The ceasefire reduces geopolitical risks, potentially stabilizing markets and easing inflation concerns, but remains vulnerable to diplomatic shifts.
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Rising oil prices amid Middle East tensions could strain global markets, impacting economic growth and corporate profits if unresolved.
The post Oil prices surge 50% amid Middle East tensions, S&P 500 opens higher April 15 appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Enhanced US-Japan communication on yen may stabilize currency, reducing pressure on BOJ for further rate cuts and impacting market dynamics.
The post Japan, US agree to boost communication on yen amid depreciation appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The blockade exacerbates geopolitical instability, potentially impacting global oil markets and diplomatic relations in the region.
The post Trump’s Strait of Hormuz blockade heightens US-Iran tensions appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The CFTC probe may deter speculative trading, potentially lowering oil prices and impacting market expectations amid geopolitical tensions.
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Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Price Passes $75,000 as Iran War Turns It From ‘Digital Gold’ Into Geopolitical Settlement Bet
Bitcoin price jumped past $75,000 on Wednesday as traders recalibrated what the asset represents in the wake of the Iran conflict and an unusually stretched derivatives market. Price action, positioning data, and a real-world test of bitcoin as a settlement rail now point to a market that values the token as more than a volatile wager on tech risk.
Bitcoin price traded around $74,000 to $75,000 on April 15, extending a rebound that began after a February low near $60,000. The move leaves the asset up roughly 23% from that trough and about 3% on the week, even as broader macro and geopolitical headlines remain tense.
Spot markets now face stiff resistance in the $75,000 to $76,000 band, a zone several analysts flag as the ceiling of a two‑month consolidation range.
Short term, traders frame the outlook around a simple line in the sand. If bitcoin price can hold above support near $71,000 and secure a clean break above $76,000, momentum models start to point toward a run into the high‑$70,000s or even $80,000 over the coming weeks, according to Bitcoin Magazine Pro data.
Failure at that band keeps the range intact and invites another pullback toward $70,000 and the low‑$60,000s where the last leg of the rally started.
Beneath the spot chart, futures markets tell a story of persistent skepticism. The 30‑day average funding rate on perpetual swaps has remained negative for 46 straight days, matching the stretch of negative funding seen near the late‑2022 bear market bottom, according to research firm K33.
That means traders who hold long positions in perpetual futures have collected fees from shorts, even as price has drifted higher.
K33 Head of Research Vetle Lunde notes that similar regimes — rising prices, climbing open interest, and negative funding across daily, weekly, and monthly windows — have appeared near consolidation lows that later resolved higher.
The firm argues that this backdrop now raises the odds of a classic short squeeze if price breaks out, as heavily positioned bears scramble to cover. Only two periods in recent history, March to May 2020 and June to August 2021, have seen longer runs of negative 30‑day funding.
The Iran war has become the crucible for a new narrative about what bitcoin is and why investors hold it. Since U.S. and Israeli airstrikes began in late February, bitcoin price has gained about 12% while the S&P 500 has slipped and gold has sold off, a pattern that jars with the old view of the token as a high‑beta extension of tech stocks.
Bitwise Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan argues that markets are now valuing bitcoin as two instruments at once.
The first leg of that thesis remains the familiar “digital gold” pitch, with bitcoin competing for a slice of a store‑of‑value market measured in tens of trillions of dollars.
The second leg, which Hougan says investors have long treated as remote, is an out‑of‑the‑money call option on bitcoin evolving into a working currency and settlement layer. In that framing, conflict does not simply add volatility to a risk asset; it raises the probability that value routes through neutral rails outside direct control of any single state.
Iran’s decision to demand bitcoin tolls from ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz has turned that abstract option into a live, if imperfect, example. The country announced a $1‑per‑barrel fee in bitcoin for crude shipments, a flow that could reach roughly $20 million in daily settlement volume at current prices. That move places BTC and the bitcoin price in the middle of physical trade tied to one of the world’s most strategic chokepoints.
Hougan links this shift back to the weaponization of traditional payment rails, including the removal of Russia from the SWIFT network in 2022, which a French official likened to a financial nuclear strike. In a world where sanctions and correspondent banking are tools of statecraft, a permissionless network that clears value without central control looks different to both allies and non‑aligned states.
All this underpins the current Bitcoin price push toward $75,000, where charts and geopolitics now intersect on the same line. At the time of writing, the bitcoin price is $74,860.

This post Bitcoin Price Passes $75,000 as Iran War Turns It From ‘Digital Gold’ Into Geopolitical Settlement Bet first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Tether moves over $70 million in bitcoin to reserves, on-chain data shows
Tether, issuer of the world’s largest stablecoin USDT, moved 951 bitcoin valued at $70.5 million into a reserve wallet linked to its treasury operations, according to on-chain data from blockchain analytics firms including Arkham Intelligence. The transfer originated from a Bitfinex hot wallet and landed in an address labeled as a Bitcoin reserve account tied to the company.
The transaction aligns with a profit allocation policy introduced in 2023 in which Tether assigns 15% of net realized profits toward Bitcoin purchases each quarter. The approach converts revenue from stablecoin issuance into a growing Bitcoin position held on the company balance sheet.
On-chain records show Tether’s Bitcoin holdings have expanded into one of the largest corporate positions in the sector. Reserve addresses attributed to the company hold about 97,141 BTC placing Tether among the top holders of Bitcoin among private entities. Holdings include transfers accumulated over multiple purchase cycles since 2022.
The purchases have been a steady source of demand for Bitcoin supply. Each allocation removes coins from exchange liquidity and moves them into long-term custody. The structure ties acquisition size to business revenue which links stablecoin usage growth with Bitcoin accumulation.
The strategy also affects perceptions of stablecoin reserve composition. Tether states that most backing for USDT consists of U.S. Treasury securities with Bitcoin representing a smaller portion of total reserves. The addition of Bitcoin introduces price exposure to the reserve portfolio while maintaining dollar-linked liabilities.
Yesterday, Tether announced the launch of tether.wallet, a self-custodial digital wallet designed to bring its global financial infrastructure directly to end users, marking a shift from backend liquidity provider to consumer-facing platform.
The wallet supports key assets including USDT, Bitcoin, and tokenized gold (XAU₮), focusing on what the company describes as essential stores of value for users, particularly in emerging markets.
Built to simplify crypto usage, tether.wallet introduces human-readable addresses and allows transaction fees to be paid in the transferred asset, eliminating the need for separate gas tokens. The app is fully self-custodial, with private keys stored locally on user devices.
CEO Paolo Ardoino framed the launch as a major step toward financial inclusion, targeting billions underserved by traditional banking systems. The product builds on Tether’s existing network, which the company claims reaches over 570 million users globally.
The wallet is powered by Tether’s open-source Wallet Development Kit and supports multiple blockchains including Ethereum, Polygon, and Bitcoin. The move signals Tether’s broader strategy to expand into direct user applications and enable future machine-to-machine and AI-driven payments.
This post Tether moves over $70 million in bitcoin to reserves, on-chain data shows first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Developers Propose Bitcoin Quantum Migration Plan That Would Freeze Legacy Coins
A new proposal circulating among Bitcoin developers is forcing the network to confront a long-standing theoretical risk: the impact of quantum computing on its cryptographic foundations.
Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 361 (BIP-361), introduced by a group of researchers including Jameson Lopp, outlines a structured plan to migrate the network away from legacy signature schemes and toward quantum-resistant alternatives. If adopted, the proposal would impose a phased deadline that could ultimately render unmigrated coins permanently unspendable.
The proposal aims to reduce Bitcoin’s exposure to a future scenario in which sufficiently advanced quantum computers can break the elliptic curve cryptography that underpins its current system.
“Even if Bitcoin is not a primary initial target of a cryptographically relevant quantum computer, widespread knowledge that such a computer exists and is capable of breaking Bitcoin’s cryptography will damage faith in the network,” the BIP authors wrote.
Today, Bitcoin relies on ECDSA and Schnorr signatures to secure transactions. Both remain robust against classical computing but are theoretically vulnerable to Shor’s algorithm, which could allow an attacker to derive private keys from exposed public keys. This risk is not evenly distributed across the network. Older address types, particularly pay-to-public-key outputs and reused addresses, reveal public keys onchain and are considered the most vulnerable.
Estimates cited by the proposal suggest that more than one-third of all bitcoin in circulation falls into this category, including early holdings attributed to Satoshi Nakamoto. In a quantum attack scenario, those funds could be compromised, potentially destabilizing the network and redistributing wealth to technologically advanced actors.
BIP-361 introduces a three-phase transition designed to preempt that outcome. Phase A, expected roughly three years after activation, would prohibit new transactions from sending funds to legacy address types. While users could still move funds out of vulnerable addresses, the restriction would push wallets and services toward adopting quantum-resistant formats.
Phase B, beginning about two years later, would escalate the transition by invalidating all legacy signatures at the consensus level. At that point, any bitcoin that has not been migrated would become effectively frozen, unable to be spent under network rules.
A proposed Phase C, still under research, would offer a limited recovery mechanism. This would rely on zero-knowledge proofs tied to seed phrases, allowing users to demonstrate ownership of frozen funds without exposing private keys. The feasibility and timeline of this phase remain uncertain.
The proposal frames the forced migration as a defensive measure rather than a punitive one. By freezing coins that fail to upgrade, the authors argue the network can eliminate a major attack surface before quantum capabilities emerge.
They also note that permanently inaccessible coins would reduce effective supply, a dynamic long discussed within Bitcoin’s economic model.
No activation timeline has been set, and BIP-361 remains in draft form.
This post Bitcoin Developers Propose Bitcoin Quantum Migration Plan That Would Freeze Legacy Coins first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Virginia Enacts Law Requiring State to Hold ‘Unclaimed’ Crypto in Original Form for One Year
Virginia has enacted a new framework for unclaimed digital assets, requiring the state to hold dormant cryptocurrency in its original form for a set period before any sale.
Governor Abigail Spanberger signed House Bill 798 into law on April 14, marking a shift in how the state handles abandoned crypto accounts. The measure will take effect on July 1, 2026, and updates Virginia’s unclaimed property statute to include digital assets.
Under the law, cryptocurrency held in customer accounts that show no activity for five years will be presumed abandoned and transferred to state custody. Unlike prior practices in many jurisdictions, the assets must be transferred “in-kind,” meaning the state takes possession of the actual tokens rather than converting them into cash upon receipt.
The change addresses a long-standing concern among crypto users and industry firms. In many cases, states have liquidated digital assets soon after taking custody, leaving owners who later reclaim funds with only the cash value at the time of sale. That approach exposed claimants to the risk of missing gains during market increases.
Virginia’s new statute aims to reduce that risk. It requires the state to hold digital assets for at least one year before any liquidation. During that period, owners who come forward can reclaim their property in its original form if it remains unsold, or receive either the sale proceeds or the market value at the time of the claim, whichever is greater.
The law defines digital assets as representations of value used as a medium of exchange, unit of account, or store of value, while excluding certain items such as in-game currencies and non-transferable rewards.
It also outlines what constitutes owner activity, including transactions, account access, or other actions that demonstrate awareness of the account, all of which reset the dormancy period.
Custody rules depend on whether a holder, such as a crypto exchange, controls the private keys tied to the assets. If full control exists, the holder must transfer the assets directly to the state. If control remains partial, the holder must retain the assets until transfer becomes possible. The law also allows the state to direct liquidation in cases where it cannot safely custody certain assets.
Industry reaction has been positive. Paul Grewal, chief legal officer at Coinbase, said the measure ensures that digital assets are handled in a way that preserves their native form during the unclaimed property process.
Virginia joins a growing number of states that have moved to update unclaimed property laws to account for digital assets. States such as California have taken similar steps, though approaches vary on whether assets must be liquidated or held in-kind.
For crypto firms operating in Virginia, the law introduces new compliance requirements tied to reporting, custody, and transfer procedures.
For users, it offers stronger protections against forced liquidation and a clearer path to reclaiming assets that fall into dormancy.
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 licensed material. In Bitcoin, as in media: Don’t trust. Verify.
This post Virginia Enacts Law Requiring State to Hold ‘Unclaimed’ Crypto in Original Form for One Year first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Pakistan Ends Bitcoin and Crypto Banking Ban, Opens Financial System to Licensed Firms
Pakistan’s central bank has formally reversed its long-standing ban on banking services for cryptocurrency firms, allowing regulated banks to open accounts for licensed virtual asset service providers (VASPs) under a new legal framework.
The decision, announced in a circular by the State Bank of Pakistan and reported by Reuters, follows the enactment of the Virtual Assets Act 2026 and marks the country’s first structured move to integrate digital asset businesses into its formal financial system.
“This is a foundational step in bringing virtual assets into the formal financial system of Pakistan,” said Bilal bin Saqib, chairman of the Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority, in an official statement.
Under the new rules, banks can provide basic financial services to crypto firms, but must first verify that the entities are licensed by PVARA. Strict safeguards have been put in place to mitigate financial risks and ensure compliance with anti-money laundering (AML) and counter-terrorism financing standards.
Banks are required to conduct full due diligence, maintain updated risk profiles for VASP clients, and report suspicious transactions to regulators.
They must also ensure that client funds are held in segregated, non-interest-bearing accounts denominated in Pakistani rupees. The commingling of customer and company funds is strictly prohibited.
However, the central bank has drawn a firm line on direct exposure to digital assets. Banks are explicitly barred from investing in, trading, or holding cryptocurrencies using either their own capital or customer deposits. Their role is limited to facilitating payment rails and custody of fiat funds tied to licensed crypto activity.
The move represents a sharp reversal from Pakistan’s 2018 policy, which effectively cut off crypto firms from the banking system and stifled industry growth. With the new framework in place, authorities are now positioning the country as a regulated hub for digital asset innovation.
Pakistan has already taken steps to attract global crypto players. Officials signed a memorandum of understanding with Binance in December to explore tokenization initiatives potentially involving up to $2 billion in assets, and have granted initial regulatory clearances to both Binance and HTX.
In parallel, the country has explored blockchain-based financial infrastructure through discussions with an affiliate of World Liberty Financial, including the potential use of stablecoins for cross-border payments.
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 licensed material. In Bitcoin, as in media: Don’t trust. Verify.
This post Pakistan Ends Bitcoin and Crypto Banking Ban, Opens Financial System to Licensed Firms first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
World Liberty Financial is back on its governance forum with a proposal that covers 62.28 billion locked WLFI tokens. This comes at a time when the real challenge is rebuilding trust, not just managing timelines. The plan would move 17.04 billion early supporter tokens into a two-year cliff, then a two-year linear vesting schedule, with all tokens kept intact and no burn.
For founders, team members, advisors, and partners, the terms get tougher. Their 45.24 billion WLFI would move to a two-year cliff and a three-year linear vest if others approve. On top of that, up to 4.52 billion WLFI (about 10% of that insider allocation) would be burned right away.
At first glance, the package is meant to show stronger alignment. Insiders would take on stricter terms than early supporters, the burn would cut down the overall supply, and the longer cliff would push back any near-term unlock pressure.
These changes let WLFI present a more disciplined front after weeks of heavy scrutiny. But the bigger picture still shapes how this proposal will be read.
Last year, Justin Sun’s address, holding 595 million WLFI, along with more than 270 additional blocklisted wallets, was blocklisted across the WLFI ecosystem.
The proposal follows WLFI's creation of a “Super Nodes” tier, which requires roughly $5 million in locked WLFI for prioritized partnership access and stronger governance standing.
Most recently, WLFI-backed borrowing on a Dolomite-linked market also used WLFI as collateral inside a structure that could leave outside suppliers exposed to bad debt under stress. This led to massive community outrage and Sun issuing demands to the WLFI team.
All of this puts the new proposal in a different light. The real question now goes beyond whether WLFI can just put together a responsible-sounding vesting plan.
The tougher question is whether WLFI’s governance, access, and collateral rules actually work in a way that holders can trust. Lately, it looks like influence grows with wallet size, control stays in a few hands, and the real power sits close to the project’s core team.
A new unlock plan can help clear up some uncertainty, but the bigger credibility gap remains about how the whole system is set up.
That difference is important because WLFI has gone from a tokenomics debate to a much bigger fight over power. Now the conflict touches everything from governance design to market structure, investor rights, and who gets access.
A project that wants to look legitimate to institutions, build stablecoin infrastructure, and work with trust banks, while also being close to political power, cannot afford to be opaque or act on a whim. Every new governance move, including this one, is judged in that light.
So this proposal deserves a closer look as a way to contain fallout in a system that’s already under strain, not just as a standalone fix.
WLFI’s own rationale focuses on participation. The proposal states that six prior governance votes drew between 2.7 billion and 11.1 billion WLFI, while 62.28 billion locked WLFI falls within the scope of the current package.
WLFI says that at its peak, only about 23% of the locked supply actually voted. That means there’s still a huge chunk of voting power on the sidelines.
WLFI is pitching the new vesting plan as the solution to that uncertainty.
But the mechanics only fix part of the issue. Anyone who opts in gets a clear vesting schedule.
If you don’t opt in, your tokens stay locked under the old terms, but you can still use them to vote. So WLFI gets a clearer unlock plan for those who join, but there’s still a big pool of voting power outside the new system.
We get more clarity on supply for some holders, but governance stays murky for others. The proposal solves one problem, but the broader political structure remains only partly clear.
The practical consequence is significant. A system can have a more predictable future circulating profile and still carry a concentrated governance core.
This is especially important for WLFI, since the recent fights have been about who gets access, who takes the hit when things go wrong, and who actually calls the shots. The Super Nodes setup made it clear that bigger capital meant more access and more say.
The Dolomite-linked lending setup brought up another problem. Insiders could stay close to the action, while outside suppliers took on more risk. The split with Justin Sun made all of this public, with claims that investors were basically stuck as captive capital in a system run by insiders.
That’s why the new proposal feels smaller than the marketing makes it out to be. Burning a large chunk of tokens and putting insiders on a five-year vesting path sends a stronger message than a fast unlock.
Those are real changes. But the bigger governance setup still looks concentrated and selective when it matters most.
In this environment, a new vesting plan acts like a pressure valve. It takes some heat off the market, but the big questions about power and process are still hanging in the air.
The best argument for the proposal is pretty clear. WLFI seems to realize just how much trust has been lost and is trying to show it is willing to pay a real price.
Burning up to 4.52 billion insider-linked WLFI is a big move. Making insiders wait even longer than early supporters also shows a stronger public commitment than letting founders and partners unlock first.
Those steps are worth recognizing. The worry is that they are part of a bigger pattern that keeps power concentrated instead of making real, lasting changes.
It starts with how access is divided up. WLFI’s Super Nodes tier made it clear that the more WLFI you lock up, the more access and influence you get.
In most projects, a premium access layer would already raise eyebrows. For WLFI, it is an even bigger deal because the project mixes token-governance talk, big-finance ambitions, and ties to a Trump-connected venture.
It is harder to brush off these access hierarchies as mere ecosystem incentives when the project is so close to political power and to potential regulatory fallout.
The lending controversy only made that impression stronger. The WLFI Markets setup means that if things go wrong, outside suppliers could be left holding the bag if collateral quality drops.
This goes beyond just technical settings. It raises the idea that insiders and their allies capture most of the upside, while regular users bear more of the risk.
Sun’s criticism of a $75 million WLFI-linked DeFi loan made that perception even sharper, especially once the fight over investor treatment and governance power went public.
The blocklist issue drove the control question even closer to the surface. Public reporting establishes that WLFI restricted Sun’s address and that hundreds of additional wallets were also blacklisted across the ecosystem.
The most serious claim is that WLFI kept hidden intervention powers, but that still needs more proof before it becomes fact. Still, what we already know changes how people see the project.
Wallet restriction authority changes the practical meaning of holder rights. It changes the value of governance participation.
It also changes how much people can trust any vesting promise, because if the system has broad intervention powers, trust in the team matters just as much as what is written in the contract.
That is the lens through which this proposal should be assessed. The package offers a more orderly unlock map, a visible burn, and a fresh alignment narrative at a moment when WLFI needs one badly.
But the proposal still leaves some big questions unanswered. The market does not have a full picture of how wallet restrictions work, who decides who gets in, or who sets the rules that put WLFI at the center of the borrowing controversy.
Until those details are spelled out clearly, this proposal looks more like a way to contain a crisis than a real structural reset.
Now, the proposal’s credibility depends on what actually gets done, what is disclosed, and what is left after the alignment talk fades. The first test is simple: the insider burn needs to happen on-chain, in a way that everyone can see and verify.
The second test is about participation and control. How the non-opt-in voting power acts will show if the governance problem is really getting smaller or just changing shape. The third test is about disclosure, since WLFI needs to spell out exactly how blacklist powers, acceptance rules, and admin discretion work for unlocks.
The fourth test is about accountability. WLFI still needs to explain who signed off on the risk settings that let WLFI collateral play such a big role in the Dolomite-linked setup.
Those are the areas where reform and stagecraft separate. A genuine reset would produce verifiable burns, clearer governance, narrower discretionary control, and a transparent record of how previous risk decisions were made.
A containment strategy would focus on sending signals, keeping admin levers vague, and hoping that time and a smaller unlock risk calm things down. Right now, WLFI’s new proposal looks more like that second approach.
This package might take some pressure off insider supply and short-term unlock worries. But the bigger risk is still there, sitting in the concentrated setup of governance, access, and control that WLFI has not yet addressed.
The post Trump family’s WLFI starts damage control but its new plan leaves holders who refuse the new terms locked indefinitely appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Goldman Sachs, the $3.5 trillion banking giant, has filed to launch an actively managed exchange-traded fund (ETF) that uses covered calls to generate income from Bitcoin.
The April 14 filing for the Goldman Sachs Bitcoin Premium Income ETF marks a strategic pivot for the investment bank, which previously had a hostile relationship with the flagship digital asset.
Moreover, what makes the new product more distinct is that Goldman is not launching a conventional spot Bitcoin product to compete in the increasingly saturated $100 billion BTC ETF market.
Instead, the banking giant is looking to engineer a moderated, yield-bearing version of Bitcoin tailored specifically for income-oriented portfolios. In this case, the firm intentionally forgoes a portion of the upside in top crypto in exchange for yield.
The proposed fund operates on a fundamentally different chassis than the spot ETFs that have dominated the market’s attention over the past two years.
According to the preliminary prospectus, the fund will not buy or hold Bitcoin directly. Instead, it will gain exposure by investing in spot Bitcoin ETPs, options on those ETPs, and options on indices that track them.
To generate its yield, the fund will systematically sell call options against that underlying exposure.
By operating as an actively managed, non-diversified fund, Goldman is positioning the ETF as a specialized wealth-management tool rather than a passive commodity tracker.
The filing details a complex operational structure to navigate regulatory constraints, including the use of a wholly owned Cayman Islands subsidiary to manage the spot-Bitcoin ETPs and related instruments, thereby allowing the primary fund to remain within US-registered fund tax and derivatives guidelines.
Goldman has tapped its own asset management arm, GSAM, to advise the fund, with Raj Garigipati, Oliver Bunn, and Sergio Calvo de Leon named as day-to-day portfolio managers. BNY Mellon will serve as custodian and transfer agent.
Utilizing the Rule 485(a)(2) filing path, the prospectus is marked for effectiveness 75 days after filing, pointing to a potential launch around June 28, 2026, assuming no regulatory delays.
The structural choices outlined in the filing make it clear that Goldman is not arriving late with a copycat product.
Rather, the banking giant is attempting to enter the crypto ETF arena through deliberate differentiation, leveraging its history in structured finance rather than competing in a race for pure beta.
While the prospect of yielding income from a historically volatile asset is a strong sales narrative, the product’s design ensures it is not a free lunch.
The fund monetizes Bitcoin’s volatility, but the mechanics of the covered-call overwrite strategy strictly limit potential gains while leaving investors exposed to underlying price drops.
Under normal market conditions, Goldman expects the fund’s overwrite level to range between 40% and 100% of its Bitcoin exposure.
When the fund sells a call option, it collects a premium from the buyer, who gains the right to purchase the asset at a specific strike price.
If Bitcoin rallies sharply beyond that strike price, the fund’s upside is capped; it is obligated to sell at the lower price, meaning the fund will inevitably lag behind direct spot investments during aggressive bull runs.
Conversely, if the cryptocurrency’s price collapses, the collected premium offers only a fractional buffer against the losses.
The filing is explicit about these trade-offs and also outlines the complex tax implications for prospective buyers.
The fund intends to declare and pay distributions from net investment income and option premiums on a monthly basis.
However, Goldman warns that the options strategy is expected to generate higher short-term capital gains and ordinary income than a simpler passive fund.
Furthermore, a significant portion of the monthly distributions may be classified as a return of capital for tax purposes, complicating the after-tax yield for investors holding the asset in taxable accounts.
Goldman’s move reflects a broader maturation taking place across the $12.5 trillion asset management industry.
The first phase of the Bitcoin ETF era was defined by access, which established the legal and structural plumbing to enable traditional brokerage accounts to purchase spot Bitcoin.
The market has now definitively entered its second phase, which is defined by packaging.
Institutions are aggressively redesigning the same underlying Bitcoin exposure to satisfy different buyer preferences.
Notably, BlackRock, the largest asset management firm in the world, is currently refining the structure of its 1933 Act-covered call product, the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA), which will seek to capitalize on the massive liquidity of its $60 billion spot fund, IBIT.
Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley chose to compete in the pure access lane, recently launching its MSBT spot fund with a highly competitive 0.14% fee that undercut the wider market and absorbed $83.6 million in its first week.
Moreover, Goldman is stepping into a yield-generating sub-sector that already features established players such as Grayscale.
Funds such as the NEOS Bitcoin High Income ETF (BTCI) and the Roundhill Bitcoin Covered Call Strategy ETF (YBTC) boast annualized distribution rates well above 40%.
Against this backdrop, Goldman is betting that its institutional weight, combined with its recent $2 billion acquisition of Innovator Capital Management, a firm known for options-based and defined-outcome products, will allow it to scale a strategy that smaller issuers have already proven viable.
The commercial logic driving the Goldman Sachs Bitcoin Premium Income ETF is rooted entirely in traditional client psychology.
The bank recognizes a substantial demographic of financial advisers and traditional investors who desire a measured allocation to digital assets but cannot tolerate the behavioral and portfolio shock of raw spot volatility.
By wrapping Bitcoin in a covered-call strategy, Goldman is converting an unpredictable digital commodity into a familiar, income-bearing financial product.
Bloomberg Senior ETF Analyst Eric Balchunas captured the target audience for this risk-adjusted profile, describing the fund's low-risk, low-reward mechanics as “Boomer candy.”
This is because it slots neatly into the conventional portfolio conversations that advisers have been having with conservative, yield-seeking clients for decades.
Meanwhile, this strategy starkly contrasts with Goldman’s historical stance on digital assets. In 2020, the bank’s wealth management division famously declared that cryptocurrencies were not a legitimate asset class, citing their highly speculative nature and reliance on the greater-fool theory.
As of the end of 2025, the bank held more than $1 billion in BTC on behalf of its clients, according to SEC filings.
Beyond that, it is willing to attach its name to a Bitcoin-linked fund through a highly engineered structure that dampens the raw asset’s profile and aligns it with traditional finance models.
As Nate Geraci, President of Nova Dius Wealth, observed following the filing:
“Think about the names now involved [with] bitcoin ETFs… It’s a who’s who of asset management.”
The Goldman Sachs filing ultimately suggests that the next frontier in the digital asset market will not be fought over who can provide the cheapest access to Bitcoin.
It will be a battle over who can most effectively redesign that access, packaging the asset’s inherent volatility into the broadest, most marketable forms for the traditional financial system.
The post New Goldman Sachs Bitcoin fund is built for advisers seeking yield, not traders chasing the next rally appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Anthropic's Mythos threat to the crypto industry can trigger hundreds of millions, if not billions, of dollars in sudden, irreversible losses.
That is the stark reality facing digital asset markets following Anthropic’s quiet unveiling of Claude Mythos Preview, a vulnerability-seeking AI model the San Francisco startup admits is simply too dangerous to release to the public.
Deddy David, chief executive of blockchain security firm Cyvers, told CryptoSlate about the catastrophic scale of the problem, noting that the financial exposure of AI-driven exploits in crypto ranges from hundreds of millions to billions of dollars.
He said:
“If AI can identify vulnerabilities at scale across core internet infrastructure, crypto will be one of the first markets to feel the impact.”
If those estimates are correct, the scope of potential damage is staggering.
Moreover, the scale of this new threat isn’t just about bad actors writing slightly better phishing emails or generating malicious code snippets.
Instead, it is about an autonomous system capable of finding deep, emergent logic flaws across smart contracts, wallets, and cross-chain bridges before human auditors even know where to look.
For years, crypto founders and security researchers have obsessed over “Q-Day,” the theoretical future date when a quantum computer becomes powerful enough to shatter blockchain cryptography.
But Mythos recent launch is forcing a pivot. Security experts have noted that the most immediate threat to digital assets is no longer a future attack on cryptography. It is an AI system that can already uncover exploitable flaws in the very software layer the industry depends on.
Anthropic’s Mythos model fundamentally rewrites the timeline of infrastructure risk.
According to the company, the model has already successfully identified vulnerabilities across every major web browser and operating system. In one alarming instance, it unearthed a 27-year-old bug buried in a critical piece of security infrastructure, alongside multiple deep-seated flaws within the Linux kernel.
This was also corroborated by the UK government's AI Security Institute (AISI), which noted:
“Our evaluation of Mythos Preview shows that it – and potentially future models – could be directed to autonomously compromise small, weakly defended, and vulnerable systems if given network access.”
The primary danger from these revelations is not simply that artificial intelligence makes cyber risk possible. Hackers have always existed. It is that AI radically compresses the time between bug discovery and exploit development.
This means that vulnerability research that historically required months of painstaking human labor can now be executed at machine speed.
For the traditional financial system, this represents a severe escalation in the cyber arms race.
For the crypto industry, where transactions are instantaneous, irreversible, and governed entirely by autonomous code, it represents an immediate, systemic vulnerability.

The architecture of the crypto ecosystem makes it uniquely vulnerable to machine-speed auditing.
While traditional banks rely on siloed, proprietary networks with centralized fail-safes and circuit breakers, the digital asset sector runs almost entirely on public code.
The industry is built on open-source dependencies, browser-based wallets, remote procedure call infrastructure, and smart contracts that are completely transparent to anyone or any AI model wishing to inspect them.
This transparency creates a massive, publicly available attack surface.
Compounding the risk is a severe structural mismatch between the value secured on-chain and the security budgets of the organizations that maintain it. Lean protocol teams frequently manage aging codebases that hold hundreds of millions of dollars in total value locked.
Alex Svanevik, the chief executive of the agentic trading platform Nansen, told CryptoSlate:
“Mythos is a different kind of threat: it’s already finding vulnerabilities in the infrastructure crypto runs on that humans and every automated tool missed for decades.”
When AI-accelerated vulnerability discovery meets instant value transfer, the results can be devastating. Thus, the industry can no longer rely on traditional audits or post-incident detection.
David explained:
“When you combine AI-accelerated vulnerability discovery with instant, irreversible transactions, you dramatically shorten the path from bug to breach to loss. This is not just an increase in attack surface, it’s an acceleration of time-to-exploit in a system where seconds matter.”
So what exactly is an AI model looking for?
According to security experts, the most exposed layers are highly complex smart contracts and cross-chain bridges.
These protocols are susceptible to emergent vulnerabilities, such as subtle state inconsistencies between upgradeable contracts or edge-case interactions across different modules.
These are not simple syntax errors that a standard audit catches. Instead, they are complex interaction paths that large-scale AI simulations can easily surface.
While artificial intelligence poses an immediate threat to the software layer, quantum computing remains the ultimate, looming threat to the cryptographic foundation of digital assets.
Google Research has warned that future quantum computers may be able to break the elliptic-curve cryptography used in crypto systems with fewer resources than previously estimated. A sufficiently powerful cryptanalytically relevant quantum computer (CRQC) could derive private keys from public keys in minutes.
With Bitcoin hovering around $70,000, the digital asset ecosystem presents a multi-trillion-dollar bounty. Current estimates suggest that up to 37% of circulating Bitcoin could be vulnerable to such a quantum hijacking before the network confirms the transaction.
However, Google’s public messaging remains focused on preparation and migration. The tech giant recently announced a 2029 target for a full industry transition to post-quantum cryptography.
That contrast highlights the core of the industry's current dilemma. Anthropic’s model represents software exploits happening right now. Quantum computing could pose a cryptographic threat later, assuming the industry fails to migrate its security standards in time.
Chris Smith, chief executive of the cryptography firm Quantus, emphasized this exact distinction in his statement to CryptoSlate. He noted that while AI models are highly effective at finding and locating software bugs, quantum computing threatens the very foundations of the mathematics on which the crypto industry is built.
If the underlying algorithms are broken, even flawless software becomes entirely insecure.

Recognizing the sheer immediacy of the AI threat, the defensive race has officially begun.
Through a new initiative called Project Glasswing, Anthropic has partnered with major tech firms and financial institutions, including Amazon Web Services, Google, Microsoft, and JPMorgan Chase, to use Mythos Preview to proactively find and fix flaws in critical systems.
The company is committing up to $100 million in usage credits to help secure infrastructure before malicious actors can develop similar offensive capabilities.
The threat has reached the highest levels of government. Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent convened a surprise meeting with major US bank chief executives to discuss the specific systemic risks posed by models like Mythos.
Meanwhile, the crypto industry is scrambling to join this defensive perimeter.
Major exchanges, including Coinbase and Binance, are reportedly in close communication with Anthropic to secure early access to the Mythos model.
Decentralized platforms are also echoing the urgency, with Uniswap founder Hayden Adams publicly requesting access to test the model against the platform. Uniswap is the largest decentralized exchange protocol, with more than $3 billion in assets locked.
Nansen's Svanevik argues that the crypto industry could utilize the tools in ways that would make it “the best security auditing tool ever built.”
According to him:
“Smart contracts have historically been audited by humans — slow, expensive, incomplete. An AI that can find a 27-year-old bug in OpenBSD can also find the reentrancy vulnerability that hasn't been caught yet in a major DeFi protocol. The question is whether defenders get access before attackers do — and whether the crypto industry moves fast enough to use it proactively rather than reactively.”
Simultaneously, OpenAI has expanded access to a more cyber-permissive model, GPT-5.4-Cyber, through its Trusted Access for Cyber program, allowing vetted security vendors to stress-test their own systems.
Despite the severe implications of machine-speed vulnerability discovery, crypto markets have shown remarkably little reaction to the advent of frontier cyber-offensive AI.
Financial markets have spent years developing a vocabulary for quantum risk. Investors broadly understand that a quantum computer could break current encryption standards and the catastrophic impact that would have on digital ownership.
However, the market appears far less prepared to price a systemic threat that operates not through a dramatic break in mathematics, but through quiet audit failures, compromised wallet dependencies, and complex exploit chains.
As artificial intelligence fundamentally reshapes the speed and scale of cyber warfare, the digital asset market may significantly underestimate the fragility of the very infrastructure on which it is built.
The post Anthropic’s secretive Mythos AI can hunt crypto smart contract flaws at machine speed, and billions in DeFi could vanish fast appeared first on CryptoSlate.
A recent White House economic study has changed the focus of Washington’s debate over the CLARITY Act. The report addresses the main issue slowing the bill in the Senate: whether limiting stablecoin yields actually protects the banking system.
The study’s findings are central to ongoing talks. After reviewing recent data on stablecoin activity, consumer habits, and bank liquidity, it found little proof that stablecoin yield products currently threaten bank lending or deposits.
Instead, the report said that banning yields would mostly limit consumers’ ability to earn returns on digital cash, while offering little or no real benefit to the stability of traditional funding.
This puts more pressure on those who support strict limits, especially since negotiations are already at a difficult stage.
The timing is important because CLARITY has entered a phase where broad support for federal market structure is no longer the main constraint. The unresolved question sits one level lower.
Washington’s key institutions increasingly agree that digital asset laws need a strong framework for custody, disclosures, registration, oversight, and clear roles for regulators.
The tougher debate is over the details of the framework, which will decide who benefits financially, who pays for compliance, and who controls the main channels for dollar liquidity.
The stablecoin yield issue is now the main point where these competing interests are being worked out.
This shift has been clear for months, but recent official comments have made it even more focused. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called market structure legislation the next big step after stablecoin law and pointed to the House’s CLARITY Act as a framework for clear rules.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins said the agency’s rules can rely on congressional work, specifically mentioning CLARITY. The SEC’s March guidance also described its approach as supporting Congress’s efforts to create a full market structure.
This shows real alignment between the executive branch and the main securities regulator. It gives political backing, helps staff with implementation, and brings laws and oversight closer together.
Even with this alignment, the Senate faces the same practical question. A bill can have positive studies and support from Treasury and the SEC, but it can still fail when political compromises are needed.
That’s why the CLARITY debate is now about action, not just support. The real test is whether Senate Banking can turn stronger evidence and wider support into a markup process that withstands pressure from banks, doubts from some Democrats, and the usual rush as the legislative calendar tightens.
At this point, analysts should look for a few key steps: a formal announcement of a committee markup to put the bill on the Senate Banking Committee’s agenda. Before markup, the committee might hold hearings, share revised drafts for review, and meet privately to finalize the language and discuss possible changes.
If markup happens before the summer break, passing the bill in committee could allow for a full Senate vote later, though timing will depend on the broader legislative schedule and other priorities.
If the committee waits until after summer or into the fall, chances of passing the bill drop as election pressures and legislative delays grow. In short, the key signs to watch are when markup is scheduled and any signs of movement from committee leaders.
The White House has strengthened the bill’s position, but the Senate still needs to prove it can move it forward.
One of the clearest developments in recent weeks is the extent to which CLARITY now looks less like an isolated industry priority and more like the draft around which Washington is building a federal operating model for digital assets. That distinction changes the politics.
When a bill is treated as an external ask from one sector, every controversial clause becomes easier to delay, dilute, or trade away. When the same bill serves as the legislature’s working chassis for interagency coordination, delay becomes more expensive because uncertainty imposes costs on regulators as well as on markets.
The House section-by-section summary shows why CLARITY has become the focal point. It attempts to answer the questions that have made US crypto regulation unstable for years, which assets fit within securities law, which fall into a digital commodity bucket, what disclosures issuers should provide, how intermediaries register, and how the SEC and CFTC divide responsibilities in a market where instruments and functions often overlap.
Senate Banking’s own fact sheet presents the bill as a package of disclosure standards, anti-fraud protections, insider-trading restrictions, and coordinated oversight, while separate committee documents outline the approach to DeFi and software developers, as well as the tools directed at illicit finance.
This policy setup has gained more open support from officials who were more cautious in the past. Bessent’s backing matters because Treasury’s opinion on market structure influences more than just crypto experts.
It affects sanctions, payment systems, bank competition, capital formation, and the government’s overall approach to financial innovation. Atkins’ comments are just as important, but for different reasons.
When the SEC chair says the agency can base its rules on CLARITY’s framework, it signals to the market that Congress’s text could quickly become policy. This reduces a big worry: whether agencies might interpret unclear parts in ways that restart debates after the law passes.
Senate Banking remains the key decision-maker, since most bills stall in committee before reaching the Senate floor. The challenge is built into the process.
Lawmakers are now deciding how much financial opportunity those rules leave for issuers, exchanges, banks, brokers, and infrastructure providers.
They’re also deciding how much freedom regulators will have in the future. These are really questions about who gets what, even though they look like technical drafting issues, and that’s where agreement often breaks down.
The White House study is especially important because it tackles the issue that has become the bill’s main obstacle. Stablecoin yield is now central to the debate.
It is the place where several larger fights converge at once: bank franchise protection, the competitive role of tokenized dollars, consumer access to return-bearing digital cash, and the question of how far Congress is willing to permit crypto-native distribution models to compete with the existing deposit system.
Banks say the yield issue threatens deposit stability. They argue that stablecoin products offering returns could take away their funding and weaken the financial system.
Crypto companies argue that letting stablecoins offer yields will boost innovation in payments and financial services without hurting banks, especially since digital asset volumes are still small compared to traditional banking.
Consumer advocates want lawmakers to balance safety concerns with keeping new options open for people to save or use digital cash. All sides are lobbying hard on this last issue, knowing it will shape the future rules and who benefits.
The main argument against yield is about financial stability and bank lending. If people can earn returns on tokenized dollars, the thinking goes, money could move from banks to digital channels, making funding less stable and limiting credit.
The Council of Economic Advisers paper cuts through that logic by arguing that a yield prohibition offers only limited support for bank lending while reducing the returns available to consumers. That does not decide the issue politically, since politics often survives weaker evidence, but it changes the terms on which a prohibition can be defended.
Lawmakers who want restrictions now need a better reason than just saying banks need protection to keep credit moving.
This makes things harder for those who want strict rules, but it gives CLARITY supporters solid evidence just when they need it.
Crypto advocates have long said that banning all yields would hurt competition, protect established players, and make digital dollars less useful, even as the market is getting more regulated. Until now, opponents could respond with arguments that sounded safe for institutions.
Now, the White House has offered a different official view that supports a more open approach.
The stakes extend beyond stablecoins themselves. If the Senate resolves yield in a way that preserves room for compliant returns, the bill’s broader architecture starts to look like a framework designed to enable onshore digital asset markets rather than merely contain them.
If the Senate chooses a strict ban or tight limits on yield, the market will see it as Congress recognizing crypto but still limiting its growth compared to traditional finance. In this way, the yield issue reflects the bill’s overall approach.
That’s why this new alignment among institutions needs careful management. Support from Treasury, the SEC’s willingness to work with Congress, and the White House’s stance on yield all make CLARITY stronger.
But none of these groups can force Senate Banking to make the final decisions. The committee still has to decide if support from the executive branch is enough to take on the political risks, especially since banks and some lawmakers remain cautious.
The fact that there’s no new public markup announcement is telling. There’s momentum, but no clear sign yet that Senate Banking is ready to act.
Last week, Bloomberg’s Sandra Ro said CLARITY might pass by July “if lucky,” showing the gap between positive signs and real certainty. Galaxy Research made a similar point, saying recent SEC guidance helps for now, but clear laws are still needed for digital assets to become a lasting part of US markets.
So, the next step is a test of action, not just talk. Can support from executive agencies actually lead to new laws?
That’s the main question for CLARITY now. The White House has made the evidence stronger.
Treasury and the SEC have narrowed the implementation gap. The Senate still has to publish the answer that counts, in text, in markup, and in the compromises it is willing to own.
Until then, the odds have improved for the bill, but the final result still depends on whether Senate support turns into real action.
The post White House exposes stablecoin yield ban wouldn’t help banks, raising the stakes for CLARITY in the Senate appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin has spent the first half of April trading in the low $70,000s, with recent moves through the $71,000 to $75,000 zone keeping the asset close enough to its highs for retail attention to return quickly.
But there’s a more important change happening beneath the surface.
A lot of household cash is moving through the U.S. financial system as today's April 15 tax deadline arrives. This year, tax season is also more complicated for people who own crypto.
This overlap creates a more interesting situation than the usual talk about ETFs or the broader economy.
Recent IRS statistics show just how big the refund channel is now.
By April 3, the IRS had sent out 69.8 million refunds, up 3.1% from last year. The total amount refunded was $241.7 billion, a 14.5% increase, and the average refund rose 11.1% to $3,462.
Direct deposit refunds stood out even more.
The IRS reported 70.3 million direct deposit refunds, totaling $242.9 billion. The average direct deposit refund was $3,454.
That’s real money landing in household accounts at a time when Bitcoin is liquid, easy to access, and familiar enough that even a small investment feels possible for people who follow the market.
This link gets even stronger as the tax deadline approaches.
A recent MarketWatch report said the average refund is now about $351 higher than last year. The IRS has also received over a million fewer returns compared to this time last year.
The same report pointed to late-arriving forms and new crypto reporting rules as reasons for the slower pace of filings.
Together, these factors are changing how people talk about Bitcoin.
ETF buyers, institutions, and corporate treasuries still get a lot of attention, but there’s also a retail cash event happening right now. Some of that money is going to people who already know how to buy Bitcoin quickly.
The main point is simple: not every refund turns into a Bitcoin purchase.
Households have to set priorities and decide what to do first. Refund season starts as a balance-sheet event and can later become a market event.
Expenses like rent, credit cards, car repairs, travel, and emergency savings all compete for the same money.
Still, the size of the refund pool changes what’s possible.
When average refunds go up by hundreds of dollars, and the total reaches hundreds of billions, the question becomes more real.
A household with some market experience can pay off a few bills and still have enough left to think about putting some money into crypto.
This leads to behavior different from the rush to buy during big market surges.
Bitcoin has always relied on new demand from groups with different reasons for buying.
Institutions buy Bitcoin for reasons like building portfolios, managing liquidity, or meeting benchmarks. Long-term holders buy because they believe in it and want to accumulate more.
Retail buyers often act on emotion, like getting surprise cash, fearing they’ll miss out, or feeling like now is a good time to buy.
Tax season brings both surprise cash and a sense of urgency.
Today, April 15, is a key decision day for millions of households. Bitcoin is one of the top assets that can benefit when people suddenly have extra cash they can use right away.
The slower pace of filings adds another layer, making this situation more complex than just a simple refund story.
The MarketWatch report pointed to new crypto reporting rules as one reason for the delay in returns.
That detail deserves closer attention because it says something larger about where Bitcoin now sits in household finance.
Owning crypto now creates enough tax paperwork to cause headaches for regular people.
This is a bigger sign of adoption than many in the market want to admit.
It puts Bitcoin into one of the most routine and widespread parts of finance: compliance.
This change affects how people behave.
A retail investor who owns Bitcoin, sold some last year, moved coins between platforms, or had taxable events, now has to make sure all their records match before filing taxes.
The friction is procedural, and that is exactly why it carries weight.
This takes Bitcoin out of the world of abstract beliefs and puts it into the same paperwork process as wages, brokerage accounts, mortgage interest, and deductions.
For people who follow the market, this changes how they see Bitcoin. Now, Bitcoin looks like any other financial asset that needs to be tracked along with the rest of a household’s finances.
There’s an interesting balance at play here. On one hand, bigger refunds give people more money to spend. On the other, the paperwork can slow them down.
Some investors will wait until they finish filing before making new investment decisions. Others will use their refund to pay off debt or build up savings.
Some crypto holders might feel a new push to invest in Bitcoin because doing their taxes reminds them that crypto is already part of their finances.
Each path flows from the same catalyst, a tax season with more cash moving through the system and more crypto-related friction embedded in the filing process.
The official numbers show this is a widespread household event and a good way to track timing.
In its April 2 update, the IRS pointed out both the increase in refunds and the high rate of electronic filing.
Electronic filing and direct deposit shorten the time between filing taxes and getting your money.
A refund that used to take a while can now show up fast enough to be used in the market within days.
For Bitcoin, which is now easy to buy through major apps and brokerages, this faster process can strengthen the link between tax refunds and buying.
The delay in tax returns also means something else.
Part of the household cash release is still ahead, rather than already spent.
Many market-savvy filers are still working out how their crypto holdings fit with their tax obligations.
In practice, some demand might just be delayed, not missing.
This gives us a more detailed view of what might happen in the next few days.
The setup carries enough force to influence behavior, though the timing depends on when households complete the paperwork and on the condition of their balance sheets once the refund lands.
The best way to look at this situation is by thinking through different scenarios.
The optimistic scenario is simple: refunds arrive, some people feel more secure, and a portion of that money goes into Bitcoin.
Each person doesn’t need to invest a lot for the overall effect to show up in the market.
If enough people each put in a few hundred dollars, it can still create a noticeable impact, especially since Bitcoin is already trading in a high-interest zone and is a quick way to take on risk.
The most likely scenario is more cautious, and it matches the current data.
Refund season gets people’s attention, gives some households more options, and makes it more likely they’ll buy after filing taxes.
But everyday expenses usually get paid first.
That means Bitcoin gets a gentle boost, not a sudden jump.
This aligns with the bigger picture: strong refunds, many households involved, and enough paperwork to slow how quickly people spend their refunds.
This outcome captures the setup as it stands, a plausible near-term catalyst, though one that still has to compete with the reality of household budgeting.
The less optimistic scenario comes from financial stress.
Refunds might go toward overdue bills, debt, delayed expenses, or savings, and the extra crypto paperwork could make investors more cautious.
Even in that case, the main idea stays the same.
Tax season still matters for Bitcoin, but the impact might show up as delayed demand and slower activity, not a quick jump in buying.
What makes this moment interesting is how it focuses the next test for Bitcoin.
The question now is whether Bitcoin can turn this household cash-flow event into real, measurable demand.
The setup is more grounded than broad rhetoric about macro liquidity or sentiment swings.
The cash amounts are clear, the filing deadline is set, refunds are flowing, the paperwork is obvious, and the timing is tight.
That combination offers a clearer framework than most retail narratives used to suggest Bitcoin tax season was separate from the crypto world. This year, it’s part of the conversations inside it.
IRS data shows refunds are ahead of last year, but recent reports show filings are still behind, partly because of crypto paperwork.
Bitcoin is now both a place for extra cash and a reason for more tax paperwork.
This double role is the real change.
It shows that Bitcoin is now part of everyday financial life, where buying and reporting go hand in hand.
The next few days will reveal whether people spend their new cash on Bitcoin or use it for other needs first.
Either way, Bitcoin has already entered a new phase.
The post Bitcoin faces $240B demand shock as ‘surprise’ tax refunds and new IRS crypto rules arrive appeared first on CryptoSlate.
We've reviewed enough CFD brokers to know that most of them blur together after a while. TradeEU Global does a handful of things well, keeps the experience simple, and doesn't try to pretend it's something it's not. That actually counts for more than you'd think in this space.
Here's our full TradeEU Global review for 2026 after spending time on the platform.
Before we get into features and fees, let's talk about what actually happens when you sign up — because that's where a lot of brokers already start losing people.
TradeEU Global's registration is quick. You fill in your details, upload an ID and a proof of address document, and you're through. Once verified, you land in a personal dashboard that lays everything out without burying things in submenus: account balance, open positions, deposit options, transaction history. It felt organized in a way that suggests someone actually thought about the user flow here, rather than just slapping a back-office panel together.
The minimum deposit is $250 across all account types. Not the lowest in the industry, but not unreasonable either.

This is probably the single best thing about TradeEU Global in 2026.
Instead of building a half-baked proprietary charting tool (which too many brokers do), they've integrated TradingView directly into the WebTrader. That means proper charting — multiple timeframes, drawing tools, over 100 indicators, and the kind of layout flexibility that TradingView users already know and expect.
The WebTrader runs entirely in-browser. No downloads, no Java plugins from 2012, no "please install our desktop client" prompts. It loaded fast, charts rendered smoothly, and placing orders felt responsive even with several pairs open at once. We also tested the mobile app on iOS and had no issues — trades placed on desktop showed up instantly on the phone, and vice versa.
It's not going to replace a full institutional-grade terminal, but let's be real: if you're reading a broker review, you probably don't need one. For analyzing setups, placing trades, and managing risk, the TradeEU Global platform handles it.

TradeEU Global lists 350+ instruments, and to their credit, the selection is practical:
The ETF access is worth calling out specifically. If you want diversified market exposure without opening a separate brokerage account, having ETF CFDs alongside traditional instruments gives you more flexibility in how you construct a portfolio.
Another feature we noticed: TradeEU Global supports automated strategies. If you've been trading manually and want to experiment with deploying algo-driven setups, you don't need to leave the platform to do it.
TradeEU Global runs the familiar tiered model. Here's how it breaks down:

TradeEU Global operates under Tradesense Holding Ltd, registered in Mauritius (registration number 183967) with an additional office in Cyprus. They're regulated by the Financial Services Commission (FSC) of Mauritius.
That said, TradeEU Global does publicly list its license details, legal entity name, and registered addresses across its site and legal documentation. That level of disclosure is more than some offshore brokers bother with.

Funding options on TradeEU Global are as follows:
No deposit fees from TradeEU Global's side (though your bank or payment provider may charge their own). Card deposits are processed instantly; bank wires take longer depending on your region. Withdrawals go through the same method you used to deposit and are processed within three business days.
The variety of options is good. Adding Apple Pay and Google Pay alongside traditional e-wallets means most traders should find at least one method that works for them without friction.
Customer support is available 24/5 through live chat, email, and phone — and they operate in English, Arabic, Korean, Spanish, French, German, and Italian. The website auto-selects your language based on your location, which is a small touch but tells you they're actually thinking about their global user base rather than just slapping an English-only FAQ page together and calling it a day.
TradeEU Global has been operating for more than 3 years, which gives it a real-world track record, not ancient, but not brand-new either. The TradingView integration makes the trading experience feel modern, the 350+ instrument range covers most strategies, and the multilingual support is legitimately useful if English isn't your first language.
Our take: open a demo account first. Spend a few days with the platform. Test the execution. If the conditions work for you, start small. And as with any broker — read the terms, understand the leverage risk, and don't deposit anything you'd panic about losing.
Crypto markets are pushing higher again, but this time the driver is not purely technical or crypto-native. Instead, a wave of political and macroeconomic developments is reshaping investor expectations — and injecting fresh liquidity hopes into the system.
Recent statements from Donald Trump suggest potential drastic changes at the Federal Reserve, including the possibility of removing Jerome Powell if he refuses to step down. At the same time, Trump hinted that interest rates would drop under a new Fed leadership.
Markets reacted instantly.
The logic driving both stocks and crypto is simple:
This explains why the S&P 500 has surged to new all-time highs, while risk assets — including Bitcoin and altcoins — continue climbing.
At the same time, Tesla saw its stock jump sharply, adding over $100 billion in market value in a single session. Small-cap stocks are also approaching breakout levels, reinforcing a broad risk-on environment.
👉 In short: markets are pricing in cheap money returning soon.
While the rally looks strong on the surface, it is being built on an unusually fragile foundation.
The growing tension between political leadership and the Federal Reserve introduces a serious risk: the potential loss of central bank independence.
If monetary policy becomes politically driven, several consequences could follow:
👉 This is not typical “bullish liquidity” — it’s forced liquidity driven by political pressure.
That distinction matters.
Despite the risks, crypto markets tend to react quickly — and positively — to any sign of increased liquidity.
Bitcoin and altcoins thrive in environments where:
Additionally, institutional narratives continue to strengthen. Morgan Stanley recently highlighted tokenization as a key future growth area, signaling that traditional finance is still moving toward blockchain integration.
👉 This creates a powerful short-term tailwind for crypto.
However, several developments suggest that this rally may not be stable:
At the same time, risk assets are rising even as uncertainty increases — a divergence that historically does not last long.
The biggest risk is not that markets are rising — it’s why they are rising.
If any of the following occur, the current momentum could reverse quickly:
👉 In that scenario, liquidity expectations could unwind just as fast as they formed.
Crypto markets are benefiting from a powerful narrative shift: the expectation of easier monetary policy. In the short term, this supports higher prices and continued momentum.
But this is not a typical bull run driver.
This rally is being fueled by political pressure, macro uncertainty, and fragile expectations — all of which can change rapidly.
For now, crypto is rising.
But the foundation beneath this move may be far less stable than it appears.
Bitcoin (BTC) has recently shown the volatility that defines the crypto market, surging toward a high of $76,088 before retreating into a correction phase. As of April 15, 2026, the Bitcoin price is hovering around the $74,000 mark. For many new investors, a "red candle" can be intimidating, but for seasoned traders, this movement often signals a vital phase known as price consolidation.
The current decline in the $Bitcoin price is primarily a downside correction following an overextended rally. After reclaiming psychological levels above $70,000 fueled by easing geopolitical tensions and ETF inflows, the market reached a local top. Traders are now taking profits, leading the price to seek out established support levels to validate the next leg up.

In technical analysis, consolidation describes a period where an asset’s price oscillates within a well-defined range after a significant move. Think of it as the market "taking a breath."
During this phase:
For Bitcoin, the current consolidation is happening between the $73,300 support and the $75,200 resistance zones. Staying above these support levels is crucial for maintaining the medium-term bullish structure.
Understanding Support and Resistance (S&R) is the bread and butter of a successful Bitcoin trading strategy.

If you want to benefit from the current Bitcoin price correction, follow this systematic approach:
To execute these strategies, you need a reliable platform with high liquidity and advanced charting tools. Bitget has emerged as a top-tier exchange for both spot and futures trading.

Why choose Bitget?
| Level Type | Price (USD) | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Major Resistance | $76,088 | Previous local high; breakout targets $78k+ |
| Key Resistance | $75,200 | Immediate hurdle for the bulls |
| Immediate Support | $73,950 | First line of defense for the current correction |
| Strong Support | $65,650 | 50% Fibonacci retracement level |
X has officially taken a massive leap toward becoming the "everything app" envisioned by Elon Musk. The platform recently rolled out Smart Cashtags, a feature that fundamentally changes how users interact with financial data and digital assets. By transforming simple ticker symbols into interactive widgets, X is effectively turning its timeline into a social trading terminal.
For the crypto community, this move is more than just a UI update; it represents the tightening bridge between social sentiment and instant market execution. Whether you are tracking the $Bitcoin price or looking for the latest meme coin, Cashtags are designed to keep you within the X ecosystem.
A Cashtag on X is a clickable financial ticker symbol prefixed with a dollar sign (e.g., $BTC, $ETH, or $TSLA). While basic cashtags have existed for years, the new "Smart Cashtag" update adds real-time pricing, interactive charts, and direct trading integrations. When a user clicks or searches for a Cashtag, X now surfaces a dedicated financial module powered by real-time data feeds, allowing for immediate market analysis without leaving the app.
The technical implementation of Cashtags relies on a sophisticated backend that connects X’s social infrastructure with market data providers like TradingView and brokerage partners.
The rollout specifically targets the pain points of the crypto industry. One of the most significant additions is the support for Smart Contract Addresses.
In the past, traders often fell victim to "scam tokens" with identical names. Now, by posting or searching a specific contract address on networks like Solana or Ethereum, the Smart Cashtag ensures the user is viewing the verified asset. This feature was championed by X’s Head of Product, Nikita Bier, who noted that billions of dollars are allocated based on information found on X.
To further professionalize the experience, X has reportedly increased its "compliance sweeps," purging crypto-drainer bots to prepare for the launch of X Money, the platform's upcoming internal payment system.
This feature is a direct move toward the "WeChat" model popular in Asia, where social media, payments, and investments coexist in a single interface. By integrating these tools, X aims to capture the "intent to trade" at the exact moment a user reads a breaking news story or a viral analysis.
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Real-Time Charts | High-fidelity price action directly in the X timeline. |
| Contract Search | Find tokens by address to avoid ticker ambiguity and scams. |
| One-Tap Trading | Integration with external brokers (e.g., Wealthsimple). |
| Device Availability | Initially on iOS (US/Canada), with Web and Android following. |
The crypto market is moving higher, with Bitcoin (BTC) pushing toward the $75,000 level and major altcoins following. At first glance, this looks like another typical crypto rally.
But this move is not being driven by crypto-specific news.
Instead, the current upside is coming from a macro shift in liquidity expectations, triggered by cooling inflation data, falling oil prices, and renewed optimism across global markets.
The main catalyst behind today’s rally is the latest US inflation signal.
Core Producer Price Index (Core PPI) came in at 3.8%, below the expected 4.1%, indicating that inflation pressures are easing faster than anticipated.
This matters because:
👉 More liquidity typically leads to stronger performance in risk assets like crypto
This shift in expectations is currently one of the strongest drivers behind the broader market rally.
Another key but often overlooked factor is the sharp drop in oil prices.

After recent geopolitical tensions pushed energy markets higher, oil has now reversed lower, signaling easing inflation pressure.
Why this matters for crypto:
In short, the energy market is no longer acting as a headwind — it is becoming a tailwind.
Geopolitical tensions remain present, but market expectations are shifting.
Recent signals suggest that diplomatic discussions, including potential US–Iran talks, could reduce escalation risks in the near term.
Markets don’t move based on current headlines — they move based on what comes next.
👉 Right now, investors are pricing in:
This shift from fear to cautious optimism is supporting both equities and crypto.
Another important signal is the return of capital into global markets.
Stablecoins, in particular, act as dry powder for crypto markets, often indicating incoming buying pressure.
👉 This suggests that the current move is not isolated — it may be part of a broader liquidity cycle.
Beyond macro factors, market structure is amplifying the move.
Before the rally, Bitcoin was consolidating near key support levels, with many traders positioned for downside.
As macro conditions flipped bullish:
This explains why the move toward $75,000 happened so rapidly.
The current crypto rally is not being driven by hype — it is being driven by macro fundamentals.
Cooling inflation, falling oil prices, and rising expectations of rate cuts are combining to create a liquidity-driven environment that supports crypto markets.
However, the key question remains:
👉 Is this the beginning of a sustained uptrend, or just a short-term reaction to macro data?
For now, one thing is clear:
Crypto is moving higher because liquidity expectations have shifted — not because of crypto itself.
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The Dogecoin price prediction is shifting. After months pinned below $0.10, multiple analyst models now project DOGE reaching $0.32 by late 2026 if the ascending channel structure holds and broader crypto momentum returns. DigitalCoinPrice and CoinCodex place their conservative band between $0.32 and $0.50, while Binance Square contributors are mapping breakout targets at $0.26, $0.32, and $0.36 if resistance clears. The setup is forming but the timeline stretches across quarters. Meanwhile AlphaPepe just pushed its live AI-DEX demo into public access, crossed $850,000 in presale capital with the $1 million mark now visible, and continues offering a Stage 13 entry at $0.01450 where the distance to analyst targets makes the Dogecoin price prediction look like a rounding error.
DOGE trades at $0.093. The 200-day moving average sits at $0.14, more than 50% above the current price. Bollinger Bands remain compressed between $0.087 and $0.101, and every attempt to reclaim $0.10 this year has been rejected. For the Dogecoin price prediction to reach $0.32, the token needs to clear $0.10, flip $0.14 from resistance to support, break through the $0.28 descending trendline that has capped rallies since July 2025, and sustain momentum long enough for the ascending channel to complete.

That is four sequential resistance levels and a minimum of six to eight months under favorable market conditions. From $0.093 to $0.32 is a 244% return. For holders who bought below a penny years ago, that is a recovery story worth watching. For new capital entering at $0.093 today, that is eight months of waiting for a triple that depends entirely on Bitcoin, sentiment, and meme cycle timing all cooperating at once.
The AlphaSwap demo is no longer a claim. It is running. Anyone can access the AlphaPepe cross-chain AI DEX interface and watch it screen contracts for exploit signatures, surface whale wallet movements in real time, and route swaps across chains through an AI execution layer. This is the product that will generate fee revenue the moment public trading opens. It works today, before a single listing candle has printed.
Behind the demo sits a codebase built by an engineer who cut their teeth shipping Shibarium infrastructure across 500 million live transactions. The smart contract carries a 10/10 BlockSAFU audit with zero vulnerabilities flagged. Supply is capped at 1 billion tokens. Every presale purchase delivers tokens to the wallet instantly with no vesting and no lock period.
The presale is approaching $1 million. Over $850,000 has been collected from 7,600 wallets, with roughly 100 new addresses entering every day. Stage 13 is live at $0.01450 but the price climbs every few days and jumps again when the current stage sells through. Stakers are collecting 85% APR while they wait for the Q2 DEX launch. A Tier 1 CEX listing follows directly after.
A $1,000 entry at $0.01450 secures 68,966 tokens. Analysts placing conservative targets at $1.50 would value that at $103,449 when trading begins. The Dogecoin price prediction needs eight months and four resistance flips for a 244% gain. AlphaPepe needs Q2 to arrive for a return measured in multiples of 100. Buyers entering at $5,000 or more can apply code ALPHA100 for a 100% bonus allocation, doubling their token count before the listing math even begins.
The $0.32 Dogecoin price prediction may arrive. The technical structure supports it if conditions align. But the presale window at $0.01450 with a live AI-DEX demo, a flawless audit, and $1 million in sight does not wait for conditions. Stage 13 is filling and the next stage is approaching at a higher price.
Click To Visit AlphaPepe Official Website To Enter The Presale
What is the Dogecoin price prediction for 2026?
Multiple models target $0.32 to $0.50 by late 2026, requiring a breakout above $0.10, $0.14, and $0.28 resistance levels from the current $0.093 price.
What is the AlphaPepe AI-DEX demo?
AlphaSwap is a live cross-chain AI DEX that screens contracts, tracks whale wallets, and routes swaps. The demo is publicly accessible now ahead of the Q2 launch.
How close is AlphaPepe to raising $1M?
Over $850,000 raised across 7,600 wallets with 100 new addresses daily. Stage 13 at $0.01450 is active and the next stage approaches at a higher price.
The post Dogecoin Price Prediction Targets $0.32 While AlphaPepe AI-DEX Demo Goes Live and Presale Nears $1M appeared first on Blockonomi.
A newly formed crypto political committee has raised $11 million and quickly directed $3 million to advertising services. Fellowship PAC booked those ads through Nxum Group, a firm co-founded by Tether US CEO Bo Hines. Federal Election Commission filings released Wednesday detailed the funding sources and spending activity.
Fellowship PAC collected $10 million from Cantor Fitzgerald and $1 million from Anchorage Digital, according to filings. The committee then committed $3 million for advertising through Nxum Group, which Hines co-founded with his father and a partner.
The PAC supports Republican candidates in congressional and gubernatorial races. It spent $300,000 to support Clay Fuller after he won a Georgia special election. It also directed $850,000 to Nate Morris in Kentucky’s Senate race and $350,000 to Senator Pete Ricketts in Nebraska.
Filings show Nxum Group received the full $3 million in disbursements for advertising services. Before this work, Nxum reported limited campaign activity. The firm previously donated $1 million in billboard advertising to MAGA Inc. in 2024.
Hines served as former President Donald Trump’s crypto adviser before joining Tether last year. He co-founded Nxum before taking his White House role. Nxum’s recent filings now connect it to the PAC’s initial advertising push.
Fellowship PAC has reported ties to Tether since its launch last year. A senior Tether executive serves as the PAC’s chairman. However, most of the current funding came from Cantor Fitzgerald.
Cantor manages reserves for Tether’s stablecoin operations. Howard Lutnick, Cantor’s former chief executive, now serves as Commerce Secretary under Trump. His children now oversee Cantor’s operations.
Fellowship PAC previously announced plans to raise $100 million to support pro-crypto candidates. That pledged total has not appeared in current filings. The PAC has not responded to requests for comment.
Anchorage Digital described its $1 million contribution as part of a broader strategy. The company stated, “Anchorage Digital has made a corporate contribution to the Fellowship PAC as part of our broader, bipartisan approach to advancing regulatory clarity for digital assets in the United States.” Anchorage also posted the statement on its website.
Neither Tether US nor Cantor Fitzgerald responded to media inquiries about their involvement. Filings identify a Cantor executive as the PAC’s treasurer. Current records do not show direct contributions from Tether entities.
U.S. law bars non-U.S. entities from directly participating in federal campaign financing. Tether operates globally, and public records do not clarify whether its U.S. arm contributed funds. The latest Federal Election Commission filings reflect $11 million raised and $3 million disbursed for advertising.
The post Fellowship PAC Sends $3M in Ads to Hines-Linked Firm appeared first on Blockonomi.
Kalshi has expanded its platform with a new Commodities Hub that adds agriculture, metals, and energy markets. The company launched the hub on Tuesday to widen access to event contracts tied to raw materials. The move strengthens its 24/7 trading model and targets rising demand for flexible commodity exposure.
Kalshi added new markets linked to natural gas, coffee, copper, sugar, corn, soybeans, wheat, nickel, diesel, and lithium. The expansion builds on existing contracts tied to WTI crude, Brent crude, gold, and silver. The company said the hub offers broader commodity coverage through binary event contracts.
The platform structures each contract around price direction and threshold outcomes. Users can trade on whether a commodity will close above or below a set level. Kalshi said this format removes margin requirements, contract rollovers, and complex mechanics tied to futures.
Kalshi stated that geopolitical stress and inflation concerns have fueled higher commodities activity. The company linked the launch to oil market swings tied to Middle East tensions. It said supply chain disruption has also increased trading interest across global markets.
The hub allows continuous trading, including weekends and holidays. Users can express views during off-hours when traditional exchanges remain closed. Kalshi said this access supports faster reactions to macro shocks in energy and agriculture.
The company emphasized that contracts operate under federal financial oversight. It said federal authorities and courts recently affirmed that its event contracts fall under CFTC jurisdiction. This position places the products outside state gaming law.
Kalshi said recent court decisions strengthened its regulatory standing. Federal rulings supported the company’s view that prediction markets qualify as financial products. The firm stated that CFTC oversight governs its commodity event contracts.
The company also confirmed that it received an NFA license for margin trading. This approval allows Kalshi to expand trading features for qualified participants. It said the license supports broader participation across its markets.
Kalshi reported that it has worked with Jump Trading on contract development and liquidity support. The firm said these efforts aim to deepen market efficiency and order flow. It stated that institutional engagement remains a core priority.
The Commodities Hub integrates with Kalshi’s existing event contract interface. Users can access price thresholds and directional markets from a single dashboard. The company said contracts trade around the clock without interruption.
The post Kalshi Expands 24/7 Commodities With New Markets appeared first on Blockonomi.
Michael Saylor signaled a renewed accumulation plan as Strategy approaches 1,000,000 BTC on its balance sheet. He posted an image with the caption, “Millions of Possibilities, One Solution,” which referenced STRC preferred shares. Meanwhile, the company continues raising capital and converting proceeds into Bitcoin purchases at a steady pace.
Saylor shared a photo holding an orange Rubik’s Cube and wrote, “Millions of Possibilities, One Solution.” He linked the message to STRC, which Strategy uses to fund Bitcoin acquisitions. The post appeared as issuance levels for STRC preferred shares reached record highs.
According to the company’s weekly report starting April 13, STRC keeps channeling market liquidity into Bitcoin purchases. Data from strc.live shows Strategy raised funds this week to acquire 17,284.73 BTC. The firm continues executing purchases as capital becomes available.
STRC enables Strategy to buy Bitcoin by leveraging the spread between its cost of capital and the asset’s yield. Shares currently trade at parity near $100, which supports issuance efficiency. As a result, the company maintains steady access to funding under present market conditions.
Strategy’s Bitcoin reserves may have surpassed 800,000 BTC based on recent disclosures. To reach 1,000,000 BTC, the company needs to increase holdings by about 20%. The firm continues accumulating coins through weekly purchases funded by STRC.
At the current rate of roughly 9,000 BTC per working week, Strategy could reach its target within 24 weeks. That timeline points to completion by the end of 2026 if the pace remains unchanged. The company maintains a structured acquisition schedule tied to capital inflows.
Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings now carry a market value of more than $57.7 billion. The company reports it has reached breakeven on its aggregate position at current prices. It continues publishing updates that detail both issuance activity and Bitcoin purchases.
STRC issuance volume remains active as shares trade close to their $100 reference value. This pricing level supports continued capital raises without discount pressure. The company therefore, sustains its funding approach while expanding its Bitcoin reserves.
The post Strategy CEO Michael Saylor Signals Path to 1,000,000 Bitcoin Goal appeared first on Blockonomi.
Bitcoin price faced renewed selling pressure near $75,000 after another failed breakout attempt. The asset reached $76,100 on Tuesday but closed below resistance. Despite the pullback, technical indicators still show room for further upside.
Bitcoin (BTC) climbed to $76,100 on Tuesday, marking its highest level since early February. However, sellers pushed the price down before the daily close. The asset ended the session at $74,164 after failing to hold above $75,000.
Earlier this month, Bitcoin rebounded from $65,692 and gained 15.8% to reach the recent peak. It has since retained about 8.45% of that advance. On March 17, Bitcoin also touched $76,000 but fell back to $73,920 after facing strong supply.
The repeated rejection at $75,000 confirms the level as firm resistance. Sellers continue to defend the zone, which limits upward movement. Bitcoin trades at $74,036 at the time of writing.
The price also encountered the 100-day simple moving average near the resistance zone. This moving average stands at $94,935 and adds technical pressure. As a result, bulls failed to secure a daily close above the barrier.
Failure to break resistance increases the risk of a decline toward $68,000 and $65,000. The 50-day moving average at $69,680 could provide support if the price drops. Market structure remains dependent on holding key levels.
Bitcoin price continues to hold the $72,000 micro support level identified by analyst Michael van de Poppe. He stated, “Holding $72,000 opens the path toward a new breakout.” The level now acts as a short-term foundation.
Van de Poppe projected a move toward $80,000 to $85,000 if Bitcoin closes above $75,000 with strong volume. He said the move could occur before the end of April. Such a rally would return Bitcoin to levels last seen in late January.
The daily Relative Strength Index stands at 60.74, which signals room before overbought conditions above 75. The reading reflects steady momentum without extreme conditions. Buyers still maintain control under current levels.

The Moving Average Convergence Divergence also supports bullish momentum. The MACD line reads 1,201.91 and remains above the signal line at 590.84. Green histogram bars continue to expand on the daily chart.
Bitcoin must secure a decisive close above $75,000 to confirm renewed upward momentum. Until then, the price remains within a defined range. Current data shows Bitcoin trading at $74,036.
The post Bitcoin Price Faces $75,000 Barrier, Eyes $85,000 Target appeared first on Blockonomi.
Crypto.com, a global crypto exchange, has entered two major partnerships expanding its reach across regulated markets and global sports events. The agreements, announced on April 11 and April 14, 2026, reflect its focus on compliance and broader mainstream exposure.
As part of the expansion, the firm signed a deal with High Roller Technologies to distribute event-based prediction contracts in the United States. The crypto exchange also partnered with Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) as a co-presenting sponsor for an upcoming event.
According to a press release from the exchange, its North American derivatives arm partnered with High Roller Technologies. Under the arrangement, High Roller will act as a registered intermediary within a framework overseen by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
With this setup, it will connect users to a futures commission merchant operated by Crypto.com. This enables access to contracts tied to finance, sports, and entertainment outcomes.
Company executives said the collaboration followed months of preparation focused on product logistics and regulatory alignment. They also noted that this structure positions High Roller early in a segment estimated to exceed one trillion dollars annually.
The exchange will now serve as a co-presenting partner for UFC Freedom 250, scheduled for June 14, 2026. The event will take place at the White House and is tied to celebrations marking 250 years of the United States. Organizers describe it as the first time a UFC card will be hosted at the location.
Under the deal, Crypto.com plans to fund a one-million-dollar bonus pool for selected fighters. The amount will be distributed alongside standard performance bonuses already offered by the promotion.
Notably, the partnership builds on an existing relationship that began in 2021, according to management from both sides. That earlier agreement made Crypto.com the official fight kit partner of the Ultimate Fighting Championship.
The event is expected to be broadcast in the United States through Paramount+. The fight card includes a lightweight title bout between Ilia Topuria and Justin Gaethje. It also features a co-main event with Alex Pereira and Ciryl Gane.
The post Crypto.com Signs High Roller Deal and UFC Partnership in Dual Expansion Move appeared first on CryptoPotato.
X has launched a feature called “Cashtags” that lets users view real-time stock and crypto charts directly within the app.
The feature is currently available to iPhone users in the United States and Canada.
X head of product, Nikita Bier, announced the Cashtags rollout on April 14, framing it around the social platform’s existing role in financial markets.
“X has always been the best source of financial news for traders and investors,” Bier wrote. “Billions of dollars are allocated every day based on what people read on Timeline.”
Simply put, Cashtags is like traditional hashtags but for finance. The feature is built around stock ticker symbols or crypto tokens prefixed with dollar signs that have now been turned into clickable links that connect X users to related financial information about that asset. In the past, such tags only highlighted ticker-like texts and linked them to basic mentions.
According to Bier, when a user searches or posts a cashtag for a specific asset or a contract address, X will automatically suggest related stocks or cryptocurrencies from which they can select the one they want. Furthermore, tapping on a cashtag will show posts that mentioned it as well as its price chart, all without having to leave X. In this way, users will be able to match chatter on the platform with the right token or stock. This means that traders will no longer have to toggle between X and separate charting tools to cross-reference what they are reading.
Bier also pointed out that people will be able to use the information from Cashtags to trade seamlessly from X. For instance, a pilot integration with Canadian brokerage firm Wealthsimple allows users in the country to place orders on assets by tapping a built-in button that routes them straight to the Wealthsimple platform.
Solana also confirmed that Cashtags will run on its network, with pricing data for the ecosystem’s tokens powered by Jupiter Exchange, historical data provided by Birdeye, and the underlying infrastructure developed by Dialect and Helius.
The concept of Cashtags is not entirely new, as it underwent a brief trial in late 2022 using data from TradingView and eToro, with former X CEO Linda Yaccarino later saying that there were plans to introduce in-app trading on the platform. Hopes for the feature solidified earlier in the year when Bier namedropped it while expressing his desire to see crypto proliferate on X but without applications that spam and harass random users.
Community reaction has so far been largely positive, with citizen journalism account Autism Capital describing the feature as “actually really cool,” noting that tapping $BTC pulls up the chart alongside relevant posts so that users can track sentiment around tickers across crypto and stocks.
“It’s super well designed,” they wrote.
Others suggested the tool could be used beyond finance to cover live events, news, and sports, with dedicated panels for real-time discussion and data, to which Bier responded with, “Give me 18 hours,” hinting at rapid iteration.
The product’s launch has come at a time when crypto markets are showing renewed activity, with BTC flying past $75,000 yesterday to mark its highest level in a month and Ethereum touching $2,400.
The post Musk’s X Introduces Cashtags with Real-Time Market Data for Crypto appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Cardano’s native cryptocurrency has plunged by 7% over the past week and is among the worst performers during this period.
According to one popular analyst, the current level is crucial since it could be followed by a massive rally or a new, much more painful correction.
Ali Martinez, a renowned crypto commentator who often discusses ADA, argued that the asset’s valuation has returned to a “make-or-break” level at $0.243. He noted that this zone has historically been “the ultimate pivot point” and has acted as a “launchpad, triggering significant rebounds.”
The analyst believes that if the bulls defend this important floor, they can open the door to a potential rally to as high as $0.30. On the contrary, losing this mark on a daily close would result in a major structural failure and could lead to a collapse to as low as $0.10.
Another market observer who recently gave their two cents on ADA is Celal Kucuker. The X user claimed that the mid to long-term chart looks “absolutely perfect,” setting a bull run target of $6.30.
The whales’ recent activity supports the optimistic scenario. As CryptoPotato reported, the number of wallets holding more than 10 million ADA tokens has risen to a four-month high of 424.
Prior to that, large investors scooped up 220 million coins in just one week. The development suggests these market participants might be getting ready for the next leg up, as it is a common theory that they may have inside information about upcoming events that could positively impact the price. Moreover, their actions can spark enthusiasm across the community and prompt smaller players to hop on the bandwagon as well.
ADA’s Relative Strength Index (RSI) also reinforces the bullish outlook. The technical analysis tool has fallen to around 30 on a weekly scale, indicating that the asset is oversold and could be on the verge of a resurgence. Conversely, ratios above 70 are seen as bearish territory.

X user Sssebi claimed that the weekly RSI shows signs of bullish divergence on the price chart, adding that “the bottom might be in or very close.”
“We should start seeing a trend reversal in the next few months and start setting higher highs,” they stated.
Next on the list is ADA’s exchange netflow. Over the past several days, outflows have dominated inflows, suggesting that some investors have abandoned centralized exchanges and moved their holdings toward self-custody methods, thereby reducing immediate selling pressure.

The post Cardano (ADA) at a Crossroads: 25% Pump or 60% Crash Comes Next? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Jameson Lopp and five other individuals have proposed freezing all quantum-vulnerable Bitcoin addresses to protect BTC from future quantum threats.
The motivation behind this development comes from a long-standing concern in the community that advances in the technology could eventually compromise the network’s current security structure.
In a Tuesday post on GitHub, the group outlined a three-step process to stop using older and less secure wallet types under Proposal BIP-361.
The draft builds on work that was first introduced in February on BIP-360. In this version, they proposed a soft fork that would introduce a new output type called Pay-to-Merkle-Root (P2MR). This, in turn, would remove the original key path found in Bitcoin addresses that makes the public keys vulnerable to exposure.
Under the latest proposal, the first phase would prevent users from sending Bitcoin to older addresses deemed quantum-vulnerable. This is meant to encourage people toward upgrading their wallets to newer models.
The second part would come two years later and introduce a stricter cut-off. At this stage, any wallet still using the old signature style will no longer be able to send Bitcoin at all. Simply put, if exchanges and everyday users do not move their holdings to newer and safer wallets by this point, they will become stuck and unusable.
However, developers are also discussing a possible third phase that would give people an opportunity to recover their funds if they missed the deadline. Furthermore, this step is not yet confirmed and requires more research and consensus within the Bitcoin community.
Industry projections show that quantum machines could become a real danger to Bitcoin’s cryptography as early as 2027 to 2030. At the same time, estimates also indicate that roughly 34% of the flagship cryptocurrency’s supply is already exposed to the vulnerability.
The proposal says that such an attack may not be obvious right away, which makes it easier for bad actors to gain access to the vulnerable addresses without being detected. As such, developers argue that waiting until the threat is immediate would be too risky.
The post also mentions some of the benefits that could come from a network-wide upgrade. For instance, such an update would make the whole network more resilient against future attacks and reduce uncertainty over its long-term security.
Another positive aspect the draft highlights is how a clear timeline would align everyone in the ecosystem. This, according to the developers, is because it would make it easier for wallets, exchanges, and institutions to prepare in advance for any future attacks instead of reacting while in a crisis.
Some institutions are already taking steps towards securing their holdings, with Blockstream Research recently announcing that it has deployed the first transactions on a live Bitcoin sidechain protected by post-quantum cryptography.
Meanwhile, the total supply of Bitcoin in circulation would greatly reduce once a huge portion of it becomes permanently inaccessible. While this may increase scarcity, developers also believe that it would make people more responsible for their holdings.
The post Bitcoin Developers Propose BIP-361 to Freeze Quantum-Vulnerable Legacy Addresses appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Sometimes markets move oddly when wallets act together, creating sharp pumps followed by sudden drops that feel highly coordinated.
One such token to have come under scrutiny is BinanceLife, after its rally coincided with large supply transfers from Binance by previously inactive wallets with no prior activity.
BinanceLife, a meme token, has reached a market capitalization of around $300 million after a large portion of its supply was withdrawn from Binance.
According to on-chain analytics firm Bubblemaps, the token was launched in October 2025 as a community meme inspired by a joke from Binance co-founder Yi He. It briefly reached all-time highs shortly after launch but was later largely abandoned.
In the past two days, however, 15 wallet addresses withdrew 13.8% of the total token supply from Binance. It is important to note that these wallets had no prior transaction history, and many of the withdrawals occurred within similar time windows.
This pattern has raised questions about whether the activity may be coordinated. Bubblemaps speculated whether a single entity could be behind the movements and the price increase. The findings also reveal that other tokens, including PIPPIN and SIREN, recently experienced sudden price surges that some observers linked to coordinated trading activity.
The focus has shifted toward several other highly volatile assets, where price action has been far more extreme. One such example is RaveDAO (RAVE), which recently registered weekly gains of 6,000% as it reached nearly $16 at its peak and briefly pushed its market capitalization close to $4 billion. The price has since come down to $12, but this rapid move has placed it among the top 30 cryptocurrencies, overtaking several established altcoins.
On-chain and trading data point to similar unusual activity before the rally, including large token transfers from wallets linked to the project and a sharp rise in open interest and trading volume. These conditions were followed by heavy liquidations in leveraged positions.
Analysts have also flagged supply concentration, as a large share of tokens was held by a small number of wallets.
The post 15 Wallets, Zero History: BinanceLife Surge Raises Pump Questions appeared first on CryptoPotato.