Heightened US-Iran tensions and military buildup reduce chances of diplomatic resolutions, increasing risks of prolonged conflict.
The post Trump favors no Iran deal as US military presence increases appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The ongoing conflict and military actions suggest a prolonged Israeli presence in Lebanon, impacting regional stability and humanitarian conditions.
The post Israeli forces conduct 41 attacks in Lebanon, killing 23 amid ongoing conflict appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Central banks may adopt tighter monetary policies globally, impacting economic growth and financial markets amid geopolitical tensions.
The post Bank of England signals potential rate hikes amid Iran conflict inflation risks appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The de-escalation with Iran may stabilize regional tensions, reducing immediate conflict risks and impacting U.S. foreign policy dynamics.
The post Trump ends Iran operations, reducing US invasion likelihood appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Libya's oil surge amid regional tensions highlights shifting power dynamics and potential long-term impacts on global energy markets.
The post Libya boosts oil output amid Iran conflict, Strait of Hormuz disruptions persist appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

From NYSE Gut Punch to ‘One App for Money’: Exodus Bets Self‑Custody Can Power Everyday Life
On stage, co-founder and CEO JP Richardson opened by talking about the company’s derailment at the New York Stock Exchange in May 2024, when Exodus flew 130 employees, friends, and family to Manhattan only to learn the night before that regulators had pulled its listing.
He described the reversal as a rule change at “the 11th hour” that left a room of supporters stunned and forced the company back into private status despite having, in his telling, followed the playbook.
That episode ended months later after the U.S. election, when Exodus finally listed on NYSE American in January with the same team, ticker, and business, but under a new administration more open to digital asset companies.
Richardson framed that saga as proof that Exodus can absorb political and regulatory shock while holding to a single principle: money belongs under user control.
Exodus, founded in 2015 in Omaha, built a self-custodial wallet that stores keys on user devices and routes swaps across multiple liquidity providers, offering access to Bitcoin and other assets without ever holding customer funds in company accounts.
The CEO argued that crypto still fails normal users on basic usability. He recounted an early experience helping a friend download four different wallets and write a 12-word seed phrase on a cocktail napkin, a ritual he said still defines too many products a decade later. Richardson called this the “pub test”: if a friend in a bar cannot safely set up a wallet without resorting to napkins, the industry has missed the mark.
He extended that critique to chain tribalism, insisting that consumers do not care whether payments settle on Solana, Ethereum, Arbitrum, or Base as long as the experience works.
To make the point concrete, he asked the audience to pull out their phones and count how many apps they use for money. The typical screen, he said, shows a bank app, person-to-person payment apps, a brokerage account, and often a separate crypto wallet.
He cast this fragmentation as a structural problem that leaves consumers juggling providers who do not share their interests.
Exodus wants to replace that cluster with “one app” that holds digital assets, connects to card networks, and routes payments while keeping users in self-custody.
A central reveal at the summit was the closing of the Monavate and Baanx UK acquisitions, a move that shifts Exodus from “renting the rails to owning them,” in Richardson’s phrase.
Monavate and Baanx supply regulated card issuing, acquiring, and processing infrastructure in the UK and EU, including BIN sponsorship, Visa and MasterCard membership, and fraud systems that already support crypto brands such as Ledger and MetaMask.
Exodus previously agreed to acquire their parent, W3C Corp, in a roughly $175 million deal aimed at building an on-chain payments stack; the company later enforced a $70 million secured loan against that group in UK receivership to protect its position.
With those assets, Exodus gains the ability to issue and process cards directly rather than acting as a program that rides on third-party rails.
CFO James Gernetzke said the combined platform now supports six layers of activity, from the core wallet and swap engine to stablecoin issuance, card programs, and banking rails, giving Exodus “owner economics” on each step of a transaction.
On stage, he walked through a £100 purchase example, explaining that where Exodus once retained a fraction of the economics as a client of Monavate and Baanx, it now captures a larger share through interchange, processing fees, and interest on float.
Richardson and Gernetzke both made it clear that Exodus is trying to grow past a trading‑centric model after a peak year in 2025, when it generated $121.6 million in revenue and $11 million in adjusted EBITDA on a base of roughly 1.5 to 1.6 million monthly active users.
In early 2026, the limits of that dependence on crypto cycles came into sharper focus: preliminary first‑quarter results show revenue falling to $22.7 million from $36.0 million a year earlier, a $36.4 million net loss on digital assets, and a 22% quarter‑over‑quarter drop in exchange volume to $1.18 billion, even as monthly active users held at 1.5 million and funded users slipped to 1.4 million.
Gernetzke described the tight correlation between trading revenue and Bitcoin’s price as a ceiling the company needs to break.
Exodus Pay, now live in all 50 states, is the clearest expression of that strategy. Embedded in the core wallet, it lets users spend USD‑backed stablecoins, Bitcoin, and other assets anywhere Visa or Apple Pay works, while keeping keys in self‑custody and turning every checkout into interchange, processing, and float income.
Later in the Summit at a fireside chat, Richardson cast that stack as infrastructure not only for today’s users but for AI agents that will execute autonomous payments across the same rails.
This post From NYSE Gut Punch to ‘One App for Money’: Exodus Bets Self‑Custody Can Power Everyday Life first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Strategy (MSTR) Stock Pops 9% As Bitcoin Price Pumps Back to $78,000
Shares of Strategy (NASDAQ: MSTR) surged roughly 9% on Friday as Bitcoin clawed back to the $78,000 level.
This movement comes just days after Executive Chairman Michael Saylor delivered a headline-grabbing keynote at the Bitcoin 2026 conference in Las Vegas.
MSTR climbed above $180 per share during Friday’s session, building on a prior close near $165. The move tracked Bitcoin’s intraday advance, which pushed BTC to $78,961 as of Friday afternoon, according to Bitcoin Magazine Pro data.
The rally is building up a welcome reprieve for MSTR investors who have endured a brutal stretch — the stock remains down more than 70% from its November 2024 all-time high above $457.
The price action comes amid a broader recovery in Bitcoin that has been grinding higher since a sharp pullback to the mid-$60,000s earlier this year. Bitcoin surged past the $78,000 mark last week as well, propelled by short liquidations and improving macro sentiment following reports of progress in U.S.-Iran diplomatic negotiations.
Polymarket contracts on May 1 BTC pricing showed 100% confidence the asset would finish in the $78,000–$80,000 range.
As a leveraged proxy for Bitcoin, MSTR tends to amplify BTC’s moves in both directions. Strategy currently holds approximately 818,334 Bitcoin on its balance sheet — roughly 3.9% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist — acquired at an average cost of around $66,385 per coin.
The stock pop also comes on the heels of fresh enthusiasm generated by Saylor’s keynote at the Bitcoin 2026 conference in Las Vegas last week.
Rather than focusing on Bitcoin price targets or more Bitcoin purchases, Saylor’s pitch centered on STRC — Strategy’s Bitcoin-backed preferred stock — and a sweeping thesis that digital credit is poised to cannibalize trillions of dollars in the legacy credit market.
“The world’s $300 trillion credit market is a much bigger opportunity than the world’s roughly $2 trillion Bitcoin market, and Strategy has built the first product to bridge the two,” Saylor argued during the keynote.
STRC, which pays an 11.5% monthly variable dividend and trades on Nasdaq, has grown to approximately $8.5 billion in notional value in under nine months — larger, Saylor claimed, than the entire existing universe of monthly-paying preferred securities combined.
“This is going viral,” he told the audience.
BlackRock’s iShares Preferred & Income Securities ETF has already taken a roughly $210 million position in STRC.
Saylor said STRC has financed the acquisition of approximately 77,000 BTC year-to-date in 2026, roughly ten times the net inflow of all U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs combined over the same period.
This post Strategy (MSTR) Stock Pops 9% As Bitcoin Price Pumps Back to $78,000 first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Exodus (EXOD) Announces Official UFC Deal and Revised, Self-Custody Money App
JP Richardson, co-founder and CEO of Exodus Movement (NYSE American: EXOD), opened part of the Exodus Summit today in Omaha, Nebraska, with an announcement about where he thinks the company’s customers already are.
Exodus is becoming the official payments partner of the UFC, Richardson said, with the partnership going live June 1.
This launch coincides with the UFC staging its “Freedom 250” fight event on the White House lawn to mark the 250th anniversary of the United States, making it the first UFC event held on those grounds. Branding will appear inside the octagon, in broadcast spots, and through activation footprints at the venue itself.
“As the fans walk through the gates, you’re gonna see Exodus activation footprints everywhere at the White House,” Richardson said.
Richardson framed the deal in two dimensions: brand exposure and trust. For a financial application, trust is not a marketing metric but rather a result of a solid product.
Consumers do not experiment with unrecognized brands when their money is involved, and Richardson argued that the UFC’s reach, 700 million fans across 165 countries, provides the kind of repeated, high-stakes visibility that accelerates that trust-building at a scale few media properties can match.
The deal is multi-year. Richardson described the target demographic as crypto-curious, young and digitally native — one that already aligns with what Exodus has spent over a decade building toward.
Later in the day, Ain Sonayen, Chief Product Officer, delivered what amounted to a formal retirement notice for the wallet category, at least as Exodus defines it.
Sonayen’s argument was precise: a wallet is a starting point, not a destination. Exodus began as a wallet because that was the primary entry point for people getting into Bitcoin and crypto in 2014. That era, he said plainly, is over.
The company is repositioning as a money platform — what Sonayen called a “money OS,” or operating system for money — built around three core experiences: stablecoin cash for everyday spending, crypto for ownership, and expanded utility for more sophisticated users.
Exodus Pay is the first layer of that platform. It ships now, available across all 50 states, with global expansion planned later in 2026. Users can fund the app via Apple Pay, bank transfer, or existing crypto balances.
Spending works anywhere Visa is accepted. Peer-to-peer sends are free and instant, requiring only a phone number — including to recipients who have not yet installed Exodus, who receive the funds upon signup.
The self-custody distinction matters here more than it might appear. Competing payments products hold user balances on their own balance sheets. If a company freezes an account, the money stops. Exodus Pay keeps private keys on the user’s device; the company never takes custody of the funds.
In a post-GENIUS Act regulatory environment, that architecture carries both compliance and competitive weight. The stablecoin market exceeded $300 billion in circulation earlier this year, and Exodus Pay said it is among the first consumer products to launch within that framework.
Sonayen also outlined the revenue logic. Payments businesses do not win on transaction volume alone; they win on balances.
Exodus Pay is engineered to keep money inside the ecosystem — users add funds, earn rewards in any asset including Bitcoin, spend with their card, and earn again. The revenue stack includes stablecoin balances, card interchange, foreign exchange, on-ramps, and utility expansion over time.
CFO James Gernetzke, quoted in the company’s press release, called Exodus Pay “recurring, scalable, and fully ours” following record Q4 earnings — language that signals the company views this launch as the beginning of a fundamentally different business model, not a feature release.
This post Exodus (EXOD) Announces Official UFC Deal and Revised, Self-Custody Money App first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Galoy Pushes Deeper Into U.S. Banking With All-in-One Bitcoin Platform
Galoy is widening its push into U.S. banking at a moment when many institutions still wrestle with how, or whether, to bring Bitcoin into their product stack.
Ahead of this week’s Bitcoin 2026 conference in Las Vegas, Galoy unveiled an expanded version of its Bitcoin-native core banking platform, aiming to turn a fragmented set of experiments into something closer to a coherent operating model for banks and credit unions.
The update bundles six core use cases into a single system: Bitcoin-backed lending, Lightning payments, stablecoin payments aligned with emerging legislative frameworks, Bitcoin exchange under the OCC’s riskless principal model, custody options, and embedded wallet infrastructure.
Rather than replacing existing core systems, Galoy said the software acts as a “sidecar,” a layer that sits alongside legacy rails. That framing reflects a reality inside most institutions, where replacing core infrastructure remains a multi-year effort few are willing to undertake.
For many banks, the most tangible entry point may be BTC-backed lending. The logic feels familiar. Lenders already understand collateralized loans tied to equities or real estate. Bitcoin introduces volatility, but the structure maps onto existing credit practices.
What has been missing is tooling that can handle real-time collateral monitoring and liquidation triggers without adding operational strain. Galoy’s platform leans into that gap, offering LTV tracking, accounting systems, and approval workflows that resemble traditional credit processes.
The company also introduced three tools meant to address a quieter obstacle: uncertainty.
Regulatory posture in the U.S. has shifted in tone but remains complex. Galoy’s “Regulatory Radar” aggregates guidance from federal and state agencies into plain language summaries, a nod to compliance teams that need interpretation as much as raw information.
Meanwhile, its “Portfolio Analyzer” and “LTV Risk Scenarios” tools speak to a deeper concern inside banks: how BTC exposure behaves under stress. By pre-loading data from thousands of U.S. financial institutions, the analyzer allows executives to see how a Bitcoin lending book might fit within their balance sheet.
The risk scenarios tool pushes further, modeling how sharp price moves could ripple through collateral and capital.
Behind the product expansion sits a broader shift in tone across the industry. A few years ago, Bitcoin in banking often lived in innovation labs or pilot programs. Now, the conversation has moved closer to revenue lines and risk committees. That shift brings a different kind of scrutiny.
Last year, Galoy launched Lana, software that enables smaller banks to offer bitcoin-backed loans, aiming to expand access and drive down high borrowing rates as more institutions enter the market.
This post Galoy Pushes Deeper Into U.S. Banking With All-in-One Bitcoin Platform first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Strike CEO Jack Mallers Announces Lending Proof-of-Reserves, Volatility-Proof Loans, and Backs Tether Merger Plan
Strike CEO Jack Mallers announced a series of product updates and strategic moves Wednesday, including the launch of lending proof-of-reserves, a new “volatility-proof” bitcoin-backed loan structure built with Tether, and a $2.1 billion credit facility.
He also said he supports a proposal by Tether Investments to merge Strike with Twenty-One Capital and bitcoin miner Elektron Energy.
Mallers said Strike’s bitcoin-backed loan and line-of-credit business has grown since launch, with users drawn to the ability to borrow against bitcoin rather than sell it.
He described bitcoin as a savings account for many customers and said Strike cut its rate tiers across the board. Pricing now ranges from approximately 10.5% APR for loans under $250,000 to approximately 7.49% APR for loans above $5 million.
Strike announced the first iteration of its lending proof-of-reserves, which gives borrowers the ability to verify that their collateral is present and segregated in a distinct on-chain address.
“We want you to trust us and know that we are who we say we are,” Mallers said. The disclosure mechanism was developed in partnership with Tether, which Mallers credited with helping Strike build the transparency infrastructure.
The two companies also jointly developed what Mallers called “volatility-proof” bitcoin-backed loans, a structure that removes the risk of forced liquidation when bitcoin prices fall or broader markets drop.
Mallers said the segregated collateral product is available now through Strike’s private client desk, and the volatility-proof loan feature is available to customers as part of the bitcoin-backed lending suite.
Mallers announced that Strike has secured a $2.1 billion credit facility, which he said gives the company capacity to meet demand at any order size within its lending business.
Earlier Wednesday, Tether Investments published a proposal to merge Twenty-One Capital with Strike and Elektron Energy, a large-scale bitcoin mining operator that manages approximately 50 EH/s, or roughly 5% of the current Bitcoin network hashrate.
Tether said the combined entity would integrate bitcoin treasury holdings, mining, financial services, lending, and capital markets under a single listed platform.
Mallers said he backs the plan. “Simply put, I think it’s a great idea,” he said, adding that building a Bitcoin company — not a narrow payments app — was his founding goal. Elektron founder Raphael Zagury has been proposed as President of the combined entity under the plan.
Mallers used a quadrant framework onstage to argue that the Bitcoin industry has a gap at the intersection of high conviction and high operating income.
He placed crypto exchanges in the high-income, low-conviction corner, saying they run profitable businesses but list many coins and build products across asset classes. He placed bitcoin treasury companies in the high-conviction, low-income corner, describing them as deeply committed to bitcoin but limited in operating business scope.
He cited Coinbase as an exchange that could carry more bitcoin on its balance sheet, and praised MicroStrategy executive chairman Michael Saylor while drawing a distinction between a treasury strategy and a product strategy. “I love him and his company,” Mallers said of Saylor, “but I want to build bitcoin products.”
His answer to the gap was a four-pillar model: a financial services arm covering brokerage, custody, lending, payments, treasury, and prime services; bitcoin infrastructure spanning energy, power generation, mining, hardware, and hosting; a capital markets operation built around loan-book securitization, mining revenue securitization, bitcoin-backed debt, and structured products; and a mergers-and-acquisitions function targeting profitable bitcoin businesses across software, custody, payments, energy, and distribution.
The stated goal of the M&A arm, as presented on his slide, is to give “every dollar of operating income one job: buy more Bitcoin.”
Mallers closed by saying a platform of that scope could “change the world with its products” and cited a phrase he has used throughout his career: “Fix the money, fix the world.”
This post Strike CEO Jack Mallers Announces Lending Proof-of-Reserves, Volatility-Proof Loans, and Backs Tether Merger Plan first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
U.S. public debt has crossed the size of the U.S. economy on a calculation from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, giving Bitcoin's hard-money case a live fiscal benchmark as investors weigh scarce assets against Washington's debt path.
CRFB said debt held by the public reached $31.27 trillion at the end of the first quarter of 2026, compared with $31.22 trillion of trailing 12-month nominal GDP. That puts the ratio at 100.2%, using the Bureau of Economic Analysis advance estimate for first-quarter output.
For Bitcoin, the threshold turns an abstract scarcity argument into a current macro question: whether a fixed-supply, non-sovereign asset becomes more attractive when confidence in sovereign balance sheets weakens. Debt is the narrative input. Liquidity, rates, ETF demand, and risk appetite are the transmission mechanism.
The move above 100% of GDP strengthens the case investors can make for Bitcoin as scarce monetary insurance. It still leaves open whether those investors will add exposure while Treasury yields, reserve conditions, and volatility keep setting the price of risk.
CRFB's calculation uses debt held by the public, the federal debt owed to outside investors and other non-government holders. That measure carries a different market meaning than total public debt outstanding, which also includes intragovernmental holdings.
That distinction is essential because the Bitcoin comparison works only if the fiscal metric is clear. Treasury's Debt to the Penny data, including its March 31 API record, separates debt held by the public from intragovernmental holdings and total public debt outstanding.
The peg sits on the public-debt measure, rather than the larger figures often used in political debate.
CRFB also placed the threshold in historical context. Outside the brief early-COVID GDP crash, it said debt only exceeded GDP for two years at the end of World War II.
A debt ratio near wartime extremes changes the language investors use around fiscal credibility, even when the U.S. Treasury market remains the center of global collateral.
The GDP side of the ratio also needs care. BEA's first-quarter release was an advance estimate.
It showed real GDP rising at a 2.0% annualized pace and current-dollar GDP rising 5.6%, but the next estimate is scheduled for May 28. That means the exact ratio can move.
The fiscal signal is still clear enough for market debate, while the precise denominator remains provisional.

Bitcoin enters this discussion because its supply schedule offers a contrast with fiscal expansion. CryptoSlate's Bitcoin market page showed about 20.02 million BTC circulating on May 1, 2026, against a maximum supply of 21 million.
That fixed cap is the core monetary contrast with a fiscal system that can issue more debt.
BlackRock has given the institutional version of that argument. In its Bitcoin diversifier paper, the asset manager described Bitcoin as scarce, non-sovereign, decentralized, and global.
It also said long-term adoption could be shaped by concerns over monetary stability, geopolitical stability, U.S. fiscal sustainability, and U.S. political stability.
That fiscal language puts CRFB's debt marker inside Bitcoin's investment case. Allocators now have a current U.S. reference point for a thesis that can otherwise sound abstract.
The argument is simple: if sovereign debt keeps growing faster than the economy, a credibly scarce settlement asset earns more attention in the debate over monetary hedges.
CryptoSlate's broader market dashboard and Bitcoin page show BTC near $77,000 on May 1, with a market cap of around $1.55 trillion, dominance near 60%, and a price roughly 39% below its Oct. 6, 2025, all-time high.
A scarcity asset can still trade like a risk asset when liquidity tightens.

Recent CryptoSlate coverage shows why the debt milestone has to be separated from near-term price behavior. A debt-and-liquidity analysis argued that U.S. debt growth, Treasury issuance, reserve balances, and bank-credit conditions can tighten the plumbing that moves liquidity into risk assets, even when broad money is expanding.
That view is important for Bitcoin because the asset sits at the intersection of two different trades. In the long run, it can be bought as monetary insurance against fiscal and currency risk.
In the medium term, it still responds to the cost of capital, leverage, ETF flows, and the level of yields available on Treasuries.
A separate CryptoSlate piece on Treasury yields and Bitcoin liquidity made the same point through the rates channel. Higher long-end yields raise the hurdle for assets with no coupon or dividend.
Bitcoin can have a stronger monetary narrative while still facing a tougher comparison against Treasury income.
The result is a two-layer market. The debt-to-GDP break improves the macro setup for Bitcoin.
The funding environment decides whether that setup becomes actual demand. Investors using the milestone as a price signal need evidence from flows, yields, reserves, and volatility before the allocation case becomes more than a narrative upgrade.
| Evidence layer | What it supports | What remains open |
|---|---|---|
| CRFB debt-to-GDP marker | Public debt has crossed GDP on CRFB's calculation, reviving a World War II-era comparison. | The exact ratio can shift as GDP estimates revise. |
| CBO baseline | Debt held by the public is projected to rise from 101% of GDP in 2026 to 120% in 2036. | Faster nominal GDP growth or policy changes could alter the path. |
| BlackRock Bitcoin thesis | Fiscal sustainability concerns fit the institutional case for a scarce, non-sovereign asset. | Adoption logic and short-term price behavior remain separate tests. |
| CryptoSlate market context | BTC still trades with liquidity, yields, ETF demand, and volatility in view. | A debt milestone alone leaves flow confirmation unresolved. |
The Congressional Budget Office's February outlook keeps the fiscal pressure in view. It projects debt held by the public rising from 101% of GDP in 2026 to 120% in 2036, above the 106% high recorded in 1946.
It also projects wider deficits, with rising net interest costs driving much of the increase.
That path gives Bitcoin's hard-money thesis a durable macro backdrop. If deficits stay large, interest costs rise, and investors become more sensitive to the supply of Treasuries, demand for assets outside sovereign issuance can grow.
In that scenario, the debt milestone becomes a symbol of the constraint Bitcoin was designed to sit outside.
CBO's own uncertainty work adds the needed restraint. In a February follow-up on how outcomes could differ from its baseline, CBO said economic and budgetary results could land above or below its central estimate, including under paths with faster nominal GDP growth.
The fiscal trajectory is serious, but it is still a forecast path rather than a settled destination.
CryptoSlate's prior coverage has been building toward the same test from other angles. A February analysis of the decade-long debt path framed the issue through term premium, dollar vulnerability, and Bitcoin's hard-asset role.
A November piece measured U.S. debt in BTC terms, showing how quickly fiscal expansion can overwhelm Bitcoin's issuance schedule. CRFB's new marker changes the timing: the ratio has crossed the threshold now.
That leaves Bitcoin with two likely outcomes. In the constructive version, inflation cools, reserve conditions improve, Treasury supply becomes easier to absorb, and the debt milestone strengthens the case for a modest allocation to scarce monetary assets.
In the restrictive version, issuance stays heavy, yields remain elevated, and Bitcoin keeps trading as a high-beta liquidity asset despite the stronger long-run narrative.
U.S. public debt crossing GDP gives Bitcoin's scarcity thesis a sharper macro anchor.
It supports the argument that some investors will keep looking for non-sovereign monetary assets as fiscal ratios worsen. It leaves the harder market proof ahead: whether liquidity, rates, and flows align enough for that thesis to become durable demand rather than another macro slogan.
The post America’s $31.27 trillion in debt now exceeds GDP – silently reinforces the case for Bitcoin appeared first on CryptoSlate.
New Financial Times reporting says Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump are set to gain exposure to a Kazakhstan tungsten venture through Skyline Builders, a Nasdaq-listed company that has signed a transaction agreement with Cove Kaz Capital Group to create Kaz Resources Inc. if completed.
Skyline and Cove, Kaz said, is expected to trade under the ticker KAZR if the deal closes.
The target projects sit within a US critical minerals policy lane focused on supply-chain resilience and reduced reliance on Chinese-controlled resources.
Public transaction materials state that the Export-Import Bank of the United States issued a letter of interest for up to $900 million, while the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation issued letters of interest exploring up to $700 million in debt financing and project development funding.
The governance issue is specific. The visible chain links FT-reported Trump-family investment exposure, a public-market shell, and federal financing interest around the same asset.
It also leaves the central questions unresolved: what the Trump sons knew, whether they had any role in the government-support process, whether financing becomes binding, and what their ultimate economics will be.

The first layer is Skyline itself. The company disclosed an August 2025 private placement that raised about $17.8 million and left Quantum Leap Energy with voting control after related transactions.
Dominari Securities was one of the placement agents.
FT reporting supplies the private-investment piece of that chain: it says Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump bought into Skyline in August through American Ventures, a special purpose vehicle run by a Dominari subsidiary, and added to the position on Oct. 28, 2025.
Skyline's August resale filing and October placement filing separately establish the financing dates, while a later registration statement identifies American Ventures series exposure tied to those placements.
The SEC filings leave the Trump sons unnamed in those placements. They do establish the placement chronology and the American Ventures series exposure that the FT connects to the brothers.
The Dominari link is visible in corporate filings. Dominari disclosed in its quarterly report that it held 90% membership interests in American Ventures Management LLC and American Ventures IM LLC, which served as the management and investment manager for American Ventures LLC.
Its later annual report describes Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump as advisory-board appointees and 5%-or-more stockholders of Dominari.
Dominari also filed a February 2025 release announcing their advisory-board roles.
The second layer came on Oct. 31, 2025, when Skyline disclosed that it had agreed to pay $20 million for an approximate 20% membership interest in a Delaware LLC engaged in critical minerals.
Skyline's Oct. 31 filing did not name the LLC. The FT identified it as Kaz Resources, tied to Cove Capital and Cove Kaz.
The third layer arrived on April 30, 2026. Skyline and Cove Kaz announced a transaction agreement to combine, with the planned company operating as Kaz Resources Inc. and trading on Nasdaq as KAZR if completed.
A definitive-agreements summary separately described the Cove Kaz transaction structure before the April market announcement.
The same announcement says closing is expected in the fourth quarter of 2026 or early 2027, subject to shareholder approval, regulatory approvals, an effective SEC registration statement, and other conditions.
| Entity | Role in the chain | Current status | Caveat |
|---|---|---|---|
| American Ventures | Vehicle through which FT reporting says the Trump sons bought into Skyline | Linked to Dominari management entities in filings | Exact Trump-son exposure is undisclosed |
| Skyline Builders | Nasdaq-listed public vehicle | Signed the Cove Kaz transaction agreement | Merger has not closed |
| Cove Kaz and Kaz Resources | Critical-minerals platform and assets | Skyline and Cove Kaz agreed to combine into Kaz Resources Inc. if completed | Agency letters remain conditional expressions of interest |
The governance question begins with access to the chain, then moves to the chain's status, and only then reaches the policy overlay.
The deal works better as a layered transaction map than as a single completed transfer of value.
The Nov. 6 venture announcement placed the Kazakhstan projects inside a national-security supply-chain argument.
Cove Capital and Tau-Ken Samruk said Cove Kaz would hold 70% and the Kazakh national mining company would hold 30% of a venture to develop Northern Katpar and Upper Kairakty.
The announcement described the deposits as a major undeveloped tungsten resource and put the total development cost at about $1.1 billion.
That cost estimate is smaller than the headline financing envelope, but the comparison only describes scale.
The broader minerals backdrop sits in official U.S. data, too. USGS tracks the critical mineral supply context in its Mineral Commodity Summaries 2026 and maintains a tungsten data hub to support the industrial supply chain.
The April transaction materials say EXIM issued a letter of interest for up to $900 million. DFC separately said it had issued letters of interest seeking up to $700 million in debt financing and project development funding tied to the Northern Katpar investment.
Those figures are conditional maximums, not binding commitments or proof that the agencies will provide stacked final funding.
The distinction is operational. A letter of interest signals that an agency is willing to consider backing under stated conditions.
EXIM's guidance describes a letter of interest as a tool that can outline possible financing terms, fees, and conditions before a final commitment.
It is a useful policy signal, especially in a strategic sector, but it remains short of a binding funding contract.
That status sets the evidentiary boundary for the conflict-risk analysis. The FT also stated the central caveat: there was no suggestion that Donald Trump Jr. or Eric Trump knew Cove was close to securing US administration backing when they made their initial investments in Skyline through American Ventures, or that they influenced the award.
The same FT account quoted Donald Trump Jr.'s spokesperson saying he was a passive investor in American Ventures with no operational role and no federal government interface for companies he invests in or advises.
It also said Eric Trump did not respond to FT requests sent to the Trump Organization and American Bitcoin.
The transaction, therefore, sits in a lane defined by positioning, access, and disclosure. Trump-family-linked capital gained exposure to a Nasdaq-listed vehicle that later agreed to merge with a minerals group that carried US agency financing letters.
That chain raises a live public-ethics question because private exposure, public-market access, and federal industrial policy all point to the same asset.
Knowledge, influence, and final financing remain open.
That distinction also applies to broader ethics law. The U.S. Office of Government Ethics has long stated that certain federal conflict statutes do not apply to the president and vice president in the same way they apply to other executive-branch officials.
That guidance leaves other legal and governance questions outside its scope.
It helps define why this is a conflict-risk and governance story rather than a completed legal conclusion.
For CryptoSlate readers, the relevance here is the route of capital. The commodity is secondary.
Trump-family-linked dealmaking has already reached Bitcoin mining, token finance, public-market combinations, and politically sensitive digital-asset flows.
Skyline adds another lane: a strategic-resource company using a public-shell structure while federal agencies express conditional interest in the underlying project.
Recent Trump-linked crypto deals have already included American Bitcoin exposure, an Eric Trump-linked miner using a public-market merger path, and World Liberty Financial financing.
CryptoSlate has also covered foreign-capital concerns around WLFI and a Trump-linked reverse-merger structure involving Tron.
The Cove Kaz chain belongs to the same market-structure conversation, even though the asset is tungsten rather than a token or mining fleet.
The policy overlap is also easy to understate. Bitcoin miners, AI data centers, drone manufacturers, defense suppliers, and critical minerals developers face similar questions about power, financing, permits, offtake, government demand, and supply-chain policy.
The sectors remain distinct. The overlap explains why politically connected capital can treat them as adjacent risk lanes when Washington chooses preferred supply chains.
With Bitcoin market capitalization around $1.55 trillion, digital assets remain large enough that political capital, financing structures, and federal policy signals can affect how investors price affiliated companies, whether those companies hold Bitcoin, mine Bitcoin, issue tokens, or supply physical inputs used by AI and defense supply chains.
The next test is disclosure. Investors still need the final merger documents, the combined company's registration statement, related-party detail, dilution terms, and any agency updates showing whether the EXIM and DFC letters move toward binding commitments.
They also need clarity on the Trump sons' exact economic exposure through American Ventures and any related Skyline series vehicles.
The Skyline-Cove Kaz transaction points to a qualified conclusion. Private business interests tied to the Trump sons can obtain exposure to public companies moving into sectors favored by US industrial policy.
The boundary remains clear: knowledge, influence, final financing, and ultimate economic exposure are still the unresolved tests.
The post Trump sons’ crypto-linked bets run into mining security and financing conflict overseas – FT appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Hundreds of Ethereum wallets that had sat untouched for years were drained into the same tagged address, turning old key exposure into this week’s sharpest crypto security warning.
On Apr. 30, WazzCrypto flagged the incident affecting mainnet wallets on X, and their warning spread quickly because the affected accounts did not appear to be freshly baited hot wallets. They were old wallets with quiet histories, some tied to assets and tooling from an earlier Ethereum era.
Over 260 ETH, roughly $600,000, was drained from hundreds of dormant wallets. More than 500 wallets appear to be affected, with losses totaling roughly $800,000, and many wallets have been idle for four to eight years. The related Etherscan address is labeledFake_Phishing2831105, and shows 596 transactions, and records a 324.741 ETH movement to THORChain Router v4.1.1 around the Apr. 30 window.
The constant across them is more important for now: long-idle wallets have been moved to a common destination, while the compromise path remains unresolved.
That unresolved vector makes the drain the strongest warning this week, following a surge in DeFi hacks. Protocol exploits usually give investigators a contract, a function call, or a privileged transaction to inspect.
Here, the central question sits at the wallet layer. Did someone obtain old seed phrases, crack weakly generated keys, use leaked private-key material, abuse a tool that once handled keys, or exploit another path that has yet to surface?
Public discussion has produced theories including weak entropy in legacy wallet tools, compromised mnemonics, trading-bot key handling, and LastPass-era seed storage. One affected user personally raised the LastPass theory.
The practical advice for users is limited but urgent. Idleness does not mitigate private-key risk. A wallet with value depends on the full history of the key, the seed phrase, the device that generated it, the software that touched it, and every place that secret may have been stored.
For users, the response is probably to inventory high-value old wallets, move funds only after setting up fresh key material through trusted hardware or modern wallet software, and avoid entering old seeds into checkers, scripts, or unfamiliar recovery tools. Revoking approvals helps for protocol exposure, including Wasabi's user warning, but a direct wallet drain points first to key security rather than token approvals.
The wallet cluster landed amid April's crypto exploit tally, which was already elevated. DefiLlama-linked reporting put April at roughly 28 to 30 incidents and more than $625 million in stolen funds. As of May 1, the live DefiLlama API showed 28 April incidents totaling $635,241,950.
A May 1 market thread captured the pressure point: this week's wallet drains, Wasabi Protocol's admin-key exploit, and April's larger DeFi losses all hit control surfaces that ordinary users rarely inspect. The link across the month is architectural rather than attributional.

Wasabi Protocol supplies the clearest recent protocol example. The Apr. 30 exploit reportedly drained roughly $4.5 million to $5.5 million after an attacker gained deployer/admin authority, granted ADMIN_ROLE to attacker-controlled contracts, and used UUPS proxy upgrades to drain vaults and pools across Ethereum, Base, and Blast. Early security alerts flagged the admin-upgrade pattern as the attack unfolded.
The reported mechanics put key management at the center of the incident. Upgradeability can be normal maintenance infrastructure. Concentrated upgrade authority turns that maintenance path into a high-value target. If one deployer or privileged account can change implementation logic across chains, the boundary around an audited contract can vanish once that authority is compromised.
That is the user-facing problem hidden inside many DeFi interfaces. A protocol can present open contracts, public front ends, and decentralization language while critical upgrade power still sits in a small set of operational keys.
Drift pushed the same control problem into signer workflow. Chainalysis described social engineering, durable nonce transactions, fake collateral, oracle manipulation, and a zero-timelock 2-of-5 Security Council migration. Blockaid put the loss around $285 million and argued that transaction simulation and stricter co-signer policies could have changed the outcome.
The Drift case matters here because the path did not depend on a simple public-function bug. It depended on a workflow where valid signatures and fast governance machinery could be turned toward a hostile migration. A signer process became the control surface.
KelpDAO moved the stress test into cross-chain verification. The incident statement described a bridge configuration in which the rsETH route used LayerZero Labs as the sole DVN verifier. Forensic reviews described compromised RPC nodes and DDoS pressure feeding false data to a single-point verification path.
The result, according to Chainalysis, was 116,500 rsETH, worth roughly $292 million, released against a non-existent burn. The token contract could remain intact while the bridge accepted a false premise. That is why a verifier failure can become a market-structure problem once the bridged asset sits inside lending markets and liquidity pools.
I think Project Glasswing deserves a special mention here for context, separate from causation. Anthropic says Claude Mythos Preview found thousands of high-severity software vulnerabilities and shows how AI can compress vulnerability discovery. That raises the bar for defenders, but the causal record in these crypto incidents points to keys, signers, admin powers, bridge verification, RPC dependencies, and unresolved wallet exposure.
The security implications are still serious. Faster discovery gives attackers and defenders more parallel surface to work through. It also makes old operational shortcuts more expensive because dormant secrets, privileged keys, and single-verifier paths can be tested faster than teams can manually review them.
The controls that follow from April sit above and around the codebase.
| Incident | Hidden control point | Failure mode | Practical control |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dormant Ethereum wallets | Old wallet material | Funds moved from long-idle wallets into a tagged address while the vector remains unresolved | Fresh key generation for valuable dormant funds, cautious migration, and no seed entry into unknown tools |
| Wasabi | Admin and upgrade authority | Privileged role grants and UUPS upgrades enabled vault and pool drains | Key rotation, stronger thresholds, bounded admin powers, timelocks, and independent monitoring of upgrade actions |
| Drift | Security Council signer workflow | Pre-signed durable nonce transactions and zero-delay governance enabled fast admin takeover | Higher thresholds, delay windows, transaction simulation, and policy-enforced co-signing |
| KelpDAO | Bridge verification path | RPC poisoning and a 1-of-1 DVN route allowed a false cross-chain message to pass | Multi-DVN verification, cross-chain invariant monitoring, and independent checks outside the same verifier path |

For protocols, the priority is to reduce the amount that any single authority can do at once. That means time locks on admin operations, stronger and more stable signer thresholds, monitored privileged-transaction queues, explicit limits on parameter changes, and co-signing systems that simulate transaction effects before humans approve them.
For bridges, the priority is independent verification and invariant checks. A cross-chain message should be tested against the economic fact it claims to represent. If rsETH leaves one side, the system should verify the corresponding state change on the other side before the destination side releases value. That monitoring needs to exist outside the same path that signs the message.
For users, the repair list is smaller. Move valuable old funds to fresh keys through a process you already trust. Separate that action from protocol-specific approval cleanup. Treat every claim about the wallet-drain root cause as provisional until forensic work identifies a common tool, storage path, or exposure source.
April proved that the average user's security checklist is likely incomplete. Audits, public contracts, and decentralized interfaces can coexist with concentrated admin authority, weak signer procedures, brittle bridge verification, and old wallet secrets.
The next quarter will reward proof over decentralization language: constrained upgrade powers, visible timelocks, independent verifier paths, transaction simulation for privileged actions, disciplined access controls, and documented key rotation.
The dormant-wallet drains show the uncomfortable user-side version of the same problem. A system can look quiet while an old control failure waits in the background. April's exploit wave exposed that layer above the code; the next phase will show which teams treat it as core security before funds move.
The post Someone just drained long-forgotten dormant Ethereum wallets, and the cause may trace back years appeared first on CryptoSlate.
BlackRock's digital assets franchise crossed a threshold in the first quarter, proving to Wall Street that it is a genuine fee line for the world's largest asset manager.
The firm's digital asset products generated $42 million in investment advisory, administration fees, and securities lending revenue during the quarter. By almost every measure of its weight inside BlackRock’s economics, the number is relatively small.
The ETF complex, which houses those products, generated over $2.4 billion during the same period. Digital assets accounted for nearly $60.7 billion of BlackRock's $5.48 trillion in ETF assets under management, which is 1.11% of the total. On fees, the share rose slightly to 1.75%.
The difference between AUM share and revenue share runs in crypto’s favor.
Using BlackRock's average AUM figures for the quarter, the digital assets line ran at roughly 24.8 basis points annualized, compared with about 17.2 basis points for the ETF complex overall.
Crypto is a higher-fee product living inside a giant lower-fee machine, which explains why it earns a disproportionate slice of the revenue pie despite its modest asset footprint.
The catch is that “disproportionate” only goes so far when the base is this small, as iShares posted record first-quarter net inflows of $132 billion and doubled net new base fees year over year.
Against that momentum, crypto's $42 million is financially minor, and the first quarter exposed just how dependent the revenue line is on asset prices.

BlackRock's digital assets products drew $935 million in net inflows during the quarter, representing only 0.71% of total ETF inflows. BlackRock recorded a nearly $18.7 billion negative market move in the digital assets category, pulling AUM down from $78.4 billion at the end of 2025 to $60.6 billion at Mar. 31.
That pattern reframes the adoption thesis, since the fee base for a product like IBIT moves with Bitcoin's price, while advisor approvals and platform listings are secondary variables.
Until digital assets' AUM grows large enough that inflows offset price swings, BlackRock's crypto revenue will stay beta-driven and volatile quarter to quarter.
As of Apr. 29, IBIT held roughly $61.7 billion in net assets at a 0.25% sponsor fee, and BlackRock describes it as the most-traded US spot Bitcoin ETP since its launch.
At that asset level, IBIT implies roughly $152.9 million of annualized sponsor-fee revenue. However, BlackRock does not disclose product-level revenue by ticker, and the $42 million figure covers the entire digital assets segment across the quarter.
| Product | Asset class | Net assets | Fee | Strategic role |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IBIT | Bitcoin | ~$61.7B | 0.25% | Flagship scale product; main driver of BlackRock’s crypto ETF franchise |
| ETHA | Ethereum | >$7.0B | 0.25% | Core Ethereum exposure; second leg of the franchise |
| ETHB | Staked Ethereum | $594.5M | N/A in article | Higher-value wrapper tied to ETH exposure plus staking rewards |
| Combined | — | ~$68.8B | — | BlackRock’s three flagship U.S. crypto products; about 13.4% above Mar. 31 digital-assets AUM |
ETHA, the iShares Ethereum Trust ETF, held over $7 billion in net assets as of Apr. 29 at the same 0.25% fee. ETHB, the iShares Staked Ethereum Trust ETF, launched on Feb. 18 and has raised $594.5 million.
ETHB targets the Ethereum price performance plus staking rewards, placing it in a category beyond plain-vanilla spot exposure.
Combined, BlackRock's three flagship US crypto products held roughly $68.8 billion in net assets by late April, about 13.4% above the firm's Mar. 31 digital assets AUM figure.
If the next phase of crypto ETF monetization comes from richer product structures, such as income, staking, and multi-asset exposure, sustaining that 24.8 basis-point yield becomes the central execution question for the franchise.
Morgan Stanley launched MSBT on Apr. 8 with a 0.14% sponsor fee, the lowest US-traded Bitcoin ETP sponsor fee at launch, according to its own account, 11 basis points below IBIT.
Charles Schwab announced on Apr. 16 that it would begin rolling out direct Bitcoin and Ethereum trading for retail clients at a 75-basis-point per-trade fee. Schwab's clients already hold about 20% of the spot-crypto ETP market.
Goldman Sachs filed for a Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, converting bitcoin exposure into an options-based income product that differentiates itself.
None of those moves will dislodge IBIT's scale advantage or BlackRock's distribution depth in the near term. BlackRock holds $13.895 trillion in firm-wide AUM and a liquidity profile in IBIT that no new entrant can replicate quickly.
These moves paint a competitive arc with more issuers, more brokerage access, more product differentiation, and narrower margins. That is how fee compression played out across every other ETF category that reached critical mass.
At BlackRock's realized digital assets monetization rate of roughly 24.8 basis points in the first quarter, every additional $10 billion in average digital assets AUM adds about $24.8 million in annual revenue.
Reaching 5% of BlackRock's current ETF fee base, roughly $120.3 million per quarter, requires about $194 billion in average digital assets AUM at that yield. If fee compression pushes realized yield to 20 basis points, the required AUM rises to roughly $240.6 billion.
Either way, the franchise would need to nearly triple from its current average to become a 5% contributor to BlackRock's ETF economics.

The bull path runs through asset prices recovering, advisor adoption broadening beyond early movers, and richer product structures like ETHB, with holding-fee yield above the plain-vanilla ETF floor.
Under that scenario, average digital assets AUM reaches roughly $140 billion, and quarterly revenue climbs toward $84 million, which is still only 3.5% of BlackRock's current ETF fee base.
The bear path runs through weaker crypto prices, muted inflows, and a first round of fee cuts, pushing average AUM to around $50 billion, quarterly revenue to roughly $27.5 million, and digital assets back to about 1.1% of BlackRock's ETF fee pool. This is barely distinguishable from noise in the firm's income statement.
The distance between those two endpoints is large, and asset prices are the dominant variable in both. No amount of product innovation can close an $18 billion quarterly market move gap in the short run.
The harder contest for BlackRock's crypto-related ETPs stays unresolved, and price levels and fee schedules will decide it.
The post BlackRock’s record breaking $60 billion crypto ETFs made just $42 million in Q1 fees appeared first on CryptoSlate.
CryptoQuant's latest Apr. 30 read shows that perpetual futures are driving Bitcoin's recovery, while spot demand is still shrinking. That is the same market structure seen during the 2022 bear market rallies, when leverage-driven rebounds gave way to fresh downside.
Spot buying through exchanges, ETFs, or direct on-chain accumulation represents committed capital. At the same time, perpetual futures allow traders to take directional exposure with borrowed capital, often at multiples of their collateral, without holding the underlying asset.
When both forms of demand expand together, a rally tends to be self-reinforcing. When futures lead and spot lags, leveraged traders finance the bounce and face forced exits if the price moves against them.
Several bear-market rallies in 2022 shared the same regime, with perpetual futures demand recovering before spot demand did. The price bounced, and leveraged positions came off as spot buyers proved too thin to absorb the selling.
The bounces looked constructive, but each one resolved into the next leg lower.

CryptoQuant's chart places Bitcoin's current April 2026 move back into a regime where spot contracts are contracting while futures contracts are expanding. The parallel is that borrowed capital is reappearing before real cash demand does, which is precisely the condition that made 2022's failed rallies fragile.
The scale of today's futures market makes that fragility a larger variable. CoinGlass data showed $47.64 billion in 24-hour Bitcoin futures volume versus $4.07 billion in spot volume, a ratio of about 11.7x, with open interest at roughly $54.19 billion as of Apr. 30.
Perpetual futures can involve borrowed capital up to 50 times the collateral on some platforms, meaning relatively small price moves can trigger large forced liquidations.
When spot volume runs at $4 billion a day and a long-side flush starts, the market's depth gets tested fast.
US spot Bitcoin ETF flows have recently reinforced the market structure warning, as Farside Investors data shows aggregate outflows of $490.5 million between Apr. 27 and Apr. 29.
The ETF bid has gone choppy at exactly the moment futures positioning is expanding, while the long-run ETF picture holds its shape.
| Metric | Current read | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| BTC futures volume, 24h | $47.64B | Derivatives activity is dominating the market |
| BTC spot volume, 24h | $4.07B | Spot support is much smaller than futures activity |
| Futures/spot volume ratio | 11.7x | Shows the rally is heavily leverage-driven |
| BTC open interest | $54.19B | Large leveraged position base that could unwind |
| US spot BTC ETF flows, Apr. 27–29 | -$490.5M | Recent ETF demand has turned choppy |
| IBIT cumulative net inflows | ~$65.2B | Long-term institutional demand remains strong |
| Total US spot BTC ETF cumulative inflows | ~$58.1B | The structural ETF bid is still positive overall |
IBIT alone accounts for roughly $65.2 billion in cumulative net inflows, and the entire US spot Bitcoin ETF category totals about $58.1 billion, numbers that reflect genuine structural buying absent in 2022.
From Apr. 13 to Apr. 29, IBIT still absorbed about $1.47 billion in net inflows, keeping the longer-term institutional picture intact. The near-term read is that the ETF bid is not currently providing clean support for price at a time when futures positioning would most need it.
The 2022 analogy breaks when spot demand turns positive before leveraged traders start reducing exposure. CryptoQuant's apparent demand measure moving back above zero is the cleanest invalidation trigger that spot accumulation confirms the futures-led move.
The structural gap between 2026 and 2022 also gives the bull case a foundation. Bitcoin now has regulated US spot ETFs, deeper institutional infrastructure, and a persistent corporate-treasury bid that did not exist four years ago.
Even CryptoQuant's Apr. 1 note, which flagged deep contraction in spot demand, acknowledged that ETF and corporate buying had been accelerating.
The bull case runs on those buyers scaling up fast enough to pull spot demand back into positive territory. If ETF inflows resume over a sustained window and the futures-to-spot volume ratio narrows toward the broader market's 3x reading, the market structure argument weakens on its own terms.

The bear case needs only leveraged traders to reduce exposure before spot demand turns positive. It requires only that leveraged traders start reducing exposure before spot demand turns positive.
At $54 billion in open interest, even a partial unwind produces large absolute selling volume, and with spot volume running at roughly $4 billion a day, the market lacks the depth to absorb a rapid unwind without a hard price drop.
The reflexivity compounds the risk, since falling prices push leveraged longs toward liquidation, liquidations press prices lower, and the cycle feeds itself until spot demand deepens enough to hold a floor.
Bear markets end when demand for spot and futures recovers together.
The current setup has futures recovering on their own, and if that condition holds, Bitcoin has reproduced the demand structure of 2022's failed rallies. The coming weeks of on-chain apparent demand and ETF flow tone will determine whether April's bounce joins that list or separates from it.
Either real cash buyers step in and validate the futures-led move, or the market finds out what a leveraged long book looks like when the spot bid is too thin to hold the floor.
The post Bitcoin is repeating a 2022 pattern – and this time we’re missing the buyers for what came next appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin is once again trading in bullish territory, with the crypto market following the broader risk-on mood across global assets. Bitcoin climbed above $78,000, Ethereum moved near $2,300, and several major altcoins turned green as stocks continued to show strength. The rally came alongside strong performance in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, both of which recently pushed into record-high territory as markets reacted positively to easing geopolitical concerns and renewed risk appetite.
But the next test for crypto may not come from the chart. It may come from Washington.
President Donald Trump announced that tariffs on European Union cars and trucks entering the United States will rise to 25% next week, arguing that the EU is not complying with a previous trade agreement. Vehicles produced by European automakers inside the United States would reportedly avoid the tariff.
For crypto traders, this matters because tariffs can quickly bring inflation fears back into the market. Bitcoin may be rallying now, but if investors start pricing in higher import costs, renewed trade tensions, and delayed Fed rate cuts, the current crypto market rally could face a serious macro test.
The crypto market is benefiting from a stronger risk-on environment. Bitcoin is holding above $78,000, Ethereum is trading near $2,300, and several large-cap tokens such as Dogecoin, Hyperliquid, and Bitcoin Cash are showing solid gains.

Part of this move is linked to stronger stock market momentum. When the S&P 500 and Nasdaq push higher, crypto often benefits because traders become more willing to take risk. In this environment, Bitcoin is being treated less like a defensive asset and more like a high-liquidity risk asset.
The latest U.S. manufacturing data also added to the picture. The ISM Manufacturing PMI stayed at 52.7 in April, above the 50 level that signals expansion, although it came in slightly below expectations. New orders improved, while employment weakened and prices continued rising.
That creates a mixed signal for crypto. Growth remains strong enough to support risk assets, but inflation pressure is still present. This is exactly why Trump’s tariff announcement matters.
The proposed 25% tariff on EU cars and trucks could become a new inflation trigger for markets. Tariffs usually increase the cost of imported goods, and if those costs are passed to consumers, inflation can become harder to control.
This is especially important now because markets have been trying to price in a more supportive macro environment. Traders want lower inflation, easier Fed policy, and stronger liquidity. But if trade tensions return, the market may start questioning whether rate cuts can arrive as quickly as expected.
For Bitcoin, this is a key point. The current rally is not happening in isolation. It is connected to liquidity expectations, stock market strength, geopolitical de-escalation, and the belief that inflation will not force the Fed to stay restrictive for longer.
If tariffs push inflation expectations higher again, crypto may lose part of that support.
Crypto prices are highly sensitive to liquidity. When traders believe interest rates could fall, capital usually moves faster into risk assets such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and altcoins. When inflation rises or rate cuts look less likely, liquidity expectations weaken.
That is why tariffs can affect Bitcoin even if they are not directly related to blockchain or crypto regulation.
The link is simple:
Higher tariffs can raise import costs. Higher import costs can increase inflation pressure. Higher inflation can reduce the chance of near-term rate cuts. Fewer rate cuts can slow liquidity growth. And weaker liquidity can pressure Bitcoin and altcoins.
This does not mean the crypto rally has to stop immediately. But it does mean traders should watch whether Bitcoin can keep holding strength if the macro narrative shifts from “growth and liquidity” back to “inflation and trade war.”
The strong performance in U.S. stocks is currently helping Bitcoin. When equities rise, especially tech-heavy indexes like the Nasdaq, crypto often follows because both markets attract similar risk-seeking capital.
However, Bitcoin now needs to prove that it can hold above key levels even if macro uncertainty increases.
The $78,000 area is important because it now acts as a short-term confidence zone. If Bitcoin holds this level while tariff headlines grow, it would show that buyers are still in control. But if BTC loses momentum and falls back below this range, the rally could quickly turn into another failed breakout attempt.
Ethereum is also important to watch. ETH is trading near $2,300 but still looks weaker than Bitcoin. If Bitcoin dominance keeps rising while Ethereum underperforms, the market may remain concentrated in BTC rather than expanding into a broader altcoin rally.
There are four key signals to monitor.
First, watch Bitcoin around the $78,000 level. A strong hold above this zone would support the bullish case, while a drop below it could signal fading momentum.
Second, watch Ethereum near $2,300. ETH needs to show strength if the market wants a broader crypto rally instead of a Bitcoin-led move only.
Third, watch tariff headlines. If the EU responds strongly or markets begin pricing in a renewed trade war, inflation fears could return quickly.
Fourth, watch Fed expectations. The most important question is whether traders still believe rate cuts are coming soon. If tariff risks delay those expectations, crypto may face pressure even while stocks remain strong.
The crypto market still looks strong, but the rally is becoming more dependent on macro stability. Bitcoin above $78,000 is a bullish signal, especially with stocks at record highs and risk appetite improving. But Trump’s EU tariff threat adds a new layer of uncertainty at the worst possible time.
If tariffs revive inflation concerns, the market may start to question the liquidity story that helped support the latest Bitcoin move. That does not cancel the bullish setup, but it makes the next few days important.
For now, Bitcoin is still holding the line. But the real test is whether the crypto market can stay strong if inflation fears return.
$BTC, $ETH, $DOGE, $HYPE, $BCH
The financial markets are witnessing a historic "green day" as both traditional equities and digital assets surge in tandem. On Friday, May 1, 2026, the US stock market opened with massive momentum, adding over $400 billion in market capitalization within the first minutes of trading. Both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq have hit fresh all-time highs, fueled by a combination of strong corporate earnings and a significant de-escalation in global geopolitical tensions.
This bullish sentiment has immediately spilled over into the cryptocurrency sector. Bitcoin ($BTC) has officially broken through the $78,000 resistance level, while Ethereum ($ETH) has reclaimed the psychological $2,300 mark.
Investors are reacting to news that Iran has submitted a new proposal for negotiations with the United States via Pakistani mediators. This development, reported late Thursday, has raised hopes for a resolution to the ongoing maritime blockades and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. The prospect of regional stability is acting as a massive "risk-on" catalyst for traders.
Bitcoin's jump to $78,101 represents a 2.31% gain within a 15-minute candle, according to recent exchange data. The technical structure suggests that $78,000 has flipped from a heavy resistance zone to a support level.

Analysts suggest that if a formal deal between the US and Iran is announced, the influx of liquidity and improved sentiment could push BTC past the $80,000 milestone before the weekend concludes.
While Bitcoin captures the headlines, Ethereum’s recovery to $2,300 is a vital signal for the broader altcoin market. ETH had been consolidating in the $2,200 range throughout late April. The current breakout suggests that institutional interest is returning to Layer 1 assets.

| Asset | Current Price | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin ($BTC) | $78,101 | All-Time High Territory |
| Ethereum ($ETH) | $2,307 | Key Level Reclaimed |
| S&P 500 | 7,246.13 | New All-Time High |
| Nasdaq | 27,644.38 | New All-Time High |
Elon Musk has voiced a harsh critique of the digital asset industry. Testifying in a federal court in Oakland, California, on April 30, 2024, Musk addressed the legitimacy of the broader crypto market. His statements have sparked intense debate among investors, especially given his historical role as a primary influencer of Bitcoin prices and meme coins.
Elon Musk explicitly stated during his testimony that while "some" cryptocurrencies have merit, the vast majority of the market consists of "scams." This comment was made under oath as Musk faced cross-examination regarding OpenAI's early financial strategies and its transition from a non-profit entity to a for-profit powerhouse.
To understand the weight of Musk's testimony, one must look at the Initial Coin Offering (ICO). An ICO is a fundraising method where a company issues its own digital tokens in exchange for investment, similar to an Initial Public Offering (IPO) in traditional equities. Musk’s "scam" comment was specifically triggered by questions regarding a 2018 proposal for OpenAI to launch its own ICO to fund its massive compute requirements.
Musk, a co-founder of OpenAI, is currently suing the organization and its CEO, Sam Altman. He alleges that the company breached its "founding agreement" by becoming a closed-source subsidiary of Microsoft rather than staying a non-profit dedicated to humanity.
Historically, a single tweet from Musk could send Dogecoin or Bitcoin into a tailspin. However, the current market reaction has been uncharacteristically muted.
Major assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum remained relatively stable following the testimony. Analysts suggest that the market has become "Musk-fatigued," meaning investors are no longer reacting impulsively to his personal opinions. Furthermore, since Musk acknowledged that "some" assets have merit—and his company Tesla still holds over 11,500 BTC—the comments were viewed more as a critique of "shitcoins" rather than a total abandonment of the technology.

Despite his courtroom skepticism, Musk remains a central figure in the industry. Tesla’s balance sheet continues to carry significant Bitcoin holdings, and Musk’s social media platform, X (formerly Twitter), continues to integrate payment features that many speculate will eventually include crypto.
| Entity | Action | Current Status |
|---|---|---|
| Tesla | Bought $1.5B BTC in 2021 | Holds ~11,509 BTC |
| SpaceX | Accepted DOGE for "Doge-1" mission | Ongoing engagement |
| X (Twitter) | Integrating "X Payments" | Licenses obtained in several US states |
Bitcoin (BTC) has officially closed the month of April 2026 on a high note, posting a significant 11.87% gain. After a turbulent first quarter that saw the asset retreat from its early 2026 peaks, this monthly candle represents a decisive "flip" in market sentiment. More importantly, the Bitcoin price successfully closed above its Monthly Previous High (MPH) of $75,900, a level that analysts have watched as the primary indicator for macro continuation.
The April monthly close at approximately $76,580 confirms that the "Q1 correction" has likely found its floor. By closing above the previous month’s highest point, $BTC has invalidated the series of lower highs that characterized the start of the year. This technical feat suggests that the crypto news cycle for May will be dominated by discussions of a potential run toward the $80,000 mark.
In technical analysis, the Monthly Previous High is a critical pivot used to gauge long-term trend strength.
The recovery witnessed in April was supported by a combination of technical indicators and institutional participation that had been absent during the March dip.

As of May 1, 2026, $Bitcoin is trading comfortably above its key moving averages. The 20-day EMA ($72,150) has crossed back above the 50-day EMA ($70,400), creating a "bullish cross" on the daily timeframes. This alignment often acts as a springboard for price discovery phases.
The Bitcoin price recovery coincides with a resurgence in Spot ETF inflows. According to data from April, institutional players resumed accumulation as the price stabilized above $70,000, providing the liquidity needed to breach the $75,900 barrier.
The successful April close establishes a new foundation for the remainder of the quarter. However, traders should watch the retest of the breakout zone to confirm the strength of this move.
| Level Type | Price Point | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| New Monthly Support | $75,900 | The "Breakout Line" (previous MPH) |
| Psychological Support | $70,000 | Major liquidity zone and buyer interest |
| Immediate Resistance | $78,500 | Local wick high from late April |
| Primary Target | $82,300 | Fibonacci extension level |
Bitcoin’s performance in April has effectively neutralized the bearish pressure that mounted in the early months of 2026. By turning the $75,900 resistance into a confirmed monthly support, the market has cleared a major technical hurdle. Investors are now looking toward the $80,000 region as the next logical milestone in this macro cycle.
The relationship between Gold and Bitcoin has reached a fever pitch in 2026. Historically, these two assets have been viewed as siblings in the "store of value" category, but their recent price action tells a more complex story of liquidity rotation and market psychology.
When Gold recently peaked at an all-time high of $5,589 per ounce on January 28, 2026, the crypto market didn't celebrate. Instead, Bitcoin [BTC] experienced a sharp -33% correction, sliding toward the $81,000 mark. While this might look like a decoupling, historical cycles suggest this "shakeout" is often the precursor to an explosive bull run for digital assets.
Not "always," but the correlation often turns negative at critical structural peaks. In August 2020, Gold hit what was then a record high, and Bitcoin immediately cooled off with a -21% retracement. Fast forward to January 2026, and we see a similar script: Gold reaches a parabolic peak, and Bitcoin sheds roughly a third of its value.
The pattern indicates that at the height of a Gold rally, liquidity is often "tapped out" or moving into defensive postures before rotating back into higher-risk, higher-reward assets like $Bitcoin.
To understand where we are going, we have to look at where we’ve been. The current market structure bears a striking resemblance to the 2020 cycle.
| Metric | 2020 Gold Peak Cycle | 2026 Gold Peak Cycle |
|---|---|---|
| Gold Peak Date | August 2020 | January 2026 |
| BTC Immediate Drop | -21% | -33% |
| Recovery Catalyst | Stimulus & Halving Lag | Institutional ETF Flows |
| Post-Peak BTC Gain | +559% (238 Days) | TBD (Projected Highs) |
In finance, "Liquidity Rotation" refers to capital moving from one asset class to another. When Gold reaches a "blow-off top" (a rapid increase in price followed by a steep drop), investors often take profits. That "sideline cash" doesn't stay idle for long. In 2020, that capital flowed directly into the crypto market, fueling a 559% rally that took BTC from $11,000 to over $60,000 in less than a year.
The 2026 drop has been more severe (-33% vs -21%) due to the increased presence of institutional leverage and Spot Bitcoin ETFs. However, the fundamental "why" remains the same:

Analysts suggest that the current Bitcoin/Gold valuation is at historic lows. This typically marks a "generational bottom" for the Bitcoin-to-Gold ratio. If the 2020 fractal repeats, the -33% drop we just witnessed is the final hurdle before Bitcoin targets the $150,000 - $200,000 range.
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XRP is up 2.1% to start May, matching April's total growth in one day. With a 13-year historical average of +23.3% in May, Bollinger Bands map the roadmap to $2.
Shiba Inu's momentum will fade quickly if even more inflows going to hit exchanges.
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Digital Currency Group founder Barry Silbert is forecasting a massive, multi-year bull cycle for Zcash (ZEC).
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse is doubling down on the company's commitment to its native token.
Bitcoin pushed above the $78,000 threshold on Saturday following reports that Tehran had delivered an updated peace proposal to United States mediators via Pakistan.

This diplomatic development followed President Donald Trump’s rejection of Iran’s previous offer, which proposed reopening the Strait of Hormuz in return for ending the American blockade at the critical oil passage. Speaking to the press, Trump remarked that Iran “wants to reach a deal badly.”
Per Axios reporting, Tehran responded to Washington’s most recent modifications to a preliminary agreement framework. White House special envoy Steve Witkoff transmitted a series of requirements to Iranian officials, primarily centered on reintegrating nuclear concerns into the agreement’s language.
At press time, BTC was exchanging hands near $78,800, representing a greater than 3% increase from its intraday bottom around $76,000, per TradingView market data.
Commodity markets reacted simultaneously to the diplomatic progress. Brent crude futures declined to approximately $106, shedding more than 4% during the session, as market participants factored in reduced geopolitical risk.
The wider cryptocurrency sector experienced parallel upward momentum. Approximately $2.1 billion worth of Bitcoin and Ethereum options contracts reached expiration on the same trading day, contributing to heightened market fluctuations.
The price appreciation aligned with exceptional institutional demand for Bitcoin investment vehicles. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF products accumulated $1.97 billion during April, surpassing March’s $1.37 billion and establishing the year’s peak monthly intake, based on SoSoValue analytics.

BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) dominated inflows with approximately $2 billion in net contributions. Conversely, Grayscale’s GBTC experienced the most significant withdrawals at roughly $280 million.
The Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust ETF (MSBT), which debuted April 8, attracted $194 million without recording any outflow sessions throughout the month.
Aggregate net contributions across all Bitcoin ETF products since their inception have now exceeded $58 billion. For 2026 year-to-date, Bitcoin ETFs maintain approximately $1.47 billion in net positive flows following withdrawal periods during January and February.
Cryptocurrency market analyst Ali Charts highlighted Bitcoin’s MVRV Pricing Bands as an essential framework for determining cyclical bottom formations. According to Ali Charts’ analysis, Bitcoin has traditionally established its price floor within the 1.0 to 0.8 MVRV band range—representing the territory where market valuation trades at or beneath its collective acquisition cost.
As of late April 2026, these technical thresholds are positioned at $54,145 for the 1.0 marker and $43,316 for the 0.8 marker. Ali Charts emphasized that Bitcoin has yet to approach these price territories during the present market cycle.
Bitcoin delivered a 12% appreciation during April, representing its most robust monthly showing since April 2025, when it climbed over 14%.
The post Bitcoin (BTC) Surges Past $78,000 Following Iran-U.S. Peace Negotiations Update appeared first on Blockonomi.
Bitcoin April closing +11.87% signals a shift in monthly momentum after early-year weakness, as traders assess whether recovery strength can extend into May while broader crypto markets respond to improving structure and renewed spot demand across major exchanges now conditions.
Bitcoin’s April closing +11.87% reflects a shift in monthly positioning after a weak Q1 phase, where repeated drawdowns shaped cautious sentiment across derivatives markets.
Price action into the April close showed steadier demand on higher timeframes, with reduced downside volatility compared to earlier months.
Market participants observed improved structure on weekly charts, where successive higher lows began forming ahead of the monthly settlement across spot and futures markets.
Liquidity conditions during April showed gradual stabilization, with trading volumes recovering across major exchanges. Spot market participation increased during late-month sessions, aligning with reduced sell pressure from short-term holders.
Derivatives positioning also adjusted, as funding rates normalized after earlier volatility spikes. This environment contributed to smoother price discovery, with fewer abrupt intraday reversals compared to prior months of 2026.
This is across both spot and derivatives segments into the month-end trading conditions. Market structure now depends on whether higher lows persist into early May trading sessions.
Traders are monitoring support retention near previous breakout zones. If price stability continues, momentum conditions may extend beyond monthly transition periods.
However, failure to hold structure often results in consolidation phases, where range-bound trading dominates before directional expansion resumes across broader crypto market cycles.
Into the May period, analysis continuation conditions remain closely monitored at the current levels observed
Historical market behavior shows May trading often diverges from April trends, even after strong monthly closes. Bitcoin’s April closing +11.87% positions the asset within a recovery phase, yet May outcomes remain dependent on liquidity flow and trader positioning.
Past cycles recorded both sharp rallies and sudden retracements, making directional bias less consistent compared to other months in the annual calendar across historical market data sets observed.
In addition, Ethereum price movement during the same period aligned with broader recovery conditions, adding context to cross-asset performance trends. April gains in both major assets reflected improved sentiment across spot markets.
However, correlation between assets does not guarantee identical May performance, as each market reacts differently to liquidity changes and positioning shifts.
Within derivatives, activity patterns remain data dependent across trading environments into the month transition phase, and conditions closely tracked are now observed.
Market participants continue to assess whether April strength transitions into sustained May momentum or short-term consolidation. Price action behavior near key support zones remains central to short-term direction.
Volume patterns and liquidity participation levels will provide additional signals on whether continuation conditions are forming across the broader market structure. For structure confirmation, conditions remain under observation.
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Litecoin price prediction enters a critical phase as LTC trades at $55.53, posting a 0.81% daily gain while still down 2.09% weekly.
Trading volume stands at $311.7M, reflecting steady participation amid ETF filings, MWEB recovery progress, and tightening volatility conditions signaling an approaching directional move.
Litecoin price prediction is gaining momentum after recent institutional developments placed the asset back in focus.
Spot ETF filings from Grayscale and CoinShares have renewed discussions around Litecoin’s position in the regulated digital asset market.
These filings matter because Litecoin is increasingly viewed as a commodity-like asset. Its decentralized structure and long operating history reduce the legal uncertainty often attached to alternative cryptocurrencies. Reports suggesting a strong probability of approval have added to this renewed optimism.
If approved, a spot Litecoin ETF could open the asset to passive investment flows. Institutional demand would likely increase through custodial products, portfolio exposure, and arbitrage opportunities linked to regulated trading vehicles.
Litecoin does not need to outperform larger assets to benefit from this shift. Inclusion alone may be enough to attract new liquidity.
At the same time, Litecoin developers recently resolved a technical issue involving MimbleWimble Extension Blocks. The bug had caused a 13-block reorganization, creating short-term concerns across the network.
The response from developers was swift. A patch was deployed quickly, restoring operational stability while preserving Litecoin’s optional privacy functionality. This reduced the risk of prolonged uncertainty and reinforced Litecoin’s reputation for dependable network maintenance.
A market update shared by SeniorDeFi described Litecoin as an asset that has consistently survived market cycles. The post noted that Litecoin performs well when speculative capital rotates away from high-volatility altcoins.
Technical analysts are now closely watching Litecoin’s volatility setup. Daily Bollinger Bands have compressed to levels not seen since 2017, signaling that a major move may be approaching.
This pattern reflects a period where price volatility has declined significantly. Buyers and sellers are currently in temporary balance, often creating conditions for a strong breakout or breakdown. The squeeze itself does not predict direction, but it usually signals magnitude.
Litecoin has been trading near the mid-$50 range after recovering from prolonged downside pressure. This sideways structure suggests the market is stabilizing while traders build positions.
Analyst Minimilian noted in a recent tweet that Litecoin is showing “compressed energy” on the daily chart. Such low-volatility phases rarely last long, especially when combined with improving fundamentals.
A confirmed breakout would likely require a strong daily close above resistance with rising volume. Until then, Litecoin remains in accumulation mode.
Litecoin price prediction now reflects a market balancing technical stability, institutional access potential, and growing utility. With volatility compressed and ETF speculation rising, traders are watching closely for the next decisive move.
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Crypto markets and traditional metals have moved in opposite directions during recent geopolitical tension, as digital assets outperformed while gold and silver weakened.
Liquidity conditions, ETF inflows, and positioning shifts have reshaped how investors allocate capital across defensive and risk assets.
The relationship between Bitcoin and gold has shifted as capital flows respond more to liquidity expectations than fear-based positioning. Digital assets, led by Bitcoin and Ethereum, recorded gains above 20 percent during the period under review.
At the same time, precious metals faced sustained pressure, with gold and silver posting notable declines. This divergence reflects a broader reassessment of where investors seek protection during geopolitical uncertainty.
Market behavior suggests that modern safe havens are increasingly influenced by policy expectations. Traders appear to anticipate monetary easing rather than prolonged disruption, encouraging allocation toward higher-beta assets.
Crypto markets benefit from continuous trading cycles, allowing immediate reaction to global developments. This 24/7 structure creates faster price discovery compared to metals, which rely on fixed trading hours and slower adjustment periods.
Institutional flows further reinforced this divergence. Bitcoin ETF inflows exceeding $1.1 billion supported demand during volatility windows, reducing downside pressure and strengthening momentum across crypto markets.
Gold entered the period with elevated positioning, limiting fresh inflows when geopolitical catalysts emerged. Instead of new accumulation, profit-taking dominated, adding to downward pressure on prices.
The evolving contrast between digital assets and metals highlights a shift in how markets interpret risk. Instead of relying solely on traditional hedges, investors increasingly favor instruments tied to liquidity cycles and growth expectations.
A widely circulated market note captured this sentiment, stating that crypto rallied while metals declined as liquidity replaced fear-based trading. This reflects a broader structural change in cross-asset behavior.
Macroeconomic conditions also contributed to the divergence. A stronger dollar and elevated interest rate expectations reduced demand for non-yielding assets such as gold and silver.
Bitcoin and Ethereum benefited from leveraged positioning in derivatives markets, amplifying price movement during periods of increased inflows. This structural leverage allowed faster repricing compared to commodity markets.
Equity indices, including the Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500, also recorded gains during the same period. This supported a broader risk-on environment aligned with expectations of policy stability rather than crisis escalation.
Copper prices remained relatively stable, signaling limited expectations of severe industrial disruption. This reinforced the view that markets were pricing contained geopolitical risk rather than systemic shock.
The evolving contrast between crypto and metals reflects a broader redefinition of safe-haven behavior, where liquidity responsiveness now plays a central role in determining asset preference.
The post Bitcoin and Ethereum Surge as Gold Slumps During Geopolitical Tension appeared first on Blockonomi.
Stablecoins are gradually moving beyond crypto-native activity into mainstream financial infrastructure worldwide.
Supply has already exceeded $300 billion, while banks and payment companies pursue direct integration. Regulatory frameworks are becoming clearer across major markets at the same time.
Annual transaction volume sits around $35 trillion, yet real-economy usage remains roughly $390 billion. That figure represents barely over 1% of total activity. The infrastructure is being built well before broader adoption fully arrives.
Stablecoins are finding their strongest real-world application in business-to-business payments today. Cross-border transfers remain slow, expensive, and full of friction for many companies.
Settlement often takes days, while liquidity regularly gets locked in transit. Smaller businesses tend to face far worse banking conditions than large institutions.
Around $226 billion of real usage comes from company-to-company transfers today. This makes B2B the largest real-economy stablecoin category by a clear margin.
That figure is growing quickly because the problem it addresses is well understood. Fewer intermediaries and 24/7 settlement rails deliver measurable savings for businesses.
As analyst @WorldOfMercek noted, traditional finance and blockchain rails are “no longer moving in completely separate worlds.” Banks are actively adopting crypto infrastructure because the operational benefits are hard to dismiss.
The old “crypto versus banks” narrative has given way to steady convergence. Financial institutions are integrating stablecoin rails for practical, well-documented economic reasons.
Most of the $35 trillion in annual volume still comes from trading, DeFi, and exchange settlement. Real-economy usage at $390 billion remains just over 1% of that total. Rails are always built before populations fully transition to using them.
Geographic data shows that Asia is ahead of the West in practical stablecoin use. Singapore, Hong Kong, and Japan account for a large share of real-world transactions.
Western markets spend more time discussing potential than actively deploying stablecoins at scale. Asia is already applying them where they directly solve payment and business problems.
Retail usage is growing, though it remains a smaller portion of the overall market. Consumer payments and daily card spending are not the leading story just yet.
That category will likely expand once rails integrate more deeply into existing payment systems. Most users care about speed, cost, and reliability — not which infrastructure moves their money.
The actual bottleneck today is not the technology — it already works. Bank connectivity, payment network access, regulatory clarity, and institutional trust are the real gaps remaining. Those barriers are narrowing as more traditional players enter the space.
Stablecoins are not displacing the financial system on any rapid timeline. Instead, they are being absorbed into it consistently and quietly over time.
That process tends to look slow until it suddenly feels inevitable to outside observers. The most consequential chapter of the stablecoin story is likely still ahead.
The post Stablecoins Cross $300B Supply as B2B Payments Become the Fastest-Growing Real-World Use Case appeared first on Blockonomi.
After six consecutive months of posting losses, almost all of which were by double digits, Ripple’s cross-border token finally managed to snap that streak in April, charting a minor increase.
All eyes are now on May, which has historically been one of XRP’s best months for gains.
XRP had a highly eventful and positive end to 2024 when it skyrocketed by a mind-blowing 281% in November alone after Donald Trump won the US presidential elections, and there was reinforced hope of a major regulatory change in the country. The asset kept climbing and matched its $3.40 all-time high in January but couldn’t break it on its first attempt.
After a six-month hiatus propelled by some questionable global policies by the now-acting US President Trump, XRP finally did the unthinkable in July when it tapped $3.65 for the first time ever. Since then, though, it has been mostly downhill. It all began with a 12% monthly decline in October, followed by a 13.8% drop in November, and another 14.8% dip in December.
The new year began with a 10.6% slip in January, according to data from CryptoRank, and an even more painful 16.2% nosedive in February. March saw a more modest decline of 2.8% before the bulls finally intervened in April and ended this painful six-month streak. In fact, this was the worst such period for XRP since late 2013/early-to-mid 2014 when it had seven consecutive months in the red.
However, that was shortly after the token had launched, and the overall crypto market was entirely different (smaller, less legitimate, and more volatile). As such, it’s safe to conclude that the 2025/2026 six-month losing period was the worst in XRP’s recent history.

The graph above shows that XRP has historically performed well in April, with an average increase of 16.5%, though this one was nowhere near those numbers. May, though, has been even kinder to the cross-border token with an average gain of 23% (followed by 23.2% in June). This makes it the fourth-best month for XRP, only after June, December, and November.
Something similar holds for BTC and ETH, as both market leaders ended April in the green and have historically charted gains in May. However, the big dark horse continues to be the war in Iran, and every major move there causes enhanced volatility in the crypto market. Until there’s a decisive resolution there, it’s unlikely that the crypto market will experience a more profound rebound from the recent lows.
The post Ripple’s XRP Turned the Tide in April After Record Losing Streak Ends appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Despite a slight delay, the Core Team behind the controversial project finally announced the completion of the next major protocol upgrade and hinted at the migration to the next one.
At the same time, the ecosystem’s native token rebounded nicely after the painful crash from earlier this week.
The Core Team began highlighting the frequent protocol updates in late February, upon the successful migration to version 19.6. V 19.9 followed suit a few weeks later, while the highly anticipated v20.2, which laid out the foundations for smart contract capabilities, arrived by March 14 (known as PiDay).
Version 21 came in early April, and the team set a deadline of April 27 for the completion of the next one (version 22). Although they failed to announce its successful migration by that date, numerous accounts on X speculated that it had been done as their applications displayed it. Nevertheless, the team confirmed the speculations online on May 1, indicating, as always, that node operators must ensure their systems are up to date to continue operating on the blockchain.
Moreover, the post hinted at the next upgrade on the roadmap (v23) but didn’t provide a specific deadline for its completion.
Network Update: The Pi Mainnet has successfully upgraded to Protocol 22!
Node operators, please ensure your systems are up to date and stay tuned for instructions regarding the upcoming v23 upgrade.
— Pi Network (@PiCoreTeam) May 1, 2026
The project’s native token went on an impressive run in the middle of the business week in a rather unexpected time when most of the crypto market remained sideways or even charted losses. Instead of joining them, PI rocketed from $0.17 to a monthly peak of $0.20 in the span of 48 hours or so, and some analysts speculated that this could be the start of a more profound rally.
However, it was painfully rejected there and driven south to just over $0.17 on Thursday. A popular analyst on X, though, reassured that PI has remained above the crucial 100-day MA, which acted as a support at the time, and predicted an instant rebound.
Such a recovery indeed transpired on Friday as the asset jumped by about 6% from its low and exceeded $0.18 once again. Its market cap is close to $1.9 billion once again as of press time, making it the 45th largest digital asset on CoinGecko.

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Strategy’s MSTR stock snapped a nine-month run of losses in April, climbing 33% as Bitcoin (BTC) rose nearly 12% in the same month, according to data shared by market commentator Mark Harvey on X.
The rebound puts fresh attention on whether investors still treat Michael Saylor’s company as a leveraged Bitcoin proxy, even after a rough stretch that badly trailed the cryptocurrency at times.
The numbers in the losing streak were ugly, going from mid-2025 through March this year. July fell 1%, August dropped 17%, and September lost 4%. It was the same story in October, which slid 16%, and November, where a 34% collapse was recorded.
December ended the year down 14%, with the losses continuing into 2026, as January saw a 2% dip and a further 14% fall in February, finished off by a 4% loss in March.
Bitcoin, for its part, did not perform particularly well over the same stretch either, falling over 6% in August 2025, before rising 5% in September. It then dropped nearly 4% in October, fell by about 18% in November, and declined nearly 3% in December.
The flagship crypto posted further losses in the first two months of 2026, before a slim gain of nearly 2% in March brought that five-month red run to a halt.
Looking at the data, while BTC’s losses were significant, MSTR’s were consistently steeper, which is characteristic of the stock’s amplified relationship with the underlying asset. April reversed that. Bitcoin gained almost 12% for the month, finishing near $76,000, while Strategy’s stock more than doubled that return at 33%.
At the time of writing, BTC was up around 13% over the past 30 days per CoinGecko but down nearly 1% on the week, trading around $77,000 after earlier dipping below $75,000 following the Federal Reserve’s decision to hold interest rates steady.
The broader 2026 performance comparison is where Strategy’s April run becomes particularly notable. Harvey’s year-to-date tracker puts MSTR up around 9.5% for the year, placing it ahead of Nvidia, Block, the Nasdaq, gold, and the S&P 500.
Bitcoin itself is down about 13% year-to-date, which means Strategy has managed to outperform the very asset backing its treasury over this timeframe.
The rest of the crypto-adjacent equities in Harvey’s list have had a rough 2026. Twenty One Capital is down around 7%, Coinbase has lost 17%, and Metaplanet is down 19%. In addition, BitMine is off 23%, and Ethereum (ETH) is down 25%.
Furthermore, firms affiliated with US President Donald Trump’s family, including Trump Media and American Bitcoin, have also had a poor 2026 so far, with the former down 31% and the latter losing 32%.
The outlier at the top of Harvey’s table is oil, up 80% on the year. Ten-year Treasury yields are also up around 6%.
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After a period of relative calm, the OG meme coin, Dogecoin (DOGE), has surged even as other top crypto assets have pulled back from gains.
Interestingly, Santiment revealed Dogecoin whale activity has surged to a six-month high.
On-chain data recorded 739 transfers of more than $100,000 in a single day. Among 149 wallets holding at least 100 million DOGE each, total holdings have reached an all-time high of 108.52 billion DOGE, which is worth around $11.6 billion.
This uptick in large transactions comes alongside a 14% increase in Dogecoin’s price over the past 10 days, which Santiment believes “is very likely not just a coincidence.” DOGE briefly touched 11 cents before a mild correction to $0.1091 on Friday.
Crypto analyst Ali Martinez recently flagged one of DOGE’s biggest transaction spikes of the year on April 16 after nearly $800 million moved in 24 hours. He noted that sudden jumps in network activity such as this have historically come before periods of volatility, often reflecting large wallets repositioning. The analyst also highlighted the aggressive accumulation by large holders during the ongoing consolidation phase, which suggested supply is being absorbed.
He said this trend typically indicates the formation of a price floor. With DOGE now trading above $0.1018, a level that has blocked five breakout attempts, he sees $0.1172 as the next target.
Several industry experts share a similar bullish outlook for the meme coin.
Dogecoin’s futures market has picked up pace as its open interest reached 15.3 billion tokens, as per data compiled by Coinglass.

Binance dominated DOGE open interest with more than 4 billion, while Gate.io followed at 1.86 billion. Bitget, Bybit, and OKX each hovered near 1.4 billion. Meanwhile, other platforms such as Hyperliquid, MEXC, and KuCoin also held strong positions.
With both price and futures activity climbing, it appears traders are opening new positions rather than just exiting old ones. That usually supports the ongoing upward move in DOGE. At the same time, the build-up of leveraged trades means any change in momentum could trigger quick and sharp pullbacks.
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Ethereum is opening May at around $2.3k, having spent the final week of April consolidating below the $2.4k resistance zone that has now rejected the price on multiple occasions. With the Coinbase Premium Index turning negative precisely as the asset stalled at resistance, the question entering the new month is whether US institutional demand has genuinely returned, or simply made a brief appearance before retreating again.
The ascending white channel from the February low remains the dominant structure on the daily chart, with its lower boundary tracking near $2k and continuing to provide the foundation for every pullback since March. The asset is currently sitting just above the 100-day moving average located at approximately $2.2k, which has now turned into a dynamic support.
The RSI has also faded from its mid-April peaks near to roughly 50, mirroring the pattern seen across the broader market as the April recovery momentum runs out of steam.
The structural picture has not broken down, but it has not progressed either. A daily close above the $2.4k supply zone remains the single requirement for the bullish thesis to regain credibility, opening the path toward the critical $2.8k area and the 200-day moving average nearby.
On the downside, the ascending channel’s lower boundary near $2k is the line that matters most, as a close below it would be the first structural damage since the February recovery began, and would bring the $1.8k demand zone back into active consideration.

The falling wedge that formed after the mid-April peak near $2.4k is now in its final stages of compression, with the converging trendlines squeezing price into a decision zone right at current levels. ETH is sitting near the wedge’s lower boundary after a bounce from it, and the RSI on this timeframe has recovered modestly from its recent lows to 50, which indicates a reset in short-term momentum.
The horizontal support zone at $2.2k sits just below as the next meaningful floor if the wedge breaks to the downside. A clean 4-hour close above the wedge’s upper boundary and through $2.4k would signal that the pattern is resolving bullishly, with the grey arrow projection targeting approximately $2.7-$2.8k as the measured move.

After spending most of April in positive territory, which was a meaningful shift from the deeply negative readings that accompanied ETH’s collapse below $2k in February, the Coinbase Premium Index has abruptly flipped back to -0.03 as May opens.
The timing is not coincidental. The premium turned positive as price recovered from the lows and US buyers re-engaged, but it has now reversed precisely as ETH stalled at the $2.4k resistance zone again. US institutional demand appeared at the lows and faded at resistance, which suggests a market being accumulated cautiously, not one where conviction buyers are stepping in to force a breakout.
The broader context amplifies this reading. US investors are navigating a difficult macro environment entering May, with ongoing tariff policy uncertainty, the Federal Reserve maintaining a restrictive stance, and equity markets exhibiting the kind of intermittent volatility that historically drives institutional capital away from high-beta risk assets like ETH.
The current premium reading of -0.03 is far from the extreme negativity of February’s -0.20 lows, and a return to positive territory is entirely possible if the macro backdrop stabilizes, which could lead to a breakout above $2.4k and a more profound recovery in the coming weeks.

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