Galaxy's new OTC prediction markets desk could reshape institutional risk management by integrating event-driven strategies with broader asset hedging.
The post Galaxy launches OTC prediction markets desk for institutional investors appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
MGUSD's launch on Stellar could revolutionize global remittances, enhancing financial inclusion and stability for underserved communities worldwide.
The post MoneyGram rolls out MGUSD stablecoin on Stellar appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
This significant transfer may impact Bitcoin market dynamics, influencing investor sentiment and potentially affecting cryptocurrency prices.
The post Mt. Gox transfers $731M in Bitcoin to new wallet as market eyes $70K support appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Robinhood's acquisition of WonderFi enhances its global reach, potentially reshaping Canada's crypto market with increased accessibility and innovation.
The post Robinhood completes WonderFi acquisition to bring low-fee crypto trading to Canada appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
AI's integration with crypto news enhances market efficiency, enabling rapid, data-driven trading decisions while mitigating misinformation risks.
The post How AI and news work together in crypto appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

CME Group Goes Live With 24/7 Crypto Futures and Options, Launches Bitcoin Volatility Contracts
CME Group, the world’s largest derivatives marketplace, has launched 24/7 trading for cryptocurrency futures and options, marking a structural shift in how regulated derivatives markets align with the nonstop nature of digital assets.
Trading went live at 4:00 p.m. Central Time on Friday, May 29, on the exchange’s CME Globex platform. Over the inaugural weekend, more than 7,200 crypto futures and options contracts changed hands, generating roughly $50 million in notional value — a figure CME said reflected demand from both retail and institutional participants, the CME Group release said.
The move closes a gap that had long frustrated crypto traders. Under the previous schedule, CME’s crypto derivatives halted on weekends, creating price discontinuities when spot markets moved and futures could not respond.
Now, with a near-continuous schedule and a two-hour maintenance window each weekend, traders can react to market events at any hour.
“By offering continuous liquidity over the weekend, we are meeting client demand and bridging the gap between traditional regulated venues and the 24/7 nature of crypto assets,” said Tim McCourt, Global Head of Equities, FX and Alternative Products at CME Group. “Since we introduced our first Bitcoin futures contract in 2017, the ecosystem has evolved in so many ways.”
The launch builds on record performance. CME recorded $3 trillion in notional crypto derivatives volume in 2025, and 2026 average daily volume has reached 407,200 contracts — a 46% increase year-over-year. Average daily open interest stands at 335,400 contracts, up 7% from the prior year.
Support from key market participants underscored the breadth of the rollout. Robinhood Markets VP JB Mackenzie said the launch marks the first time users can trade regulated futures contracts at any hour of any day.
Ripple Prime President Noel Kimmel said his firm’s futures clearing infrastructure was built to provide institutions with uninterrupted access to regulated crypto derivatives.
Wedbush Securities’ Bob Fitzsimmons said his firm has served clients on a 24/7 basis for over a year and has developed technology to meet the demands of the new structure.
CME’s crypto suite now covers futures on Bitcoin and select other crypto.
On the same day the 24/7 schedule went live, CME introduced Bitcoin Volatility futures (ticker: BVI) — the first regulated product of its kind. The contracts settle against the CME CF Bitcoin Volatility Index (BVX), a 30-day implied volatility measure derived from real-time Bitcoin options order book data.
Rather than taking a directional position on Bitcoin’s price, traders can now go long or short on the intensity of expected price swings — a tool long available in equity markets through instruments like the VIX, but never before offered in regulated form for Bitcoin.
This post CME Group Goes Live With 24/7 Crypto Futures and Options, Launches Bitcoin Volatility Contracts first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Coinbase Exec Sees Path to Crypto’s ‘Dodd-Frank Moment’ as CLARITY Act Heads for Senate Floor
The fate of America’s current crypto market may hinge on a Senate vote expected this month, and few people are watching it closer than Coinbase Chief Policy Officer Faryar Shirzad.
In an interview on Fox Business’ Mornings with Maria earlier today, Shirzad made the case that the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act — known as the CLARITY Act — represents the most significant financial regulatory legislation since Dodd-Frank, and that passage is within reach.
“This will be the biggest financial regulatory bill that Congress has done in quite some time, certainly since Dodd-Frank,” Shirzad said. “What this does is it creates clarity for the crypto sector.”
The stakes are high. Wyoming Senator Cynthia Lummis issued a blunt warning on X on May 29, telling lawmakers this Congress represents the final window for action. “The next window for digital asset legislation after this Congress is likely 2030,” Lummis wrote. “Until then, developers remain exposed with no legal protections, and law enforcement remains without the tools to hold bad actors accountable. The CLARITY Act solves both.”
The bill cleared the Senate Banking Committee in a 15-9 vote on May 14, with Democratic Senators Ruben Gallego of Arizona and Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland crossing party lines to support it. But the full floor vote is a different math problem. The bill needs 60 votes to clear the Senate, and with November’s midterm elections compressing the legislative calendar, the window for passage is measured in weeks.
Shirzad expressed confidence that the numbers are there.
“The Republican caucus is pretty unified,” he said. “The president’s been putting a shoulder into this, and there’s a very large group of Democrats who want to get this done. We’ve got about 80 Democrats in the House who voted for this, and I think we’ll get a proportional number in the Senate.”
President Trump has made crypto legislation a White House priority, posting on Truth Social with a pledge to codify a “future-proof” digital asset market — and his team is targeting a July 4 signing.
Shirzad framed the bill not as a crypto-versus-banks fight, but as an expansion of opportunity for the traditional financial sector.
“This will be the first piece of legislation since the 90s that gives banks new authorization to get into the crypto space,” he said. “I know JPMorgan wants to get into it. Every other big bank wants to get into the crypto sector. We welcome their entry.”
Coinbase’s confidence extends beyond legislation. The exchange scored a significant regulatory win on May 29, when the Commodity Futures Trading Commission issued guidance that cleared Coinbase Financial Markets to connect U.S. institutional clients to global crypto derivatives markets.
Coinbase Financial Markets became the first CFTC-regulated futures commission merchant to offer domestic clients access to global crypto perpetuals and options — instruments that account for roughly 80% of all global crypto trading volume. The exchange acquired derivatives platform Deribit, which holds over $31 billion in Bitcoin options open interest, and began institutional onboarding immediately. Retail access is planned for a later date.
“This is a big regulatory unlock,” Shirzad said. “It shows that U.S. regulators are trying to execute on what the president has said — which is to bring the crypto markets onto U.S. soil.”
On the state of the broader crypto market, Shirzad pushed back against any notion that the big trades are behind investors.
“We’re even more bullish about crypto as a technology,” he said, pointing to the integration of blockchain-based infrastructure across major banks and financial services firms. “Crypto is now the accepted upgrade of the financial system.”
He described the coming era as “tokenized” — financial applications built on blockchain rails — with the CLARITY Act providing the legal foundation that would unlock participation from both crypto-native firms and legacy institutions.
One live issue remains the stablecoin rewards provision. Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks brokered a compromise in May that bars rewards on stablecoins that are economically or functionally equivalent to bank deposit interest, while preserving activity-based incentives. Shirzad said the language is settled.
“The key architects of that compromise — Senator Tillis and Senator Alsobrooks — have been clear that the language is fixed,” he said. “This is the compromise they intend to defend with their colleagues.”
On May 28, when JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon sat down with Maria Bartiromo on Fox Business and fired a direct shot at the bill — and at Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong.
In the interview and in remarks at the Reagan National Economic Forum, Dimon called Armstrong’s characterization of the banking industry’s position on the bill dishonest, using language that circulated widely across social media.
Armstrong responded with a hockey-themed meme that drew broad support from across the crypto industry.
Dimon’s core objection centers on the stablecoin rewards provision — the same one Coinbase spent months fighting to protect. He argued that allowing crypto platforms to offer yield-like rewards on stablecoins gives those platforms a structural advantage over chartered banks, which operate under a different set of rules.
“If you want to be a bank, be a bank,” Dimon told Bartiromo. He also cited concerns about anti-money laundering compliance and Bank Secrecy Act enforcement, calling the bill unenforceable in its current form and saying banks would not accept it without changes.
The standoff is not without irony. Coinbase uses JPMorgan as its own bank — a point Shirzad made unprompted.
“JP Morgan is our bank, and they’ve worked with us and stayed by our side, even through the Biden administration,” Shirzad said.
This post Coinbase Exec Sees Path to Crypto’s ‘Dodd-Frank Moment’ as CLARITY Act Heads for Senate Floor first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Strategy Sold 32 Bitcoin… And That’s a Good Thing.
On May 5, Michael Saylor made an unusual comment.
“We will probably sell some Bitcoin to pay a dividend just to inoculate the market. Just to send the message that we did it.”
At the time, the statement caught many people off guard.
For years, Strategy had built its reputation around an uncompromising commitment to accumulating and holding Bitcoin. The idea that the company would voluntarily sell Bitcoin, even a tiny amount, seemed to run counter to that narrative.
Then it happened.
In its latest filing, Strategy disclosed that it sold 32 BTC for approximately $2.5 million at an average price of $77,135 per bitcoin. The proceeds are expected to be used to fund distributions on preferred stock. At the same time, the company reported holdings of 843,706 BTC and a $900 million USD reserve.
The sale represents less than 0.004% of Strategy’s total Bitcoin holdings.
Financially, it was insignificant.
Strategically, it may have been one of the most important Bitcoin transactions the company has ever made.
For decades, public market investors have been conditioned to ask the same question whenever they encounter an asset-backed company:
“How do I get my money back?”
In traditional finance, the answer is familiar.
A company generates cash flow. Cash flow supports dividends. Assets can be sold if necessary. Debt can be refinanced. Capital can be returned to shareholders.
Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury introduces a new dynamic.
Many investors understand how a company can acquire Bitcoin. Fewer understand how a company can support preferred securities, debt obligations, and capital return programs while holding a balance sheet primarily composed of Bitcoin.
The concern is not whether Bitcoin has value, but whether that value can be accessed when needed.
Saylor’s comment suggests he recognized this concern long before most observers did. The purpose of the sale was not to raise meaningful capital. The purpose was to demonstrate that the mechanism works.
The word Saylor chose was “inoculate.”
That choice matters.
An inoculation is a small, controlled exposure designed to prevent a much larger problem later. In this case, Strategy may have intentionally exposed the market to a tiny Bitcoin sale today to prevent panic around a larger Bitcoin sale tomorrow.
Imagine a future where Strategy needs to sell several thousand Bitcoin to support a capital structure that includes multiple preferred securities, debt instruments, and dividend obligations.
If investors have been conditioned to believe that any Bitcoin sale represents a breakdown in the company’s strategy, such an event could trigger unnecessary volatility.
But if investors have already seen Strategy sell Bitcoin responsibly, transparently, and for a clearly defined purpose, the reaction changes.
The transaction becomes operational rather than existential.
That distinction is critical.
The immediate reaction to any Bitcoin sale is often emotional.
For years, Bitcoin holders have been conditioned to view selling as a sign of weakness, capitulation, or a loss of conviction. That mindset may make sense for individual investors. It makes far less sense when evaluating a public company managing billions of dollars in assets, liabilities, and capital market obligations.
The question is not whether Strategy sold Bitcoin.
The question is whether the sale made Strategy stronger.
In this case, the answer appears to be yes.
First, the transaction reduces uncertainty. Investors no longer need to speculate about how Strategy would support dividend payments if required. The company has demonstrated that it can access a small portion of its Bitcoin reserves, fulfill an obligation, and continue operating exactly as before. That may seem obvious, but capital markets place tremendous value on proof over theory.
Second, the sale strengthens the credibility of Strategy’s preferred stock platform. Over the past two years, the company has expanded beyond a simple Bitcoin accumulation strategy and into a broader capital markets strategy. Preferred securities such as STRF, STRK, STRD, and STRC are designed to attract investors with different risk profiles and return objectives. Those investors need confidence that distributions can be funded consistently. This transaction provides evidence that the supporting infrastructure exists.
View the STRC Tracker for live data on Strategy’s Bitcoin accumulation.
Third, the sale helps normalize Bitcoin as a treasury reserve asset.
Companies routinely sell cash equivalents, bonds, commodities, and other assets to meet strategic objectives. Bitcoin cannot become a mature treasury asset if corporations are expected to treat it differently. Demonstrating that Bitcoin can be accumulated, held, pledged, financed against, and occasionally sold when appropriate is part of the maturation process.
Most importantly, the sale may increase Strategy’s future access to capital.
Michael Saylor’s objective has never been to maximize the amount of Bitcoin that remains untouched. His objective is to maximize Bitcoin per share over time. If demonstrating operational flexibility attracts more investors, lowers perceived risk, and expands the pool of capital available to the company, then a sale of 32 BTC today could ultimately support the acquisition of thousands of BTC tomorrow.
Viewed through that lens, the transaction was not a retreat from Strategy’s Bitcoin strategy. It was an investment in the durability of that strategy.
One of the most common misconceptions about Bitcoin treasury companies is that Bitcoin must never be sold under any circumstance.
That is not how treasury management works.
A corporation’s objective is not to maximize the number of years it can avoid touching its assets. The objective is to maximize long-term shareholder value.
And occasionally, it may mean selling a small amount of Bitcoin to support a broader capital strategy.
The question is not whether Bitcoin is sold, but whether the transaction increases or decreases Bitcoin per share over time.
Strategy’s entire framework is built around increasing Bitcoin per share. If a small sale helps support a larger capital structure that ultimately enables the company to acquire substantially more Bitcoin in the future, the sale may be accretive to that objective.
The most interesting aspect of this transaction is what it reveals about the next phase of Bitcoin treasury companies.
The first phase was simple accumulation.
Raise capital. Buy Bitcoin.
The second phase is capital markets integration.
Build securities around Bitcoin. Create preferred stock offerings. Establish dividend frameworks. Develop new financing vehicles. Expand access to different investor classes.
As companies move into this second phase, treasury management becomes more sophisticated.
Bitcoin remains the reserve asset, but the capital structure surrounding that reserve asset becomes increasingly complex.
Strategy’s sale of 32 BTC may ultimately be remembered not because of its size, but because it marked the moment when the company demonstrated that Bitcoin treasury companies can do more than accumulate.
They can operate. They can manage obligations. They can support dividends.
And they can do all of those things while continuing to hold hundreds of thousands of bitcoin on their balance sheet.
The market did not need to see Strategy sell 32 BTC, but Michael Saylor needed the market to see that it could.
Disclaimer: This content was prepared on behalf of Bitcoin For Corporations for informational purposes only. It reflects the author’s own analysis and opinion and should not be relied upon as investment advice. Nothing in this article constitutes an offer, invitation, or solicitation to purchase, sell, or subscribe for any security or financial product.
This post Strategy Sold 32 Bitcoin… And That’s a Good Thing. first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Nick Ward.
Bitcoin Magazine

The Business Owner’s Guide to Vertical Integration with Bitcoin
While Bitcoin is often viewed strictly as a financial asset, a growing number of 2026 operators are treating it as something entirely different: a stack of operational capabilities to vertically integrate.
In traditional manufacturing, vertical integration is one of the oldest competitive moves in the playbook. A car company that owns its tire factory is vertically integrated; Apple, by owning its silicon, operating system, storefront, and device, is the modern textbook case. The structural advantages, lower costs, fewer dependencies, and tighter control over quality, are now being claimed by companies integrating Bitcoin into multiple stages of how they produce, hold, move, and earn money. The businesses furthest along this path aren’t necessarily those with the largest treasuries, but those that treat Bitcoin as a core infrastructure.
This article is the operator’s guide to that decision. We define the vertical integration of Bitcoin in concrete terms, lay out the four stages every integrated company moves through, provide a diagnostic to figure out how far you should climb, and deliver a sequenced roadmap for getting there.
In the classical sense, vertical integration means owning multiple stages of your supply chain rather than renting them. A vertically integrated business produces its own inputs, makes its own product, and controls its own distribution. Each stage feeds the next. Each stage adds margin that would otherwise leak to a vendor.
Applied to Bitcoin, vertical integration means owning multiple stages of how your business interacts with Bitcoin, rather than renting any single piece of it. The four stages are:
A company that does all four owns the full operational stack. A company that does two has integrated partially. A company that does one is using Bitcoin but not yet integrated. None of these are wrong. But the deeper the integration, the more durable the strategic position, because each stage feeds the next. Payments fund reserves. Reserves enable productive deployment and underwrite financial products. Financial products attract capital that funds more reserves. Productive deployment generates more Bitcoin. The flywheel runs in this direction for a reason.
The first stage is taking Bitcoin from your customers. For most businesses with a payment terminal or a checkout flow, accepting Bitcoin via the Lightning Network is the lowest-friction entry into the integrated stack. The economics are not subtle. Credit card processing typically costs 2.5% to 3.5% per transaction, settles in two to three business days, and exposes the merchant to chargeback risk. Lightning settles in seconds, costs less than 0.1%, and is final on receipt.
The clearest case study is Steak ‘n Shake. The chain enabled Lightning payments across all U.S. locations in May 2025. At the Bitcoin 2026 Conference, executive Michael Boes reported that the company saves approximately 50% on processing fees when customers pay with Bitcoin compared to traditional credit card transactions, and that universal Bitcoin adoption among its customer base would translate to roughly $6 million in annual savings. Same-store sales rose 11% in Q2 2025 and accelerated to 15% in Q3.
What makes Steak ‘n Shake an integration case rather than just a payments case is what happens after the customer pays. Bitcoin payments do not get auto-converted to dollars. They flow into a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve on the company’s balance sheet, which underwrites a $0.21-per-hour Bitcoin bonus paid to hourly employees and helps fund a menu overhaul that includes 100% grass-fed beef. Stage 01 (Accept) is wired directly into Stage 02 (Hold). The savings on the payment rail do not sit in a P&L line. They become inventory in the strategic reserve.
This is the first principle of vertical integration applied to Bitcoin. A move taken in isolation is just a feature. A move wired to another stage is integration.
For many operators, Stage 01 is no longer a project. As of March 30, 2026, Square switched on Bitcoin Lightning payments by default for eligible merchants globally, covering approximately 4 million businesses. Bitcoin payments through Square are free through 2026, with a 1% flat fee applying from 2027. The first stage of the integrated stack is effectively the default for most merchants. The integration question is whether you wire the inflow to the next stage or let it auto-convert to fiat and disappear.
A side-by-side, on a $100 transaction:
| Metric | Legacy stack | Bitcoin via Lightning |
|---|---|---|
| Processing fee | 2.90% | <0.1% |
| Settlement time | 2 to 3 days | Seconds |
| Chargeback risk | Yes | Zero |
| Cross-border | FX spread added | Native |
| Net to operator | $97.10 | $99.90+ |
The second stage is putting Bitcoin on your balance sheet. Where Stage 01 is a payments decision, Stage 02 is a treasury decision. The question every CFO has had to answer for a century is where to park retained earnings.
The default answer of cash and short-term Treasuries is a slow leak when measured against a fixed-supply asset. Stage 02 says a portion of the company’s reserves should be denominated in something that cannot be diluted by anyone, including its issuer.

Try the Bitcoin Treasury Simulator with any stock ticker.
The canonical example is the work Michael Saylor began in August 2020, when his company (then MicroStrategy, now Strategy) became the first major public corporation to declare Bitcoin its primary treasury reserve asset. As of June 1, 2026, Strategy holds 843,706 BTC at an average cost basis of approximately $75,500 per coin, an aggregate position of $60.4 billion that represents nearly 4% of all Bitcoin in existence. Saylor’s argument was never that Bitcoin would go up. It was that cash was going down, and the right unit of account for a long-duration corporate treasury was the asset with the most credible scarcity.
Strategy is the deepest expression of Stage 02 in existence, but it is not the only shape this stage can take. Mining companies like Marathon and Riot hold mined production rather than selling it. Metaplanet in Japan has built a similar accumulation strategy in the Asian market, providing yen-denominated Bitcoin exposure through a Tokyo-listed structure. Block holds 8,997.89 BTC in its corporate treasury, separated from a further 19,357 BTC held in custody for Cash App customers, and verifies the distinction on-chain through quarterly Proof of Reserves disclosures.
Most operators will not run a 100% Bitcoin treasury. They do not have to. Even a 1% to 5% allocation of retained earnings is a meaningful hedge, and the policy decision to denominate a slice of the balance sheet in Bitcoin is more important than the size of that slice. The board resolution comes first. The accumulation comes after.
A note on custody, which is part of this stage and not separable from it. Holding Bitcoin without controlling the keys is not actually holding Bitcoin. Operators integrating Stage 02 should set up institutional multi-signature cold storage from day one to maximize balance sheet sovereignty. The cost of getting custody wrong is total. The cost of getting it right is a one-time setup fee and a quarterly verification routine.
The third stage is generating Bitcoin yourself, by mining. This is the most operationally intense stage in the stack and the most niche, but it is also the one that gives the integrated operator the deepest cost advantage. The cost basis of mined Bitcoin is your cost of power and amortized hardware, typically far below the market price of BTC itself. For the right kind of business, that gap is structural margin that no competitor can replicate without similar inputs.
Stage 03 is not for most operators. It requires industrial-scale operations, low-cost electricity (often dedicated power purchase agreements or stranded energy), and operational expertise in data center management. The pure-play public-market exemplars are Marathon Digital (MARA), with roughly 50,000 BTC accumulated almost entirely through self-mining, and Riot Platforms, with approximately 19,000 BTC. Their cost basis is not a market price. It is electricity, hardware depreciation, and operational scale.
What makes Stage 03 integrated rather than isolated is the connection to Stage 02. Both Marathon and Riot retain the majority of their mined production rather than selling it on the open market. The mining operation feeds the treasury directly. Each block reward is inventory for the strategic reserve, denominated in the same asset the company is accumulating long-term.
What makes Stage 03 newly accessible in 2026 is who else is moving into it. Block, through its Proto division, is developing an open-source 3-nanometer custom ASIC chip and a complete mining system designed to make industrial-grade mining accessible to operators who are not themselves miners. The strategic implication is that production is becoming a primitive any sufficiently committed operator can adopt, particularly those with stranded power assets, surplus electricity, or operational synergies with existing energy businesses. A power utility, a data-center operator, an industrial real-estate holder, or a company sitting on cheap behind-the-meter power can now consider Stage 03 in a way that would have been unrealistic five years ago.
For most readers of this article, Stage 03 will not be the right move to integrate. The capital and operational requirements are too specific to most business models. But for the subset whose existing business already produces or controls the inputs, this is the stage with the largest structural margin advantage and the most defensible moat.
The fourth and deepest stage is offering Bitcoin products, infrastructure, or financial instruments to other businesses or to investors, capturing fees, network effects, distribution, or capital as a result. Where the first three stages are about using Bitcoin internally, Stage 04 is about selling Bitcoin-related services and products externally. It is the stage that converts the integrated operator from a Bitcoin user into a Bitcoin business.
Four sub-categories matter inside Stage 04, and they map to different kinds of businesses.
Custody products. Bitkey (a Block product), Casa, and Unchained sell secure Bitcoin storage as a service. The market exists because every Stage 02 operator needs a custody solution and few want to build one in-house. The business model is subscription, hardware sales, and institutional service fees.
Network infrastructure. LQWD Technologies (TSXV: LQWD) is the clearest example. The company holds 262 Bitcoin, with no debt or convertible obligations against the position, but the Bitcoin is not in cold storage. It is deployed as liquidity across a global network of enterprise-grade Lightning nodes, where it earns routing fees on every transaction it helps settle. CEO Shone Anstey has noted the Lightning Network now processes over $1 billion in monthly transaction volume, and LQWD’s own infrastructure has routed more than two million transactions and over 2,012 Bitcoin since launch. The novelty is that the same Bitcoin functions simultaneously as a Stage 02 balance-sheet asset and as Stage 04 productive infrastructure earning fees in the same asset, without selling, lending, or staking it.
Consumer products. Cash App is the most-used Bitcoin on-ramp in the United States, with millions of consumers buying, sending, and now automatically earning Bitcoin through routine app activity. Strike serves a parallel function with a Lightning-first design and global remittance focus. River targets long-term Bitcoin accumulators with low-fee dollar-cost averaging and account-level Lightning support. The strategic point of consumer distribution is moat. A company that owns the on-ramp does not just earn fees, it shapes how an entire generation forms its relationship with the asset.
Bitcoin-backed financial products. This is the fastest-growing sub-category and the one most operators have not yet recognized as part of Stage 04. Strategy is the canonical case. Beginning in 2024 and accelerating through 2026, Strategy has built a full preferred stock suite designed to give institutional and retail investors exposure to Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury thesis without holding Bitcoin directly. The suite currently includes STRF (10% perpetual strife preferred), STRC (variable rate perpetual stretch preferred, currently yielding 11.50% annually paid monthly), STRK (8% perpetual strike preferred), STRD (10% perpetual stride preferred), and STRE. Together, these products represent over $30 billion in remaining issuance capacity under active at-the-market programs.
Saylor describes the category as “digital credit” — an emerging asset class of income instruments built on Bitcoin treasury balance sheets. STRC in particular, with its variable rate, monthly cash payment, and par-targeting mechanism, is designed to compete directly with money market funds and short-duration fixed income.
View the STRC Tracker for live data on Strategy’s Bitcoin accumulation.
The $43+ billion Strategy has raised across equity, preferred, and convertible debt in less than two years has been deployed into Bitcoin acquisition. The reflexive flywheel is the part worth studying closely: the larger Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury grows, the stronger the collateral story behind the preferred stock, the better the preferred stock prices, the more capital it raises, the more Bitcoin Strategy can buy. Stage 04 (Build) and Stage 02 (Hold) reinforce each other directly. This is the integration.
The same model is now being adapted by other operators. Bitcoin-collateralized lending products, structured notes, exchange-traded products, and ABCP-style facilities using Bitcoin treasury equity as underlying collateral are all extensions of the digital credit thesis. For operators with sufficient Bitcoin treasury scale, Stage 04 financial products can become the dominant mechanism by which Stage 02 funds itself.
Not every business should integrate all four stages. The right depth depends on what the business already does, what assets it already controls, what kind of capital it can access, and what kind of operational complexity its leadership can absorb. The diagnostic below is the simplest version of the question every operator should answer before choosing how deep to go.
Question 01. Do customers pay your business directly?
If yes, Stage 01 is available immediately and produces measurable value from the first transaction. If most revenue is invoiced or B2B, Stage 01 still applies but the implementation shifts toward Bitcoin invoicing rather than point-of-sale. If the business has no customer payment flow, integration starts at Stage 02 instead.
Question 02. Does your business carry retained earnings or cash reserves on its balance sheet?
If yes, Stage 02 is available at any size from 1% to 100% of reserves. If the business runs lean with no meaningful cash position, Stage 02 is premature and integration begins or ends at Stage 01.
Question 03. Do you control cheap electricity, stranded energy, or capital scale that could support an industrial mining operation?
If yes, Stage 03 becomes feasible and adds the deepest cost-basis advantage in the stack.
If no, Stage 03 should be skipped, not deferred. Most operators will integrate Stages 01, 02, and 04 without ever touching Stage 03.
Question 04. Do you have a technology or platform business, or a balance sheet large enough to support Bitcoin-backed financial products as new revenue?
If yes, Stage 04 is the natural extension of existing capabilities, and the relevant sub-category (custody, infrastructure, consumer, financial products) should match your existing competencies. A fintech goes to consumer products. An infrastructure company goes to network operations. A hardware firm goes to custody devices. A capital-markets-active operator with significant Bitcoin treasury goes to financial products.
Most operators reading this article will land in one of five integration patterns:
| Pattern | Stages owned | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Single-Stage Operator | One stage | Operators testing the integration thesis with their lowest-risk move |
| Operations Pragmatist | Stages 01 + 02 | Operators with both customer payments and a balance sheet (Steak ‘n Shake template) |
| Capital Markets Pragmatist | Stages 02 + 04 | Operators with significant Bitcoin treasury and capital-markets capability (Strategy template) |
| Builder | Three stages, including Stage 04 | Tech, financial, or platform businesses adding Bitcoin as a revenue line |
| Maximalist | All four stages, fully integrated | Operators whose core business is built around Bitcoin (Block template) |
The two Pragmatist patterns are worth studying side by side. Both are two-stage integrations. Both wire one stage into another to create a flywheel. But the flywheels run on different inputs and produce different outputs. Steak ‘n Shake’s flywheel runs on customer payments and produces a growing reserve. Strategy’s flywheel runs on capital markets and produces a growing reserve. The destination is the same. The mechanism is different.
Each pattern is a legitimate integration posture. The deeper the integration, the larger the structural moat, but also the larger the operational complexity. Most operators reading this article will and should land in one of the two Pragmatist patterns or in the Builder pattern. Few will be Maximalists. That is the correct distribution.
To make the patterns concrete, here are three companies that exemplify three different shapes and depths of integration in 2026:
Block: the Maximalist. Block owns all four stages. Square (Stage 01), an 8,998 BTC corporate treasury verified on-chain (Stage 02), Proto mining hardware (Stage 03), and Bitkey, Cash App, and Spiral (Stage 04). The total company-wide Bitcoin position, including custodied customer assets, is 28,355 BTC. Block is the working proof that vertical integration of Bitcoin can live inside a single corporate structure across all four stages, and that the integration produces compounding strategic advantages no single-stage competitor can replicate. The takeaway for most operators is not to copy Block. It is to recognize that the integrated maximalist position is now demonstrably possible, which means none of the four stages are theoretical anymore.
Steak ‘n Shake: the Operations Pragmatist. Steak ‘n Shake owns Stages 01 and 02, wired tightly together. Bitcoin sales at the point of payment flow directly into the company’s Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, which underwrites both employee compensation and product reinvestment. Same-store sales rose 18% heading into 2026. Steak ‘n Shake is the practical case for most operators with customer-facing payment flows: pick the two stages your business model already supports, engineer the connection between them, and let each one strengthen the other. The integrated effect is more than additive. The reserve gives the payments program a strategic purpose, and the payments program gives the reserve an organic accumulation engine.
Strategy: the Capital Markets Pragmatist. Strategy owns Stages 02 and 04, wired into a reflexive flywheel that has raised over $43 billion in less than two years. The 818,334 BTC reserve (Stage 02) underwrites the credibility of Strategy’s preferred stock suite (Stage 04), and the preferred stock suite raises capital that funds further Bitcoin acquisition for the reserve. STRC alone, with $30+ billion in remaining ATM issuance capacity across the full preferred stack, demonstrates that Bitcoin-backed financial products can scale to institutional volume. Strategy is the practical case for capital-rich operators with the balance sheet to issue financial products: pick Hold and Build, wire them together, and let capital markets compound the reserve faster than operating cash flow ever could.
The pattern across all three is that vertical integration in Bitcoin does not require maximalism. What it requires is intentionality. Each stage has to be chosen because it fits the business, and each connection between stages has to be engineered deliberately. The operators who get this right end up with structural advantages their competitors cannot easily replicate. The operators who treat Bitcoin as a single decision (buy or don’t) miss the architecture entirely.
| Operator | Stage 01: Accept | Stage 02: Hold | Stage 03: Produce | Stage 04: Build | Pattern |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Block (NYSE: XYZ) | Primary | Primary | Primary | Primary | Maximalist |
| Strategy (NASDAQ: MSTR) | — | Primary | — | Primary | Capital Markets Pragmatist |
| MARA Holdings (NASDAQ: MARA) | — | Primary | Primary | — | Producer-Holder |
| Riot Platforms (NASDAQ: RIOT) | — | Primary | Primary | — | Producer-Holder |
| Steak ‘n Shake (private) | Primary | Supporting | — | — | Operations Pragmatist |
| LQWD Technologies (TSXV: LQWD) | — | Supporting | — | Primary | Builder |
| Metaplanet (TYO: 3350) | — | Primary | — | — | Single-Stage Operator |
Vertical integration is not built in a single quarter. It is sequenced. The order of operations matters because each stage builds on the one before it, and each stage requires organizational and operational learning that the next stage assumes. The roadmap below is the path most successfully integrated operators have followed, and the order most operators starting today should follow.
Quarter 1 to 2 — Adopt Stage 01. Enable Bitcoin Lightning payments through Square or a comparable processor. For Square merchants, this is now a setting rather than a project. Decide whether incoming Bitcoin is auto-converted to fiat or held in a wallet. Most operators should auto-convert at first while custody and treasury policy are being formalized.
Quarter 2 to 4 — Build the foundation for Stage 02. Set up institutional multi-signature custody before any meaningful Bitcoin position accumulates. Draft and pass a board policy that defines Bitcoin as a treasury reserve asset and authorizes a target allocation, even if the initial allocation is 1% of retained earnings. Maintain 6 to 12 months of operating expenses in fiat as a buffer.
Quarter 4 onward — Wire Stage 01 to Stage 02. Stop auto-converting incoming Bitcoin payments. Route them directly into the strategic reserve. This is the moment integration becomes real. The payments program is no longer a cost-savings initiative. It is an organic Bitcoin accumulation engine that the operator does not have to fund externally. At this point, the operator has reached the Operations Pragmatist pattern.
Year 2 — Evaluate Stage 04 if applicable. For technology, financial, or platform businesses, the second year is the right time to evaluate whether Bitcoin can become a revenue line and which sub-category fits. For operators whose Bitcoin treasury has grown large enough to anchor capital markets activity, financial products become a credible Stage 04 path. For most other operators, integration concludes at the Operations Pragmatist pattern.
Year 3+ — Evaluate Stage 03 if applicable. Mining is the last stage to consider because it requires the most capital, the most operational expertise, and the most clarity about long-term Bitcoin commitment. For operators with energy assets or stranded power, the calculus may justify earlier entry. For most others, Stage 03 is permanent skip rather than deferred consideration.
By Year 3, an operator who has followed this roadmap has built a vertically integrated Bitcoin position that no competitor can replicate without making the same multi-year commitment. The integration is the moat. The Bitcoin position is the byproduct.
Vertical integration of Bitcoin is not a maximalist posture. It is a strategic posture. It can be expressed at any depth from one stage taken seriously to four stages fully wired together, and the patterns vary by which two stages an operator chooses to pair. Steak ‘n Shake pairs Accept with Hold. Strategy pairs Hold with Build. Both are two-stage integrations. Both produce reflexive flywheels. The mechanisms are different. The strategic posture is the same.
What separates an integrated Bitcoin operator from one who has merely bought Bitcoin is the connection between stages. Payments feed reserves. Reserves underwrite financial products. Financial products attract capital that funds more reserves. Productive deployment generates more Bitcoin. The flywheel runs in this direction because each stage produces inputs the next stage consumes.
For most operators in 2026, the right path is the Operations Pragmatist pattern. Stages 01 and 02, tightly coupled, executed over four to six quarters. Steak ‘n Shake is the template. For capital-rich operators with significant Bitcoin treasury and capital-markets capability, the Capital Markets Pragmatist pattern is the more powerful play. Strategy is the template. The companies that will define the next decade of corporate finance are not the ones with the largest Bitcoin holdings. They are the ones that turned Bitcoin into an integrated operating model, picked the right two stages for their business model, and let the connections between the stages compound into a structural advantage their competitors cannot match.
Pick your pattern. Build the connections. Let the integration do the work.
Disclaimer: This content was prepared on behalf of Bitcoin For Corporations for informational purposes only. It reflects the author’s own analysis and opinion and should not be relied upon as investment advice. Nothing in this article constitutes an offer, invitation, or solicitation to purchase, sell, or subscribe for any security or financial product.
This post The Business Owner’s Guide to Vertical Integration with Bitcoin first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Nick Ward.
Bitcoin Magazine

Strive (ASST) Eyes $4.2B War Chest to Ramp Up Bitcoin Accumulation
Strive, Inc. (ASST), the publicly traded Bitcoin treasury and asset management company, announced Monday that it plans to dramatically upsize its at-the-market (ATM) capital programs by a combined $4.2 billion — adding $2.1 billion each to its Class A common stock (ASST) and Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Preferred Stock (SATA) programs — in what could be one of the most aggressive Bitcoin accumulation moves by any public company this year.
CEO Matt Cole confirmed the plans in a post on X, stating: “Strive expects to increase the size of both the $ASST and $SATA ATM programs by $2.1 billion each, reflecting a sustained increase in liquidity and demand for both securities.” Cole added that a balance sheet update would be provided before market open on Tuesday.
If completed, the expansion would bring Strive’s Class A common stock ATM capacity to $2.55 billion and its SATA preferred stock capacity to $2.6 billion — a staggering scale-up from the $500 million SATA ATM program Strive originally launched in December 2025.
The announcement comes on the heels of a record-shattering week for the company. In the seven days ending May 24, 2026, Strive raised enough capital to acquire approximately 2,624 Bitcoin — more than double its previous weekly purchase record of 371 BTC — deploying over $194 million in SATA proceeds alone.
On one historic day during that stretch, the company’s SATA instrument absorbed an estimated 453 BTC in a single session, representing approximately 101% of the entire Bitcoin mining supply for that day — what market observers called the first “full-supply absorption event” in months.
As of late May 2026, Strive holds approximately 16,500 BTC on its balance sheet, valued at roughly $1.27 billion, placing the firm seventh among publicly listed companies holding Bitcoin globally.
The company has added over 3,700 BTC to its treasury since January 2026, building on its acquisition of Semler Scientific, which jump-started its Bitcoin accumulation strategy.
Strive’s ATM model — which issues shares directly into the open market and converts proceeds to Bitcoin in near real-time — mirrors the structure pioneered by Strategy, though Strive has distinguished itself by funding accumulation exclusively through perpetual preferred equity rather than convertible debt.
The expansion remains subject to the completion of amended prospectus filings and related corporate approvals.
The company’s shares have surged more than 133% over the past three months as the company’s Bitcoin treasury model continues to attract institutional and retail demand.
This post Strive (ASST) Eyes $4.2B War Chest to Ramp Up Bitcoin Accumulation first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
From a 2011 peak near $1,900, gold spent years carving a deep base, retested resistance around $2,100 in 2020, consolidated again through 2022, then broke decisively higher to reach $3,300 by early 2025 and a record above $5,400 in January 2026.
According to analyst and Real Vision affiliate James Easton, Bitcoin's weekly chart is now drawing the same formation on a compressed timeline: a 2021 peak, a deep base through 2022 and 2023, a recovery and retest of prior highs in 2024 and early 2025, and a pullback that has left BTC sitting at the blue dot.

Traders overlaying the two structures are projecting a move to $300,000 for Bitcoin by the end of 2026 if the pattern holds, arguing that BTC is lagging gold's repricing as a macro hedge asset.
The macro case for that lag closing looked compelling until June 1, when Brent crude jumped by over $6 per barrel to $97.14 after Iran's Tasnim news agency reported Tehran had halted message exchanges with the US and that aligned groups were weighing measures to block the Strait of Hormuz.
Gold's cup-and-handle resolved because the dollar weakened, real yields fell, central banks accelerated reserve diversification away from US Treasuries, and geopolitical fragmentation made a non-sovereign hard asset structurally attractive.
World Gold Council data show central banks bought 244 tonnes net in the first quarter alone, the seventeenth consecutive quarter of net purchases, sustained even as prices sat 81% above year-ago levels.
Bar and coin demand rose 42% year-over-year to 474 tonnes, gold-backed ETFs added 62 tonnes, and total demand value hit a record $193 billion on a modest 2% volume gain.
The breakout had a buyer base that does not reprice on rate-hike fears because yield sensitivity is structurally irrelevant to a central bank building reserves.
Bitcoin's pattern demands the same macro resolution from a buyer base with the opposite rate sensitivity: US spot Bitcoin ETFs logged ten consecutive trading days of net outflows through May 29, with nearly $3 billion drained during the period, according to Farside Investors data.
BlackRock's IBIT shed roughly $2 billion during the streak, including a $527.8 million single-session exit on May 27.
An ETF holder reprices the position the moment oil pushes inflation expectations higher and rate-hike odds climb. Yield-sensitive institutional capital exits the moment oil pushes rate-hike odds higher, which is precisely what it is doing now.
| Breakout ingredient | Gold | Bitcoin | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Structural demand | Central banks bought 244 tonnes net in Q1 | No central-bank equivalent | Gold has sovereign reserve demand |
| ETF behavior | Gold ETFs added 62 tonnes | BTC ETFs saw nearly $3B in outflows | BTC demand is more macro-sensitive |
| Retail demand | Bar and coin demand +42% YoY | Mostly ETF/institutional-led in article frame | BTC reprices faster when conditions tighten |
| Rate sensitivity | Lower for central-bank reserve buyers | Higher for ETF/institutional holders | Oil-driven Fed fears hit BTC harder |
| Pattern status | Breakout completed | Breakout conditional | BTC still needs macro confirmation |
The Strait of Hormuz carries 20.9 million barrels per day, roughly 20% of global petroleum liquids consumption, according to EIA data.
The Dallas Fed estimates that a two-quarter closure of the Strait of Hormuz would add 0.79 percentage points to the fourth-quarter headline PCE and 0.31 percentage points to core PCE.
On June 1, CME FedWatch data showed traders pricing roughly a 56% chance of at least one US rate hike by year-end. When rate-hike odds rise, the dollar firms, real yields move higher, and liquidity-sensitive assets reprice lower.
Gold fell nearly 2% on June 1 as that transmission ran through yields, confirming that even the completed breakout struggles when the shock arrives via rates. Bitcoin faces that transmission more directly, with a record 0.96 correlation to US equities during the war shock period.
The pattern on the chart requires BTC to behave as gold did at the equivalent blue dot: absorbing selling pressure, holding the base, and accelerating as macro conditions ease.
EIA's May short-term energy outlook forecasts Brent averaging around $106 in May and June, before easing to $89 in the fourth quarter of 2026 and $79 in 2027 as Middle East production recovers.
The IEA projects a 420,000 b/d contraction in demand in 2026, adding fundamental weight to a supply ceiling.
If that path holds before the Fed actually hikes, financial conditions ease, rate-hike odds fade, and the same forces that drove gold's cup-and-handle resolution become available to Bitcoin: dollar weakness, falling real yields, and institutional reallocation into hard assets.
Bitcoin's 30-day annualized perpetual basis had slipped to -0.45% as of mid-May, against 3.16% a year earlier, a spot-led structure with minimal leverage overlay. The same accumulation profile preceded gold's durable breakout.
VanEck identified the $80,000-$85,000 zone as the key resistance to reclaim for momentum to shift, and Citi's bull case sits at $165,000 within 12 months. The $300,000 requires a melt-up that extends well beyond institutional consensus and demands sustained ETF inflows to compress the available float against rising demand.
If Hormuz disruption extends for two or more quarters, the Dallas Fed's inflation model puts headline PCE 0.79 percentage points higher by the fourth quarter, enough to make a Fed hike more likely than not and ETF outflows self-reinforcing.
Citi's recessionary scenario sits at $58,000, and at that level, the cup-and-handle formation on Bitcoin's weekly chart transitions from a base to a failed breakout, resetting the pattern clock entirely.
Peter Brandt, who set a $300,000-$500,000 target for Bitcoin in April 2026, framed it as contingent on the four-year cycle holding, a caveat that applies with full force when oil threatens to reprice the Fed's path.
| Scenario | Oil / macro condition | Fed path | Bitcoin implication | Key level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pattern survives | Oil finds a ceiling; Brent follows EIA easing path | Hike odds fade | ETF pressure eases, chart remains valid | $80K–$85K reclaim |
| Consensus bull | Dollar weakens, real yields fall, inflows resume | Liquidity improves | BTC moves toward institutional bull case | $165K |
| Pattern fails | Hormuz disruption lasts two quarters | Inflation pressure rises | ETF outflows become self-reinforcing | $58K |
| Melt-up case | Gold-lag trade fully closes | Easing/liquidity returns | BTC overshoots consensus | $300K stretch target |
Gold benefits from war risk as central banks buy more, Asian retail demand accelerates, and ETF holders rotate in. Bitcoin reaches the same destination only through a second-order path, where geopolitical stress must translate into dollar weakness and monetary easing, a sequence that an oil-driven inflation shock actively forecloses.
Whether Bitcoin can complete gold's version of the formation depends entirely on whether oil stops rising before it locks in the rate environment that would make the pattern impossible.
The post Bitcoin’s $300K gold pattern now depends on whether Iran’s oil shock rewrites the Fed path appeared first on CryptoSlate.
CME Group's cryptocurrency futures and options have been trading continuously since 4:00 p.m. CT on May 29, making this the first full trading week without the classic weekend CME gap.
Over the inaugural 48 hours, over 7,200 contracts changed hands, representing roughly $50 million in notional value, enough to confirm that institutional demand for weekend hedging is real.
However, the launch coincided with the S&P 500, Dow, and Nasdaq all closing at record highs on June 1, while Brent crude settled at $94.98, up 4.2% with renewed US-Iran tensions, and Bitcoin nearly lost the $70,000 floor.
Before May 29, Bitcoin spot markets traded continuously while CME futures closed every Friday afternoon and reopened Sunday evening.
When spot moved sharply over the weekend, the CME futures chart reopened with a visible gap between Friday's closing price and Sunday's opening tick. Traders treated those gaps as magnets, since price tended to return and fill them, often within weeks.

CME's continuous trading closes the chart gap and opens a different one, as US ETF markets follow equity-market hours, some institutional desks run lighter over weekends, and Monday morning still represents the return of full cash-market participation. The new question is whether weekend price discovery holds when Monday liquidity arrives.
CME crypto derivatives averaged 407,200 contracts per day year-to-date in 2026, up 46% year-over-year, against a backdrop of $3 trillion in notional volume across all crypto products in 2025.
That volume base confirms institutions already use CME as a hedging venue, and the 24/7 extension removes the window during which that hedging was unavailable, without fundamentally changing where price is made.
The sharper framing for this week is that Bitcoin is underperforming a record-high equity session, and the narrowness of that equity rally makes the underperformance harder to dismiss.
Index records driven by Nvidia's 6.2% session gain, while a slight majority of stocks fell, and the Russell 2000 dropped 0.5% point to a rotation into large-cap tech.
Bitcoin has historically tracked broad risk sentiment, which puts it on the wrong side of a tape that appears bullish on the surface but defensive underneath.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs shed roughly $3 billion across the ten trading sessions from May 15 through May 29, per Farside Investors data, including $733.4 million on May 27 alone and $527.8 million out of BlackRock's IBIT that same session.
ETF flows are now the most direct institutional demand signal Bitcoin has, and that signal is running against the market-structure improvement CME just delivered, as continuous regulated futures access amplifies price discovery when institutional allocators are adding exposure.
| Market signal | Latest move | Read-through for BTC |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 / Dow / Nasdaq | Record closes | Headline risk-on tape |
| Nvidia | +6.2% | Rally concentrated in mega-cap tech |
| Russell 2000 | -0.5% | Weak breadth / defensive underneath |
| Slight majority of U.S. stocks | Fell | Index strength not broad |
| Brent crude | $94.98, +4.2% | Inflation/rate pressure still alive |
| Bitcoin | Nearly lost $70K | Failing to follow equities higher |
| Spot BTC ETFs | Roughly $3B outflows over 10 sessions | Institutional demand signal is negative |
If Monday's return of full ETF and cash-market participation pulls Bitcoin back toward the equity performance, CME's new structure contributes directly.
Institutions that hedged weekend crypto exposure in regulated futures through Saturday and Sunday arrive at Monday's open with positions already adjusted, reducing the disorderly repricing that the old Sunday-evening reopen sometimes produced.
VanEck identified the $80,000-$85,000 zone as key resistance for a shift in momentum, and the three legacy CME gaps in the $70,000-$80,000 range stay unresolved targets that predate the new regime.
Bitcoin's 30-day annualized perpetual basis had slipped to -0.45% as of mid-May, down from 3.16% a year earlier, a spot-led structure with minimal leverage overlay.
Recoveries from that configuration tend to be durable, spot-driven moves, and the bull case rests on ETF flows reversing and broad equity risk appetite widening beyond mega-cap tech, giving Bitcoin a tape to track.
Oil-driven inflation fear is the cleaner short-term magnet when the chart no longer carries a gap to fill.
Brent at $94.98 keeps rate-hike expectations alive, and CME FedWatch showed traders pricing roughly a 56% chance of at least one US rate hike by year-end, and Treasury yields briefly touched 4.52% before easing to 4.46%.
If oil holds near $95-$100 and the ETF outflow streak extends into a second week, Bitcoin trades as a high-beta risk asset in a tightening environment, which is precisely what it has done for the past two weeks of that streak.
The just-below-$70,000 legacy CME gap sits directly within the current price range, and a clean break below it would remove the last nearby technical reference point. Citi's recessionary Bitcoin scenario targets $58,000, relevant if the dollar strengthens on persistent rate-hike expectations.
| Scenario | Trigger | New market signal to watch | BTC implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bullish catch-up | Oil cools, equities remain strong, ETF flows reverse | Monday liquidity confirms weekend prices | BTC reclaims $80K–$85K resistance |
| Neutral digestion | Oil stays high but stable, ETF flows mixed | Basis and options skew stabilize | BTC chops around $70K–$80K legacy gap zone |
| Bearish breakdown | Oil holds $95–$100, rate fears persist, ETF outflows continue | Monday liquidity sells weekend strength | BTC loses the sub-$70K legacy gap area |
| Stress case | Dollar/yields rise and defensive hedging accelerates | CME 24/7 used for downside exposure | Citi-style $58K recessionary target enters view |
CME's 24/7 launch gives institutions a better hedging tool, and when the macro environment pushes toward defensive positioning, that tool gets used to build downside exposure.
More efficient access to CME at 2:00 a.m. Saturday is an improvement in market plumbing with no bearing on price direction when yield expectations are rising.
The classic CME gap trade gave Bitcoin a visible, chart-based signal that drew institutional attention back to specific price levels regardless of macro conditions.
ETF flow direction, Monday liquidity depth, futures basis behavior, and options skew now carry that weight.
This week's price action will show whether the new regime produces cleaner price discovery or removes one of the few signals that pulled BTC back from macro-driven dislocations.
The post Bitcoin starts its first gapless CME week as the market searches for a new signal appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin price has hit $70,000 after Strategy, the world's largest publicly traded corporate holder of the top crypto, sold a portion of its BTC treasury for the first time since 2022.
Data from CryptoSlate showed that BTC's price dropped 4% on the news to as low as $69,690 before recovering to $70,120 as of press time. This is its lowest price level in six weeks.
This price movement came as Strategy revealed on June 1 that it sold 32 Bitcoin between May 26 and May 31. The sale generated roughly $2.5 million at an average execution price of $77,135.
The digital asset sale represents a microscopic 0.0038% of its total holdings against a total corporate stockpile of 843,706 Bitcoin, acquired at an average price of $75,699.

Market observers quickly highlighted the significance of Strategy's decision to sell as a formal departure from the founder Michael Saylor's long-standing doctrine of absolute retention. CNBC's Mad Money host Jim Cramer said:
“Strategy (Micro) sells Bitcoin, $2.5 million. May have to reevaluate pro-bitcoin stance given how much Strategy has propped it up. Key trampoline for years. Some say manipulation. I think that's too strong.”
More importantly, the sale brings an underlying structural risk into sharp relief as Strategy is increasingly relying on a volatile asset to fund fixed, dollar-denominated corporate liabilities.
According to the filing, Strategy said that it sold its BTC holdings “to fund distributions on preferred stock.”
Over the past year, Strategy has introduced several publicly traded perpetual preferred stocks, including STRK, STRC, STRF, and STRD, to provide fixed-income returns alongside its Bitcoin treasury operations.
The most popular of them is STRC, which is a perpetual preferred stock introduced in July 2025 under the nickname Stretch.
In recent months, security has been central to Saylor's effort to turn the company's Bitcoin holdings from a passive reserve into a financing platform that can attract investors seeking yield rather than direct exposure to the token.
Saylor has said Strategy wants STRC to become one of the leading credit instruments in global markets, a goal that depends on keeping the product stable enough to function more like an income vehicle than a volatile crypto-linked equity.
STRC pays monthly cash distributions and currently carries an annualized dividend rate of 11.5%, a level Strategy has held for four consecutive months. The rate is reviewed monthly and can be adjusted to help keep the shares trading close to their $100 par value.
That price anchor is important to the company's broader funding strategy.
When STRC remains near par, Strategy can issue additional shares through its at-the-market program on more favorable terms, thereby raising capital to buy more Bitcoin, meet dividend obligations, and manage liabilities.
The product, however, has shown some strain recently. STRC has not traded at par since mid-May and fell as low as $97.11 last week before recovering to about $99.10. Still, the product has funded the purchase of more than 122,000 BTC.

Meanwhile, the shares may move closer to $100 ahead of the June 15 ex-dividend date, when investors must own the stock to receive the next payout.
This trading pattern has focused attention on the mechanics behind Strategy's new model.
STRC works best when investor demand keeps the security close to par. If that support weakens, the company may have to rely more heavily on higher yields, equity issuance, or its Bitcoin treasury to keep the structure running smoothly.
Strategy and its supporters have presented the 32-Bitcoin sale as a way to show that its treasury is not locked away from the market.
The company argues that it can sell when doing so supports its balance sheet, improves per-share metrics, or helps meet obligations tied to the securities it has issued around its Bitcoin holdings.
However, critics argue that this explanation addresses only part of the concern now forming around the company.
Glenn Cameron, global head of institutional at Onramp Bitcoin, noted that Bitcoin's liquidity has never been the central doubt for institutional investors. The asset trades continuously across global venues and routinely clears tens of billions of dollars in daily volume.
According to him, the more difficult question is whether Strategy can rely on that liquidity during a sustained drawdown, when fixed dollar payments remain due, and other funding channels may be less attractive.
He wrote that the company's model rests partly on the idea that Bitcoin would need to appreciate by only about 2.3% a year to cover an estimated $1.6 billion STRC dividend bill over time.
According to him, the calculation is based on the dividend bill relative to the current notional value of Strategy's Bitcoin holdings. At today's prices, a modest gain in the treasury can appear sufficient to offset the cash cost of the payout.
Dividends, though, are not paid with mark-to-market gains. They require dollars. That distinction becomes more important when the value of the underlying treasury falls.
If Bitcoin's price were cut in half, the same dividend obligation would consume a larger share of the company's asset base.
However, if Strategy continues issuing preferred shares, the cash burden would also grow. A manageable breakeven rate in a rising market can become more demanding when the treasury value contracts and the dividend bill stays fixed.
That is where the 32 Bitcoin sale takes on more significance than its size suggests. The transaction did not test Strategy's ability to sell Bitcoin at scale. It showed how the treasury could be used once cash obligations tied to the preferred-stock structure come due.
In a supportive market, Strategy can draw on several funding channels simultaneously. Common-share issuance can raise cash. Preferred shares can trade close to par. Bitcoin sales can be limited and presented as selective balance-sheet management. A rising Bitcoin price also reinforces the value of the treasury backing the structure.
Those conditions become harder to rely on during a drawdown. A weaker common stock price makes equity issuance more dilutive. A lower STRC price can force the company to offer more yield to restore demand.
Meanwhile, dividend payments must still be made in cash, regardless of where Bitcoin trades.
That is the scenario drawing scrutiny from analysts. If capital markets remain open, Strategy can fund its obligations without leaning heavily on the Bitcoin stack. If market access tightens, the treasury becomes a more visible source of liquidity.

Repeated sales in a falling market would carry their own risks. A lower Bitcoin price would require more coins to meet the same dollar obligation, while each sale could deepen investor concern about whether the preferred-stock structure is beginning to feed on the asset it is meant to support.
Jeff Dorman, chief investment officer at Arca, has argued that the small sale may be preparing investors for larger disposals later.
He has also warned that Strategy's $900 million cash reserve covers only about five months of dividend obligations, leaving the preferred-stock structure more exposed if issuance becomes harder.
Dorman described the setup as a “ticking time bomb,” saying the interests of common shareholders, preferred holders, and Bitcoin investors may not always move together once fixed cash payouts are layered onto a volatile treasury.
Meanwhile, that tension extends beyond Strategy. Public Bitcoin treasury companies are no longer simple holders of a reserve asset.
Once they issue yield-bearing securities and rely on traditional capital markets, they take on obligations to shareholders and capital providers that can complicate a pure hold-through-volatility strategy.
Simon Dixon, a Bitcoin analyst, said investors should recognize that the managers of public treasury companies now operate inside a broader financial structure. He said:
“Those who care about Bitcoin should understand who Adam, Saylor and others running Bitcoin treasury companies ultimately work for now, and adjust their expectations accordingly.”
Strategy has turned Bitcoin into the base layer of a corporate credit strategy. The question now is how that structure behaves if the market stops supplying the conditions that made it work: rising Bitcoin prices, steady investor demand, and open access to new capital.
The post Strategy sold 32 BTC to pay dividends – But the real risk is what happens if it has to sell more Bitcoin appeared first on CryptoSlate.
XRP’s latest drop has turned bullish flows into a live test of market control. ETF demand and exchange outflows still point to support, but spot sellers are setting the price near multi-month lows.
The token has been trading around the low-$1.30s after hitting its weakest level in roughly 15 weeks, even as two data points bulls often treat as supportive moved in the other direction.
Spot XRP ETFs have continued to attract money, with cumulative inflows around $1.42 billion, while late-May exchange-flow data showed more than 25 million XRP moving off exchanges after a prior inflow.
That combination would normally invite a simple accumulation case. Less XRP on exchanges can mean less immediately available sell-side supply. ETF inflows can show that regulated wrappers are still drawing capital.
Yet price action points to something colder: neither signal has been enough to stop sellers from setting the marginal price.
CryptoSlate's XRP market page showed the asset near $1.30 on June 1, with a market cap around $80.87 billion and roughly $1.62 billion in 24-hour volume.
The token remains a top-five crypto asset by market value, but that size has not protected it from a market where rebounds are still being sold.

The ETF side of the story has the clearest bullish potential.
SoSoValue data puts late-May spot XRP ETF inflows at roughly $11.8 million on May 29, taking cumulative net inflows to about $1.4 billion. Investor demand for XRP exposure through regulated products has continued during the latest drawdown.
ETF inflows are separate from immediate control of the spot market. They show that capital is entering a wrapper. They do not prove that enough aggressive buying is hitting exchange order books at the moment sellers are pressing sell orders through the market.
XRP has already spent much of May showing the same disconnect.
A recent analysis of XRP's bullish signals found that ETF inflows, exchange withdrawals, and rising ledger activity had built a constructive setup, while price action still failed to follow.
The June 1 low moves that setup forward from a stalled bullish case to a clearer test of whether those flows can support the token before traders give up on the support zone.
| Signal | Bullish case | Offsetting pressure |
|---|---|---|
| Spot XRP ETF inflows | Regulated-product demand remains visible | Wrapper demand has yet to overpower spot selling |
| Late-May exchange outflows | Less XRP may be available for immediate selling | The flow followed a large exchange inflow and covers a short window |
| XRP still near the top of market rankings | Liquidity and attention remain deep relative to most altcoins | The token is still near a 15-week low |
| Prior accumulation signals | Bulls can argue that supply is being absorbed | Price keeps treating rebounds as sell zones |
The table shows the risk in reading ETF demand in isolation. Each constructive signal has a plausible bullish interpretation, but each also has an offsetting pressure that carries more weight for price right now.
What traders need to ask now is whether those flows are strong enough, direct enough, or immediate enough to change who controls spot trading.
The exchange-flow data shows the same tension.
Santiment showed a 22.80 million XRP exchange inflow before the balance reversed, with about 25.24 million XRP moving off exchanges in late May.
The second part of that sequence can look constructive. Coins leaving exchanges often reduce the supply available for fast selling and can point to custody, accumulation, or positioning away from trading venues.
In a stronger market, such a move could help confirm a bounce.
A 22.80 million XRP inflow shows that meaningful supply had also moved toward exchanges before the reversal.
The outflow that followed carries weight, but it leaves the earlier sign of sell-side pressure in the picture. It also cannot prove by itself that buyers are willing to absorb spot supply at higher prices.
The price response shows why the distinction counts. If XRP moves off exchanges and the price still falls to a multi-month low, visible exchange balances are only one part of the pressure.
Spot demand, order-book depth, leverage, and trader confidence can all carry more weight in the immediate window.
CryptoSlate's XRP data also shows why centralized exchange behavior can be impactful: XRP's 24-hour CEX volume was around $1.62 billion, compared with DEX volume of about $1.4 million.
For this market, the main price signal is still being formed on centralized venues, so exchange flows and liquidity conditions are where the ETF and accumulation narratives meet live selling.
The sell-zone pattern has been building for months. An earlier analysis found that XRP losses were forcing late buyers out and turning rebounds into fresh selling areas.
The latest low suggests that behavior has not fully cleared. Outflows can reduce potential supply, but they cannot repair sentiment if traders keep using every bounce to exit.
The strongest explanation for the contradiction is market structure.
XRP can keep some bullish signals and still leave sellers in control when liquidity is thin enough, and spot conviction weak enough, for marginal selling to push through supportive flow headlines.
A recent look at XRP liquidity found that Binance's 30-day XRP liquidity index was near 0.043, its lowest level since January 2020, while all-exchange open interest hovered near $2.9 billion and futures volume ran at about 6.8 times spot volume.
Under those conditions, price can move sharply even when the broader story contains bullish data points.

Thin liquidity changes how flow signals should be understood. In a deep market, ETF inflows and exchange outflows may help absorb selling pressure over time.
In a less liquid market, a smaller burst of spot selling can still move price, especially if derivatives activity is high and traders are leaning on the same levels.
Broader ETF rotation is less important here than it might look at first. XRP inflows have stood out at times while Bitcoin and Ethereum products faced pressure, and CryptoSlate has covered that ETF rotation.
Relative ETF strength is different from outright price strength. XRP can attract capital through one channel and still fall if the spot market is weaker, less liquid, or more leveraged than the inflow headline suggests.
For now, the next test is price, rather than another bullish data point. Buyers need to make the supportive flow signals visible in the chart.
A recovery through the low-$1.30s and a reclaim of the $1.34 area would show that buyers are finally absorbing visible sell pressure.
That makes $1.31 the immediate line to watch. Hold it and reclaim $1.34, and the flow data starts to matter again.
Lose it while ETF inflows and exchange outflows remain constructive, and the market will be showing that wrapper demand and apparent accumulation still have no control over spot XRP.
The post XRP tests $1.31 as ETF demand clashes with spot selling appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Cardano's 2026 Summit in Singapore is off after the network's treasury governance process failed to approve funding for it.
The official event page now says the Summit will not take place on Oct. 5-6 as previously announced. The cause is governance: Cardano Foundation said treasury-funded initiatives are subject to community vote, and the community decided not to proceed with the proposal.
A governance abstraction has therefore turned into a public budget veto. A revised 7.8 million ADA request from the Cardano Foundation, already cut from an earlier bundled proposal, expired below the Delegated Representative threshold.
The proposal recorded 64.61% DRep yes support against a 0.67 treasury-withdrawal threshold. A related Singapore presence still survived the vote, as EMURGO's separate TOKEN2049 sponsorship proposal passed.
The result is more specific, and more revealing: DReps blocked the dedicated Summit while allowing a related Singapore sponsorship to continue.

The revised governance action had a defined business and community scope. It asked for 7.8 million ADA, based on a $0.25 ADA assumption, to fund a $1.95 million Summit budget.
It described a two-day event in Singapore with one Ecosystem Day for builders, DReps, governance sessions, and workshops. That would be followed by an Industry Day aimed at enterprise, institutional, and regulatory audiences.
The Foundation had already revised the ask after community feedback. The proposal said the budget was reduced by 22%, or $550,000, and separated from EMURGO's TOKEN2049 sponsorship.
It also increased the Foundation's expected internal resource contribution to reduce external vendor costs. The proposal's targets show the work the cancellation now affects.
The Summit was pitched as a funnel for 1,200 attendees, 250 enterprise marketing-qualified leads, and 50 strategic meetings within 45 days after the event.
Those numbers were proposal goals rather than delivered results. They positioned the Summit as both a community event and a business-development vehicle at the edge of Cardano's wider Singapore conference push.
| Item | Funding Ask | Status | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revised Cardano Summit 2026 Singapore | 7.8 million ADA | Expired below DRep threshold | DReps blocked the dedicated event budget |
| EMURGO TOKEN2049 sponsorship | Separate sponsorship proposal | Passed | DReps distinguished the sponsorship from the Summit budget |
The threshold mechanics explain why a majority-support figure still failed. Cardano treasury withdrawals require Constitutional Committee and DRep approval, with DRep approval set at 0.67 and no stake pool operator threshold for that action type.
The same 67% DRep pass threshold also appears in GovTool's treasury withdrawal documentation. That design gave DReps the power to stop the withdrawal even after 64.61% yes support.
A funding action can draw majority support and still expire when the required delegated-stake threshold sits above the final vote total.
For Cardano, that is the point of the system and the source of the problem. Treasury governance is supposed to impose discipline on spending.
It is supposed to make institutions justify requests, split bundled asks, respond to feedback, and accept a result when the threshold is missed. This vote shows that machinery working.
It also converts budget discipline into an operational outcome: the Summit disappeared from the 2026 calendar.
Cardano's broader 2026 funding fight has already been building. Input Output had reduced its annual treasury funding request to $46.8 million as the ecosystem moved away from single-entity dominance and toward community-controlled funding approval.
A later vote brought DRep resistance, abstentions, and concern that proposals tied to Cardano's technical roadmap were struggling around the same 67% approval area.
The Summit cancellation turns that funding tension into a calendar outcome ecosystem participants can see. The proposal itself targeted builders, governance participants, enterprise leads, and strategic meetings.
Those audiences can now observe a planned event being removed by the same treasury system that Cardano is asking them to trust.
So it cuts both ways. On one side, it strengthens Cardano's claim that on-chain governance has teeth.
The Foundation proposed, revised, and still had to accept that the treasury would withhold funding. The constraint is meaningful precisely because it applied to a request from one of the ecosystem's central institutions.
On the other side, a governance system that can stop spending also has to prove it can fund high-value work on usable timelines.
If major initiatives repeatedly miss thresholds after late revisions, Cardano may gain budget discipline while losing execution speed. For events, that risk can appear as calendar uncertainty, weaker partner confidence, and fewer clear chances to use large industry gatherings as distribution moments.
The failed Summit vote also complicates Cardano's institutional narrative. The revised proposal argued that Singapore would put Cardano in front of enterprise, financial, and regulatory audiences during TOKEN2049 week.
DReps could treat that strategic goal and the budget request as separate questions. Outside the governance process, the visible outcome is simpler: Cardano goes into 2026 without its dedicated Singapore Summit.
ADA's market context gives the story a financial backdrop. On June 1, ADA traded near $0.23, a little more than 2% lower over 24 hours, with market capitalization around $8.4 billion and 24-hour volume around $360 million.
The vote shows how treasury scrutiny can shape the ecosystem's public calendar as well as its balance sheet.
The next test is whether Cardano can turn this veto into a clearer funding process instead of another source of institutional drag. Future treasury proposals may face pressure to show tighter budgets, cleaner separation from adjacent sponsorships, and stronger evidence that spending creates measurable ecosystem value.
The Summit vote makes decentralization operational. DReps can now restrain core institutions in public.
The question is whether Cardano can pair that restraint with enough coordination to keep building, selling, and showing up where the next wave of users and institutions are making decisions.
The post Cardano 2026 Summit canceled after treasury vote misses key threshold appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The cryptocurrency market is experiencing a severe intraday correction on June 2, 2026. Ethereum ($ETH) has officially breached its critical $2,000 psychological support zone, hitting an intraday low near $1,963. This macro markdown follows a systemic bleed-out led by Bitcoin ($BTC), which cascaded below the definitive $70,000 threshold for the first time in nearly two months.

The downside momentum accelerated during early European trading hours, triggering automated stop-losses and derivative liquidations across major digital asset exchanges like Bitstamp and Binance.
The driving force behind Ethereum’s sudden decline is entirely tied to the negative structural shift in Bitcoin’s price action. The leading cryptocurrency faced dual headwinds that crushed buyer sentiment over the last 24 hours:

As capital aggressively rotated out of Bitcoin, the wider altcoin landscape collapsed. Since $Ethereum remains tightly correlated with BTC's market dominance, the drop under $70,000 forced an immediate technical breakdown in Ethereum.
Looking at the 4-hour ETH/USD chart, the price action paints an intensely bearish picture for short-term holders.

The cryptocurrency market faced severe downward pressure on Tuesday morning as the Bitcoin price officially broke below the critical $70,000 psychological baseline. $BTC dropped by nearly 4% over a 24-hour window, hitting intraday lows near $69,371.

This unexpected correction has disrupted weeks of sideways momentum and triggered a cascade of automated sell orders. Total crypto market liquidations surged past $766 million within a matter of hours, with over $600 million consisting of overleveraged long positions being wiped out.
The sudden breakdown below $70,000 is primarily attributed to a combination of institutional sell pressure and the sudden awakening of long-dormant wallets.
Market anxiety intensified following a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) 8-K filing revealing that MicroStrategy sold 32 Bitcoins between May 26 and May 31 to fund shareholder dividends. While the dollar amount of the sale was minor—valued at approximately $2.5 million—the psychological impact on retail and institutional investors was massive. MicroStrategy’s departure from its strict buy-and-hold narrative ignited widespread FUD (Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt), accelerating a $483 million capital flight from U.S. spot $Bitcoin ETFs.
Adding fuel to the fire, blockchain tracking firm Arkham Intelligence flagged a massive movement of 10,306 BTC (worth roughly $739 million) out of Mt. Gox cold storage into new active wallets. This represents the largest estate movement in over two months, raising investor concerns that imminent creditor distributions are about to hit the open market.

With the $70,000 floor officially invalidated, Bitcoin's short-term technical structure looks increasingly bearish. If the daily candle fails to close back above $70,000, market analysts warn of an extended correction. Weakening spot ETF inflows coupled with escalating macroeconomic uncertainties could pave the way for a deeper retest of the $65,000 macro support zone over the coming weeks.
XRP has broken below the key psychological and technical support level of $1.30. Following a period of distribution throughout May, the token faces heightened selling pressure at the beginning of June.
The technical breakdown coincides with scheduled network updates and localized supply expansions, forcing traders to re-evaluate near-term downside risks and potential reversal areas.
The 4-hour XRP/USD chart shows a definitive breakdown from a descending triangle structure. The descending yellow trendline has consistently suppressed attempted relief rallies since mid-May, capping higher bounds and compressing price action into horizontal support.

Exacerbating XRP's structural weakness is a sharp decline in Bitcoin ($BTC), which has fallen below the critical $70,000 threshold for the first time since April. The market bellwether faced a sudden wave of liquidations following an SEC filing by its largest corporate holder, Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), disclosing a rare sale of tokens to fulfill dividend obligations. Though the sale amount was nominal, it shattered the "never selling" narrative and induced widespread FUD across institutional channels.

This corporate selling pressure has coupled with persistent macroeconomic headwinds reported on Forbes, including massive capital outflows from spot Bitcoin ETFs as investors rotate capital into safer equity sectors like artificial intelligence. Furthermore, escalating geopolitical friction in the Middle East has quashed general risk appetite. Because $Bitcoin dictates systemic crypto market correlation, its ongoing battle to maintain the $70,000 floor introduces a severe risk outlook for altcoins. If BTC breaks decisively lower toward $60,000, it will likely drag XRP and the wider market down into a prolonged capitulation phase.
The immediate trigger for the increased liquid supply comes alongside Ripple’s standard monthly operations. According to on-chain tracking data compiled, Ripple executed its scheduled escrow unlock on June 1, releasing 1 billion $XRP across three separate transactions.
While the majority of these monthly distributions are historically returned to locked escrow accounts to manage long-term supply inflation, the structural introduction of liquidity often creates short-term headwind pressures when broader market sentiment remains risk-off.
Despite the localized price correction, structural indicators show underlying capital rotation into the XRP ecosystem. Following the definitive settlement of the Ripple vs. SEC lawsuit in late 2025, systemic regulatory risks have largely abated. This institutional shift has fostered continuous inflows into regulated spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and expansion protocols like the RLUSD stablecoin framework, establishing a fundamental divergence between short-term technical volatility and long-term network utility.
Bitcoin has experienced a sharp, sudden correction, breaking down from its recent consolidation range to test lower macro support levels. The premier cryptocurrency plummeted toward the $71,000 threshold, leaving traders questioning whether the psychological support at $70,000 will hold or if a broader market liquidation is underway.
The drop comes at a highly ironic moment for market participants, arriving right alongside major capital restructuring updates from Michael Saylor’s Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy).
The 4-hour BTC/USD chart paints a distinctly bearish picture for the short term. After spending days consolidating in a tight distribution phase between $73,100 and $74,500, the bears aggressively seized control.

The Relative Strength Index (RSI-14) has plunged sharply down to 25.55, steering well into oversold territory. While an oversold RSI indicates that the immediate selling pressure may be overextended, it also demonstrates intense bearish momentum. In severe downtrends, the RSI can remain suppressed for extended intervals before a meaningful reversal materializes.
A significant point of discussion during this downward move is the structural dynamic of institutional accumulation versus broader market distributions. Michael Saylor's Strategy recently made headlines by shifting a massive $2.0 billion through capital markets to aggressively stack another 24,869 Bitcoins, bringing their total holdings to a staggering 843,706 $BTC.
However, the broader market quickly realized a fundamental structural flaw: Saylor may be the most persistent buyer, but he is not the only market participant.
While Strategy acts as a persistent vacuum for circulating supply, systemic liquidity factors are overriding this single-source buying power:
The next several daily closes will be pivotal for BTC. If buyers fail to step in and orchestrate a swift recovery back above the $72,000 mark, the gravitation toward $70,000 will become irresistible.
Traders should monitor global macroeconomic indicators, upcoming U.S. economic data releases, and spot ETF net inflow data on tracking platforms like CoinMarketCap to gauge if retail and institutional interest will return to defend the $70,000 baseline.
Crypto exchange Binance has officially expanded into traditional equities by launching direct U.S. stock and ETF trading for eligible non-U.S. users. Accompanying this rollout is the announcement of "bStocks," an upcoming feature that will allow users to convert their traditional equity holdings into tokenized securities directly on the BNB Chain.
The new feature enables Binance users to trade over 7,000 U.S.-listed stocks and ETFs using existing crypto balances, including stablecoins like USDT and USDC, as well as Binance's native token, BNB. The exchange is targeting global retail accessibility by offering zero-commission trading and fractional shares starting at a $5 minimum.
To facilitate the service while remaining within legal parameters, Binance has partnered with traditional financial intermediaries. The execution of buy and sell orders is handled by broker-dealer Nest Trading, while New York-based financial firm Alpaca manages asset custody, dividend distributions, and corporate actions.
This model offers users exposure to traditional equity price movements directly inside the crypto application, running 24 hours a day, five days a week.
While the immediate launch provides a unified interface for traditional stocks, Binance co-CEO Richard Teng confirmed that the secondary phase involves full on-chain tokenization. Planned for release in the coming weeks, the "bStocks" initiative will give users the option to tokenize their equity assets.
Once converted to bStocks on the BNB Chain, these digital certificates will function as programmable real-world assets (RWAs). This enables features unique to the digital asset ecosystem:
According to Binance’s official product disclosure, bStocks are legally classified as certificates representing specific financial instruments. They do not grant direct legal ownership or voting rights in the underlying public companies, but rather mirror the financial and economic exposure of the shares.
This shift highlights a growing industry trend where major digital asset platforms compete directly with traditional fintech brokerages like Robinhood and Webull. By eliminating the friction of onboarding onto multiple applications, Binance aims to capture broader overseas retail capital.
The integration of traditional equities alongside major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and BNB marks a significant step toward the convergence of decentralized finance and legacy capital markets.
Bitcoin fell below $70K on the back of the sales, and a major Polymarket dispute is brewing over whether Strategy indeed sold in May or not.
Nvidia's Nemotron 3 Ultra tops every American open-weight AI system by a wide margin—but still trails the Chinese-led frontier.
As Google buries its search results under AI-generated answers, DuckDuckGo believes a growing number of users just want the old internet back.
Telegram is taking the reins of The Open Network, years after abandoning the project—and it plans to adopt Toncoin's originally planned name.
SpaceX's amended IPO filing signals the company may issue substantial new shares in future transactions as Elon Musk expands its ambitions.
Shiba Inu is unlikely to reclaim a bullish market wave as inflows spike substantially.
Ripple CTO emeritus breaks silence on role at company's inception.
Kalshi issues new proposal to the SEC to officially bring perpetual futures for XRP and other major crypto assets to the U.S. market.
XRP Ledger payment volume exploded nearly 10x in a single day, with more than 1.5 billion XRP transferred.
The trader who nailed the 700% XRP run calls out the fake 'Saylor sell panic' and sets a hard Bitcoin floor.
Broadcom experienced a significant 6.8% surge during Tuesday’s pre-market session, reaching $491.09, propelled by a pair of favorable developments that emerged simultaneously.
Broadcom Inc., AVGO
This rally elevated Broadcom’s total market capitalization past the $2 trillion milestone, positioning the company as the seventh most valuable corporation globally.
The initial driver stemmed from Alphabet’s declaration of an $80 billion equity offering aimed at financing artificial intelligence infrastructure expansion. While broader market sentiment toward this announcement remained divided, the implications for Broadcom proved decidedly positive.
Alphabet intends to deploy these resources toward constructing data centers equipped with proprietary processing units — technology that Broadcom plays a crucial role in engineering.
The secondary momentum came courtesy of Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang, who projected that Marvell Technology could eventually achieve a $1 trillion market capitalization. Such a valuation would signify approximately a 400% increase from Marvell’s current trading level.
Given that Broadcom and Marvell compete in overlapping market segments, Huang’s optimistic assessment appeared to generate upward pressure on both equities. Marvell posted a 7% gain during the session.
Broadcom had already demonstrated considerable strength entering Tuesday’s trading. The equity has appreciated 79% over the trailing twelve-month period through Monday’s close, fueled by escalating artificial intelligence chip demand.
The pre-market rally arrives just days before Broadcom reports fiscal second-quarter 2026 financial results, scheduled for release on June 3.
Susquehanna’s Christopher Rolland elevated his price objective from $450 to $490 on May 28, maintaining his Positive stance. The analyst refreshed his financial model in anticipation of the report, projecting sustained momentum in custom XPU sales coupled with robust TPU demand.
Susquehanna did acknowledge one modification. Broadcom’s original TPU deliveries to Anthropic have been restructured to exclude complete rack systems, prompting the firm to reduce its custom XPU revenue projection for calendar 2026.
UBS executed a comparable adjustment on May 18, raising its price target from $475 to $490 while reaffirming its Buy recommendation.
UBS also addressed the Anthropic contract revision — transitioning from comprehensive rack solutions to a more conventional ASIC configuration. This modification diminishes anticipated revenue to roughly 25% of the initial expectation.
Nevertheless, UBS emphasized that the reconfigured arrangement should deliver substantially improved profit margins, potentially mitigating a portion of the revenue shortfall.
Both financial institutions now maintain $490 price objectives, with Broadcom trading marginally above that threshold in pre-market activity at $491.09.
The company’s June 3 earnings disclosure will attract considerable attention given the Anthropic contract modifications, persistent AI semiconductor demand, and potential guidance adjustments.
Broadcom concluded Monday’s session with its market capitalization newly surpassing the $2 trillion benchmark, an exclusive tier occupied by only a select group of global enterprises.
The post Broadcom (AVGO) Surges 7% as Alphabet’s AI Investment and Nvidia CEO’s Comments Fuel Rally appeared first on Blockonomi.
For most of the last cycle, the metrics that defined growth in crypto were the metrics that were easiest to inflate. Total Value Locked. Transaction count. Active wallet count over the previous day. Twitter follower count. Each of these has a number that goes up, and each of them was treated as evidence that something was working. In retrospect, none of them measured the thing they were supposed to be measuring.
The thing they were supposed to be measuring is whether users actually use the product. That is a harder thing to measure, which is part of why the easier metrics were preferred for so long.
A useful exercise in 2026 is to take any protocol whose growth chart looked impressive at any point between 2020 and 2022, and ask what percentage of the wallets transacting at the peak are still active today. Most of the time, the answer is in single digits. Most of the rest of the time, it is small enough that the protocol’s team would prefer not to share it. This was not always due to bad-faith activity. Sometimes the wallets were retail users who simply moved on. More often, the wallets were not really users in any operational sense. They were yield-farming addresses, points-program participants, multi-wallet farmers, or bot accounts run by sophisticated operators who knew the incentive timing better than the protocols’ own teams did.
This is the part of the cycle that is becoming uncomfortable for the industry to look at directly. The growth was not real. The metrics that proxied it were not measuring users. The teams that designed those metrics for their own dashboards were often the same teams that knew the limits of the data, and shipped it externally anyway because the alternative was a chart with smaller numbers on it.
A quieter pattern has been forming in the years since. A subset of crypto products has started paying attention to a different category of metric, one that is harder to game and slower to compound: real traction. The vocabulary for it is not standardized. Some teams call it sticky usage. Some call it retention. Some call it organic activity. The underlying observation is the same. A user who returns to the product seven days after their first transaction, then returns again at the end of the month, then returns the following quarter, is a user the protocol has earned. A wallet that shows up during an airdrop window and never returns is not a user; it is a marketing artifact.
The teams that have been compounding on the harder definition of traction are starting to look different from the teams that compounded on the easier one. Their growth charts are less impressive in the moment and more durable over time. They tend to have multi-product engagement, which is to say that a meaningful share of their users actually uses more than one of the products the team has shipped. They tend not to need an active marketing engine, because the users who came in earlier brought friends. They tend to have honest data, because the protocols whose growth is real are also the protocols whose teams stopped feeling the need to flatter the data.
A useful example of this pattern at the application layer is Nika Finance, a non-custodial application combining spot trading, perpetuals, staking, yield, and prediction markets powered by Polymarket across multiple chains in a mobile-first interface. The traction Nika has accumulated has accumulated without a marketing engine. The audience has compounded through use. The data the team looks at, and the data the team is willing to share with people who ask honest questions about it, is data about users who came back. A meaningful share of those users uses more than one of the five product lines the team has shipped, which is a metric most single-product crypto teams would struggle to disclose at all.
“The industry spent years confusing incentivized activity with real product demand. The products that last will be the ones users come back to consistently after the incentives are gone.” said Daniel Brinzan, founder of Nika Finance.
The point of looking at real traction is not to embarrass the teams whose growth turned out to be temporary. Many of those teams were operating in good faith inside an incentive structure that rewarded the metrics the audience was willing to value. The audience has changed. The metrics that audience values have changed with it. Teams that adapted early to the harder definition of growth are now compounding on the right things, and the gap between them and the teams that did not is starting to be visible on the surface.
The implication for the next several quarters of crypto is that growth charts alone will stop being persuasive. A protocol that wants to claim it is growing will need to be able to explain, in specific terms, what its users do, how often they come back, and how much of the traction in the chart would survive a sudden removal of incentives. The teams that can answer those questions cleanly are already pulling ahead.
The post Not All Crypto Growth Is Real Growth appeared first on Blockonomi.
Shares of Credo Technology tumbled 14% during extended trading hours Monday before moderating losses to finish 4.2% lower at $226.10, following the release of impressive fiscal fourth-quarter earnings coupled with forward guidance that underwhelmed the market.
Credo Technology Group Holding Ltd, CRDO
The shares remained approximately 2% lower in pre-market activity Tuesday. Nonetheless, CRDO has delivered a 58% gain year-to-date and has climbed 157% from its March 30 trough.
Fourth-quarter revenue reached an all-time high of $437 million, representing a 157% year-over-year increase and exceeding the $431.8 million analyst projection. Non-GAAP earnings per share registered $1.16, comfortably beating the $1.02 consensus and significantly higher than the $0.35 reported in the prior-year period.
For the complete fiscal 2026 year, revenue totaled $1.3 billion — a 206% annual expansion. Non-GAAP net income multiplied more than five times to $662 million. The quarter generated $177.5 million in free cash flow, with the company concluding the period with $1.4 billion in cash reserves.
Chief Executive Bill Brennan described fiscal 2026 as “another defining year,” highlighting that fourth-quarter revenue alone surpassed the company’s entire fiscal 2025 annual revenue.
For the first quarter of fiscal 2027, Credo projected revenue ranging from $465 million to $475 million. While this exceeds the Street consensus of $461.3 million, market participants had anticipated a more robust forecast.
Full-year fiscal 2027 revenue is anticipated to expand over 80% year-over-year. Company leadership indicated that approximately half of this expansion will stem from its optical product line, with the remainder driven by copper-based solutions including Active Electrical Cables and retimer products.
Non-GAAP net margin is forecast to remain around 50% throughout the fiscal year.
Major customers include Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta. The company’s four largest accounts each represented at least 10% of fourth-quarter revenue, with the top customer alone accounting for 34%.
Credo completed its acquisition of DustPhotonics last week, paying $750 million in cash plus 920,000 shares of CRDO stock. This transaction enhances Credo’s portfolio with silicon photonics and photonic integrated circuit capabilities.
Company executives noted that DustPhotonics brings established 800G and 1.6T design wins alongside a development roadmap extending to 3.2 terabits per second. The technology’s architecture requires fewer lasers, potentially reducing expenses and enhancing reliability.
Credo anticipates its optical portfolio — encompassing optical DSPs, silicon photonics PICs, and ZeroFlap Optics — will produce more than $600 million in fiscal 2027 revenue. Each of the three product categories is projected to individually exceed $100 million in sales.
ZeroFlap Optics is forecast to be the primary optical revenue generator due to superior average selling prices — reaching triple digits compared to double digits for discrete components.
Brennan indicated that mid-single-digit sequential expansion is projected during the first half of fiscal 2027, with acceleration anticipated in the second half fueled by optical product adoption.
Looking toward fiscal 2028, Credo anticipates production scaling for its AEC and OmniConnect product lines, along with its Weaver gearbox solution designed to address emerging inference memory bottlenecks.
CFO Dan Fleming stated the company has no intentions to pursue additional capital raises or stock repurchase programs following the DustPhotonics cash transaction.
The post Credo Technology (CRDO) Shares Dip Despite Record-Breaking Quarterly Performance appeared first on Blockonomi.
Crude oil markets experienced volatility Tuesday as contradictory messages from U.S. and Iranian officials left investors uncertain about prospects for a diplomatic resolution.
Brent crude, the global pricing benchmark, declined approximately 2% to reach $93.06 per barrel during Tuesday’s trading session. West Texas Intermediate similarly retreated roughly 1.9% to settle at $90.32 per barrel.

The Tuesday decline followed a significant rally during the previous session. Benchmarks surged 4.2% Monday after Tasnim, Iran’s semi-official news outlet, claimed Tehran had halted peace negotiations with Washington in response to Israel’s military operations targeting Lebanon.
Trump subsequently disputed that characterization. Via his Truth Social platform, the president stated that Hezbollah had committed to ceasing attacks on Israel, with Israel reciprocating that commitment. He emphasized that diplomatic discussions with Iran were continuing without interruption.
During a conversation with ABC News, Trump indicated that a memorandum of understanding with Iran regarding the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz could materialize within seven days. He acknowledged that Washington still needed to resolve “a few more points” before finalizing any agreement.
The Strait of Hormuz represents a narrow maritime passage situated between Iran and Oman at the Persian Gulf’s entrance. Under typical conditions, approximately one-fifth of global daily petroleum and liquefied natural gas shipments transit through this chokepoint.
Following the escalation of regional tensions, commercial vessel traffic through the strait has faced substantial limitations. This bottleneck has maintained global oil prices significantly above pre-conflict trading ranges.
Tasnim also reported that Tehran and allied regional actors had deliberated over potentially closing both the Strait of Hormuz and the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, a critical passage located at the Red Sea’s southern terminus. Such action would impact an additional crucial corridor for petroleum exports.
Analysts at HSBC characterized the current commodities environment as a “super-squeeze,” cautioning that conditions could deteriorate further should Hormuz remain effectively shuttered.
Giovanni Staunovo, a commodity analyst with UBS, noted Tuesday that Trump’s social media communications suggesting de-escalation were applying downward pressure on crude benchmarks. Nevertheless, he emphasized that petroleum shipments through Hormuz “remain restricted.”
Market observers anticipate price declines following any diplomatic breakthrough, though not to pre-conflict baseline levels.
Dave Sekera, Morningstar’s chief U.S. market strategist, projected that prices would decrease “pretty substantially” after a resolution emerges. He warned, however, that inflationary consequences from prolonged elevated oil prices could persist “for at least months if not several quarters.”
The ceasefire dynamics involving Israel and Hezbollah introduced additional complexity. Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu provided conflicting accounts regarding a telephonic discussion about Lebanon. Lebanon’s presidential office indicated that further negotiations were scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday, aiming to expand any ceasefire agreement throughout Lebanese territory.
As of Tuesday morning, crude benchmarks remained substantially elevated compared to pre-conflict levels, with the Strait of Hormuz continuing to operate under severe commercial traffic limitations.
The post Crude Oil Markets Retreat as Trump Confirms Ongoing Negotiations with Iran appeared first on Blockonomi.
Micron Technology, Inc. (MU) shares climbed 6.64% to settle at $1,035.50 following its comprehensive AI memory product presentation. Yet, MU experienced a 0.44% decline in pre-market activity to $1,030.20 as profit-taking emerged. The stock movement came after Micron Technology’s COMPUTEX 2026 presentation detailing HBM4 technology, DRAM innovations, NAND products, enterprise SSDs, and edge AI solutions.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
Micron Technology leveraged COMPUTEX 2026 to unveil an extensive memory and storage ecosystem designed for artificial intelligence workloads. The semiconductor manufacturer highlighted solutions spanning training environments, inference operations, agent-driven systems, and extended-context applications. Furthermore, the presentation emphasized how memory throughput and storage velocity increasingly determine AI system capabilities.
The semiconductor leader indicated that AI context windows are expanding dramatically on an annual basis. It further revealed that memory allocation per server has doubled within a three-year period. Micron characterized memory and storage technologies as critical components in AI-driven data facilities.
Micron Technology’s data center portfolio encompasses HBM, LPDDR, DDR, RDIMMs, and professional-grade SSDs. HBM technology enables accelerated model processing and high-speed key-value caching, whereas DDR supports system coordination and expanded context windows. Concurrently, SSDs manage ongoing cache requirements and expansive data repositories throughout AI environments.
Micron Technology showcased the HBM4 36GB 12H module as a strategic component for large-language-model inference operations. The semiconductor manufacturer stated this solution can boost inference performance by 2.6 times. Additionally, this improvement occurs with each doubling of bandwidth capacity, according to company validation.
The organization also featured SOCAMM2 within its energy-efficient data center initiative. Micron Technology indicated its 256GB SOCAMM2 delivers the maximum capacity available in this category. Furthermore, it consumes one-third the energy and occupies one-third the physical space of conventional RDIMMs.
Micron has also distributed samples of a 256GB DDR5 RDIMM manufactured with 1-gamma process technology. This memory module achieves performance levels reaching 9,200 megatransfers per second. Moreover, it operates 40% faster than existing high-volume modules while reducing operational power consumption by more than 40%.
Micron Technology also emphasized its data center SSD lineup designed for AI training and inference applications. The Micron 9650 SSD represents the industry’s first commercially shipping PCIe Gen6 solid-state drive, the company confirmed. Simultaneously, the 6600 ION now delivers 245TB capacity and addresses high-density storage demands.
The company reported the 6600 ION decreases rack space requirements by 82% when compared with HDD configurations. It also reduces energy consumption by 50% relative to traditional hard-drive architectures. Micron Technology connected its SSD development pipeline to reduced data center real estate and operational energy expenses.
Micron additionally broadened its AI strategy to encompass personal computers, smartphones, automotive systems, robotics platforms, and embedded applications. Its LPCAMM2, GDDR7, LPDDR5X, 4600 SSD, and UFS 4.1 solutions enable enhanced edge computing performance. Collectively, the COMPUTEX presentation reinforced MU stock’s position within the expanding intersection of AI processing and memory infrastructure requirements.
The post Micron Technology (MU) Stock Climbs on HBM4 Launch and AI Memory Innovation at COMPUTEX 2026 appeared first on Blockonomi.
Outpoll introduces a new global prediction market platform that enables users to trade on the outcomes of real-world events. Categories include, but are not limited to, politics, sports, crypto, culture, and more – with a product layer that is centered on professional trading tools, access through a public API, integrated news layer, a native mobile experience, as well as creator-led markets.
It goes without saying that prediction markets have managed to move from niche to mainstream throughout the last two years. Volumes are already in the billions, institutional capital is here, and the prices these markets produce are cited alongside polls and expert forecasts. That said, the trading layer seems to have been slower to keep pace with the actual experience of taking, managing, and exiting positions on these markets.
The Outpoll prediction market platform is one of the venues that aim to close that particular gap.
At its heart, Outpoll brings forward a prediction market – in the structural sense that the category has converged on. Users are able to trade on whether specific events will happen, with positions resolving against defined outcomes.
The mechanics will feel very familiar to those of you who have already used such a platform before, and this is a deliberate choice.
However, what Outpoll changes is the layer above the mechanics. The majority of prediction markets historically offer the same thin interaction. Users have to pick a side, hit the button, hold the position, and then watch the chart, waiting for resolution. Outpoll is built on the assumption that people trading these markets expect more.

One of the most immediate things that experienced traders will notice is the order ticket. Both limit and market orders are, of course, available, while take-profit and stop-loss can be set on open positions.
These are pretty much the standard features on the majority of other trading venues, with platform-level oversight ensuring orders execute against the published rules.
The practical effect is that you can set a position, protect it, and walk away. You can size into a position at a chosen price with a limit order, define a clear exit on both sides, and let the platform handle execution.
For anyone who has ever held a prediction market position through a violent re-pricing on a 3 AM news headline, the value of this infrastructure is absolutely obvious.
For those traders who operate through code and not through the UI, the platform will also publish a full public REST and WebSocket API. The use cases here are those that matter for active strategies: automating take-profit and stop-loss across a portfolio of positions, monitoring price drift across different markets in real-time, connecting Outpoll to different stacks that traders may already be running, and more.
The platform’s help center includes a dedicated section with API guides, as well as technical reference material, including practical Python examples of working strategies, and so forth.
This matters more than it might appear at a glance. Programmatic access is the channel through which sophisticated capital tends to arrive in any new market, and the presence of a real, usable API is one of the more reliable signals about who a platform expects its users to be.
One of the more distinctive structural choices that Outpoll is taking is its creator-led markets platform. Approved community leaders, subject-matter experts, and channel owners will be able to launch and curate their own prediction markets for their audiences.
The majority of prediction markets tend to be operated top-down. This means that the platform is in charge of deciding which markets exist, and users participate. Outpoll wants to open that layer to creators, while also keeping platform-level oversight on resolution and quality. A creator who covers a specific sport, political beat, or cultural niche is capable of extending the conversation they already have with their audience into a market where that audience can engage with directly.
For users who follow specific niches, this changes the texture of the platform. The market list reflects the actual distribution of attention online – not just the events a central team finds tractable to list. The result is broader topical coverage than a centrally-curated catalog can typically support, with markets often run by people deeply familiar with the underlying domain.

Prediction markets are news-driven more than most other venues. The events these markets price move on headlines – political developments, geopolitical shifts, macroeconomic prints, cultural moments – and the gap between consuming a relevant headline and acting on it is the friction the trader pays for.
Within the Outpoll platform, a dedicated news section sits directly inside the trading interface, aggregating relevant world news in one place. The intended path is straightforward: a development relevant to a market becomes immediately visible to a trader watching the platform, with a position one click away. No tab switching, no fragmented context, no gap between consuming the information and acting on it.
It is the kind of workflow detail that’s easy to overlook in a feature list and noticeable once a user has actually traded with it – because once one workflow runs without context-switching, the friction of every other workflow becomes obvious.

In today’s world, a considerable share of trading on prediction markets happens on phones. Moreover, this tends to happen in direct response to news, which are also consumed mostly on phones. Outpoll launches with a native Android application that is available on Google Play, whereas the iOS app is coming later in the autumn.
The order ticket, position management, charting, and notifications all behave the way they should on the mobile device. This might be a small thing on paper, but it’s a noticeable step in practice when the market resolves while you might be away from your desk.
Outpoll is designed with support for deposits in multiple currencies with in-app conversion. Users are able to fund their account in their preferred crypto asset, and the platform will handle the conversion to USDC, which is the primary settlement asset for trading. This happens without the necessity for an additional swap before depositing.
All markets are fully collateralized at the contract level, with the resolution rules and authoritative sources published before each market is live. The trading fees are approximately 0.1% per trade, which seems to be in line with industry norms.

To wrap it up, Outpoll does offer some interesting features, and it stands out for the following:
Disclaimer: The above article is sponsored content; it’s written by a third party. CryptoPotato doesn’t endorse or assume responsibility for the content, advertising, products, quality, accuracy, or other materials on this page. Nothing in it should be construed as financial advice. Readers are strongly advised to verify the information independently and carefully before engaging with any company or project mentioned and to do their own research. Investing in cryptocurrencies carries a risk of capital loss, and readers are also advised to consult a professional before making any decisions that may or may not be based on the above-sponsored content.
Readers are also advised to read CryptoPotato’s full disclaimer.
The post Outpoll: A New Paradigm in Prediction Markets appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Ethereum remains under pressure after failing to reclaim a major resistance cluster. The price is now hovering around a key long-term support zone. The broader structure suggests sellers still dominate the market, while weakening demand from US investors adds another layer of caution.
On the weekly timeframe, ETH has extended its rejection from the major horizontal resistance region around $2.4K. This zone has repeatedly acted as a pivotal level throughout the current cycle and has once again capped upside momentum. The rejection has pushed the asset back toward the ascending trendline that has supported the market since the 2022 bear market bottom.
ETH is currently trading around $2K, just above the trendline and the $1.8K demand zone. This area represents the most important support cluster on the chart, as it combines a horizontal support area with the long-term rising trendline.
As long as ETH remains above this confluence, the long-term market structure will be intact. However, a decisive breakdown below the trendline and the $1.8K support region could trigger a catastrophic correction toward the next major support area near $1,500 and cause more panic, even among long-term investors.
On the upside, the $2.4K zone remains the primary resistance. Reclaiming that area would be the first sign that buyers are regaining control and could open the door for a move toward $4.8K. Yet, with momentum conditions also remaining weak, as shown by the RSI, but not reaching the oversold region on the weekly timeframe, it seems that downside pressure has not fully exhausted itself. As a result, a deeper decline to test the critical support area is likely the scenario in the short-term.

The 4-hour chart paints a similarly bearish picture. ETH continues to trade inside a descending channel. The channel is clearly identifiable by consistent lower highs and lower lows since mid-May. Following the rejection from the $2.15K supply zone, the market resumed its downward trajectory and is now returning to the lower boundary of the channel. The price is currently moving inside the $1.95K to $2K support area, which is preventing a sharper decline.
Yet, the bearish channel structure remains the dominant technical feature. As long as ETH stays below the upper boundary of the pattern and beneath the $2.15K resistance zone, short-term momentum favors sellers. A breakdown below the current support region could expose the liquidity pocket around $1.95k and potentially lead to a long liquidation cascade and push the price deeper to test the lower boundary of the channel.
Conversely, a successful defense of the $1.95k area followed by a breakout above the channel’s upper trendline would likely be the first indication of a broader recovery toward $2.15K and potentially the key weekly resistance at $2.4K.

The Coinbase Premium Index continues to signal weak spot demand from U.S. investors. The metric has remained predominantly in negative territory throughout May and has recently declined toward approximately -0.13. This is one of its lowest readings in the past year.
Historically, sustained positive Coinbase Premium readings tend to accompany periods of strong institutional and U.S.-based buying activity. In contrast, the current negative values indicate that ETH is trading at a discount on Coinbase relative to offshore exchanges, suggesting weaker demand from a key segment of the market.
This weakness aligns with Ethereum’s ongoing downtrend and helps explain the market’s inability to reclaim the $2.4K resistance zone. While deeply negative Premium readings can sometimes precede local bottoms as selling pressure becomes exhausted, the metric currently shows little evidence of aggressive accumulation. So, unless the Coinbase Premium Index begins to recover and move back toward positive territory, supply and demand dynamics continue to support the cautious outlook implied by the technical structure.

The post Ethereum Price Prediction: How Low Can ETH Go If $2K Support Decisively Cracks? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Ripple inked strategic deals with three Turkey-based crypto platforms, aiming to boost adoption and usage of its stablecoin RLUSD.
Additionally, the company picked Istanbul Technical University (ITU) as its latest partner in its global University Blockchain Research Initiative (UBRI).
The company behind the popular cryptocurrency XRP revealed that its USD-pegged stablecoin is now available to institutions in Turkey via partnerships with BiLira, Bitexen, and Bitlo. Jack McDonald (SVP of Stablecoins at Ripple) said the country sits “at the crossroads of traditional financial and digital economy” and has one of the highest rates of crypto adoption globally.
“By providing a stable, USD-backed asset that is both transparent and fully regulated, we are empowering Turkish businesses to access global liquidity,” he added.
Alphan Göğüş, CEO at Bitexen MENA, also spoke on the matter. He described the collaboration as “the first step in a broader rollout” across the Bitexen Global platform.
“Supporting RLUSD aligns with our strategy to provide trusted, USD-denominated instruments within a compliant and scalable framework,” he said.
For his part, Sinan Koç, Co-Founder of BiLira, argued that the stablecoin is “uniquely equipped” to accelerate blockchain adoption in the country. As a matter of fact, Turkey has already emerged as a dominant player in the crypto world, and according to a 2025 Chainalysis report, it facilitates roughly $200 billion in annual transaction volume, outpacing its rivals in the MENA region.
Mustafa Aplay, CEO of Bitlo, said the partnership with Ripple offers the Turkish crypto ecosystem a direct, secure gateway to global financial markets.
“By integrating a regulated, enterprise-grade stablecoin like RLUSD, we’re providing our customers with the highest standard of digital dollars for enterprise needs,” he concluded.
Ripple’s stablecoin officially saw the light of day toward the end of 2024, and since then, it has experienced impressive advancement. Some heavyweights that have so far embraced it include crypto exchanges Binance and OKX, as well as America’s oldest bank, BNY Mellon. Its market capitalization has been rising lately and currently stands at around $1.81 billion, making RLUSD the 48th-largest digital asset.
In addition to collaborating with BiLira, Bitexen, and Bitlo, Ripple also shook hands with Istanbul Technical University (ITU). The partnership, funded via RLUSD, will support advanced research initiatives and graduate fellowships while establishing an XRP Ledger (XRPL) validator directly on the Istanbul Technical University ITU campus.
“By integrating academic research with hands-on decentralized infrastructure, Ripple and ITU are ensuring the next generation of Turkish researchers and students are at the forefront of blockchain innovation,” the official announcement reads.
The post Major Ripple (XRP) Announcement Affecting Turkish Users: Details appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin’s price troubles intensified in the past several hours as the asset dumped to its lowest levels in almost two months, under $70,000.
Interestingly, there are some major altcoins posting gains or smaller losses than BTC, which has harmed its dominance over the market.
It was just a couple of weeks ago when the primary cryptocurrency was riding high above $80,000 and even challenged $82,000 and $83,000. However, the subsequent rejection and correction have been quite painful. It quickly lost the $80,000 support and dived to $75,000 on May 23/24.
After a quick but unsuccessful rebound attempt that was halted at $78,000, the bears took control once again and initiated another leg down that drove BTC to under $74,000 in late May. Bitcoin maintained $73,000-$74,000 for a few days but broke down as June started.
It first dipped to $71,000 yesterday, where it found some support, but that was short-lived. The bears kept the pressure mounting, and BTC crashed below $70,000 earlier today for the first time since April 8 amid some Mt. Gox transfers. Moreover, its dominance over the market has been significantly reduced as many alts have charted more minor losses.
The metric has slumped to 56.3% on CG, down by approximately 2% in the past week or so. Its market capitalization now struggles to remain above $1.4 trillion.

Although most altcoins are in the red today, most of their losses are smaller than bitcoin’s. In fact, ETH is even slightly in the green on a daily scale, even though it continues to struggle below $2,000. XRP, TRX, ADA, and RAIN have dropped by under 3%, while BNB, HYPE, and SOL are down by around 1%.
XLM has plunged the most today after its recent run, and is now down by over 9%. In contrast, NEAR, ICP, and H have marked significant double-digit price pumps.
The total crypto market cap has dumped below $2.5 trillion on CG. Recall that the metric stood above $2.7 trillion just a few weeks ago.

The post Bitcoin Dominance Crashes as BTC Price Dumps Below $70K: Market Watch appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The EDGE token collapsed to an all-time low of around $0.40 on June 1, less than two weeks after it hit an all-time high of $1.54.
The crash wiped off about 51% of the token’s value in a single day, triggering more than $6.2 million in liquidations across major exchanges and drawing immediate accusations of insider manipulation from on-chain researcher ZachXBT.
edgeX, the decentralized perpetual futures DEX that issues the EDGE token, posted on X several hours after the crash began, acknowledging what it called “a sudden and irregular price movement.” The team also said they were working to understand what happened. Two hours later, the project followed with a firmer statement, saying the following:
“The edgeX protocol were not compromised in any way. This is not a hack, exploit, or security breach. What we have identified so far suggests deliberate attempts by certain external party to manipulate the market price of EDGE.”
The company added that it was working with relevant exchanges and platforms to identify the cause and pursue accountability. It also promised to provide a more detailed update once the said investigations were over.
However, their explanation was not well received everywhere, with ZachXBT, an on-chain investigator known for calling out bad actors in crypto, pushing back directly and stating that the EDGE supply appeared to be controlled by a small group with low circulating float. He also challenged the edgeX team to disclose the platform’s counterparties and market maker agreements if they really cared about transparency, mocking the project’s self-investigation with a pointed paraphrase:
“We investigated ourselves and did not find ourselves guilty even though we control nearly the entire supply.”
On the price side, the damage was significant, with CoinGecko data showing that EDGE dropped from about $1.26 to near $0.40, which was a new all-time low, before it stabilized around $0.62 at the time of writing.
Additional data from CoinGlass showed the price fall caused liquidations of about $6.2 million in 24 hours, with long positions accounting for $4.84 million. That activity was mostly concentrated on Binance, Bybit, and OKX, which together handled the majority of the forced closures that affected at least 3,840 traders, with price volatility hitting 74.77% on the day.
There is a valid reason why many people, upon seeing EDGE’s behavior in the market, immediately thought its parent platform had been hacked and why edgeX came out to categorically deny that there had been such an incident.
This year, the crypto space has been rattled by a string of exploits, including a recent attack on DxSale, where more than 1,400 liquidity pools tied to its old contracts on the BNB Chain were drained of about $7.3 million worth of tokens. A hacker also stole about $11 million from the Verus bridge, while TrustedVolumes, a liquidity provider, lost just under $6 million.
The post ‘We Investigated Ourselves’: ZachXBT Slams EdgeX After Sudden Token Collapse appeared first on CryptoPotato.