Messi and Ronaldo's World Cup achievements highlight the growing intersection of sports and blockchain, impacting fan token market dynamics.
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The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz may stabilize global oil markets, but unresolved nuclear issues could still pose significant geopolitical risks.
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The compensation deal highlights ongoing tensions between shareholder and creditor interests, potentially affecting future corporate accountability.
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Hyperscale's Bitcoin strategy boosts its asset value but heightens exposure to crypto volatility, impacting investor risk and stock stability.
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The influx of crypto sponsorships at the World Cup highlights the growing intersection of sports and digital finance, impacting fan engagement and investment strategies.
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Bitcoin Magazine

VanEck: Bitcoin Miners Face $50B Funding Gap as AI Pivot Separates Winners From Losers
A new framework from asset manager VanEck is drawing clear lines between Bitcoin miners that are genuinely transforming into artificial intelligence infrastructure providers and those that are still selling a story. All of it comes with a sobering price tag: a roughly $50 billion near-term funding gap standing between the sector’s pipeline ambitions and actual delivery.
In a research note, VanEck investment analyst Griffin MacMaster and Head of Digital Assets Research Matthew Sigel laid out what they describe as the first structured valuation approach for the increasingly blurry category of companies that straddle both Bitcoin mining and AI data center hosting.
With financial disclosures varying widely across the sector and cash flows still nascent, VanEck argues the cleanest metric available to investors right now is gross energized power — essentially, how many megawatts a company has actually switched on, not just announced.
The gap between those two things is already telling. Companies that have physical leases in hand — including Cipher Mining (CIFR), Hut 8 (HUT), and TeraWulf (WULF) — are commanding valuations above 10x gross energized power.
Meanwhile, names like Marathon Digital (MARA) and CleanSpark (CLSK), which remain more closely tied to Bitcoin mining with limited contracted AI capacity, are trading at just 2–6x that same metric.
“For now, we find that the market is paying for contracted and energized capacity, while discounting everything still in the pipeline,” the analysts wrote.
Signing contracts, VanEck warns, is only the beginning. Across the entire peer group, miners have delivered only approximately 25% of their leased capacity — a figure that the firm expects to decline further before improving, as large-scale construction projects kick off in 2027 and 2028.
That execution gap is expected to become the dominant valuation driver going forward, with companies that miss construction milestones risking what VanEck calls “structural de-ratings.”
The analysts also flag that very few of these companies have any prior experience building out the kind of infrastructure AI customers require — making project management credentials as important as megawatt counts.
VanEck’s deal tracker signals a busy second half of 2026, with multiple companies — including Bitdeer (BTDR), HIVE Digital (HIVE), Riot Platforms (RIOT), and Core Scientific (CORZ) — in various stages of active or advanced lease negotiations. WULF is described as in “advanced negotiations” on a 480MW site in Kentucky, expected to land a customer in the second quarter.
The capital demands of this pivot are staggering. VanEck estimates the sector’s long-term capital expenditure needs approach $221 billion, with near-term needs alone creating a collective funding shortfall of roughly $50 billion above current cash positions.
The dispersion within the group is wide. HIVE faces the most acute strain relative to its market cap, driven by its AI Gigafactory ambitions targeting more than 100,000 GPUs. IREN and KEEL carry the next heaviest near-term loads. By contrast, WULF and CIFR appear relatively better-positioned, having already secured contracted anchor deals that help de-risk their capital raises.
Funding routes vary significantly. Companies with Bitcoin treasury holdings — including MARA (35,303 BTC), CLSK (13,561 BTC), and HUT (13,696 BTC) — can lean on Bitcoin monetization strategies to part-fund construction.
REN, which carries a large near-term funding need with no BTC treasury to draw from, faces a narrower set of options: dilutive equity issuances or incremental debt.
The report also challenges how closely the market links the entire cohort to Bitcoin prices. While the group’s average daily-return correlation to BTC runs around 0.55 year-to-date and average one-year beta sits at approximately 1.05, VanEck argues that dynamic overstates the sector’s true Bitcoin sensitivity for companies that have largely moved on.
Only MARA (with BTC-sensitive value equal to ~98% of market cap), CLSK (~53%), and RIOT (~23%) carry meaningful balance-sheet exposure to Bitcoin price swings. At the other end, CORZ, WULF, APLD, and IREN have effectively decoupled.
The analysis shows that a drop in Bitcoin to $50,000 would erase roughly 45% of MARA’s equity value and nearly 50% of HIVE’s, while shaving just 4% off HUT’s — underscoring how poorly the “single BTC trade” framing captures the increasingly divergent nature of the group.
VanEck expects valuations to eventually migrate away from megawatt counts toward delivery ratios, unit economics, and ultimately discounted cash flow models — at which point these companies will begin to resemble data center REITs more than miners.
The firm anticipates that many could ultimately be sold or converted into REITs as their AI revenue matures.
For now, VanEck sees the greatest re-rating potential in names with the widest gap between ambition and current market pricing — HIVE, KEEL, IREN, and Bitdeer — while acknowledging those same names carry the highest execution risk. Companies with anchor deals already in hand, like WULF, CIFR, and HUT, offer a more conservative path to compounding that advantage into long-term market position.
This post VanEck: Bitcoin Miners Face $50B Funding Gap as AI Pivot Separates Winners From Losers first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Invite-Only Mita TechTalks 2026 to Unite Bitcoin, AI and Energy Leaders in Punta Mita
Public companies now hold more than 1.2 million Bitcoin — nearly 6% of the total supply — and that number is still climbing. Goldman Sachs projects U.S. data center power demand will hit 66 gigawatts in 2027, more than double its 2025 level, as AI infrastructure construction accelerates at a pace the grid was never built to handle.
Bitcoin miners and AI hyperscalers are now bidding for the same megawatts, in the same substations, on the same timelines.
Those three storylines — corporate Bitcoin adoption, AI’s takeover of financial services, and a power crunch reshaping energy markets — have been running in parallel for two years. A new event is betting they are now one story.
Mita TechTalks announced today that its 2026 summit will convene October 25–27 in Punta Mita, Mexico. The invite-only gathering caps at 125 guests — high-net-worth investors, family office allocators, corporate strategists, and builders — for three days of sessions, private villa workshops, and dinners at the Kupuri Beach Club inside Punta Mita’s gated community on Mexico’s Pacific coast.
The corporate Bitcoin buildout is accelerating on every front. Strategy holds 846,842 BTC as of June 16, making it the largest single public holder by a wide margin. SpaceX disclosed 18,712 BTC when it went public, landing immediately at No. 8 on the leaderboard. Strive grew its holdings 30% in a single month and climbed to No. 7.
Treasury adoption grew 73% in 2025 even as Bitcoin was the worst-performing major asset of the year.
Meanwhile the energy math is getting harder. U.S. data center electricity consumption stands near 180 terawatt-hours today and could reach 400 to 600 TWh by 2030. Marathon Digital and Core Scientific have both moved to convert mining infrastructure into AI data center capacity, treating their existing power contracts as the asset.
The companies that control cheap, reliable electricity now sit at the center of two industries at once.
Programming at Mita TechTalks runs across three tracks — macro and corporate strategy, energy, and AI.
Confirmed speakers include Jeff Booth, founding partner of ego death capital and author of The Price of Tomorrow; Lisa Hough, founder of BTM Energy; Sam Callahan, Director of Strategy and Research at OranjeBTC; and Andre Neves, co-founder and CTO of ZBD.
The summit is organized by Lynne Bairstow and Israel Muñoz, partners at Base Layer Advisors and co-hosts of the Build With Bitcoin podcast. Bairstow founded MITA Ventures in 2012 after starting her career at Merrill Lynch and has spent two decades backing early-stage technology across Mexico and Latin America.
Muñoz co-founded a cross-border payments startup and helped build out 500 Startups’ Miami operation before shifting focus to Bitcoin infrastructure.
Passes start at $2,750 and rise as tiers sell out. Registration is open now.
This post Invite-Only Mita TechTalks 2026 to Unite Bitcoin, AI and Energy Leaders in Punta Mita first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Cardone Capital’s Bitcoin-REIT Hybrid: Targeting 22-32% Returns by Blending Cash-Flowing Properties and BTC Holdings
Real estate investor Grant Cardone is positioning his Cardone Capital to challenge the traditional real estate investment trust (REIT) sector by integrating Bitcoin directly into large-scale multifamily deals. With roughly $5 billion in real estate assets under management across about 15,000 units, Cardone claims the hybrid approach can deliver superior returns while onboarding new investors to Bitcoin.
In a recent interview at Consensus 2026, Cardone laid out his strategy for disrupting the multi-trillion dollar Realestate Investment Trust sector, also known as REITs, companies that own, operate, or finance income-producing real estate. Established under U.S. law in 1960, they must distribute at least 90% of taxable income as dividends to shareholders, providing investors with liquidity and yields without direct property ownership. According to Cardone, publicly traded REITs and the broader industry control over $4.3–4.5 trillion in U.S. real estate assets.
Cardone highlighted a key structural constraint during his Consensus Miami 2026 appearance: traditional REITs like Camden, AvalonBay, and others “can never ever hold Bitcoin on their balance sheet.” This limitation, rooted in the industry’s 1960s-era rules focused on real estate assets and income, creates what he calls a “glitch” in the market, a competitive opening.
Cardone’s Bitcoin Origin and Hybrid Strategy
Cardone first encountered Bitcoin when he was paid 115 BTC for a speaking engagement in Las Vegas, which he still holds. He has since evolved this into a hybrid model at Cardone Capital. Rather than tokenizing real estate on the blockchain, the firm acquires institutional-quality, cash-flow-positive multifamily properties at significant discounts and pairs them with Bitcoin inside a dedicated LLC.
In one prominent example, Cardone Capital purchased a 366-unit property at 101 Via Mizner in Boca Raton from a Blackstone-related lender for $235 million in cash. The property, described as irreplaceable and valued at approximately $400 million replacement cost, was combined with about $100 million in Bitcoin, creating a total ~$335 million investment vehicle.
Replacement cost refers to the expense of building a comparable property today. Cardone targets assets trading at significant discounts to this benchmark. Instead of simply capturing the real estate discount, the firm allocates Bitcoin to “stuff it into the discount gap” and move the overall cost basis of the property higher. In the Boca deal, Cardone says this structure generated a $50 million tax write-off.
Commercial real estate of this sort should provide stable cash flow. Cardone suggests the Boca property is expected to return 4% per year, alongside depreciation benefits, and periodic refinancing opportunities every 7–10 years. Bitcoin adds upside potential and liquidity characteristics. He stated, “We believe by combining real estate and Bitcoin and having time… I’ll end up with somewhere between a 22 and a 32% return on an asset class that has been boring, consistent, and ancient.” The investment horizon of real estate properties of this sort is often in decades, a long-term mindset that gives Bitcoin plenty of time to grow past its short-term volatility.
In turn, this vehicle exposes new investors to Bitcoin in a risk-controlled and novel way. According to Cardone, about 80% of investors in the Boca fund reportedly had zero prior Bitcoin exposure, aligning with Cardone’s goal of “onboarding people into Bitcoin that have had zero exposure.”
Real estate is, of course, a complicated business with known trade-offs such as long hold periods typical of institutional real estate and execution risks in scaling retail participation via crowdfunding. Cardone says he has completed road shows with banks but prefers direct-to-consumer raises leveraging his audience.
Disruption Potential
Cardone claims to have assembled roughly $1 billion in real estate and around 2,000 reported Bitcoin, accumulated over the last 17 months, with six deals currently in contract. He aims to disrupt the REIT sector, noting that even capturing 5–10% of the market could create significant value. Plans include a potential public listing of the hybrid structure, relying on his roughly 20 million online followers, with about 20,000 current investors.
This approach builds on Cardone Capital’s earlier Bitcoin activity, including purchases during market dips and cash-flow-backed accumulation.
Cardone views the current environment as “the greatest time in the history of the world to make money,” with Bitcoin as a beneficiary. “People gotta live someplace. You cannot live in your Bitcoin account,” he said, underscoring the enduring need for real assets alongside digital ones.
This hybrid model represents one prominent effort to bridge traditional real estate with Bitcoin treasury strategies, potentially expanding access and returns for investors. Further developments will depend on execution, market cycles, and regulatory considerations for such structures.
This post Cardone Capital’s Bitcoin-REIT Hybrid: Targeting 22-32% Returns by Blending Cash-Flowing Properties and BTC Holdings first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Juan Galt.
Bitcoin Magazine

Binance Reportedly Faces European Union Exit as MiCA License Bid Nears Rejection
Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, is on the brink of losing access to the European Union after its application for a Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) license in Greece faces rejection, according to Reuters reporting on the matter.
The decision, if confirmed, would prevent Binance from offering services across the 27-member bloc when the MiCA transition period ends on July 1. Under the new regulatory framework, crypto firms must secure approval from a national regulator to gain passporting rights across the EU.
Binance submitted its application through a Greek entity earlier this year, positioning the country as its regulatory base in Europe. The exchange pointed to Greece’s workforce and operating environment as factors behind the choice. Co-CEO Richard Teng had expressed confidence that the firm would meet the requirements ahead of the deadline.
Two sources told Reuters that Greece’s Hellenic Capital Market Commission is set to reject the application. The regulator declined to comment, citing confidentiality rules. Binance said it has received no formal notice of a denial and maintains that its submission meets MiCA standards.
The firm said they believe it complies with the framework and has not been told otherwise by the Greek authority.
Despite that stance, the timeline leaves little room for delay. Without a license in place by the end of June, Binance would need to halt services to EU clients or risk enforcement action from national regulators. That could include fines or restrictions that limit access across key markets such as France, Germany, and Italy.
After the report came out, Binance sought to reassure users on X over its regulatory status in Europe. In a series of posts, the exchange said it remains committed to the region and is working to minimize disruption while it navigates the approval process.
“Binance remains committed to its European users and will continue to operate in compliance with applicable law,” the exchange posted.
The EU has emerged as a major test case for global crypto regulation. MiCA introduces a single rulebook for digital asset firms, covering areas such as consumer protection, capital requirements, and governance. The regime is designed to replace a patchwork of national rules with a unified system.
Binance has faced regulatory pressure in several jurisdictions over the past few years, including the United States and the United Kingdom. The outcome in Europe could shape its global strategy as it seeks to align operations with stricter oversight.
Rivals that have secured MiCA licenses, including Coinbase and Kraken, stand to benefit if Binance exits the region. A shift in market share could follow as users migrate to platforms that can offer uninterrupted access under the new regime.
The potential loss of the EU market also raises questions about liquidity and product availability on Binance’s platform. Europe represents a large base of retail and institutional users, and any disruption could affect trading volumes and token flows.
This post Binance Reportedly Faces European Union Exit as MiCA License Bid Nears Rejection first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

BlackRock Launches New Bitcoin ETF Combining BTC Exposure With Covered Call Income
BlackRock today launched the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (Nasdaq: BITA), a new exchange-traded product that holds spot bitcoin and shares of the iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) while selling call options on a portion of those holdings to generate monthly income for investors.
The fund writes call options on roughly 25% to 35% of its IBIT holdings, collecting option premiums that are distributed to investors each month.
The structure preserves the bulk of bitcoin exposure, allowing participation in price appreciation while producing an income stream — a combination that BlackRock says a growing portion of its client base has requested.
“A significant segment of our client base is interested in bitcoin but is also highly focused on income generation,” said Robert Mitchnick, Head of Digital Assets at BlackRock. “BITA was built in response to that demand, enabling investors to retain the majority of their bitcoin upside exposure while capturing potential income through a convenient exchange-traded structure.”
A covered call strategy involves holding an asset and selling call options against a portion of that position to collect premium income.
In sideways or mildly bullish markets, these premiums boost returns. In strong bull markets, upside on the covered portion is capped because issuers must sell at the option’s strike price.
BITA gains its bitcoin exposure through both direct spot BTC holdings and IBIT — the world’s largest bitcoin ETP, which has accumulated nearly $49 billion in assets since its January 2024 debut. IBIT’s options market averages $3.7 billion in daily trading volume and ranks among the top 1% of all options products by that measure, a scale that BlackRock says is essential to executing the strategy at institutional quality.
The fund carries a 0.65% sponsorship fee — higher than IBIT’s 0.25%, but lower than other income-generating bitcoin ETFs such as Roundhill’s YBTC and NEOS’ BTCI.
Earlier today on Bloomberg, BlackRock executive Rick Rieder said, “I think bitcoin is ultimately going considerably higher.”
BITA’s structure holds bitcoin and IBIT for tax-efficient growth while selling options on IBIT that qualify as Section 1256 contracts, subject to the favorable 60/40 tax treatment — 60% long-term and 40% short-term on capital gains from option premium income.
Investors in the partnership structure may also pass through capital losses to offset gains elsewhere in their portfolios, and both short-term and long-term gains retain capital gains character.
The fund was registered under the Securities Act of 1933 rather than the Investment Company Act of 1940, meaning it operates outside the regulatory framework that governs mutual funds and traditional ETFs.
Jay Jacobs, BlackRock’s U.S. head of equity ETFs, said the fund targets three distinct investor profiles. The first group includes income-focused investors seeking returns beyond dividend stocks and bonds.
The second consists of bitcoin holders who want cash flow from a long-term position. The third is investors who have stayed away from bitcoin — or gold — because those assets produce no income on their own.
“You could imagine this could be people who have a significant portion of their wealth in bitcoin but would like to have an income stream to support their lifestyle,” Jacobs said to CoinDesk.
Jacobs added that while some IBIT holders may migrate into BITA, the fund is designed to pull in investors who do not currently own bitcoin at all — people for whom income is a prerequisite, not a bonus.
BITA enters a market where covered call bitcoin products are gaining traction. Goldman Sachs filed in April to launch its own Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, an fund that also uses a partial covered call strategy. Bloomberg analyst Eric Balchunas projected Goldman’s product would become effective around July 1.
BITA also extends BlackRock’s dominant position in the digital asset ETP space. The firm captured approximately 90% of all U.S.-listed digital asset ETP flows in 2025 and now oversees more than $130 billion in assets across digital asset ETPs, tokenized liquidity funds, and stablecoin reserve management.
This post BlackRock Launches New Bitcoin ETF Combining BTC Exposure With Covered Call Income first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Crypto yield has always carried a credibility problem. The same market that learned to demand proof after incentive-heavy protocols unwound still tends to compress risk into a single APY. That tension sits at the center of Solstice’s pitch: whether stablecoin-native, delta-neutral strategies can become usable yield infrastructure without recreating the same opacity, reflexive incentives, and contagion risks that damaged DeFi in prior cycles.
Solstice, as framed in this interview, sits at the intersection of staking, stablecoins, and yield infrastructure. The project says it built its business before launching SLX, pointing to a live strategy, onchain tokenization, operating revenue, and more than $500 million in deposits as evidence that the token was introduced around an existing product rather than a future roadmap. Its model centers on access to yield sources including eUSX, which the company describes as a delta-neutral strategy earning from funding rates, basis spreads, and hedged liquidity.
That positioning matters because the next phase of DeFi is less about whether yield exists and more about where the risk sits, how it is disclosed, and who can access it. Solstice’s answers push into several of the sector’s current fault lines: token design after the collapse of emissions-led growth, the durability of institutional demand, the role of offchain execution in onchain products, and the regulatory trajectory of dollar-denominated digital assets.
The discussion also reflects a broader debate over what institutional DeFi should become. Day argues that open and permissioned access models can coexist, with the same underlying asset moving through different rails depending on the user. But that coexistence raises harder questions around liquidity at size, compliance tooling, custody, reporting, and whether crypto-native composability can mature without simply rebuilding traditional finance on faster rails.
In this CryptoSlate Q&A, Ryan Day, CMO of Solstice, discusses why TVL alone is an incomplete measure of protocol quality, how Solstice thinks about risk management in onchain finance, what institutions still ask when diligencing Solana exposure, and why credibility may depend less on narrative than on consistent, verifiable operating discipline.
Read on for the full conversation.
The post Solstice’s Ryan Day on why sustainable DeFi yield depends on business fundamentals, not token incentives appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin holders appear unwilling to support dedicated Bitcoin-native DeFi at the scale needed to keep projects in the space alive.
That is the tension behind Botanix Labs' decision to wind down Botanix, a Bitcoin Layer 2 built to bring EVM-style applications, lending, borrowing and yield to BTC holders.
The wind-down is harder to dismiss than a routine token-cycle collapse. Botanix says it deliberately avoided a token, airdrops, points programs and the usual machinery used to manufacture early chain activity.
Demand still fell short.
Botanix said its first target wind-down date is July 1, followed by a two-week grace period through July 15 and, if needed, a final extension to Aug. 1 before the remaining Bitcoin is swept and the company begins to dissolve.
Its homepage notice tells users to withdraw assets before the July 1 deadline.
The shutdown lands at an awkward moment for BTCFi. Bitcoin yield, collateral, structured credit and treasury products are becoming more visible across mainstream finance.
Yet one of the cleaner attempts to build Bitcoin-native DeFi rails is leaving the market after concluding that demand was too weak on its own.
Botanix did not leave behind an empty testnet or a white paper. The team says Spiderchain went live and stayed live for more than a year with 100% uptime and zero security incidents.
It says the network processed 25 million transactions, reached about 200,000 wallets, moved tens of millions of dollars in assets, and secured integrations with Chainlink, Morpho, GMX, Dolomite, Fireblocks, Alchemy, Galaxy, and OKX Wallet.
The current homepage shows the same shape in live-facing terms: more than 26.1 million total transactions, 176,056 unique addresses and 8,387 total contracts.
Those numbers make the failure harder to dismiss. Botanix was building on shipped infrastructure, live usage, and recognized partners, rather than asking the market to imagine a future Bitcoin DeFi layer.
It says it operated one and gave users an organic path into Bitcoin-backed applications without adding a new token as the main economic primitive.
That is why the postmortem is more useful than a normal shutdown notice. It asks whether a working Bitcoin DeFi layer can attract enough users when the product competes with a much easier path: keep BTC where it already is, or use a representation of it elsewhere.
Botanix's own answer is blunt. The team said it mistimed the Bitcoin community's center of gravity.
In its view, Bitcoin holders are still working through questions about BTC as a reserve asset, its political and monetary role, and the conservative culture around the base layer. Programmable utility sits downstream of those concerns.
Some Bitcoin holders clearly want yield, leverage, or access to collateral. Botanix's conclusion is that a dedicated Bitcoin Layer 2 must overcome more than just technical risks.
It has to persuade users that the extra security story, wallet flow, and application set are worth the switch in behavior.
Botanix removed the easy excuse that demand disappeared only after rewards ended.
Its own record raises a harder distribution question: when users can already access BTC products elsewhere, how much extra value does a native rail need to deliver?
The clearest line in Botanix's post is about WBTC. For lending, basic yield and leveraged exposure, the team said WBTC on a mature Layer 2 such as Arbitrum is sufficient for most users who want Bitcoin-denominated DeFi.
That statement cuts through a lot of BTCFi marketing. The practical test is whether enough users care about native Bitcoin rails when they can already borrow, lend or trade against wrapped Bitcoin on venues with deeper liquidity, familiar interfaces and more established applications.
Recent market context points in the same direction. Circle's launch of cirBTC on Ethereum shows the wrapped-BTC fight moving toward custody, reserve visibility, redemption controls and institutional trust.
CryptoSlate's coverage framed the same launch as an attempt to make wrapped Bitcoin look bank-grade before institutions use it as collateral.
That is wrapped Bitcoin finance: BTC exposure converted into a form that risk desks, market makers, lending venues and settlement systems can route through existing workflows.
The same pattern is visible outside DeFi. BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF seeks Bitcoin performance while generating premium income through an options strategy.
CryptoSlate reported that Bitcoin is being packaged for income investors through products such as BITA, Metaplanet's Siiibo acquisition, and other yield structures that generate income from options, credit, or collateralized exposure rather than from Bitcoin's protocol.
Metaplanet's Siiibo deal adds another version of the same idea. The Japanese Bitcoin treasury company is trying to turn a BTC balance sheet into a regulated securities channel for bonds, funds and yield-style products.
Terms, approvals, collateral rules, and investor protections remain undisclosed, so the risk profile remains unresolved. The direction is clearer than the product design: Bitcoin is being turned into something brokerages and income investors can buy.
These products also translate Bitcoin into familiar paperwork, accounts and risk frameworks. That translation reduces the behavioral change required from the buyer.
The user may be seeking income, liquidity, or access to collateral, rather than making a statement about Bitcoin's technical roadmap.
Botanix also pointed to a second force: distribution. It named Hyperliquid, Robinhood, major centralized exchanges, and emerging TradFi participants as venues that are absorbing more attention, flow, and revenue because they own the user relationship.
That diagnosis fits the broader Bitcoin finance buildout. CryptoSlate's structured-credit reporting showed that Bitcoin is already being used in insurance reserves, loans, and securitizations, including Ledn's $188 million Bitcoin-backed loan securitization in February 2026, with $160 million of senior notes rated BBB- and $28 million of junior notes rated B-.
CryptoSlate also reported on Morgan Stanley and Galaxy's work around Bitcoin and Ethereum collateral, describing a market where institutions are competing to control the wrapper, custodian, collateral agent or servicing infrastructure through which crypto assets flow.
For a user, those paths often feel less ideologically pure but more legible. A brokerage account, ETF, lending desk or wrapped asset has a known interface.
It may also have clearer disclosures, deeper liquidity, tax reporting, customer support or institutional approval.
A Bitcoin-native DeFi rail must offer sufficient additional value to overcome that convenience gap.
| Question | Bitcoin-native BTCFi rails | Wrapper-led Bitcoin finance |
|---|---|---|
| Custody story | Attempts to keep the product closer to Bitcoin-native assumptions | Uses custodians, ETFs, wrapped tokens or brokerage platforms |
| User path | Requires new wallets, bridges, apps and risk decisions | Runs through venues and accounts users already know |
| Yield source | Needs real application revenue or protocol-level demand | Often comes from options premiums, credit structures or collateral use |
| Distribution | Must build its own audience | Leans on exchanges, asset managers, banks and brokers |
| Main risk | Insufficient repeat usage to sustain the network | Complexity, counterparty risk, capped upside or forced-selling loops |

That split helps explain why Botanix could be technically credible and commercially exposed at the same time. The network had activity, integrations, and uptime, but the competing channels offered an easier customer path.
The Bitcoin finance boom is splitting into two tracks: productive BTC through wrappers and native BTCFi, which is still fighting for habitual users.
Botanix's shutdown shows that technical credibility and organic metrics are still insufficient if the product fails to align with where users are willing to take risks.
The more precise reading is that Bitcoin DeFi remains caught between two markets. One market wants Bitcoin to stay simple: reserve asset, collateral, treasury holding, long-term store of value.
The other wants Bitcoin to become productive: borrowed against, wrapped, routed into income products, posted as collateral and used inside trading systems.
Botanix tried to connect those markets through Bitcoin-native infrastructure. The growth elsewhere suggests many users and institutions are choosing the second market, but through wrappers that hide the complexity or hand it to a regulated intermediary.
That makes the next BTCFi cycle easier to judge. The test is whether a Bitcoin-native network can produce repeat users, durable liquidity, and sufficient revenue without leaning on a token campaign or relying on users to care about native rails more than convenience.
If the next wave of Bitcoin finance happens on Bitcoin-native infrastructure, Botanix will look early. If it keeps moving through ETFs, wrapped BTC, lending desks, treasury products, and exchange-owned applications, Botanix will look like an honest experiment that discovered where demand actually lives.
The post Bitcoin DeFi’s demand problem is becoming harder to ignore appeared first on CryptoSlate.
SpaceX’s first week as a public company is starting to look less like a conventional stock-market debut and more like a high-leverage crypto asset.
Shares of Elon Musk-led company, trading under the ticker SPCX, extended their post-IPO rally Tuesday as investors piled into one of the smallest public floats ever attached to a company valued in the trillions of dollars.
The stock rose as much as 13% to $210 in early market trading, according to Yahoo Finance data.
This frenzy has also crossed into digital-asset markets, where SPCX-linked perpetual futures have become one of the busiest contracts across crypto trading platforms.
SpaceX’s post-IPO rally has been intensified by the unusually small amount of stock available for public trading.
The company sold 555.6 million shares in its IPO, raising $75 billion. The sale later expanded to 638.9 million shares and about $85.7 billion in proceeds after underwriters exercised their overallotment option.
Even after the additional shares, only a narrow slice of SpaceX’s equity entered the public market. This is because the company has about 13 billion shares outstanding, meaning the IPO released only a small portion of its total stock.
Thus, Musk and other insiders still control most of the company, while lockup agreements limit how much additional supply can reach the market in the near term.
Thierry Borgeat, co-founder of Arvy, said that structure created an exceptionally tight supply setup for a company of SpaceX’s scale, with index funds, retail traders, and momentum buyers all chasing a limited number of tradeable shares.
Crypto analyst Colin Talks Crypto drew a similar comparison to digital-asset markets, arguing that SPCX is behaving like a token with a heavily restricted release schedule.
He said the small liquid float can help drive sharp early gains, but warned that later unlocks could create sell pressure as more shares become available for trading.

That imbalance has made each wave of demand more powerful. With few natural sellers on the other side, buying from retail investors, index-linked funds, and speculative traders can move the stock sharply higher.
CNBC’s Jim Cramer pointed this out, saying the stock was behaving like a meme stock because it had “no sellers.”
As a result, the pressure has helped SpaceX climb more than 50% from its $135 IPO price just days after its record listing.
The same supply pressure that has driven SpaceX higher in the stock market has spilled into crypto derivatives, where traders are using leveraged contracts to chase the rally around the clock.
SPCX traded at $222.52 over the past 24 hours, up $48.12, or 27.6%, according to CoinGlass data. Futures volume jumped 501.5% to nearly $9 billion, while open interest climbed to $813 million, signaling a sharp increase in both trading activity and capital committed to the market.
These contracts give traders synthetic exposure to SpaceX’s share price through a crypto-native product that trades continuously and allows leverage. That structure has turned the post-IPO rally into a 24-hour speculation cycle, extending the stock-market frenzy beyond regular trading hours.
For a stock such as SpaceX, where public supply is limited, and social media is helping shape the narrative in real time, that kind of market can intensify price swings.
The leverage has already forced a sharp unwind. CoinGlass data showed more than $30 million in SPCX positions liquidated over 24 hours as price volatility exceeded 35%. Short liquidations accounted for about $19 million of that total, compared with roughly $12 million in long liquidations.

That liquidation profile shows how the rally has fed on itself. When short sellers are forced out, exchanges automatically buy back exposure to close their positions.
That buying can push prices higher, forcing more bearish traders to exit. The same mechanic has fueled violent rallies in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and smaller tokens during crowded positioning events.
For SpaceX, the loop is now clear. A thin public float drives the stock higher. The rising share price pulls more traders into perpetual futures. Short liquidations add more forced buying. The derivative market then reinforces the perception that the rally still has momentum.
Together, those markets have transformed SpaceX’s first week as a public company into a cross-asset momentum trade.
The rally gained another narrative boost after SpaceX announced an agreement to acquire Anysphere, the software company behind the AI coding tool Cursor, for $60 billion. The transaction is expected to close in the third quarter of 2026.
The firm stated:
“SpaceX has exercised the option to acquire Cursor in an all-stock transaction with the goal of building the world’s most useful AI models. For the past few months, SpaceXAI has been jointly training a model with Cursor, which will be released in Cursor and Grok Build soon.”
Quinn Thompson, chief investment officer of Lekker Capital, described the deal as a clever use of SpaceX’s newly elevated equity value.
He said the company was using a low-float, retail-inflated stock price to buy real businesses before the lockup period expires, calling it a creative way to turn post-IPO momentum into acquisition power.
Moreover, the deal gives investors a fresh reason to treat SpaceX as a broader technology platform rather than a company defined only by rockets and satellites.
Musk has increasingly positioned the business across launch services, Starlink, defense systems, artificial intelligence infrastructure, and enterprise software.
That broader identity helps explain why some investors are willing to support a valuation that appears stretched against current revenue. Bulls are looking beyond today’s sales and betting that SpaceX can become critical infrastructure across several large markets at once.
The Anysphere transaction fits that view. Cursor has become one of the most closely watched AI coding products, competing in a market where OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and other technology companies are racing to automate software development.
Bringing Cursor into SpaceX would deepen Musk’s exposure to enterprise AI while potentially giving Anysphere access to greater computing resources.
For traders, the immediate effect is simpler. The deal keeps the growth story expanding while the stock is still in its early price-discovery phase.
In a market already driven by scarcity, leverage, and social-media momentum, a major AI acquisition gives buyers another reason to stay involved and short sellers another risk to manage.

The harder question now is whether SpaceX can hold its valuation once investors shift from momentum trading to fundamentals.
Henrik Zeberg, a macro strategist at Swissblock, warned that the rally looks more like late-cycle speculation than the start of a durable bull-market advance. He said:
“This is NOT what you see at Bull Market Take-Offs. This is the Final Phases of a Bull Market. And people speculating in SpaceX will lose a lot of money … unfortunately!”
That skepticism is sharpened by the scale of SpaceX’s valuation. Charlie Bilello, chief market strategist at Creative Planning, noted that the company’s market value has climbed above $3 trillion, putting it ahead of Amazon and near Microsoft.
The comparison is striking because those companies generate far more revenue and substantial annual profit, while SpaceX is still producing losses.

In view of this, Bilello stated:
“SpaceX is a great company and will go on to do great things. But a few months from now we will look back at this moment as peak mania. Investors are pricing SpaceX stock as if the future has already happened.”
That leaves investors paying years in advance for execution. If SpaceX keeps growing quickly, wins large contracts and turns its AI push into a meaningful business line, the premium may hold.
But if growth slows, losses persist or locked-up shares begin entering the market, the same structure that powered the rally could start working in reverse.
The post SpaceX is trading like a $2T meme stock after its record IPO appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Standard Chartered has set a $100 UNI target for the end of 2030, a forecast that would put one of DeFi's largest governance tokens far above its current market range.
The bank's thesis states that tokenized assets may eventually require DeFi venues to convert fragmented on-chain instruments into usable liquidity.
The Standard Chartered note said the bank assumes tokenized assets could reach $4 trillion by 2028. The same thesis puts the share active in DeFi rising from about 3.5% today to 30% by 2030.
On that math, DeFi could hold over $2 trillion by 2030.
Tokenization is being built by banks, asset managers, transfer agents, and regulated platforms, yet the liquidity layer could still reward open protocols if those assets require round-the-clock trading, collateral movement, and composability beyond a single issuer's system.
CryptoSlate data on June 16 showed UNI trading near $3.02, with a market cap of roughly $1.88 billion and 24-hour trading volume of about $353.9 million. The broader CryptoSlate coin rankings snapshot showed a crypto market of about $2.27 trillion and a daily trading volume of about $89.8 billion.
Against that market backdrop, the practical question is whether tokenized Treasuries, funds, equities, stablecoins, and other on-chain assets become inventory for open liquidity, or stay in systems where access, settlement, and transfer remain tightly controlled.

The Standard Chartered call rests on a chain of assumptions. Tokenized assets first need to grow into a large enough market. A meaningful share, then, needs to become active in DeFi, rather than simply sitting on-chain as a record of ownership within a regulated wrapper.
Finally, Uniswap has to capture enough of that activity for UNI economics to benefit. The claim shifts the focus from issuance to liquidity.
Standard Chartered's public work already frames tokenization as a large long-term opportunity. In 2024, the bank said a paper with Synpulse projected tokenized real-world assets could reach $30.1 trillion by 2034, with trade finance among the major categories.
The same release said tokenization could create new applications in DeFi and new business models.
Citi's June 2026 tokenization report points in the same direction on market size, while adding a counterweight. Citi projected a $5.5 trillion base-case tokenized asset market by 2030 and an $8.2 trillion bull case.
It also said hybrid models may dominate, with institutions controlling issuance, distribution, and settlement rails.
The divide defines Uniswap's opportunity. If tokenization grows but the value remains within bank platforms, transfer-agent systems, broker-dealer networks, or approved marketplaces, open DeFi plays a limited role.
If assets need broader venues where different tokenized instruments, stablecoins, and collateral can trade against one another, protocols such as Uniswap become more central.
DefiLlama data supports the view that Uniswap is a plausible candidate for that thesis. As of press time, the protocol had about $2.89 billion in total value locked across multiple chains and more than $50 million in 30-day fees.
The present data only establishes an operating base, but it places Uniswap in the liquidity-infrastructure category rather than the pure governance-token category.
For institutions, the distinction is practical. Issuing a fund token is one process; creating a venue where it can trade against stablecoins, collateral, and other tokenized instruments is another.
That gap is where an open automated market maker could either become useful infrastructure or remain a marginal connection point.
The venue decision, therefore, becomes as important as issuance, because liquidity determines whether tokenized products become usable markets, collateral, and settlement assets, or remain static records within approved systems.
BlackRock's BUIDL fund provides a live example of the thesis. In February, Uniswap Labs and Securitize announced that BlackRock's USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund was available for trading on UniswapX.
The integration uses an RFQ framework, whitelisted subscribers, and pre-qualified participants.
CryptoSlate's earlier BUIDL coverage captured the central tension: BUIDL holders can swap into USDC through UniswapX, but the access is gated.
The trade touches DeFi technology while keeping the asset limited to approved participants.
BlackRock's original BUIDL launch terms show how controlled that model can be. The fund was offered to qualified investors through Securitize, had a $5 million initial investment minimum, could be transferred only to pre-approved investors, and was not listed on an exchange.
RWA.xyz showed BUIDL at about $2.37 billion in total asset value and 108 holders on June 16.
Read together with the access terms, that supports a cautious view of tokenization's current state: large tokenized products can exist on-chain while participation remains concentrated and permissioned.
Standard Chartered's own May 2026 investor presentation also cited BUIDL's integration into Uniswap to enable distribution and trading.
The deck places Uniswap within the same institutional digital-asset infrastructure that the reported target depends on, even though the exact UNI initiation note has not been made public.
| Routing model | What it gives institutions | What it gives Uniswap | Main constraint |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open DeFi liquidity | 24/7 markets, composability, stablecoin settlement, and broader collateral use | More pools, more fees, deeper relevance for tokenized assets | Compliance, identity, and transfer restrictions must be solved without killing open access |
| Controlled bank and broker-dealer rails | Permissioned access, familiar compliance, curated counterparties, and easier risk controls | Limited integration points such as RFQ access or whitelisted liquidity | Liquidity may stay fragmented across private systems and approved venues |
The BUIDL example currently sits between those two models. It uses Uniswap technology, yet preserves institutional controls around who can participate. That design creates a bridge into DeFi infrastructure without moving tokenized assets into fully open liquidity.
This is the version of open liquidity institutional assets may accept first: DeFi rails for execution and settlement, paired with restrictions around identity, transferability, and counterparties.
Greater RWA activity on Uniswap would not by itself guarantee value for UNI holders. The asset still needs a capture mechanism.
The executed UNIfication proposal on Tally describes the protocol-fee and UNI-burn mechanics and states that Uniswap aims to become the default exchange for tokenized value.
That gives the valuation argument a route, but it also makes the path conditional. Governance decisions, fee settings, commercial integrations, and actual volume all need to line up.
The reported Standard Chartered target is well above current market levels and UNI's 2021 all-time high. A $100 target cannot rest only on asset issuance. It requires real trading flows, durable fee generation, and a clearer link between protocol growth and token economics.
The institutional tokenization debate becomes practical at that point. Banks and asset managers may want blockchain settlement, 24/7 transferability, programmable collateral, and stablecoin payment rails.
They may also want KYC, transfer restrictions, approved counterparties, and control over where secondary markets form.
The Financial Stability Board's tokenization work reinforces that caution. It describes tokenization as still small in scale and highlights issues such as limited-access structures, interoperability gaps, settlement-asset constraints, and platform fragmentation.
Those are the frictions that can keep tokenized assets from becoming liquid, composable DeFi inventory.
If those frictions dominate, Uniswap becomes an integration point at the edge of institutional tokenization. If they ease, the protocol could become one of the venues where tokenized funds, stablecoins, and crypto-native assets meet.

Standard Chartered's reported call ultimately depends on where tokenized liquidity settles. The $100 target introduces market upside, while the stronger claim is that a Wall Street bank sees a path for DeFi protocols to capture part of the institutional tokenization wave.
BUIDL already shows that asset managers can use DeFi technology while preserving tight access controls. Citi's tokenization outlook suggests Wall Street may build hybrid systems that keep issuance, distribution, and settlement close to institutions.
The FSB's caveats show why interoperability and settlement remain central.
The next evidence will come from new tokenized asset integrations. If they remain isolated, whitelisted RFQ channels, open DeFi captures only a slice of the market.
If they create broader pools that allow tokenized assets to move across DeFi liquidity with fewer bespoke controls, Uniswap's role in tokenization could expand beyond crypto-native swaps.
The post Standard Chartered’s $100 Uniswap call exposes the open DeFi problem Wall Street may need to solve appeared first on CryptoSlate.
BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF has moved from launch watch to live market structure, giving Bitcoin investors a new choice: hold spot exposure directly or accept a covered-call wrapper that turns part of Bitcoin's volatility into monthly income.
The fund, trading under the ticker BITA, began listing on Nasdaq today, June 16, after a Nasdaq listing alert named Susquehanna Securities as the designated liquidity provider.
The launch path followed the SEC's June 12 notice of effectiveness for the fund's S-1 registration statement, a June 11 Form 8-A registering the trust's shares under Section 12(b), and the SEC's earlier approval of Nasdaq's rule change to list and trade the product.
That puts BITA in a different category from a plain spot trust. The fund starts with Bitcoin exposure but packages it through an options-income overlay.
That structure turns the liquidity and volatility around BlackRock's $50 billion-plus iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF, IBIT, into a monthly distribution strategy. The trade-off is equally important: the income comes from selling call options, which can dampen volatility in flat or moderately rising markets but can leave holders behind when Bitcoin runs sharply higher.
BITA entered the market with a 0.65% sponsor fee, monthly distribution frequency, Nasdaq listing, June 9 inception date, and $10.65 million in net assets as of June 15.
It also listed 200,000 shares outstanding as of June 15 and two holdings as of June 12.
The fund's strategy seeks spot Bitcoin performance plus option premium income. It can hold Bitcoin and IBIT directly, then write covered calls on about 25%-35% of portfolio assets.
In practical terms, BITA is selling part of the portfolio's upside potential in exchange for option premium that can support monthly distributions.
That structure places the product in the next stage of Bitcoin ETF design. The first phase of US spot Bitcoin ETFs solved access, custody, brokerage availability, and institutional packaging.
BITA asks whether Bitcoin's volatility can serve as an input to income-oriented portfolios without stripping away too much of the asset's upside.
The timing gives BlackRock a natural distribution advantage. IBIT listed roughly $51 billion in net assets and a daily volume of about 53 million shares as of June 15.
BITA is tiny by comparison at launch, but it is built around the same iShares Bitcoin ecosystem and a market where IBIT options have become a visible part of the trading stack.
| Product | Core exposure | Income method | Main trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| BITA | Bitcoin and IBIT exposure | Covered calls on roughly 25%-35% of assets | Monthly income potential in exchange for capped upside on overwritten exposure |
| IBIT | Spot Bitcoin exposure | Direct price participation | More direct participation in Bitcoin price moves, without an option-premium buffer |
| Goldman Sachs filing | Indirect Bitcoin ETP-linked exposure | Options overwrite expected around 40%-100% | Broader income overlay, still exposed to capped-upside and options execution risk |
That comparison is the point for allocators. BITA is a hybrid exposure tool: part Bitcoin access, part options-income strategy, and part test of whether IBIT's scale can support a recurring distribution wrapper.
The early asset base also keeps the launch in perspective. BITA is a small wrapper at inception, while IBIT remains the distribution engine with more than $50 billion in net assets. That gap makes early volume, spreads, and monthly distribution levels more meaningful than launch assets alone.

The phrase “Bitcoin yield supercycle” is exciting because it captures what Wall Street is trying to build: funds that make Bitcoin feel less like a pure directional bet and more like an income sleeve.
BITA is a clear example of that shift, and its mechanics are straightforward. Option premium has to come from somewhere, and in a covered-call product it comes from selling away part of the benefit from a strong rally.
BlackRock's issuer materials avoid promising a fixed return. The product brief says the fund seeks monthly income and aims to participate in the majority of Bitcoin's upside, while noting that actual upside participation can vary.
The issuer's risk language warns that covered calls can limit gains above the exercise price, while the brief says the fund may underperform IBIT when Bitcoin rises significantly.
Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas has framed the launch around a 15%-25% annualized yield target and at least 70% upside participation, and CryptoSlate's June 16 yield analysis repeated that market framing.
Those figures should stay separate from issuer-backed claims. The firmer BlackRock-backed facts are the monthly distribution frequency, the 25%-35% covered-call overwrite target, the 0.65% sponsor fee, and the claim that the strategy seeks majority upside participation, with actual results dependent on market conditions.
For investors, the real question is whether that cost is acceptable. In a sideways market, an option-income sleeve may seem useful because option premiums can help offset volatility while the fund still maintains Bitcoin exposure.
In a strong rally, the same structure can lag a direct spot product because a portion of the upside has already been sold.
The risk stack also goes beyond the headline yield figure. BITA still depends on Bitcoin's price path, IBIT liquidity, options execution, tax treatment, and whether distributions come from repeatable premium capture or from a market environment that later changes.
A monthly payout can make exposure easier to fit within an income portfolio, while total return relative to IBIT through both rallies and drawdowns will determine whether the wrapper earns its fee.
The launch advances a story CryptoSlate has already tracked. June 11 coverage followed the BlackRock and Goldman Sachs race to package Bitcoin volatility into premium income, while the broader June 16 analysis placed BITA inside the push to normalize Bitcoin yield strategies.
BITA's listing shifts that debate from filing language into observable market behavior.
Goldman's pending filing for a Bitcoin Premium Income ETF shows the category is still being tested rather than standardized. The registration filing describes a strategy with indirect Bitcoin exposure and a much larger expected overwrite range of around 40%-100%.
That contrast shows Wall Street trying different ways to package volatility, option liquidity, and investor appetite for distributions.
The market backdrop makes the pitch easier to understand. Bitcoin is trading around the mid-$66,000s, up over seven days but down over 30 days, while broader CryptoSlate market data showed Bitcoin dominance near 58.6%.
That mixed trend is exactly the type of market where income wrappers get attention: investors may still want Bitcoin exposure while seeking a way to be paid during consolidation.
The risk is that income language can soften the perception of how much risk remains. BITA still depends on Bitcoin, IBIT, options execution, tax treatment, liquidity, and the path of future price moves.
Its distributions will only answer part of the question unless investors can see how much return came from premium, how much came from underlying Bitcoin exposure, and how much upside was given away in a rally.
That is the test from here. Early trading volume will show whether investors want a Bitcoin income wrapper from BlackRock at scale.
The first monthly distributions will show how the strategy looks in dollar terms. Options-market capacity will show whether the approach can grow beyond a launch product.
The next strong Bitcoin rally will show whether BITA's income feels like a useful volatility harvest or an expensive way to make BTC exposure look like yield.
The post BlackRock’s new Bitcoin ETF offers monthly income, but caps gains when Bitcoin surges appeared first on CryptoSlate.
DeFi emerged in 2020 with a vision to build solutions on top of the existing bottlenecks in the centralized financial system. In the last two years since its inception, by riding on some of the unparalleled use-cases like flash loans, liquidity mining, staking, yield farming, and compounding interest rates, the ecosystem exploded to $87 billion. DEXs emerged as the hotspots for witnessing maximum DeFi activities. Some of the users within the ecosystem who had earlier registered on Cex or Centralized exchanges moved their assets to Dex or decentralized exchanges for interacting with the DeFi protocols via wallets.
However, one thing which was like an elephant in the room was inconvenience causing trouble for the users. For example, users had to buy cryptocurrencies on one exchange and transfer the same to another DEX for operation. In this way, the process not only killed a lot of time, wasted their resources and caused inconvenience to users; but also deprived them of a good earning opportunity. Hence, to quicken decision-making, maximize ROIs and fix the fragmented operational process, crypto aggregators are an amenable choice moving forward in 2023.
Crypto aggregators establish a system through the use of Dapps, smart-contract, oracles, and APIs, where data from different DEX and CEX are clubbed together on a single platform with price feeds integrated. In this way, the traders need not have to shuffle between exchanges to find out the best prices for an asset. On the contrary, they can simply log in to the crypto aggregator and trade from those platforms. In some rare instances, some of the crypto aggregators allow trading in cryptocurrencies pairs which are not supported even on some of the renowned exchanges operational across the world.

Crypto aggregators use price oracles that connect to multiple exchanges to provide the latest price feeds. You can take this as an example. Suppose, if you are visiting a holiday destination, there may be multiple hotels available for accommodation. If you have to go and check every hotel to find the best prices, it would take a lot of time and money. However, to ease the process, there’s a website that directly connects with all the hotels present in that holiday destination and tracks all their offers and prices to facilitate quick booking on the go. Using that website, the user can track even the smallest fluctuations in the prices that the hotels provide and grab the opportunity to book their services.
A crypto aggregator works much like the same where it tracks all crypto exchanges through price oracles and APIs to give the latest price for the crypto. Once the user/trader picks up a trade, the protocol runs the trade across all exchanges and swap protocols. Upon finding the best platform for the trade, the protocols execute the trade and the trader ends up making the maximum profit which would have been otherwise impossible without the crypto aggregator’s help.
1inch is the most-used aggregator on EVM chains and the project that popularized split routing back in 2019. It remains the benchmark for anyone trading on Ethereum, BNB Chain, Arbitrum, Base, and the wider EVM ecosystem.
What makes it stand out:
Best for: Most EVM same-chain swaps, multi-hop altcoin trades, and traders who want a single battle-tested router across all the major chains.
Watch for: On Ethereum, gas can be significant, and 1inch sometimes captures value through positive slippage. For large EVM trades, default to Fusion (intent) mode rather than classic routing.
If your assets live on Solana, the choice is effectively made for you. Jupiter is the uncontested default, routing roughly 80% of all aggregator volume on the network — its next three competitors combined don't match its weekly throughput.
What makes it stand out:
Best for: Any swap on Solana, from memecoin trades to stablecoin routing to portfolio rebalancing.
Watch for: Solana has no public mempool in the EVM sense, but it has its own forms of priority gaming — Jupiter's transaction simulation helps, but be mindful on volatile, low-liquidity pairs.
For traders who care more about protection than speed — especially on large orders — CoW Swap is purpose-built. It takes a fundamentally different approach to execution that makes sandwich attacks structurally difficult.
What makes it stand out:
Best for: Large EVM trades, stablecoin swaps at size, and anyone who prioritizes MEV-resistant execution over instant settlement.
Watch for: Batch settlement adds a little latency. If you need immediate execution, a classic router may suit you better — but never publish a five-figure swap to the public mempool without protection.
The simplest way to think about it in 2026:
A few universal tips: going direct to the aggregator's own site usually nets the same or better price than the wallet integration, and unlocks advanced modes (Fusion, batch auctions) that wallets don't always surface. For maximum safety, pair any aggregator with a hardware wallet so you keep full custody of your funds throughout.
The aggregator category is in the middle of an architectural shift toward intent-based trading — you express what you want, and solvers compete to deliver it. By the end of 2026, most retail EVM volume is expected to flow through intent systems like 1inch Fusion and CoW Swap rather than direct router calls, while Jupiter keeps its iron grip on Solana.
For most traders, you don't need to overthink it: pick the leader for your chain, default to intent mode on large trades, and let the aggregator do the work of finding your best price across a fragmented market.
Two markets moved in opposite directions on the same headline. As the United States and Iran confirmed a peace deal to end their nearly four-month war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, crude oil tumbled to a three-month low — while Bitcoin and the entire top 10 crypto market posted a green week. The reason is the same for both: the single biggest geopolitical risk premium weighing on global markets is finally unwinding.
Here's the full breakdown of the oil crash, the latest US–Iran war developments, and how the top 10 cryptocurrencies performed over the past 7 days.
The de-escalation hit energy markets hard. US crude oil closed down 4.8% to $80.75 per barrel, while international Brent crude fell 4.7% to $83.17 — the lowest closing prices for both benchmarks since the first week of March, right after the war began.
The slide was not a one-day event. Oil had already tumbled more than 6% over the prior week in anticipation of an agreement, meaning the market front-ran the news before the official confirmation even landed. Heating oil, a proxy for jet fuel, dropped more than 3.5%, and wholesale gasoline fell more than 2.5%.

The catalyst is the Strait of Hormuz. Roughly 20% of the world's oil supplies passed through the strait before tanker traffic collapsed in early March, and its closure triggered one of the largest oil supply shocks on record. With Trump authorizing the toll-free reopening of the strait and lifting the US naval blockade, traders are pricing in the return of Gulf energy flows.
**CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 74% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
The diplomatic picture firmed up over the weekend but still carries open questions:
The takeaway: the framework is in place and markets are treating it as real, but the June 19 signing in Switzerland is the event that converts intention into commitment. Until then, expect headline-driven volatility in both energy and risk assets.
While oil sank, crypto climbed. The lifting of the geopolitical overhang pushed risk appetite back into digital assets, with every major name green over the trailing 7 days. Here's how the top 10 (excluding stablecoins Tether and USDC) performed:
The pattern is textbook risk-on rotation: the higher-beta, more speculative names (SOL leading at +4.62%) outperformed the steadier large caps (BTC, ETH, BNB), while the broad-market index of the top 20 climbed roughly 5% on the week.

The oil-down, crypto-up split tells a single story: markets are repricing a world with less war risk. Cheaper energy eases inflation pressure at the margin, a lifted naval blockade restores global trade flows, and the removal of the geopolitical premium frees up risk appetite for assets like Bitcoin that sold off hardest during the conflict.
But this is a relief rally built on an agreement, not yet a signature. Three things to watch into the week ahead:
For now, the message from both markets is aligned: the war premium is coming out, and risk assets are breathing again.
After the largest IPO in history, SpaceX stock refused to cool off. On its second trading day, SPCX extended its record debut, climbing through the $180s and pushing to an intraday high of $192.37 — well above its $135 IPO price and the ~$172 first-day peak. The message from the market is blunt: demand for SpaceX shares did not stop at the opening bell.
If you missed the IPO allocation and want exposure to SPCX, this guide breaks down the day-two price action and then walks you through exactly how to trade SpaceX stock, step by step.
The second session was a clean uptrend with two distinct legs. After opening softer in the low $160s, $SPCX dipped toward the $158–160 zone early before buyers stepped in hard. From that intraday low, the stock built a staircase of higher highs and higher lows through the afternoon — pushing past $172, consolidating around $176–180, and then breaking out into the close to tag $192.37, its highest print since listing.

Three takeaways from the chart:
A few forces are stacking in SpaceX's favor heading into day two:
That said, this is still a freshly listed, highly volatile stock. Parabolic post-IPO moves can reverse just as fast as they rise, so position sizing and risk management matter more here than usual.
If you want to trade SPCX without waiting for another allocation, XTB is one of the most accessible regulated brokers for accessing stocks and stock CFDs. Here's the full process from zero to your first trade.
Head to XTB and start the sign-up here:
👉 Open an XTB account
Enter your email, set a password, and select your country of residence. The initial registration takes only a couple of minutes. XTB offers both a live account (real funds) and a demo account, so if you want to practice the SPCX trade first with virtual money, you can start on the demo and switch to live later.
*Investments carry risks. Trade responsibly.
Like all regulated brokers, XTB requires identity verification (KYC) before you can trade with real funds. You'll be asked to:
Verification is typically fast — often completed within the same day. Once approved, your account is ready to fund.
Open the deposit section in your XTB dashboard and choose a funding method. XTB generally supports:
Card and e-wallet deposits are usually credited near-instantly, while bank transfers can take longer. Fund only what you're comfortable risking on a volatile post-IPO stock like SPCX.
Once your balance is live:
That's it — you're trading SpaceX stock. 👉 Get started on XTB here
*Investments carry risks. Trade responsibly.
With SPCX printing fresh highs at $192, the key question is whether momentum carries into day three or whether the stock cools after such a vertical run. Watch a few signals:
For traders, SPCX offers a high-octane way to play one of the most anticipated listings in market history. Just remember that the same volatility fueling these gains can erase them quickly, which is why a regulated broker with proper risk tools matters.
Hyperliquid is becoming one of the biggest stories in crypto as HYPE continues to climb the market cap rankings. While Bitcoin, Ethereum and other major altcoins are recovering from the recent sell off, HYPE is standing out with stronger momentum and growing attention from traders.
According to the latest market overview, Hyperliquid is trading around $66, up more than 9% in the last 24 hours. Its market cap has climbed above $16 billion, placing HYPE near the top 10 cryptocurrencies and ahead of several major altcoins.
The rise of HYPE is not only about price action. Hyperliquid is also gaining attention as one of the most important decentralized trading platforms, especially as demand for perpetual futures, tokenized assets and on chain trading continues to grow.
HYPE has become one of the strongest large cap crypto performers, with its market cap now above $16 billion. This puts Hyperliquid in direct competition with some of the biggest names in the market, including Dogecoin, Zcash, Cardano, Chainlink and Monero.
This is important because HYPE is no longer moving like a small speculative altcoin. Its current market cap places it among the most valuable crypto assets, which means more traders and investors are now watching it as a serious large cap project.
The latest move also shows a shift in market interest. While older altcoins are still trying to recover from recent losses, Hyperliquid is gaining momentum because it is tied to one of the strongest current crypto narratives: decentralized trading infrastructure.
The main reason behind the HYPE rally is the growing importance of Hyperliquid as a decentralized perpetuals exchange. The platform allows traders to access on chain markets without relying on traditional centralized exchange structures.
Hyperliquid has also benefited from the recent rise of pre IPO and tokenized market products. As crypto traders look for exposure to major private companies and high interest assets, platforms like Hyperliquid are becoming more relevant.
This became especially visible during the SpaceX trading wave, where pre IPO style futures and tokenized exposure became a major market topic. Hyperliquid was one of the platforms gaining attention from this trend, showing how decentralized trading venues are expanding beyond classic crypto pairs.
At the same time, HYPE benefits directly from the growth of the Hyperliquid ecosystem. As platform activity increases, demand for the native token can also rise, especially if traders believe Hyperliquid will keep taking market share from centralized exchanges.
The key question now is whether HYPE can hold its current breakout and continue pushing deeper into the top 10 crypto rankings.
If HYPE manages to stay above the $60 to $65 range, the bullish structure remains strong. Holding this area would show that buyers are defending the rally and that the recent move is not only a short term spike.
The next upside target for HYPE is around $70, followed by the previous high area near $75. If buying pressure continues and the broader crypto market stays positive, a move toward $80 could become possible.
However, HYPE has already posted a strong move, so traders should also watch for profit taking. If the price fails to hold above $60, HYPE could pull back toward $55 before attempting another move higher.

HYPE has a real chance to remain in the top 10 discussion if Hyperliquid continues to grow as a major decentralized exchange. Unlike many meme driven rallies, HYPE is tied to a platform with real trading activity and a clear market use case.
This gives Hyperliquid a stronger narrative than many short term altcoin pumps. The project is benefiting from three major themes at once: decentralized perpetuals, on chain trading and tokenized market speculation.
Still, staying near the top 10 will not be easy. HYPE will need to defend its market cap against established coins such as Dogecoin, Cardano, Zcash and Chainlink. It will also need continued trading volume and ecosystem growth to justify its higher valuation.
If Hyperliquid keeps attracting users and trading volume, HYPE could become one of the most important utility tokens in the market. But if volume drops or the broader market turns bearish again, the token could face a sharp correction.
HYPE is showing strong momentum, but buying after a major rally always comes with risk. The better setup may depend on whether the token can hold support above the $60 to $65 area.
For short term traders, the most important levels are $65 on the downside and $70 to $75 on the upside. A breakout above $75 could confirm renewed strength, while a drop below $60 could signal that the rally is losing momentum.
For longer term investors, the main question is whether Hyperliquid can continue growing its position in decentralized trading. If the platform keeps expanding and attracting volume, HYPE could remain one of the strongest large cap crypto assets.

Hyperliquid is no longer just another fast moving altcoin. With HYPE trading near $66, up more than 9% in 24 hours, and a market cap above $16 billion, the token has become a serious top 10 contender.
The rise of HYPE reflects growing interest in decentralized trading platforms, perpetual futures and tokenized market exposure. If Hyperliquid continues to gain users and trading volume, HYPE could remain one of the strongest crypto assets to watch.
The next major test is whether HYPE can hold above the $60 to $65 range. If buyers defend this zone, the token could target $70, $75 and potentially $80 next. But if the rally loses strength, a short term correction toward $55 remains possible.
For now, Hyperliquid is one of the most important names in the crypto market, and HYPE’s rise into the top 10 race shows how quickly the next generation of crypto infrastructure projects can challenge older market leaders.
Zcash is suddenly back in the spotlight after becoming one of the strongest performers among the top cryptocurrencies. While Bitcoin and Ethereum are recovering from the recent market sell-off, ZEC is outperforming most major coins with a sharp daily rally.
According to the latest crypto market data, Zcash is trading around $494, up more than 15% in the last 24 hours. Its market cap has climbed above $8 billion, placing it ahead of several major altcoins and making it one of the biggest winners in the current market rebound.
The broader crypto market is showing signs of recovery after a difficult sell-off, with Bitcoin back above $65,000 and Ethereum moving above $1,700. However, Zcash is standing out with a much stronger move than most large-cap cryptocurrencies.
While BTC is up around 1.5% and ETH is up around 2.3%, ZEC has gained more than 15% in the same period. This makes Zcash one of the strongest performers among the top 20 cryptos, outperforming XRP, Solana, Cardano, Chainlink, Monero, and Bitcoin Cash.
This strong move is especially important because Zcash was recently under pressure with the rest of the market. The sharp rebound suggests that buyers may be returning aggressively to privacy-focused coins, especially as traders look for altcoins with stronger upside momentum.
The ZEC rally appears to be driven by a mix of market recovery, renewed interest in privacy coins, and strong technical momentum.
Privacy coins have been gaining more attention as the crypto market shifts back toward narratives beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum. Zcash remains one of the most recognized privacy-focused cryptocurrencies, and its position in the top 20 gives it higher visibility when market sentiment improves.
Another reason behind the rally is the technical setup. After the recent correction, ZEC may have entered an oversold or undervalued zone, attracting traders looking for a rebound. Once the price started moving higher, momentum buyers likely joined the move, pushing ZEC above other major altcoins in daily performance.
The strong 24-hour volume also supports the move. Zcash recorded more than $750 million in daily trading volume, showing that the rally is not only based on low liquidity but backed by stronger market activity.
The key question now is whether ZEC can hold this breakout or whether the current move is only a short-term relief rally.
If Zcash manages to stay above the $480–$500 area, the bullish momentum could continue. A clean hold above this zone would suggest that buyers are defending the recovery and could open the door for another move toward the next resistance levels.
The next upside targets for ZEC could be around $550, followed by $600 if buying pressure continues. A move above $600 would be a strong signal that Zcash is not only recovering from the recent crash but possibly entering a larger bullish continuation phase.
However, traders should also watch for rejection near the current levels. After a 15% daily surge, short-term profit-taking is possible. If ZEC fails to hold above the $480 area, the price could pull back toward $450 or lower before attempting another move higher.

Zcash is showing strong momentum, but buying after a sharp daily rally always carries risk. The better setup may depend on whether ZEC can confirm support above the $480–$500 range.
For short-term traders, the most important signal is whether ZEC continues to outperform the broader market. If Bitcoin remains stable above $65,000 and Ethereum holds above $1,700, altcoins like ZEC could continue to benefit from renewed risk appetite.
For longer-term investors, the privacy coin narrative remains the main factor. If market interest in privacy-focused cryptocurrencies continues to grow, Zcash could remain one of the main beneficiaries because of its strong brand, large market cap, and long history in the crypto market.
Zcash has become one of the biggest winners in the latest crypto market rebound, surging more than 15% in 24 hours and pushing its market cap above $8 billion. The move comes as Bitcoin and Ethereum recover, but ZEC is clearly outperforming most major cryptocurrencies.
The next major test is whether Zcash can hold the $480–$500 area. If buyers defend this zone, ZEC could aim for $550 and possibly $600 next. But if the rally loses strength, a short-term pullback could happen before the next attempt higher.
For now, Zcash is one of the most important coins to watch as privacy coins lead the latest altcoin recovery.
The Chinese company is doubling down on its "embodied AI" bet.
Binance said it believes it is compliant as a regulatory deadline in the European Union nears—and a report says it's likely to lose access.
Sensor Tower's State of AI 2026 report shows ChatGPT's audience share slipping below 50% for the first time, as Gemini's default-app advantage and Claude's Pentagon-fueled rally eat into OpenAI's lead.
Federal prosecutors allege five men planned to use explosive-laden drones and sniper teams to take out "high-value targets" at the UFC event.
Publicly traded crypto exchange Coinbase added to its feature set Tuesday as it seeks to become the "everything exchange."
Industry groups, including the Crypto Council for Innovation (CCI), have vehemently condemned the new Illinois legislation as the "most anti-crypto law in the U.S."
The Binance exchange has issued a warning about the broader economic consequences of blocking its entry into the MiCA framework.
Elon Musk has made history by reaching an unprecedented personal net worth of $1.4 trillion.
SHIB could flip 15 coins for the 14th spot on CoinMarketCap if a "revert to mean" pattern sparks a squeeze to the historical 200-week price curve.
Ripple backs Flutterwave at a $3.2 billion valuation, opting for RLUSD stablecoin over XRP to power cross-border payments across 34 African markets.
Cryptocurrency mining operations that have been touting artificial intelligence partnerships for the last two years now confront a critical challenge: delivering on those commitments.
Investment firm VanEck has quantified the obstacle in a recent analysis. The industry confronts an immediate capital shortfall approaching $50 billion, with total funding requirements potentially escalating to $221 billion should all planned developments proceed.
VanEck’s research team, led by analysts Griffin MacMaster and Matthew Sigel, indicates the investment community is now scrutinizing actual performance rather than mere announcements.
“Execution, not signing, becomes the next premium,” the analysts stated.
Industry-wide, mining companies have completed construction on merely 25% of the artificial intelligence and high-performance computing infrastructure already committed to clients. VanEck anticipates this completion rate may decline further before reversing course, as major construction initiatives aren’t scheduled to accelerate until 2027 and 2028.
Organizations that fail to meet construction timelines face what VanEck characterizes as “structural de-ratings” from the investment community. The research also emphasizes that most mining operations lack previous experience constructing the sophisticated infrastructure demanded by AI clients.
The strategic shift toward artificial intelligence accelerated following the 2024 Bitcoin halving event, which significantly compressed mining margins. Numerous operators began redirecting their electrical infrastructure toward AI applications, wagering that technology companies would offer superior compensation for power and data center resources compared to cryptocurrency mining economics.
Core Scientific executed a multi-billion dollar infrastructure agreement with artificial intelligence company CoreWeave. TeraWulf, Hut 8, Iren, and Cipher Mining have all publicized intentions to lease electrical capacity and data center facilities to AI enterprises. Marathon Digital, Riot Platforms, and CleanSpark are implementing dual-strategy approaches that maintain Bitcoin mining operations while pursuing AI opportunities.
VanEck’s analysis establishes a sharp distinction between organizations that have successfully deployed operational AI infrastructure and those still promoting prospective initiatives.
The critical evaluation metric is “gross energized power” — measuring actual operational megawatts rather than announced capacity. Organizations with executed physical leases, including Cipher Mining, Hut 8, and TeraWulf, command valuations surpassing 10 times gross energized power. Marathon Digital and CleanSpark, maintaining stronger connections to cryptocurrency mining, trade at merely 2–6 times equivalent metrics.
Capital access strategies differ substantially across companies. Firms maintaining Bitcoin treasury holdings — Marathon Digital possesses 35,303 BTC, CleanSpark maintains 13,561 BTC, and Hut 8 holds 13,696 BTC — can liquidate cryptocurrency assets to support construction financing. Organizations without digital asset reserves confront more constrained alternatives, including equity dilution or additional borrowing.
VanEck anticipates customer creditworthiness will increasingly influence valuations. Mining firms serving established, investment-grade cloud computing companies should access more favorable financing terms and premium valuations compared to those partnering with emerging AI startups.
Notwithstanding Bitcoin’s approximately 24% decline since January, numerous mining equities have posted substantial gains. Riot Platforms has surged nearly 94% year-to-date. Cipher Mining has advanced approximately 62%.
VanEck projects the sector will eventually receive valuations resembling data center real estate investment trusts rather than mining operations, once AI revenue streams mature. Several companies, the analysis suggests, may ultimately pursue acquisition or REIT conversion.
Currently, the investment firm identifies maximum valuation expansion opportunity in HIVE, KEEL, IREN, and Bitdeer — while acknowledging these entities carry the greatest execution uncertainty. TeraWulf, Cipher Mining, and Hut 8 represent more conservative investment alternatives, having secured foundational customer agreements.
The post Bitcoin Mining Companies Confront $50B Shortfall in AI Infrastructure Transition appeared first on Blockonomi.
Cryptocurrency mining operations that have been announcing artificial intelligence partnerships over the last 24 months now confront a fundamental challenge: can they actually deliver on their commitments?
A comprehensive analysis from investment manager VanEck quantifies the magnitude of this hurdle. The industry confronts an immediate capital deficit approaching $50 billion, with aggregate long-term financing requirements potentially hitting $221 billion should current expansion roadmaps proceed as planned.
VanEck research analysts Griffin MacMaster and Matthew Sigel note the industry narrative is evolving from partnership announcements to operational execution.
“Execution, not signing, becomes the next premium,” their analysis states.
Throughout the mining sector, companies have activated roughly 25% of the artificial intelligence and high-performance computing infrastructure they’ve contractually committed to clients. VanEck anticipates this percentage will decline further before recovery, as major construction initiatives aren’t projected to accelerate until 2027 and 2028.
Firms that fall behind on construction timelines face what VanEck characterizes as “structural de-ratings” from the investment community. The research team further emphasizes that most of these organizations lack meaningful experience constructing the sophisticated infrastructure AI clients demand.
This strategic transformation began following the 2024 Bitcoin halving event, which significantly compressed mining profit margins. Numerous operators pivoted toward repurposing their electrical infrastructure for artificial intelligence applications, wagering that technology companies would pay premium rates for power and computing capacity compared to cryptocurrency mining economics.
Core Scientific executed a multi-billion-dollar hosting arrangement with artificial intelligence company CoreWeave. TeraWulf, Hut 8, Iren, and Cipher Mining have all unveiled strategies to provide power and data center facilities to AI customers. Marathon Digital, Riot Platforms, and CleanSpark are implementing dual-track approaches that maintain Bitcoin mining operations while pursuing AI opportunities.
VanEck’s analysis establishes a distinct separation between organizations that have secured and activated AI infrastructure versus those still presenting future concepts.
The critical measurement is “gross energized power” — actual megawatts a company has activated, not merely planned. Organizations with executed physical agreements, including Cipher Mining, Hut 8, and TeraWulf, are commanding valuations exceeding 10 times gross energized power. Marathon Digital and CleanSpark, which maintain stronger connections to Bitcoin mining, trade at merely 2–6 times that benchmark.
Financing pathways differ substantially across companies. Organizations maintaining Bitcoin treasury positions — Marathon Digital possesses 35,303 BTC, CleanSpark controls 13,561 BTC, and Hut 8 maintains 13,696 BTC — can liquidate holdings to finance construction activities. Others lacking cryptocurrency reserves confront limited alternatives, including equity dilution or additional leverage.
VanEck also projects client creditworthiness will gain importance moving forward. Mining companies servicing major, investment-grade cloud providers could secure more favorable financing terms and superior valuations compared to those partnering with emerging AI ventures.
Notwithstanding Bitcoin declining approximately 24% since January, numerous mining equities have appreciated substantially. Riot Platforms has surged nearly 94% year-to-date. Cipher Mining has climbed roughly 62%.
VanEck suggests the sector will eventually receive valuations resembling data center real estate investment trusts rather than mining operations, once AI revenue streams stabilize. Several companies, the analysis notes, could ultimately be acquired or restructured as REITs.
Currently, the firm identifies the strongest revaluation opportunity in HIVE, KEEL, IREN, and Bitdeer — although these names simultaneously carry the most significant execution uncertainty. TeraWulf, Cipher Mining, and Hut 8 represent a more prudent approach, with cornerstone agreements already finalized.
The post Bitcoin Mining Companies Confront Massive $50B Shortfall in AI Infrastructure Push appeared first on Blockonomi.
Coinbase has unveiled an extensive suite of new offerings as it advances its vision to create what the company describes as an “everything exchange.” The revelations came Tuesday during the platform’s “System Update” announcement series.
The nation’s leading cryptocurrency exchange is now venturing into domains traditionally dominated by conventional brokerage firms, banking institutions, and financial technology providers.
Investors can now migrate their current stock holdings from competing brokerage platforms directly to Coinbase using the Automated Customer Account Transfer Service, commonly referred to as ACATS. This mechanism enables the movement of securities and funds between platforms without liquidation.
Via Coinbase Advanced, American users gain access to trade equities, exchange-traded funds, and market indexes right alongside their digital currency investments. The service provides commission-free transactions, partial share purchasing, integrated TradingView analytics, and yields up to 3.5% on qualifying USDC deposits.
The platform is also preparing to introduce options contracts for both traditional stocks and cryptocurrencies, a sophisticated instrument generally targeted toward seasoned traders. Tokenized equity products, fully backed by corresponding U.S. securities, will become accessible to international users starting next month.
This strategic expansion positions Coinbase as a direct competitor to services like Robinhood, enabling customers to consolidate their equity and cryptocurrency management within one unified interface.
Coinbase is broadening its derivatives portfolio with perpetual futures contracts linked to thematic investment sectors, encompassing artificial intelligence, defense industries, and Chinese market exposure. Pre-IPO perpetual futures are also debuting, providing speculators with exposure to privately-held enterprises.
SpaceX trading contracts became available immediately after the aerospace company’s recent transition to public markets. Contracts connected to OpenAI and Anthropic, both anticipated to complete their public offerings later this year, are scheduled to launch subsequently.
The exchange has also unveiled Coinbase Advisor, characterized as among the earliest SEC-registered artificial intelligence-driven investment advisory platforms. This service launches exclusively for Coinbase One subscribers across the United States and delivers portfolio optimization suggestions, tax-loss harvesting strategies, and comprehensive market insights.
Coinbase is developing infrastructure that enables AI agents to autonomously execute transactions within parameters established by users.
Additional consumer-focused financial products comprise a travel booking platform delivering 5% Bitcoin rewards on reservations, a USDC-denominated variant of the Coinbase One credit card, and borrowing capabilities secured by staked Solana through partnerships with Jito and Morpho.
Prediction market offerings are simultaneously expanding, featuring short-duration cryptocurrency contracts and bundled betting options that enable traders to consolidate multiple predictions into singular positions.
This aggressive product diversification arrives on the heels of challenging first-quarter performance. Coinbase reported an unexpected loss of $1.49 per share on $1.41 billion in quarterly revenue for Q1 2026, significantly underperforming analyst projections of 27 cents earnings per share on $1.52 billion revenue. Diminished cryptocurrency valuations resulted in suppressed trading volumes throughout the quarter.
Coinbase’s financial performance has historically demonstrated strong correlation with cryptocurrency market fluctuations, and the organization is actively pursuing reduced dependency through expansion into equities, ETFs, and comprehensive financial service offerings.
Chief Executive Brian Armstrong has consistently articulated his ambition to evolve Coinbase into a comprehensive financial services destination integrating trading capabilities, payment processing, lending facilities, and wealth management solutions.
The post Coinbase (COIN) Unveils AI-Powered Investing and Stock Trading in Major Platform Expansion appeared first on Blockonomi.
Solana has mounted an impressive comeback from its June bottom, posting gains exceeding 20% in recent days. This rally has positioned SOL at a technical crossroads that may determine its trajectory in the weeks ahead.

As of June 16, SOL was changing hands around $75, marking a substantial recovery from the $60 region tested earlier this month.
The upward momentum received support from broader market catalysts. News emerged that the United States and Iran had negotiated a preliminary deal to maintain open access to the Strait of Hormuz, alleviating inflationary pressures. Crude oil prices declined following the announcement, while Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other digital assets caught a bid.
Derivatives metrics confirmed the bullish shift. Data from CoinGlass indicated rising open interest alongside the price advance. Short squeeze activity also contributed momentum, as leveraged bearish positions were liquidated during the climb from the low $60s.
On the business front, Solana Company turned down an unsolicited takeover bid from Forward Industries on June 15. The proposal offered a premium valuation and emerged amid growing competition among companies developing SOL-focused treasury operations.
The daily timeframe reveals that Solana consolidated within a defined range for approximately four months, bounded by support at $75.7 and resistance at $98.3. This structure collapsed in early June when price breached the lower boundary and descended toward $60.
SOL has now circled back to challenge that previous support zone. A decisive reclaim of this area would negate the earlier breakdown and bring $83.5, $90, and ultimately $98.3 back into play as upside objectives.
Zooming into the four-hour perspective, SOL has pierced through a downward-sloping trendline that contained rallies since late May. The Relative Strength Index has climbed back above the neutral 50 mark after dipping into oversold territory, while the MACD indicator shows early signs of bullish crossover.
Trader Daan Crypto Trades shared on X that Solana appears to be escaping from a consolidation wedge pattern relative to BTC. He suggested that a confirmed breakout could trigger follow-through buying and lift related ecosystem tokens, though he emphasized the current zone represents meaningful resistance.
Analyst Satoshi Flipper spotted a falling wedge breakout pattern on the daily timeframe, with price successfully reclaiming the upper boundary near $70. His analysis projects a longer-term objective at $250, a level that would match peaks achieved during Solana’s previous bull market phase.
Technical analyst More Crypto Online identified a concentrated Fibonacci resistance cluster spanning $69.44 to $72.58 on the four-hour chart. This zone represents the convergence of the 38.2% retracement level, 100% Elliott Wave extension, and 50% retracement—creating a formidable obstacle.
Not every market observer shares the optimistic view. Crypto Coral cautioned on June 16 that Solana had violated a bearish flag formation and is now retesting significant EMA resistance. According to this analysis, failure to recapture that level could trigger another downward move.
Should the $75 zone fail to provide support, traders are eyeing $71.8, $69.1, and the June low near $60 as successive downside targets.
The Supertrend indicator on the four-hour chart currently places support in the vicinity of $70.9.
The post Solana (SOL) Rallies 20% as Traders Focus on Critical Resistance Zone appeared first on Blockonomi.
The Federal Reserve’s upcoming June 17 FOMC meeting is virtually guaranteed to result in unchanged interest rates. Market data from CME FedWatch indicates probabilities between 99.4% and 99.6% for a hold decision.
MARKETS BET FED WILL HIKE AGAIN
Investor expectations for a Fed rate hike are rising. Bank of America’s June fund manager survey shows 40% expect at least one hike in the next 12 months, up from 16% in May. Rate-cut hopes fell sharply, with only 28% expecting cuts versus 50%… pic.twitter.com/S59YbqgYAA
— *Walter Bloomberg (@DeItaone) June 16, 2026
This marks the inaugural FOMC meeting under Kevin Warsh’s leadership following his appointment by President Donald Trump. Warsh assumes control during a challenging period where persistent inflation has significantly complicated the trajectory toward monetary easing.
Research conducted by CNBC involving 32 financial professionals—including economists, market strategists, and investment managers—revealed unanimous expectations for rate stability at the upcoming meeting. Additionally, consensus points to no adjustments extending throughout 2027.
However, forward-looking market pricing tells a different story. Data from the Kalshi prediction platform indicates 64% odds that the Federal Reserve will implement at least one rate increase before July 2027. This represents a substantial increase from projections made earlier in 2026.
Supporting evidence comes from Bank of America’s latest fund manager survey. Nearly 40% of participants now forecast at least one rate hike over the coming 12 months. This marks a dramatic rise from the 16% recorded just one month earlier. Meanwhile, only 28% anticipate rate reductions.
The primary catalyst behind shifting expectations is renewed inflationary pressure. US consumer price data for May showed a 0.5% monthly increase. Year-over-year calculations reveal inflation accelerating to 4.2%, representing a significant jump from April’s 3.8% reading.
Escalating oil prices have intensified inflationary concerns. Geopolitical friction between the United States and Iran has driven energy costs upward, generating anxiety about potential supply disruptions affecting the Strait of Hormuz shipping corridor.
The CNBC survey revealed that 88% of participants anticipate the Federal Reserve will remove forward guidance indicating rate cuts as the next probable action. This would signal a meaningful policy tone adjustment, even absent immediate rate modifications.
EY’s chief economist Gregory Daco commented to CNBC that Warsh “will inherit a committee that has become noticeably more hawkish,” despite Warsh’s personal reputation for dovish policy preferences.
Fed funds futures markets confirm this sentiment shift. Trading patterns no longer anticipate significant monetary easing over upcoming years, with expectations clustering around the current 3.62% rate level.
Cryptocurrency markets have demonstrated cautious responses to evolving rate expectations. Elevated interest rates typically redirect liquidity away from higher-risk investment categories, which includes digital currencies.
The Bank of Japan recently implemented a 25 basis point increase, bringing rates to 1%—the highest level witnessed in over three decades. Similarly, the European Central Bank raised rates by 25 basis points to 2.25%, marking its first increase since 2023.
A potential diplomatic agreement between the US and Iran, announced following the conclusion of the CNBC survey period, could provide relief on energy pricing. Should inflation moderate consequently, the Federal Reserve may gain additional flexibility regarding future policy directions.
Currently, both cryptocurrency and traditional financial markets remain focused on forthcoming FOMC communications for clarity regarding the central bank’s policy trajectory.
The post June 2026 FOMC Meeting: Why Markets Are Betting on Future Rate Hikes Despite Hold Decision appeared first on Blockonomi.
The days of altcoins making money from token launches and hype alone are over.
This is according to CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju, who says there are now only three categories that can survive into the future.
The analyst made his blunt assessment in an early Wednesday thread on X, where he started by pointing out that “altcoins aren’t dead,” but those that only made money from selling narratives would soon disappear from the crypto world.
He then made a structured case for why a selective exposure to a small subset of the asset class still makes sense in 2026, putting emphasis on those with real revenue, real businesses, and alignment with where global finance is actually heading.
The first category he identified is what he called “global internet companies with tokenized market layers,” where he pointed to Binance’s BNB Coin and the TON blockchain’s recently rechristened GRAM token. According to Ju, such tokens are backed by businesses with revenue, have an established user base, and have shown long-term operational commitment. He suggested that for such companies, it sometimes made more sense to issue a token and list it on a crypto exchange than to pursue traditional equity listings.
The second group the market watcher identified were DeFi protocols also with actual revenue. Here, he namechecked Hyperliquid’s DEX, noting that tokens from such “high-quality” projects can still offer huge upside, especially if the teams behind them are credible, they have money coming in, and their governance systems respect holders.
Highlighting Hyperliquid was no mistake on Ju’s part, considering the HYPE token associated with the platform has been doing crazy numbers lately, jumping over 31% in the last seven days and almost 70% across the last month. That push, supported by ETF inflows and strong trading activity tied to SpaceX-linked perpetual contracts, saw it reach a new all-time high just above $76 on June 16.
Lastly, the analyst also suggested that projects “aligned with broader financial trends,” including stablecoins and real-world asset tokenization, as well as AI agents, which he believes could be a “major growth area.”
Ju’s take reflects a wider change in crypto markets, with the speculative sectors that dominated past cycles currently struggling for traction. For instance, data recently published by CryptoRank showed that meme coins, which once boasted a collective market cap north of $135 billion, have seen their value shrink to just $24.5 billion in the last two years, with the sector falling by about 31% this year alone.
Meanwhile, according to the on-chain technician, there’s been growing interest in stablecoins and tokenized stocks, sectors which, in his view, are showing where blockchain technology can support actual business activity rather than just speculative trading.
The post Analyst Identifies 3 Altcoin Sectors Positioned to Survive Market Shakeout appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Coinbase plans to launch tokenized stock trading in August for customers outside the US, according to an announcement on Tuesday.
Tokenized stocks will be backed 1:1 by the underlying asset and will represent “true equity ownership,” it stated. This includes dividend payouts and complete shareholder rights, alongside the “programmatic utility of the onchain economy.”
The product merges traditional equities with crypto flexibility, as traders can access stock markets out of hours. Tokenized stocks can also be lent out for yields, posted as loan collateral, or transferred to other users, it stated.
“Our product will give all the benefits of true ownership, with all the benefits of tokenized assets. This is a great step towards unlocking global access to US markets,” said Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong.
Coinbase also announced that it will be rolling out options trading for crypto and stocks, directly on the exchange. Options are derivative contracts that give the holder the “option” of selling at a strike price, rather than futures, which are fixed.
The company is also introducing real-world asset (RWA) perpetual futures, with targeted exposure to equity indices like AI, China, defense, and tech.
Its recently launched pre-IPO perps also offer early exposure to high-interest companies before they hit public exchanges, starting with SpaceX, but soon to include Anthropic and OpenAI.
Pre-IPO perpetual futures have exploded in popularity over the past couple of months, leading up to the SpaceX IPO last week. According to CryptoQuant, volumes across leading exchanges have surged 1,100% since the beginning of May to around $12 billion, with Binance dominating market share.
Pre-IPO perpetual volume has exploded from $2M in March to $12B as of June.
Binance alone now controls ~83% of the market. pic.twitter.com/jTZIgqv4wS
— CryptoQuant.com (@cryptoquant_com) June 16, 2026
Tokenized stocks make up just 5% of the total tokenized RWA onchain value, according to RWA.xyz, with around $1.5 billion. Ondo is currently the largest platform for tokenized stocks by market share, with 59%, followed by xStocks with 32%.
Brian Armstrong said on Fox News on Tuesday that big banks are trying to undermine the President’s crypto agenda.
“They’re [banks] are trying to protect their profit margins, taking money out of the pockets of hardworking Americans,”
Banks are pushing back against crypto legislation over stablecoin yields, which far exceed most interest rates high street banks offer. They fear there will be a deposit flight as savers seek earnings on their capital rather than leaving it devaluing in a bank.
The post Coinbase to Launch Tokenized Stocks For Non-US Customers appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Following a wave of selling pressure that pulled bitcoin (BTC) below $60,000 two weeks ago, analysts have highlighted on-chain data that signals possible seller exhaustion, which is further substantiated by a reprieve in macroeconomic conditions.
According to analysts at crypto exchange Bitfinex, the market is witnessing a transition into late-stage capitulation rather than a broader distribution phase. This translates to constant selling pressure among previous buyers of BTC, like exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and treasury companies.
Recent bitcoin buyers aggressively turned into sellers after the asset’s price fell below $75,000. Since then, demand for the cryptocurrency has been completely agnostic to price. These buyers are now realizing losses at an accelerating pace, as evidenced by the $1.35 billion in daily realized losses in June’s first trading week.
As selling pressure persists, analysts added that the market is in a transitional phase that reflects a typical post-liquidation structure. This dynamic often appears once the primary wave of forced selling from distressed investor cohorts exhaust themselves.
Although current loss realization levels are enough to confirm deep bear conditions, they have not reached the intensity required to establish a definitive bottom. Market experts believe that demand levels will determine whether this consolidation transforms into a concrete support floor or acts as a temporary pause before a deeper plunge.
“What the tape shows is seller exhaustion arriving at the same moment as a macro reprieve, which is a different condition from genuine demand. The price action that follows each behaves very differently, which leads us to believe that despite the short-term recovery, bulls face significant hurdles before an uptrend can form,” analysts explained.
Looking back at the market’s moves on June 5, Bitfinex’s analysts believe crypto lows were a front-running of a global meltdown across risk assets. For the first time in six years, risk asset correlations broke down and commodities, equities, and yields all declined.
While most risk assets, including BTC, have recovered, dynamics intertwining inflation, energy markets, and monetary policy have dominated the U.S. macro environment. There is also some form of relief amid easing geopolitical tensions, particularly signs of a potential US-Iran agreement. If the agreement holds, there could be a ripple effect that would affect macro dynamics that continue to shape digital markets.
Regardless of the outcome of the geopolitical situation, liquidity conditions remain a more important driver than traditional safe-haven narratives. So, demand remains bitcoin’s biggest challenge for an upward rally.
The post Bitcoin Seller Exhaustion? On-chain Data Signals Transition Toward Late-Stage Capitulation appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Avalanche (AVAX) became one of the most discussed cryptocurrencies on Monday despite the broader market rally, as growing skepticism around the network fueled social media debates.
According to Santiment, many users are questioning whether Avalanche can still compete with faster-growing blockchains such as Solana and Sui.
Much of the criticism has focused on concerns that developer activity, user adoption, and overall ecosystem growth are moving away from Avalanche toward rival networks. Santiment’s sentiment data revealed that market mood around AVAX has dropped sharply, pivoting from one of its most bullish phases earlier this year to one of its most bearish periods.
However, the analytics platform stated that extreme negative sentiment can sometimes create opportunities for reversals in the market. Despite the rising criticism, Avalanche continues to maintain institutional partnerships, government-linked initiatives, and its subnet technology, which remains a major feature of the network.
Meanwhile, stats from the Developer Report by Electric Capital revealed Solana leads with 795 full-time developers (each contributing 10+ days monthly), whereas Sui has 202 such developers, and Avalanche is behind with only 168. Furthermore, the total developer counts show Solana leading at 2,555, Sui at 656, and Avalanche at 484. The metric considers only original code authors, while excluding developers involved in merged pull requests, forked commits, and automated bot activity.
AVAX briefly moved above $7 this week as the broader crypto market recovered. The token gained nearly 4% in the past 24 hours. The rally also comes amid growing attention around FIFA’s partnership with Avalanche during the ongoing 2026 World Cup. FIFA is using a custom Avalanche blockchain to support ticketing, loyalty programs, and digital collectibles for fans across the world.
The Layer 1 network, announced in May 2025, powers FIFA Collect, the organization’s official collectibles platform developed with Modex. Fans can use Right-to-Ticket collectibles to access official World Cup tickets through a special portal before matches. The partnership has also reportedly helped Avalanche attract new users.
Zooming out, however, AVAX is still over 26% down over the past month. Additionally, the price has fallen by over 76% from its September 2026 high of $30.
The post Is Avalanche Falling Behind? Social Media Debates Heat Up Over AVAX Growth Slowdown appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Many leading altcoins are well in the green today (June 16), but Bittensor (TAO) has failed to follow the overall upswing, posting a substantial daily decline.
Even so, several analysts think it could be gearing up for a rebound that might carry it back to multi-month highs.
TAO currently trades at around $268, a 7% plunge over the past 24 hours. It is important to note that its decline occured despite Grayscale’s positive remarks. Just hours ago, the digital asset management company claimed that centralized companies like Anthropic are more vulnerable to government intervention and decentralized projects like Bittensor “offer an alternative.”
“Bittensor provides open-source, permissionless access to AI through a decentralized global network,” the firm posted on X.
X user Altcoin Sherpa noted that TAO has lagged behind numerous well-known cryptocurrencies, suggesting the weakness may stem from traders pre-positioning and many already being fully allocated. At the same time, the analyst said TAO still “looks good” and that they remain invested in it.
“This current area is a bit of a resistance spot, 200d EMA + S/R level, but if it can break here, I think the low $300s is my next area up,” the X user added.
Ali Martinez also gave his two cents. He argued that TAO is approaching the top of its descending channel and predicted that a decisive break could open the door to a jump to $350 and then $420.
The asset’s recent exchange netflow raises the possibility of a short-term revival. Over the past few weeks, outflows have surpassed inflows, suggesting that many investors have abandoned centralized trading venues in favor of self-custody solutions, thereby reducing immediate selling pressure.

Another analyst who seems very fond of TAO is Michael van de Poppe. A few days back, he described the token’s chart as “phenomenal” and envisioned a potential price explosion to $500.
Shortly after, he opined that the strongest altcoins from the previous months, including TAO, could extend their solid performance in the near term, provided Bitcoin (BTC) has already bottomed.
Recall that at the start of June, the primary cryptocurrency briefly collapsed to around $59,000 – its lowest point in 19 months. And while it has recovered well above $65,000 following the peace deal between Iran and the US, some analysts believe the worst for this cycle has yet to come.
The post Bittensor (TAO) Slips 7% Daily, Yet a Price Explosion May Come Next appeared first on CryptoPotato.