money era has ended.” He pointed out that past speculative market booms, from the California Gold Rush to the dot-com bubble, have historically lasted between three and seven years.
According to him, crypto's run, beginning with the initial coin offering (ICO) craze of 2017 and rolling through DeFi summer, the NFT mania, airdrops, points farming, and memecoin speculation, stretched for roughly eight years.
Against that hackdrop, he concluded that:
“We are already past that, as every easy money model has been discovered, exploited, or arbitraged to max competition.”
This means that the easiest avenues for rapid gains have been thoroughly mined, leaving behind a maturing market that demands deep specialization and durable unit economics from both builders and users.
The wreckage from the first quarter supports this thesis. The projects crumbling today are largely those engineered for an environment that no longer exists: one defined by abundant risk capital, incentive-driven traffic, and the blind assumption that user growth would eventually translate into a viable business.
While the current wave of closures suggests the easy money has dried up, capital hasn't abandoned the industry; it has simply changed its target.
Instead, the new liquidity is geared toward entirely different objectives. As Ignas frames it, the frontier has shifted toward integration with traditional finance (TradFi), tokenization, real-world assets (RWAs), permissioned corporate chains, and regulatory compliance.
The data bears this out. US spot Bitcoin ETFs absorbed $1.32 billion in March, marking their first positive month of 2026 after a four-month outflow streak, according to SoSoValue.
Apart from data, CryptoSlate reports that stablecoins are hovering near a staggering $300 billion market capitalization, with several traditional financial institutions, including Fidelity and Western Union, launching new stable products.
Meanwhile, data from RWA.xyz shows the total value of distributed real-world assets at over $26 billion. This emerging sector has also seen an avalanche of traditional institutions like BNP Paribas, BlackRock, and others.
All of these show that the money is undeniably still in the system. However, it is just pooling in venues that look more liquid, more legible, and fundamentally more durable.
This migration dictates who survives. Bitcoin ETFs siphon retail and institutional demand into familiar, heavily regulated portfolio structures. Stablecoins are increasingly entrenched in mundane but massive use cases: payments, settlement, and corporate cash management. Tokenized Treasuries attract capital hunting for yield-bearing instruments within a clear commercial and regulatory framework.
In this austere environment, a generalized consumer wallet or an app reliant on fading NFT volumes faces a nearly insurmountable burden of proof to justify user attention or venture funding.
Consequently, crypto is rapidly concentrating. Activity that once cascaded across a long tail of speculative projects is now being pulled toward a few dominant rails, established brands, and products that plug directly into balance-sheet finance.
This means the baseline for survival has shifted: a startup can no longer rely solely on cultural relevance within the crypto echo chamber; it increasingly needs recurring users, robust fee income, or a definitive role in the infrastructure that institutions are actively adopting.
Ignas captured it best, saying:
“What’s left to earn requires real infra, real users, real revenue.”
The post Crypto apps are shutting down as billions move into Bitcoin ETFs and stablecoins appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin rose with the rest of the crypto market on Monday after President Donald Trump struck a mixed tone on a possible deal with Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, prompting a relief rally that lifted prices but left the broader market setup unresolved.
According to CryptoSlate's data, the largest cryptocurrency briefly climbed above $70,000 before retracing to around $69,500. This had helped push the total crypto market capitalization up to $2.5 trillion, an 11-day high.
The move followed two conflicting messages from Trump over the weekend. In a Truth Social post, he warned that Iran would be “living in Hell” if the Strait of Hormuz was not reopened. However, in a subsequent Fox News interview, he said Iran was “negotiating now” and that there was a “good chance” of a deal within 24 hours.
Notably, Trump had initially given Iran a 10-day window to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. His latest comments suggested Tehran now had until Tuesday, with US attacks on Iranian power plants and bridges threatened if the waterway was not reopened.
At the same time, his remarks on negotiations opened the possibility, however tentative, that the conflict could shift toward diplomacy rather than immediate escalation.
That was enough to lift sentiment in a market that had become heavily skewed toward caution after more than a month of war, rising oil prices, and mounting fears of broader economic damage.
Crypto traders responded to that prospect by lifting prices across the market, but Monday’s move did not amount to a decisive break from the pattern that has defined trading since the conflict began.
The latest advance pushed Bitcoin back toward the top of the band that has contained every major rally and selloff since the war began. The move was sharp enough to show that positioning had become too bearish, but it was not strong enough to establish a new trend.
Timothy Misir, head of research at BRN, told CryptoSlate that BTC's price action remained restrained, as the digital asset remains trapped in the broader $60,000 to $70,000 range.
Jurrien Timmer, Fidelity’s director of global macro, corroborated this view, while pointing out that Bitcoin continues to hold the $65,000 to $70,000 range as it tries to form a base. He explained that the current zone is supported by prior highs, the Bitcoin-gold ratio, and the token’s deviation from its power-law curve.

That view fits the current tape. Bitcoin has recovered toward the upper end of its five-week war range, but the broader structure has not changed. The roughly $65,000 to $73,000 channel that has framed recent price action remains intact, leaving today's rebound looking more like a recovery within an established range than the start of a clean breakout.
Timmer also pointed to a shift in exchange-traded product flows that helps explain why Bitcoin responded quickly once the geopolitical tone softened. When Bitcoin peaked last October, he said, flows left Bitcoin and moved toward gold.
Now, as gold loses some momentum and Bitcoin begins to regain footing, those flows have started to reverse. In his telling, gold has begun acting more like Bitcoin, while Bitcoin has started acting more like gold.
That gives the rally a clearer context. Bitcoin is not moving in isolation from macro conditions, and it is not trading like an asset that has fully escaped the war-driven pressure bearing down on risk markets.
It is responding to the same combination of sentiment, positioning, and shifting expectations that have shaped oil, equities, and broader cross-asset trading since the conflict intensified.
That left Monday’s rally dependent on a headline shift rather than a clear change in underlying market strength.
The move was strong enough to unwind shorts and push Bitcoin back toward the top of its range, but not strong enough to remove doubts about whether the market could sustain those gains if the ceasefire talk faltered or oil resumed climbing.
Meanwhile, this BTC rebound also did not eliminate the deeper downside case that has been building around the top crypto as the war has dragged on.
Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Mike McGlone has argued that Bitcoin could still fall toward $10,000 in 2026 if the macro backdrop deteriorates further.
McGlone said Bitcoin may be reverting toward the area where it was most heavily traded after futures launched in 2017, while facing a market now crowded with alternative tokens and increasingly dominated by the growth of dollar-backed stablecoins.

He tied the downside case to the risk of an equity market rollover and a fresh rise in volatility, conditions that would place more pressure on Bitcoin if macro stress intensifies.
That scenario remains well outside the range implied by Monday’s price action, but it has not been invalidated by a single relief rally.
CryptoSlate had previously reported that a prolonged US-Iran standoff, a continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz, or a wider regional war severe enough to push oil toward $150 to $200 a barrel would tighten global liquidity much more sharply and could drag equities down by more than 30%.
Under those conditions, the $10,000 case would no longer look like an extreme outlier but rather a stress scenario that markets would need to consider more seriously.
Misir also supports caution, noting that the same market that can rise on a headline suggesting negotiations are progressing remains exposed to the pressure from war, oil, and weaker risk appetite.
If the diplomatic opening fades and the energy shock worsens, the support that lifted Bitcoin at the start of the week becomes much harder to defend.
Notably, oil remains central to that calculation. Crude climbed back toward $112 a barrel on Monday morning as the war and the disruption around Hormuz fed concerns about supply and inflation. The Kobeissi Letter estimated that if those levels persist for another seven weeks, US CPI inflation could rise to around 3.7%.
According to Misir:
“Inflation risk is alive, policy flexibility is limited, and growth has to absorb the shock.”
Against that backdrop, Misir concluded that BTC's next move will depend on inflation data and the Federal Reserve.
He explained that the upcoming FOMC meeting and CPI Index would show whether policymakers still see inflation as manageable after the oil shock, or whether the war is reinforcing expectations that rate cuts will stay off the table.
The post Why Bitcoin briefly jumped above $70,000 on Iran deal hopes as Trump’s Hormuz threat keeps rally fragile appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Crypto AI company OpenServ is trying to sell two things at once: an AI infrastructure story and a crypto token story. Its claim that its new model, SERV Nano, can match or beat OpenAI on some tasks has made that pitch more interesting, but they have also raised the standard of proof.
The company describes itself as an end-to-end suite for building, launching, and operating autonomous startups, with product rails that span AI agents, workflow tooling, reasoning architecture, token launch mechanics, and on-chain monetization. That places it in a category that remains underbuilt.
A large share of the AI market still revolves around models, wrappers, and user interfaces, while a more difficult operational layer sits lower in the stack, where systems need bounded reasoning, cost discipline, auditable outputs, and enough structure to handle tasks that carry budget, execution risk, and real-world consequences.
| # | Coin | Price | 24h % | MCap | 24h Vol |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
$8.72 | -3.87% | $6.34B | $529.24M |
| 2 |
|
$313.38 | -3.8% | $3.39B | $298.38M |
| 3 |
|
$1.24 | -4.32% | $1.6B | $131.91M |
| 4 |
|
$2.31 | -2.78% | $1.27B | $47.45M |
| 5 |
|
$1.90 | -3.53% | $986.37M | $51.15M |
| 6 |
|
$8.79 | +3.82% | $736.37M | $15.39M |
| 7 |
|
$0.24 | -1.79% | $533.32M | $155.04M |
| 8 |
|
$0.59 | +1.61% | $426.52M | $51.62M |
| 9 |
|
$0.63 | -4.88% | $412.88M | $46.71M |
| 10 |
|
$0 | -0.58% | $323.24M | $12.83M |
The company’s branding around its launch on Base and Solana has raised a basic but important question. Is OpenServ a blockchain project, or is it an AI project with blockchain rails attached?
The available evidence points toward the latter. OpenServ’s own documentation presents the platform as an agentic infrastructure layer that supports AI-driven products and autonomous business workflows, while the crypto side handles token creation, launch mechanics, incentives, fee flows, and capitalization.
Its $SERV token documentation describes the asset as a native ecosystem token tied to usage, burn, and reward mechanisms across the platform. That framing points toward a crypto-native AI business, rather than a base-layer blockchain protocol.
OpenServ is not trying to compete with Base, Solana, or any other chain as a network. It is trying to sit above models and above chains, then own a layer where agents can be structured, deployed, and monetized.
In practice, that means the blockchain element serves distribution, launch, and economic coordination, while the core technical proposition sits inside the orchestration and reasoning layer. The market has started to reward projects that can present this as a full-stack system.
The risk is that multiple claims can be bundled into a single narrative premium before each layer has cleared its own evidentiary threshold.
OpenServ’s architecture is easiest to understand as a layered stack. At the top sits the product narrative around autonomous startups, AI agents, and self-serve tooling. At the middle sits the orchestration claim, where OpenServ argues it has built a structured reasoning framework that can coordinate agent behavior more efficiently than generic prompt chains.
At the bottom sits the crypto monetization layer, where projects can launch tokens, create liquidity, and route platform value through an ecosystem asset. The company’s public materials repeatedly tie these pieces together.
Its website presents building, launching, and running as one continuous path, while the docs spell out token launch mechanics and ecosystem value capture in more detail.
That structure helps explain the use of Base and Solana. Base gives OpenServ an EVM-aligned environment for token launches and liquidity workflows, while Solana gives it access to a faster, lower-cost ecosystem that remains active in retail token experimentation and on-chain application design.
The use of both chains broadens the platform’s addressable market and gives OpenServ a way to present itself as chain-flexible rather than chain-dependent. For a company trying to sell AI tooling into a crypto-native audience, that design makes commercial sense.
It allows OpenServ to say its reasoning layer can drive autonomous systems, while the blockchain rails handle launch, ownership, incentives, and financial coordination.
A harder question sits underneath the packaging, around where the durable moat actually lives. A token launch framework can attract attention quickly, especially when it taps into the current market appetite for AI-linked assets. Distribution can move fast. Capital can move even faster.
Defensibility usually lives deeper in the stack. If OpenServ’s durable edge sits in orchestration, then Base and Solana function as useful deployment venues, while the real asset is the proprietary reasoning layer that claims to make AI agents cheaper, faster, and more reliable.
If the core edge sits instead in token design and chain-level packaging, then the platform looks closer to a crypto distribution machine wrapped around an AI narrative.
The blockchain assessment, therefore, needs to stay tied to the benchmarks. OpenServ’s crypto rails can explain how value moves through the ecosystem. They do not answer whether the system actually performs better than alternatives.
The market often compresses these issues into a strong team, a large market, early positioning, and an underpriced token. That framing can produce attention and liquidity.
It does not resolve whether the product has crossed the line from interesting architecture to independently validated infrastructure. The value of Base and Solana in this setup depends on what they are supporting.
If they are supporting a reasoning layer with measurable economic and operational gains, the blockchain component becomes part of a coherent stack. If they are supporting a narrative premium around benchmark snippets and selective adoption language, then the on-chain layer amplifies volatility more than it compounds product strength.
OpenServ’s own materials give enough evidence to establish one point clearly. This is a crypto-native AI platform that uses blockchain for launch, monetization, and ecosystem coordination.
That seems more precise than calling it a blockchain protocol, and more useful than reducing it to an AI wrapper with a token. The platform is trying to merge agent tooling with on-chain economic rails, then own the operational layer between models and monetized deployment.
That ambition is clear. The remaining work lies in proving that the middle of the stack is as strong as the outer packaging suggests.

The center of gravity in OpenServ’s current positioning sits in its benchmark language. The most forceful public claims center on the company’s reasoning framework and its SERV Nano offering, with executives and promoters arguing that the system can outperform or match OpenAI models on standard evaluations while running at a sharply lower cost and higher speed.
Those claims are designed to do two things at once. First, they signal that OpenServ is working on a real technical bottleneck inside agent systems. Second, they create a valuation bridge between infrastructure performance and token upside.
Once the market hears “matched GPT-5.4 at 20x lower cost and 3x the speed,” the burden of proof shifts to methodology, task selection, reproducibility, and evidence of deployment.
OpenServ has published material around its BRAID framework, short for Bounded Reasoning for Autonomous Inference and Decisions. The company says this layer improves performance-per-dollar and boosts reliability across bounded tasks by replacing loosely structured prompting with a more deterministic, machine-readable process.
The associated arXiv paper presents the framework in academic form and references internal benchmark logging. That gives OpenServ more technical surface area than a typical promo campaign. It also means the strongest claims can be tested against a higher standard.
The OpenAI comparison needs careful handling. OpenAI’s own documentation for GPT-5.4 nano frames the model as a low-cost, high-speed option for high-volume tasks.
That positioning already suggests the comparison is more nuanced than a simple frontier-versus-frontier showdown. When a third-party framework claims it can match or surpass an OpenAI model, the result can reflect several different sources of lift.
It can come from narrower task framing. It can come from routing logic. It can come from deterministic scaffolding. It can come from constraints that reduce output variance. It can come from cost accounting that measures system-level efficiency rather than raw model capability.
Each of those can be commercially meaningful. Each one also says something different about what has been achieved.
For OpenServ, the key question is what exactly is being compared. If SERV Nano is a model, then the company is making a single claim. If it is an orchestration layer or a structured wrapper that sits atop another model, then the claim takes a different shape.
If the result depends on bounded tasks with narrow decision trees, that can still be useful in enterprise settings where reliability and cost control carry more weight than a broad conversational range. If the result is being generalized into “beating every OpenAI model,” then the language moves faster than the information needed to evaluate it.
That distinction becomes even more important because the strongest market narratives often form around a cluster of adjacent claims. OpenServ’s public messaging combines benchmark wins, large speed and cost differentials, enterprise usage, government deployment language, and an under-$50 million valuation frame promoted by supporters.
At that point, the benchmark is doing more than technical work. It is underwriting a token thesis.
Public market data from CoinGecko currently places SERV in the small-cap range, with a mid-teens million market capitalization during the latest review, which keeps the asymmetry pitch alive for speculators. Yet token valuation and benchmark validity sit on different ladders.
A low market cap can create upside if the product is real. It can also create a fast-moving narrative pocket long before the product has been independently established.
None of this means the benchmark claims should be dismissed. A structured reasoning layer that delivers higher accuracy per dollar on bounded tasks would address a real pain point in enterprise AI.
Cost curves still matter. Latency still matters. Reliability under constraint still matters.
Enterprises do not need every workflow to resemble frontier research. Many need systems that execute repeatable tasks cheaply, quickly, and within defined boundaries.
That is exactly the environment where an orchestration layer can create value. It is also the environment where the proof standard should be the highest, because bounded systems can appear strong under curated conditions and then degrade when task complexity, ambiguity, or integration risk increases.
The next stage in evaluating OpenServ, therefore, sits in the evidence around configuration, task selection, reproducibility, and customer references. Which OpenAI models were compared, under which conditions? What does “matched” mean numerically and operationally? Were tools enabled? Were context windows aligned? Were tasks chosen from public benchmarks, private enterprise workflows, or internal composites? How much of the cost advantage came from model choice versus orchestration logic?
Those questions do not weaken the case. They define it. A serious infrastructure company should welcome that standard, because durable value in this category will accrue to platforms that can show their work and hold up under independent inspection.
The last layer in the OpenServ thesis sits beyond Base, Solana, and benchmark charts. It sits in proof. Public messaging around the platform has gone beyond model economics and into production credibility, with references to enterprise adoption and use by the UAE government.
Those claims, if fully substantiated, would materially strengthen the platform’s position. They would suggest that OpenServ has moved beyond a well-marketed architecture and into a narrower class of companies that can sell operational AI under real constraints.
That jump is large, and the evidence threshold should rise with it.
So far, public documentation gives partial visibility but not full verification. OpenServ’s own materials provide details on the framework, the token system, and the product architecture.
Press-release distribution and company-linked promotion reference enterprise usage and government-linked production environments. What remains difficult to establish through independent public sources is the exact identity of those deployments, the scope of usage, the distinction between paid production and pilot relationships, and the direct line between benchmark results and deployed business outcomes.
Those details will determine whether OpenServ belongs in the category of credible infrastructure companies or in the wider field of AI-crypto projects that can present an impressive stack faster than they can prove it.
The broader market context helps clarify this. AI infrastructure has moved into a phase where orchestration, control, auditability, and settlement are starting to carry as much strategic weight as model quality.
Recent reporting across crypto and AI has drawn more attention to verification, escrow, machine payments, and the coordination problems that arise when agents move beyond chat and begin transacting or acting under policy constraints. That backdrop gives OpenServ’s pitch more relevance than a generic AI-token narrative.
The company is pointing at a real bottleneck. Agents that carry budget, authority, and operational scope need a trustworthy execution layer. They need structure. They need bounded logic. They need enough determinism to make audit and accountability possible.
That backdrop also sets a more demanding test. Once a platform claims to sit in the trust layer of the agent stack, every supporting assertion takes on operational significance.
A government deployment claim should be nameable, scoped, and attributable. Enterprise relationships should be classifiable as pilots, design partnerships, paid contracts, or production systems. Benchmark papers should allow external readers to understand exactly what has been measured and where the lift originates.
A token should have a clearly legible role in value accrual rather than serving as ambient upside around a SaaS-style platform. Each of these is manageable. Together, they form the real threshold.
OpenServ deserves attention, but the correct frame remains disciplined. The company appears to be building an AI infrastructure platform with blockchain rails on Base and Solana, while using benchmark results against OpenAI-linked models to argue that its reasoning layer can deliver better economics on bounded tasks.
That package addresses a genuine market need. It also creates a promotional surface that can run ahead of independent confirmation.
The next phase will come down to named deployments, reproducible methodology, customer testimony, and evidence that gains from controlled benchmarks translate into messy operating environments.
For now, OpenServ looks less like a standalone blockchain protocol and more like a crypto-native AI infrastructure company.
Its blockchain rails help launch and monetize the platform. Its benchmark claims are carrying the heavier analytical load.
Its opportunity lies in proving that a structured reasoning layer can produce reliable gains in cost, speed, and operational trust. If that proof arrives, the platform will have a stronger foundation than many AI-token narratives currently trading on category heat.
If that proof remains diffuse, the market will still have learned something valuable about where attention is flowing in the next phase of agent infrastructure, toward the layer where models, execution, and monetization meet.
The post Crypto AI project OpenServ claims to beat OpenAI in direct benchmark comparisons appeared first on CryptoSlate.
EDX Markets’ bid for a federal trust bank charter is not just another crypto expansion story. It is a live test of whether Wall Street-backed firms can move more of crypto’s custody and settlement stack inside the U.S. banking perimeter.
EDX Markets’ application for a federal trust bank charter opens a more consequential question than whether another large financial consortium wants deeper exposure to digital assets.
The sharper question is whether some of the firms that helped shape modern U.S. equity market structure are now trying to impose a similar functional separation on crypto, with custody, settlement, collateral management, and fiduciary asset handling pulled into a federally supervised banking perimeter.
That framing comes directly from EDX Trust’s application to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The filing argues that traditional financial markets evolved around specialized roles, brokers, exchanges, market makers, clearing institutions, and custodians, while digital asset markets developed around vertically integrated venues where execution, custody, and balance sheet functions often sit under one roof.
Why this matters: If this model wins approval and real flow, more of crypto’s back-end infrastructure could move away from all-in-one exchanges and toward federally supervised institutions. That would matter for who controls custody, how trades settle, and which firms become the preferred route for institutional capital.
EDX’s proposal attempts to redraw that map. Order matching would remain with EDX Markets, while the proposed national trust bank would handle custody, fiduciary asset management, settlement-related functions, and riskless principal activity.
For a market still defined by the aftershocks of concentrated exchange risk, that distinction gives the filing its real weight. The application points to a bid to move a meaningful share of crypto infrastructure away from all-in-one venue design and toward a modular structure that institutions already understand.
The names behind EDX add force to that interpretation. Citadel Securities, Fidelity, and Charles Schwab backed the venue at launch, and the proposed trust bank lands at a moment when the federal charter process is starting to look like a competitive lane rather than an isolated regulatory experiment.
The OCC’s digital assets licensing applications page shows that EDX Trust joined a growing queue of pending applicants in March, alongside firms such as Morgan Stanley Digital Trust, zerohash, and Revolut Bank US.
That follows the OCC’s December announcement that it had conditionally approved five digital asset-related national trust bank charters, including applications tied to Ripple, Fidelity Digital Assets, BitGo, and Paxos.
The competitive significance lies in the pattern. Federal trust bank status is starting to look like an emerging layer of institutional crypto infrastructure, one that could shape who gets to intermediate regulated capital and who remains outside the most defensible perimeter.
That gives EDX’s filing a broader significance than a standard custody expansion. The application describes a model built around end-of-day net settlement for spot trades, rather than the heavily prefunded arrangements common across large parts of crypto trading.
EDX argues that this structure could improve capital efficiency and reduce the operational burden on institutional participants. The target users in the filing make the ambition clear: broker-dealers, futures commission merchants, registered investment advisers, corporations, and other regulated intermediaries whose participation depends on custody arrangements, counterparty controls, and supervisory familiarity.
Viewed through that lens, the filing signals an attempt to build a crypto market structure that can carry institutional flow on a larger scale, with federal oversight sitting closer to the assets and the settlement process than crypto venues historically allowed.

The most revealing part of EDX’s application is the way it defines the market problem. The document spends far more time on structural separation than on promotional language around adoption or innovation.
That choice says a great deal. EDX is effectively telling the OCC that the missing layer in crypto is infrastructure that regulated institutions can route through without inheriting the operational and governance profile of vertically integrated exchanges.
That argument lands because it maps directly onto how large financial institutions already think about market participation. In equities and listed derivatives, institutions operate through a web of specialized actors and clearly delineated responsibilities.
Matching venues match. Custodians custody. Clearing and settlement functions sit in distinct frameworks. Risk is measured and transferred across known institutional channels.
Crypto still looks uneven by that standard. Exchanges often combine execution, asset custody, financing, and internal balance-sheet activities. The result is an architecture that can scale quickly in bull markets but looks brittle under stress.
EDX’s proposed trust bank aims to answer that structural gap. According to the application, EDX Trust would provide custody for digital assets and fiat balances, fiduciary asset management, and settlement support for spot transactions executed on EDX Markets.
The filing also states that custodied cash and stablecoins would be invested in highly liquid instruments targeting returns near the federal funds rate, while custodied digital assets could be staked or used in permissible yield-generating activities. That broadens the institution’s role beyond safekeeping. It places the proposed bank closer to the center of collateral, idle asset utility, and balance-sheet efficiency.
The settlement design is especially important. EDX states in its OCC application that spot trades would settle once per day on a net basis and that certain clients could post collateral rather than fully prefund activity, depending on their financial condition and risk profile.
That departs from one of crypto’s defining constraints, the need to warehouse capital across venues in advance of execution. For active institutional participants, capital efficiency directly affects how much flow can move, how much inventory must sit idle, and whether participation scales beyond exploratory allocations.
This is where the EDX model starts to look like an effort to import the habits of mature market structure into crypto. The firms behind the venue understand fragmented liquidity, specialized roles, and the economics of execution architecture at a very high level.
Their filing reads like a view that crypto can no longer rely on venue-centric design to sustain institutional depth. Vertically integrated exchanges may continue to command large volumes, though a federally chartered trust layer could become the preferred route for some classes of institutions that have held back or participated only through narrow channels.
A second signal sits in the way EDX handles custody itself. The application says the proposed bank would use sub-custodian banks to hold private keys. That introduces another layer of segregation and operational specialization.
It also reinforces the idea that the filing is trying to carve clear boundaries around function, liability, and control. As those boundaries harden, crypto infrastructure starts to resemble the institutional layouts that dominate traditional capital markets.
The federal charter itself will draw attention, though the more durable question is whether this model attracts real institutional migration. Regulatory approval would establish legitimacy and supervisory footing.
On its own, approval would still leave open the commercial question of whether the architecture wins flow. Institutions will need to decide whether the combination of a matching venue plus a federally supervised trust-bank layer offers a superior route for execution, custody, capital efficiency, and governance compared with incumbent crypto venues and existing bilateral arrangements.
There are reasons to think that the question is now live. The OCC’s December conditional approval for Fidelity Digital Assets’ conversion to an uninsured national trust bank showed that the federal banking perimeter is already opening to crypto-native and crypto-adjacent infrastructure.
Fidelity’s approval contemplated crypto custody and trade execution services, creating a notable benchmark within the broader shareholder ecosystem surrounding EDX. At the same time, the OCC’s current application queue suggests several firms see strategic value in securing the same kind of status.
Once multiple players pursue the same charter path, charter access starts to resemble a competitive boundary rather than a badge.
That competitive boundary could reshape the exchange landscape. If custody, settlement, and collateral functions migrate toward federally chartered trust institutions, then the economic center of gravity in crypto could shift away from venue-centric models and toward modular infrastructure.
A venue would still matter for liquidity, matching quality, market design, and access. Yet the parts of the stack that institutional allocators care about most, asset control, segregation, supervisory clarity, and settlement discipline, could move into entities built specifically for those functions. That would pressure the long-standing logic of keeping everything under one roof.
EDX also enters this phase with some scale history behind it. According to Ledger Insights, which cited company figures, EDX processed $36 billion in cumulative notional trading volume during 2024.
That number should be treated as company-reported rather than independently verified market share, though it still provides a useful reference point. It suggests EDX is filing from a position of operational experience, rather than concept alone.
The venue expanded its listed assets well beyond its initial launch lineup. The operating premise is clear. EDX wants a broader product scope paired with a structure designed to carry larger institutional participation.
The unresolved part sits in adoption. Large intermediaries and asset managers will need to decide whether a trust-bank-based structure genuinely improves the economics and controls of participation.
Market makers will need to assess whether the model supports the same depth and responsiveness they require. Institutions that already route activity through crypto-native venues will weigh operational familiarity against the appeal of federal supervision and stronger functional separation.
That comparison will determine whether this filing marks a structural pivot point or merely another incremental layer in crypto’s long regulatory buildout.
For now, the signal is still strong. EDX’s application frames crypto’s institutional bottleneck as a market-structure problem and proposes a federal trust bank as part of the solution.
That puts the next phase of competition in a different place. The market has spent years focused on products, access points, and the expansion of listed assets. The more consequential contest may now sit deeper in the stack, where custody, settlement, collateral management, and supervisory architecture determine who can intermediate the next wave of institutional flow, and on what terms.
The post Citadel Securities and Fidelity just made their clearest move yet to rebuild crypto like Wall Street appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Facing an unprecedented blockade from the global SWIFT banking network and a collapsing national currency, Tehran has institutionalized digital assets to facilitate international trade, procure dual-use technology, and fund military operations. Following recent military escalations in early 2026, blockchain data has revealed massive capital movements within the Islamic Republic, proving that digital ledgers are now the "front line" of modern financial warfare.
Yes, Iran is actively and systematically using cryptocurrency to bypass US-led economic sanctions. According to the Chainalysis 2026 Crypto Crime Report, Iran’s on-chain ecosystem reached a staggering $7.78 billion in 2025. By integrating crypto-mining into its state energy grid and utilizing dollar-pegged stablecoins for cross-border settlements, the Iranian government has created a parallel financial system that operates largely outside the reach of the US Federal Reserve.
To understand how a nation-state "uses crypto" to evade sanctions, we must define the three primary pillars of Tehran’s strategy:
A significant shift occurred throughout 2025: the total dominance of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) over the Iranian crypto market.
"In Q4 2025, IRGC-linked addresses accounted for over 50% of all value received by Iranian crypto services, moving more than $3 billion to support regional networks and oil sales." — Chainalysis 2026 Report.
This represents a transition from "civilian" crypto use (citizens protecting their savings from a Rial that hit 1.75 million per dollar in 2026) to "state" crypto use. The IRGC uses these funds to:
The US government is aggressively countering these moves. In February 2026, the US Treasury stepped up enforcement against platforms found to be functioning as critical nodes for Iranian state-backed finance.
However, the challenge for regulators is the "whack-a-mole" nature of decentralized finance. When one exchange is sanctioned, new liquidity hubs emerge in gray-market jurisdictions. Furthermore, the collaboration between Iran and Russia on the A7A5 stablecoin has created a bilateral corridor that processed over $100 billion in its first year, providing a blueprint for other sanctioned nations.
Iran’s use of cryptocurrency has evolved from a survival tactic into a strategic weapon. By leveraging the borderless nature of blockchain, Tehran has managed to maintain its military funding and essential imports despite being "disconnected" from the world. For investors following the latest crypto news, this highlights the dual nature of digital assets: a tool for individual financial freedom and a vehicle for state-level geopolitical maneuvering.
As the conflict in West Asia continues, the world is watching to see if digital assets can truly replace the US Dollar as the primary settlement currency for the "sanctioned bloc" of nations.
The cryptocurrency market in April 2026 is witnessing a pivotal moment for XRP. After a period of cooling off from earlier yearly highs, the XRP/USD pair has established a formidable defensive line. As of April 7, 2026, technical charts reveal that the $1.30 level is acting as a "line in the sand" for bulls, preventing further downside and setting the stage for a potential trend reversal.
Currently, $XRP is trading near $1.315, hovering just above its primary support zone. If the current consolidation phase completes with a bullish breakout, the immediate target is $1.45. Conversely, a failure to hold the $1.28–$1.30 range could see a retracement toward $1.20.
The recent price action on the 4-hour chart illustrates a clear "floor" forming at the $1.28 - $1.30 horizontal support level (marked by the orange line). Despite multiple tests over the last week, sellers have been unable to push the price decisively below this mark.

The market is currently in a state of "compressed volatility." This usually precedes a sharp move in either direction. Based on current market structure, here are the levels to watch:
If XRP maintains its position above $1.30, the first major hurdle is the $1.35 resistance. A breakout above this level, backed by increasing volume, would likely trigger a fast move toward the $1.45 yellow resistance line shown on the chart. This represents a potential 10% gain from current levels.
Should the broader market—led by Bitcoin—face a sudden downturn, XRP might lose its $1.28 footing. In this scenario, the next structural support lies at the psychological $1.20 level. Traders should keep a close eye on crypto exchanges to ensure they have the best liquidity for tight stop-loss management.
Beyond the charts, the fundamental backdrop for Ripple remains robust. Recent reports indicate that Ripple’s integration with SWIFT-certified infrastructure—following its major 2025 acquisitions—is now processing significant annual flows. This "utility-driven" valuation is a major reason why XRP is holding higher support levels compared to previous cycles.
Furthermore, with the SEC–CFTC Memorandum of Understanding providing clearer regulatory lanes in 2026, institutional "smart money" appears more comfortable accumulating XRP during these consolidation phases.
The current price action represents a classic "wait and see" period. The tight range between $1.28 and $1.35 is where the next major trend will be decided.
The Ethereum price ($ETH) has entered a period of significant sideways movement, leaving investors and traders questioning the next major directional shift. For several weeks, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap has been oscillating within a well-defined corridor between $1,800 and $2,100. This compression typically acts as a "coiling spring" for the market, where the longer the consolidation lasts, the more explosive the eventual breakout or breakdown tends to be.
Currently, $Ethereum is facing a tug-of-war between macroeconomic headwinds and internal ecosystem growth. While the broader crypto market has seen fluctuations due to geopolitical tensions and interest rate uncertainties, Ethereum's technical structure remains remarkably resilient. The $1,800 level has established itself as a "must-hold" psychological and technical support zone, while $2,100 continues to act as a formidable ceiling.
The consolidation phase isn't just about price; it’s about accumulation:

Recent crypto news highlights that the Ethereum Foundation and large "whales" have been active in staking, which reduces the circulating supply. From a technical standpoint, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) is currently hovering around the 50-neutral mark, confirming the lack of a clear trend. However, the Bollinger Bands are beginning to squeeze, a classic precursor to a high-volatility event.
"Ethereum is currently in a 'wait-and-see' mode. The transition from $1,800 support to $2,100 resistance is the most watched range in the industry right now. A decisive move outside this bracket will set the tone for the rest of Q2 2026." — Market Analysis Team, CryptoTicker.
Two major catalysts are expected to break this stalemate:
Bitcoin has moved back above the $70,000 level — but this breakout is not being driven by crypto fundamentals.
Instead, the move comes amid rapidly shifting geopolitical headlines. Reports of a potential 45-day ceasefire between the US and Iran triggered a sharp change in sentiment, pushing oil lower and lifting risk assets across the board. Bitcoin reacted immediately, breaking resistance and accelerating higher.
At the same time, the rally was amplified by positioning.
This kind of price action reflects a market caught offside — not necessarily a confirmed trend.
The key takeaway is simple: Bitcoin is trading macro, not crypto.

Recent price movements are closely tied to external factors:
In this environment, Bitcoin behaves less like a standalone asset and more like a real-time macro indicator.
While markets reacted positively to ceasefire discussions, the downside scenario remains fully in play.
Jamie Dimon recently warned that an escalation involving Iran could:
If that scenario unfolds, the current rally could reverse quickly.
This explains why the breakout above $70K, while technically significant, still lacks strong conviction.
Right now, everything depends on how the geopolitical situation evolves:
Bullish Scenario — De-escalation confirmed
Bearish Scenario — Escalation returns
The market is not choosing between these outcomes yet — it is reacting to each headline as it comes.
Another key factor: timing.
This breakout is happening during the weekend, when liquidity is thinner and moves are easier to exaggerate. These conditions often lead to temporary price spikes rather than confirmed trends.
The real test will come when:
If traditional markets support the move, Bitcoin could stabilize above $70K. If not, this breakout risks fading quickly.
Bitcoin price above $70K looks strong — but the context matters.
This is a headline-driven rally, not a structural shift. As long as markets remain tied to geopolitical developments, volatility will dominate over clear direction.
For now, Bitcoin is not leading the market — it is reacting to it.
Crypto markets are about to enter one of the most decisive moments of the year.
After a quiet weekend with low volatility, real trading resumes today as Wall Street reopens — and with it comes the return of institutional capital.
Bitcoin is holding near $67,000. Ethereum remains above $2,000. Altcoins are drifting lower.
👉 But this calm is not stability — it’s compression before a major move.
Weekend crypto trading often creates a false sense of direction.
👉 That changes today.
With traditional markets reopening:
👉 This is when the real trend forms
Crypto market structure suggests that a large move is building.
When liquidity returns after a compressed weekend:
👉 In past setups like this, total market cap has moved $100B+ within hours
This is exactly the type of environment we are entering now.
Several major catalysts are converging at the same time:
👉 This combination creates a pressure cooker setup
If markets absorb macro risks:
👉 Expected:
If macro fear dominates:
👉 Expected:
The most important period is not the full day — it’s the first hours after market open.
Watch closely:
👉 If volume confirms the move, it becomes a trend
👉 If not, expect more volatility and fakeouts
Crypto is not quiet. Crypto is waiting.
👉 Waiting for liquidity
👉 Waiting for institutional flows
👉 Waiting for direction
And today…
That direction will likely be decided.
Bitcoin ETFs saw their biggest inflow in six weeks as crypto investors positioned ahead of Trump's Iran deadline.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said that the rate of AI adoption "will likely be far faster than prior technological transformations."
Polymarket is overhauling its technical foundations and launching a stablecoin as it aims to improve the user experience and order book.
A new OpenAI blueprint urges economic changes for the AI era as reporting raises questions about Altman’s motivations.
Holders of tokenized shares in Galaxy (GLXY) will soon be able to participate in proxy voting on-chain via Broadridge.
XRP market resets as long-term holders post significant losses.
Shiba Inu lost the key threshold much sooner than expected, with new possibilities emerging.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Paul Atkins announced upcoming proposals for a "Reg Crypto" token fundraising exemption and a new "innovation exemption" for Decentralized Finance (DeFi).
The race to secure public blockchains against the existential threat of quantum computing is accelerating, and the XRP Ledger is being recognized as an early pioneer in the space.
The new trading week starts off on a high note as Ethereum, Bitcoin and even Hyperliquid enter new recovery attempts.
UBS Global Wealth Management has adjusted its outlook for the S&P 500, trimming its price projection for 2026. The revision comes as energy costs climb and economic headwinds intensify due to escalating tensions in the Middle East.
According to an April 6 research note, UBS reduced its year-end forecast to 7,500 from a previous estimate of 7,700. The firm also lowered its mid-year projection to 7,000 from 7,300.

Since conflict erupted with Iran on February 28, the S&P 500 has retreated approximately 3.9%. Spiking energy costs combined with geopolitical instability have prompted investors to reduce equity exposure.
UBS’s central scenario anticipates the conflict subsiding in the weeks ahead, which would enable energy supply chains to gradually normalize.
Yet the Swiss banking giant cautioned that returning oil production to pre-conflict capacity will require significant time. Widespread infrastructure damage throughout the region means full production restoration remains months away.
This delay could sustain elevated crude prices beyond current market expectations.
Rising energy costs typically decelerate economic expansion while accelerating inflation. UBS indicated this pattern will likely sustain sticky inflation and create modest drag on the American economy.
Consequently, the institution now anticipates the Federal Reserve will postpone additional monetary easing. UBS had originally projected reductions in June and September but now forecasts two 25-basis-point decreases in September and December.
This adjustment illustrates how international geopolitical developments can influence domestic central bank decisions.
Notwithstanding the reduced targets, UBS calculates roughly 13.43% upside potential from the S&P 500’s most recent closing level of 6,611.83.
UBS maintained its 2026 earnings projection for the S&P 500 at $310 per share. The institution characterized American equities as “attractive” notwithstanding near-term challenges.
The firm highlighted that corporate profit expansion remains robust. It also emphasized ongoing artificial intelligence adoption and commercialization as supportive factors for equities once conflict-related pressures diminish.
UBS noted that even with delayed policy accommodation, the Federal Reserve continues to provide broad market support.
The bank refrained from altering its constructive view on U.S. stocks. It simply recalibrated the timeline and magnitude of its price forecasts to reflect the ongoing war’s impact.
UBS currently projects two Federal Reserve rate reductions before 2026 concludes, both scheduled for the year’s second half.
The post UBS Slashes S&P 500 Forecast Amid Middle East Tensions and Rising Oil Costs appeared first on Blockonomi.
Xiao-I Corp. has experienced an unprecedented surge in market value this week. Following Monday’s explosive 515% rally, AIXI shares continued their ascent with another 40% gain in premarket trading on Tuesday, bringing the stock tantalizingly close to $1.00—a price level not witnessed since November 2025.
Xiao-I Corporation, AIXI
What triggered this extraordinary movement? A pivotal legal victory in China.
The Supreme People’s Court of China struck down Apple’s petition to invalidate several of Xiao-I’s fundamental artificial intelligence patents. The March 27, 2026 determination represents the ultimate judgment on this matter, leaving Apple without any remaining legal mechanisms to contest the patents’ legitimacy.
These patents form the foundation of an active infringement claim. Xiao-I maintains that Apple incorporated its proprietary AI innovations—encompassing natural language understanding, voice interaction systems, and machine learning algorithms—into products without authorization.
The litigation has progressed through several judicial phases, including proceedings before the Shanghai High People’s Court throughout 2024. Apple’s petition to China’s highest court represented its final attempt to undermine the patents’ standing, and that effort has now been definitively rejected.
On April 1, 2026, Xiao-I submitted a Form 6-K document revealing the court’s determination. This regulatory disclosure appears to have catalyzed widespread investor attention and triggered Monday’s unprecedented trading activity.
A crucial clarification: while the patent validity has been confirmed, this ruling does not determine monetary damages. The underlying infringement litigation remains in progress, and Xiao-I has explicitly warned shareholders that neither financial recovery nor ultimate success is assured.
Limited trading volume plays a significant role in explaining this dramatic price action. AIXI operates as a small-capitalization company with zero coverage from major Wall Street research firms, creating conditions where even moderate buying interest can generate disproportionate price volatility.
Combine this with momentum-driven traders and probable short position liquidations, and the result is the kind of explosive move that captures market attention. The stock had suffered sustained declines for months, languishing beneath the $1.00 mark since early November 2025.
Before this week’s dramatic turnaround, Xiao-I revealed it had received dual deficiency notifications from Nasdaq’s Listing Qualifications Department.
These warnings indicated that AIXI’s American Depositary Shares had settled below the mandatory $1.00 minimum bid price requirement for 30 consecutive business days—specifically from November 3 through December 15, 2025.
Maintaining pricing above $1.00 extends beyond mere optics. It represents a fundamental listing standard. Regaining and sustaining that price level has become essential to Xiao-I’s ability to remain traded on Nasdaq.
During Tuesday’s premarket session, AIXI was changing hands near $0.96—approximately four cents below the crucial compliance benchmark.
Since the start of 2026, the stock has essentially doubled in value. The patent infringement proceedings against Apple remain active, with no confirmed schedule for a final determination on potential damages or other remedies.
The post Xiao-I (AIXI) Stock Explodes Over 500% Following Major Chinese Supreme Court Victory Against Apple appeared first on Blockonomi.
Humana (HUM) shares launched approximately 11% higher on Tuesday morning, responding to Monday evening’s revelation of the official 2027 Medicare Advantage reimbursement rates.
Humana Inc., HUM
The approved 2.48% rate represents a dramatic improvement over the 0.09% preliminary rate unveiled in January, which shocked the healthcare industry and triggered selling pressure across insurer equities.
The CMS decision translates to private health insurance companies receiving upwards of $13 billion in supplementary Medicare Advantage reimbursements from federal coffers during 2027.
UnitedHealth (UNH) and CVS Health (CVS), which owns Aetna, both surged over 6% before the opening bell Tuesday. Elevance Health (ELV) jumped approximately 5%. Hospital operators and managed care organizations likewise benefited, with Molina Healthcare (MOH) climbing 7% and Centene (CNC) advancing 4%.
The equity surge followed an extended period of industry advocacy, with insurers and industry associations contending that January’s proposal ignored escalating medical expenditures. The Better Medicare Alliance characterized the near-zero preliminary rate as effectively a “cut,” highlighting that medical cost inflation has been running between 7% and 9% year-over-year.
CMS implemented multiple technical revisions beyond the primary rate adjustment. Beginning in 2027, the department will eliminate diagnosis information from unlinked chart review documentation when determining risk scores, though creating an exception for enrollees transferring between Medicare Advantage carriers.
The department indicated this modification will disproportionately affect plans that depend extensively on chart reviews to capture patient diagnoses and secure elevated reimbursements. CMS additionally refreshed the Part D risk adjustment framework to incorporate modifications mandated by the Inflation Reduction Act.
CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz stated the revisions are designed to maintain “coverage affordable” while guaranteeing patients receive “real value from their plans.”
Financial analysts had approached Monday’s disclosure with conservative expectations. TD Cowen’s Ryan Langston had projected a more restrained increase in the 1% to 1.5% territory. The 2.48% result surpassed those projections, although Mizuho’s Jared Holz offered measured commentary: “We do not believe a Medicare rate increase of 2.5% is so awesome in a vacuum, but is certainly better than the government’s initial rate decision.”
Holz suggested there exists “a chance for margins to expand next year, provided the Companies continue to trim benefits and align costs with revenue.”
Medicare Advantage serves approximately 35 million Americans and has experienced consistent expansion, now exceeding participation in traditional government-administered Medicare. The final reimbursement rate determines how more than half a trillion dollars circulates through private health coverage annually, establishing it as among the most scrutinized metrics within the health insurance industry.
The calculation incorporates variables including fundamental cost escalation, 2026 Star Ratings governing quality incentive payments, and risk adjustment formula modifications. CMS verified it will maintain the 2024 Medicare Advantage risk adjustment framework for 2027.
Bipartisan congressional concern regarding Medicare Advantage expenditures had introduced additional unpredictability into the rate-setting process. Lawmakers across party lines have questioned insurer documentation methodologies that can generate elevated payments for enrollees with more comprehensive diagnosis records. The Biden administration’s CMS had already begun restricting those reimbursements, and January’s proposal under the Trump administration demonstrated that oversight would persist.
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The Iowa-headquartered convenience store operator Casey’s General Stores (CASY) is advancing to the premier stock index. S&P Dow Jones Indices confirmed late Monday that the company will join the S&P 500 when trading commences on Thursday, April 9.
Casey’s General Stores, Inc., CASY
This promotion stems from Hologic’s (HOLX) departure from public trading. The medical device manufacturer is being acquired by private equity firms Blackstone (BX) and TPG Global in a transaction anticipated to finalize around April 7. As Hologic transitions to private ownership, Casey’s will assume its position in the prestigious index.
Following the announcement, CASY shares jumped more than 4% in after-hours action. Notably, both CASY and HOLX reached new 52-week peaks during Monday’s regular trading session.
This index promotion carries substantial financial implications beyond prestige. Mutual funds and exchange-traded funds that replicate the S&P 500 must incorporate its member companies into their portfolios, creating inevitable institutional demand. This mandatory rebalancing typically produces upward price momentum for newly inducted stocks as the effective date nears.
Casey’s promotion reflects consistent operational excellence. The retailer has surpassed Wall Street earnings projections for eight straight quarters. Its latest quarterly disclosure on March 9 revealed diluted earnings per share of $3.49—significantly exceeding both the previous year’s $2.33 figure and analyst consensus of $3.00. Since releasing those results, the stock has appreciated 12.5%.
Third-quarter fiscal 2026 revenue totaled $3.92 billion, modestly trailing the $4.04 billion analyst forecast, though comparable-store inside sales advanced 4.0% on a year-over-year basis. Fuel gallon sales at existing locations increased 0.4%. The company maintains a quarterly dividend distribution of $0.57 per share, translating to approximately a 0.39% yield.
S&P 500 membership requires companies to demonstrate profitability in both the latest quarter and cumulatively across the trailing twelve-month period. Casey’s satisfies these financial requirements comfortably.
Hologic’s exit initiates a cascade of index adjustments across multiple market capitalization tiers. Cloud infrastructure provider DigitalOcean (DOCN) will ascend from the SmallCap 600 to the MidCap 400, occupying Casey’s vacated position. DOCN shares dipped 0.1% in extended trading.
Real estate investment trust Broadstone Net Lease (BNL), which specializes in single-tenant commercial real estate, will enter the SmallCap 600 as DigitalOcean’s replacement. BNL experienced a dramatic 5.1% surge after-hours—illustrating the pronounced impact index inclusion can generate for smaller-capitalization securities.
While these quarterly index reconfigurations follow established procedures, the market responses they trigger are far from predictable for affected companies.
According to TipRanks, Wall Street analysts currently assign CASY a Moderate Buy consensus rating—comprising seven Buy recommendations and six Hold ratings. The mean analyst price objective stands at $715.08, suggesting modest downside from present elevated price levels.
The post Casey’s General Stores (CASY) Shares Jump 4% Following S&P 500 Inclusion Announcement appeared first on Blockonomi.
The U.S. Postal Service and Amazon have reached a new delivery partnership agreement, averting what many feared would be a catastrophic financial setback for the financially struggling postal agency.
Under the renewed contract, USPS will continue handling approximately 1 billion Amazon packages annually — representing roughly 80% of the volume it currently manages. This marks a significant improvement from earlier reports suggesting Amazon might slash deliveries by two-thirds.
Amazon characterized the arrangement as an extension of their “longstanding partnership.” The Postal Service has yet to release an official statement.
Amazon represents USPS’s largest commercial client, contributing approximately $6 billion to the agency’s roughly $80 billion yearly operating budget. A substantial loss of this revenue stream would have created severe financial challenges. The Postal Service cautioned in recent weeks that it could face a cash shortage as soon as October.
Amazon.com, Inc., AMZN
The arrangement still requires official regulatory authorization.
The announcement triggered negative reactions among Amazon’s competitors. FedEx (FDX) stock retreated 0.8% to close at $358.91, while UPS shares fell 1% to end at $97.16.
UPS has already initiated steps to reduce its Amazon delivery exposure. In January 2025, the company revealed plans with Amazon to decrease delivery volumes by over 50% by late 2026. This represents a calculated strategic pivot away from Amazon reliance.
Conversely, FedEx adopted the opposite approach — establishing a multi-year delivery partnership with Amazon in May 2025.
Amazon shows no signs of slowing its own delivery infrastructure development. The e-commerce giant announced in April 2025 that it would commit over $4 billion toward expanding rural delivery capabilities throughout the United States by late 2026.
This buildout will proceed as planned — though not at a magnitude that would directly compete with USPS’s comprehensive door-to-door coverage, according to informed sources.
Meanwhile, USPS continues searching for additional revenue streams to stabilize its financial position. The agency has requested authorization for a temporary 8% rate increase on priority mail and package services, scheduled to take effect April 26. Postmaster General David Steiner has additionally proposed increasing first-class stamp prices from the current 78 cents to 95 cents.
USPS has accumulated $118 billion in net losses since 2007, primarily due to the dramatic decline in first-class mail volumes, which have dropped to levels not seen since the late 1960s.
Steiner previously indicated to Reuters that USPS currently delivers approximately 1.7 billion packages for Amazon each year, making the 1 billion package threshold in the new agreement a notable decrease — though considerably better than Amazon’s earlier proposals.
The post Amazon (AMZN) Finalizes USPS Agreement, Maintains 80% of Package Volume appeared first on Blockonomi.
XRP posted a fresh decline on Tuesday as it struggled to climb past $1.31. While modest gains pushed it above $1.35 last week, the asset faced a sharp pullback later, which erased those advances. Monday’s recovery also lacked strong follow-through.
New data suggests that XRP’s long-term average trader returns have never been this low since 2022.
Santiment said that wallets active on the XRP Ledger (XRPL) over the past year are sitting on average losses of around 41%. This puts XRP’s MVRV at its lowest level since the FTX collapse in November 2022.
According to the analysis, such deeply negative returns point to reduced risk levels for new or additional XRP purchases, as market participants are already experiencing heavy drawdowns, reflecting what Santiment describes as “blood in the streets” conditions across the market.
Despite what appears to be a potential opportunity, transaction patterns demonstrate participants are actively pulling liquidity from exchanges. Over the past month, deposit transactions have trailed behind withdrawals, which has led to a clear net outflow from the exchange. The imbalance shows more assets leaving the platform than entering it during this period. While outflows continued, the overall number of transactions has dropped sharply. This points to slowing activity across the market, indicating a phase of stagnation.
Meanwhile, crypto analyst ‘CasiTrades’ stated that XRP is showing signs of exhaustion rather than strength as it continues to trade within a defined range. She highlighted that multiple timeframes still point to a downside trajectory. The projected path includes an initial move lower toward the $1.13 level, followed by a brief relief bounce, and then a continuation toward the $1.08 zone, identified as macro 0.786 support.
After another period of consolidation, the analyst expects a further decline toward $0.87, near the macro 0.854 support level.
Spot XRP ETFs saw their first negative month in March since debuting in November, as geopolitical tensions rattled markets. Rising oil prices fueled uncertainty and drove investors away from risk assets. This resulted in around $31 million being withdrawn from XRP ETFs over the month. The trend has carried into April, as early data showed continued outflows.
In the first week alone, investors pulled about $1.25 million.
The post XRP Investors Deep in Losses as Crucial Metric Revisits 2022 Lows appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin’s price somewhat unexpectedly surged on Monday morning to mark a multi-day peak at over $70,000 before it was rejected and driven south by roughly two grand.
Most altcoins have also followed suit and are in the red today, aside from CC and ZEC, both of which have posted some gains.
The primary cryptocurrency peaked at $69,200 last week, but the bears quickly stepped up at the time and pushed it south to $65,600 in a matter of days due to the quickly escalating and changing comments on the war in Iran. The following weekend was very eventful in that regard, with new threats and deadlines from Trump, but they couldn’t really move BTC.
The asset remained sideways between $66,000 and $67,000 before Monday morning, when it suddenly skyrocketed by a few grand to $69,600 at first and then to $70,250. This came after reports emerged that the US and Iran could reach a ceasefire deal soon.
However, there’s no indication for such a development as of press time, and Trump’s latest deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz expires later today. Unless he moves it (again), there could be intense attacks against the Middle Eastern country’s key infrastructure.
BTC was stopped and dipped to $68,400 before it recovered some ground and now trades around $69,000. Its market cap is at $1.380 trillion, while its dominance over the alts is at 56.6% on CG.

Most larger-cap alts posted notable gains yesterday, but have turned red on a daily scale now. Ethereum has slipped back toward $2,100 after a 1.4% decline in a day, BNB is close to dipping beneath $600, while XRP was halted at $1.35. ADA, HYPE, XLM, RAIN, and AVAX have dropped the most from this cohort of alts.
In contrast, CC has risen by over 5.5% to $0.147, while ZEC is close to $270 after a 5% surge. MORPHO is also well in the green, gaining 6% to trade above $1.60.
The total crypto market cap has shed around $30 billion since yesterday’s peak and is down to $2.440 trillion on CG.

The post These Alts Bleed the Most as Bitcoin Was Rejected at $70K: Market Watch appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The Core Team behind Pi Network made a big announcement recently about the state of the reward distribution phase, in which it said over 500 million validations have been successfully completed.
At the same time, the project’s native token continues to struggle, currently fighting for $0.17, while the overall user base keeps complaining about the lack of actual token migrations.
The rollouts officially began on Pi Day (March 14), and the first batch of rewards has been successfully delivered directly to eligible validators’ Mainnet wallets, marking a major milestone for the network’s decentralized workforce, reads the statement.
It added that over 526 million validation tasks were completed by more than a million human validators, helping verify the identities of more than 18 million users globally. The process also works with AI-assisted features, which makes the achievement into something even more significant, the team said:
“The completed work in KYC validation demonstrates the capability, consistency, and scale of Pi’s global, distributed human workforce in driving meaningful real-world outcomes, especially in areas that require human judgment and input.”
The post also encourages users to become a KYC validator, complete accurate validation work, and join the project’s decentralized workforce to demonstrate the power of distributed human input at a global scale. Moreover, it promised that the team is working to improve the validator performance algorithm for the second distribution round.
The first distribution of KYC validator rewards is now complete!
Rewards were calculated for over 526 million validation tasks completed by more than 1 million KYC validators.
This demonstrates the scale and capability of Pi’s decentralized human workforce worldwide in…
— Pi Network (@PiCoreTeam) April 7, 2026
It seems that whatever the official X team posts in recent weeks, the community continues to lash out at the Core Team. On the one hand, some members are constantly claiming that they have completed the necessary KYC steps but have not received their tokens for months or even years in some cases.
On the other hand, some Pioneers are complaining that the native cryptocurrency has fallen hard since its launch last year, and cannot even be traded on major CEXs, aside from Kraken. PI’s price is down by over 94% since its all-time high of $2.99 in February last year. It currently struggles to remain above $0.17 after the latest rejection at $0.18 earlier this week.

The post Pi Network Completes First Validator Rewards Distribution: What It Means for Pioneers appeared first on CryptoPotato.
XRP’s price declined to around $1.31 on April 7th, down 2.5% over the past 24 hours. This brings its total losses for the past two weeks to 7.3% and close to 30% for the last year.
The disappointing performance comes after what seemed to be a promising rally in the middle of March, when XRP shot up to almost $1.6, but the bulls failed to sustain momentum.

Analysts now offer multiple takes on the altcoin’s current price action, but the consensus is that any positivity remains largely suppressed.
Popular crypto analyst CRYPTOWZRD, who offers daily insights into XRP’s price action, stated yesterday that the altcoin painted a dragonfly doji candlestick pattern, which indicated that further upside was possible if the intraday chart managed to hold above $1.32. Unfortunately, the daily XRP candle yesterday closed indecisively, and the price is now trading below $1.31, showing indecisiveness.
According to the analyst:
A bullish move above its nearest resistance target will eventually start pushing XRP bullish. However, it might take some time considering Bitcoin Dominance’s current price behavior. XRP is currently trading above $1.3. We need a further bollush move from this location towards the $1.55 resistance.”
Ultimately, he explained that XRP’s price is tightly correlated with BTC’s and that if the latter declines below $64K, the former will decline toward the $1.07 support.
Data from Glassnode shows that the percentage of XRP supply in profit has declined to 43.4%, the lowest level since July 2024.

For reference, though, back in November, when the price was $2.15, 41.5% of the supply was in the red. The depressing price action is further supported by the fact that spot exchange-traded funds tracking its price continue to dig new lows, ending March as the first month in the red.
That said, it’s not necessarily true that XRP’s price is the best gauge for Ripple’s overall performance as a company. The firm recently unveiled two new product lines called Digital Asset Accounts and Unified Treasury within the Ripple Treasury platform, which now allow corporations to manage fiat and crypto side by side in a single system.
Moreover, earlier in April, the rating agency KBRA assigned a BBB issuer rating to Ripple Prime, a signal of significant credibility in the world of traditional finance.
The post XRP’s Price is Crashing Again and This Key Level Could Decide Everything appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin network activity “just snapped higher after months of decline,” reported CryptoQuant on Monday. The blockchain analytics provider’s index tracks addresses, transactions, UTXOs, and blockspace demand.
It noted that the daily Bitcoin transaction count is now around 615,000, which is the highest since November 2024. It added that this shift is happening while BTC fees remain relatively low, “so part of this activity spike may be operational, not just organic demand.”
Low-fee environments make it cheaper for exchanges, custodians, and large holders to consolidate UTXOs, rebalance wallets, and reshuffle funds on-chain, stated CryptoQuant.
Bitcoin network activity just snapped higher after months of decline.
The CryptoQuant Network Activity Index is rebounding: tracking addresses, transactions, UTXOs, and blockspace demand.
What’s happening? Let’s dive in
pic.twitter.com/KXgOsTeF03
— CryptoQuant.com (@cryptoquant_com) April 6, 2026
So this uptick in activity may not be directly related to price action, which remains weak. Meanwhile, Glassnode reported on Monday that the recent breakout follows a period of compression and “signals a renewed attempt to challenge overhead resistance.”
However, declining exchange volume suggests participation remains relatively light, “pointing to a recovery that is constructive but not yet fully confirmed,” it added.
Santiment took a look at social sentiment, noting that the crowd believes that this rally is likely to continue, posting the third-highest “greed score” in around three months.
“With optimism high, remember that markets typically move opposite to the crowd’s expectations.”
At the time of writing, the crypto Fear & Greed Index had fallen back to “extreme fear” at 11, where it has been for the past couple of weeks.
Permabull ‘Sykodelic’ remained ever the optimist, commenting on Tuesday that Bitcoin has been putting together a “textbook high-time-frame expanded flat reversal pattern.”
“If we reclaim $74,400 on the weekly, the correction is over, and it very likely won’t look back again, whether or not it sweeps $60k,” they said.
Bitcoin tapped $70,000 in late trading on Monday before retreating to $68,500 during the Tuesday morning Asian trading session. BTC remains stuck in a two-month range-bound channel, and geopolitical headlines, good or bad, seem to have very little impact on it.
Bitcoiner Scott Melker said if history is any guide, this sideways inactivity could easily stretch another hundred days, “or resolve lower and reset the entire process.”
“There’s no telling where the bottom will be, but the consensus still feels like it’s leaning lower – and if price follows, those expectations will just keep shifting down with it.”
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