The shift in US policy towards Venezuela may stabilize oil markets, alter geopolitical dynamics, and impact cryptocurrency demand.
The post Trump administration directs prosecutors to halt Venezuela probes appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Escalating Middle East tensions could trigger increased crypto volatility, impacting global markets and influencing central bank policies.
The post Iran launches attack on US air base as crypto markets brace for volatility appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The AI boom's economic boost may be temporary; sustained growth depends on continued investment, while inflation risks could impact consumers.
The post Bank of Korea chief says AI boom offsets Iran war impact on economy appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The /remember command in Grok Build enhances AI coding efficiency, but its success hinges on managing complex, evolving project contexts effectively.
The post Grok Build introduces /remember command for persistent context across coding sessions appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
AI's potential to disrupt labor markets could lead to reduced consumer spending and impact economic sectors reliant on high-income earners.
The post Muddy Waters Capital reevaluates India fund plans amid AI focus appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

The 2036 Issue: What Choices Will You Make On The Way To A Multipolar World?
As I write this in 2026, the world is becoming more multipolar, and I expect that trend to continue over the next decade through 2036.
In reality, it was this recent unipolar period that was historically anomalous. Starting from the end of World War II in 1945 and especially since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, the United States has existed as the world’s sole hyperpower. For the first time in history, telecommunications and industry connected the whole world, enabling a truly global reach.
Prior to that point, multipolarity was the norm. Even during the height of the Roman Empire nearly two millennia ago, there were other similarly powerful regions of the world, including the Han Dynasty and other Asian kingdoms and empires. That was at a time when distance truly mattered, and great powers could exist simultaneously with only limited contact.
The other side of this multipolar aspect of power was the multipolar nature of money. For thousands of years, it was gold and silver, along with lesser commodities, that served as money. There was no sovereign ledger big enough to serve the whole world, and so only nature’s decentralized ledger could suffice.
But in the age of telecommunications, as commerce and money began to flow at the speed of light in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, even gold wasn’t good enough. The United States dollar became the primary currency for cross-border lending and contract pricing, while the United States treasury bond became the primary reserve asset for central banks. People often point to the existence of prior reserve currencies, such as the British pound sterling or the Dutch gilder, but they weren’t the same thing as the dollar. They were proxies for metal, and gold itself was the real reserve currency in those eras. But during this unipolar hyperpower era, the free-floating dollar and its bond market surpassed the known market capitalization of gold and became by far the largest holding in sovereign reserves.
Many people viewed this unipolar era as the end of history, even though of course history never does end. China and India gradually recovered their economic might from the depths of colonialism and war that defined their 19th and 20th centuries, with China in particular becoming the world’s largest steel producer, electricity generator, and manufacturer now in the early 21st century. The United States, meanwhile, suffered from the Triffin dilemma: in order to maintain the world’s reserve currency, the nation must supply the world with units of its currency, which they do by running deficits. Those deficits, and the associated hollowing-out of industry that they contribute to, is what eventually weakens the trust in that currency.
Now, many of those in power in the United States no longer want the costs of issuing the reserve currency, though few would say it out loud. The imbalances have become too great. Meanwhile, the rest of the world doesn’t want their assets to be devalued or frozen, or their liabilities hardened, at the whim of Washington DC. There are no other sovereign entities willing and able to serve as the world’s ledger either, with all the trust that’s required and all the burdens it entails.
And so, here it is that we witness the gradual trend shift back toward multipolarity of money. Gold is the obvious first choice; it’s the only other liquid and divisible store of value that’s big enough. It’s still not fast enough, but nations see that they didn’t have to go as all-in on the dollar as they did. They can hold gold in lieu of treasuries for a bigger chunk of their savings than they have been doing in recent decades. It may have its flaws, but gold can’t be hacked, can’t be unliterally debased or frozen, and lasts forever.
The second choice is a boring but obvious one: diversification. In a world where there are a handful of major economic powers, nations can diversify their fiat currency exposures. They can hold a plurality of currencies and bonds at roughly equal proportion to the size of their trading partners and capital providers. That spreads out risk, both in terms of debasement and in terms of confiscation. The problem here is about network effects: liquidity begets more liquidity, and entities don’t want assets and liabilities denominated in different units, and so money naturally trends toward one wherever possible. A patchwork combination of gold and two or three major fiat currencies collectively serving as the world’s ledger is a workable one, but not an ideal one.
The third potential choice, still in its relative infancy, is Bitcoin. Nature provided slow but decentralized ledgers, sovereigns provided fast but centralized ledgers, and this third method now provides a ledger that is both decentralized and fast. The hyperpower unipolar world occurred at a time when transaction speeds could move at the speed of light, but final settlement could not. Fast global transactions (i.e. IOUs) only require Morse code over telegraph connections, which are very simple and of low bandwidth, while fast global settlements (i.e. irreversible transfers) require much higher bandwidth communications and hard encryption. Now that fast settlement exists at scale, the reliance on central intermediaries to bridge the gap between fast transactions and slow settlements can be reduced.
However, the challenge from this point on is twofold: security and network effects.
Bitcoin’s ultimate security has been questioned from its inception. Will its economic incentives keep it permissionless and decentralized indefinitely, or will it eventually gravitate toward centralized capture? Will its cryptographic assumptions continue to hold? And related to both of those questions: will it be able to gradually update over time despite its decentralization, so that it can remain functional and secure as the world’s computer infrastructure evolves underneath it? At only seventeen years of age, these questions are still unanswered, but those of us who invest in the asset and participate in development either directly or through the financing of development believe that Bitcoin is the best shot we have, and so we try to create the reality we want to see.
Bitcoin’s network effects are strong, but are still limited. These network effects, along with its simple and robust design, have been sufficient to keep it as the largest cryptocurrency for seventeen straight years since inception, with no true competitors anywhere in sight. However, when looking more broadly, it’s still a minnow in an ocean of sharks. The direct user base is in the low millions, in a world of billions. The market cap is in the low trillions of dollars in a global world of assets that has reached roughly a quadrillion dollars. And speaking of dollars, people use the largest and most liquid money as their unit of account, and that remains the dollar globally and other fiat currencies locally. It’s what people’s paychecks are denominated in, it’s what their business contracts refer to, and it’s what fulfills their liabilities.
In order to grow very large, Bitcoin by definition requires upward volatility. With upward volatility comes euphoria and leverage, which create the conditions for periods of downward volatility. This volatile adoption period, which inevitably takes decades as it chips into the existing network effects of the dollar and other large monies, limits its attractiveness both as a unit of account and as a near-term savings device. It serves as an investable asset, as long-term savings, and as the most unstoppable payment and settlement method for products and services that are otherwise denominated in more stable incumbent monies. Bitcoin’s fate during this adoption period rests on the vision of early adopters whose plans are measured in decades. The larger it becomes, the more stable it can be and the more it can function as an accounting unit and near-term savings, but getting there is a long journey.
To the extent that Bitcoin continues to remain strong in the face of security threats, and continues to chip into the incumbent monetary networks, the more attractive it becomes to individuals, corporations, and sovereigns. In 2036, I believe gold will still be desired, as there is a natural tendency to want to own physical, immortal things. And I believe the largest fiat currencies, troubled as they may be, will still be in widespread use: those trains have quite a while to run yet. If it’s successful, Bitcoin in 2036 would be larger than any stock, and would rival the largest currencies and metals in market size.
The biggest challenge to Bitcoin is not governments, not quantum computers, not rogue developers, and not other digital assets. Instead, the biggest challenge, the biggest risk, is us. The people. All people.
In 2036, war, corruption, and tyranny will still exist. However, it’s a question of ratios and numbers. People imagine that governments impose all of these things on us, when in reality that’s only partially true. The way it works in practice is that people ask for it.
There is a perceived balance between liberty and security. War and tyranny, and the centralized ledgers that fuel them, come not just out of human evil, but also from human fear. When people are afraid of invaders, plagues, technology, and competition over scarce resources, they turn to their leaders for protection. They give up some of their liberty as long as they perceive that they’re under the collective security umbrella, and that the power of the state will be directed at others rather than themselves. This can work for a time, but it breeds corruption. Power begets power, and eventually turns inward. State failures, when they inevitably occur, must be covered up. Critics of the state, whether from without or from within, must be silenced. When liberty is gone, that system which promised security eventually and ironically becomes the biggest threat to it.
People who criticize ubiquitous surveillance and bureaucratic overreach when wielded by their political opponents often turn around to embrace those tools as soon as their political allies are in power. It’s a short-sighted strategy, relying either on staying in power forever, or in the lack of foresight about how those tools will be given back to their opponents at some point, stronger than ever and ready to be used against them yet again.
If Bitcoin fails to catch on by 2036, I think it will be because humanity didn’t want it, or wasn’t ready for it. The technology itself is robust. Proof of work helps keep the network secure. Tight limits on bandwidth and storage help keep the network decentralized. Layers built on top of it help provide scaling and privacy. There is more work to do, but the foundation is already strong, open for business, and being used at scale. To the extent that major challenges arise, the network is upgradable whenever sufficient consensus is achieved.
In this latest bull/bear cycle, Bitcoin further separated itself from other cryptocurrencies, but failed to attract many new users. AI services caught on with the public far more quickly, leapfrogging Bitcoin in adoption, because people and businesses could see AI’s immediate benefits to them, while Bitcoin’s benefits were unclear to many who haven’t gone down a rabbit hole of research.
There are many stores of value to choose from, and volatility is painful. In order for Bitcoin to truly catch on, it will need to be because people value financial sovereignty. It will need to be because hundreds of millions of people, not just several million as we have now, appreciate the importance of self-custodied savings, permissionless payments, and financial privacy. Those collectively are the attributes that Bitcoin uniquely provides at scale.
Prior to Bitcoin, during this century of fast transactions but without fast settlements, governments could impose their control over the financial system in the background. By regulating the banks, they could surveil and contain activities to a significant degree without restricting almost any end-user directly. Thus, most people didn’t see any direct threats to their financial liberty. After Bitcoin, people can run open-source code, can transact without permission, and can hold liquid savings in their own custody. To the extent that governments are threatened by this, they can’t just impose restrictions on thousands of banks anymore; they have to impose restrictions on millions of end-users and developers.
The question is, now that technology has pulled the mask off, will enough people resist and push forward through frictions, or will they comply without protest and move backward?
We have the tools now, but will we use them? That’s the main question to answer for 2036.

Don’t miss your chance to own The 2036 Issue — featuring articles written by many influential figures in the space pondering the challenges of the next decade!
This piece is featured in the latest Print edition of Bitcoin Magazine, The 2036 Issue. We’re sharing it here as an early look at the ideas explored throughout the full issue.
This post The 2036 Issue: What Choices Will You Make On The Way To A Multipolar World? first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Lyn Alden.
Bitcoin Magazine

Cathie Wood Doubles Down: ARK Invest Sets Bitcoin Base Case at $750,000 by 2030
ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood reaffirmed her firm’s long-term bullish outlook for Bitcoin, projecting a base case of approximately $750,000 and a bull case of $1,250,000 within the next five years, even as critics question the asset’s performance amid volatility and geopolitical tensions.
In a recent interview with Fox Business, Wood addressed Bitcoin’s role as a maturing asset class, pushing back against skepticism that it has failed to serve as an effective hedge during periods of global uncertainty.
“Our base case is closer to $750,000. But the bull case involves a substitution for gold,” Wood said. “So as generational wealth transfer takes place, we think that younger people are more prone to adopting a digital store of value. So that would be Bitcoin.” Most of the world’s wealth is expected to be passed from the baby boomer generation to their children and younger heirs in the coming decades.
She outlined three primary drivers behind ARK’s forecasts: generational shifts toward digital assets, Bitcoin’s utility as an insurance policy in emerging markets, and accelerating institutional adoption.
“The second is Bitcoin is an insurance policy, particularly in emerging markets against fiscal and monetary neglect at best or corruption at worst,” Wood explained. “And so as wealth increases around the world, we think that individuals will shift from stablecoins… to Bitcoin, which has much more appreciation potential.”
“But the biggest reason is institutional adoption,” she added, “This is a new asset class. It has very low correlation to other asset classes in terms of risks and returns. And so every asset allocator has a responsibility to examine it because it will increase risk-adjusted returns over time.
Wood’s comments come as Bitcoin faces criticism, including from figures like Mark Cuban, who has suggested the asset has “lost the plot” and underperformed as a hedge amid recent geopolitical and economic turbulence. In events such as market stress tied to international conflicts, Bitcoin has at times decoupled from expectations, with gold outperforming in certain episodes.
Wood acknowledged short-term dynamics but pointed to longer-term structural advantages. She highlighted Bitcoin’s fixed supply schedule as a key differentiator.
“21 million units, we’re up to 20 million that have been minted. Only one more million to go. So the scarcity value is there,” Wood said. “Bitcoin is mathematically metered. There will be no supply response. It’s just mathematically metered. And right now it’s increasing at 0.9% roughly per year, the supply is, which is lower than gold’s long-term, and in the next two years, we’ll be down to 0.45% increase per year. So there’s real scarcity value evolving now.”
On the Bitcoin-gold relationship, Wood noted low historical correlation since institutional interest began in earnest around 2019. “You’ll find a very low correlation between gold and Bitcoin, digital gold — very low correlation, it’s 0.14,” she said. “So almost no correlation.” She observed recent shifts where Bitcoin has shown momentum while gold has retreated, partly tied to a strengthening U.S. dollar.
Recent developments in global finance further illustrate Bitcoin’s growing role as neutral money. Reports indicate Iran has implemented mechanisms to accept Bitcoin payments for safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz, including structured toll processes for shipping, highlighting the asset’s utility in sanctions-prone environments and cross-border transactions where traditional systems face friction. The corridor saw over 20% of global oil pass through it, before the war.
On the national front, Wood emphasized that regulatory clarity will accelerate institutional participation. She pointed to pending U.S. legislation, such as the Clarity Act, as a catalyst.
“I think the Genius Act and soon, hopefully, the Clarity Act, will set the stage appropriately for this space to flourish and for institutions,” Wood said. “I think once we do, because the odds have gone up recently that it will be passed, that we will see much more of an institutional swoosh into the space.”
Wood also addressed the coexistence of Bitcoin with the U.S. dollar, noting stablecoins’ role in extending dollar influence globally while Bitcoin captures appreciation potential.
Despite near-term volatility, Wood maintained that Bitcoin’s characteristics position it for continued adoption across demographics, with younger users particularly drawn to its properties as both a store of value and transactional medium.
The ARK CEO’s outlook aligns with her firm’s updated models, which continue to center digital gold substitution and institutional flows as core drivers for Bitcoin’s trajectory through 2030.
This post Cathie Wood Doubles Down: ARK Invest Sets Bitcoin Base Case at $750,000 by 2030 first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Juan Galt.
Bitcoin Magazine

Strive’s SATA Tops Estimated 490 Bitcoin in a Single Day — More Than the Entire Daily Mining Supply
Strive, Inc. crossed a notable threshold on Wednesday, with its Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Preferred Stock (Nasdaq: SATA) estimated to have acquired around 490 bitcoin through the company’s at-the-market program — a figure that exceeds the roughly 450 BTC the Bitcoin network produces in an average day.
The milestone places Strive in rare company. With miners currently earning 3.125 BTC per block and roughly 144 blocks produced each day, the global Bitcoin network adds approximately 450 new coins to circulation every 24 hours at baseline — a rate set at the April 2024 halving and unchanged until the next halving, expected in 2028.
On Wednesday, Strive’s SATA program absorbed more than that entire daily issuance through a single equity instrument in a single session.
Wednesday’s Bitcoin for Corporation’s SATA Tracker dashboard showed roughly $66.9 million in total volume, a 13% yield, and 95% of volume above the $100 par threshold — the floor below which Strive’s board has directed management not to issue shares. At a 58% estimated capture rate, ATM proceeds reached approximately $35.3 million, with bitcoin spot at $74,956.
In the week ending May 24, SATA posted a weekly record of approximately 794 BTC acquired. Wednesday’s revised 475 BTC estimate now stands as the instrument’s second confirmed daily supply absorption event in eight days.
The broader 8-K confirmed data visible in the dashboard showed that between May 18 and May 26, SATA generated $50 million in total proceeds and added roughly 650 BTC to Strive’s treasury at a 48% capture rate for that filing window.
Strive’s most recent SEC filing confirmed the purchase of 1,109 bitcoin between May 19 and May 22 at an average cost of approximately $76,989 per coin, bringing total holdings to 16,500 BTC.
Strive is a Dallas based corporate treasury and structured finance company that uses preferred equity to accumulate bitcoin at scale. The firm issues Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Preferred Stock, branded SATA, which will soon pay cash dividends on each business day at a 13 percent stated annual rate that compounds through frequent distributions.
Strive eliminates traditional debt and leans on preferred stock instead, seeking long duration funding that matches bitcoin’s long duration profile. Proceeds from SATA offerings fund large bitcoin purchases, retirement of convertible notes from its Semler Scientific acquisition, and repayment of a Coinbase Credit loan, which leaves the company’s bitcoin stack unencumbered.
Founder Vivek Ramaswamy established Strive as a vehicle for “digital credit” strategies, and CEO Matthew Cole leads the current treasury design and capital markets playbook.
This post Strive’s SATA Tops Estimated 490 Bitcoin in a Single Day — More Than the Entire Daily Mining Supply first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Miami IT Worker Arrested in $1.9 Million Bitcoin Theft from Former Boss
A Miami man faces multiple felony charges after police say he stole nearly $2 million worth of Bitcoin from a former employer — a theft that went undetected for years while the cryptocurrency sat locked in a safe.
Nahum Reynaldo Castro, 40, was arrested Tuesday on charges of grand theft, money laundering, unlawful use of a communications device, and offenses against computer users, according to an arrest report obtained by NBC 6.
The case stretches back to December 2017, when the victim began purchasing Bitcoin as a long-term investment. He bought a hardware wallet to store the digital currency, and turned to Castro — a trusted employee since 2013 and an IT specialist — to handle the wallet’s setup and security, the report said.
By the end of January 2018, Castro had secured more than $217,000 worth of Bitcoin on behalf of his employer. The hardware wallet was then locked in a safe inside the victim’s home, where it remained untouched for years.
That changed in July 2025. While in the middle of a move, the victim opened the safe and accessed the wallet — only to find it empty. The Bitcoin was gone. At the time of the discovery, the stolen holdings had grown to a value of more than $1.9 million, according to the arrest report.
Investigators determined the theft had taken place in 2020, more than five years before the victim realized anything was missing. Castro continued working for the victim until 2024, the report said.
Central to the investigation was the wallet’s seed phrase — a master recovery key that grants full access to a cryptocurrency wallet. According to the report, only two people had knowledge of that phrase: the victim and Castro.
Bank records proved critical in building the case. Deposits into Castro’s accounts aligned with withdrawals from the Bitcoin wallet, providing investigators with the financial corroboration needed to connect him to the theft, NBC 6 reported.
The case highlights a risk in the cryptocurrency space that security experts have long flagged: placing complete trust in a single person during the setup of a digital asset wallet.
Because Bitcoin transactions are recorded on a public blockchain but are not reversible, stolen funds are nearly impossible to recover without law enforcement intervention.
Castro was booked into jail following his arrest and was set to appear in bond court Wednesday. He has not entered a formal plea in the case.
This post Miami IT Worker Arrested in $1.9 Million Bitcoin Theft from Former Boss first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Casa Launches Four Security Features to Combat Rising Social Engineering Attacks on Bitcoin Holders
Bitcoin security firm Casa has released a suite of four features targeting social engineering, the attack vector responsible for the bulk of crypto theft in 2025. The features are live now for Casa customers, arriving as the FBI reports crypto fraud losses climbed 22% year over year to more than $11 billion last year.
Social engineering — where scammers manipulate victims into sending funds or handing over wallet access — now dwarfs other forms of crypto theft. For every physical attack on a crypto holder reported in 2025, there were more than 2,000 phishing attacks filed with the FBI.
Casa CEO Nick Neuman said the firm treats attacks on its clients as a direct challenge. “Social engineering is the lowest of the low,” Neuman wrote. “People are trying to trick others into losing their life savings. We will not stand for it.”
The first feature, Guardian Mode, adds a human checkpoint to every transaction. When enabled, the Casa Recovery Key will not sign a transaction until two Casa Advisors complete a live video verification call with the account holder.
After that call, a 48-hour hold activates before the signature is applied. The window gives users the ability to reverse course if they acted under pressure. Disabling Guardian Mode follows the same process — a verification call plus a 48-hour delay — so an attacker cannot strip the protection and strike in the same session.
Guardian Mode is opt-in and available to Premium and Private Client members.
Whitelisting restricts vault withdrawals to a list of pre-approved addresses. Any new address added to the list enters a 48-hour waiting period before it becomes active. During that window, Casa sends an email alert to the account holder.
The delay is designed to interrupt a core element of social engineering: the manufactured urgency that pushes victims to send funds before they reconsider. Turning off Whitelisting carries its own 48-hour hold, preventing an attacker from disabling the feature and draining funds in a single move.
The third feature monitors login locations and flags sessions that are physically impossible given the timing of prior logins. Casa records city-level location data at sign-in but does not store IP addresses; location data is deleted after 48 hours. If a login from Tokyo follows a login from Montreal by 20 minutes, the system sends an email alert.
The feature is built to catch unauthorized account access without building a surveillance profile on the user.
The fourth feature addresses the role phone calls play in social engineering. Casa found that 20% of such attacks begin with an unexpected call, where the attacker uses real-time conversation to manufacture urgency and override the victim’s judgment.
The Casa app now detects an active phone call on the device and, when a user attempts to send funds mid-call, requires them to enter a Casa Advisor Verification Code before the transaction proceeds.
A legitimate Casa advisor will have the code. The app checks call state only and does not access audio, caller ID, or call content.
Casa said the features are part of a broader five-week campaign with industry experts to raise awareness about social engineering. AI tools and data breaches, the company noted, have made these attacks more targeted and convincing than before.
This post Casa Launches Four Security Features to Combat Rising Social Engineering Attacks on Bitcoin Holders first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Hut 8 is pushing even further into AI infrastructure than most other Bitcoin miners are. Its latest disclosures show a company using power access, data center leases, project debt, and BTC-backed liquidity to build the financing stack for that move.
The company's latest disclosures put numbers around that transition. Hut 8 reported $16.8 billion in triple-net, take-or-pay contracted lease revenue across two hyperscale AI campuses, then separately refinanced a $200 million Bitcoin-backed credit facility with FalconX.
The new facility cut the fixed rate to 7.0% from 9.0% and unencumbered roughly 3,300 BTC from the prior collateral package.
Taken together, the disclosures show a miner identity changing into something closer to an infrastructure landlord. Hut 8 is turning megawatts, lease commitments, project debt, and Bitcoin holdings into the machinery for a business that depends less on mining alone.
The result is a case study with more substance than a generic AI pivot. Hut 8 is showing a funded path into data center infrastructure, though the model still needs operating proof. The test is whether contracted AI cash flows arrive on schedule and become durable enough that Bitcoin collateral becomes a bridge instead of a recurring source of balance-sheet dependence.
The strongest number in Hut 8's first-quarter disclosure sits outside the Q1 income statement: $16.8 billion of contracted lease revenue across River Bend and Beacon Point, covering 597 MW of AI data center capacity.

Hut 8 generated $71 million of revenue in the first quarter, including $66 million from Compute, and posted a $253 million net loss that included $295 million of primarily unrealized digital-asset losses.
The $16.8 billion figure represents long-term contracted lease value that Hut 8 is presenting as the foundation for a different kind of business.
The pieces are specific. Hut 8's Beacon Point lease added 352 MW of IT capacity and $9.8 billion of base-term value. Its earlier River Bend lease added 245 MW and $7 billion of base-term value, with Google providing a financial backstop for the base lease term.
Hut 8 is commercializing scarce power and data center capacity under long-term lease structures. The appeal comes from contracts and power access rather than a token, a cloud slogan, or a vague compute promise.
Triple-net and take-or-pay terms are designed to make those cash flows more financeable because the tenant obligation is less tied to day-to-day mining economics.
Hut 8's disclosures line up across four moving parts:
| Model component | Hut 8 evidence | Reader impact | Risk still live |
|---|---|---|---|
| Power and sites | 597 MW of contracted AI data center capacity across two campuses | Turns miner infrastructure into leaseable digital infrastructure | Delivery, interconnection, construction, and tenant concentration |
| Contracted demand | $16.8 billion in base-term contracted lease revenue | Creates a financing story beyond hashprice exposure | Lease value depends on execution over long timelines |
| Project finance | $3.25 billion River Bend notes, non-recourse to Hut 8 | Reduces the need to fund all growth from equity or BTC sales | Large projects still carry cost, schedule, and market risks |
| Bitcoin balance sheet | $200 million FalconX BTC-backed facility and 3,300 BTC unencumbered | Gives liquidity without immediately selling coins | Collateral value still moves with BTC |
Hut 8's AI transition has more to it than most, but each component still carries a different kind of risk.
The leases reduce some revenue uncertainty. The bond financing reduces some parent-level funding pressure. The Bitcoin facility improves liquidity. Still, all three leave Hut 8 with the task of building, delivering, and operating infrastructure for customers whose requirements differ from Bitcoin mining.
The FalconX refinancing is the clearest sign that Bitcoin is becoming part of the financing machinery rather than only the asset being mined.
The full Hut 8 release distributed through Nasdaq described the facility as a 364-day Bitcoin-backed loan with limited recourse to pledged BTC, a no-rehypothecation covenant, fixed loan-to-value thresholds, and no loan-to-value ratchet triggered by declines in Bitcoin's price.
Those terms blunt part of the obvious criticism. The deal improves the terms of a miner's coin-backed borrowing instead of worsening them to chase a new market.
Hut 8 lowered its fixed cost of debt by 200 basis points and increased Bitcoin held outside collateral covenants. The release valued the newly unencumbered coins at roughly $260 million as of May 1, 2026, giving Hut 8 more balance-sheet room without selling the asset.
That makes the facility a better tool, but not a risk-free one.

Hut 8's own balance sheet shows why the distinction is important. Its 10-Q said the company held about 16,332 BTC as of March 31, 2026, including about 9,311 BTC held by Hut 8 and about 7,021 BTC held by American Bitcoin.
The aggregate fair value was about $1.11 billion, based on approximately $68,222 per BTC. The same filing tied the first-quarter digital-asset loss to Bitcoin's decline during the period.
Today, Bitcoin trades near $75,782 on CryptoSlate's price page, down 2.1% over 24 hours and roughly 40% below its October 2025 all-time high. The market-price channel is the relevant risk.
Bitcoin can provide liquidity without a sale, but the borrowing value, covenant comfort, and refinancing backdrop still depend on the asset's market behavior.
That is why the AI landlord strategy cannot be separated from the Bitcoin treasury strategy. If AI leases produce reliable cash flows, BTC collateral can be transitional capital. If delivery slips, financing markets tighten, or Bitcoin weakens at the wrong time, the same collateral can keep the pivot tied to the volatility it was meant to escape.
Earlier coverage of miners' AI pivot showed the broader identity split facing the sector. Miners are moving toward AI and high-performance computing because power access, cooling infrastructure, land, interconnection work, and industrial operations can be worth more under contracted dollar revenue than under compressed mining margins.
Hut 8 fits that broader sector shift. Public miners built businesses around converting power into BTC, and AI data center demand is now giving some of them a second possible use for the same physical footprint.
The difference is that AI customers do not buy the same thing the Bitcoin network buys. Mining can tolerate interruption when economics or grid conditions change. AI tenants want uptime, delivery certainty, dense power, cooling, network architecture, and creditworthy execution.
A miner with megawatts still has to become a hyperscale landlord. It has to turn a power position into infrastructure that lenders and tenants will treat as dependable.
Hut 8's disclosures show both sides of that transition. The company describes itself as an energy infrastructure platform integrating power, digital infrastructure, and compute. It also still reports digital-asset losses, BTC holdings, and exposure to mining economics.
Some Compute revenue and BTC holdings are held by American Bitcoin, a consolidated subsidiary, making Hut 8's strategy less straightforward than a clean exit from mining.
That complexity is part of the shift. The market is watching whether miners can stop being pure BTC proxies without losing the balance-sheet optionality that made their treasuries valuable in the first place.
The strongest argument in Hut 8's favor is that the AI pivot uses more than Bitcoin-backed debt. The company said it closed $3.25 billion of fully amortizing 16.5-year investment-grade senior secured notes to finance River Bend.
Hut 8 described the financing as non-dilutive and non-recourse to Hut 8, with loan-to-cost increasing to about 95%.
That weakens the crutch argument. If project-level debt funds the campus and long-term leases support the debt, then Bitcoin collateral is one part of the structure rather than the whole. It is a liquidity tool alongside project finance and contracted revenue.
The caution is that the financial structure still has to become operationally sound. River Bend is still advancing toward delivery, Beacon Point still has to be built out, and the company still has to convert an 8,375 MW development pipeline into real contracted capacity.
Hut 8 also warned investors about risks tied to data center construction, financing, power expansion, permitting, supply chains, technical challenges, and market conditions.
Hut 8 is showing that miners can finance a route into AI infrastructure when they have scarce power, credible tenants, project-finance access, and a Bitcoin balance sheet lenders will underwrite. It has yet to show that the route is self-sustaining.
The next test is whether AI infrastructure cash flows become strong enough to push Bitcoin collateral into the background. If they do, Hut 8's BTC-backed financing will look like bridge capital for a miner that successfully monetized its power footprint.
If they fail to do so, the pivot will remain tethered to the same balance-sheet asset that made the strategy possible in the first place.
The post Hut 8 AI landlord data center strategy turns Bitcoin collateral into bridge capital appeared first on CryptoSlate.
CME gaps are supposed to die Friday.
CME Group says its regulated crypto futures and options will move to 24-hour, seven-day trading on May 29, pending regulatory review, cutting into one of Bitcoin‘s familiar institutional market tells.
The weekday venue that helped create weekend CME-gap talk is preparing to keep matching trades while crypto prices keep moving.
CME is extending the moment traders can execute, while other parts of the regulated futures stack still keep a business-day clock.
Weekend and holiday trades from Friday evening through Sunday evening will still carry the following business day's trade date, and CME says clearing, settlement and regulatory reporting tied to that activity will be processed on that following business day.
For participating institutional users, the execution gap gets smaller. The harder question shifts to liquidity quality, clearing behavior and Monday post-trade processing.
CME announced that its regulated cryptocurrency futures and options will become available for trading 24 hours a day, seven days a week beginning May 29, pending regulatory review.
The move applies to the exchange's crypto futures and options complex and is being implemented through CME Globex and ClearPort, subject to maintenance windows.
The commercial case is clear. CME said client demand for digital-asset risk management reached a record level, with $3 trillion in notional volume across its crypto futures and options in 2025.
It also reported 407,200 year-to-date average daily contracts in 2026, up 46% from the prior year.
Those figures show why the weekend access problem has moved beyond a meme. Bitcoin traded around $75,782 in CryptoSlate's May 27 snapshot, with a market capitalization near $1.52 trillion and 24-hour volume near $35.17 billion.
In a market of that size, a regulated derivatives venue that closes through the weekend can leave institutional desks managing price risk with a time-zone mismatch.
For traders using futures to hedge spot exposure, manage basis, or offset ETF-linked flows, the practical question is whether the regulated instruments they are allowed or required to use can respond when prices move outside the old CME week.
CME's move gives qualified participants a regulated execution channel during periods that previously sat outside that trading window.
That access can change how a weekend shock is absorbed. Instead of compressing every move into a Sunday evening or Monday reopening, participating desks can hedge, roll, quote or adjust exposure while the broader crypto market is already trading.
The improvement is meaningful for basis trades, ETF-linked exposure, liquidation risk and headline-driven volatility, even as the rest of the regulated workflow remains more constrained.
For CME, the scale also shifts the launch from product housekeeping into market-structure work: a large derivatives franchise is adapting its access model to an asset class that keeps pricing risk through weekends.
CME's clearing and global operations guidelines spell out the limit of the change. The document says there will still be five business days, Monday through Friday, and that Saturday and Sunday clearing settlement cycles are outside the new setup.
The distinction is operationally important: execution becomes continuous, while the official machinery that turns trades into cleared obligations still leans on the next business day.
| Layer | Weekend change | Business-day mechanic |
|---|---|---|
| Trading access | Crypto futures and options can trade through weekends and holidays, subject to maintenance windows. | Some clients may remain on five-day access instead of enabling seven-day trading. |
| Trade date | Trades can be executed from Friday evening through Sunday evening. | Those trades carry the following business day's trade date. |
| Clearing and settlement | Weekend trades are accepted into the regulated workflow. | Settlement-cycle processing waits for the following business day. |
| Regulatory reporting | Weekend activity enters the reporting chain. | CME says reporting tied to weekend and holiday activity is processed on the following business day. |

That design reflects the unresolved operating problem for regulated crypto markets. Crypto prices can move continuously, while futures markets depend on clearing members, collateral, risk controls, settlement cycles, reporting records and operational staffing built around business-day discipline.
CME's guidelines show how the exchange is trying to bridge the mismatch. Clearing members that participate in supplemental trading hours must be approved by CME Clearing.
They must have risk policies and procedures that cover the extra hours, including account monitoring, credit controls, position limits, intraday and overnight monitoring, and defined liquidity sources.
During certain weekend hours, CME Clearing will monitor exposure against posted performance bond and available liquidity. Clearing members are required to submit weekly liquidity templates and deposit collateral for anticipated weekend clearing activity by Friday afternoon into separate weekend settlement accounts.
Those mechanics are the back-office version of 24/7 trading: prefunded risk capacity and monitoring until the business-day cycle catches up.
The old CME gap became shorthand because Bitcoin and other crypto assets kept trading while CME's institutional venue was closed. If spot prices moved sharply on Saturday, CME futures reopened later at a different level, creating a visible gap on the chart.
That chart pattern was only one part of the issue. The deeper problem was that regulated access stopped during precisely the period when crypto-native venues, offshore platforms, ETFs, market makers and leveraged traders could still be forced to react.
CME's BTIC materials show how weekend access reaches the basis-trading and ETF workflows around crypto futures, not just directional bets.
In plain terms, a basis trade at index close lets participants trade crypto futures basis against CME CF reference rates, including reference-rate closes in London, New York and APAC. CME also cites ETF creation and redemption NAV risk as a use case.
That places CME's derivatives complex close to the plumbing of institutional exposure. A desk managing basis against a reference rate, hedging ETF-linked exposure, or carrying futures against spot needs instruments, margin processes and liquidity when prices move.
Access alone still leaves market quality to prove itself. If weekend books are thin, spreads widen, or clearing constraints bite during stress, the market may feel more available without feeling fully continuous.
CME appears aware of that risk. Separate CFTC filings show weekend market-maker programs for cryptocurrency futures and options.
The options program says participants must quote continuous two-sided markets in covered products at maximum bid-ask spreads and minimum quote sizes during a required share of time in market.
Those filings support a launch-liquidity program rather than evidence of deep weekend markets. The first live measure will be practical: which clearing members enable seven-day access, how much volume trades outside old hours, how weekend bid-ask spreads compare with weekdays, whether options quotes remain reliable, and whether exposure alerts or prefunding requirements shape behavior during volatile periods.
There are two plausible paths. In the stronger version, CME's weekend access becomes a genuine pressure valve.
Institutional traders can hedge, roll, quote and adjust exposure while crypto-native markets are already moving, and Monday becomes more of an administrative processing point than a delayed risk event.
In the weaker version, the venue is technically open while liquidity remains uneven, with many users still treating Monday as the real moment when weekend activity becomes visible in clearing, settlement and reporting.
The launch would still be important; it would show that the weekend gap has migrated from price charts into market depth and operations.
CME's 24/7 launch gives institutional traders a way to use familiar futures and options products while Bitcoin and the broader crypto market move through weekends and holidays.
It also exposes the limits of the shift. Regulated crypto can trade more like crypto, while it still clears and reports through machinery built for business days.
For the weekend gap, the split is now clearer. CME is likely to kill the most visible version for traders who can access the venue through the weekend.
The tougher part moves into a less visible place: whether liquidity, risk controls and clearing behavior can make regulated crypto feel continuous when the back office still keeps a business-day clock.
The post CME’s 24/7 crypto launch will kill Bitcoin’s weekend gap, but Monday now matters more appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Ethereum developers are racing to bring native privacy to the world’s largest smart contract blockchain as investors warn that delays could weaken ETH’s claim as crypto’s default settlement layer.
The pressure has intensified as the market rotates toward privacy-focused assets while Ethereum struggles to hold investor attention amid its current wave of FUD and questions over its identity.
ETH has fallen roughly 30% this year and recently traded near $2,000, even as Zcash has registered double-digit gains during the same period.
That divergence has turned privacy from a long-running cypherpunk goal into a product deadline for Ethereum.
The network still dominates stablecoin settlement, tokenization, decentralized finance, and Layer 2 activity, but its default transparency remains a problem for users and institutions that do not want balances, counterparties, or transaction histories visible in real time.
Tom Dunleavy, head of venture at Varys Capital, said Ethereum’s privacy push is bullish, but only if developers move quickly.
According to him:
“Super bullish on the privacy push for Ethereum, but it needs to happen in a reasonable, under-12-month timeframe, or it effectively doesn’t matter. Ethereum now more than ever is in a race on the product side, and its competition is extremely well-funded, motivated, and has all of the connections Ethereum lacks. Ship or die.”
The warning comes as Ethereum’s market position is already under pressure. GSR Research said blockchain revenue is shifting toward rival networks such as Solana, Tron, and Hyperliquid, while the ETH-to-Bitcoin ratio recently hit its lowest level since mid-2025.

This trend is also reflected in CryptoQuant data, which points to a sharp retreat among retail and mid-tier Ethereum holders.
According to the firm, wallets holding between 100 and 1,000 ETH have nearly halved their balances over the past three years, falling from a 2023 peak of 16.2 million ETH to roughly 8.75 million ETH today.
Larger holders have also begun reducing exposure. Wallets holding between 1,000 and 10,000 ETH, which helped drive Ethereum’s 2024 rally, reportedly started trimming their positions late last year.

Those outflows cannot be directly attributed to demand for privacy. However, they add pressure to Ethereum’s broader narrative at a time when privacy-focused assets are gaining market attention, and investors are questioning what could restore ETH’s momentum.
The push for Ethereum privacy coincides with a broader market thesis that financial confidentiality will dictate the next major cryptocurrency cycle.
Grayscale Research recently published an analysis arguing that the digital asset sector is on the cusp of a “third wave” of widespread public attention regarding financial privacy.

According to the firm, this shift is driven by the proliferation of stablecoins and blockchain-based applications, as well as the rapid advancement of artificial intelligence. These AI tools, Grayscale warned, introduce new and highly sophisticated methods of financial surveillance.
On public blockchains, balances, counterparties, and transaction histories can remain visible indefinitely.
Grayscale researchers emphasized that the demand for privacy is not solely limited to users seeking full anonymity. Instead, it reflects ordinary preferences for confidentiality in economic life.
Individuals generally do not want their spending history exposed by default, while businesses require confidentiality for supplier payments, payroll, and treasury flows. Institutions similarly view the real-time mapping of their wallet structures as a non-starter.
However, implementing these features involves significant commercial tradeoffs.
Grayscale noted that stronger privacy protections have historically led to weaker market distribution, creating friction with centralized exchange support, regulatory compliance, and wallet integration.
Despite these hurdles, Grayscale Investments Chairman Barry Silbert echoed the report’s sentiment, declaring that the “privacy era” in digital assets has officially commenced.

This narrative shift is already evident in the crypto market, where Zcash's market capitalization has surged by over 900% in the past year, approaching nearly $10 billion. Even Monero, which frequently faces regulatory scrutiny over its use in illicit markets, has doubled in value.
Over the past weeks, Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has pushed the issue back to the front of the network’s technical agenda, calling for developers to “accelerate the cypherpunk privacy reality” after years of privacy research and debate.
His near-term roadmap focuses on three areas, including account abstraction and FOCIL, keyed nonces, and access-layer privacy work.
Together, they are designed to make private Ethereum activity harder to censor, harder to link, and less dependent on trusted infrastructure.
FOCIL, short for fork-choice-enforced inclusion lists, is designed to address transaction censorship.
Today, transactions can sit in a public mempool before they are finalized, giving block builders and other intermediaries visibility into pending activity. That creates openings for exclusion, front-running, and surveillance.
FOCIL would allow a committee of validators to propose lists of transactions that block builders are expected to include.
If builders ignore those transactions, their blocks may be rejected by the network. The mechanism is designed to make it harder to censor transactions, including private transfers, before they reach the chain.
Account abstraction addresses another weakness in Ethereum’s current design. Most users still rely on externally owned accounts controlled by a single private key.
Account abstraction allows accounts to behave more like programmable smart contracts, supporting features such as social recovery, multisignature approval, and fee sponsorship.
For privacy, that flexibility matters because wallet activity can be structured to reduce obvious behavioral patterns. It also makes it easier for applications or relayers to pay fees on behalf of users without forcing every action through the same exposed account model.
Keyed nonces target a narrower but important metadata leak. Ethereum accounts currently use a single counter, known as a nonce, to prevent the same transaction from being replayed. Because that counter increases in sequence, observers can use it to link transactions that might otherwise appear separate.
The proposed fix splits the account counter into different replay domains. That would allow separate types of activity to use different nonce keys, making it harder to link private actions back to the same account through simple sequencing.
Lastly, the most ambitious part of that wider push may be Kohaku, an Ethereum Foundation-backed open-source toolkit designed to bring privacy features into the wallets people already use. The project goes beyond private transfers by targeting the access-layer leaks that expose users before a transaction even settles.
Even if transactions become private, wallets can still leak information when they query the blockchain. Most wallets rely on remote procedure call providers to check balances, read smart contracts, and submit transactions, giving those providers visibility into a user’s IP address, wallet identity, and requested data.
Kohaku is designed to reduce that exposure by giving wallet developers privacy and security components that can be integrated into existing products. Its roadmap includes private sending, safer key management, private reads, and a reference wallet for developers and power users.
The toolkit can also connect wallets to shielded protocols such as Railgun, which is already live on Ethereum, and Privacy Pools, which remains in development.
Ultimately, its goal is to give users private transfers and DeFi access without forcing them to adopt niche tools or move away from wallets they already use.
Ethereum researcher soispoke.eth said the combined package could enable the blockchain network to offer native, trustless, and censorship-resistant private transactions as soon as next year if the proposals ship together.
Crypto lawyer Gabriel Shapiro said these privacy works could help Ethereum compete for institutional tokenization because enterprises need confidentiality for tokenized securities, treasury flows, and DeFi interactions.
That argument goes to the center of Ethereum’s investment case. The network’s advantage has long been its breadth: stablecoins, lending markets, decentralized exchanges, tokenized assets, Layer 2 networks, and developer infrastructure.
However, this breadth alone may not be enough if every financial interaction remains visible by default.
For institutions, public settlement without privacy can be a liability. A company does not want competitors mapping its suppliers. A fund does not want trading routes exposed. A bank does not want clients’ tokenized securities activity to be visible on a public ledger.
Ethereum has the infrastructure to serve those users, but the market is pressing for proof that privacy can reach wallet-level products rather than remain a research agenda.
That is why Dunleavy’s 12-month warning lands with force: Zcash already has the clearest privacy narrative, and Monero remains a major privacy asset despite exchange and regulatory pressure.
At the same time, rival blockchain networks, including Solana, Tron, and Hyperliquid, are capturing market attention while Bitcoin still commands the strongest institutional demand.
Still, Ethereum has the deepest application base in crypto with over $350 billion in assets tokenized on the blockchain, but the market is no longer treating that lead as permanent.
If Hegota introduces usable privacy products within the next year, the feature could strengthen ETH’s role as a settlement infrastructure for both individuals and institutions.
However, if those upgrades remain technical promises, the current privacy trade may continue rewarding assets that made confidentiality their core feature from the start.
The post Ethereum’s privacy push faces a 12-month deadline as markets reward privacy-first assets appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Agentic payment protocol x402 volume collapsed roughly 77% from its November 2025 peak of $5.15 million to $1.19 million by May 2026.
Meanwhile, transaction count fell only 41% from its December 2025 peak of 4.85 million, then rebounded to 2.89 million in May, up 12.5x from a February trough, with an average transaction size of $0.52.
The market's recovery took the form of high-frequency, low-value usage, revealing that agents are paying for APIs, data, and compute over HTTP at sub-dollar amounts, relying on automation to function.
A conservative 5-to-15-second wallet confirmation to each of those 2.89 million monthly x402 transactions can generate between 4,000 and 12,000 user-hours of approval friction in a single month.
At a $25/hour time value, each manual confirmation costs $0.03 to $0.10, which is material for a $0.52 transaction, and economically absurd for a $0.01 API call.
At sub-cent payment sizes, the friction cost exceeds the transaction value itself, and the smaller the payment, the wider that distance.
That logic explains why every major actor building agentic payment infrastructure now concentrates on authorization frameworks.

Google donated AP2 to the FIDO Alliance in April 2026 after developing it as an authorization framework for delegated AI tasks.
AP2 uses cryptographically signed “mandates,” instructions that define what an agent can do, under what conditions, and within what limits.
For tasks where the user is absent, AP2 supports pre-authorized rules that cover price ceilings, time windows, and action scope. Donating it to FIDO pushes it toward a cross-platform standard, and FIDO frames AP2 as enabling secure delegation, verifiable authorization, and trusted transaction execution.
Mastercard's Verifiable Intent creates a tamper-resistant record linking what the user authorized to what the agent executed, an audit trail that travels with the transaction and answers whether an agent did exactly what the user asked and nothing more.
Stripe and Tempo's implementation of the Model Context Protocol for payments addresses the on-chain friction version of the same challenge.
A Tempo Machine Payments Protocol (MPP) session requires only two on-chain transactions, one to open, one to settle, regardless of how many payments occur in between, letting agents execute high-frequency, low-value payments without paying on-chain costs per request.
Stripe's machine payments documentation describes pay-per-use models starting at 0.01 USDC per agent invocation, recurring payments, and programmatic API calls, all designed for agents acting without a human in the loop.
Cloudflare treats x402 and MPP as HTTP infrastructure, with agents discovering services, receiving 402 Payment Required challenges, and retrying with payment credentials programmatically.
Visa's Intelligent Commerce Connect, already in pilot with AWS, Diddo, Highnote, Mesh, Payabli, and Sumvin, adds tokenization, spend controls, and authentication to the same stack.
Across all of these, the common architecture positions authorization at the policy level, where a single user decision governs many agent actions.
| Player / protocol | Delegation mechanism | What it controls | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Google AP2 | Signed mandates | Price ceilings, time windows, action scope | Lets agents act under pre-authorized rules |
| Mastercard Verifiable Intent | Tamper-resistant intent record | Whether action matched user authorization | Creates audit trail between intent and execution |
| Stripe / Tempo MPP | Sessions | Many payments inside one open/settle flow | Reduces friction for high-frequency payments |
| Cloudflare x402 / MPP | HTTP 402 challenge flow | Programmatic paywall and retry logic | Turns web resources into machine-payable services |
| Visa Intelligent Commerce Connect | Tokenization, spend controls, authentication | Agent-initiated commerce safeguards | Brings payments-network controls to agent commerce |
| Base MCP | Wallet approval gate | Swaps, transfers, contract calls, x402 payments | Shows the gap between “agent proposes” and “agent spends” |
Base expands what agents can do by enabling check balances, sending funds, swapping tokens, signing messages, executing contract calls, and paying via x402-enabled APIs, but every write action still requires user approval through Base Account.
For swaps, lending positions, and larger wallet actions, that gate is a safety feature. For recurring micropayments of $0.52 or less, it is the same approval wall as at the wallet layer.
Launched on May 26, Base MCP exposes the delegation disconnect: an agent that can propose an x402 payment but cannot execute it without a wallet pop-up cannot function autonomously in a micropayment economy.
The distance between “agents can propose” and “agents can spend” is what AP2 mandates, MPP sessions, and Verifiable Intent are trying to close.
If the delegation frameworks mature and achieve broad adoption, x402 adjusted transactions could climb from 2.89 million monthly to 10 to 30 million, with average transaction size remaining mostly sub-dollar.
The growth driver would be a higher ratio of payments per user authorization, in which a user sets a budget and defines an allowlist, and an agent executes thousands of microtransactions within those parameters.
McKinsey estimates that by 2030, agentic commerce could orchestrate up to $1 trillion in US B2C retail revenue and $3 to $5 trillion globally.
That figure depends on agents operating reliably within delegated authority, across machine-readable transaction objects, at frequencies no human approval loop can support.
The bear case turns on institutional coordination, and trust-building moves more slowly than infrastructure does. Gartner predicts that over 40% of agentic AI projects will be canceled by the end of 2027, citing costs, unclear value, and weak risk controls.
If wallets default to human-in-the-loop for liability reasons, if merchants add friction to agent-initiated payments because they cannot verify intent, or if a single high-profile exploit forces regulators into the conversation before standards harden, x402 adjusted transactions could stay in the 1-to-3 million monthly range.
| Scenario | Delegation outcome | x402 / agentic payment signal | What it would mean |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear case | Wallets stay human-in-the-loop | 1M–3M monthly x402 tx | Payments remain niche because approval friction persists |
| Base case | Budgets and allowlists become common | 3M–10M monthly tx | Agents handle routine API/tool/data payments safely |
| Bull case | Policy-level authorization scales | 10M–30M monthly tx | Approval density becomes the main adoption metric |
| Trust shock | Exploit or spoofing event slows adoption | Activity contracts or becomes noisy | Standards harden before growth resumes |
Standards like AP2 and Verifiable Intent require broad adoption to serve as trust signals, and that adoption depends on wallets, merchants, and platforms converging on a common authorization model.
MPP routes through Tempo stablecoins, Stripe-supported cards, Lightning, and custom payment methods, so on-chain Artemis data covers only a portion of its activity.
When judged by agent invocations per authorized session, MPP's footprint expands into the foundational plumbing layer of machine payments.
That measurement difference shapes how the category gets evaluated, and miscalibrated evaluation affects where capital goes and which standards win the adoption race.
The next phase of agentic payments is proving they deserve the authority to spend, and that the humans, wallets, and merchants on the other side of those transactions are willing to grant it in advance.
The post Tiny x402 payments expose the approval gap holding AI agents back appeared first on CryptoSlate.
At 10:30:34 a.m. ET, a single IBIT print of 29,212,864 shares, crossed at $43.16, for a notional of roughly $1.26 billion.
The next-largest visible movement was 1.3 million shares, making one trade dwarf everything else in IBIT's session, accounting for about 34.8% of the ETF's reported intraday volume of 83.86 million shares.
IBIT ended the sequence at $42.99, up about 0.09%, while Bitcoin traded around $75,911, down roughly 1.73%. A dark pool executed the trade with a momentary 1% dip in Bitcoin, which recovered immediately, confirming the block absorbed through organized liquidity and settled cleanly.
IBIT's intraday volume of 83.86 million shares gave the market enough daily turnover to absorb even a 29.2 million-share print, and a buyer or a network of buyers matched the seller at $43.16 without triggering a disorderly repricing of the ETF.
Before spot Bitcoin ETFs launched, moving a billion dollars of Bitcoin exposure required either a large OTC desk arrangement or a sequence of exchange orders that would leave visible price impact across crypto markets.
Today's block routed through block desks, market makers, arbitrage desks, authorized participants standing ready, and IBIT closed near where it started.
IBIT shares trade continuously on the secondary market among investors, and a block trade between those investors changes ownership of the shares, leaving the trust's underlying Bitcoin holdings intact unless something else happens.
BlackRock's fund documentation states that IBIT shares are bought and sold on the secondary market and are not individually redeemable from the trust.
Only authorized participants, which are large financial institutions that interact directly with the fund, can create or redeem shares in large baskets. This happens through a separate process, and that process determines whether the trust actually sells Bitcoin.
Farside Investors May 26 IBIT flow row was not yet populated, leaving confirmation of whether today's block translated into fund-level Bitcoin selling still pending.
IBIT's previous single-day withdrawal record was approximately $523 million, set in November 2025. A confirmed outflow matching today's full notional size would more than double that record.
If IBIT reports no major outflow, the block transfer of exposure from one institutional holder to another is a liquidity event confined to the secondary market.

If IBIT posts a large outflow, particularly one approaching or exceeding its prior record of $523 million, the block translates into basket-redemption pressure.
A large holder may have wanted to cut Bitcoin exposure and used IBIT because it offered enough liquidity to move size discreetly. The buyer may have been a different institution rotating into Bitcoin exposure via the ETF wrapper.
The trade could also reflect a portfolio rebalancing, a basis-trade unwind, a hedge adjustment, or a mandate-driven allocation change, none of which requires a directional view on Bitcoin's price.
In the bull case, ETF flow data shows no major IBIT outflow, and today's block confirms the depth of Bitcoin's institutional market.
One institution reduced exposure, and another absorbed it through the ETF structure, keeping spot Bitcoin off the exchange order books and the ETF price intact.
That outcome supports the argument that Bitcoin's market structure has matured, as billion-dollar exposure transfers can now occur within ETF plumbing.
Institutions looking to size into or out of Bitcoin have a liquid, organized venue capable of handling the volume, and May 26 movement is the evidence.
In the bear case, IBIT reports a large outflow in the next flow print, one that approaches or exceeds its prior record of $523 million.
That would mean the block translated into basket redemption pressure, as authorized participants returned shares to BlackRock, the fund sold Bitcoin to meet redemptions, and the ETF structure amplified the concentrated selling, transmitting it into spot price pressure.
The broader implication is that institutional de-risking at scale can activate the redemption cycle, converting a secondary-market block trade into primary-market Bitcoin sales in a sequence the tape alone cannot show.
Whatever the flow data confirms, today's block already demonstrated the depth of Bitcoin's institutional infrastructure.
| Scenario | ETF flow print | Interpretation | Market meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Absorption | No major IBIT outflow | One holder sold, another absorbed the shares | ETF market passed a billion-dollar liquidity test |
| Partial redemption | Outflow below prior record | Some primary-market pressure, but not full block conversion | Mixed signal; secondary liquidity still absorbed part of trade |
| Record outflow | Outflow near or above $523M | Block likely translated into basket-redemption pressure | Institutional de-risking became fund-level selling |
| Extreme case | Outflow approaches full $1.26B notional | More than double prior IBIT withdrawal record | Could reframe the event as major ETF redemption shock |
A trade worth roughly $1.26 billion crossed at a single venue, and the ETF held its price, sustained by IBIT's order book depth, block-desk liquidity, and the arbitrage apparatus that keeps the ETF's price tethered to its net asset value under stress.
The block trade only converts into deeper Bitcoin sell pressure if it shows up in the next ETF flow print. Until then, the cleaner interpretation is that a billion-dollar transfer of Bitcoin exposure happened, and the market absorbed it.
The post Bitcoin just absorbed a single $1.3B IBIT block trade with barely any price movement appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Retail brokerage Robinhood has launched a breakthrough feature allowing customers to connect third-party artificial intelligence (AI) agents directly to their accounts. This system, known as Agentic Trading, enables advanced AI models to autonomously execute market strategies within a partitioned financial ecosystem.
Robinhood rolled out the beta phase of its Agentic Trading platform on May 27, 2026. Currently, the setup supports automated operations strictly for equities (stocks). While cryptocurrency execution is not available at launch, Robinhood confirmed that support for Robinhood Crypto and options will be integrated as the ecosystem expands out of beta.
Agentic Trading enables users to delegate deployment choices and execution power to an independent AI agent. Instead of relying on static algorithmic APIs, traders can connect LLMs (like Claude or ChatGPT) to evaluate data and adjust portfolios based on conversational natural language instructions.
To maintain security, Robinhood implemented the open-standard Model Context Protocol (MCP) server architecture. Built-in safeguards include:
Alongside market access, Robinhood is bridging AI with everyday consumer spending via the new Agentic Credit Card. Available to Robinhood Gold members, this virtual credit card leverages secure banking MCP servers to let an AI agent shop autonomously on behalf of the customer.
Users can instruct their AI agent to scan the web for consumer items—such as tracking optimal travel deals—and authorize the purchase automatically when specific price thresholds are met. These virtual cards feature strict spending caps to insulate core financial assets.
After a brutal multi-week downtrend stemming from the $2,500 region, the Ethereum price is currently trading at $2,075, hovering above the psychologically vital $2,000 baseline.
The central question is whether the current consolidation is the final pause before a catastrophic $ETH coin crash below $2,000, or a classic liquidity hunt designed to trap short-sellers before a sharp bullish reversal.
The current weakness in $ETH does not exist in a vacuum; it is part of a systemic pullback visible across the entire crypto ecosystem. Heavy institutional liquidations and spot ETF outflows are weighing heavily on major assets:
Compared to its peers, $ETH has notably underperformed over the past month due to an extended ten-day streak of negative ETF flows, placing its immediate technical floors under maximum stress.
An analysis of the daily ETH/USD chart reveals a highly defined horizontal support and resistance matrix that has dictated price action throughout the year.

Over the past few weeks, the $2,100 level served as a firm structural floor, repelling multiple downside attempts. However, the chart shows that after three successive tests, this defensive perimeter finally gave way. The price has descended into the orange-highlighted circle, finding temporary friction just above the primary horizontal support at $2,000.
When a critical level like $2,100 breaks, it typically triggers momentum expansion toward the next major psychological boundary. In this case, the $2,000 level represents the absolute line in the sand for macro bulls.
Complementing the candlestick structure is the Relative Strength Index (RSI), currently registering at 37.49, with its moving average sitting slightly higher at 37.65.
If macroeconomic headwinds—specifically via hotter-than-expected inflation metrics or persistent spot ETF outflows—continue to dominate the news, a clean breakdown becomes highly probable.
In a strict bearish continuation scenario, a daily candle closing decisively below $2,000 will invalidate the local accumulation thesis. This would effectively turn the $2,000 floor into a formidable overhead resistance level. According to historical volume profiles shown on the chart, the next defensive bastions for buyers are situated at $1,800 (marked by the teal horizontal line) and $1,600 (marked by the lower yellow support line).
Traders looking to manage their risk safely during such structural shifts often utilize secure storage solutions, which can be reviewed on our comprehensive guide to hardware wallets.
Despite the grim short-term price action, several institutional and underlying variables point heavily toward a potential bullish fakeout (also known as a spring or bear trap) rather than a complete market collapse.

While retail sentiment remains fearful, deep-pocketed entities are treating this correction as a premier buying window. Massive corporate treasuries and institutional buyers have been taking advantage of the sub-$2,200 discount, showing that structural demand remains strong under the surface of the spot market.
Furthermore, recent efforts to minimize operational selling pressure from major ecosystem foundations are helping establish a cleaner fundamental launchpad for the asset.
If a fakeout occurs, expect the price to momentarily wick down to the $1,950–$1,980 range to sweep stops before closing the daily candle back above $2,020. This behavior would confirm a structural failure to break lower, rapidly shifting momentum back toward the overhead targets at $2,400 and $2,600.
What to know:
Data from the daily charts strongly confirms that XRP has found its cyclical bottom at current prices. Despite a broader market slowdown that has dragged down top assets, $XRP has repeatedly held its ground above the $1.29 horizontal support line.

While the 40% drop over the last six months shaken out speculative weak hands, on-chain metrics show aggressive accumulation by institutional entities. With sell-side liquidity drying up on major exchanges, the path of least resistance for XRP is shifting heavily to the upside, making a trend reversal toward $2.50 highly probable.
A closer look at the daily XRP/USD chart reveals a clear structural shift from an aggressive sell-off to a prolonged, tightly wound accumulation phase.

Following the steep 40% decline from its local highs, XRP found major buyer interest just above the $1.2931 horizontal support line. Despite multiple tests throughout April and May, bears have repeatedly failed to push the price decisively below this threshold. This tells us that institutional demand and retail accumulation are heavily concentrated in this pocket, validating it as a reliable market bottom.
The 14-period Relative Strength Index (RSI) is currently hovering around 41.18. While this indicates mild bearish momentum in the short term, it also highlights that XRP is approaching oversold territory on a macro scale. More importantly, the RSI has stopped making lower lows, showing a subtle bullish divergence against the stabilizing price action. This typically precedes a violent trend reversal as selling momentum completely dries up.
With XRP hovering around $1.3452, entering a position at these levels offers a highly favorable risk-to-reward ratio. If the identified bottom holds and the broader crypto market enters an upward expansion phase, the potential percentage returns for investors targeting key resistance levels are substantial:
To execute trades safely during these accumulation phases, choosing a secure and liquid platform is vital. You can evaluate top-tier trading venues using our comprehensive crypto exchange comparison.
The technical bottoming structure does not exist in a vacuum; it is heavily backed by shifting global fundamentals. While the chart shows a tightening coil, external events are providing the fuel needed for a violent breakout.
According to recent reports, regulatory clarity continues to act as a primary tailwind for Ripple. Japan’s upcoming reclassification of XRP under its strict Financial Instruments and Exchange Act, paired with progress on the U.S. CLARITY Act, has given institutional investors the legal safety they need to deploy capital into the asset.
Ripple is fundamentally transforming its utility narrative. The company recently backed a $6 million funding round for Squid, a cross-chain routing protocol, aiming to embed the XRP Ledger directly into over 100 blockchains. Concurrently, Ripple’s USD stablecoin (RLUSD) hit an all-time high supply of $1.76 billion, dramatically outperforming competitors. This expanding liquidity ecosystem ensures that XRP is no longer just a speculative tool, but core financial infrastructure.
While the long-term outlook remains highly asymmetric to the upside, XRP faces immediate structural hurdles before it can trigger its violent expansion toward the $2.50 milestone.
The first major test for the bulls sits between $1.45 and $1.50. This zone previously acted as a rigid support-turned-resistance level. A daily candle close above $1.50 will confirm a bullish market structure break, likely triggering a rapid short-squeeze toward the $1.80 level.
Volume profiles indicate that thin liquidity exists between $1.50 and $1.80. This drop in liquidity—evidenced by Binance order books hitting multi-year depths—means that large orders can move the price much faster than usual. Once the immediate overhead supply is cleared, the upward move could happen in a matter of days. For broader context on how these movements align with major market leaders, keeping an eye on the $Bitcoin price remains essential, as macro liquidity trends still heavily dictate altcoin momentum.
From escalating military conflicts to systemic fractures in the banking and bond markets, the traditional financial architecture is under immense strain. Under normal historical conditions, such a barrage of negative catalysts would trigger a severe, prolonged capitulation across the high-risk asset spectrum.
Yet, Bitcoin has not only withstood these systemic shocks but managed to post consecutive positive monthly closures. This divergence between deteriorating global fundamentals and crypto market performance highlights a structural shift in investor psychology and asset allocation.
A foundational principle in financial market analysis states that a market reaches its cyclical bottom when prices stop reacting negatively to bad news. Over the last three months, the macroeconomic environment has delivered a relentless stream of worst-case scenarios. Despite this, the Bitcoin price successfully printed green monthly candles for both March (+1.81%) and April (+11.87%), with May continuing to hold positive territory (+0.65%).

This persistent strength in the face of macro headwinds confirms that selling exhaustion has been reached. The market has fully priced in the negative externalities, signaling that the cyclical bottom for Bitcoin is firmly established.
To appreciate the significance of Bitcoin's current price action, it is necessary to examine the sheer scale of the negative catalysts that failed to depress the market.
The geopolitical landscape fractured severely following the initiation of direct military engagements between the United States, Israel, and Iran under Operation Epic Fury. The ensuing conflict severely disrupted the Strait of Hormuz—one of the world's most critical oil chokepoints—instantly threatening global trade and energy security. Historically, sudden outbreaks of war trigger an immediate flight from risk assets into cash and gold. While traditional equities staggered, Bitcoin maintained its structural integrity.
Driven by the war-induced energy supply disruptions, headline inflation across OECD nations spiked aggressively, hitting a multi-year high of 4.0% in March. In the United States, energy inflation surged by double digits, forcing central banks to reconsider prolonged higher-for-longer interest rate frameworks. High inflation typically diminishes consumer purchasing power and dampens liquidity—yet Bitcoin's inflows remained net-positive.
Simultaneously, public equities suffered intense liquidations. The intersection of highly leveraged private asset distress and rising long-duration sovereign bond yields sparked severe volatility. Institutional investors faced margin pressures globally, often forcing them to liquidate liquid assets to cover structural losses in the fixed-income and real estate sectors.
The currency markets experienced extreme turbulence as the Bank of Japan spent roughly ¥10 trillion in aggressive foreign exchange interventions to stabilize the rapidly depreciating Yen. The steepening of the Japanese yield curve shook the foundations of the global macro "carry trade," introducing massive systemic instability into international funding markets.
Compounding these macroeconomic pressures, the crypto-specific narrative was hit with a wave of Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt (FUD) regarding rapid advancements in quantum computing. Sensationalist reports claimed that emerging quantum capabilities would imminently compromise Bitcoin’s SHA-256 encryption protocol, threatening the integrity of the network.
The structural behavior observed in the crypto news cycle reflects a classic financial phenomenon: the absorption of peak capitulation.
A market asset achieves a macro trend reversal when the volume of structural sellers is completely exhausted. At this juncture, even the most severe macroeconomic downgrades fail to induce lower technical lows because all participants inclined to panic-sell have already exited the market.
Instead of acting as a speculative tech stock, Bitcoin is increasingly treated as a systemic hedge against fiat debasement, sovereign debt crises, and geopolitical isolation. When the stability of major fiat pairs (like the Yen or Euro) is called into question, or when banking systems face contagion, the immutable and politically neutral architecture of Bitcoin transforms it into an alternative safe haven.
An inspection of the empirical monthly returns highlights the anomalous nature of the 2026 price action:
| Year | January | February | March | April | May |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | -10.17% | -14.94% | +1.81% | +11.87% | +0.65% |
| 2025 | +9.29% | -17.39% | -2.30% | +14.08% | +10.99% |
| 2024 | +0.62% | +43.55% | +16.81% | -14.76% | +11.07% |
The steep corrections observed in January (-10.17%) and February (-14.94%) effectively washed out late-cycle leverage and speculative retail positioning. When the geopolitical and inflationary shocks manifested in March, the market lacked the speculative sellers needed to drive prices lower. The subsequent +11.87% recovery in April, under peak wartime conditions, serves as definitive proof of institutional accumulation.
Investors seeking to navigate these volatile market environments safely are increasingly shifting capital away from centralized platforms prone to liquidity freezes, opting instead to evaluate security frameworks using dedicated hardware wallets comparison guides to secure their sovereign assets.
The cryptocurrency market has entered a sharp correction, erasing recent gains and catching many retail traders off guard. Bitcoin (BTC) has plunged below the critical $77,000 support level, triggering a broader wave of liquidations across the altcoin space.

For investors asking why cryptos are crashing right now, the sudden downturn is not tied to a single isolated event. Instead, it is the result of a simultaneous breakdown in geopolitical stability, fading momentum for favorable U.S. regulatory legislation, and severe stress building up in global fixed-income markets. These factors have collectively forced institutional investors to scale back risk, putting downward pressure on token prices.
Geopolitical instability remains a premier driver of financial market volatility. Recent reports from major media outlets, including CBS News, indicate that the United States could execute new military strikes against Iran. This comes amidst an ongoing conflict that has already heavily restricted commercial traffic through the vital Strait of Hormuz.
The immediate economic fallout of an expanded military intervention is felt in the energy sector. Crude oil prices, which have hovered near the $100 per barrel mark, face immediate upward pressure. Higher energy costs directly accelerate consumer price index (CPI) inflation. For the Federal Reserve—now led by newly appointed Chairman Kevin Warsh—resurgent inflation fears diminish the probability of anticipated interest rate cuts. Instead, it forces the central bank to maintain a hawkish stance or even consider further interest rate hikes, which historically drains liquidity out of speculative environments like cryptocurrency trading.
On the domestic front, regulatory headwinds are shifting from tailwinds to obstacles. In a matter of two weeks, political forecasting models tracking the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025 (H.R. 3633) saw the odds of the crypto market structure bill passing into law drop from a promising 75% down to 50%. The bill is highly anticipated by institutional players because it establishes a clear federal rulebook, distinguishing digital commodities under CFTC jurisdiction from securities.
Compounding this regulatory friction, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) officially delayed a highly anticipated plan that would grant innovation exemptions for crypto firms to trade tokenized stocks on public blockchains. The regulatory pushback, driven by concerns over third-party token compliance and investor protection, has dampened short-term institutional optimism. Investors looking to benchmark exchange infrastructure before deploying capital can monitor institutional grade platforms via our crypto exchange comparison.
The third pillars of the downturn rests heavily within the fixed-income markets. Government bond yields worldwide are surging to multi-year highs. The yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury note has neared 4.7%, while the 30-year yield touched 5.19%. Concurrently, Japanese government bond yields are testing new heights as international debt holdings shift.
High sovereign debt yields present two distinct problems for crypto assets:
From a technical perspective, Bitcoin's failure to maintain its footing above $75,000 exposes the asset to further downside risk over the weekend.
| Scenario | Target Zone | Market Implications |
|---|---|---|
| Active Military Strikes | $72,000 – $72,500 | Validation of bearish continuation; test of primary structural macro support. |
| De-escalation / No Strikes | $76,500 – $78,000 | Strong relief rally and potential market reversal early next week. |
If military strikes manifest over the weekend, the immediate emotional reaction from algorithms and spot traders will likely push BTC toward the primary support zone between $72,000 and $72,500. Conversely, if geopolitical headlines calm and no strikes occur, the market will likely experience an aggressive short-squeeze and reversal heading into the next weekly candle open.

During periods of heightened market volatility and rapid price movements, keeping your long-term assets secure in cold storage is paramount; you can explore market-verified security options via our hardware wallets comparison.
Researchers warn that prolonged chatbot interactions could distort how some users experience reality and social connection.
If Tesla and SpaceX merged—as is a reported possibility—then Elon Musk's combined entity would hold billions of dollars' worth of Bitcoin.
Predictors on Myriad are losing faith, believing it's more likely that Ethereum dumps to $1,500 before a prospective move up to $3,000.
Music v2 brings genre-shifting and section-by-section composition to ElevenLabs. Stable Audio 3.0 ships open weights and six-minute tracks. Is either good enough to dethrone the category leader?
ElevenLabs has licensed Stan Lee’s voice and likeness, adding the late Marvel comic creator to a growing market for AI celebrity replicas.
Multiple drivers are pushing assets like Near higher, while the rest of the cryptocurrency market relies on institutional and retail inflows.
A New York man and two corporate entities have filed an unprecedented lawsuit in the Supreme Court of the State of New York against 39,069 dormant digital wallets, seeking a formal judicial declaration establishing them as the legal owners of millions of.
Bitcoin is bracing for a massive surge in volatility as a dangerous mix of surging leverage, retail speculation.
While retail sentiment remains negative, Wall Street is quietly absorbing XRP supply via spot ETFs, fueled by a 63% monthly surge in the network's stablecoin capitalization.
Strategy has acquired 2.6 times of the total amount of Bitcoin miners have produced so far in this year despite the frequent volatility.
A Google software engineer faces federal charges after allegedly using confidential company data to profit on prediction markets.
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed a complaint on May 27, 2026, against Michele Spagnuolo, a Switzerland-based Google employee.
Spagnuolo allegedly traded event contracts on Polymarket.com using nonpublic information about Google’s 2025 Year in Search results.
The CFTC is seeking restitution, disgorgement, civil penalties, and a permanent trading ban.
Spagnuolo worked as a software engineer at Google during the relevant period. Through his role, he gained access to sensitive, nonpublic data tied to Google’s official 2025 Year in Search list. That access came with a duty to keep the information confidential and not use it for personal gain.
Between October and December 2025, Spagnuolo reportedly traded on at least 23 event contracts on Polymarket. He bought “Yes” or “No” shares on contracts like “#1 Searched Person on Google this year.” His accuracy across those trades was described as near-perfect.
Operating under the Polymarket handle “AlphaRaccoon,” Spagnuolo allegedly generated around $1.2 million in profits. That level of return, across dozens of contracts tied to nonpublic search data, drew regulatory attention.
The CFTC’s complaint was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. The agency is seeking trading and registration bans, along with a permanent injunction against further violations of the Commodity Exchange Act.
On the same day the CFTC announced its complaint, federal prosecutors moved separately. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York unsealed a criminal complaint against Spagnuolo. The criminal charges mirror the conduct alleged by the CFTC.
CFTC Chairman Michael S. Selig addressed the case directly. “The Commission will not tolerate fraud, manipulation, or insider trading, regardless of the technology or platform that is used,” Selig said. His remarks pointed to prediction markets as an area of active regulatory focus.
David I. Miller, Director of Enforcement, reinforced that position. “Employees who are entrusted with confidential business information cannot misappropriate that information for personal financial gain,” Miller stated.
He described the Division as actively policing insider trading across prediction markets and other markets within CFTC jurisdiction.
Miller also noted the broader scope of the effort. “The Division is a cop on the beat in policing the illegal use of inside information in the prediction markets,” he added. That framing positions this case as part of a wider enforcement pattern, not an isolated action.
The CFTC credited the U.S. Attorney’s Office for its assistance in the matter. Together, the civil and criminal actions mark one of the more prominent insider trading cases tied to prediction market activity to date.
The case sets a clear precedent for how regulators view the misuse of proprietary data in emerging contract markets.
The post CFTC Charges Google Employee with Insider Trading on Polymarket Using Search Data appeared first on Blockonomi.
The CFTC has joined Gemini Trust Company LLC in a motion to vacate a consent order tied to a 2022 enforcement action.
The regulator concluded that the original complaint against the crypto firm should never have been filed. After a comprehensive review, the agency found several serious problems with how the case was built and prosecuted.
The move comes amid broader shifts in federal digital asset enforcement policy across multiple government agencies.
The CFTC’s internal review of the Gemini case uncovered a troubling series of missteps. The complaint was largely built on testimony from a whistleblower later found to lack credibility.
Rather than targeting alleged fraudsters, the agency pursued Gemini — a company the review identified as a fraud victim itself.
The CFTC stated directly that “the complaint should not have been filed — and would not have been under current enforcement standards.”
Investigators also found that evidentiary support was withheld from a Commissioner ahead of the vote to file the complaint. This raised questions about transparency within the agency’s own decision-making process.
Litigation counsel also invoked the deliberative process privilege, blocking Gemini from accessing evidence needed for its defense.
The review found that personnel “improperly influenced the CFTC’s regulatory authority to create settlement leverage.” These findings paint a picture of an enforcement process that, in this case, went beyond its proper boundaries.
The parties entered into a consent order in January 2025 after the original complaint was filed in June 2022. The non-prospective provisions of that order, including the civil monetary penalty, have already been satisfied.
However, the CFTC determined that continuing to enforce the remaining injunctive and prospective provisions no longer serves the public interest.
The agency concluded that “continuing enforcement of the consent order’s prospective provisions serves neither the CFTC’s mission nor the public interest.”
As a result, both parties are now jointly asking the Southern District of New York court to vacate those outstanding provisions.
The CFTC added that applying these terms going forward “would not be equitable,” given the findings of the review.
This development fits within a wider federal reassessment of digital asset enforcement policy. Multiple agencies have revisited and resolved crypto-related cases under revised standards.
For Gemini, the outcome marks a formal acknowledgment that it should not have been a defendant in this matter at all.
The post CFTC and Gemini Jointly Move to Vacate 2022 Consent Order After Enforcement Review appeared first on Blockonomi.
HIP-4 introduces a new contract type on Hyperliquid, enabling users to express directional, leveraged, and event-driven views within one portfolio.
This upgrade adds binary options to the platform’s existing spot and perpetuals infrastructure. Currently, no other onchain venue combines all three contract types in a single unified account.
The development brings Hyperliquid closer to the full-service model that traditional financial venues have long kept separate from one another.
Traditional portfolio managers have always worked with spot positions, futures, and options. Onchain vault managers, however, have only had two of those three until now. HIP-4 changes that by adding binary contracts alongside existing spot and perpetuals on Hyperliquid.
Binary contracts are not a perfect substitute for dated options. That said, they close much of the gap for practical trading purposes.
They allow vault managers to express bounded, dated, and event-driven views that spot and perp positions cannot capture.
With that in place, spot, perp, and binary risk can now net within one portfolio. This unlocks capital efficiencies that fragmented venues cannot match.
A vault manager can run event-driven income on one side and catalyst-protected longs on the other. All of this happens without leaving the platform.
To illustrate, consider a vault manager holding a token ahead of a large supply unlock. Before HIP-4, hedging that specific scenario required moving to a separate venue for the event-driven leg.
Now, all three positions sit in the same Hyperliquid account, offsetting each other through unified portfolio risk netting.
HIP-4 pays a fixed amount if an event occurs and nothing at all if it does not. Maximum loss is limited to the premium posted upfront. As a result, there is no liquidation engine or funding rate to manage throughout the position.
Perps cannot cleanly express a Fed meeting hedge or a weekly range view on ETH. HIP-4 fills that gap. Markets at launch are short-dated and recurring, including daily BTC level binaries and weekly ETH range contracts. Hyperliquid already has the trader base these markets are designed to serve.
Some speculative flow will naturally rotate from perps into HIP-4 during periods of event-driven attention. Community discussions across crypto social platforms have reflected growing interest in this shift.
Over time, though, both contract types are expected to grow alongside each other. Hyperliquid captures the flow either way.
On the revenue side, HIP-4 generates modest direct fees by design. At $3 billion monthly in volume with a 7 bps fee, the contract type adds roughly $25 million annualized. That figure is additive to Hyperliquid’s existing $636 million trading revenue run rate.
Reserve yield from retained USDC balances flows through AQAv2, with 90% routed to the Assistance Fund. Each new primitive added to the venue compounds that flywheel.
The post Hyperliquid’s HIP-4 Brings Binary Options to Hyperliquid’s Unified Trading Portfolio appeared first on Blockonomi.
Circle Payments Network (CPN) has added Nium as a global payout partner, linking USDC settlement with last-mile delivery across more than 190 countries.
The partnership gives financial institutions on CPN direct access to Nium’s payout infrastructure in 100 currencies through a single integration.
This move addresses a long-standing gap between fast stablecoin settlement and reliable local currency delivery worldwide.
Financial institutions using CPN can now route payments directly through Nium’s real-time payout rails. This removes the need to manage multiple local providers across different corridors.
Institutions gain access to Nium’s full country and currency portfolio without building separate integrations for each market.
The partnership also brings integrated FX optimization and smart routing to CPN transactions. Funds can be converted and delivered efficiently without institutions sourcing individual providers.
This reduces both operational complexity and the capital tied up in prefunding accounts across multiple corridors.
Prajit Nanu, Founder and CEO of Nium, pointed to the broader shift happening across the payments industry. “Traditional and onchain payment rails are converging, and that convergence demands infrastructure that banks, fintechs, and global enterprises can rely on at scale,” he said.
Nanu added that the deal combines Circle’s regulated settlement instrument with Nium’s global payout reach for a more seamless cross-border experience.
The partnership targets a key challenge that has long slowed institutional adoption of stablecoin rails. Bridging fast, transparent settlement with dependable last-mile delivery has remained difficult at scale. CPN and Nium now tackle both sides of that equation through one connected network.
Circle brings regulated USDC-powered settlement to the partnership, with built-in compliance and a governed network for institutional use.
Nium handles the final step, delivering funds in local currency into accounts, wallets, and cards worldwide. Together, the two companies offer a unified foundation for end-to-end global payments.
Kash Razzaghi, Chief Commercial Officer at Circle, explained what the integration means for institutions exploring stablecoin payments. “Financial institutions are increasingly looking for ways to use stablecoins to solve persistent payments pain points,” he said.
Razzaghi added that the Nium integration extends USDC from a settlement instrument into a complete payments flow, offering greater speed, transparency, and capital efficiency.
CPN has reached $8.3 billion in annualized transaction volume, based on trailing 30-day activity as of March 31, 2026.
Circle notined that CPN participants can expect faster end-to-end payments, reduced prefunding across corridors, and local fiat payouts through a single integration. That figure reflects growing institutional demand for USDC-based payment infrastructure.
Institutions on CPN can also track transactions in real time through onchain transparency. This visibility supports both payment operations teams and compliance functions managing multi-jurisdiction reporting.
The Nium integration marks a broader step in CPN’s growth as a governed network for institutional stablecoin payments at scale.
The post Circle Payments Network Adds Nium to Bridge USDC Settlement With Global Payouts appeared first on Blockonomi.
Worldcoin (WLD) recorded a 15.72% price gain in 24 hours, trading at $0.3813 on a broadly red market day. On-chain data from Santiment showed whale transactions, active addresses, and new wallet creation all reaching their highest or second-highest levels of 2026.
Trading volume climbed 266% to $768 million. Open interest in WLD futures rose to $281 million from $217 million the previous day.
Santiment data recorded 64 whale transactions within a single 24-hour window. That figure marked the highest whale activity for WLD so far in 2026.
Active addresses also jumped to 1,309 during the same period, which ranked as the second-highest reading of the year.
Network growth, measured by new wallet creation, reached 379 addresses in one day. This figure also set a 2026 record for the project.
Together, these three metrics rising at once pointed to growing participation from both large and small investors.
However, Santiment noted that the spikes appeared tied to the price surge itself. The data provider flagged the activity as potentially FOMO-driven rather than organic accumulation. That distinction matters when assessing whether the engagement will persist beyond the rally.
Still, the convergence of whale moves and retail interest in a short window is relatively uncommon. When both groups enter a market simultaneously, it can reflect broader shifts in sentiment around a project.
The immediate catalyst behind the price move was the integration of DeFi aggregator Oku Trade into the World App.
The aggregator routes transactions through Worldchain and launched weekly swap competitions. Winners can earn up to 100 WLD per competition round.
According to BSCNews, the competition mechanics encourage repeat swap behavior from participants. That pattern showed up directly in spot volume figures, which more than tripled over the prior session. The structural incentive behind the volume spike differs from purely speculative buying.
Beyond the DeFi integration, WLD also benefits from its positioning within the AI narrative. Worldcoin is a crypto and digital identity project co-founded by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. The project uses biometric verification through Orb devices to build a global proof-of-personhood system.
As AI adoption accelerates through 2026, concerns around bots, fake identities, and AI-generated content have grown. That backdrop keeps WLD relevant in news cycles tied to AI fraud and digital identity.
On a day when Bitcoin sat near $76,006 and Ethereum traded around $2,072, WLD stood out as one of the few assets posting gains across the broader altcoin market.
The post Worldcoin Surges 15% as On-Chain Activity Hits 2026 Highs Amid DeFi Integration appeared first on Blockonomi.
Strategy’s preferred stock STRC is now a larger buyer of Bitcoin (BTC) in peak weeks than every US spot ETF combined.
However, unlike ETF flows, it only moves in one direction, and that asymmetry, according to a recent analysis by on-chain researchers at Pine Analytics, is why STRC’s volatility is becoming one of the most important variables for a sustained move higher for BTC.
In a report it shared on May 27, Pine Analytics made its argument, comparing STRC BTC buying and ETFs. According to the firm, during the week of March 9-15, 2026, STRC’s at-the-market share sales generated $1.18 billion, which Strategy used to buy 17,994 BTC at an average price of $70,946.
In the same week, all 12 US spot Bitcoin ETFs took in approximately $763 million combined, meaning STRC alone beat the entire BTC ETF complex.
However, the more important point that Pine’s analysts mentioned was structural, with ETF flows usually going in two directions and Strategy’s STRC in one. For example, on January 29, the ETFs posted net outflows of $817.8 million, meaning authorized participants sold Bitcoin into the market to meet redemptions. That’s a mechanism STRC doesn’t have. When holders of the stock sell, they do so in the equity market, and Strategy never touches its Bitcoin stash.
“STRC does not exist to pay a dividend. It exists to buy Bitcoin,” the market watchers wrote. “The dividend is the cost of keeping the machines running.”
More importantly, they pointed out that every dollar used to buy an STRC share creates a Bitcoin bid, while no amount of STRC selling can create a BTC ask. And that’s the structural difference: ETFs drain Bitcoin liquidity, and STRC physically cannot.
Additionally, the report mentioned that Strategy can only issue new STRC shares when they are trading at or above $100, with anything raised above the $100 par going directly to buying Bitcoin. It means that the issuance is entirely dependent on price stability.
But the connection goes deeper than par mechanics, seeing as in leverage markets, lower volatility means smaller haircuts, which means more borrowing capacity per dollar held, which pulls in more institutional capital into the position.
Looking at STRC, since it was launched, its 30-day rolling volatility has compressed from 18% to about 2%, meaning every institution holding it could size up. And more capital coming in would mean more ATM issuance, more Bitcoin buys, and a stronger balance sheet for Strategy, which would then lead to a more stable STRC. It’s essentially a loop that compounds on its own track record.
As of the latest data from Strategy’s website, the 30-day historical volatility is near 4.2%, with STRC priced just below par at $99.47. That sub-par print matters, and a BitcoinQuant chart cited in a follow-up post by Pine shows visible price pressure across the preferred series since March, with the firm saying, “this does not look good.”
The fragility can be consequential, as was seen earlier in the year, when a routine ex-dividend dip paused issuance and collapsed weekly BTC purchases from 17,994 to just 1,031. And a real credit event, where the peg breaks and stays broken, would shut down the ATM program entirely and remove one of the largest systemic bids in the Bitcoin market.
The post Report: Why STRC Volatility Matters More Than ETF Flows for Bitcoin appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bankless co-founder David Hoffman said he sold his Ether holdings because he believes the long-standing “ETH is money” thesis has already largely played out. Despite this, he remains strongly bullish on Ethereum as a network.
According to Hoffman, the decision did not come lightly, given that he built his career, business, community, and identity around Ethereum.
In his latest tweet, Hoffman stated that the “ETH is money” thesis depended on Ethereum succeeding across multiple layers of coordination, including decentralized leadership, governance, Layer 2 ecosystems, roadmap execution, and technological development.
Hoffman described Ethereum as “not Bitcoin,” and said that Bitcoin simplified its blockchain to maximize the value of BTC, while Ethereum pursued a more ambitious path by expanding utility across decentralized applications, finance, tokenization, and infrastructure. He even went on to add that Ethereum achieved part of that vision and earned the market capitalization it currently has, but said the opportunity for ETH to be significantly rerated higher by the market now appears to be closing.
The Bankless co-founder also explained that the broader “strong version” of crypto, which focused on decentralized finance, NFTs, DAOs, and crypto-native systems, failed to maintain long-term mainstream support outside the 2020 to 2022 period. He said crypto’s reputation later became associated with scams, grifts, and speculative behavior, which ended up weakening the social belief system required for ETH to function as money at a global scale.
He further stated that Ether’s utility increasingly benefits other forms of money, especially stablecoins and tokenized dollars, rather than ETH itself. Hoffman described Ethereum as a “giver, not a taker,” while saying that the network provides secure blockspace, tokenization infrastructure, and DeFi support at minimal cost rather than extracting maximum value for ETH holders. He said Ethereum’s architecture prioritizes applications, rollups, and ecosystem growth over ETH itself, which makes it difficult for the underlying crypto asset to fully achieve global money status without overwhelming market dominance.
Hoffman’s decision also comes at a time when bearish sentiment around Ethereum has been intensifying. A recent report by Santiment found that social media discussions have increasingly shifted from optimism toward frustration and concerns about further downside.
The analytics firm said traders have increasingly viewed ETH as “dead money” compared to stronger-performing crypto assets in 2026, as weakening ETF flows, declining on-chain activity, and growing competition from ecosystems such as Solana and BNB Chain added pressure on sentiment.
Rumors about prominent Ethereum figures reducing or exiting ETH positions, including discussions surrounding Hoffman, have also contributed to rising uncertainty in the market, especially as traders worried about insiders losing confidence in the asset.
The post “Ethereum Is a Giver, Not a Taker”: David Hoffman Explains ETH Exit appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Ripple (XRP) continues trading within a narrow range between around $1.30 and $1.38 despite several failed breakout attempts.
Santiment has identified a rare XRP signal as traders remain under increasing pressure.
According to on-chain analytics platform Santiment, the average XRP trader active over the past 30 days is currently down 47%, as many investors are reportedly selling at the bottom during the recent market decline.
Santiment found that XRP’s 30-day Market Value to Realized Value (MVRV), a metric used to measure average trader returns, has now dropped to its lowest level since December 2020. MVRV readings historically tend to return toward 0%, which makes the current level an indication that the crypto asset may be in an extreme undervalued zone.
As per the analysis, the sharp decline is indicative of a growing fear and frustration among traders following XRP’s retracement, which has erased more than half of its market value since last summer. Santiment said XRP’s strong rally during late 2024 and early 2025 led many traders to enter positions near local highs before momentum weakened and repeated selloffs pushed short-term holders into heavy losses.
Despite the decline, the findings reveal that some long-term investors remain optimistic due to expectations surrounding regulatory progress, speculation about a potential XRP ETF, and Ripple’s broader adoption narrative. Santiment added that deeply negative MVRV zones like the current one have historically appeared when retail traders capitulate, often creating conditions where even minor positive catalysts can trigger strong recoveries.
Additionally, fear around the crypto asset has climbed to unusually high levels on social media. The ratio of bullish to bearish comments has dropped to just 1.1 positive comments for every 1 negative comment as traders grow more cautious about XRP’s outlook.
Santiment observed that similar periods of fear and skepticism have historically acted as contrarian signals for XRP, as many weaker holders tend to exit the market during sharp downturns. The platform added that previous moves into this “FUD zone” were often followed by price stabilization or short-term rebounds.
At the same time, fresh data from CryptoQuant pointed to growing speculative activity around XRP perpetual futures on Binance, even though the token itself has continued hovering near $1.34. The analytics firm said XRP’s volume imbalance reading climbed to roughly 0.54, which means that perpetual contract trading volumes are now significantly higher than during earlier periods of quieter market activity.
According to CryptoQuant, this suggests more traders are returning to short-term leveraged positions. The platform also noted that XRP’s Z-Score rose to nearly 0.95, meaning current trading activity is approaching one full standard deviation above its usual average.
CryptoQuant added that the indicator had spent an extended period in negative territory before recently moving back into positive levels, which points to a gradual improvement in trader risk appetite and renewed speculative participation in the market.
The post Important for Ripple (XRP) Traders: Rare Bottom Signal Emerges appeared first on CryptoPotato.
[PRESS RELEASE – GEORGE TOWN, CAYMAN ISLANDS, May 27th, 2026]
With more than $320 billion in dollar stablecoins now in circulation and short-dated Treasury yields near 4%, holders collectively forgo well over $10 billion a year in potential returns — income that accrues to issuers rather than the desks holding the tokens. fUSD, launched today by Falcon Finance and Anchorage Digital Bank, N.A., is built to close that gap: a GENIUS-ready digital dollar that meets institutional compliance mandates while sharing a portion of its reserve economics with qualifying holders. The GENIUS-ready stablecoin will launch on Ceffu’s institutional custody and collateral infrastructure with a rewards structure.
Falcon Finance, the synthetic dollar protocol with $1.63 billion in USDf circulating supply and ranked among the top ten stablecoins on Ethereum by market cap, today announced the launch of fUSD, a U.S. dollar payment stablecoin issued by Anchorage Digital Bank, N.A. fUSD is GENIUS Act ready, the federal framework for payment stablecoins enacted on 18 July 2025.
The GENIUS Act restricts stablecoin issuers from paying interest or yield to holders. Anchorage Digital Bank issues fUSD but does not pay yield or rewards on the stablecoin itself. Rewards are offered by an entity separate from Anchorage Digital Bank, NA. and are tied to the stablecoin’s underlying collateral, such as U.S. Treasuries. Falcon Finance, as the name partner, operates an institutional rewards program, targeting roughly 3% per year. The rewards are available only to institutional entities that enter a contractual agreement with Falcon; no other regulated U.S. dollar stablecoin currently offers this structure to institutional holders.
fUSD is supported by Ceffu’s institutional custody and collateral infrastructure, the same platform used by leading trading firms and liquidity providers, including FalconX, Presto and Orderly. Falcon already uses Ceffu within its existing custody stack for USDf, its overcollateralized synthetic dollar. By launching fUSD on Ceffu, Falcon positions the stablecoin where professional desks, treasury desks, high-frequency trading firms, basis traders, and counterparties operating under tight compliance mandates, already manage collateral. For these desks, the most widely-used stablecoins return nothing on the balances they hold; a regulated, rewards-bearing dollar lets them improve the economics of their strategies without stepping outside their compliance requirements.
Falcon Finance will be a launch holder of fUSD, deploying a portion of its own corporate reserves into the stablecoin from launch, a signal of the firm’s confidence in the issuance framework and of how it expects institutional counterparties to engage with the product.
Andrei Grachev, Founding Partner of Falcon Finance, said: “The desks we work with operate under compliance mandates that synthetic and offshore stablecoins were never designed to satisfy, and the regulated dollars they can hold today pay them nothing. fUSD closes both gaps. It’s issued by a federally-chartered bank, backed by Treasuries, launched on the infrastructure these desks already use to manage collateral, and built so qualifying institutional holders can share in the economics of the reserves. We’re putting our own balance sheet behind it from day one.”
Nathan McCauley, CEO and Co-Founder of Anchorage Digital, said: “fUSD is built from the ground up for institutional use, and that’s only possible because of our federal bank charter. Falcon Finance is exactly the kind of partner the GENIUS framework was designed to serve: sophisticated, institutional, and choosing to operate inside U.S. regulation rather than around it.”
Ian Loh, CEO of Ceffu, said: “The integration of fUSD into Ceffu’s ecosystem delivers institutional-grade custody and collateral utility. We look forward to supporting Falcon Finance in expanding the institutional adoption and utility of stablecoins.”
Falcon Finance now operates two complementary dollar products. USDf, the overcollateralized synthetic dollar, continues to serve DeFi-native users and multi-collateral mandates. fUSD extends Falcon’s reach to federally-regulated treasury desks, compliance-constrained counterparties, and institutional collateral mandates that require a regulated, non-synthetic dollar.
About Falcon Finance
Falcon Finance is building a universal collateral layer that turns any liquid asset, including digital assets, currency-backed tokens, and tokenized real-world assets, into USD-pegged onchain liquidity. By bridging onchain and offchain financial systems, Falcon enables institutions, protocols, and capital allocators to unlock stable, yield-generating liquidity from assets they already hold.
About Anchorage Digital
Anchorage Digital is a global crypto platform that enables institutions to participate in digital assets through trading, staking, custody, governance, settlement, stablecoin issuance, and the industry’s leading security infrastructure. Home to Anchorage Digital Bank N.A., the first federally chartered crypto bank in the U.S., Anchorage Digital also serves institutions through Anchorage Digital Singapore, which is licensed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore; Anchorage Digital NY, which holds a BitLicense from the New York Department of Financial Services; and self-custody wallet Porto by Anchorage Digital. Anchorage Digital Bank also offers fiat custody services through the use of an FDIC-insured, licensed sub-custodian. Anchorage Digital is funded by leading institutions including Andreessen Horowitz, GIC, Goldman Sachs, KKR, and Visa, with a valuation of $4.2 billion. Founded in 2017 in San Francisco, California, Anchorage Digital has offices in New York, New York; Porto, Portugal; Singapore; and Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Learn more at anchorage.com, on X @Anchorage, and on LinkedIn.
About Ceffu
Ceffu is a compliant, institutional-grade custody platform offering custody and liquidity solutions that are ISO 27001 & 27701 certified and SOC2 Type 2 attested. Our multi-party computation (MPC) technology, combined with a customizable multi-approval scheme, provides bespoke solutions allowing institutional clients to safely store and manage their virtual assets.
About fUSD
fUSD is a U.S. dollar payment stablecoin issued by Anchorage Digital Bank, N.A. Subject to final applicable law, fUSD is GENIUS-ready, the federal framework for payment stablecoins. Each fUSD token is backed 1:1 by a reserve pool of cash, short-dated U.S. Treasuries, and Treasury-backed repo via eligible MMF exposure, held at Anchorage Digital Bank under federal supervision. Reserves are attested by Deloitte on a monthly and annual basis. fUSD is purpose-built for institutional trading desks, collateral mandates, and counterparties operating under federally-regulated compliance requirements.
fUSD is not a deposit, not FDIC insured, and not endorsed or guaranteed by the U.S. government.
The post Falcon Finance and Anchorage Digital Bank Launch fUSD, a GENIUS-Ready Stablecoin with Rewards on Ceffu appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Tuesday turned ugly for crypto markets, with a broad wave of selling hitting altcoins across the board, led by Zcash (ZEC), which dropped 11%, World Liberty Financial’s WLFI, which was down 8%, and Ondo Finance (ONDO), falling 7%.
The losses came against a backdrop of rising bearish sentiment in the crowd, which, according to blockchain analytics firm Santiment, has historically happened right before prices rebounded.
Santiment flagged the damage in a post on X earlier today, noting drops in Ondo, Zcash, WLFI, and DeXe, among others.
For Ondo, the timing was particularly grim, seeing as the dip came right on the heels of the passing of 32-year-old founder and CEO Nathan Allman. The company announced that longtime President Ian De Bode will take over as CEO. The token is now trading near $0.41, putting its performance in the last seven days up by roughly 9%.
Zcash’s 11% single-day drop was the sharpest among the named losers, although at the time of writing the decline was at about 7.5% in the last 24 hours, with ZEC trading at around $570. For context, the asset is up 60% over the past month and nearly 970% across the last year, so the daily move looks less alarming against that backdrop.
Meanwhile, WLFI’s 8% dip added to a difficult stretch for the token, which hit a new all-time low in late April after crashing 16% in one day. It has had to navigate a controversial lock-up proposal, a lawsuit by Tron’s Justin Sun, and continued scrutiny over ties to the Trump family.
Despite the losses mentioned above, the weekly picture looked different for some tokens. For example, NEAR was up more than 55% over seven days, and it was changing hands around the $2.50 level, although it pulled back nearly 8% on Tuesday alone. Another gainer was Hyperliquid’s HYPE token, which went up 25% per Santiment’s data.
However, the week’s standout was RAIN, which hit an all-time high of around $0.012 on Tuesday after climbing almost 55% for the week and over 44% in the last 24 hours alone.
Separate data from Santiment posted on the same day showed that bearish crowd expectations have been building for about 10 days now, with the firm noting that this kind of collective lean toward caution has historically heralded price recoveries, considering that markets tend to move against the crowd’s prevailing mood.
But traders will have to wait and see whether that plays out this time, especially with Bitcoin still stuck below $77,000 and struggling to break above its descending 200-day moving average near $80,000.
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