Alberta's 2026 referendum could reshape Canada's political landscape and influence geopolitical dynamics, especially with US interest.
The post Alberta schedules 2026 referendum on independence from Canada appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Trump's decision on the Iran deal could heighten geopolitical tensions, impacting global oil markets and prompting diplomatic shifts.
The post Trump to decide on Iran deal, demands Strait of Hormuz opening appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The draft US-Iran agreement could reshape Middle East geopolitics, fostering peace and reducing military tensions across the region.
The post US-Iran draft agreement includes end to Lebanon war, signals regional de-escalation appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Texas' Bitcoin reserve initiative could influence energy policy and regulatory frameworks, potentially setting a precedent for other states.
The post Texas forms Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Advisory Committee, appoints CleanSpark executive appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The anticipated regulatory clarity could enhance investor confidence, potentially driving significant growth in the U.S. crypto market.
The post SEC Chair: Trump to sign crypto market structure bill soon appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

CFTC Cracks Open U.S. Market for Bitcoin and Crypto Perpetual Futures
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has cleared the way for American traders to access one of crypto’s most important derivatives markets, approving the first true bitcoin perpetual futures contract on a U.S. exchange and issuing parallel relief that lets Coinbase route U.S. clients into global perp and options liquidity.
On Friday, the agency approved KalshiEX, LLC’s BTCPERP contract, a perpetual futures product that references the spot price of bitcoin and trades on Kalshi’s CFTC‑regulated designated contract market.
At the same time, staff granted no‑action relief to Coinbase Financial Markets, allowing it to offer digital commodity derivatives — including access to offshore venues — to U.S. customers through a CFTC‑registered futures commission merchant structure.
Perpetual futures, or “perps,” are a type of futures contract with no expiration date that lets traders bet on the price movement of assets without owning them directly.
They have become the dominant product in crypto derivatives trading, with most activity historically concentrated on offshore platforms.
CFTC Chair Michael Selig framed the move as a watershed moment for U.S. market structure.
“This morning, the CFTC took historic action to permit the listing of a true bitcoin perpetual contract by a CFTC‑registered exchange, charting a path for one of the most liquid segments of the crypto asset markets to exist within the US regulatory framework,” Selig said in a post on X.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong quickly seized on the news, highlighting just how much market access the agency has effectively unblocked. “Big day for our US‑based traders, and for Coinbase,” he wrote on X, noting that U.S. users had previously been shut out of “~80% of global crypto markets (perpetual futures and options). But not anymore!”
Through Coinbase Financial Markets, institutional clients will be able to access global perps and options — including Deribit, which boasts tens of billions of dollars in bitcoin options open interest — via a single U.S.‑regulated FCM.
Friday’s announcements did not come in isolation. Alongside the product actions, the CFTC’s Division of Clearing and Risk, Division of Market Oversight and Market Participants Division issued a staff advisory on 24/7 trading, clearing and settlement of derivatives.
The advisory is not a formal rulemaking, but it offers a window into how the agency is thinking about round‑the‑clock markets increasingly enabled by blockchain and decentralized infrastructure.
Commission staff said they have observed growing interest in effectively 24/7 trading, driven in part by digital asset markets.
“Therefore, Commission staff believes that an advisory, outlining the potential risks associated with 24/7 trading, clearing, and settlement, and the ways in which these risks are addressed by current Commission regulations, may help promote continued market robustness, along with responsible innovation and fair competition among market participants,” the staff wrote.
In practice, the combination of the Kalshi approval, the Coinbase no‑action position and the 24/7 advisory amounts to a blueprint for how U.S.‑regulated entities can plug into, and help domesticate, the global perpetuals market.
Kalshi can list a fully regulated bitcoin perp on its own exchange, while Coinbase, through its FCM, can connect U.S. clients to deep offshore liquidity pools without forcing them into bespoke offshore corporate structures.
Under Chair Selig and President Donald Trump, the CFTC has steadily pivoted from a posture of enforcement‑driven deterrence toward one of structured onshoring of key crypto market segments.
Earlier this year, the CFTC and SEC jointly outlined a new taxonomy for crypto assets, and the SEC is preparing a broad tokenization rule set, while Paxos just secured approval to clear U.S. equities on blockchain rails.
This post CFTC Cracks Open U.S. Market for Bitcoin and Crypto Perpetual Futures first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Someone Just Inscribed the U.S. Constitution onto the Bitcoin Blockchain
An unknown actor broadcast a Bitcoin transaction Thursday evening embedding the full text of the U.S. Constitution onto the blockchain — permanently and without the possibility of removal.
The transaction, confirmed at 8:25 p.m. UTC on May 28, cost 113,454 satoshis, or about $83.41 in fees, and was processed by mining pool SpiderPool just 14 minutes after it hit the network.
At 44.4 kilobytes, the transaction is far larger than a standard Bitcoin transfer — its bulk comes from the Constitution’s full text, beginning with “We the People of the United States,” written into an OP_RETURN output field and recorded on-chain.
OP_RETURN is a script opcode that allows anyone to attach arbitrary data to a transaction. Outputs tagged this way are provably unspendable — they carry no bitcoin value and exist solely to store information. For years, the field was capped at 80 bytes, limiting its use to short hashes, timestamps, and brief messages.
That changed with Bitcoin Core v30, released in mid-2025, which stripped away the byte limit and the one-OP_RETURN-per-transaction rule. Developers behind the change argued that the old cap was counterproductive — users were finding workarounds anyway, and the restriction created more problems than it solved.
This transaction is one of the first high-profile uses of that new freedom, exploiting SegWit and Taproot features alongside the expanded OP_RETURN to fit an entire founding document into a single on-chain record.
Writing data to the blockchain is not a new concept. Projects like OpenTimestamps, DOCPROOF, and Factom spent years anchoring document hashes to the chain as tamper-proof records. The Ordinals protocol, which launched in 2023, pushed the practice further by inscribing images, audio, and code into the witness data of Taproot transactions. What separates Thursday’s inscription is the choice of document — not a hash or a jpeg, it was the governing charter of the United States, written in full.
The inscription arrives during a moment of discussion in the Bitcoin community. BIP-444, a pending proposal, would restore the old 83-byte OP_RETURN cap, with backers arguing that unlimited data storage undermines Bitcoin’s identity as a monetary network.
The sender claimed no credit, offered no explanation, and left no traceable identity — only the Preamble, seven Articles, and 27 Amendments, written into a block that every Bitcoin node on the planet now carries.
This post Someone Just Inscribed the U.S. Constitution onto the Bitcoin Blockchain first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Texas Names Bitcoin Reserve Advisory Committee as State Eyes Direct Bitcoin Custody
Acting Texas Comptroller Kelly Hancock on Thursday announced the members of the Texas Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Advisory Committee, a newly created body tasked with guiding the state’s management, custody, and valuation of bitcoin holdings.
The committee was established under Senate Bill 21, passed by the 89th Texas Legislature and signed into law on June 22, 2025 — making Texas one of the most prominent states in the nation to move forward with an operational bitcoin reserve.
“The Legislature gave the Comptroller’s office a clear responsibility to administer the Texas Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, and that work must be done with transparency, security and strong financial controls,” Hancock said in a statement Thursday. “This advisory committee brings together the kind of expertise needed to help the state carry out that direction carefully, responsibly and in the best interest of Texas taxpayers.”
The five-member committee — which includes Hancock himself — draws on a broad range of financial, legal, and digital asset expertise.
Laurie Dotter, who chairs the Investment Advisory Board for the Employees Retirement System of Texas, brings more than 35 years of investment and governance experience.
Jamie McAvity, founder and CEO of Cormint Data Systems, is a nationally recognized bitcoin miner operating a 130-megawatt facility in Fort Stockton with top efficiency rankings.
Legal scholar Carla Reyes, a professor at Southern Methodist University, currently serves on the federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s Innovation Advisory Committee and has testified before Congress on blockchain policy.
Rounding out the panel is Gary A. Vecchiarelli, CPA, president and CFO of CleanSpark, who built that company’s institutional-grade BTC trading desk, yield strategies, and digital asset governance framework.
The office also issued an RFP seeking a qualified crypto custodian to support its Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, which currently holds about $10 million in exposure via the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), with services covering secure custody, liquidity, and asset management.
The move signals a planned transition from ETF-based exposure to directly custodied Bitcoin within 60 days of contract execution, reflecting a shift toward full ownership, institutional-grade security, and broader crypto asset support over time.
Texas’s move comes as the federal government continues working to solidify its own Strategic Bitcoin Reserve — a process that has proven more complicated than initially anticipated.
President Trump signed an executive order on March 6, 2025, directing the Treasury Department to establish a reserve seeded with BTC already held through criminal and civil asset forfeitures — an estimated 328,372 BTC, making the U.S. the largest known state holder of BTC in the world.
The order explicitly bars the Treasury from selling those bitcoin.
However, the path to a formal, codified reserve has faced delays. In January 2026, Patrick Witt, Executive Director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, acknowledged “obscure legal provisions” still needed to be overcome.
By May 2026, Witt signaled that a major legal breakthrough had been reached, saying an announcement on the reserve was imminent.
Legislation to make the reserve permanent is also advancing in Congress. The American Reserves Modernization Act — co-sponsored by Senator Cynthia Lummis and Representative Nick Begich — would authorize the Treasury to purchase up to 200,000 BTC per year for five years, with holdings locked for a minimum of 20 years.
If passed, the Treasury’s first open-market Bitcoin purchase is projected for Q4 2026.
This post Texas Names Bitcoin Reserve Advisory Committee as State Eyes Direct Bitcoin Custody first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Miners Face AI Squeeze as Hash Rate Flattens and Network Enters New Security Phase, Fidelity Says
Digital asset markets are slogging through a choppy 2026, with prices under pressure even as the underlying plumbing of the system quietly advances — from tokenization on Wall Street to quantum‑resistant upgrades on Bitcoin.
A new mid‑year update from Fidelity Digital Assets frames the year as one of “structural retooling,” where regulatory progress, infrastructure build‑out, and institutional experimentation are doing more work than headline prices suggest.
Bitcoin is down about 13% year‑to‑date amid liquidation‑driven deleveraging, stubborn inflation and geopolitical shocks that have pushed rate expectations back toward tightening, Fidelity notes.
Yet the asset has outperformed many traditional benchmarks during recent flare‑ups in global conflict, hinting at renewed demand for liquid, politically neutral assets when stress spikes.
At the same time, demand for crypto exposure through mainstream channels remains resilient, with options on spot BTC exchange‑traded products—launched only in late 2024—now seeing open interest comparable to options settled in native bitcoin, according to the report.
Tokenization is another quiet growth area, as large financial institutions roll out blockchain‑based products and major exchanges take stakes in digital‑asset platforms, helped by joint SEC–CFTC guidance and draft legislation like the CLARITY Act that aim to formalize a digital‑asset taxonomy.
One of the more novel developments so far this year is the interplay between AI and bitcoin mining capacity. Fidelity noted the 30‑day average hash rate and mining difficulty are each down roughly 8–9% from earlier highs—before a modest rebound—suggesting miners may be redirecting power and infrastructure toward higher‑margin AI data center workloads.
On‑chain, the firm reports that expanding the amount of data allowed in Bitcoin’s OP_RETURN field has not triggered the feared “blockchain bloat,” with block sizes and utilization still tracking within projected ranges.
Instead, attention has turned to node diversity and long‑term security: Bitcoin Core still accounts for about 77% of nodes versus roughly 17% for Bitcoin Knots, raising what Fidelity calls a non‑zero risk of fragmentation under certain conditions even as work accelerates on proposals like quantum‑resistant Pay‑to‑Merkle‑Root outputs.
Outside crypto, gold has reasserted itself as a preferred macro hedge, surging nearly 30% earlier in the year before settling back to a still solid 3–4% gain year‑to‑date, according to the report.
Fidelity points to persistently strong central‑bank buying and evidence that gold is overtaking U.S. dollars and Treasuries in some reserve mixes, alongside isolated but symbolically important moves such as Iran accepting BTC for certain payments tied to traffic in the Strait of Hormuz.
This post Bitcoin Miners Face AI Squeeze as Hash Rate Flattens and Network Enters New Security Phase, Fidelity Says first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Anonymous Plaintiff Seeks Legal Title to $293 Billion in Dormant Bitcoin, Without Holding Any Private Keys
A pseudonymous individual calling himself “Noah Doe,” along with two Wyoming LLCs, has filed suit in New York Supreme Court seeking a court declaration that they are the legal owners of 39,069 dormant Bitcoin addresses holding roughly 3.8 million BTC — worth an estimated $293 billion at current prices.
The case, filed March 11, 2026, and amended May 1, 2026 (Index No. 153119/2026), is believed to be the first attempt in U.S. history to claim title to Bitcoin under a lost-and-found property statute.
The legal vehicle is New York Personal Property Law Article 7-B, a statute designed for tangible lost objects — a wallet found on a sidewalk, say, or jewelry left in a cab. The law says a finder who reports lost property to police, makes reasonable efforts to locate the owner, and receives no response within a set period can eventually take legal title to the item.
Noah Doe’s complaint argues that dormant Bitcoin addresses are “lost property” under that framework, that his USB drives of address data delivered to the NYPD 17th Precinct satisfy the deposit requirement, and that title to all 39,069 addresses vested in him across three dates: December 26, 2025, March 31, 2026, and April 14, 2026.
The statute has never been applied to cryptocurrency. Article 7-B was written for physical objects that a finder picks up and hands to authorities. The plaintiff never held private keys to any of these addresses and could not have transferred the coins to the police or to any owner who came forward.
A Bitcoin address, unlike a lost wallet, remains fully accessible to its original owner regardless of whether someone else has identified it — the coins do not move unless the true keyholder signs a transaction.
The 39,069 addresses named as defendants are not a random sample of dormant Bitcoin.
According to blockchain research firm Galaxy Digital, which published a detailed analysis of the case in May 2026, roughly 21,923 of the defendant addresses carry what researchers call the “Patoshi” nonce pattern — an onchain fingerprint widely attributed to Bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator, Satoshi Nakamoto. Those addresses alone hold approximately 1.096 million BTC, worth around $84.7 billion.
Also on the defendant list: one address holding 79,957 BTC stolen in the 2011 Mt. Gox hack — coins that have been actively tracked by investigators for over a decade — and one address that is a Counterparty “burn” address, meaning it is provably unspendable and was never controlled by any person. The Mt. Gox coins are the subject of ongoing recovery proceedings and are not, by any conventional definition, abandoned.
The median defendant address holds 50 BTC, currently worth approximately $3.86 million. The average holds 97.25 BTC, worth around $7.5 million.
According to Galaxy’s onchain data, 99.9% of the defendant addresses hold BTC worth considerably more than $10.
That $10 figure is central to the case’s architecture. The complaint relies on an unnamed expert’s opinion that each address was worth less than $10 “as is” at the time of finding, on the basis that recovering the contents is uncertain.
That single valuation places all 39,069 addresses into Section 257(2) of Article 7-B — the statute’s fastest track, which vests title in the finder just one year after the find date, with no multi-year police holding period required.
The $10 figure is the legal linchpin of the lawsuit, because it is the number the plaintiffs use to argue that the wallets qualify for New York’s fastest lost-property title path, even though the coins themselves are worth far more on the market.
If the addresses were valued closer to their market prices, they would fall into the statute’s top bracket, which carries a three-year police holding requirement. The one-year shortcut the complaint relies on would not be available.
The complaint’s three title-vesting dates correspond exactly to the three found dates plus one year — a timeline that only works if the sub-$10 valuation holds. The expert behind that valuation is not named anywhere in the filings.
The defendant addresses did not emerge from nowhere. Galaxy Research identified all but one of them in an October 2025 report on a blockchain “dusting” campaign — a practice where tiny amounts of BTC are sent to addresses, often to track wallet activity.
Between June and July 2025, over 39,000 addresses received OP_RETURN messages — a Bitcoin data field used to embed text — claiming the sender had taken constructive possession of the coins.
Galaxy’s research showed those messages appeared to be groundwork for a legal abandonment claim. That report won Best Crypto Research for 2025 from the Association of Cryptocurrency Journalists and Researchers.
Galaxy’s May 2026 analysis traced the funding for both the 2025 dusting campaign and the 2026 court-ordered onchain service to a single Bitcoin address, which Galaxy calls the “Bankroll” address. The firm found that 99.6% of the 2025 dusting transactions were funded within two hops from that address, and the same address funded the 2026 service operation.
Because the defendants are anonymous Bitcoin addresses, the court authorized alternative service under CPLR § 308(5): each address received a 546-satoshi payment (roughly 4 cents) carrying an OP_RETURN message linking to a website hosting the pleadings. Galaxy confirmed 98 batch transactions across Bitcoin blocks 950,446 to 950,576, reaching all 39,069 addresses between May 21–22, 2026.
Whether that constitutes adequate legal notice is an open question. Onchain service has precedent in Ethereum cases, where wallets are account-based and tokens dropped into an address tend to surface in wallet software.
Bitcoin operates differently — wallets are built around unspent transaction outputs, and most Bitcoin wallet software does not display OP_RETURN payloads at all. Many wallets filter incoming dust transactions as spam by default.
Crypto legal observers across the industry agree that even a complete plaintiff victory would not allow Noah Doe to move a single coin. Without private keys, a court declaration confers no ability to transact on the Bitcoin network. The protocol does not recognize court orders; only a valid cryptographic signature moves BTC.
The practical concern, as Galaxy and legal commentators have noted, is different. A court declaration could function as a “cloud on title” — a legal document the plaintiffs could present to a regulated exchange or custodian if any of the listed coins appeared at a centralized venue.
That could trigger asset freezes and force original owners to surface and prove ownership, potentially at the cost of their anonymity. It is that leverage over regulated intermediaries, rather than any ability to seize coins directly, that gives the case its potential significance.
Because the defendants are pseudonymous addresses that will not appear in court, a technical default is possible around late June 2026, approximately 30 days after service. A motion for default judgment would likely follow.
The court retains discretion to hold a hearing before issuing a declaration of title, and legal observers note that the novelty of the theory and the scale of the claim are factors that tend to invite judicial scrutiny.
This post Anonymous Plaintiff Seeks Legal Title to $293 Billion in Dormant Bitcoin, Without Holding Any Private Keys first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
On May 29, Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) moved more than 411 Bitcoin to Coinbase Prime, drawing fresh scrutiny to Michael Saylor’s financing model.
Arkham Intelligence data showed two transfers of roughly 205.3 BTC and 206.2 BTC from Strategy-associated wallets before the coins reached the destination address.

This movement has not been confirmed as a sale, and Strategy has previously shifted coins between wallets as part of custody management, triggering similar speculation that later appeared to reflect internal restructuring.
However, the latest transfer drew closer attention because of how the coins moved.
ForeDex Proof, an on-chain analyst, said the transferred Bitcoin first left two Strategy-linked wallets for new addresses before being moved again, a second step that differs from earlier wallet migrations.
Those prior transfers generally stopped after funds moved from an MSTR-linked wallet into a new address.
Moreover, the address format also stood out. ForeDex Proof said Strategy has historically used Coinbase Custody and Native SegWit addresses beginning with “bc1q,” while the latest movement involved an address beginning with “3,” a P2SH format.
Considering this, the analyst said the latter wallets appeared connected to Coinbase Prime activity commonly associated with over-the-counter transactions, raising the possibility that Strategy was preparing to sell a small portion of its holdings.
Still, this BTC movement represents only a fraction of Strategy’s 843,738 BTC treasury, but its timing gave the movement greater weight.
This is because it came during a week in which the company paused fresh Bitcoin purchases, moved to repurchase convertible debt, and told investors that selling Bitcoin could become part of its financing toolkit if market conditions or dividend obligations required it.
The Coinbase-linked transfer comes as Strategy’s preferred-stock structure faces pressure from a falling dollar reserve and weaker trading in STRC, the variable-rate preferred instrument designed to trade around its $100 par value.
Over the past months, Strategy has used the preferred stock issuance as part of a broader funding system that enables it to raise capital, buy Bitcoin, and manage liabilities without relying solely on common stock or convertible debt.
Market observers noted that STRC’s structure depends on market confidence, as investors must believe the company can continue paying dividends, maintain sufficient cash coverage, and access capital markets.
That confidence has grown more fragile as STRC has consistently traded below par since mid-month.
Meanwhile, Strategy recently moved to repurchase nearly $1.5 billion in face value of its 0% convertible senior notes due in 2029 for about $1.38 billion in cash.
The repurchase removed a future liability and retired the notes at a discount, but it also reduced the reserve that some investors had viewed as a buffer for preferred dividends and interest costs.
Glenn Cameron, global head of institutional at Onramp Bitcoin, said Strategy’s dollar reserve fell from $2.25 billion on Feb. 1 to $871 million on May 25. The decline roughly matched the cash cost of the convertible-note repurchase.
Cameron estimated that Strategy’s annual cash obligation is about $1.66 billion, including preferred dividends, convertible interest, and software business burn. He said STRC alone accounts for about $1.23 billion of that total at an 11.5% dividend rate.
On that estimate, Strategy’s remaining dollar reserve covers about 6.3 months of annualized obligations. Cameron said the reserve had been presented to STRC subscribers as roughly 2.5 years of coverage for preferred dividends and interest on debt before the convertible repurchase reduced the cash cushion.
These figures sharpen concern over the company’s funding structure. If STRC remains below par, Strategy may need to raise the dividend rate to restore demand, and each increase applies to the full outstanding STRC stack, raising the company’s future cash burden.
Crypto analyst Ragnar said Strategy needs to refill its cash reserve as soon as possible and argued that STRC’s weakness may reflect investor concern over the shrinking coverage ratio.
He said the company may sell higher-cost Bitcoin lots to rebuild cash, citing purchases of 220 BTC at $123,561, 430 BTC at $119,666, and 6,220 BTC at $118,940 as potential candidates if Strategy chooses to reduce exposure at the margin.
That theory would align with the logic of a tactical sale without altering Strategy’s broader holdings. Selling higher-cost coins could raise cash and reduce the company’s average cost basis while leaving the bulk of its treasury intact.
It would also mark a visible change in the way investors understand Saylor’s Bitcoin strategy, because even a limited sale would show that some coins can be used to support the capital stack when market conditions tighten.
Joao Wedson, chief executive of Alphractal, said the pressure reflects a deeper issue around Strategy’s accumulation timing.
He argued that a company with such a large Bitcoin position should have built a much lower average entry price during the 2022 and 2023 bear-market window, rather than carrying an average purchase price near the mid-$70,000 range after aggressive buying in 2024 through 2026.

Wedson said older Bitcoin holders were distributing during the later phase of Strategy’s accumulation, leaving the company with a less favorable risk-reward profile.
His critique cuts into one of the assumptions behind the model: that repeated capital raises can keep improving shareholder exposure as long as the company converts proceeds into Bitcoin.
That argument has become more relevant as preferred dividends grow. A lower average cost basis would give Strategy more flexibility to sell a limited amount of Bitcoin while still realizing gains across the treasury.
However, a higher cost basis leaves less room between market price, investor confidence, and the obligations attached to the company’s preferred-stock stack.
Jeff Dorman, chief investment officer at Arca, said Strategy has entered its first major bind among common shareholders, Bitcoin holders, and preferred investors.
He argued that the company could have preserved its cash buffer for dividend payments, but instead used a large portion of that reserve to retire 0% of its debt.
Dorman said the company now faces two main paths if pressure continues. It can sell Bitcoin to help fund preferred dividends, supporting preferred holders while weakening the accumulation narrative. Or it can stop paying dividends, preserving the Bitcoin stack while undermining confidence in the preferred securities.
Strategy could also raise new capital, but that depends on market access. STRC’s design relies on the ability to issue securities near par. If investor demand weakens, the company may need to offer higher yields to attract buyers, thereby increasing future obligations against the same Bitcoin pool.
Dorman said the tension could play out over the next four months. That timeline has become a test of whether Strategy can keep its funding loop intact while Bitcoin remains volatile, STRC trades below par, and the dollar reserve provides less room for error.
The post Strategy selling? Saylor’s Bitcoin transfer to Coinbase puts his treasury model under cash pressure appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin miners spent years racing to secure cheap electricity, and that electricity has since become more valuable than the Bitcoin mining business built on it.
That inversion drives Fidelity's May 2026 assessment that AI hosting could give miners a second revenue stream while flattening Bitcoin's hash rate as major operators redirect energy infrastructure away from pure mining, and two hyperscaler contracts have put a concrete price on what miners built.
Cipher Mining's SEC-filed business update announced a roughly $5.5 billion, 15-year lease with AWS to provide 300 MW of turnkey space and power for AI workloads, with delivery beginning in July 2026.
IREN signed a roughly $9.7 billion, five-year GPU cloud contract with Microsoft, deploying NVIDIA GB300 GPUs through 2026 at its 750 MW Childress, Texas campus and supporting 200 MW of critical IT load.
| Miner | Hyperscaler | Contract value | Duration | Power / capacity | Delivery timeline | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cipher Mining | AWS | ~$5.5B | 15 years | 300 MW | Begins July 2026 | Shows powered mining sites can be leased as AI infrastructure |
| IREN | Microsoft | ~$9.7B | 5 years | 200 MW critical IT load at 750 MW Childress campus | GPUs deployed through 2026 | Shows miners can monetize power campuses through GPU cloud, not just BTC mining |
Miners had already secured land, grid interconnection, substations, and power rights, which are what AI data centers need and cannot build fast enough.
The 2024 halving compressed hash prices and pushed CoinShares' tracked weighted-average cash cost to roughly $79,995 per BTC by the first quarter of 2026, prodding operators toward AI hosting as a revenue stabilizer, leasing unused capacity, keeping the mining rigs running, and offsetting the worst of the Bitcoin downturns.
CoinShares estimates public miners' AI and HPC contracts had surpassed $70 billion in aggregate by early 2026, with listed miners on pace to derive as much as 70% of revenue from AI by year-end, up from roughly 30%.
That is a revenue hedge that the Cipher and IREN contracts have since displaced with price discovery for power campuses.
Fidelity's January 2026 analysis identified a mining-to-AI crossover at roughly $60 to $70 per petahash per day for a 20-joule-per-terahash fleet, meaning most 20-to-25 J/TH miners would need the hash price to rise 40% to 60% to match contracted GPU-hosting economics.
The Hashrate Index's May 25 data has since extended this distance, with the US dollar-denominated hash price at $35.88 per PH/day, placing the AI crossover at approximately 67% to 95% above the current spot.
A miner sitting on 300 MW of powered, permitted infrastructure now faces a choice between deploying ASICs and earning $35.88 per PH/day, or signing a hyperscaler lease at contracted rates that require hash price to nearly double to match.
AWS and Microsoft have effectively published a floor on what that infrastructure is worth to someone other than Bitcoin, and every major operator with comparable assets now has that number in their model.
AI infrastructure costs between $8 million and $15 million per megawatt to build, compared to $700,000 to $1 million for Bitcoin mining infrastructure, and miners who transition enter a more capital-intensive business with fundamentally different debt profiles, valuation metrics, and execution risk.

Bitcoin's mining expansion historically followed price, with miners ordering more machines when BTC rose and cutting capacity when it fell.
VanEck's April ChainCheck recorded 30-day hash rate momentum at the 16th percentile and 90-day momentum at the 9th percentile, the densest cluster of sustained hash-rate drawdowns since China's 2021 mining ban.
CoinWarz data as of May 28 showed Bitcoin difficulty at 136.61T and a 90-day difficulty change of -5.40%, consistent with Fidelity's picture of mining churn.
Bitcoin's 2,016-block difficulty adjustment is still the counterweight, since every time hash rate exits, it lowers the computational cost of producing valid blocks and raises revenue per unit of remaining hash once difficulty resets.
A 20% hash-rate exit would lift surviving miners' hash price to roughly $44.85 per PH/day, while a 30% exit would bring it to roughly $51.26, still well short of Fidelity's AI crossover unless BTC price or transaction fees rise meaningfully.
Power locked into 15-year AWS leases or five-year Microsoft GPU contracts cannot rotate back to mining even if ASIC economics recover. In older cycles, idle hash returned because machines could be switched back on, while in this cycle the campuses themselves may be committed elsewhere.
If BTC moves toward $100,000 to $140,000 or transaction fees rise materially, the economics realign.
A 20% reduction in network hash rate lowers the BTC price required to reach the $60 to $70 AI crossover to approximately $98,000 to $114,000, and a 30% reduction lowers that threshold to roughly $86,000 to $100,000.
Miners who are still committed to Bitcoin benefit from a market where hash price rises faster than hash rate, compressing the competitive field and improving margins for operators with efficient fleets and lower power costs.
Fewer large public miners in the hash rate mix also reduces the forced BTC selling that has historically pressured spot price during expansion cycles.
Charles Schwab's May 26 analysis argues that hybrid infrastructure models strengthen Bitcoin's overall network health: lower forced selling, tighter difficulty conditions, and better miner margins reduce the systemic stress that large capital-intensive miners have historically introduced at cycle peaks.
The industry separates into two distinct businesses, consisting of companies that own power campuses and monetize them through hyperscaler contracts, and companies that actually mine Bitcoin, often at lower-cost, more flexible, or stranded-energy sites where AI data centers cannot easily operate.
| Scenario | Hash-rate exit | Implied hashprice after difficulty reset | BTC price needed for $60/PH/day | BTC price needed for $70/PH/day | Takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Status quo | 0% | $35.88 | ~$122K | ~$142K | Mining remains far below AI crossover |
| Moderate exit | 20% | ~$44.85 | ~$98K | ~$114K | Difficulty reset helps miners but does not fully close the gap |
| Larger exit | 30% | ~$51.26 | ~$86K | ~$100K | Bitcoin mining becomes more competitive if BTC rises or fees improve |
If BTC holds below $70,000 to $80,000, fees stay thin, and power prices stay elevated, contracted GPU-hosting economics dominate internal capital allocation for operators with AI-ready sites.
CoinShares estimates that at roughly $30 per PH/day, between 15% and 20% of the global fleet becomes uneconomic if power costs $0.06 per kilowatt-hour or higher for machines with S19 XP efficiency or lower.
Older fleets shut down, difficulty declines across successive epochs, and surviving miners earn more per petahash, but not enough to close the gap with the Cipher and IREN contracts for operators who still have that choice.
The difficulty adjustment keeps the network running through any exit, and mining's center of gravity moves as large public miners with AI-ready infrastructure become data-center landlords, while Bitcoin hash rate concentrates among operators with cheaper, more intermittent, or internationally diversified energy.
The IREN/Microsoft contract carries an explicit delivery-timeline clause that Reuters reported could trigger termination if milestones are missed, and miners carrying heavy debt alongside delayed AI revenue face an equity repricing from a Bitcoin proxy to an execution-risk asset.
The contest between ASICs and GPUs for miner capital plays out site by site, operator by operator, contingent on power contracts already signed and BTC price at the next halving.
Bitcoin's network absorbs hash-rate exits through lower difficulty, and higher BTC price or fees can pull economics back toward mining for any operator who has not already committed power elsewhere.
The more durable consequence of the AWS and Microsoft deals is that they have made it possible to run a large, credibly profitable infrastructure business on the same sites that Bitcoin mining built, without mining a single block.
Whether that possibility becomes the default for the next generation of power-campus construction depends on where BTC price settles relative to $35.88, and how many more hyperscalers arrive with 15-year checkbooks before the next halving forces the question again.
The post Bitcoin miners’ real prize is power as AI reshapes mining appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Senate Banking cleared the CLARITY Act 15-9 on May 14, and within two weeks, President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social pledging to codify a “future-proof” digital asset market that haters could not undo, calling the US the “crypto capital of the world.”
Crypto allies are using the timing to press the argument that a friendly regulatory posture lasts only as long as the regulator who holds it, and statute demands a congressional act to overturn.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins amplified the same line on X, writing that the agency's prior hostility to digital asset innovation is over and that the administration, Congress, and regulators are delivering clarity to digital asset markets, a framing that positions the agency as the handoff and Congress as the closer.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent urged the Senate to act fast, warning that floor time is precious, while Senator Cynthia Lummis called the moment the “last chance” to pass CLARITY until at least 2030, with midterm elections framing the outer boundary.

Senate Banking advanced the CLARITY Act, with Chairman Tim Scott declaring it ready for the Senate floor.
The legislation would divide digital asset oversight between the SEC and CFTC, expand CFTC supervision of crypto spot markets, define when tokens qualify as securities or commodities, require registration and disclosure from covered firms, protect customer funds, and apply Bank Secrecy Act obligations to digital asset businesses, converting years of agency interpretation fights and litigation into a single statutory framework.
The Senate calendar carries no confirmed floor date for CLARITY, but the White House is reportedly pushing it toward a showdown as it targets a July 4 signing.
Before a signing, Senate leaders must reconcile the Banking product with the Senate Agriculture Committee's separate digital commodities track, pass a merged bill through the full chamber, and align with the House version.
Republicans hold 53 Senate seats, and cloture requires 60 votes, meaning the bill needs 7 Democratic or independent votes if every Republican backs it, a threshold the committee reached only two votes toward, from Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks.
Both Senators may withhold floor support unless the Senate addresses three specific objections: anti-money-laundering provisions that Democratic minority staff say leave illicit-finance loopholes around sanctions and mixers, demands to bar political officials from profiting on crypto ventures they help shape, and stablecoin reward language that banking groups warn could pull deposits from community lenders.
Banking trade associations have positioned themselves as conditional supporters, backing a federal framework in principle but pressing for tighter guardrails on stablecoin rewards, arguing that stablecoin issuers with reward programs would compete directly with traditional deposit accounts and reduce local lending capacity.
That wedge between mainstream finance and crypto-native industry groups gives Senate Democratic holdouts a conventional-finance rationale for demanding revisions, separate from the AML and ethics objections.
| Senate math | Votes |
|---|---|
| Republican seats | 53 |
| Votes needed for cloture | 60 |
| Democratic/independent votes needed if GOP holds | 7 |
| Democratic yes votes in committee | 2 |
| Additional Democratic/independent votes still needed | 5 |
The reported July 4 target rests on Senate leadership holding the floor calendar through June, and a state work period runs from June 29 to July 10, cutting practical floor time to the weeks before the recess begins.
If leadership does not bring CLARITY to the floor by roughly the third week of June, the July 4 signing target becomes logistically untenable, and any remaining action would need to fit between the end of the recess and the start of the August break.
If Gallego and Alsobrooks hold their committee votes and compromise language secures five or more additional Democratic or independent votes, with banks accepting narrower stablecoin reward limits, CLARITY could produce the first broad federal market-structure law for digital assets in US history.
Statutory CFTC supervision of spot markets gives crypto firms a legal foundation that will survive future administrations, since overturning a statute requires an act of Congress, a higher procedural bar than a presidential appointment alone.
The Crypto Council for Innovation and the Blockchain Association have both argued that a signed bill would accelerate institutional adoption and consolidate US leadership, a claim that carries more weight once it has the force of law behind it than it does as a lobbying position.
If Democrats find AML language insufficient, Republicans reject ethics demands, and crypto-industry lobbying holds stablecoin reward fixes in place, the seven-vote threshold goes unmet, and the floor fight stalls.
| Scenario | What has to happen | Result | Market / policy implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bull case: compromise passes | Gallego and Alsobrooks hold; 5+ more Democrats/independents accept changes; banks accept narrower stablecoin limits | CLARITY clears the Senate and moves toward Trump’s desk | Crypto gets durable statutory market structure |
| Base case: July slips | Negotiations continue but Senate calendar compresses floor time | Bill stays alive, but July 4 target becomes unrealistic | Industry keeps momentum but not final certainty |
| Bear case: floor fight stalls | AML, ethics or stablecoin-reward disputes remain unresolved | CLARITY misses the June window | Crypto relies on friendly regulators, not durable law |
The industry holds the friendliest regulatory environment in a decade, built entirely on Atkins at the SEC, an accommodating CFTC, and a pro-crypto White House, positions that the next administration can vacate with new appointees and revised guidance.
Lummis's “last chance until 2030” framing puts the specific cost on the bear case: if CLARITY misses the June window, midterm elections in 2026 could flip Senate seats and close the legislative path for the rest of the decade.
Trump's allies ran a flood-the-zone campaign this week to generate enough public and political momentum in June that Senate Democratic holdouts face greater cost from blocking the bill than from voting yes on a compromise.
Whether that calculation produces seven or more Democratic votes before the June window closes will determine whether the administration's pro-crypto regulatory reversal becomes law or stays a posture the next SEC chair can reverse with a memo.
The post Trump’s crypto push hits the Senate vote math behind CLARITY Act’s July 4 target appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The BEA's April PCE print showed headline inflation at 3.8% year over year and core at 3.3%, broadly matching economist expectations and removing the risk of a fresh macro shock, leaving Bitcoin in the fragile middle ground it has occupied since losing $75,000, where macro panic has cooled.
Yet, renewed demand still has to arrive before stabilization becomes a directional move. Matt Mena, senior crypto research strategist at 21Shares, said in a note:
“Market sentiment is being anchored by today’s PCE print coming broadly in line with expectations, giving risk assets a needed macro stabilizer after a volatile stretch driven by geopolitical headlines and inflation prints.”
The PCE print confirmed Mena's read that inflation held steady at the exact moment Bitcoin was already technically fragile.
| Macro signal | Latest reading | Bitcoin implication |
|---|---|---|
| Headline PCE inflation | 3.8% YoY | Inflation did not surprise hotter, removing a bear catalyst |
| Core PCE inflation | 3.3% YoY | Still too high for a clean Fed-cut narrative |
| Fed inflation target | 2.0% | Macro is stabilizing, not easing |
| Rate expectations | Unchanged into 2027 | BTC needs internal demand, not just liquidity hopes |
| BTC market state | Below $75K | Relief matters because Bitcoin was already technically fragile |
BTC had slipped below $75,000 before the PCE data landed, registering an intraday low near $72,500 and keeping the $73,000-$75,000 support zone under pressure.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $733.4 million in net outflows on May 27, with IBIT accounting for $527.8 million of that figure, and PCE removed the risk of a hotter-than-expected print compounding that damage, while leaving the bid behind those outflows unresolved.
The 3.8% annual headline figure is the fastest pace in three years and aligns with forecasts. Markets have already priced in rates staying unchanged into 2027, meaning Bitcoin's next leg higher requires internal demand to arrive independently of monetary easing.

Bitcoin broke above $80,000 a few weeks ago after holding below it for more than three months, the level Mena identifies as where the bull thesis confirms or stalls, and the current consolidation between $73,000 and $75,000 puts that breakout at risk of being erased.
Mena reads the move as a reset, noting that Bitcoin is up by over 10% from April's open and over 11% since the start of Operation Epic Fury, while gold has declined over 16% over the same period.
That difference reinforces Bitcoin's position as a high-beta macro asset with differentiated demand, one that held its support zone through a geopolitically charged stretch that sent more traditional safe-haven assets lower.

A decisive reclaim of $80,000 would put $82,000 back in focus, the resistance that capped upside since February, and in Mena's model could set Bitcoin up to end the quarter in the $85,000-$95,000 range.
If Bitcoin consolidates at $73,000-$75,000, the ETF outflows slow, and BTC reclaims $80,000, the pullback resolves as a reset after an impressive run.
PCE's in-line print removed the macro trigger for a forced breakdown, and Mena's relative-strength argument is that crypto held through geopolitical volatility that pressured other assets, the broader crypto market is up roughly 6% over the same period, and Hyperliquid's HYPE token set a new all-time high of $65.
Those are telling of risk appetite across the space holding through the sell-off. Polymarket currently prices a 57% probability that the CLARITY Act is signed into law in 2026, and ceasefire diplomacy between the US and Iran has eased one of the geopolitical overhangs that drove volatility through the spring, adding secondary support to the bull case.
Mena's year-end target, contingent on inflation fears staying contained and regulatory momentum continuing, puts Bitcoin above $100,000.
If ETF redemptions continue and BTC loses the $73,000-$75,000 zone, PCE's neutral reading leaves the floor entirely to internal demand.
With inflation at 3.8% headline and 3.3% core, the Fed stays in a hold that markets have already priced through 2027, meaning Bitcoin in the bear case has only internal demand to work with.
A break below $73,000 would reframe the current consolidation as distribution and push the $80,000 reclaim further out of reach.
Policy tailwinds, such as CLARITY odds and Middle East de-escalation, stay in place, but policy momentum alone carries insufficient force to reverse a Bitcoin selloff driven by sustained spot-market outflows and deteriorating ETF demand.
| Scenario | What needs to happen | BTC implication | Article takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bull case: reset confirmed | ETF outflows slow, BTC holds $73K–$75K, and price reclaims $80K | $82K comes back into focus; $85K–$95K becomes plausible | PCE relief becomes the base for another leg higher |
| Base case: fragile stabilization | BTC holds support but fails to reclaim $80K quickly | Choppy trading between support and resistance | PCE avoided a shock, but buyers still need to show up |
| Bear case: demand breaks | ETF redemptions continue and BTC loses $73K | Consolidation turns into distribution | Inflation did not break Bitcoin, but weak demand might |
Sticky inflation keeps financial conditions tight for the high-beta assets that Bitcoin most closely resembles in a risk-off environment, and tight conditions favor sellers over buyers at current support levels.
Inflation held close enough to April's forecasts to keep the macro shock risk contained, and at 3.8% headline and 3.3% core, it also confirmed that inflation remains too elevated for the Fed to ease financial conditions.
Bitcoin's next move depends on whether buyers return before the $73,000-$75,000 support gives way, and whether a reclaim of $80,000 arrives before the stabilization PCE provided runs out.
The post Bitcoin avoided an inflation shock, now it has to prove the rally isn’t over appeared first on CryptoSlate.
A New York lawsuit is seeking to treat some of Bitcoin’s oldest dormant wallets, including addresses tied to the cryptocurrency’s creator, as lost property valued at less than $10 each.
The amended complaint asks a state court to grant legal ownership of 39,069 Bitcoin addresses to a pseudonymous plaintiff identified as Noah Doe and two Wyoming entities, ABC Company, and XYZ Company.
Together, the addresses hold nearly 3.8 million BTC, or about 18% of Bitcoin’s fixed 21 million token supply.
Galaxy Digital stated that nearly all of the 39,069 defendant addresses overlap with wallets that received small on-chain transactions in 2025.

At the time, Salomon Brothers used Bitcoin’s OP_RETURN feature to serve legal notices on the dormant wallets, claiming a right to seize them under the “Doctrine of Abandonment” unless the owners responded within 90 days.
After that campaign, hundreds of addresses moved coins and were excluded from the lawsuit. The addresses that stayed silent became the defendant set.
The plaintiffs’ case rests on an attempt to fit dormant Bitcoin addresses into New York’s lost-property law, a framework designed for physical items that can be found, reported, and returned.
Noah Doe and the two Wyoming-based entities argue that the wallets qualify as abandoned property because they were identified, reported to authorities, and left unclaimed for more than a year.
According to the complaint, the plaintiffs placed lists of the addresses on USB drives and delivered them to the New York Police Department’s 17th Precinct, then followed up with an on-chain notice campaign using OP_RETURN messages, a press release, and a claim window intended to demonstrate reasonable efforts to reach the owners.
The plaintiff's legal effort leans heavily on Article 7-B of New York’s Personal Property Law, which allows a finder of lost property to claim title after the required holding period if no rightful owner appears.
In ordinary cases, that framework applies to property turned over to police and held while an owner is given time to come forward. The lawsuit asks the court to extend that logic to public blockchain addresses whose owners are unknown, unreachable, or silent.
To fast-track the litigation, the plaintiffs rely on a controversial valuation strategy, claiming an unnamed independent expert appraised the contents of each individual wallet at less than $10 because the private keys required to move the coins are unavailable.
Notably, New York law provides finders a shorter path to property worth less than $10 if they have made reasonable efforts to locate the owner and have failed.
However, on-chain data runs counter to that appraisal. Galaxy Digital stated that the 39,069 addresses hold an estimated $293.5 billion in Bitcoin at current market prices.
A further breakdown of the wallets showed that the average address in the legal claim contains 97.25 BTC, worth roughly $7.5 million, while the median holds exactly 50 BTC, or about $3.86 million.

That 50-BTC median reflects Bitcoin’s original mining reward, meaning many of the defendants appear to be early block payouts that have remained untouched since the network’s first years.
That gap between the legal valuation and current market value sits at the center of the dispute. If the court accepts the plaintiffs’ view that each address is worth less than $10 because recovery is uncertain, they can argue that the title vested one year after each batch of addresses was found.
However, if the court values the property by the Bitcoin recorded at those addresses, the lawsuit becomes far harder to place on the expedited track the plaintiffs are using.
The addresses named in the lawsuit stretch back to Bitcoin’s earliest years, pulling some of the network’s most-watched and contested wallets into a claim built around abandonment.
Galaxy Digital said the defendant list is anchored by roughly 21,923 Patoshi-pattern addresses, a group of early-mined wallets long associated with Bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator, Satoshi Nakamoto.
Those addresses hold about 1.096 million Bitcoin, making them one of the largest dormant pools of BTC on the ledger.
Their inclusion gives the case its market significance, but it also complicates the plaintiffs’ theory.
Satoshi-linked coins are not obscure assets that disappeared from view. They have been studied for years by researchers, investors, and forensic analysts because any movement from those wallets would likely become one of the most closely scrutinized events in Bitcoin’s history.
Meanwhile, another target is a wallet holding 79,957 Bitcoin that blockchain investigators have linked to the 2011 Mt. Gox breach. Those coins are widely treated as stolen and contested property, a status that sits uneasily with a lost-property claim based on abandonment.
Additionally, the list also includes a counterparty-linked burn address holding 2,131 Bitcoin. Burn addresses are used to remove coins from circulation by sending them to destinations that cannot be spent from.
In that case, the legal claim runs into a technical wall because the address was designed so that no owner could later appear with a private key and move the funds.

Many of the remaining wallets last moved between 2009 and 2013, when Bitcoin went from having no market price to trading at a few hundred dollars. Some may belong to early miners. Some may reflect lost keys. Others may be cold storage, estate assets, or wallets controlled by holders who have chosen not to move their coins.
That uncertainty goes to the center of the dispute. Bitcoin’s ledger records movement, not intent. A wallet can sit untouched for 15 years because the owner is gone, because the key is lost, because the coins are deliberately held, or because the address can never be spent from at all.
The lawsuit asks a court to infer abandonment from inactivity, even though the blockchain alone cannot explain why a coin has remained still.
That mix shows the difficulty of applying a physical lost-property statute to blockchain records.
Market analysts emphasize that even a sweeping courtroom victory for the anonymous plaintiffs would not immediately move a single satoshi.
This is because a judicial decree cannot generate the private cryptographic keys required to authorize a transaction, nor can it override the immutable math of a decentralized network.
Instead, the true value of a favorable judgment lies in its utility as a legal weapon at the boundary between Bitcoin’s permissionless ledger and traditional financial institutions.
If Noah Doe secures a quiet-title declaration from a New York court, that document would serve as a powerful cloud on title.
Should the legitimate owner of a targeted wallet ever move their Bitcoin to a centralized exchange, an institutional custodian, or a commercial bank, the plaintiffs could present the court order to freeze the accounts. This would trigger protracted domestic litigation, forcing the true owners to step forward and prove their identities.
That dynamic exposes a profound irony at the heart of the case. The plaintiff obtained permission from Justice Kathy J. King to proceed under a pseudonym, citing the threat of physical violence or kidnapping if his identity were tied to a multi-billion-dollar claim.
Yet, the legal mechanism he is employing forces the actual owners of the dormant wallets to forfeit their own privacy and expose their identities to the public record simply to defend their property.
Because the defendants are anonymous cryptographic addresses, no traditional defense counsel is expected to appear in court.
Galaxy Digital stated that a technical default is likely by late June 2026, roughly 30 days after the on-chain service of process was executed, with a formal motion for a default judgment anticipated later this summer.
However, the firm argued that a rubber-stamped victory is highly improbable. New York justices retain broad discretion when evaluating applications for declaratory judgments, particularly when confronting novel legal frameworks, questions regarding process servers, and a nominal $10 valuation slapped onto a $293 billion fortune.
Alex Thorn, head of research at Galaxy Digital, concluded:
“It would be extraordinary for a New York court to hand three anonymous parties legal title to roughly $293 billion worth of BTC, including the coins most closely associated with Satoshi Nakamoto, on a lost-and-found theory propped up by a questionable under-$10 valuation,”
The post New lawsuit claims Satoshi Nakamoto’s Bitcoin is “Lost Property” worth under $10 per wallet appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Finding a crypto-friendly business account for a corporate entity remains one of the largest operational hurdles for modern enterprises, tech startups, and Web3 firms. Corporate structures worldwide face strict institutional compliance and rigid Know Your Business (KYB) checks. Traditional legacy banks often instantly decline applications associated with digital assets due to conservative risk mitigation strategies.
Fortunately, fintech innovation has fundamentally shifted the corporate financial landscape. European platforms operating under full banking licenses now provide robust corporate accounts designed to interface seamlessly with digital assets and international fiat networks.
Here is a comprehensive breakdown of the best crypto-friendly business accounts for companies, exploring global efficiency with specific insights into key markets like Germany.
Corporate banking for crypto-exposed businesses requires a framework that can handle standard fiat operations—such as payroll, tax payments, and vendor settlements—without flagging legitimate transfers to and from digital asset platforms.
Financially strict jurisdictions across Europe enforce tight anti-money laundering (AML) protocols. In regions like Germany, the financial regulatory authority (BaFin) closely monitors fiat-to-crypto flows. This has historically caused traditional commercial banks to freeze corporate accounts that interact with exchanges or on-chain treasuries. For modern corporations, the ideal solution is a corporate fintech platform that bridges the gap between traditional fiat compliance and the digital economy.
Revolut Business has emerged as one of the most reliable and scalable financial solutions for modern enterprises, startups, and established international corporations. Operating with a full European banking license, the platform balances strict regulatory compliance with the flexible infrastructure required by fast-growing corporate teams.

One of the primary advantages of utilizing this platform is the speed of corporate onboarding. Traditional institutions can take anywhere from 4 to 8 weeks to finalize a business account setup. Revolut Business slashes this timeline to 24–72 hours through automated photo and video identification systems, allowing new companies to become operational almost immediately. This is particularly beneficial for German structures like the GmbH (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung) or UG (Unternehmergesellschaft), which traditionally face slow institutional bureaucracy.
For international firms managing global operations, cross-border transfers can become costly. The platform allows corporate entities to execute domestic and international transfers at highly competitive interbank exchange rates. This ensures that firms moving fiat capital into crypto liquidity pools or off-ramping corporate revenues do not lose significant margins to hidden foreign exchange fees.
The platform provides advanced expense management tools. Businesses can issue dedicated physical or digital corporate cards to team members, set explicit operational limits, and track expenses dynamically in real time. This level of internal governance is critical for Web3 firms and tech startups that require strict audit trails for financial compliance.
While Revolut Business offers an exceptional all-around interface for corporate teams, several other banking-as-a-service (BaaS) and fintech providers operate within the global and European markets:
Finom is a prominent European fintech platform operating extensively in Germany and Western Europe via a strategic partnership with Solaris SE, which holds a full German banking license. Finom provides dedicated IBANs within 24 hours and includes integrated invoicing and accounting tools tailored for freelancers and small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs).
Vivid Money provides flexible corporate accounts suitable for modern corporate structures. It offers competitive interest on corporate fiat balances and specific cashback rewards, making it a viable option for early-stage startups seeking operational flexibility.
For larger, institutional corporate structures requiring substantial credit lines or traditional corporate backing, legacy institutions like Deutsche Bank or Commerzbank remain relevant. However, their compliance frameworks for crypto-related transactions are significantly more rigid, requiring extensive source-of-funds documentation.
When evaluating where to establish your company's primary financial repository, consider the following parameters:
Setting up a robust, modern business account can be completed entirely online. To prepare for the application process, ensure you have the following documentation ready:
To register your business and secure an agile corporate account, you can access the streamlined signup interface directly via the corporate portal: Register Your Company with Revolut Business
Global stock markets are showing strong momentum, with major indices reaching new record levels across the United States and Asia. The S&P 500 closed at a new all time high, while Japan’s Nikkei and South Korea’s KOSPI also pushed into record territory.

This rally shows that traditional risk assets are attracting strong investor demand, especially as AI related stocks, government contracts, and broader equity optimism continue to support market sentiment. However, the crypto market is not following the same path with the same strength.
Instead, major altcoins remain under pressure, and the market still looks cautious despite some green daily moves.
The latest crypto market performance shows several major altcoins moving higher on the day. Ethereum, BNB, XRP, Solana, Cardano, Dogecoin, Zcash, and Stellar are all showing positive daily changes.
However, the move does not yet look like a full market recovery. Many major crypto assets still carry weak technical ratings, suggesting that the current bounce may be more defensive than bullish.
This creates an important gap between global equities and digital assets. Stocks are breaking records, but the crypto market is still trying to stabilize after recent selling pressure.
There are several possible reasons why the crypto market is lagging behind.

First, liquidity remains selective. Investors may be willing to take risk in equities, especially in AI and technology stocks, but they are still cautious when it comes to altcoins.
Second, institutional crypto flows remain uneven. When large funds reduce exposure or when ETF related outflows dominate the headlines, sentiment across the broader crypto market can weaken quickly.
Third, altcoins usually need stronger confirmation before a real rally starts. A few daily gains are not enough if trading volume, momentum indicators, and technical ratings remain weak.
One of the most interesting differences is the AI narrative. In traditional markets, AI related stocks are seeing strong demand, supported by government spending, corporate investment, and investor enthusiasm.
In crypto, AI tokens are still gaining attention, but they are not leading the market with the same strength. This shows that the AI trend is currently more powerful in equities than in digital assets.
That makes the crypto AI sector an interesting area to watch, but not yet a confirmed leader in the current market cycle.
For the crypto market to confirm a stronger recovery, altcoins need more than short term green candles. The market needs stronger trading volume, better technical signals, and renewed confidence from both retail and institutional investors.
A real recovery would likely require:
Stronger inflows into crypto products, improved sentiment across major altcoins, higher trading volume, and a clear shift from defensive positioning to risk appetite.
Until then, the crypto market may continue to move sideways or recover unevenly, even while global stocks continue to break records.
The main question now is whether the crypto market is simply lagging behind traditional markets or showing a deeper weakness.
If global risk appetite continues to improve, altcoins could eventually benefit from the same liquidity wave that is lifting equities. However, if crypto specific pressure remains high, the market could stay disconnected from the stock rally for longer.
For now, the message is clear: global stocks are showing strength, but the crypto market still needs stronger confirmation before calling this a real recovery.
As decentralized compute and machine learning models become integrated into financial and creative workflows, certain projects have emerged as clear leaders.
Investors are increasingly looking beyond simple "AI hype" toward protocols that provide tangible infrastructure for the future. In this article, we analyze three AI tokens that demonstrate high utility and strong market positioning.
In 2026, the synergy between AI and blockchain is no longer theoretical; it is a "multiplicative" force for global efficiency. Blockchain provides the transparent, decentralized layer needed to verify AI data and secure compute resources, while AI offers the "intelligence" to optimize on-chain processes.
Bittensor remains the premier protocol for decentralized machine learning. By creating a marketplace for intelligence, Bittensor allows different subnets to specialize in various AI tasks—from image generation to complex data analysis—rewarding participants in TAO.
As of May 2026, Bittensor has gained massive institutional validation. With recent reports of major tech entities exploring TAO's subnet architecture, the token has shown strong "alpha" performance. The Bittensor price (often compared to the blue chips of the sector) remains a favorite for those betting on a "World Computer" of intelligence.
As AI-generated video and spatial computing become mainstream, the demand for GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) power has hit record highs. Render Network bridges the gap by connecting users who need compute power with those who have idle GPUs.
Render transitioned successfully to the Solana blockchain, which significantly lowered transaction costs and improved scalability. This move allowed it to integrate more deeply with AI training and inference workloads, moving beyond its original scope of 3D rendering.
While Bittensor and Render focus on infrastructure, DeXe Protocol is revolutionizing how we interact with decentralized finance (DeFi) and governance through AI-enhanced tools. DeXe provides the framework for DAOs (Decentralized Autonomous Organizations) and social trading platforms.
In 2026, DeXe has integrated advanced automated tools that allow for "meritocratic" governance. AI agents within the DeXe ecosystem help analyze trader performance and manage treasury allocations based on real-time data, reducing human error and bias.
| Project | Primary Sector | Key Catalyst for 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Bittensor ($TAO) | Decentralized AI Models | Subnet expansion and ETF speculation |
| Render ($RENDER) | Decentralized GPU Compute | Spatial computing and AI video demand |
| DeXe ($DEXE) | DAO & Social Trading | AI-governed treasuries and copy-trading |
The crypto market is under pressure again, with major coins trading in the red while traditional markets show stronger momentum. Bitcoin is hovering near $73,000, Ethereum is trading close to the critical $2,000 level, and Solana has slipped below $85.
The broader market picture also looks weak. $BTC, $ETH, $BNB, $SOL, $DOGE, $ADA, and $LINK are all showing negative daily performance, while several major crypto assets carry weak technical ratings. This suggests that the current crypto market crash is not limited to one token or sector, but reflects broader selling pressure across the market.
Privacy coins are also under pressure, with Monero and Zcash showing sharp moves. Meanwhile, Stellar stands out as one of the few major gainers, but that is not enough to shift the overall market sentiment.
The most important part of the story is the contrast between crypto and stocks. While Bitcoin and major altcoins are falling, the S&P 500 has reportedly reached a new all-time high. This creates a major market contradiction: traditional risk assets are rallying, but crypto is failing to follow.
Usually, when stocks rise strongly, crypto often benefits from improved risk appetite. However, this time, the reaction is different. Stocks appear to be pricing in better macro sentiment, while crypto traders remain cautious.
This divergence raises an important question: if investors are willing to take risk in equities, why is Bitcoin still falling?
One possible reason is that crypto is still dealing with its own internal weakness. The recent crypto crash triggered heavy selling, weak technical setups, and possible leverage unwinding across major coins. Even if macro sentiment improves, crypto may need more time to recover from the damage caused by the sell-off.
Bitcoin is also trading near a key psychological zone. If $BTC fails to hold above the $70,000–$73,000 area, traders may expect another downside move before any real recovery begins. This keeps buyers cautious, especially while Ethereum remains close to $2,000 and Solana continues to trade below stronger resistance levels.
Another factor is market rotation. Investors may currently prefer stocks because the S&P 500 is showing stronger momentum, while crypto charts still look fragile. Until Bitcoin confirms a rebound, capital may continue flowing into equities instead of digital assets.
Recent posts also show renewed attention around President Trump and his pro-crypto positioning. Some traders are calling him the first pro-crypto president, while others are focusing on his influence on market sentiment.
However, the latest crypto market reaction shows that political narratives alone are not enough to reverse a crash. Even if Trump’s administration is seen as more supportive of crypto, traders still need stronger liquidity, clearer regulation, and better technical confirmation before confidence returns.
In other words, bullish headlines may support long-term sentiment, but they do not automatically stop short-term selling.
For now, Bitcoin’s next major test is whether it can hold above the current support zone. If $BTC stabilizes above $73,000 and buying volume returns, the market could attempt a recovery toward $78,000–$80,000.

However, if Bitcoin loses momentum and breaks lower, the next key psychological level is around $70,000. A move below that area could deepen the crypto market crash and put more pressure on Ethereum, Solana, XRP, and other major altcoins.
The bullish scenario depends on Bitcoin reclaiming strength and proving that the stock market rally can eventually spill back into crypto. The bearish scenario is that crypto is warning of hidden risk while stocks continue to rally.
The current market setup is unusual. Stocks are breaking records, but crypto is still struggling. That makes this moment important for traders because it could signal either a delayed crypto rebound or a deeper divergence between Bitcoin and traditional markets.
For now, the key levels to watch are Bitcoin near $70,000–$73,000, Ethereum around $2,000, and Solana below $85. If these levels hold, the crypto market may still recover. If they fail, the crash could continue before a stronger bottom forms.
$BTC, $ETH, $SOL, $BNB, $XRP, $DOGE, $ADA, $LINK, $ZEC, $XMR, $XLM
The cryptocurrency market is witnessing a stark disconnect between Washington politics and raw market mechanics. Within the last 24 hours, U.S. President Donald Trump aggressively attempted to salvage market sentiment by issuing two highly supportive, pro-crypto statements on his Truth Social platform. Most notably, Trump declared that under his administration, the United States is securely positioned as the "crypto capital of the world," emphatically promising that he will "NEVER let Crypto down!"
Despite this overt rescue attempt from the White House, the market reacted with cold indifference. Instead of an upward rally, the premier digital assets entered a synchronized freefall. The Bitcoin price suffered a sharp drop, dumping over $2,000 to slide into the $73,200 range, while major altcoins like Ethereum ($ETH) and Ripple ($XRP) recorded even steeper percentage losses.
If you are wondering why is bitcoin crashing right as a sitting U.S. President goes out of his way to salvage the industry's regulatory outlook, the fundamental catalyst isn't domestic policy—it is escalating war.
While Trump's verbal rhetoric was bullish, a fresh exchange of U.S.-Iranian military strikes shattered regional ceasefire hopes, triggering global risk-off sentiment. Short-term traders used the temporary political headline pump to exit their positions into stable cash and gold. This flight to safety triggered an aggressive cascade of margin liquidations that dragged down the entire crypto sector, breaking multi-month support zones for several top-tier tokens.
The downside momentum was not isolated to Bitcoin. The broader altcoin market faced intense distribution, invalidating critical psychological floors.
Ethereum experienced a severe technical breakdown, plunging by over 4.8% within 24 hours to trade at $1,987. This marks the first time ETH has closed below the vital $2,000 level since March. Analysts note that after seven consecutive weeks of downward or sideways distribution, the failure to hold the $2,100 support level has opened the door for Ethereum to test the next structural floor near $1,900.
Ripple’s native token, $XRP, similarly fell victim to the heavy selling pressure, losing roughly 4% of its value to drop to $1.27. The intense selling volume pushed XRP below its strongly defended $1.30 support zone. The asset is facing dual headwinds from stagnant spot ETF inflows and external geopolitical anxieties, with traders now eyeing the $1.10 horizontal support as the next defensive line.
To understand Trump's salvage operation, we must look closely at what the administration expressed. Trump's posts targeted two specific pillars of the domestic digital asset landscape that have faced heavy regulatory pressure: structural market legislation and federal regulatory jurisdiction.
Codifying the CLARITY Act: Trump took aim at the "Anti-Crypto Army" and promised to permanently codify a "FUTURE-PROOF Digital Asset Market Structure," referring implicitly to the ongoing legislative push for the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act currently awaiting a full Senate floor vote.
Defending Prediction Markets via the CFTC: In his secondary post, Trump came to the defense of prediction markets (such as Polymarket and Kalshi), insisting that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) must retain "exclusive authority" over these platforms to ensure they thrive against state-level restrictions.
An examination of the BTC/USD trading chart and major altcoin pairs shows that the market was already showing signs of severe exhaustion prior to the social media posts.

When the bullish headlines hit, price action experienced a brief, volatile spike before aggressively reversing. From a technical perspective, both BTC and ETH have drifted well below their short-term 50-day and 100-day Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs). If Bitcoin cannot stabilize above $73,000, analysts warn that a deeper correction toward the psychological floor of $70,000 could trigger a broader capitulation.
The primary underlying mechanism behind the sudden price drop was a massive influx of institutional selling paired with a flush in the derivatives market. Data from Coinglass revealed that spot Bitcoin ETFs suffered a massive single-day outflow of $733 million, led heavily by BlackRock's IBIT fund shedding over $500 million.
This institutional exit exacerbated a massive leverage wipeout in the derivatives market. The broader cryptocurrency market suffered over $744 million in total liquidations within a 12-hour window, with $715 million consisting of forced long liquidations. Trump's attempt to salvage the mood acted as a counter-indicator; instead of driving spot demand, it provided the ideal conditions for whales to distribute assets, trapping over-leveraged retail traders in the process.
Wintermute is providing liquidity on the two biggest prediction markets, linking flows for both firms, according to a source familiar with the matter.
The CFTC issued an order allowing Kalshi to offer perpetual futures in the U.S., starting with contracts tied to Bitcoin's price.
The Sui token is among the worst performing top 100 crypto assets of the last week in the wake of back-to-back outages.
Cooling demand for Bitcoin ETFs adds to declining accumulation by whales, underscoring a trying time for the crypto market.
The man who built the modern NYSE just said Hyperliquid is bigger than Nasdaq. JPMorgan says the debasement trade is unwinding.
Chicago-based derivatives giant CME Group is introducing round-the-clock trading for its cryptocurrency futures and options starting this Friday.
Decentralized derivatives leading token HYPE hit a $66.84 ATH as traders weigh the macro impact of CFTC's historic perpetual futures approval.
Coinbase emerges as the first regulated firm to expand access to global crypto options and perpetual futures in the U.S. following approval from CFTC.
XRP has officially turned red in its monthly return for May as market sentiment increasingly become bearish while its price continues to decline.
Bloomberg analyst explains why falling Bitcoin ETF volatility matters more than millions in outflows from BlackRock and how it brings crypto closer to gold.
AI tokens are back in focus this month, with the sector crossing roughly $26.6 billion in combined market value as capital rotates toward projects tied to real AI demand. With Chainlink near $9.43 billion and Bittensor close to $2.73 billion, traders are hunting the next AI crypto to watch before it reprices.
Among the names drawing fresh attention is the Ruvi AI (RUVI) decentralized AI superapp , which already runs 20+ AI models across text, image, video, and audio behind one $RUVI economy and is rolling out a public sale across seven phases with early-buyer bonuses stacked on top.
Ruvi rewards conviction through a structured VIP bonus system paid before listing. The more $RUVI accumulated during the sale, the higher the tier and the larger the extra allocation. VIP 1 starts at 20,000 $RUVI for a +20% bonus, VIP 3 sits at 100,000 $RUVI for +60%, and VIP 5 tops out at 500,000 $RUVI for a full +100% bonus.

A VIP 3 participant holding 100,000 $RUVI receives an additional 60,000 $RUVI before listing, while VIP 5 effectively doubles a 500,000-token position. These bonuses stack with leaderboard rewards, so the earliest and largest backers compound their entry well beyond the headline phase price.
Many AI tokens trade on narrative while their holders capture none of the revenue the network generates. Ruvi closes that gap by paying contributors in $RUVI for user-guided training, rewarding the people who improve the models instead of extracting value from them silently.
That combination of a live AI superapp, contributor payouts, and tiered VIP bonuses is pulling attention away from tokens with thinner utility. Staking will activate at the end of the presale, giving holders another reason to position early. For traders scanning the next AI crypto to watch, a working product priced near the floor reads sharper than another chart.
Ruvi’s presale runs across seven phases. Phases 1 and 2 sold out at $0.010 and $0.015, the active Phase 3 is priced at $0.020, the final phase reaches $0.070 for a 3.5x step, and the listing target sits at $0.10, a 5x move from Phase 3.
A $500 position at $0.020 buys 25,000 $RUVI. At $0.070 that is $1,750, and at the $0.10 listing target that is $2,500. Layer a VIP 5 +100% bonus on a large position and the early math compounds further before the token ever lists.

The 1,500,000,000 presale allocation unlocks 100% at launch with no cliff, and against the fixed 5,000,000,000 supply the buyback-and-burn engine keeps reducing circulating tokens as usage grows. Every phase that fills closes for good and steps the price higher, so the lowest entry available is the one open right now in Phase 3.
The next AI crypto to watch debate is full of tokens priced on narrative with little to show holders. Ruvi at $0.020, with 3,000+ holders, 20+ AI models live, a fixed 5B supply, and VIP bonuses up to +100%, is shipping product today. Make a move before Phase 3 closes and today’s entry becomes the floor.
What is the next AI crypto to watch this month? With the AI sector near $26.6 billion, traders are scanning for working products priced low. Ruvi pairs a live AI superapp with a seven-phase sale now in Phase 3 at $0.020.
How do Ruvi VIP bonuses work? Bonuses scale by tier, from +20% at 20,000 $RUVI to +100% at VIP 5’s 500,000 $RUVI threshold. They are paid before listing and stack with leaderboard rewards.
Is Ruvi worth watching over other AI tokens? Phase 3 sits at $0.020 with 20+ AI models live, 3,000+ holders, and contributor payouts in $RUVI. The contrast in execution speaks for itself.
Useful Links
Website/Buy $RUVI: Ruvi.io
Whitepaper: Docs
X/Twitter: @RuviAiOfficial
Telegram: @Ruviofficial
The post Analysts Say Ruvi AI (RUVI) Is The Next AI Crypto To Watch As AI Token Sector Crosses $26.6 Billion in Market Value appeared first on Blockonomi.
Broadcom (AVGO) shares advanced 4.2% during Thursday morning’s session on May 29, establishing a fresh record at $448.58. The rally followed a series of bullish analyst revisions and significant developments in AI-focused financing arrangements.
Broadcom Inc., AVGO
Christopher Rolland of Susquehanna elevated his AVGO price objective to $490 from the previous $450 level, maintaining his Positive stance. Rolland expressed confidence in “Broadcom’s ASIC operations and anticipates sustained strength across their networking product line.”
Stefan Chang at Aletheia Capital pushed his target even higher, moving from $500 to $525. Chang emphasized that “immediate financial results matter less than the firm’s TPU commentary,” observing that Google seems to have adjusted its inferencing TPU strategy toward TPUv8i for the 2027-2028 timeframe.
UBS recently increased its price objective to $490 as well, pointing to a revised Anthropic contract expected to yield improved profit margins. Evercore kept its Outperform designation, highlighting robust demand in AI networking solutions.
The timing carries significance. With Broadcom’s fiscal second-quarter financial report scheduled for June 3, these bullish revisions arrive at a particularly impactful moment.
Apollo and Blackstone are presently pursuing additional backers for a $36 billion debt financing package linked to Anthropic’s AI infrastructure buildout. Broadcom serves as the payment guarantor for the arrangement’s largest component.
This represents a substantial commitment. Acting as credit backstop on the primary portion of a $36 billion financing demonstrates institutional confidence that extends far beyond conventional chip vendor relationships.
Additionally, Broadcom revealed a fresh collaboration with FuriosaAI. This partnership will integrate FuriosaAI’s Tensor Contraction Processor design with Broadcom’s networking capabilities to develop a multi-die chiplet platform designed for AI inference applications within data center environments.
This agreement expands a client roster that currently features Google, Meta, ByteDance, and Anthropic.
Jim Cramer discussed Broadcom on Mad Money, describing it as “a sleeper” and highlighting CEO Hock Tan as “a shrewd businessman who’s constantly getting new clients.” Cramer mentioned the Charitable Trust has maintained AVGO exposure consistently, despite reducing the position slightly on April 24.
Hock Tan’s statements from the Q1 earnings call remain influential. During that discussion, he revealed having “line of sight to achieve AI revenue from chips, just chips, in excess of $100 billion in 2027,” with manufacturing capacity already arranged through 2028.
This projection continues appearing prominently in Wall Street analysis, and the reasoning is clear.
Broadcom delivered revenue expansion of 25% across the trailing twelve-month period. The broader equity markets provided support Thursday, with the S&P 500 gaining 0.4%, the Dow advancing 0.4%, and the Nasdaq climbing 0.6%, powered by technology shares.
As the June 3 earnings date approaches, market participants will focus intently on any updates regarding AI customer agreements and advancement toward that 2027 revenue objective.
The post Broadcom (AVGO) Stock Surges to Record High on Wall Street Upgrades and Massive AI Deal appeared first on Blockonomi.
CoreWeave executives and board members unloaded more than $140 million in company stock on May 26, coinciding with CRWV trading near post-IPO peaks.
CoreWeave, Inc. Class A Common Stock, CRWV
Chief Executive Michael Intrator disposed of 297,693 Class A shares at transaction prices ranging from $105.705 to $109.16, generating proceeds of roughly $32.8 million. These transactions occurred under a pre-arranged Rule 10b5-1 trading plan established on November 20, 2025. Following these sales, Intrator maintains direct ownership of 4,076,815 Class A shares.
Additionally, Intrator indirectly divested 107,693 shares via Omnadora Capital LLC, an entity under his control. Concurrently, Omnadora converted an equivalent quantity of Class B shares to Class A shares, ending the day with no Class A holdings in the LLC.
Director Jack Cogen liquidated 986,540 indirectly owned shares distributed across five trusts and corporate entities, realizing approximately $106 million. Cogen maintains direct ownership of 261,140 shares, valued near $28 million at prevailing market prices.
Board member Karen Boone divested 1,060 directly held shares at $108.23, totaling $114,723. She additionally sold 10,520 shares from a family trust through three separate transactions priced between $107 and $108, accumulating approximately $1.25 million. Boone continues to hold 7,300 shares directly.
CRWV has appreciated approximately 45–46% year-to-date. By comparison, the Nasdaq Composite has advanced 16% and the S&P 500 has climbed 11% during the same timeframe.
The stock’s impressive performance unfolds amid challenging financial fundamentals. CoreWeave disclosed a $740 million net loss for Q1 2026 — exceeding twice the deficit recorded in Q1 2025, representing the company’s largest quarterly loss since going public.
The organization is investing aggressively in expanding AI data center capacity. Projected capital expenditures for 2026 range between $31 billion and $35 billion, predominantly financed through debt instruments.
By Q1’s conclusion, CoreWeave maintained $25 billion in outstanding debt alongside $10 billion in lease obligations. The company recently arranged a $3.1 billion delayed draw term loan facility to support continued infrastructure expansion.
Despite mounting losses, the revenue pipeline presents an optimistic narrative. Contracted future revenue reached $99.4 billion in Q1, underpinned by a $21 billion partnership with Meta Platforms.
Wall Street analysts remain divided on CRWV’s prospects. Deutsche Bank maintains a Buy rating while Evercore ISI holds an Outperform stance, both emphasizing robust AI infrastructure demand. Conversely, Bernstein SocGen assigns an Underperform rating, highlighting competitive threats.
Those competitive dynamics are intensifying. Specialized neoclouds like Nebius Group and Lambda, concentrating on high-density GPU computing infrastructure, are aggressively pursuing the identical market segment.
CFO Nitin Agrawal acknowledged competitive dynamics during a recent industry conference. “I’m sure some of these new players would be reasonably successful, and I’m sure some of them would not be,” he remarked on Thursday.
A prospective joint venture between Blackstone and Alphabet has attracted considerable attention as another potential competitor in AI cloud infrastructure.
CoreWeave unveiled unified agentic AI capabilities this week, featuring Serverless RL for training operations and CoreWeave Inference for deployment processes, designed to integrate training and inference within a unified feedback loop.
The post CoreWeave (CRWV) Stock: Insiders Dump $140M in Shares Despite Stock Rally appeared first on Blockonomi.
Shares of Okta (OKTA) rocketed approximately 27.7% during Thursday’s trading session following the identity and access management provider’s impressive first-quarter fiscal 2027 performance. The stock climbed to around $115.94, surpassing its earlier 52-week peak of $107.84 and propelling the company’s valuation to roughly $20 billion.
Okta, Inc., OKTA
The enterprise software firm delivered earnings per share of $0.91, comfortably exceeding Wall Street’s consensus projection of $0.85—representing an approximately 7% upside surprise. Top-line results totaled $765 million, surpassing analyst forecasts of $752 million by nearly 1.7%.
Current remaining performance obligations—a critical metric for gauging future revenue streams—posted 12% year-over-year expansion. This growth rate mirrored the fourth quarter’s performance and exceeded both internal projections and Street consensus of 10%.
Looking ahead to Q2, Okta provided guidance calling for 11% year-over-year cRPO growth, again outpacing the 10% consensus view and representing a one-percentage-point improvement over Q1’s outlook. Management elevated every metric in its full-year FY2027 financial guidance.
The blockbuster quarterly report sparked an immediate cascade of upward price target revisions from investment analysts.
UBS analyst Roger Boyd increased his price objective to $130 from a previous $115. DA Davidson similarly moved its target to $130 from $110, though the firm maintained its Neutral stance. Raymond James analyst Adam Tindle delivered one of the more substantial adjustments, elevating his target to $115 from $85.
RBC Capital’s Matthew Hedberg pushed his price goal to $122 from $108. Cantor Fitzgerald advanced its target to $125 from $100. Stifel upgraded to $120 from $92. Jefferies also established a $120 target. Mizuho’s Gregg Moskowitz, who maintained his Buy recommendation, lifted his target to $110 from $100—though this now trails the current trading price.
Wells Fargo analyst Richard Poland adjusted his price target upward to $100 from $85.
Jefferies analyst Joseph Gallo, recognized by TipRanks as the top-performing analyst covering OKTA, maintains a Buy rating paired with a $120 price target. His track record on the stock spans a one-year success rate of 100% with average gains of 15.57%.
DA Davidson highlighted AI Agents as an area demonstrating robust early adoption. The firm anticipates this trend, alongside continued improvements in sales force productivity and strengthening OIG momentum, could catalyze accelerating cRPO growth in upcoming quarters.
Mizuho’s Moskowitz attributed the exceptional quarter to expansion among large enterprise accounts and successful new product launches.
Stifel emphasized particular strength in enterprise-focused performance indicators. Jefferies spotlighted the expansion in calculated remaining performance obligations as an especially encouraging signal.
Despite the predominantly optimistic sentiment throughout analyst coverage, DA Davidson’s team retained its Neutral rating even while raising the price target, suggesting the shares appear rich compared to InvestingPro’s Fair Value calculation at present trading levels.
At $115.94, OKTA currently trades approximately 8% above its previous 52-week high watermark.
The post Okta (OKTA) Stock Soars 27% Following Stellar Earnings Beat and Raised Guidance appeared first on Blockonomi.
Kraken DeFi Earn has crossed $300 million in total deposits, with its Bitcoin Vault contributing over $70 million. The vault converts idle BTC into structured yield positions through vetted DeFi protocols.
It operates using a supervised loan strategy, avoiding directional speculation entirely. Yield comes from the spread between borrowing costs and returns on deployed stablecoins.
The vault requires no active management from depositors at any stage.
The vault supplies BTC as collateral to lending protocols, then borrows stablecoins against it. Those stablecoins are deployed into pre-approved yield strategies across onchain markets.
Target venues include Aave, Euler, and Morpho for stablecoin lending. Real-world assets and market-neutral AMM pairs on platforms like Curve also receive allocations. Each strategy is chosen because expected returns exceed borrowing costs.
Sentora Research flagged the vault’s milestone on X recently. SentoraHQ noted that the Bitcoin Vault alone surpassed $70 million shortly after launch.
That growth reflects strong depositor interest in BTC-based yield strategies. The vault’s design focuses on productivity without requiring price speculation. Idle BTC holdings are put to work through a constrained, structured process.
Leverage is used in this vault, but its application differs from typical margin trading. CEX margin trading often involves 5x to 100x leverage on directional bets.
The Bitcoin Vault uses a single supervised borrow with a 10–20% buffer below maximum collateral ratios. The strategy maintains market neutrality throughout its operation. If BTC falls in value, automated systems deleverage before liquidation thresholds are approached.
The vault does not use recursive leverage or looping strategies. BTC collateral is deposited once, stablecoins are borrowed once, and capital is deployed into approved venues.
There is no re-deposit cycle that compounds BTC price exposure across multiple loops. This single-cycle structure limits overall risk significantly. It keeps leverage defined, traceable, and governed by automated rebalancing at all times.
The vault uses kBTC, Kraken’s wrapped Bitcoin token on Ethereum, as its collateral format. Native BTC cannot operate directly on Ethereum’s lending and liquidity infrastructure. kBTC is redeemable one-to-one for Bitcoin with no fees attached.
For existing Kraken users, this wrapper does not introduce new custodial risk. It simply extends an existing trust relationship into the onchain environment.
Sentora applies a three-layer risk management model across all vault operations. The first layer involves formal research and due diligence before any capital is deployed.
Over 60 protocols across 17 networks have undergone technical and economic review. Audit history, oracle dependencies, and liquidation mechanics are all examined. No protocol enters the approved list without completing this review process.
The second layer is an automated on-chain system that acts as a 24/7 circuit breaker. It continuously tracks collateral ratios, borrow costs, and liquidation thresholds in real time.
If safety thresholds are breached, the vault autonomously recalls capital and repays debt. This process can occur within the same block when market conditions require it. Since January 2021, the vault has recorded zero liquidations across all deployments.
The third layer consists of quantitative off-chain monitoring across six risk categories. These include concentration, liquidity, interest rate, duration, leverage, and correlation. Metrics like Val01 and Exit Maturity help stress-test positions against worst-case market scenarios.
Available liquidity is evaluated to confirm clean exit conditions for each position. Large-holder movements that could shift market conditions are also tracked continuously.
Withdrawals from the vault are available through a standard five-day window. This period allows the system to exit multiple strategies while minimizing slippage costs.
The withdrawal timeline is expected to shorten as deposits scale and flows deepen. Independent audits by Spearbit and 0xMacro have reviewed the vault’s infrastructure. Sentora’s stated philosophy remains return of capital before return on capital.
The post Kraken Bitcoin Vault Hits $70M as DeFi Earn Platform Crosses $300M in Total Deposits appeared first on Blockonomi.
Crypto markets traded lower over the past seven days, with Bitcoin leading the decline as investors shifted away from risk assets. BTC started the week near the $77,000-$78,000 range but steadily lost momentum, falling toward roughly $ 73,000 by Friday.
This move undoubtedly reflected a combination of macro pressure, renewed ETF outflows, and weaker liquidity rather than a single industry-specific event.
It goes without saying that the biggest theme was the fading institutional demand. US spot Bitcoin ETFs saw notable redemptions, with over a billion dollars leaving in a single day. At the same time, large-holder activity picked up, with whale outflows reaching their highest level since February, which added to concerns that some investors are preparing to offload into weakness.
Macro headlines also played their part. Geopolitical tensions between the US and Iran have reduced hopes for near-term rate cuts, weighing on speculative assets. Moreover, analysts reported that central banks are adding to their gold reserves at an unprecedented rate, signaling broader risk-off market sentiment.
Altcoins followed Bitcoin lower – at least most of them. Ethereum is hovering near $2,000, and risk appetite remains cautious, to say the least.
Overall, the week showed that crypto remains highly sensitive to ETF flows and macro risk. Bitcoin’s failure to hold its price around the mid-$70s level leaves the market looking rather defensive heading into next week.
Market Cap: $2.54T | 24H Vol: $83B | BTC Dominance: 57.7%
BTC: $73,158 (-5.4%) | ETH: $1,995 (-5.9%) | XRP: $1.33 (-3.4%)

SpaceX Pre-IPO Market Flash-Crashes 45% on Hyperliquid. The pre-IPO market for SpaceX on Hyperliquid, powered by Ventuals, went through a sudden flash crash. Its price tanked by 45% in moments before recovering, causing mass liquidations. Ventuals has said that affected traders will be compensated.
Google Engineer Accused of Turning Secret Search Data Into a $1.2M Polymarket Profit. US prosecutors have charged a software engineer from Google with allegedly using confidential information to profit from betting on Polymarket. He allegedly made $1.2 million by using proprietary search data.
Hyperliquid Adds Macro Prediction Markets, HYPE Explodes Above $64. Hyperliquid has expanded the suite of available outcome markets on its platform. Initially, only fixed bets on Bitcoin’s daily price were available, but now users can trade on macro events such as monthly CPI prints and more.
Coinbase CEO Reveals What Still Needs to Change Before Finance Truly Evolves. Brian Armstrong said that the financial system still requires major upgrades. He emphasized that significant technological innovation and policy work will be needed to achieve them.
Galaxy Digital and BitGo Clash in Court Over Failed $1.2 Billion Crypto Merger. BitGo and Galaxy Digital continue their courtroom clash over the collapse of a $1.2 billion acquisition agreement that was once expected to become the largest merger in the industry.
Sui Network Hit by Fresh Outage Months After Previous Six-Hour Downtime Incident. Sui Network has once again experienced considerable downtime. The blockchain went offline for nearly six hours on Thursday. It’s far from the first time this has happened as well.
This week, we have a chart analysis of Ethereum, Ripple, Cardano, Binance Coin, and Hyperliquid – click here for the complete price analysis.
The post Bitcoin, Altcoin Prices Slide on ETF Outflows and Macro Risk: The Weekly Crypto Recap appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Around 85,500 Bitcoin options contracts will expire on Friday, May 29, with a notional value of roughly $6.3 billion. This event is larger than usual for the end of the month, so it may affect spot markets.
Crypto markets have been in decline all week, with around $120 billion leaving the space as Bitcoin continues to weaken and Ether gets crushed.
Escalation of US military action in the Middle East has pushed investors into panic mode, and the sell-off has accelerated.
This week’s batch of Bitcoin options contracts has a put/call ratio of 0.85, meaning that sellers of longs and shorts are pretty evenly matched. Max pain is around $75,000, according to Coinglass, which is a little higher than current spot prices, so some could be out of the money on expiry.
Open interest (OI), or the value or number of Bitcoin options contracts yet to expire, remains highest at the $80,000 strike price on Deribit, with $1.7 billion, but short sellers still have $1.2 billion in OI at $60,000. Total BTC options OI across all exchanges has been declining recently, and is at $37.5 billion, according to Coinglass.
Although Bitcoin has fallen to a “very dangerous level,” implied volatility (IV) has not risen significantly, reported derivatives provider Greeks Live on Thursday.
Under these circumstances, today’s expiry appears likely to “significantly alter the current options position structure,” they added.
“The market as a whole is still betting on support, and large investors’ concerns about the risk of a breakout have not increased significantly.”
BTC’s price has begun to break below the Gex concentration zone, and the resistance from open interest will continue to weaken. Meanwhile, since Gex is concentrated around $2,000, ETH has also broken below the Gex resistance level.
Although BTC has fallen to a very dangerous… pic.twitter.com/INeioAIqMP
— Greeks.live (@GreeksLive) May 28, 2026
In addition to today’s batch of Bitcoin options, around 650,000 Ethereum contracts are also expiring, with a notional value of $1.3 billion, max pain at $2,200, and a put/call ratio of 0.77. Total ETH options OI across all exchanges is around $6.9 billion.
This brings the total crypto options expiry notional value to around $7.6 billion, the largest event for many weeks.
Markets have been falling all week, with total capitalization dipping to $2.55 trillion on Friday morning in Asia, their lowest level since April 13.
BTC managed to recover $73,000 after falling below it twice on Thursday, but its market structure remains weak and further losses look likely.
ETH had reclaimed $2,000 at the time of writing, but also looked very weak and deep in bear market territory.
Crypto could be further pressured by US inflation, which increased at its fastest pace in three years in April as measured by this week’s PCE report.
The post Will Crypto Markets Fall Further When $6.3B Bitcoin Options Expire? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
On May 29, the world’s largest corporate holder of Bitcoin Strategy transferred 411.48 BTC, worth over $30 million, to Coinbase Prime, a move that immediately drew attention across the crypto community as traders tried to read the intent from the on-chain activity.
The timing was especially hard to ignore considering that on Polymarket, the probability that Strategy will sell some of its Bitcoin before December 31, 2026 has now hit 84%.
Depositing BTC to an exchange does not automatically mean that the holder is looking to sell. This was noted by pseudonymous crypto analyst COINBOY, who pointed out that funds moved to Coinbase Prime could be for OTC trading, collateral arrangement, or institutional fund management rather than outright liquidation. Keep that distinction in mind before reading too much into a single on-chain transaction.
However, what gave Strategy’s move more weight is the context around it, with the company’s Executive Chairman Michael Saylor recently declining to rule out selling some BTC before year-end, a notable departure from the hold-at-all-cost image he’s spent years building.
That change in mindset was revealed on Strategy’s Q1 2026 earnings call, where the firm reported $12.5 billion in net losses for the period. During the call, Saylor suggested that the company could liquidate part of its BTC stash to pay dividends, a position that was defended by Bitcoin maximalist Samson Mow, who said that the “never sell” mantra long associated with Saylor should not be taken as some kind of corporate oath but as guidance for individual holders, since any BTC treasury company that completely rules out selling would be handing a roadmap to short sellers that could hurt it.
There’s also the question of what Strategy did earlier this week when, instead of buying more Bitcoin as is the tradition, it repurchased approximately $1.5 billion of its own 0% convertible senior notes that were due in 2029. Analyst Darkfost framed the move as a balance sheet cleanup rather than the company rethinking its BTC plan, although Saylor himself had once again hinted in an interview that one of the options Strategy had considered to fund the repurchase was Bitcoin sales.
Interestingly, hours before on-chain tracking platform Lookonchain reported on Strategy’s 411 BTC deposit on Coinbase Prime, the executive posted a one-word tweet on X that simply read, “HODL.”
While speculation about Strategy’s intention was running rife, BTC itself was being buffeted by geopolitical developments, with the OG cryptocurrency losing more than $2,000 from its value after hostilities between the USA and Iran resumed. That session was quite rough, as it saw crypto markets shed over $100 million in total capitalization, with liquidations across derivatives topping $1 billion.
Today, at the time of writing, BTC was about $300 short of $74,000, having dipped by almost 5% in 7 days and nearly the same percentage in the last month. For Strategy, whose 843,738 BTC were purchased at around $75,700 per coin, the current price range puts its overall position modestly in the red on paper.
The post Strategy Moves $30 Million in BTC to Coinbase Amid Sell Speculation appeared first on CryptoPotato.
This Friday, we examine Ethereum, Ripple, Cardano, Binance Coin, and Hyperliquid in greater detail.
Ethereum is down 6% this week after sellers managed to put pressure on the $2,000 support. At the time of this post, this level appears to be holding, but only by a thread. Another push later could turn it into key resistance.
If $2,000 is lost next week, buyers will likely retreat to support at $1,800. This level managed to halt the downtrend previously, but another visit there could be interpreted as bearish, with a higher chance of a breakdown.
Looking ahead, this cryptocurrency remains in a bearish trend with sentiment being quite negative. This will likely fuel new lows as the downtrend continues into the summer of 2026.

XRP also had a bad week, closing with a 4% loss. Its price fell below the blue pennant, which is now acting as resistance. Sellers are defending the level at $1.4 and the key support levels are found at $1.2 and $1 where buyers are likely to return.
If this weakness continues, this cryptocurrency is likely to revisit the support levels in the coming weeks. Sellers are also controlling the price and have dominated for over three weeks with no relief.
Looking ahead, XRP is in a difficult position because its downtrend has been ongoing for almost a year. There were no major relief rallies, and any bounce was short-lived. Hopefully, a bottom is found soon, with $1 as a prime candidate.

ADA has entered dangerous territory after its price pierced through the support at $0.24. While it is still early to call it, this breakdown could be a significant loss of trust as the price falls to new lows.
Cardano also closed the week with a 7% loss, being unable to stop sellers from pushing the price down. The support at $0.24 held well for several months, but it seems this latest push may seal its fate.
Looking ahead, if $0.24 becomes resistance in the coming days, this cryptocurrency may make new lows not seen since 2021. If so, key target areas will be found at $0.20 and $0.15.

Binance Coin continues to disappoint, as its price has failed to break the $690 resistance level several times. This has forced it to bounce in a flat trend for months, testing the support at $580 and resistance at $690 several times. It also closed the week with a 3% loss.
Without a clear breakout, BNB could end up making lower lows, as the overall market bias is bearish. Therefore, sellers have the advantage and they could soon try their luck again at the key support. If that won’t hold, bears will target $ 500 next.
Looking ahead, this cryptocurrency may pause, moving sideways before its downtrend resumes. This is contingent on the overall market remaining bearish. Should Bitcoin make new lows, BNB is likely to follow as well based on this price action.

HYPE closed this week 6% higher, but it appears to have hit a ceiling somewhere around $64. Since that level was visited, sellers managed to put a stop to the rally and the price has been hesitating to make new gains.
With sellers becoming more aggressive, the most likely scenario here is a pullback towards the low $50 before HYPE attempts new highs. A correction would also be ideal to consolidate the recent gains after such a spectacular performance in recent weeks.
Looking ahead, if HYPE manages to test and confirm $52 as support, then it can use that level as a base towards new highs later. The current resistance at $63 continues to hold and will need to turn into support for the rally to resume.

The post Crypto Price Analysis May-29: ETH, XRP, ADA, BNB, and HYPE appeared first on CryptoPotato.
XRP-linked exchange-traded funds continue to attract investor demand despite the broader crypto market downturn.
The latest data shows that XRP ETF clients bought $1.77 million in XRP yesterday, bringing total net assets to about $1.12 billion.
The fresh XRP inflow comes at a moment when Bitcoin and Ethereum products have been hit by renewed outflows. Investors seem to be pulling back from riskier assets amid a broader crypto market downturn. Data from SoSoValue shows that US BTC spot ETFs record $228M in outflows, while ETH products lost $121M.
Against that backdrop, XRP’s $1.77 million inflow might seem modest in size, but it could be interpreted as notable in direction. It indicates that some ETF investors continue to accumulate exposure to Ripple’s native cryptocurrency despite the fact that capital is exiting BTC and ETH products.

Of course, the inflow has been far from enough to reverse XRP’s weakening price action, although positive signs appear.
XRP is showing a modest rebound today, with the token trading around 2% higher. That said, the move has not fully erased the recent bearish pressure.
As CryptoPotato reported earlier, XRP recently slipped towards its lowest levels since March, eyeing $1.20 as the next major support zone.
Technical pressure has also been intense throughout the past week. XRP fell below its 100-day moving average, which is currently treated as considerable resistance at $1.4, while the 200-day moving average remains higher around $1.6.
A breakdown below $1.2 could open the door to a much deeper decline, potentially toward the zone around $0.60.
And yet, the contrast seems clear: ETF demand remains positive, but price momentum is still bearish. The first step to stabilizing the PA would be to reclaim the 100-day EMA at $1.4.
The post Good News for Ripple? XRP ETFs Post Inflows Despite Market Downturn appeared first on CryptoPotato.