Escalating Gulf tensions could destabilize energy markets, impacting global supply chains and investor sentiment, including in crypto sectors.
The post Kuwait intercepts hostile aerial targets as Gulf tensions escalate, and crypto markets are watching appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Geopolitical tensions heighten market instability, influencing crypto volatility and complicating monetary policy amid global economic impacts.
The post US Central Command strikes Iranian military targets, crypto markets brace for volatility appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Ochoa's sixth World Cup appearance underscores his enduring talent and highlights the rarity of such longevity in international football.
The post Guillermo Ochoa set to play in 6th World Cup this summer appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The HBAR spot ETF's launch could drive increased institutional interest and liquidity in Hedera, potentially boosting its market adoption.
The post Canary Funds files SEC 424B3 for HBAR spot ETF, marking a first for Hedera investors appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Kraken's partnership with FIFA 2026 could accelerate crypto adoption, enhancing fan engagement and influencing the sports economy globally.
The post Kraken becomes official crypto partner of FIFA World Cup 2026 as tournament preparations intensify appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

Strategy (MSTR) CEO Says Bitcoin Sale Was About Market ‘Inoculation,’ Not a Retreat
Strategy Inc. CEO Phong Le somewhat pushed back Tuesday against the wave of criticism that followed the company’s first Bitcoin sale since 2022, telling CNBC’s Power Lunch that the move was a deliberate, limited exercise designed to signal operational flexibility — not a philosophical reversal.
“We wanted to inoculate the market and we wanted to test our processes,” Le said in what the network described as a first-time interview. “We learned that everything works.”
Between May 26 and May 31, Strategy sold 32 Bitcoin for approximately $2.5 million at an average price of $77,135 per coin — a transaction that, despite representing just 0.004% of the company’s total holdings, set off an outsized market reaction and reignited debate over whether Michael Saylor’s famous “never sell” doctrine was being abandoned.
Le was careful to frame the disposal in terms of balance sheet management rather than conviction. He cited three reasons for the sale: establishing that Strategy can sell when necessary, confirming that internal systems for executing Bitcoin disposals are fully operational, and creating opportunities to capture tax losses on Bitcoin acquired at lower cost basis — the company has purchased BTC at prices ranging from $10,000 to $125,000 per coin.
Critically, he said the sale was not driven by financial distress. “We did not need to sell our Bitcoin to satisfy our dividends,” Le said. “We’re able to do that through other capital-raising activities.” Proceeds from the sale were directed toward distributions on the company’s STRC perpetual preferred stock.
Le also pointed out that Strategy remained a net buyer: on balance, the company purchased approximately 1,500 Bitcoin over the same period it sold the 32 coins.
The most pointed exchange came when the host pressed Le on the backlash from investors who believed Strategy had pledged never to liquidate its Bitcoin reserves. Le acknowledged the frustration but was unapologetic.
“We have a set of constituents that we have to be able to answer to,” he said, listing common stockholders, preferred shareholders, debt holders, and Bitcoin holders. “When it makes sense for our common stockholders for us to sell our Bitcoin, we will.”
Le suggested the loudest critics were retail investors and “crypto anarchists” ideologically committed to permanent hodling — not the institutional shareholders the company interacts with directly.
“Our institutional shareholders that we talked to don’t seem to be unnerved by it,” he said.
This was not Strategy’s first Bitcoin disposal. In December 2022, the company sold 704 BTC at $16,776 per coin and repurchased 810 BTC two days later — a tax-loss harvesting maneuver that exploited the lack of a crypto wash-sale rule.
Jeffrey’s chief market strategist David Zervos, who joined Le on set, asked about the macro picture around Bitcoin, noting weakness across traditional safe-haven assets. Le acknowledged the broader headwinds, citing three macro forces pressuring Bitcoin: uncertainty around the Federal Reserve’s interest rate path, two ongoing global wars, and a lack of regulatory clarity from Congress on pending crypto legislation.
Still, Le remained bullish on Bitcoin’s long-term thesis.
“I do think Bitcoin is a hedge against inflation. I think Bitcoin is a hedge against big government,” he said, adding that the current environment — potentially a cyclical drawdown — mirrors the roughly 75% pullback seen in May 2022, four years ago.
The market, for now, is less sanguine. Bitcoin was trading around $61,600 on June 10, 2026 — down more than 40% from its all-time high of $126,198 reached in October 2025. The sell-off deepened after the Strategy announcement coincided with record spot ETF outflows estimated between $2.8 billion and $3.5 billion, triggering $1.8 billion in forced liquidations in a single day.
MSTR shares have been caught in the same downdraft, trading near $117–$127 as of this week — down roughly 67% from their 52-week high of $457.
Strategy has since resumed buying, acquiring 1,550 BTC at an average price of $65,332 between June 1 and June 7 in a move analysts characterized as an effort to restore market confidence.
As of late May, the company held 845,256 Bitcoin at a total cost basis of approximately $63.97 billion.
This post Strategy (MSTR) CEO Says Bitcoin Sale Was About Market ‘Inoculation,’ Not a Retreat first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin Executive Says Education — Not Products — Is Wall Street’s Real Obstacle
When Morgan Stanley created a firmwide Head of Digital Asset Strategy role in January 2026, it handed the job to Amy Oldenburg — a 26-year veteran of the bank who spent much of her career in emerging markets, trading foreign exchange and equities in places where formal banking infrastructure was either unreliable or absent.
That background, she said in a recent interview on the Coin Stories podcast with Natalie Brunell, shapes everything she believes about where Bitcoin is headed.
“Where were the first users of a lot of this?” Oldenburg said, pointing to cross-border and international markets — regions where people were not rejecting the traditional banking system out of ideology, but because that system had already failed them.
On the podcast, she described watching M-Pesa, Safaricom’s mobile money service, spread across East Africa in 2007, with women loading cash onto flip phones in villages with no reliable electricity and dirt roads. The parallel to Bitcoin’s decentralized value proposition was not lost on her.
Morgan Stanley’s entry into Bitcoin has been methodical, and Oldenburg explained why. The bank is a global systemically important bank, or G-SIB, and unlike BlackRock — an independent asset manager — Morgan Stanley is owned by a bank holding company governed by the Federal Reserve.
That distinction meant the firm faced capital treatment requirements and regulatory constraints that independent asset managers did not, forcing it to watch peers roll out crypto products years before it could.
The regulatory environment was not the only obstacle. Morgan Stanley had built a plan years in advance to launch spot crypto trading on its E-Trade platform, but by 2024, several of the vendors the bank had shortlisted for partnerships had collapsed — a casualty of the same industry shakeout that took down FTX and a wave of smaller firms. The bank had to rebuild its strategy from the ground up.
When the firm finally launched the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust — ticker MSBT — on April 7, 2026, it became the first spot Bitcoin ETF issued by a U.S. chartered bank. The debut was the strongest first-day ETF launch in Morgan Stanley’s history, taking in over $33.8 million and landing in the top 1% of all ETF debuts by volume, according to Bloomberg senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas.
The fund carries an expense ratio of 0.14%, making it the cheapest Bitcoin ETF in the U.S. market — undercutting BlackRock’s IBIT by 11 basis points.
The product exists. The challenge now, Oldenburg said, is getting the people inside Morgan Stanley’s own wealth machine to use it.
The firm manages roughly $9.3 trillion in client assets, and in October 2025 its Global Investment Committee formally recommended a 2% to 4% crypto allocation for moderate to aggressive growth portfolios, describing Bitcoin as a scarce asset comparable to digital gold. Yet advisor uptake has been slow.
Oldenburg attributed this directly to an education gap. Many financial advisors still cannot cleanly distinguish Bitcoin from the broader crypto category — let alone explain the structural differences between Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana to a client who just wants to know if it belongs in their retirement account.
The problem runs in both directions: clients who came of age watching crypto exchanges collapse understandably associate all digital assets with FTX-era chaos, while advisors with fiduciary responsibility are reluctant to recommend an asset that still moves in lockstep with risk equities rather than as an independent inflation hedge.
“It’s not all fitting together yet,” Oldenburg said, comparing the current moment to the early days of the BlackBerry — a technology where she knew something was there, but the use case had not crystallized for most people.
This sentiment echoes Oldenburg’s comments at The Bitcoin Conference, where she argued that bitcoin remains widely misunderstood and that investor education is the key obstacle to broader adoption. She said the firm is training advisors, expanding crypto access, and believes regulatory progress could eventually make bank-held bitcoin “not out of the question.”
On the question of what would push Bitcoin toward a more decisive breakout, Oldenburg gave an answer that reflected her experience watching systems under stress. She suggested it may take a crisis — not necessarily a dramatic one, but a slow grind that breaks confidence in traditional financial infrastructure and makes Bitcoin’s properties as a decentralized, borderless store of value viscerally clear.
She has seen that dynamic play out in emerging markets, in Russia and Ukraine, where people she knew personally lost access to their banking assets overnight.
For U.S. banks to hold Bitcoin on their balance sheets, she said the path runs through capital treatment reform — specifically the removal of the punitive regulatory burden that makes Bitcoin less efficient to hold than other assets from a balance sheet perspective.
The bank is pursuing an OCC digital trust charter that would let Morgan Stanley custody crypto directly, a step that would bring its digital asset ambitions further in-house.
This post Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin Executive Says Education — Not Products — Is Wall Street’s Real Obstacle first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Fold Holdings Dumps $45M in Bitcoin to Wipe Out Debt, Stock Briefly Pumps Over 130%
Fold Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: FLD), the bitcoin financial services company behind a suite of consumer rewards products, announced a series of capital transactions designed to eliminate secured debt, strengthen its balance sheet, and fund the next phase of its growth strategy.
The company monetized approximately $45 million in bitcoin at an average price of around $71,000 per coin, used $20 million of those proceeds to retire bitcoin-collateralized debt, and directed the remaining $25 million toward growth initiatives across its consumer and enterprise platforms.
The moves leave Fold debt-free on the secured side while preserving a bitcoin treasury of approximately 1,492 BTC — worth roughly $95 million at current prices.
Fold’s stock ripped to $1.50 in early trading, up over 130% on the day. Since then, the stock has fallen to under $1, up only 30% on the day.
The headline transaction is tied to a broader debt restructuring. Fold repaid approximately $66.3 million in convertible notes, a position it originally built in March 2025 when the company added 475 BTC to its treasury through those same instruments. Retiring the debt released 521 BTC that had been locked up as collateral, giving management more flexibility over the company’s bitcoin holdings going forward.
“We have reduced financing risk, strengthened our balance sheet, and ensured that short-term market volatility cannot stand in the way of executing our roadmap,” said Will Reeves, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. “As we approach several product launches, we believe Fold is entering one of the most important growth periods in the company’s history.”
Fold’s flagship product, its Bitcoin Rewards Credit Card, sits at the center of management’s growth thesis.
The debt elimination removes monthly cash interest payments from the expense base and, in Reeves’ framing, gives the company the financing flexibility to support a larger cardholder base and pursue funding relationships that participate in the card program’s economics as it scales.
The company also has a $45 million revolving credit facility backed by bitcoin collateral and a $250 million equity purchase facility aimed at future bitcoin accumulation — instruments that reflect the corporate treasury playbook Fold has committed to since going public on February 19, 2025, through a SPAC merger with FTAC Emerald Acquisition Corp.
The restructuring arrives against a backdrop of genuine business momentum. Fold’s fiscal year 2025 revenue reached $31.8 million, a 34% increase year-over-year, driven by transaction volume of nearly $960 million for the period.
Since launching in 2019, the company has processed more than $2 billion in total transactions and distributed over $45 million in bitcoin rewards to users, the company said.
The combination of a debt-free balance sheet, a functioning revenue engine, and a treasury that retains exposure to bitcoin appreciation gives Fold a capital structure that management argues is designed for the current environment — one where bitcoin-native financial products are gaining traction with both consumers and institutional financing partners.
“Over the past year, we’ve built one of the strongest product roadmaps in our history,” Reeves said. “Increased liquidity and lower debt ensure we have the resources and flexibility to execute our plans during this pivotal moment for Fold.”
This post Fold Holdings Dumps $45M in Bitcoin to Wipe Out Debt, Stock Briefly Pumps Over 130% first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Traditional Finance is Rushing Into Crypto as Institutions Buy Bitcoin’s Dip: Axios
Traditional financial institutions are shedding their skepticism toward crypto, and the shift is accelerating in 2026.
Banks, brokerages, and exchanges are racing to offer crypto products as demand from retail investors, institutions, and wealthy clients reaches a tipping point.
David Ripley, co-CEO of crypto exchange Kraken, told Axios that “nearly all traditional financial services companies are gonna offer crypto, bitcoin, ethereum to their customers” — a development he called “a big story of 2026.”
The turning point reflects a broader collision of mega-trends reshaping financial markets. Stablecoins, tokenization, AI, and extended-hours trading are converging to create a financial system that is more digital, more global, and increasingly around the clock.
Ripley said the rise of stablecoins — blockchain-based versions of traditional assets — has primed investors for what comes next: tokenized public equities.
“The next most significant place where we see tokenized equity or tokenized assets will be public equities,” he said.
The stakes are high. Kraken recently announced plans to offer tokenized IPO shares to retail investors, targeting ordinary Americans who Ripley says have been “entirely locked out” of major wealth-creating companies until late in their growth cycles.
The IPO market itself is preparing for a historic wave. SpaceX is targeting a Nasdaq debut this week, seeking to raise about $75 billion at a $1.7 trillion valuation — which would make it the largest IPO on record.
Nasdaq CFO Sarah Youngwood told Axios the U.S. market has the depth to absorb a pipeline of trillion-dollar offerings, including OpenAI and Anthropic, without structural changes.
Nasdaq is pushing into extended-hours trading, aligning with crypto markets that never close.
These comments to Axios come as bitcoin fights near $60,000, but its 50% decline from the all-time high have not deterred major institutional investors, according to Coinbase’s head of institutional strategy, John D’Agostino, who says sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and other large investors are actively buying the dip.
Abu Dhabi’s sovereign wealth fund, Mubadala, increased its exposure to BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF for a fourth consecutive quarter, while Bitcoin ETFs collectively still hold roughly $100 billion in assets despite the market downturn.
D’Agostino attributed the selloff to a combination of macroeconomic uncertainty, elevated interest rates, regulatory delays, geopolitical tensions, and concerns sparked by Strategy’s sale of 32 BTC. Even so, he said institutions remain confident in Bitcoin’s long-term value, a view reinforced by Strategy’s subsequent purchase of 1,550 BTC for $101 million.
This post Traditional Finance is Rushing Into Crypto as Institutions Buy Bitcoin’s Dip: Axios first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

New Documentary ‘Bitcoin Season’ Charts Bitcoin’s Push Into the NBA
A new feature documentary is making the case that Bitcoin belongs in the boardrooms of professional basketball — and it has the access to back it up.
Bitcoin Season, directed by Mike Nicoll, follows Swan Bitcoin, a Bitcoin wealth services company, on its mission to establish Bitcoin-only partnerships inside the professional basketball industry. The film centers on Swan’s groundbreaking deal with the Cleveland Cavaliers — described as the first Bitcoin-only partnership with an NBA franchise — and a separate agreement with Klutch Sports Group, the player agency founded by Rich Paul that represents some of the biggest names in the sport.
The film frames Bitcoin not as a financial product but as a tool of player empowerment, arriving at a moment when athletes are increasingly asserting control over their careers, their brands, and their money.
Former NBA guard Matthew Dellavedova, who appears in the film, called it “a blueprint” for franchises, leagues, and athletes looking to transform what they stand for beyond the balance sheet.
“[Bitcoin Season] shows franchises, leagues, and athletes that Bitcoin can transform more than a balance sheet, it can transform what you stand for and the legacy you leave. We’re in the player-empowerment era, and owning Bitcoin is part of that,” Dellavedova said.
Expert voices in the film include Michael Saylor, Lyn Alden, Adam Back, Max Keiser, Pierre Rochard, Greg Foss, and Natalie Brunell, alongside executives from the Cavs and Klutch organizations.
The film’s central argument: as legacy financial models erode in the digital age, storing value in Bitcoin represents a winning strategy for athletes and institutions alike.
Nicoll is no stranger to basketball documentaries. His 2017 film At All Costs was acquired by Netflix and earned comparisons to Hoop Dreams from the LA Times. His follow-up, The Spoils: Selling the Future of American Basketball, premiered at the NBA Summer League Film Festival in June 2024 and drew praise from filmmaker Ken Burns. It is now available on Amazon Prime.
Bitcoin Season had its premiere on June 3, 2026, in San Clemente, California, hosted by Swan founder and CEO Cory Klippsten. A sneak peek is scheduled for the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas on July 18.
You can watch the trailer here.
This post New Documentary ‘Bitcoin Season’ Charts Bitcoin’s Push Into the NBA first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
The UK Financial Conduct Authority is weighing a rule that would let UCITS schemes and most non-UCITS retail schemes hold crypto exchange-traded notes, capped at 10% of scheme property.
The proposal, set out in the FCA's CP26/17 consultation, would move crypto exposure deeper into regulated fund plumbing. Retail investors already gained a route to crypto ETNs as standalone exchange products.
The new question is how far those notes can travel inside diversified portfolios run by authorized fund managers.
The answer is a short leash. The FCA would allow a limited ETN sleeve where it matches the fund's disclosed objective and risk profile.
Direct holdings of Bitcoin, Ether, or other cryptoassets for investment purposes remain outside the proposal. Comments on the fund chapter are due July 13, 2026.
The proposed rule would give UK UCITS schemes and, with exceptions, non-UCITS retail schemes a capped allocation channel. The limit would apply at the scheme-property level, meaning up to 10% of a fund's property could consist of transferable securities that are cryptoasset ETNs.
That threshold makes the exposure possible while keeping it secondary. A balanced multi-asset fund could use the permission as a satellite allocation.
A fund marketed as a conventional retail portfolio would still sit within the retail authorized-fund framework, with crypto exposure contained through the ETN wrapper and the percentage cap.
The FCA also draws lines between fund types. Qualified investor schemes, which are sold to professional clients and sophisticated investors, sit outside the same proposed retail-fund limit.
Long-term asset funds and NURS operating as funds of alternative investment funds face a proposed prohibition on crypto ETN holdings, with the FCA asking for views on that treatment.
| Vehicle | Proposed treatment | Implication |
|---|---|---|
| UK UCITS schemes | May hold cETNs up to 10% of scheme property | Opens a capped route inside mainstream retail fund portfolios |
| Most NURS | May hold cETNs up to 10% of scheme property | Extends the same limited channel beyond UCITS structures |
| Qualified investor schemes | Outside the proposed retail-fund cap | Reflects their professional and sophisticated investor base |
| LTAFs and NURS operating as FAIFs | Proposed prohibition on cETN holdings | Signals that some fund wrappers may remain outside the channel |
| Direct crypto holdings | Excluded for investment purposes | Keeps the exposure indirect through listed notes |

That distinction gives the proposal its shape: access can expand through securities law and fund rules while custody of the coins stays outside the fund portfolio.
A fund could get price-linked crypto exposure through a security traded on a regulated venue. The underlying cryptoasset would remain beyond the authorized fund's investment holdings.
The proposal follows the FCA's earlier decision to open retail access to crypto ETNs traded on UK recognized investment exchanges.
That change, which came into force on Oct. 8, 2025, allowed retail consumers to access cETNs through FCA-approved UK investment exchanges, with financial promotion rules and Consumer Duty protections applying.
Those protections kept cETNs in a high-risk category. The FCA said retail cETNs sit outside Financial Services Compensation Scheme coverage, and the ban on retail cryptoasset derivatives remains in place.
The regulator's stance is that the market has evolved enough to permit controlled access while preserving a high-risk label for the underlying exposure.
That same logic runs through the fund proposal. Crypto ETNs have already become a live UK exchange-traded product category, with London Stock Exchange coverage describing the product segment one year after launch.
For funds, however, the wrapper creates a second layer of responsibility. Managers must decide whether a listed note is eligible and whether the exposure fits a fund's objectives, liquidity profile, risk limits, and retail disclosures.
The FCA says fund managers should have adequate knowledge and understanding of the assets in which a fund invests, conduct due diligence on investment selection, and monitor compliance with the fund's objective, strategy, risk limits, and liquidity profile.
It also says managers should consider whether cryptoassets and cETNs will remain liquid in stressed conditions.
The cap is the visible control. Disclosure and liquidity work may decide how usable the permission becomes.
The FCA plans to rely on existing disclosure rules for authorized funds holding cETNs. It points managers back to rules on fund objectives, investment policies, marketing communications, Consumer Duty, and risk summaries for cryptoassets and cETNs.
It also says UCITS managers must include a prominent volatility statement where a fund has, or is likely to have, higher volatility in its net asset value.
A manager using the permission would need to explain the exposure in fund documents and consumer-facing materials while keeping the product's character clear.
A small allocation may still be an essential feature of a strategy when it is more than genuinely de minimis, because crypto ETNs carry different risks from many conventional transferable securities.
The FCA also asks managers to assess cETN holdings against the broader portfolio, including other higher-risk assets, indirect crypto exposure through other funds, and assets correlated with crypto, such as cryptoasset treasury issuers.
A 10% cETN limit therefore leaves a separate question around the rest of a fund's crypto-linked market behavior.
For retail investors, the practical effect is that crypto can move closer to the default portfolio stack while staying visible. If adopted, the rule would allow a fund to include cETNs, with the exposure disclosed, monitored, and evaluated alongside the rest of the portfolio.
The proposal creates access; demand still depends on fund managers, platforms, depositaries, and distributors deciding that the capped exposure is worth the documentation, governance, and suitability work.
One path is meaningful, limited adoption. Managers could use cETNs as a small allocation tool inside diversified funds.
In that case, the FCA's rule would mark a real shift: crypto exposure would move beyond a standalone retail decision or a professional-investor product and become something a mainstream fund could include with risk controls around it.
Another path is largely symbolic. Managers may decide that the 10% limit, disclosure duties, liquidity questions, and reputational risk outweigh the benefit.
The permission would remain a bridge that few products cross, creating a policy change with a modest allocation footprint.
That is why the proposal is best read as an incremental normalization of crypto market structure instead of a broad portfolio opening.
The FCA is accepting that crypto ETNs have become established enough to enter some authorized funds while still trying to stop the exposure from becoming a dominant retail portfolio risk.
The next signal will be allocator behavior, filing updates, and platform documentation.
UK asset managers will either rewrite prospectuses, product summaries, and platform materials to make room for cETNs after the consultation closes, or the 10% cap will function mainly as a symbolic bridge. Until then, crypto can move inside the fund wrapper while remaining on a short leash.
The post UK mutual funds may soon be allowed to hold crypto ETNs, but only with a 10% leash appeared first on CryptoSlate.
MetaMask has opened early access to Agent Wallet, a self-custodial wallet built so AI agents can transact across DeFi while the person funding them keeps control of the rules.
The product, launched on June 8, 2026, is aimed at traders, automators, and builders who want software agents to execute onchain workflows.
MetaMask says those workflows can include swaps, perpetuals, prediction markets, liquidity provision, EVM chains, and Hyperliquid.
The launch marks an early attempt to answer a problem that autonomous finance creates as soon as a model can move from suggestion to execution. A human wallet protects a person at the moment of signing.
An agent wallet has to govern software behavior before the human is present, during a chain of possible actions, and after a transaction has been routed through contracts the user may never inspect directly.
MetaMask's answer is a wallet with a leash. The agent can act, but the user defines the leash in advance through spend limits, allowlists, operating modes, transaction simulation, threat scanning, MEV protection, and two-factor approval when a transaction is flagged or falls outside policy.
The question is whether that leash makes agentic DeFi materially safer or turns wallet security into a more programmable attack surface.
The Agent Wallet explainer describes a self-custodial wallet for AI agents that connects through a command-line interface and lets users set operating rules before an agent starts transacting.
The user keeps control of the keys, while the agent receives an agent-specific wallet and operates within the policy boundaries the user selects.
Within the server-wallet mode described in MetaMask's technical docs, the security model has two public operating modes. Guard Mode is the default.
It enforces daily spend or rolling outflow limits, allowlisted protocols and addresses, and human approval through 2FA when a transaction is malicious, outside policy, or requires a limit increase.
Beast Mode is opt-in and gives power users fewer policy interruptions, but MetaMask's developer documentation says malicious transactions and risky contracts still require 2FA approval.
MetaMask says every Agent Wallet transaction passes through simulation, Blockaid-powered threat scanning, and Smart Transactions MEV protection where supported.
Transactions deemed safe may also be backed by Transaction Protection coverage, although that protection is conditional and subject to eligibility terms.
| Control | What it contains | What remains exposed |
|---|---|---|
| Spend and outflow limits | Caps how much an agent can move before approval is required. | A badly chosen limit can still be too high for the task. |
| Protocol and address allowlists | Constrains where the agent can route transactions. | Approved venues can still contain risky contracts, bad routes, or changed conditions. |
| Simulation and Blockaid scanning | Checks transactions before execution and flags malicious behavior. | Detection quality becomes part of the security boundary. |
| 2FA escalation | Stops flagged or out-of-policy actions until a human approves. | Approval fatigue can turn the human back into the weak link. |
| Beast Mode | Allows more autonomous execution for advanced users. | Less friction also means more trust is placed in the rule layer. |

The structure is useful because it treats autonomy as a permission problem, rather than a binary yes-or-no decision. An agent can be useful when wallet access is limited.
It needs enough authority to complete a defined task while avoiding a signature requirement for every minor step.
A March analysis of autonomous agents framed the broader issue plainly: as software starts researching, buying, coordinating, and completing tasks with limited supervision, it needs wallets, credentials, budgets, payment systems, and operating rules.
Crypto rails are attractive because they are programmable and always on, but those same traits make the approval boundary critical.
That boundary is already visible in agentic payments. A May analysis of x402 payments showed how low-value machine payments push against manual wallet confirmation.
For sub-dollar API, data, or compute payments, user approval can take more time than the payment itself. For larger DeFi actions, the same approval gate is a safety feature.
Agent Wallet sits directly on that line. It lets an agent spend while defining when the user has already approved enough in advance and when the transaction must come back for review.
The failure mode for an AI wallet can also involve instructions being converted into spend authority.
The Grok-linked Bankrbot incident showed a different path: another system treated public model output as an executable instruction, turning language into spend authority via that instruction path rather than through a private-key compromise.
In that kind of setup, the parser, social trigger, permission layer, and execution policy all become security surfaces.
MetaMask's model is designed to interrupt some of those paths. If a transaction routes to a non-allowlisted contract, exceeds a limit, touches a flagged address, or is classified as malicious, the agent must pause for approval.
But the strength of that model depends on how specific the user's rules are and how meaningful the approval moment remains as the agent moves quickly.
The leash can still fail when attackers target the constraints themselves. Prompt or content injection can push an agent toward an unintended action before the wallet sees a transaction.
A malicious contract can appear inside a route that looked acceptable at the instruction layer. A broad allowlist can turn a limited agent into a flexible one.
A high daily outflow limit can make the leash symbolic. A stream of routine approval prompts can train users to tap through the one prompt that counts.
These pressure points can appear before any specific product exploit because the financial authority delegated to software gives attackers more targets than a seed phrase or private key.
Agentic systems need controls matched to their level of autonomy, with governance that evolves as access expands, according to a May Gartner governance warning.
At the highest level of autonomy, the firm said that agents need continuous monitoring, enforced guardrails, rollback mechanisms, circuit breakers, and clear behavioral ownership.
In DeFi, those requirements translate into practical questions about wallets. Can an agent's rules be scoped tightly enough for a task while keeping the product usable?
Does the 2FA screen show enough transaction detail for a person to reject a dangerous route? Do policy templates keep permissions aligned with intent as routes, markets, or contracts change?
How quickly can a user halt an agent that is behaving inside the letter of the policy but outside the user's intent?
The risk rises because agents operate at software speed. MetaMask's explainer says a trading agent can watch markets, respond to prompts, generate routes, and attempt transactions faster than a person at a keyboard.
That speed is the product's appeal. It is also why the rules must be right before execution begins.

MetaMask is launching Agent Wallet in limited early access. That gives the company a controlled window to learn how real traders and builder-traders set policies when actual funds are on the line.
The sharper signal is how users configure their agents. If early users keep Guard Mode tight, use specific allowlists, set low limits, and reserve Beast Mode for cases they truly understand, Agent Wallet could become a template for safer autonomous DeFi execution.
If users relax rules to avoid friction, the same infrastructure could make wallet risk easier to automate.
The broader agent economy makes that question harder to postpone. Agentic commerce is also becoming an identity and accountability problem.
The World Economic Forum framed it that way in January and cited forecasts for the AI agents market to grow from $5.4 billion in 2024 to $236 billion by 2034.
Those numbers are outside estimates, but the direction is clear enough: more software will be allowed to act on behalf of humans and organizations.
For crypto, the control layer is now moving into the wallet. MetaMask's early access product leaves the safety question open.
It sets up the decisive test before agent activity scales: whether wallet rules can become strong enough, specific enough, and easy enough to use before attackers learn to program around them.
The post MetaMask just gave AI agents a DeFi wallet with a leash appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Amid crypto's ongoing DeFi hack crisis, Humanity Protocol's H token crash has turned a biometric identity project into the latest example of the sector's oldest failure mode: control of keys.
The project is built around proof-of-humanity infrastructure, with official materials describing palm biometrics, zero-knowledge proofs, decentralized identifiers, and verifiable credentials as parts of a privacy-preserving identity stack.
Yet the H crisis unfolded through the operational layer that still underpins much of crypto: laptops, private keys, bridge controls, token liquidity, and exchange response.
In an incident update, Humanity said the June 8 attack affected H token activity on Ethereum and BNB Smart Chain, began with a compromised employee laptop, exposed Gnosis Safe owner keys for a Hyperlane bridge ProxyAdmin, and led to roughly $36 million being stolen and sold.
The update also said about 141.2 million H was moved on Ethereum and 200 million H was minted on BNB Smart Chain. Earlier onchain analysis had already put the drain above $30 million across at least 17 wallets linked to, or interacting with, Humanity Protocol.
At press time, the H market page showed the token at $0.17, down 76% over 24 hours, with a $476 million market cap and $533 million in 24-hour volume.
The selloff made the loss of confidence visible. The deeper issue is why an identity project asking users and applications to trust its rails could still be exposed through admin-key custody.
The disclosures available so far attribute the incident to key and bridge authority, and they have not established that Humanity users' biometric data or personally identifiable information was stolen.
That caveat is essential. The incident is about wallet and bridge authority rather than a confirmed biometric data breach. For a project whose public pitch centers on identity trust, the distinction still leaves a serious problem: much of the trust sits outside the cryptographic claim.
Humanity's own account, from its incident summary, points to a familiar chain of failure.
A compromised employee laptop exposed owner keys tied to a Gnosis Safe. Those keys gave the attacker access to a Hyperlane bridge ProxyAdmin.
From there, the incident moved across Ethereum and BNB Smart Chain, combining token movement, selling pressure, and unauthorized minting on BSC.
The distinction is material: A zero-knowledge proof can reduce what a user reveals when proving an attribute. A biometric proof-of-humanity system can be designed to distinguish one person from another without broadcasting raw personal data.
Those features still leave a separate obligation to secure the keys that control bridges, liquidity, admin roles, and minting permissions.
The bridge warning made that clear in real time. Humanity warned users not to interact with the project's bridge or liquidity pools while the team worked with security firms and exchange partners.
Founder Terence Kwok also tied the incident to compromised private keys belonging to a Humanity Foundation member. Those statements shifted attention away from speculation about a generic exploit and toward an operational-security breakdown with token-supply consequences.
A compact version of the confirmed public record looks like this:
| Point | Public record |
|---|---|
| Attack date | Humanity said the attack occurred on June 8, 2026. |
| Stated initial cause | A compromised employee laptop exposed Gnosis Safe owner keys. |
| Control layer | The exposed keys were tied to a Hyperlane bridge ProxyAdmin. |
| Reported value impact | Humanity's incident update cited roughly $36 million stolen and sold. |
| Token movement | The update cited about 141.2 million H moved on Ethereum and 200 million H minted on BSC. |
| User warning | Humanity told users not to interact with the bridge or liquidity pools while safety work continued. |
The table also shows why the H crash is more than a market repricing. When a bridge-admin role and minting path are part of the fact pattern, the market is pricing uncertainty over token supply, liquidity venues, bridge state, and recovery controls after remediation.

H's market move shows how quickly a trust narrative can become a liquidity event. A token tied to an identity network also functions as a market-facing proxy for whether users, exchanges, and applications believe the project's operational rails are intact.
The 76% 24-hour decline shown on the asset page came while broader coin rankings showed a steadier market than H's chart suggested.
H fell far more sharply than the broader market after incident reports, bridge warnings, and unresolved questions around stolen and minted tokens.
The developing timeline is important. Initial reports described more than $30 million drained and at least 17 wallets affected.
Later, Humanity's update put the stolen-and-sold amount at roughly $36 million and described the BSC minting component. Lookonchain had earlier flagged 100 million H minted on BSC, but a later update cited 200 million.
For exchanges and liquidity providers, the central question is whether the affected authority paths have been disabled, rotated, audited, and independently confirmed.
If stolen or unauthorized-minted tokens remain in circulation, the market has to price in potential freezes, recoveries, liquidity gaps, or further disclosures. If the bridge and admin controls are fully contained, the damage may remain severe but bounded to operational failure and market confidence.
If those controls remain unclear, the token's role inside Humanity's identity ecosystem becomes harder to evaluate.
The answer also affects how future identity integrations will view the H token. In a normal token selloff, buyers can separate price volatility from product function.
In a bridge-admin and minting incident, that separation becomes harder because the token rail, liquidity path, and operating institution are all part of the same trust claim.
The question for partners includes whether the project can show that the authority structure behind H is now clean, rotated, and externally reviewable.

Humanity's official materials describe a protocol designed around private identity verification. The project's protocol page presents Humanity as an identity layer using biometrics, zero-knowledge proofs, decentralized identifiers, and verifiable credentials.
Its docs describe palm-print enrollment, scanner-based vein mapping, and zero-knowledge proofs intended to keep personal data confidential.
A user can believe that a ZK identity flow minimizes disclosure and still have to trust that the project's operators protect laptops, hardware wallets, Safe owners, bridge admin roles, deployment keys, and exchange-response playbooks.
The Humanity incident puts that difference front and center.
Crypto has seen plenty of private-key incidents. What makes this one different is the category of project affected.
A biometric identity network sells assurance in a way a trading app or meme token does not. It asks users and partners to believe that the project can mediate trust between humans, applications, credentials, and blockchains.
A private-key compromise can leave the ZK identity concept intact while undercutting confidence in the institution operating the rails.
Still, current disclosures provide no source basis to say that palm scans, identity credentials, or user PII were accessed.
The stated incident mechanics point to token, bridge, admin, and custody controls. The risk frame is an identity project keeping its privacy story intact while still failing at a layer users rarely see but must implicitly trust.
Humanity's bridge warning also places the incident inside a broader DeFi security pattern.
Recent coverage of multi-chain exploit risk noted that newer failures can spread through shared controls, repeated deployments, and cross-chain infrastructure rather than remain confined to a single isolated smart contract.
Humanity's update describes the operational route that can turn a single endpoint compromise into a multi-chain token event.
Private-key risk has already become a recurring user-trust issue across crypto. Coverage of a private-key compromise showed how quickly operational custody can become a public market and user-trust problem.
Humanity now extends that pattern into the identity sector, where the stakes are partly financial and partly reputational.
There is also a limited parallel with recent Zcash coverage. The Zcash case involved a different technical issue, but the market reaction carried a similar lesson: sophisticated cryptographic branding leaves questions of trust intact.
When a hidden assumption is exposed, whether in implementation, operations, custody, or response, markets can reprice confidence faster than teams can explain the difference.
The next disclosures will decide which version of the Humanity incident survives. A full postmortem with transaction hashes, affected contracts, key-rotation steps, exchange actions, bridge remediation, and independent security review would help contain the incident as a severe but understood operational failure.
Confirmation that bridge deposits, withdrawals, liquidity pools, and mint/admin permissions are safe would carry more weight than any short-term token bounce.
The opposite path is more damaging. If questions about unauthorized minting persist, if bridge controls remain unclear, or if exchange recovery is incomplete, the incident becomes a token-supply and cross-chain trust crisis for a project trying to be an identity trust layer.
For now, the disclosed mechanics point to an ordinary private-key failure beneath an advanced identity pitch. That is the uncomfortable answer to the question posed by the H crash: ZK and biometrics can reduce what users reveal while leaving them exposed to the people and keys that operate the system.
The post Humanity Protocol’s H crash exposes the private keys behind its ZK identity pitch appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin rose above $62,000 after the latest US inflation report gave traders enough relief to step back from a deeper test of the $60,000 level.
The move followed several days of pressure across crypto markets, where investors had been preparing for the possibility that a hotter inflation print would revive rate-hike concerns and push risk assets lower.
However, the report gave Bitcoin room to rebound, shifting the immediate question from whether the market would break down to whether the post-CPI bounce can hold.
The US consumer price index rose 4.2% in May from a year earlier, matching consensus expectations and marking its fastest pace in three years. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, rose 2.9%, slightly above April’s 2.8% reading.
Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, said the report came in broadly in line with expectations and the figures supported the market’s focus on persistent inflation risks tied to higher energy prices and the prospect of higher-for-longer interest rates.

That distinction shaped BTC's market reaction. Investors had been watching to see whether the jump in prices was mostly the result of higher gasoline costs and Middle East tensions or evidence that inflation was becoming more entrenched across services, rents, and supply chains.
A broader acceleration would have been harder for traders to dismiss. It would have strengthened the argument that the Fed may need to keep policy restrictive for longer or consider another rate increase if inflation expectations begin to move higher.
While the report did not give markets a clean all-clear, it also did not deliver the kind of shock that would have made a break below $60,000 more likely.
Bitcoin’s reaction was sharper because the asset entered the CPI release from a weakened position.
The largest cryptocurrency had been under pressure for weeks, with research firm 10x Research noting that Bitcoin was down $21,000 over 30 days. The slide had left traders focused on whether the $60,000 area would hold as support or become the next level to fail.
That weakness reflected a mix of macro and crypto-specific pressures.
Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds had seen demand cool after helping support earlier gains. Rising yields also made non-yielding assets less attractive, while investors reduced exposure to volatile trades ahead of the inflation report.

At the same time, market leverage had also been cut down. CryptoSlate previously reported that a severe liquidation wave recently wiped out more than $10 billion in bullish long positions across the market. That forced selling reduced the speculative depth that had helped absorb earlier declines.
The options market also showed caution before the CPI release. BIT Official said put options were commanding a significant implied volatility premium over calls, a sign that traders were paying more to protect against further downside.

That defensive setup helped fuel the rebound once the report failed to produce a major upside surprise. Traders who had prepared for a deeper selloff had less reason to keep pressing the downside after Bitcoin defended $60,000.
Still, the move above $62,000 does not by itself mark a full trend reversal. Bitcoin remains below levels reached earlier in the month, and the market’s recovery depends on whether buyers return beyond a short-term relief trade.
The CPI report gave crypto markets room to breathe, but it did not settle the interest-rate debate.
Headline inflation at 4.2% remains more than double the Fed’s target. Even if much of the increase came from energy, policymakers may be cautious about easing policy while price growth remains elevated.
That leaves investors focused on the composition of future inflation data. If oil prices retreat and core inflation remains contained, markets may continue treating May’s increase as a temporary supply shock. If higher energy costs feed into services, wages, or retail prices, rate-hike expectations could return quickly.
The fixed-income market had already been preparing for that risk before the CPI report. US Treasury yields had moved higher as traders reassessed whether the Fed could cut rates at all in the near term.
That backdrop remains important for Bitcoin because the asset has increasingly traded as part of the wider risk complex. When yields rise and liquidity tightens, crypto tends to struggle. When rate pressure eases, Bitcoin can rebound quickly.
The post-CPI spike above $62,000 fits that pattern because the report simply reduced the immediate risk that inflation would force traders into a more hawkish view.
Bitcoin’s immediate task is to show that the move above $62,000 can extend beyond a CPI relief bounce.
Before the report, analysts had pointed to oversold technical conditions as a reason Bitcoin could recover if inflation came in softer than feared. The rebound suggests that some traders were positioned too defensively going into the release.
The next level to watch is near $64,000, where previous resistance could test whether buyers are willing to chase the move higher. A push toward that area would suggest the market is rebuilding confidence after defending $60,000.
A failure to hold the post-CPI gains would send a different message. It would show that the rally was mainly a reaction to a less-bad inflation report rather than evidence of renewed demand.
For a more durable recovery, Bitcoin will likely need support from several areas at once. ETF flows would need to stabilize, options positioning would need to become less defensive, and broader risk appetite across equities and credit would need to improve.
The CPI report gave Bitcoin one immediate win. It kept the $60,000 level intact and forced traders to reassess the downside risk that had built before the release.
The post Bitcoin jumps above $62,000 after CPI report gives traders room to defend $60,000 appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The total value locked (TVL) on DeFi fell from $172 billion to $148 billion as the sector logged $635 million in exploit losses across April alone. Coinbase Ventures bought Ethena's ENA token on the open market, Janus Henderson took its own strategic ENA position, and Morpho closed a $175 million round structured entirely around the MORPHO token.
Apollo separately secured rights to acquire up to 90 million MORPHO tokens over 48 months.
The bet these investors are making is that governance tokens attached to DeFi protocols with real institutional distribution will rerate as financial infrastructure, and that the security panic accelerates that outcome by flushing weaker protocols out of the running.

Morpho reports $11 billion-plus in deposits and counts Bitwise, Galaxy, Anchorage Digital, Coinbase, Kraken, and Binance among its institutional users.
Apollo's token acquisition agreement was capped at 90 million MORPHO over 48 months with transfer and trading restrictions, structured through open-market purchases, OTC transactions, or other contractual arrangements.
Fortune reported the $175 million raise valued the protocol at up to $2 billion, a figure derived entirely from the token's market value.
ENA sits at the governance layer of a synthetic-dollar protocol being routed through Coinbase's 100 million-plus users, where Coinbase already serves as Ethena's primary custodian, wallet provider, and perpetuals venue.
Meanwhile, Janus Henderson pairs its ENA position with plans to use USDe for treasury cash management and to explore tokenized CLO collateral through its and Centrifuge's infrastructure.
With the 10-year Treasury yield around 4.55% and a Fed target range of 3.50%-3.75% that most economists expect to hold through the rest of 2026, stablecoin yield, tokenized Treasuries, and on-chain credit markets carry the kind of economic relevance that makes these positions legible to traditional asset managers.
USDe's market cap sat at roughly $4.5 billion, up 13% over 30 days, while ENA itself traded near $0.08 with a market cap of around $750 million.
| Protocol / token | Infrastructure exposure | Institutional links | Key adoption metric | Token caveat |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethena / ENA | Synthetic dollar, stablecoin yield, collateral, treasury cash management | Coinbase, Janus Henderson, Anchorage | USDe market cap around $4.5B, up 13% over 30 days | ENA price near $0.08; adoption has not clearly translated into token rerating |
| Morpho / MORPHO | Onchain lending, credit markets, vault infrastructure | Apollo, Paradigm, a16z, Circle Ventures, VanEck, Coinbase, Kraken, Binance | $11B+ deposits; $6.43B TVL; $3.43B active loans | Governance rights do not equal equity, cash-flow claims, or legal ownership |
The April incident wave spanned compromised privileged keys, social engineering, bridge failures, governance surface attacks, and external dependencies.
Protocols with institutional distribution, professional custody integration, transparent collateral structures, and genuine demand from exchanges and asset managers carry a different risk profile.
If capital keeps repricing DeFi's weakest tier downward, the protocols already embedded in institutional workflows absorb the flows leaving weaker venues.
Janus Henderson, Apollo, Circle Ventures, and VanEck each built positions in DeFi infrastructure tokens as security fears accelerated the separation between protocols tied to real institutional demand and those DeFi TVL figures have historically tracked, with capital growing more selective about which rails it trusts.
ENA and MORPHO give holders governance rights over the protocols, with ownership of Ethena Labs or the Morpho Association, legal claims to cash flows, and control over assets, all outside what either token conveys.
Betting on these tokens works only if adoption translates into token demand, governance relevance, or credible value capture.
DefiLlama shows Morpho Blue generated roughly $39 million in gross protocol revenue in the second quarter, with $3.43 billion in active loans against $6.43 billion TVL flowing to liquidity providers and vault curators.
Coinbase and Janus Henderson provide Ethena with a distribution that most DeFi protocols cannot access, and USDe's market cap grew roughly 13% over 30 days to about $4.49 billion.
Yet ENA traded down roughly 10% on the day of the Janus announcement, with the token near $0.08 and market cap around $750 million.
Buyers of ENA are taking a position on a convergence between institutional adoption and token value that the market has yet to price in.

If Coinbase, Janus Henderson, Apollo, Circle, and VanEck normalize DeFi-backed cash and credit products through their existing channels and security panic keeps concentrating capital into top-tier protocols, ENA and MORPHO rerate as governance assets over infrastructure processing real institutional volume.
USDe would then retest a significantly larger supply base, and Morpho deposits would move toward $18 billion and $25 billion, with both tokens trading as strategic assets with a claim on the rails beneath them.
If another major exploit, depeg event, or regulatory restriction pauses institutional distribution, governance token ownership proves it was always decoupled from protocol economics.
In this scenario, USDe supply would fall by 30% to 50%, MORPHO would sell off despite continued protocol usage, and the disconnect between holding governance rights and capturing value from the protocol would remain wide.
| Scenario | What happens | USDe / ENA implication | Morpho / MORPHO implication | Bigger takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bull case | Institutional distribution expands and security panic concentrates capital in top protocols | USDe retests a larger supply base; ENA rerates as governance over synthetic-dollar infrastructure | Deposits move toward $18B–$25B; MORPHO trades as strategic governance exposure | Governance tokens become infrastructure assets |
| Bear case | Major exploit, depeg, or regulation pauses adoption | USDe supply falls 30%–50%; ENA remains disconnected from adoption | MORPHO sells off despite continued protocol usage | Token ownership remains decoupled from protocol economics |
| Base case | Adoption grows, but token value capture remains uncertain | USDe grows, but ENA repricing is uneven | Morpho usage rises, but value accrual stays unclear | Infrastructure wins, tokenholders may not |
| Black swan | Core protocol, custody, collateral, or governance failure | ENA loses infrastructure premium | MORPHO governance becomes a liability | The “trusted rails” thesis breaks |
Apollo, Paradigm, a16z, Janus Henderson, and Coinbase Ventures each made a separate bet that the rails they chose would carry enough institutional volume to make governing those rails worth holding.
Whether token ownership closes the distance with the economic value flowing through the protocols beneath it is the cycle's actual open question.
The post Wall Street is buying DeFi tokens again, even as everyone worries the code is unsafe appeared first on CryptoSlate.
U.S. President Donald Trump issued a stern warning on June 10, 2026, stating that Iran has taken too long to negotiate a peace deal and "will have to pay the price." The statement followed a rapid escalation in the Middle East, during which the United States launched targeted airstrikes against Iranian infrastructure.
The military action was ordered by the Trump administration in response to the downing of a U.S. Army Apache attack helicopter near the critical Strait of Hormuz shipping lane. While the two U.S. service members were rescued uninjured, the incident shattered a fragile two-month ceasefire, triggering immediate retaliation from Tehran against regional U.S. assets and sparking a volatile reaction across traditional and digital asset markets.
According to official updates from The Guardian's Live Coverage, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) executed targeted strikes against Iranian air defense systems, ground control stations, and radar sites along the southern coast. Trump asserted on social media that the U.S. response was an absolute necessity.
Following the American bombardment, Iran launched retaliatory drone and missile attacks targeting U.S. military positions in Jordan, Kuwait, and Bahrain. This direct confrontation has effectively unraveled weeks of diplomatic progress, forcing international mediators from Qatar to scramble back to the negotiation table in a bid to avert an all-out regional war.
The abrupt end to the ceasefire sent immediate shockwaves through macro asset classes. Given that the Strait of Hormuz serves as a vital chokepoint for global energy supply, crude oil prices reacted sharply to the heightened threat of prolonged blockades.
The crypto market has reflected the broader tension, experiencing notable capital preservation flows. While previous political developments in 2026 had pushed Bitcoin below $70,000 during periods of diplomatic optimism, this fresh military friction has forced a reassessment of market structure.
Market analysts note that Bitcoin and major altcoins are facing severe macro pressure. The sudden geopolitical risk has triggered liquidations in over-leveraged long positions, exposing vulnerabilities in current crypto market structures. Furthermore, the conflict intersects directly with the digital asset sector following recent U.S. Treasury sanctions targeting major Iranian cryptocurrency exchanges accused of facilitating sanctions evasion and state-sponsored financial routing. Traders are advised to monitor the $60,000 support level closely as the situation develops.
The GameFi and non-fungible token (NFT) sectors are experiencing localized, violent injections of speculative capital. Audiera (BEAT), a Web3 gaming and artificial intelligence ecosystem operating primarily on the BNB Chain, has emerged as a primary beneficiary of this trend. The project's native utility token registered an explosive rally, pushing its price up by more than 380% over a rolling seven-day window to achieve a new all-time high (ATH) at $5.40.

While this vertical price expansion has captured significant retail attention, technical indicators and shifting market parameters suggest that the rapid climb carries structural dangers. Overbought conditions are forming on daily timeframes, drawing parallels to recent historic token collapses where thin liquidity and high retail concentration led to severe downward unwinding.
Audiera is a decentralized gaming platform positioned as a modern, Web3 evolution of traditional rhythm and dance titles like Audition. According to documentation tracked on major cryptocurrency tracking platforms, the architecture is built to combine dance-rhythm mechanics with AI-driven player interactions and a localized web economy where autonomous AI agents act as equal economic participants.
The project utilizes a dual-platform engagement strategy to capture both standard mobile gamers and casual crypto users:
Within this infrastructure, the native BEAT token functions as the core economic pillar. Out of a maximum supply of 1 billion tokens, approximately 288 million are currently in circulation. The token is utilized by participants for acquiring in-game assets, executing platform upgrades, trading localized NFTs, and engaging in ecosystem governance.
The development and ongoing maintenance of Audiera are driven by a team specialized in interactive mobile gaming architecture, augmented by Web3 tokenomics designers. The identity framework functions as an open gaming ecosystem, though distribution metrics indicate that initial liquidity provisioning and smart contract deployments remain relatively centralized.
Audiera has actively aligned itself with large-scale Layer-1 networks. By deploying its core smart contracts on the BNB Chain, the project leverages low-latency execution and nominal gas fees. This infrastructure is mathematically necessary to sustain high-frequency microtransactions, real-time gaming inputs, and secondary market NFT trading without friction for the end-user.
According to real-time spot market data, $BEAT broke out from a multi-month accumulation base, accelerating through intermediate resistance lines to hit an intraday local high of $5.40. This massive volume expansion pushed the project's aggregate market capitalization above $1.5 billion, temporarily elevating it into the top 60 largest digital assets globally by market scale. Over a 30-day trailing window, the token is up an astronomical 920%.

The parabolic rally has been heavily driven by leveraged derivatives trading rather than organic spot accumulation alone. Data compiled from cryptocurrency analytics platforms like Coinmarketcap indicates that Audiera's Open Interest (OI) expanded rapidly to nearly $200 million, while corresponding derivatives trading volume spiked by over 190%, scaling past $1.9 billion.
When spot prices and open interest climb symmetrically, it confirms that aggressive futures market participants are opening heavy long positions. This high leverage creates a volatile floor, as a minor reversal can trigger mandatory liquidations.
While the price structure remains visually bullish on traditional daily charts, key underlying on-chain indicators show structural frailty:
The current market structure of $BEAT exhibits classical signs of extreme speculative overextension. The daily Relative Strength Index (RSI) has lingered deep within overbought boundaries above 93, signaling that upward momentum is exhausting its immediate capital reserves.
Investors must exercise extreme caution, as vertical expansions of this magnitude frequently precede devastating liquidity collapses. A highly relevant historical precedent occurred with Rave DAO ($RAVE), an entertainment-focused crypto project. RAVE underwent a rapid, multi-thousand-percent pump driven by thin order books and extreme token concentration, where a handful of isolated addresses controlled the vast majority of the total circulating supply.
When those internal entities began offloading tokens onto public order books, a cascading liquidation cycle completely obliterated RAVE's artificial paper valuation. The token crashed from its peak down to fractions of a dollar virtually overnight, wiping out over 95% of its value and leaving late-stage retail buyers holding highly illiquid, devalued assets.
Given that BEAT’s climb is heavily detached from its organic on-chain active user base, a sudden exhaustion of derivative buy-walls could trigger an identical, swift cascade. If profit-taking accelerates and the critical $4.00 support level fails to hold on an initial retracement, a rapid flush down toward structural Fibonacci support levels at $3.35 and $2.22 becomes structurally probable.
The crypto market crash is deepening as Bitcoin, Ethereum, major altcoins, US stocks, gold, silver, and oil all move lower at the same time. What started as a crypto selloff has now turned into a wider market correction, raising one major question: if everything is dumping, where is the money going?
According to the latest market screenshots, Bitcoin dropped near the $61,000 level, while Ethereum fell close to $1,700. Several major cryptocurrencies also traded in the red over the past 24 hours, with Solana, XRP, BNB, Dogecoin, Chainlink, and Cardano all showing weakness. At the same time, US stock indices also came under pressure, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq falling sharply amid renewed selling in technology and AI related stocks. Reuters reported that the S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit one-month lows as chipmakers and tech names faced strong selling pressure.
Normally, when risk assets like crypto and stocks fall, investors may move into safer assets such as gold. But this time, gold and silver also dropped, which suggests the market is not simply rotating from risky assets into safe havens.
Reuters reported that gold fell as rising Treasury yields and expectations of a potential US rate hike weighed on the market. Spot gold dropped 0.7%, while silver fell more sharply, losing over 3%.
This type of market behavior often points to a broader liquidity squeeze. Investors may be selling multiple assets at once to raise cash, reduce leverage, or protect portfolios from further downside. In simple terms, this does not look like a normal crypto-only crash. It looks like a cross-market liquidation event.
Bitcoin has been struggling to hold key support levels after a steep correction from higher levels earlier this month. Coindesk reported that Bitcoin recently fell below $62,000, triggering more than $1.5 billion in leveraged crypto liquidations over 24 hours. The report also pointed to ETF outflows and institutional weakness as additional pressure points.
Ethereum also remains under pressure, with the latest screenshots showing ETH near the $1,700 area. This matters because Ethereum weakness often increases pressure across altcoins, especially in sectors like DeFi, Layer 2, meme coins, and AI tokens.
When both Bitcoin and Ethereum weaken at the same time, the broader crypto market usually loses momentum quickly. Traders reduce exposure, leveraged positions get liquidated, and smaller altcoins often suffer larger percentage losses.
The stock market selloff appears to be strongly linked to weakness in technology and AI stocks. AP reported that AI related stocks dragged Wall Street lower, with the S&P 500 falling 1.7%, the Nasdaq losing 2.9%, and several major semiconductor names reversing sharply from earlier gains.
This is important for crypto because Bitcoin has been trading more like a risk asset than a safe haven. When tech stocks fall, crypto often follows, especially when investors are already nervous about interest rates, inflation data, and geopolitical risks.
The connection is clear: if investors are reducing exposure to high-growth tech and AI names, they may also reduce exposure to Bitcoin, Ethereum, and altcoins.
Oil also moved lower during the broader selloff. Reuters reported that oil prices dropped more than 4% after Iran and Israel paused hostilities, reducing some immediate supply fears.
This creates a mixed signal for markets. Lower oil can help reduce inflation pressure, but the broader selloff shows that investors are still worried about rate expectations, risk appetite, and global uncertainty.
For crypto, this means the market is not only reacting to one event. The pressure is coming from several directions at once: stocks, rates, liquidity, geopolitics, and leverage.
The current move looks more like a market reset than a simple crypto crash. Bitcoin is not falling alone. Stocks are down, gold is down, silver is down, oil is down, and altcoins are under pressure.
This suggests three possible forces are driving the move:
First, traders are reducing leverage after a sharp market reversal. Second, investors are moving into cash instead of rotating between assets. Third, uncertainty around inflation and interest rates is making risk assets less attractive in the short term.
Crypto may recover quickly if Bitcoin holds the $60,000 to $61,000 zone and broader markets stabilize. But if Bitcoin loses this area with strong volume, the next phase could bring deeper losses across altcoins.
The next major signal will come from Bitcoin’s ability to defend the $60,000 support area. If BTC stabilizes above this level, the market could see a relief bounce, especially in oversold altcoins. However, if Bitcoin breaks below $60,000 again, panic selling could return.
Ethereum also needs to reclaim stronger levels above $1,700 to improve sentiment. Without an ETH recovery, altcoins may remain weak even if Bitcoin stabilizes.
For now, the crypto market remains highly sensitive to global macro conditions. The crash is no longer just about Bitcoin. It is about a broader market environment where investors are selling almost everything at once.
The latest crypto market crash is important because it shows how closely Bitcoin and altcoins are now tied to global markets. Crypto is no longer moving in isolation. When stocks, gold, silver, oil, and Bitcoin all fall together, it signals a deeper shift in investor behavior.
The key question now is whether this is a short-term liquidation event or the beginning of a larger correction. If liquidity returns and Bitcoin holds support, crypto could recover. But if global markets continue to weaken, the next downside move could be sharper, especially for altcoins.
$BTC, $ETH, $SOL, $XRP, $BNB, $DOGE, $ADA, $LINK
Humanity Protocol, a decentralized digital identity project utilizing privacy-preserving biometric verification, has experienced a severe security breach. The protocol's native asset, the H token, suffered a rapid 90% price collapse within a 12-hour window.
The sharp market downturn effectively wiped out more than $1 billion in market capitalization. This correction materializes just days after the token logged a notable 339% upward rally, driven by speculative momentum surrounding decentralized identity infrastructure.
On-chain data indicates that the attacker gained unauthorized access to digital assets linked directly to Humanity Protocol applications. According to network monitors such as PeckShield, the exploiter systematically drained over $31 million from associated project wallets.
Following the initial asset extraction, the attacker initiated market conversions, liquidating the stolen $H tokens into Ethereum ($ETH) and Binance Coin ($BNB) via decentralized exchange pools. This immediate, high-volume selling pressure caused the token price to drop from approximately $0.68 to a low of $0.079, triggering automated liquidation cascades across decentralized finance (DeFi) liquidity pools.

Humanity Protocol founder and CEO Terence Kwok officially confirmed the incident, stating that the root cause was not an exploit within the smart contract architecture itself. Instead, the entry point was a security breach involving compromised private keys belonging to an internal member of the Humanity Foundation.
Security Failure Root Cause: Internal Private Key Compromise (Humanity Foundation Member) Effect: Unauthorized Multi-Wallet Drainage and Arbitrary Minting Controls
In response to the exploit, the development team has issued an emergency notice instructing all global ecosystem participants to cease interactions with the official bridge contracts and native liquidity pools. Security teams are currently tracking the flow of the converted digital assets across protocols to trace the movement of funds.
The native token of the defunct cryptocurrency exchange FTX, $FTT, witnessed a massive price spike, surging nearly 90% from a baseline of roughly $0.22 to an intraday high of $0.42. This sudden volatility followed breaking news that FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF) has formally submitted an application for a presidential pardon to the United States Department of Justice (DOJ).
On June 8, 2026, Sam Bankman-Fried officially filed a petition for a presidential pardon with the DOJ’s Office of the Pardon Attorney. Bankman-Fried is currently serving a 25-year federal prison sentence following his 2023 conviction on seven counts of wire fraud, securities fraud, and money laundering tied to the $8 billion collapse of FTX.
Legal analysts note that the filing specifies a request for a "pardon after completion of sentence," a narrow designation aimed at restoring civil rights rather than securing immediate release. However, the nuance of the filing was quickly ignored by crypto traders. Speculators rushed into the low-liquidity FTT token, driving a massive volume spike and a rapid price appreciation within hours of the public disclosure.
According to market data, FTT was trading in a tight, depressed range near $0.22 before exploding vertically to over $0.42. The 4-hour chart shows an isolated, high-volume green candle, pushing the Relative Strength Index (RSI) deep into overbought territory above 80.

Market analysts warn that this rally is purely driven by sentiment and narrative. Because the FTX exchange no longer functions and the bankruptcy estate has systematically liquidated its holdings to repay creditors, FTT holds no fundamental utility. The token’s circulating supply is highly concentrated and illiquid, making it highly susceptible to localized "pump-and-dump" dynamics whenever headlines surface.
The aggressive speculative buying of FTT is largely fueled by recent historical precedents within the crypto regulatory landscape. In October 2025, President Donald Trump granted a full and unconditional presidential pardon to Binance founder Changpeng "CZ" Zhao.
Zhao had previously served a four-month prison sentence after pleading guilty to anti-money laundering (AML) violations under the Bank Secrecy Act. The pardon of CZ followed extensive corporate alignments and deep financial integrations between external entities and the Trump family's web of digital asset initiatives, including World Liberty Financial.
Traders are betting that Bankman-Fried’s legal representatives—who have actively engaged with Republican strategists linked to the administration—might replicate a similar outcome.
Despite the market's euphoria, the probability of SBF receiving immediate relief remains low. Political watchdogs and financial advocacy groups, such as Americans for Financial Reform (AFR), immediately issued statements condemning the pardon request. Critics point out that unlike CZ’s case, which involved regulatory compliance failures without direct fraud charges, Bankman-Fried was convicted of deliberate theft of billions in customer deposits.
Predictive markets on platforms like Polymarket currently price the likelihood of an SBF pardon before the end of 2026 at under 8%. As trading volume cools, market history suggests that late-stage buyers of FTT face a high risk of severe liquidations as the initial hype dissipates.
$BTC $ETH $Alts
DiffusionGemma hits 1,000 tokens per second by ditching word-by-word generation entirely. It just doesn't run on most people's machines yet.
In a new essay, Dario Amodei called for binding safety rules for frontier models as his company heads toward an IPO.
Solana-based decentralized exchange Raydium will repay the funds swiped in the $1.34 million exploit using its treasury.
Stablecoin giant Tether led a massive Series C round for German robotics firm NEURA, which will embed crypto payment tools and edge AI.
Token burn, silent censorship, and a mandatory data grab—the biggest Claude release has become Anthropic's messiest.
Market recovery is the main priority right now, even though its possibility is slim to none in the short-term.
Many investors anticipated a breakout for Bitcoin following its ascent to new all-time highs, but veteran investor Kevin O’Leary argues the true rally is still on hold.
The CNBC superstar has labeled Bitcoin and gold as "bad money" that are currently being offloaded in favor of high-growth tech stocks like Nvidia and Apple.
The rapidly expanding bloc of voters is now looking at candidates through the lens of their preferred asset class.
Mastercard sidelines XRP for its new AI pilot, but RippleX has already launched a workaround to keep the token in the race.
The US stock market is flashing warning signs not seen since the dot-com collapse. A veteran market analyst with 13 years of experience is sounding the alarm over the current IPO boom, calling it the biggest red flag of his career.
At the center of the warning is SpaceX, going public at $2 trillion and 100x revenue. That compares to Apple’s IPO at under $2 billion and 15x revenue — a contrast that exposes how extreme current valuations have become.
The SpaceX IPO is not designed to reward new buyers. Fidelity dropped its minimum investment from $500,000 to $2,000, and SpaceX allocated 30% of shares to retail participants. Millions of new buyers were brought in just before the listing.
Insiders, however, control 95% of all shares. That represents approximately $1.66 trillion in privately held stock sitting above the market. Retail buyers are entering at peak prices while those holding the bulk of shares prepare to sell.
The unlock schedule makes the threat concrete. A 60-day lockup triggers a 20% release once the stock climbs 30%. From day 70, recurring 7% tranches unlock across days 90, 105, 120, and 135. Another 28% follows Q3 earnings.
By November, roughly 93% of insider shares become sellable. That volume hitting the market over a compressed window is a direct threat to the broader US stock market, not just SpaceX’s price.
Institutions are not waiting. They are already shortening index inclusion timelines, selling current holdings, and raising cash ahead of forced buying tied to new listings. That repositioning creates selling pressure across existing equities right now.
Retail investors are doing the same, liquidating portfolios to fund IPO participation. The analyst draws a direct parallel to the late 1990s dot-com era, when capital rotation out of existing stocks into new listings preceded a broad market crash.
SpaceX reported $4.3 billion in losses in Q1 2026 alone. Cumulative losses stand at $41.3 billion. Most retail participants never reach that data, buried deep inside a 300-page prospectus. That information gap consistently favors insiders over new buyers.
Anthropic and OpenAI carry the same structural problem. Both trade at valuations inflated by circular investment flows involving Nvidia.
Neither has reached profitability, and current pricing requires earnings growth that analysts say is unlikely to materialize.
The analyst’s conclusion is straightforward: capital flowing into these IPOs exits the US stock market, and that exit pressure is building fast.
The post US Stock Market Crash Warning: SpaceX IPO Boom Mirrors Dot-Com Era Red Flags appeared first on Blockonomi.
Bitcoin stablecoin liquidity on Binance continues to weaken in June 2026, pointing to market consolidation rather than a fresh recovery.
The exchange holds roughly $41.2 billion in USDT across ERC-20 and TRC-20 chains, yet the reserve has been declining steadily.
On-chain data shows the ERC-20 book has shed 2.3% over the past 30 days, sitting at only the 23.5th percentile of its 30-day range — well below accumulation territory.
Combined 30-day netflows across both chains total approximately -$1.27 billion, marking a broad retreat of capital from the exchange.
Late May registered the most extreme outflow intensity of the current cycle, with the seven-day moving average of ERC-20 netflows dropping to -$215 million — a reading flagged as a strong capital exit signal.
The pace of distribution shifted in early June, though the direction remains negative. The MA7 flipped briefly to +$120 million on June 5 before cooling back to neutral by June 8, suggesting deceleration rather than reversal.
According to CryptoQuant analyst Crazzyblockk, this is a key distinction: “Until Binance’s USDT reserve reclaims its 30-day average with sustained positive daily flows, the liquidity foundation for a BTC recovery remains incomplete.”
The reserve remains nearly 12.4% below its December 2025 peak of $43.9 billion. Capital that exited during the correction has not returned, and the 30-day average has yet to be reclaimed. These conditions make it difficult to argue that a genuine recovery cycle is underway.
The broader exchange picture adds further context to the data. OKX, Bybit, and Bitfinex are all in mild distribution on a 30-day basis, reinforcing the pattern seen at Binance.
KuCoin and Bitget are showing accumulation on the TRC-20 chain in early June, which stands in contrast to the dominant outflow trend. However, their combined reserve of approximately $465 million limits the structural weight of this signal.
For a signal to carry meaningful market impact, it must originate from exchanges that hold a significant share of total stablecoin liquidity.
At current levels, KuCoin and Bitget together represent a fraction of what Binance alone holds, making their accumulation a minor counterpoint rather than a market-shifting force.
Bitcoin traded in the low $60,000 range through early June, and stablecoin flows suggest the market is stabilizing rather than reloading.
The distinction matters: stabilization reflects reduced selling pressure, whereas reloading implies fresh capital entering in preparation for an upside move.
Until Binance’s USDT reserve consistently posts positive daily flows and climbs back above its 30-day average, the liquidity conditions for a sustained BTC price recovery remain thin. The data, as it stands, supports a consolidation scenario — not a recovery.
The post Bitcoin Stablecoin Liquidity Signals Caution as Binance Reserve Slides appeared first on Blockonomi.
Fold Holdings has sold approximately $45 million in Bitcoin to eliminate secured debt and fund business expansion.
The Nasdaq-listed Bitcoin financial services company monetized the holdings at an average price of $71,000 per Bitcoin.
Proceeds were split between retiring $20 million in Bitcoin-collateralized debt and allocating $25 million toward growth initiatives.
The move strengthens Fold’s balance sheet ahead of several planned product launches across its consumer and enterprise platforms.
The Fold Bitcoin liquidation marks a deliberate shift in the company’s capital strategy. By repaying all Bitcoin-backed secured debt, Fold eliminates monthly cash interest expenses immediately.
This improves the company’s net cash flow position starting in June 2026. Management expects further cash flow gains throughout the year as new products launch and customer activity increases.
Fold retains a meaningful Bitcoin treasury position after the sale. The company also keeps access to its revolving credit facility for future needs.
Management reserves the right to monetize additional Bitcoin holdings when returns justify it. This flexible approach keeps strategic options open as market conditions evolve.
The debt elimination removes a key risk factor tied to Bitcoin price swings. Bitcoin-collateralized loans carry liquidation risk during sharp market downturns.
Clearing that exposure gives Fold more operational stability. It also reduces pressure to make reactive decisions during volatile periods.
CEO Will Reeves positioned the transaction as a forward-looking move. “We believe Fold is poised for near-term growth and investing in that future is exactly what the company needs to do,” Reeves said.
He added that the company has built one of the strongest product roadmaps in its history. The recently launched Bitcoin Credit Card, Bitcoin Gift Cards, and Fold Business products anchor that pipeline.
The $25 million cash allocation is primarily directed toward scaling the Fold Bitcoin Credit Card. Improved liquidity positions Fold to support a larger cardholder base going forward.
The company is also pursuing additional funding relationships to expand the credit program. Management considers the Credit Card among Fold’s highest long-term growth opportunities.
Greater financing flexibility allows Fold to capture more of the economics generated by the card program. As the cardholder base grows, revenue participation from the program increases.
This creates a compounding effect on company revenues over time. The strengthened balance sheet directly enables that participation.
Reeves addressed the strategic rationale directly. “We have reduced financing risk, strengthened our balance sheet, and ensured that short-term market volatility cannot stand in the way of executing our roadmap,” he said.
The statement points to deliberate risk management ahead of several product launches. Fold also plans to introduce additional products in the coming months.
Operating leverage is expected to improve as new products launch and financing partnerships come online. Each factor contributes to a stronger cash flow profile throughout the year.
With debt cleared and cash deployed, Fold Bitcoin operations enter a more stable phase. The company now has the resources to execute its plans without short-term financial constraints.
The post Fold Sells $45M in Bitcoin to Wipe Out Debt and Back Next Growth Phase appeared first on Blockonomi.
BlackRock and Fidelity now command most new allocations into U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds. Recent flow data shows the two firms absorb the bulk of daily inflows and shape overall direction. The pattern has strengthened through 2026 as other issuers record limited activity.
When U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs launched in January 2024, investors chose from more than a dozen products. However, flow data now shows BlackRock and Fidelity capture most institutional allocations. Farside Investors’ data highlights repeated sessions where the pair dominated inflows.
On January 14, spot Bitcoin ETFs drew $840.6 million in net inflows. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust attracted $648.4 million, while Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund added $125.4 million. Together, they represented over 90% of that day’s total inflows.
On April 17, total inflows reached $663.9 million across all products. IBIT secured $284 million, and FBTC collected $163.4 million. The two funds accounted for roughly two-thirds of new capital entering the sector.
On May 1, the trend continued as total inflows hit $629.8 million. IBIT contributed $284.4 million, and FBTC added $213.4 million. Combined, the pair drew nearly $500 million of the day’s allocations.
Bitcoin has declined about 29% year-to-date, which has pressured the broader crypto ETF complex. Between mid-May and early June, several sessions recorded heavy net outflows. Despite weaker sentiment, IBIT and FBTC frequently absorbed or limited redemptions.
BlackRock manages over $10 trillion in global assets and maintains wide distribution networks. Fidelity also operates one of the largest U.S. brokerage and retirement platforms. These structures support trading volume, liquidity, and access for advisers and institutions.
Many buyers include registered investment advisers, hedge funds, family offices, and pension consultants. For these allocators, issuer reputation and liquidity weigh heavily in product selection. As a result, many treat IBIT and FBTC as default vehicles for Bitcoin exposure.
Meanwhile, smaller funds post modest daily flow figures. Franklin Templeton’s EZBC, VanEck’s HODL, Valkyrie’s BRRR, and WisdomTree’s BTCW often record single-digit-million inflows. In many sessions, their flows do not alter the total sector direction.
Bitwise’s BITB and Ark’s ARKB also trail the two largest funds this year. Earlier in 2026, Trump Media & Technology Group withdrew plans for a proposed spot Bitcoin ETF. The withdrawal followed intensified competition led by BlackRock and Fidelity.
During volatile sessions, capital shifts primarily into or out of IBIT and FBTC. When investors buy aggressively, most inflows concentrate in those products. When selling increases, their activity often determines whether the sector records net inflows or outflows.
The post BlackRock and Fidelity Dominate U.S. Bitcoin ETF Flows appeared first on Blockonomi.
Tether confirmed it led a Series C round worth up to $1.4 billion in Neura Robotics. The stablecoin issuer announced the deal on Wednesday and outlined plans for wallet integration. The agreement follows earlier reports that Tether considered investing in the German robotics firm last year.
Tether said it backed the raise of up to $1.4 billion from strategic and financial investors. The company described the move as a step toward advancing machine intelligence and autonomy. It stated that the investment supports a firm reshaping how machines think and move.
The company said, “By supporting the raise of up to $1.4 billion, the group takes a decisive step.”
It added that Neura Robotics aims to redefine how machines interact and transact in the physical world. Tether confirmed the funding round closed after several months of negotiations.
Neura Robotics develops humanoid robots and precision robotic arms for industrial use. The company also builds autonomous mobile robots and service robots for multiple sectors. Tether stated that these systems will operate where human and machine collaboration creates value.
Neura raised nearly $140 million in January 2025 from BlueCrest, C4 Ventures, Lingotto, and Volvo Cars Tech Fund. That round expanded its capital base before the Series C financing. The company competes with Tesla, which also plans to mass-produce robots.
Tether has expanded its venture capital activity through profits from its USDT stablecoin business. The firm holds reserves in yield-bearing assets such as U.S. Treasurys. These investments generate income that supports strategic deals like the Neura round.
Tether said it will deploy technology within the Neura robotics ecosystem. The company confirmed that Neura will integrate Tether’s Wallet Development Kit into robotic systems.
Tether stated, “To be truly autonomous, robots need financial tools.”
The integration will allow robots to access digital payment capabilities directly. Tether explained that the wallet tools will support transactions within machine environments. The statement outlined plans to embed payment functions into robotic workflows.
Tether did not disclose the exact timing for deploying the wallet technology. However, it confirmed that development teams will work on direct integration. The company linked the effort to its broader digital asset infrastructure strategy.
Neura operates from Germany and focuses on collaborative robotics platforms. The company builds systems designed for industrial and service applications. It stated that its products aim to function across varied environments.
Tether did not release further financial details beyond the $1.4 billion figure. The company emphasized that diversified investors participated in the round. It confirmed that the funding and integration plans form part of the closed Series C agreement.
The post Tether Leads $1.4B Series C Round in Neura Robotics appeared first on Blockonomi.
Coinbase’s vice president of tax, Lawrence Zlatkin, testified before the House Ways and Means Committee on June 9, asking lawmakers to stop requiring Americans to calculate capital gains every time they spend a stablecoin or pay a blockchain transaction fee.
His testimony came during a hearing on six standalone bills aimed at updating how the US tax code treats digital assets, covering everything from mining and staking taxation to charitable donations and broker reporting requirements.
Ahead of the hearing, the House Ways and Means Committee said it would examine legislation designed to bring “clarity, parity, and administrability” to digital assets. Representing Coinbase, Zlatkin told legislators that the current tax rules force consumers to track tiny gains and losses on routine transactions involving crypto.
According to him, federally regulated stablecoins pegged to the US dollar should be treated at par for tax purposes because they are designed to maintain a one-to-one value with the greenback.
He also argued that asking users to calculate cost basis every time they spend a stablecoin only created paperwork without generating any meaningful tax revenue. Furthermore, Zlatkin backed a proposal by Congressman Rudy Yakym to waive tax reporting on gas fees of up to $10.
He also asked Congress to create a broader de minimis exemption for small crypto purchases. Under Coinbase’s proposal, people making low-value transactions with Bitcoin (BTC) or other non-stablecoin cryptocurrencies would not have to calculate taxable gains every time they bought something.
Recall that in March this year, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong faced accusations of lobbying against a BTC tax exemption. At the time, he called the claims “totally false” and said that he had personally spent time advocating for a Bitcoin de minimis rule.
On mining and staking, the exchange supported a bill by Congressman Mike Carey that, if passed, would let validators defer tax on block rewards until those assets are actually sold instead of when they are received.
“A farmer is never taxed when a bushel of wheat sprouts from the ground; they are taxed when they harvest that crop, bring it to market, and execute a sale,” Zlatkin explained.
Lastly, the executive reiterated Coinbase’s view on wash-sale rules, which prevent investors from claiming a tax loss if they buy back the same asset within 30 days of selling it.
While the firm has long agreed that the rules should also apply to crypto, it flagged a practical problem: that crypto trades 24 hours a day across exchanges, liquidity pools, and self-custody wallets, all at the same time, and there currently is no shared data architecture that would let anyone track wash-sale violations across that broken environment in real time.
According to the tax guru, before the rules take effect after being enacted, there should be an implementation runway of at least 18 to 24 months to allow for necessary software infrastructure to be built. He warned that forcing immediate compliance would lead to widespread reporting errors and a flood of IRS audits.
The post Coinbase Urges Congress to Treat Stablecoins Like Cash and Ease Crypto Tax Burdens appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Venture capitalist Tim Draper says fears that quantum computing will break Bitcoin (BTC) are misplaced, arguing that traditional banks and the dollars held within them face a bigger security risk.
In comments published by Benzinga and amplified in an X post on June 9, Draper said he considers his BTC holdings safer than cash sitting in a bank account.
Responding to concerns that quantum computers could eventually crack BTC’s cryptography, Draper pointed out that financial institutions rely on older infrastructure that would be easier to compromise than the Bitcoin network.
“Quantum will crack the banks long before it touches the blockchain,” he wrote on X. “Everyone’s panicking about quantum breaking Bitcoin’s encryption while banks are running on legacy infrastructure that makes Bitcoin look like Fort Knox.”
He also argued that even if something did happen to the Bitcoin network, full node operators could roll back to the last secure block. Banks, as he put it, “don’t have that option.”
The rollback point is worth examining carefully. While that type of fork is technically feasible, it needs consensus from many node operators and miners, and it is usually only resorted to in extreme circumstances. Additionally, it would contradict Bitcoin’s claim of immutability, a tension that Draper did not address.
BTC investor Lark Davis backed Draper’s broader framing, saying that if people used “basic security hygiene,” then their holdings would be safer than cash in the bank, unless their keys got stolen. He also insisted that quantum technology will break all legacy security, so people need to stop singling out the cryptocurrency.
Draper also repeated a long-held prediction that Bitcoin will one day eclipse the dollar. He broke down the mechanism for that in a Crunchbase interview earlier in the year, where he said a time will come when retailers will “only take Bitcoin,” and were that to happen, he believes there would be a run on the dollar. Such is his confidence in the asset that in April this year, he reiterated an old bet that BTC could hit $250,000, this time giving it 18 months to do so.
The quantum threat to Bitcoin has been analyzed in detail by several researchers, including on-chain analyst James Check, who in April argued that the commonly cited figure of 6.3 million BTC with exposed public keys overstates the actual risk.
According to him, active institutions such as exchanges and custodians, which face most of that exposure, are already working on solutions to mitigate that risk, meaning the genuinely high-risk portion is the roughly 1.716 million BTC in early-era Pay-to-Public-Key addresses, most of which he said are assumed to be permanently lost coins from Bitcoin’s earliest blocks.
Meanwhile, Draper’s infrastructure argument is directly counter to security expert Jameson Lopp’s. According to the Casa co-founder, who co-authored the BIP-361 proposal to freeze quantum-vulnerable addresses, banks can upgrade to counter quantum threats “orders of magnitudes faster” than Bitcoin, given that the cryptocurrency needs broad decentralized consensus before any protocol change can be made.
He estimated that it could take as much as a decade for a full Bitcoin upgrade to quantum-resistant cryptography, and that is the core difference. Draper is betting that banks will fail first, but Lopp thinks that Bitcoin’s slowness to upgrade will be the harder problem to solve.
The post Tim Draper Explains Why Bitcoin Is Safer Than Banks in the Quantum Era appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The past few weeks have been devastating for the cryptocurrency market, with Solana (SOL) being hit especially hard.
And while some analysts expect further losses in the near future, certain indicators signal that a much-needed recovery could be knocking on the door.
Earlier this month, SOL collapsed to around $60, the lowest level since the end of 2023. As of this writing, it trades at roughly $63 (according to CoinGecko), which is a 33% monthly drop, while its market capitalization has fallen well below $40 billion.
According to Ali Martinez, though, the current bottom might present an excellent opportunity for investors to jump on the bandwagon. He revealed that the TD Sequential indicator has flashed a buy signal on SOL, meaning the price could soon head north to $77.
Another technical analysis tool that suggests a resurgence might be on the way is Solana’s Relative Strength Index. Its ratio (on a daily scale) recently dipped to approximately 15, its lowest mark ever. The index ranges from 0 to 100, and readings below 30 indicate that the asset is oversold and on the verge of a potential rebound. On the other hand, anything above 70 is a warning for a possible pullback ahead.

X user Henry supported the optimistic outlook. They noted SOL’s recent decline but argued that it looks “absolutely bullish” at the moment, predicting a W-shaped recovery beyond $88, assuming bulls reclaim $79.9. At the same time, the analyst warned that losing the major support level at $60 could be catastrophic.
Despite the positive signals, the bearish market conditions remain an obstacle, with some industry participants expecting a further price crash for SOL. X user cyclop envisioned a short-term plunge to the $30-$40 range, a level last visited in October 2023. Nevertheless, the analyst is optimistic for the long term, forecasting a pump to $300 in the next 1-2 years.
Lately, many investors have transferred their holdings from self-custody to centralized exchanges: a development that intensifies fears of an additional correction by increasing immediate selling pressure.

Another worrying factor is the waning interest from institutional investors. Over the past few days, outflows from spot SOL ETFs have exceeded inflows, indicating that pension funds, hedge funds, and other market players have reduced their exposure to the asset. This, in turn, has required the products’ issuers, including Bitwise, Fidelity, Grayscale, Invesco, and others, to sell real SOL to properly back the shares.

The post Solana (SOL) Bleeds Heavily, Yet Key Indicator Flashes a Buy Signal: Details appeared first on CryptoPotato.
[PRESS RELEASE – New York, United States, June 10th, 2026]
Shotgun.fun, a new trading terminal, launches today with a model that returns every fee back to the trader, ending an industry standard that has quietly extracted billions.
Every trade ever placed has made someone else money: not the market and not the protocol, but the terminal sitting between traders and execution. The fee paid on every buy, every sell, and every limit order became the status quo. Shotgun’s the paradigm shift.
Shotgun.fun is a high-performance trading terminal that returns up to 100% of trading fees to traders. Cashback starts at 50%, already higher than any other trading terminal offering, and scales with volume. Tiers are built to unlock fast. Getting to 100% is not an out-of-reach theoretical ceiling, it’s the destination.
The terminal is fully non-custodial, secured through Turnkey, ensuring keys are encrypted and accessible only to the user.
Shotgun arrives fully loaded:
Insiders have extracted hundreds of millions from everyday traders across recent token launches. Shotgun aims to even the playing field by shining a light on insider wallets, helping users view their trades and copy their moves in real time.
Shotgun also comes packed with a referral program that offers up to 50% revenue share across five layers of referrals, meaning users earn when their referrals trade.
Shotgun is led by Miguel Loures and Pedro Maurício, the founding team behind Pulsar Finance, a portfolio manager backed by Delphi Ventures that grew to more than one million users before being acquired by Terraform Labs. The team has been building in this space since 2020.
“Until now, traders have been treated as the product, not as users,” said Miguel Loures, founder of Shotgun. “We built Shotgun to give the power back to the people.”

Shotgun launches with support for Solana, with more blockchains and agentic trading coming soon.
About Shotgun
Shotgun.fun is a non-custodial trading terminal built for traders. Up to 100% cashback, enterprise-grade execution, and a full suite of tools built for speed, instinct, and being first.
More information available at:
Website: https://shotgun.fun/
Twitter/X: https://x.com/shotgundotfun
The post Shotgun.fun Launches as the First Trading Terminal With 100% Cashback appeared first on CryptoPotato.
[PRESS RELEASE – Norwich, United Kingdom, June 10th, 2026]
Nightrush.com, an independent iGaming comparison and review platform, today announced a comprehensive restructuring of its editorial operations and platform revamp.
The initiative responds directly to the widespread adoption of artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning, and adaptive personalization technologies by licensed operators, as well as the increasingly fragmented global regulatory landscape.
The goal is to serve intelligence content and provide resources for the players, focusing on responsible gaming advice and education.
The update arrives as data indicates the global iGaming market surpassed $105 billion in 2025 and is projected to exceed $133 billion by the end of 2026 according to the ICRRD Journal.
Market expansion has been accompanied by a shift toward data-driven, compliance-heavy operational environments, where international regulatory bodies are enforcing stricter standards on promotional bonuses, identity verification, and player safety protocols.
To address these market dynamics, Nightrush.com is implementing a modernized scoring and auditing methodology focused on three core operational pillars:
This operational realignment establishes an independent, verification-based reporting model designed to provide transparent market data for consumers navigating complex digital entertainment sectors.
Olesea Naidion, Brand Manager at Nightrush.com said: “The integration of artificial intelligence is fundamentally changing how platforms interact with users. Our updated editorial infrastructure ensures that our review standards evolve alongside these technical advancements, prioritizing objective transparency and independent validation over superficial marketing metrics.”
About Nightrush.com
Nightrush.com is an independent digital media platform and information resource specializing in the verification, review, and comparison of licensed international iGaming operators. Operating strictly as an informational affiliate platform rather than a gambling operator, the company provides market analysis, compliance tracking, and consumer safety evaluations across North America, Europe, Scandinavia, and Oceania. The platform is dedicated to maintaining high-integrity editorial standards to support informed consumer decision-making within regulated digital gaming markets.
The post Nightrush.com Responds to the AI Personalization Wave Reshaping iGaming And Raises the Bar appeared first on CryptoPotato.