Ripple's x402 launch on XRPL could revolutionize AI-driven transactions, enhancing efficiency and potentially reshaping digital commerce.
The post Ripple launches toolkit for agentic payments on XRPL appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
TSMC's revenue surge highlights AI's dominance in chip demand, potentially sidelining smaller sectors like crypto mining, affecting market dynamics.
The post Taiwan Semiconductor reports $13.2B revenue in May, up 30% year-over-year appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Blanche's confirmation could perpetuate lenient crypto oversight, risking market instability and potential investor losses amid regulatory gaps.
The post Donald Trump nominates Todd Blanche as attorney general, sparking confirmation battle appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
AI's rising power demands could strain global energy resources, impacting industries reliant on affordable electricity and reshaping investment strategies.
The post KKR’s Raj Agrawal warns AI growth may drive power demands far higher than expected appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Ammouta's appointment could enhance Al Ahly's strategic depth and competitive edge in African football, potentially elevating their global stature.
The post Al Ahly nears agreement to appoint Hussein Ammouta as head coach appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

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

New Documentary ‘Bitcoin Season’ Charts Bitcoin’s Push Into the NBA
A new feature documentary is making the case that Bitcoin belongs in the boardrooms of professional basketball — and it has the access to back it up.
Bitcoin Season, directed by Mike Nicoll, follows Swan Bitcoin, a Bitcoin wealth services company, on its mission to establish Bitcoin-only partnerships inside the professional basketball industry. The film centers on Swan’s groundbreaking deal with the Cleveland Cavaliers — described as the first Bitcoin-only partnership with an NBA franchise — and a separate agreement with Klutch Sports Group, the player agency founded by Rich Paul that represents some of the biggest names in the sport.
The film frames Bitcoin not as a financial product but as a tool of player empowerment, arriving at a moment when athletes are increasingly asserting control over their careers, their brands, and their money.
Former NBA guard Matthew Dellavedova, who appears in the film, called it “a blueprint” for franchises, leagues, and athletes looking to transform what they stand for beyond the balance sheet.
“[Bitcoin Season] shows franchises, leagues, and athletes that Bitcoin can transform more than a balance sheet, it can transform what you stand for and the legacy you leave. We’re in the player-empowerment era, and owning Bitcoin is part of that,” Dellavedova said.
Expert voices in the film include Michael Saylor, Lyn Alden, Adam Back, Max Keiser, Pierre Rochard, Greg Foss, and Natalie Brunell, alongside executives from the Cavs and Klutch organizations.
The film’s central argument: as legacy financial models erode in the digital age, storing value in Bitcoin represents a winning strategy for athletes and institutions alike.
Nicoll is no stranger to basketball documentaries. His 2017 film At All Costs was acquired by Netflix and earned comparisons to Hoop Dreams from the LA Times. His follow-up, The Spoils: Selling the Future of American Basketball, premiered at the NBA Summer League Film Festival in June 2024 and drew praise from filmmaker Ken Burns. It is now available on Amazon Prime.
Bitcoin Season had its premiere on June 3, 2026, in San Clemente, California, hosted by Swan founder and CEO Cory Klippsten. A sneak peek is scheduled for the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas on July 18.
You can watch the trailer here.
This post New Documentary ‘Bitcoin Season’ Charts Bitcoin’s Push Into the NBA first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Dan Loeb Reveals DOJ Threat to Trump Over Ross Ulbricht Commutation in Final Hours of First Term
Hedge fund manager Dan Loeb has publicly claimed that the Department of Justice threatened President Donald Trump in the final hours of Trump’s first term in January 2021, warning it would “go after” him if he commuted the sentence of Ross Ulbricht, creator of the Bitcoin-powered Silk Road marketplace. After the reported threat, Trump withdrew the commutation, forcing Ulbricht to serve four additional years in prison before receiving a full pardon in January 2025 during Trump’s second term.
Loeb, founder and CEO of Third Point LLC, made the revelation on the All-In Podcast while discussing his role in criminal justice reform and Ulbricht’s clemency efforts. “On the last day of Trump’s 45th term, we were certain that he was going to get out,” Loeb stated. “And the Justice Department, for whatever reason, said, ‘If you commute his sentence, we’re going to go after you,’ to the president. So he, as I understand, he withdrew the commutation.”
This account is the first public report of such a direct threat from the DOJ during the closing days of Trump’s first presidency. It has not been independently corroborated by other sources to date, and no specific DOJ official has been named as delivering the warning. The claim rests on Loeb’s recollection, likely conveyed through the advocacy chain that included crypto figures like Riva Tez, Charlie Kirk, and then-White House counsel David Warrington.
DOJ Leadership in January 2021
Jeffrey A. Rosen served as Acting Attorney General after William Barr’s departure in late December 2020. Richard Donoghue was Acting Deputy Attorney General. The Office of the Pardon Attorney, a DOJ unit that reviews clemency petitions and issues recommendations, operated under their oversight. Presidents, including Trump, frequently bypassed standard OPA processes for politically sensitive cases.
The alleged threat appears to have gone well beyond typical DOJ advisory input on issues such as sentence proportionality, victim impact, or enforcement priorities. Ulbricht had been serving a double life sentence plus 40 years following his 2015 conviction on charges including operating a continuing criminal enterprise, narcotics distribution via the internet, money laundering, and hacking. Contrary to popular belief and widely publicized insinuations by the mainstream media, Ulbricht was never prosecuted on any charges related to murder for hire.
Silk Road, which relied primarily on Bitcoin for transactions, represented one of the earliest large-scale experiments in the use of an alternative currency to the dollar, making the case and its history foundational to the Bitcoin community.
A warning framed as potential retaliation against the President himself would constitute an extraordinary escalation in tensions between the executive branch and the Department of Justice over clemency authority. Such pushback likely stemmed from institutional concerns about appearing soft on major drug trafficking and money laundering cases tied to the early Bitcoin economy.
Four-Year Delay and Political Impact
The reported DOJ intervention in the final days of Trump’s first term cost Ulbricht four more years behind bars. As Loeb recounted, Charlie Kirk later took the lead on the clemency effort. “This was his only ask of the president,” Loeb said, referring to Kirk. Kirk’s advocacy helped turn Ulbricht’s release into Trump’s primary promise to libertarians and the crypto community during the 2024 campaign. Trump delivered on that promise with a full and unconditional pardon early in his second term.
Ironically, the delay strengthened the “Free Ross” movement. What began as advocacy for clemency in a case viewed by many in Bitcoin circles as emblematic of government overreach evolved into a potent political force. The campaign highlighted issues of disproportionate sentencing, self-custody, privacy tools, and resistance to broadly unpopular and ineffective war on drugs, core themes in Bitcoin’s ethos of financial sovereignty and of high importance to the libertarian voting block. This momentum and Trump’s promise to pardon Ulbricht are widely considered to have earned Trump the libertarian and crypto vote in 2024.
Broader Context for Bitcoin
Loeb framed his involvement in Ulbricht’s case as part of broader criminal justice reform, linking it to his broader philanthropy efforts on education and concerns over opportunity and income inequality. He highlighted three categories for clemency: the wrongly convicted, the rehabilitated, and those with disproportionately harsh sentences. Ulbricht, who acknowledged wrongdoing on Silk Road while denying murder-for-hire allegations, fit the latter category in Loeb’s assessment.
The episode highlights ongoing tensions between law enforcement, Bitcoin innovation, and the libertarian culture that makes up a large part of the U.S. public. Silk Road, one of the earliest Bitcoin marketplaces, remains a reference point in debates over decentralization, privacy, and regulatory overreach. Similar cases continue to draw attention in the Bitcoin community, including Bitcoin activist Ian Freeman, the developers of the Samourai Wallet privacy tool, and Roman Storm of Tornado Cash—all facing charges viewed by many as attacks on Libertarian leaders, the freedom of commerce, self-custody and financial privacy tools.
This post Dan Loeb Reveals DOJ Threat to Trump Over Ross Ulbricht Commutation in Final Hours of First Term first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Juan Galt.
Bitcoin Magazine

Crypto Industry Heavyweights Urge Senate to Pass Clarity Act With Developer Protections Intact
More than 60 of the most prominent CEOs and founders in the cryptocurrency industry sent a letter to Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer on June 9, calling on the full Senate to pass the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act with its blockchain developer protections intact — a provision the signatories described as a non-negotiable condition of their support.
The letter, signed by executives from Coinbase, a16z crypto, Uniswap, Solana Labs, Kraken, Paradigm, Galaxy, Ledger, and dozens of other leading firms, focused on Section 604 of the Clarity Act — the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act, or BRCA — which shields non-controlling software developers from Bank Secrecy Act obligations and federal money transmission prosecution.
The signatories argued that without the BRCA, the broader market structure bill would fail to deliver the legal certainty needed to sustain blockchain innovation in the United States.
“From core Bitcoin development to novel DeFi smart contract designs, developers need clear legal certainty to openly build, maintain, and contribute to community-driven software projects,” the letter reads.
The Clarity Act, formally known as H.R. 3633 — the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act — has been years in the making. The bill passed the House of Representatives in July 2025 on a bipartisan 294-134 vote, a commanding margin that reflected broad legislative appetite for a federal framework governing digital asset classification.
The bill then stalled twice in the Senate, most notably in January 2026 when the Senate Banking Committee postponed a scheduled markup after Coinbase withdrew support over a proposed ban on stablecoin rewards.
The Senate Banking Committee cleared the legislation on May 14, 2026, by a 15-9 vote, with Democrats Ruben Gallego of Arizona and Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland crossing the aisle to join Republicans. The bill was placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar on June 1, 2026. Galaxy Research estimates the bill has a 60-75% chance of becoming law in 2026 and projects a possible presidential signature during the week of August 3, though Senator Cynthia Lummis, one of the bill’s architects, cautioned after the committee vote: “Nobody is popping the champagne quite yet”.
Similarly, over the weekend, more than 200 crypto companies and organizations, led by Stand With Crypto, urged Senate leaders to bring the Clarity Act to a full Senate vote, arguing that clear regulations are needed to keep digital asset innovation in the United States.
The BRCA, incorporated as Section 604 of the Clarity Act, codifies a principle from FinCEN’s 2019 guidance: that developers and infrastructure providers who do not custody or control user funds are not money transmitters subject to Bank Secrecy Act registration or criminal prosecution under 18 U.S.C. § 1960.
The provision draws a firm line between intermediated financial services — exchanges, hosted wallets — and open-source protocol development. The DeFi Education Fund and Coin Center have both described the BRCA as a baseline requirement for any market structure bill, arguing that without it, developers face the threat of prosecution for building permissionless software.
The June 9 letter also urged the Senate to preserve companion protections in Clarity Act Section 601, which carves out developers from SEC registration requirements, and Section 207 of the Senate Agriculture Committee’s Digital Commodity Intermediaries Act, which does the same for commodities law.
The bill still faces a demanding path to enactment. The Senate Banking Committee version must be merged with the Senate Agriculture Committee’s jurisdiction framework before a full Senate floor vote, where the bill requires 60 votes to clear the filibuster threshold.
The Senate and House versions must then be reconciled before arriving at President Trump’s desk. Senate Democrats, led by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, have argued the bill’s anti-money laundering provisions remain too weak.
This post Crypto Industry Heavyweights Urge Senate to Pass Clarity Act With Developer Protections Intact first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Five Years On, El Salvador Is Still Buying Bitcoin
Five years ago yesterday, El Salvador’s Congress voted 62-to-22 to pass the world’s first Bitcoin Law, making the small Central American nation the first country on earth to grant bitcoin legal tender status.
The date was June 8, 2021. Half a decade later, the government holds 7,677 BTC worth approximately $480 million — and it is still accumulating.
The country has run a dollar-cost averaging strategy since President Nayib Bukele announced a policy of purchasing one bitcoin per day in November 2022. In the 12 months since June 2025, El Salvador added more than 1,600 BTC to its stack, including a tactical purchase of over 1,000 BTC in a single week during a November market dip.
At the start of 2026, the Bitcoin Office declared the country was going “all in” on both bitcoin and artificial intelligence.
That conviction survived a major policy reversal. In January 2025, Bukele’s administration stripped bitcoin of its mandatory legal tender status as a condition of a $1.4 billion IMF loan package. Businesses are no longer legally required to accept it, and the government-issued Chivo wallet — the centerpiece of Bukele’s original pitch — is being phased out.
But the government has not sold a single coin from its treasury and BTC is still able to be used as a currency for those who wish to use it.
El Salvador offers no capital gains tax on bitcoin or cryptocurrency transactions, a policy the government doubled down on in early 2026 to court foreign investors. The country is also developing plans for a “Volcano Bond” backed by bitcoin and a proposed Bitcoin City powered by geothermal energy.
The remittance case that Bukele used to sell the law to the public has yet to materialize at scale. El Salvador is one of the most remittance-dependent economies in the world — personal transfers from abroad equal roughly 24 percent of GDP, with Q1 2026 totaling $2.43 billion. Crypto accounted for just $17.38 million of that figure, or 0.71 percent of the total.
This post Five Years On, El Salvador Is Still Buying Bitcoin first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
The total value locked (TVL) on DeFi fell from $172 billion to $148 billion as the sector logged $635 million in exploit losses across April alone. Coinbase Ventures bought Ethena's ENA token on the open market, Janus Henderson took its own strategic ENA position, and Morpho closed a $175 million round structured entirely around the MORPHO token.
Apollo separately secured rights to acquire up to 90 million MORPHO tokens over 48 months.
The bet these investors are making is that governance tokens attached to DeFi protocols with real institutional distribution will rerate as financial infrastructure, and that the security panic accelerates that outcome by flushing weaker protocols out of the running.

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

If Coinbase, Janus Henderson, Apollo, Circle, and VanEck normalize DeFi-backed cash and credit products through their existing channels and security panic keeps concentrating capital into top-tier protocols, ENA and MORPHO rerate as governance assets over infrastructure processing real institutional volume.
USDe would then retest a significantly larger supply base, and Morpho deposits would move toward $18 billion and $25 billion, with both tokens trading as strategic assets with a claim on the rails beneath them.
If another major exploit, depeg event, or regulatory restriction pauses institutional distribution, governance token ownership proves it was always decoupled from protocol economics.
In this scenario, USDe supply would fall by 30% to 50%, MORPHO would sell off despite continued protocol usage, and the disconnect between holding governance rights and capturing value from the protocol would remain wide.
| Scenario | What happens | USDe / ENA implication | Morpho / MORPHO implication | Bigger takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bull case | Institutional distribution expands and security panic concentrates capital in top protocols | USDe retests a larger supply base; ENA rerates as governance over synthetic-dollar infrastructure | Deposits move toward $18B–$25B; MORPHO trades as strategic governance exposure | Governance tokens become infrastructure assets |
| Bear case | Major exploit, depeg, or regulation pauses adoption | USDe supply falls 30%–50%; ENA remains disconnected from adoption | MORPHO sells off despite continued protocol usage | Token ownership remains decoupled from protocol economics |
| Base case | Adoption grows, but token value capture remains uncertain | USDe grows, but ENA repricing is uneven | Morpho usage rises, but value accrual stays unclear | Infrastructure wins, tokenholders may not |
| Black swan | Core protocol, custody, collateral, or governance failure | ENA loses infrastructure premium | MORPHO governance becomes a liability | The “trusted rails” thesis breaks |
Apollo, Paradigm, a16z, Janus Henderson, and Coinbase Ventures each made a separate bet that the rails they chose would carry enough institutional volume to make governing those rails worth holding.
Whether token ownership closes the distance with the economic value flowing through the protocols beneath it is the cycle's actual open question.
The post Wall Street is buying DeFi tokens again, even as everyone worries the code is unsafe appeared first on CryptoSlate.
After becoming 2026's best-performing major stock market on the back of an AI chip boom, South Korea's KOSPI suffered one of its sharpest drops on record and then rebounded almost as fast.
The 48-hour swing shows how concentrated the global AI trade has become, and why investors in everything from chip stocks to Bitcoin are exposed to sudden shifts in Federal Reserve policy.
The numbers we saw in the past couple of days are the kind normally reserved for volatile cryptocurrencies. KOSPI fell 8.29% on Monday, June 8, closing at 7,484.41 after an automatic 20-minute trading halt froze the market, then jumped 8.18% the next day to close at 8,096.93. Across two sessions, a market worth trillions swung close to 17%.
KOSPI is South Korea's main stock index, the rough equivalent of the S&P 500. It tracks around 950 companies on the Korea Exchange, weighted by size, which is its main problem: a few chipmakers led by Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix dominate it.
The index's total value had swelled past 7,000 trillion won, roughly $4.6 trillion, at its peak at the beginning of June, making the Korean market a direct bet on the global AI hardware cycle. Monday's plunge erased more than 554 trillion won, about $360 billion, in a single day.
The run was built almost entirely on AI. KOSPI climbed about 92% in 2026 on demand for AI hardware, rising chip prices, and the race to build data centers, with Samsung and SK Hynix supplying roughly 72% of the gains. When a market leans that heavily on two stocks, the same names tend to drag everything down once the mood turns.
The trigger came from Washington, where a strong May jobs report on June 5 showed the US adding 172,000 jobs against forecasts near 85,000, the firmest hiring in 18 months. Strong hiring gives the Fed less reason to cut interest rates, and higher rates hit expensive, fast-growing tech companies hardest, since so much of their value rests on profits years away.
Chipmaker Broadcom then forecast weaker AI sales than Wall Street wanted and fell about 13%, dragging the main US chip index down more than 10% on Friday. By the time Seoul opened Monday, Samsung and SK Hynix were down around 10%.
Borrowed money then turned what was already a bad day into a market-halting one. Korea's retail traders had piled into leveraged bets on the chip giants, and margin debt had hit a record 37.74 trillion won, about $25 billion.
When prices fall against borrowed money, brokers demand more cash, forcing more selling that pushes prices lower still. The market's fear gauge spiked to a record high, above its financial-crisis peak, as those forced sales accelerated the decline.
The selling didn't stay contained in Seoul. On Tuesday in the US, the Nasdaq dropped more than 4% by midday before closing down about 1%, as investors dumped the riskiest tech names and rotated into defensive stocks like consumer staples and retailers.
Among them was Strategy, now seen by TradFi traders as essentially a leveraged bet on Bitcoin, a sign of how closely the AI and crypto trades now move together.
Korea's rebound reflected a swing back in global sentiment more than any change in AI demand. A ceasefire between Israel and Iran calmed nerves; Nvidia's Jensen Huang called the sell-off a buying opportunity; and US chips bounced overnight. The recovery clawed back nearly everything Monday wiped out, leaving the valuation question open.
The June 5 jobs report knocked Bitcoin to a 2026 low near $59,100, wiped out more than $1.7 billion in leveraged crypto bets in a day, and extended a record run of withdrawals from US funds that hold Bitcoin. But how did one US job number drain the world's hottest stock market and its most-watched digital asset at once?
That reason is liquidity, the flow of cheap money. AI stocks and crypto have both run on easy money and an appetite for risky, fast-growing assets, so when investors brace for higher rates, they pull back from every speculative corner at once, which is how Seoul and Bitcoin fall together without any direct link.
The AI build-out is itself becoming an inflation risk for the Fed, with AI spending nearing $800 billion in 2026 and pushing up costs for power, chips, and labor. The same boom that lifts tech stocks could keep the Fed from cutting rates, the opposite of what crypto traders have spent months hoping for.
Whether this is an AI bubble or ordinary volatility is still up for debate. The bullish case is solid: AI spending is still strong, and chip earnings are holding up. But the bearish case is just as good: valuations are stretched, the gains sit in a few names, and borrowed money makes every drop worse.
A market that nearly doubled this year gave up months of gains on Monday and clawed most of them back by Tuesday, a reminder of how much the AI trade now rides on confidence and the Fed's next move.
The June 16-17 Fed meeting, the first under new chair Kevin Warsh, and this week's US inflation report will help decide whether Seoul's wild ride was a brief scare or an early warning for everything built on the same ground.
The post The world’s hottest AI stock market just swung nearly 17% in two days appeared first on CryptoSlate.
A Delphi Consulting analysis of 652 CEX listings from January 2025 onward found that a user buying every new token across Binance, Bybit, Coinbase, Gate.io, and Kraken would have kept roughly 50 cents on the dollar.
The win rate across all listings was 12%, 52% of tokens lost more than 80%, and the median return was -82%. Tokenized stocks appear to be the answer that exchanges are giving to failing token launches.

Kraken now offers more than 100 tokenized stocks and ETFs through its xStocks product, with 24/5 trading, $1 minimums, and self-custody support.
Robinhood EU lists more than 2,000 Stock Tokens linked to Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, and the Vanguard S&P 500, with minimums of €1 and 24/5 access.
Coinbase offers stock and ETF trading inside the same app as crypto, with zero commission, USDC funding, and $1 fractional shares for US users, with a longer-term plan to make tokenized stocks available globally as on-chain collateral.
Tokenized stocks across all platforms held $1.48 billion in distributed value as of June 1, up 39% over 30 days, with $4.2 billion in monthly transfer volume.
Binance Research reported that equity ownership outside the US runs broadly below 20%, compared with 62% of Americans holding equities, attributing the gap to infrastructure access.
The same report projects that crypto exchanges could channel $2 trillion in incremental capital and nearly 300 million new users into global equity markets by 2031 under a base case, rising to $5 trillion in annual incremental equity capital under a bull case.
Some AI-cycle stocks traded above $1,000 per share during periods when average monthly wages in parts of Africa and Southern Asia were below $300, making single-share ownership inaccessible without fractional shares.
Binance says stablecoins could remove an average of 3.6% and about $40 per transaction in cross-border off-ramp costs, and that TradFi-linked perpetuals already account for roughly 10% of stablecoin trading volume, positioning stablecoins as general-market access infrastructure.
| Binance Research point | Why it matters for tokenized stocks |
|---|---|
| Equity ownership outside the US broadly below 20% vs 62% in the US | Large access gap for emerging-market users |
| Nearly 300M potential new users by 2031 | Crypto exchanges become global brokerage gateways |
| $2T base-case incremental capital by 2031 | Tokenized equities become a major financial access product |
| $5T bull-case annual incremental equity capital | Upside case if crypto rails become normalized equity infrastructure |
| Stablecoins can reduce off-ramp costs by 3.6% / ~$40 per transaction | Stablecoins become brokerage cash, not just crypto trading collateral |
| TradFi-linked perps at ~10% of stablecoin trading volume | Demand for non-crypto assets is already appearing inside crypto markets |
A user buying tokenized Nvidia with USDC creates demand for stablecoin settlement, exchange revenue, custody activity, and tokenization platform fees.
If stock trading activity routes through base-layer networks for settlement or collateral, select protocols could capture fee and staking demand from equity flows that never touch a new token listing, expanding the total addressable market even if crypto asset adoption stagnates.

Numbers from a recent Delphi report show that exchanges spent the 2025 cycle listing hundreds of tokens that overwhelmingly destroyed retail capital, and the same platforms now offering Nvidia or Apple exposure are implicitly conceding that the native listing product lost user trust.
A retail user with a stablecoin balance can now buy tokenized exposure to a company with quarterly earnings, analyst coverage, and a familiar brand through the same account that previously offered only new token listings at a -82% median return.
Tokenized stocks give existing crypto account holders a competing asset class inside the same account, and if exchanges succeed in making that the primary growth product, they validate crypto rails while reducing the addressable demand pool for new token listings.
Institutional allocators rotating from Bitcoin ETFs into AI equities, and retail users in crypto apps choosing tokenized stocks over new listings, put the structural demand argument for long-tail tokens under simultaneous pressure from both ends of the capital stack.
Exchanges running that model become TradFi distributors on crypto infrastructure, capturing stock trading revenue while the native listing business shrinks to a secondary product.
Base layers may still benefit from settlement and collateral activity, but governance tokens, new altcoin listings, and assets without earnings or utility face a valuation problem that tokenized stocks make harder to ignore.
Kraken says xStocks provide price exposure without shareholder rights such as voting, and Robinhood describes its Stock Tokens as derivative contracts that carry liquidity, currency, and counterparty risks.
The SEC warns that third-party and synthetic tokenized securities may not represent ownership of or contractual obligations tied to the underlying security, exposing holders to the risk of issuer or custodian bankruptcy.
Tokenized stocks may reduce friction and expand reach, but users in emerging markets buying stock-like exposure through a crypto exchange may discover during a market-stress event that they have held a synthetic product.
The infrastructure win and the ownership disconnect can coexist, and it matters most precisely when market conditions make it most relevant.
Stablecoins, exchanges, custodians, and tokenization issuers capture value from tokenized stock activity regardless of whether crypto-native tokens benefit.
A user funding a tokenized Nvidia purchase with USDC through Kraken generates stablecoin demand, exchange revenue, and tokenization platform fees without generating demand for ETH, SOL, or any new altcoin listing.

The bull case for crypto tokens requires that stock trading activity creates collateral, settlement, or staking demand that flows through crypto-native assets.
That chain of value capture is commercially plausible but depends on product design choices that exchanges have not yet fully committed to.
Binance Research's $2 trillion base case and $5 trillion bull case describe capital flowing through crypto infrastructure without necessarily creating demand for crypto-native tokens, which depend on separate design choices that exchanges have not yet committed to.
The post Crypto’s killer app may be selling stocks after its own tokens failed retail appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bipartisan Senate talks over crypto ethics turned rocky this week after a Democratic source described an “about-face” by GOP members and the White House on a prior enforcement agreement.
The disputed provision would have allowed state attorneys general to sue the Justice Department for failing to enforce certain crypto ethics requirements.
As Punchbowl News and Eleanor Terrett reported, Senate Republicans floated a weaker ethics guardrail package during a bipartisan meeting on June 9, discussed removing the state enforcement provision entirely, and raised impeachment as a separate option.
GOP sources responded that senators not involved in the original ethics discussions later raised concerns about granting state officials the authority to bring actions against federal officials, including members of Congress.
The floor math was already tight before the recent talks broke down. The CLARITY Act passed the Senate Banking Committee on May 14 by a 15-9 vote, with all 13 Republicans joined by Democrats Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks.
Yet the bill needs 60 votes to overcome a Senate filibuster, meaning at least seven Democrats must cross over if all Republicans vote yes.
Gallego warned he was “not afraid to vote no” on the floor if outstanding issues stay unresolved, and Alsobrooks described her committee's vote as a commitment to keep negotiating in good faith.

The conflict-of-interest question has been on the table in CLARITY negotiations since September 2025, when 12 Senate Democrats released a market structure framework that demanded ethics provisions.
By January 2026, when the Senate Banking Committee released a 278-page draft, the ethics language was watered down.
In the May 309-page draft, it was gone entirely, marking a trajectory from demand to dilution to deletion, with Democratic senators publicly signaling that the bill was dead on arrival without a reversal.
At the May 14 markup, Sen. Chris Van Hollen's amendment aimed to block senior government officials, including the president and vice president, from holding business ties to the crypto industry.
Republicans decided not to include the language, arguing that ethics considerations sit outside the committee's remit and could be added via amendment on the Senate floor.

Crypto-friendly Democrats had argued that the committee needed to reach a deal ahead of the vote to avoid a future scenario in which the language is not included later, and the Van Hollen amendment failed 11-13.
Committee supporters had pointed to floor negotiations as the path to resolving ethics after that vote. Per Terrett's reporting, Republicans and the White House are backing away from an agreement that had been within reach.
The specific mechanism in dispute, allowing state attorneys general to sue the DOJ over enforcement failures, would have put outside pressure on the Justice Department if Democrats believed federal officials were failing to enforce ethics rules.
Republicans counter that senators raised constitutional concerns about allowing state officials to bring actions against federal officials, including members of Congress.

Democrats need guardrails they can describe as binding, and the state-AG provision was the mechanism they had negotiated to make that case.
If the enforcement mechanism is removed or weakened beyond what swing-vote Democrats can defend publicly, the bill does not reach 60.
The bull case is that Republicans and the White House agree on an alternative enforcement mechanism, with impeachment and a separate judicial pathway discussed per Punchbowl, that produces a deal Democrats can bring to their caucus as enforceable.
Under that outcome, the bill reaches the floor with a coalition broad enough to clear the filibuster, and the ethics fight closes before it consumes the floor calendar.
Galaxy Research's Alex Thorn currently estimates the probability of the CLARITY Act passing in 2026 at 60%.
The bear case is that Democrats conclude the ethics language is too weak, and Gallego and Alsobrooks do not carry their committee votes to the floor.
Analysts warn that slippage into 2027 is still possible if the floor calendar does not open in June, and senators have warned that failure before the August recess could push the next viable legislative window to 2030 or beyond.
A bill that clears committee with thin bipartisan support and then loses those two Democrats on the floor is a failed vote on the most consequential crypto legislation the Senate has considered.
Ethics is the immediate fire, but four unresolved issues are still active, dragging on the coalition.
Senate Banking Democrats have targeted the bill's anti-money laundering provisions, and a Sen. Elizabeth Warren-sponsored amendment to give Treasury authority to sanction DeFi services was rejected by all 13 Republicans at markup, leaving an enforcement split that Democrats can reopen on the floor.
On DeFi more broadly, the bill defines when trading protocols are “non-decentralized” based on control, discretion, or the ability to alter or censor operations, and requires rulemaking for how persons controlling such protocols comply with securities intermediary rules.
That definition leaves the bill politically exposed from both directions, as DeFi advocates push back on broad enforcement obligations, while Democrats use narrow definitions as a national-security attack line.
The stablecoin yield dispute reached a working compromise through the Tillis-Alsobrooks agreement, which prohibits stablecoin issuers from paying interest or yield on balances in a manner economically equivalent to an interest-bearing bank deposit, while allowing activity-based and transaction-based rewards modeled on credit card points programs.
Banks are still concerned about deposit flight, but that fight has moved to the margins. On procedure, the Senate Banking text still needs to be merged with the Senate Agriculture Committee's parallel version before a full Senate vote, and any Senate-passed text would then need House approval, since the House passed its own version in July 2025 by 294-134.
That sequence, combined with the 60-vote hurdle, means the ethics fight has to be resolved before any of the other steps can move on a timeline that avoids the August recess.
| Risk | Current status | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Ethics enforcement | State-AG mechanism under dispute | Could determine whether Gallego, Alsobrooks, and other Democrats support floor passage |
| Illicit finance / AML | Warren-backed DeFi sanctions amendment rejected by Republicans | Gives Democrats a national-security argument against the bill |
| DeFi treatment | “Non-decentralized” protocol test still politically exposed | Too strict angers DeFi advocates; too loose angers enforcement hawks |
| Stablecoin yield | Tillis-Alsobrooks compromise reached, but banks remain concerned | Lower-risk than ethics, but still a bank-vs-crypto pressure point |
| Procedure | Banking text must merge with Agriculture text, pass Senate, then likely return to House | The clock becomes a threat if August recess arrives before floor action |
White House adviser Patrick Witt has said the administration will accept ethics rules only if they apply across the board, from the president down, rejecting any provision that singles out the president specifically.
That posture frames the enforcement dispute as a substantive question about whether the bill's ethics rules apply with equal force to the officials responsible for enforcing them.
The post CLARITY Act momentum slows to a crawl as lawmakers clash over crypto ethics rules appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Circle has launched cirBTC on Ethereum, but the larger play is to make wrapped Bitcoin look like collateral infrastructure institutions can route through DeFi, OTC desks, lending markets, treasury systems, market makers, and settlement flows.
cirBTC is live on Ethereum and backed 1:1 by native BTC, according to Circle's launch materials. The company says the underlying Bitcoin is held through a Circle entity, segregated from corporate assets, and designed for onchain reserve visibility.
The product also sits inside Circle's existing stack. Circle is positioning cirBTC around Circle Mint, USDC workflows, Ethereum DeFi, and planned support for Arc and other chains.
This moves wrapped Bitcoin into an issue of trust. BTC itself does not move natively through Ethereum contracts, so any wrapped version asks users to trust a claim on Bitcoin held somewhere else.
For retail DeFi users, that can be a bridge decision. For institutions, it is a collateral decision: who holds the keys, how reserves are checked, what happens during redemption, and whether the operational process can survive internal risk review.
Circle's cirBTC pitch starts with the same basic promise as other wrapped Bitcoin products: one token for one BTC. The difference is the operating package around that promise.
Its materials say cirBTC is backed by native BTC, reserves are separated from corporate assets, and counterparties can verify reserves onchain. Circle also ties the product to the same institutional interface many firms already use for USDC issuance and redemption.
A desk that already moves USDC through Circle Mint could, in theory, add BTC collateral to the same account-and-settlement relationship instead of stitching together a separate custodian, wrapper, exchange, bridge, and DeFi access point.
The proof-of-reserve component supports that positioning. Proof of Reserve systems can help tokenized assets and DeFi protocols monitor backing data onchain and build safeguards around undercollateralization.
For cirBTC, the next live signal is the reserve feed or dashboard counterparties can use for the token itself.
That leaves counterparty trust in place. cirBTC still depends on custody, redemption, reserve controls, and user confidence in Circle's process.
The institutional pitch is that those assumptions can be packaged in a cleaner way, with the BTC claim, reserve visibility, and Circle account relationship pointing in the same direction.
The comparison is clearest against cbBTC and WBTC.
Coinbase's cbBTC is also a 1:1 BTC-backed wrapped asset, held in Coinbase custody and available across Base, Ethereum, Solana, and Arbitrum.
Coinbase also maintains a proof-of-reserves page, giving users a public reserve and supply reference for the product. Availability and terms can vary by jurisdiction.
WBTC remains the incumbent Bitcoin wrapper in Ethereum DeFi. Its own site presents WBTC as backed 1:1 by Bitcoin, with a public reserve dashboard and proof-of-reserve context.
Circle's opportunity sits in the trust bundle it can offer: the USDC issuer, Circle Mint, reserve transparency, Ethereum access, and future Arc support under one institutional brand.
| Product | Main trust promise | What is known now | Open test |
|---|---|---|---|
| cirBTC | Circle-backed BTC collateral for institutional workflows | Live on Ethereum, backed 1:1 by native BTC, with Circle stating reserve segregation and onchain visibility | Whether liquidity, protocol listings, and reserve feeds make it usable as collateral at scale |
| cbBTC | Coinbase custody and exchange-account workflows | Backed 1:1 by BTC held by Coinbase, with listed support across Base, Ethereum, Solana, and Arbitrum | Whether Circle can compete with Coinbase distribution and Base-native lending activity |
| WBTC | Incumbent DeFi collateral with public reserves | Backed 1:1 by BTC with a public reserve dashboard and proof-of-reserve context | Whether institutions prefer an incumbent DeFi asset or a Circle-controlled operating model |

The comparison shows why cirBTC is more than a token launch. Wrapped Bitcoin products increasingly compete on the legal and operational identity of the issuer, the visibility of reserves, and the pathways by which collateral enters lending markets.
Coinbase has already tied cbBTC to lending through Base. CryptoSlate reported that Coinbase and Morpho introduced Bitcoin-backed loans on Base, using cbBTC and USDC in a consumer-facing borrowing flow.
That comparison shows the distribution Circle has to challenge if cirBTC is to become more than another Ethereum asset.
Circle's Arc ambitions give cirBTC a second layer of meaning.
Arc is being pitched as infrastructure for stablecoin finance, with USDC fees, settlement tooling, privacy controls, and institutional use cases around payments, foreign exchange, tokenized assets, and capital markets.
Circle has described Arc as a chain purpose-built for stablecoin finance, and CryptoSlate has previously reported how the network pushes Circle deeper into territory also occupied by Coinbase and Base.
In that context, cirBTC could become the Bitcoin leg of a broader Circle stack. USDC provides the dollar asset. Circle Mint provides issuance and redemption access. Ethereum provides current DeFi reach.
Arc, if it develops as planned, could give Circle a venue where tokenized dollars, BTC collateral, and settlement workflows operate with fewer handoffs.
The record remains early. Circle says cirBTC is live on Ethereum and points to planned Arc and multichain support. Its launch materials stop short of showing broad DeFi protocol adoption, live Arc usage for cirBTC, or a supply figure that would show market depth.
A token can be fully backed and still fail to become preferred collateral.
Institutions and DeFi protocols still need liquidity, risk parameters, redemption confidence, oracle support, and a clear reason to add another BTC wrapper beside existing options.
The broader market context is already moving in that direction. CryptoSlate recently framed a Morgan Stanley and Galaxy arrangement as part of Bitcoin's next institutional test in lending collateral.
The cirBTC launch fits that same issue: Bitcoin can become useful collateral for institutions when the custody and risk controls around the token are strong enough to satisfy the people managing the real BTC.
Arc also gives the Coinbase comparison more weight. Coinbase can route cbBTC through Base and its own account system; Circle is trying to offer a parallel route built around USDC, Mint, and Arc.
The adoption contest centers on which issuer can turn custody relationships into liquidity.
Circle has the right ingredients for a bank-grade wrapper: a known issuer, reserve language, onchain verification, institutional access, USDC proximity, and an Arc roadmap.
Collateral infrastructure comes later, when counterparties use those ingredients in production.

That means lenders need to accept the asset, market makers need to quote it, treasury teams need clean redemption, DeFi protocols need collateral parameters, and risk desks need confidence in the reserve process.
Users also need to move between BTC exposure and dollar liquidity without wondering where the real Bitcoin sits.
That is where cirBTC will face WBTC and cbBTC. WBTC has incumbent DeFi familiarity. Coinbase has distribution, custody, and Base workflows.
Circle has USDC, Mint, compliance credibility, and an ambition to own more of the settlement stack through Arc.
Circle can turn wrapped Bitcoin into institutional collateral infrastructure if cirBTC becomes the wrapper institutions choose because the custody, reserve, and redemption model lowers operational friction.
If liquidity stays elsewhere and Arc remains future context, cirBTC will still read as a product launch rather than infrastructure.
For now, Circle has changed the frame around wrapped BTC. The debate now centers on who institutions trust to hold the Bitcoin while the token moves through programmable finance.
The post Circle wants wrapped Bitcoin to look bank grade before institutions trust it as collateral appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The GameFi and non-fungible token (NFT) sectors are experiencing localized, violent injections of speculative capital. Audiera (BEAT), a Web3 gaming and artificial intelligence ecosystem operating primarily on the BNB Chain, has emerged as a primary beneficiary of this trend. The project's native utility token registered an explosive rally, pushing its price up by more than 380% over a rolling seven-day window to achieve a new all-time high (ATH) at $5.40.

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

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

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

Market analysts warn that this rally is purely driven by sentiment and narrative. Because the FTX exchange no longer functions and the bankruptcy estate has systematically liquidated its holdings to repay creditors, FTT holds no fundamental utility. The token’s circulating supply is highly concentrated and illiquid, making it highly susceptible to localized "pump-and-dump" dynamics whenever headlines surface.
The aggressive speculative buying of FTT is largely fueled by recent historical precedents within the crypto regulatory landscape. In October 2025, President Donald Trump granted a full and unconditional presidential pardon to Binance founder Changpeng "CZ" Zhao.
Zhao had previously served a four-month prison sentence after pleading guilty to anti-money laundering (AML) violations under the Bank Secrecy Act. The pardon of CZ followed extensive corporate alignments and deep financial integrations between external entities and the Trump family's web of digital asset initiatives, including World Liberty Financial.
Traders are betting that Bankman-Fried’s legal representatives—who have actively engaged with Republican strategists linked to the administration—might replicate a similar outcome.
Despite the market's euphoria, the probability of SBF receiving immediate relief remains low. Political watchdogs and financial advocacy groups, such as Americans for Financial Reform (AFR), immediately issued statements condemning the pardon request. Critics point out that unlike CZ’s case, which involved regulatory compliance failures without direct fraud charges, Bankman-Fried was convicted of deliberate theft of billions in customer deposits.
Predictive markets on platforms like Polymarket currently price the likelihood of an SBF pardon before the end of 2026 at under 8%. As trading volume cools, market history suggests that late-stage buyers of FTT face a high risk of severe liquidations as the initial hype dissipates.
$BTC $ETH $Alts
The price of XRPUSD is a concern for investors worldwide—especially the question of whether the price could ever drop to zero. In this analysis, we examine the realistic scenarios that would be necessary for this to happen and why a total loss remains extremely unlikely under current conditions.
The XRP/USD price is showing volatility in June 2026. On June 8, 2026, the XRP/USD price is around $1.14, while the price of Ripple (XRP) fluctuates between $1.1313 and $1.1672. The current price of Ripple (XRP) is approximately €0.9984.

$XRP was originally conceived as the idea of a decentralized peer-to-peer payment network by Ryan Fugger in 2004. The cryptocurrency XRP in its current form appeared in 2012 when Chris Larsen and Jed McCaleb co-founded Ripple Labs and developed the XRP Ledger as a decentralized database for transactions.
The performance of XRPUSD since 2013 has been characterized by extreme fluctuations. XRP can benefit from positive market cycles and sentiments but also reacts violently to negative news.
A fall to $0 would only be conceivable under extreme conditions. These scenarios are unlikely on their own; their combination would be unprecedented.
Realistically, multiple scenarios would need to occur simultaneously to force a permanent price of $0.

Despite all the risks, several factors argue against XRPUSD falling to zero. The Ripple (XRP) price is fundamentally determined by supply and demand—and both sides of the equation currently support a value significantly above zero.
Exact time predictions for a total loss would be unprofessional. Predictions for the XRP price are speculative. However, rough scenarios can be outlined:
All time estimates are solely for the illustration of risks.
Investors should incorporate the following sources of risk into their personal risk management and regularly check metrics such as volume, market capitalization, and chart patterns.
Looking at other trading pairs helps to better assess the overall risk. Those who compare the chart in different currencies quickly realize: The fundamental risks remain the same; only the exchange rate between Euro and USD causes slight deviations.
After analyzing all scenarios, historical data, and current metrics, it can be concluded: A sudden drop to 0 US dollars is extremely unlikely under the conditions of June 2026. As long as Ripple Labs delivers functioning products, institutions utilize the payment network, and liquidity remains on global crypto exchanges, XRP will retain measurable value. Nevertheless, XRPUSD is a speculative market where significant price losses are possible at any time.
No. While XRP has experienced extreme fluctuations since its launch – such as the drop from its all-time high of $3.84 to below $0.40 – it has never been traded permanently at $0. Even around the SEC lawsuit at the end of 2020, when several U.S. exchanges halted trading, trading continued on international platforms, and the price remained measurably above zero.
Delisting on a single exchange can technically set the price to $0 there, but global markets continue to exist. A global price of $0 would only be possible if nearly all trading venues exited simultaneously and there were no buyers left – a scenario without historical precedent in the crypto market.
The fundamental risks when buying are identical, regardless of the trading currency. Due to exchange rate fluctuations between the euro and the US dollar, there may be short-term differences in the chart. International analyses typically use XRPUSD as a reference, while European investors should also keep an eye on the price in euros.
Ripple Labs and key figures like David Schwartz play a central role in the ongoing development of the technology and in expanding partnerships with banks and payment service providers. A significant withdrawal or serious issues at Ripple Labs could severely damage trust in XRP and exert pressure on the XRPUSD price – though it would not necessarily lead to an immediate drop to $0.
No. It is a neutral, informative risk analysis and not investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell XRP. Readers should seek information from additional sources, consider independent financial advice if necessary, and take their individual investment goals and risk tolerance into account before investing money in the crypto market.
Players can now enter World Series of Poker tournaments with SOL or stablecoins, with Solana branding to be prominent at events.
The integration builds on Myriad’s use of the Chainlink Runtime Environment to power its prediction market infrastructure.
Markets sold off ahead of CPI. Crypto tax bills hit a wall in the House. And Morpho closed one of the biggest DeFi rounds in a long time.
Millions of Bitcoin are underwater as experts say the 'scale of market reset' signals capitulation, but long-term opportunities remain.
Kalshi's new rules force traders to disclose their employers before trading high-risk markets flagged for insider trading or manipulation.
Price doesn't matter? Dogecoin director explains what really counts.
Money flows around Hyperliquid are verbose, which proves that a recovery is more than a possibility.
Mercari lists Shiba Inu and Dogecoin, enabling 4 million crypto accounts to buy meme coins with second-hand sales proceeds from 1 yen.
Stellar (XLM)'s momentum waned after a 103% price surge at May's close.
Solana achieves a new milestone in its real-world asset market as major institutions like Blackrock, Securitize and more continue to choose the blockchain for tokenization.
Shares of Cracker Barrel (CBRL) experienced a remarkable 11% surge during Wednesday’s premarket session after the casual dining chain delivered an unexpected profit and upgraded its annual projections.
Cracker Barrel Old Country Store, Inc., CBRL
The company’s shares finished Tuesday’s regular session at $36.30, reflecting a 43% gain year-to-date, before jumping another 8% to $39.20 in extended trading after the earnings announcement.
During its third fiscal quarter, Cracker Barrel delivered adjusted earnings of 29 cents per share. Wall Street analysts had forecast an adjusted loss of 48 cents. The variance represents a significant outperformance.
On a GAAP basis, the restaurant operator recorded net income of $42.8 million, translating to $1.90 per share, versus $12.6 million, or 56 cents per share, in the same period last year. The GAAP results reflected a $47.4 million legal settlement.
Quarterly revenue totaled $797.4 million, representing a decline from last year’s $821.1 million but exceeding the analyst consensus estimate of $776.7 million.
Comparable restaurant sales declined 2.6%, while total same-store sales decreased 1.8% on a year-over-year basis. Customer traffic fell approximately 6.7% throughout the quarter.
While these figures remain in negative territory, they represent substantial improvement compared to the 8.5% and 7.9% comparable sales declines experienced in the previous two quarters — when the brand was dealing with significant logo controversy fallout.
Notably, the retail division exceeded restaurant sales performance for the first time in over four years, management highlighted.
Chief Executive Julie Masino informed analysts that the average guest check reached $15.85, representing a 4.3% year-over-year increase, though still trailing casual and family dining sector averages. She indicated that menu adjustments have been implemented to enhance value perception. Chief Financial Officer Craig Pommells expressed that the company remains “encouraged by the gradual improvements in the underlying traffic trend.”
The restaurant chain’s Google Star rating increased 4% year-over-year, reaching its highest point since 2018.
The quarter’s profitability improvement stemmed from disciplined expense management, including a corporate reorganization finalized in the second quarter that’s projected to deliver $20 million to $25 million in annual cost savings.
Cracker Barrel has revised its full-year revenue expectations to a range of $3.27 billion to $3.3 billion, up from the prior guidance of $3.24 billion to $3.27 billion. The Street consensus had stood at $3.25 billion.
The adjusted EBITDA forecast was elevated to $120 million–$125 million from the previous outlook of $85 million–$100 million. Analyst consensus expectations had been approximately $92.7 million.
Following customer backlash over a brief rebranding initiative, the company restored its traditional logo and reintroduced several original food preparation methods, including the practice of rolling and baking biscuits fresh daily.
Despite the year-to-date rebound, CBRL stock continues to trade 35% below its levels from twelve months ago.
The post Cracker Barrel (CBRL) Stock Soars 11% on Unexpected Quarterly Earnings Win appeared first on Blockonomi.
American equity futures experienced notable declines during Wednesday’s early session following U.S. military operations targeting Iran, amplifying worries about potential Middle Eastern conflict escalation.
S&P 500 futures contracted 0.94%, accompanied by an 0.86% decline in Dow Jones futures. The Cboe Volatility Index futures advanced 1.34%, signaling heightened market unease.
Super Micro Computer emerged as the session’s steepest decliner, shedding between 9% and 11% during early market hours. The technology firm unveiled plans for $7 billion in equity and equity-linked financing arrangements to secure components necessary for fulfilling AI server contracts.
Super Micro Computer, Inc., SMCI
The financing strategy encompasses $5 billion through public offerings — allocating $1.25 billion to common stock issuance and $3.75 billion to depositary shares. Additionally, it features an at-the-market offering of up to $2 billion scheduled to commence no sooner than Q3 2026.
Wolfspeed experienced a 6.6% decline following its SEC registration statement filing for potential resale of over 24 million shares by existing stockholders. The semiconductor manufacturer won’t receive any proceeds from these transactions.
Summit Therapeutics retreated approximately 6% after revealing a $500 million underwritten equity offering, including an additional $75 million option available to underwriters.
Micron Technology declined 3.7% while Qualcomm shed 3% as technology sector weakness persisted. Korean semiconductor manufacturers bore the brunt — SK Hynix plummeted 7.5% and Samsung Electronics dropped 6.1%.
Anxieties surrounding inflated AI stock valuations have pressured the sector. SpaceX prepares for Friday’s trading debut in what’s anticipated to become history’s largest IPO, commanding a $1.75 trillion valuation. Market participants remain divided, with some viewing it as catalyst for AI momentum while others interpret the valuation as cautionary.
Asian exchanges concluded overnight sessions lower, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 retreating 1.89% and China’s Shanghai Composite sliding 0.42%. European equities followed suit, with the STOXX 600 declining 0.70%.
Several stocks bucked the downward trend. Cracker Barrel surged 7% following quarterly results that exceeded expectations and demonstrated operational improvement. Comparable store retail sales contracted 1.8%, significantly outperforming analyst projections of a 5.6% decline.
Chewy advanced 7.2% in premarket activity. Cellectis rallied 6.8% after its CAR-T therapeutic candidate secured FDA Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy designation for treating aggressive leukemia.
Regarding commodities, Brent crude appreciated 1.29% on Middle Eastern geopolitical concerns, while gold futures contracted 2.30%. Bitcoin retreated to $61,084. The 10-Year Treasury yield elevated to 4.546%.
The post Market Turbulence: SuperMicro (SMCI) Plunges 9% as Geopolitical Tensions Rattle Investors appeared first on Blockonomi.
The United States experienced a notable uptick in consumer prices during May, with the inflation gauge reaching 4.2% compared to the same period last year — marking the most significant increase since spring 2023.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics published the figures on Wednesday morning at 8:30 a.m. ET. Month-to-month, consumer prices advanced 0.5%, representing a modest deceleration from the 0.6% increase recorded in April, aligning with analyst projections.
Energy costs emerged as the primary driver of inflation. The energy sector experienced a 3.9% monthly jump and was responsible for over 60% of the total price increase. The nation has faced persistent elevated energy expenses for more than three months, linked to the continuing tensions with Iran.
Food costs expanded 0.2% on a monthly basis, showing a deceleration from April’s 0.5% rate. Annually, food expenses have climbed 3.1%.
The grocery sector provided welcome news for consumers. The food-at-home metric increased merely 0.1% during May, representing a dramatic slowdown compared to April’s 0.7% monthly rise. On an annual basis, supermarket prices have increased 2.7%.
Restaurant prices demonstrated more persistence. The food-away-from-home category advanced 0.3% month-over-month and has climbed 3.5% year-over-year.
In other categories, vehicle insurance premiums decreased 1.7% from the previous month, providing consumers some respite. Healthcare facility costs increased 0.7%.
Coffee prices maintained their upward trajectory, while dairy products like cheese experienced price declines. The official report didn’t provide granular data for these individual items.
The core consumer price index, excluding volatile food and energy components, increased 2.9% year-over-year, meeting analyst expectations. However, the monthly core measurement registered 0.2%, undershooting the anticipated 0.3%. This milder core figure alleviated some concerns regarding aggressive monetary policy tightening ahead.
For American workers, the data painted a challenging picture. Inflation-adjusted average hourly wages fell 0.1%, indicating that compensation failed to maintain pace with rising costs during May.
The Federal Reserve has been monitoring inflation developments attentively. The juxtaposition of an elevated headline figure alongside a more moderate core reading presents monetary policymakers with a nuanced scenario as they approach their upcoming policy meeting.
The annual inflation rate now stands at its most elevated point in three years. The last comparable reading occurred in April 2023.
While the monthly inflation trajectory has been moderating — May’s 0.5% increase follows April’s 0.6% — the annual comparison continues moving in an unfavorable direction.
The subsequent CPI release will encompass June statistics and is anticipated in mid-July.
The post May Inflation Surges to 4.2%, Highest Level in Three Years appeared first on Blockonomi.
The New York Department of Financial Services is pursuing federal recognition of its stablecoin regulatory program under the GENIUS Act framework. Through newly proposed rules, DFS aims to demonstrate substantial equivalence with federal standards while retaining jurisdiction over qualified stablecoin issuers. The framework strengthens existing requirements around reserve management, redemption protocols, auditing standards, and operational risk controls.
Acting Superintendent Kaitlin Asrow unveiled the regulatory proposal from the New York State Department of Financial Services. The initiative expands upon previous DFS guidance from June 2022 governing dollar-pegged stablecoin operations. This update directly addresses federal certification pathways established by the GENIUS Act.
The proposed framework retains New York’s core requirements for reserve composition, token redeemability, and acceptable backing assets. DFS-licensed issuers would continue facing mandatory independent audit obligations. These foundational elements already constitute New York’s current approach to stablecoin regulation.
Yet the proposal introduces additional safeguards designed to satisfy federal benchmarks. The updated rules would cap reserve concentration with individual custodial institutions. Issuers would also need to implement structured risk management frameworks spanning critical operational functions.
New York seeks official designation that its regulatory structure substantially mirrors federal stablecoin requirements. Achieving this certification would permit qualifying issuers to continue operating under DFS jurisdiction. Absent such recognition, certain operators might transition to direct federal regulatory oversight.
The GENIUS Act establishes a bifurcated regulatory architecture for stablecoin supervision. Issuers with circulating tokens exceeding $10 billion come under federal regulatory authority. Smaller operators may continue under state supervision provided federal authorities certify those state programs.
A designated Stablecoin Certification Review Committee evaluates state regulatory frameworks under the legislation. This committee comprises officials from the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve, and FDIC. Consequently, New York must demonstrate regulatory parity with federal requirements.
The revised regulatory framework extends beyond reserve backing and redemption mechanics. Issuers would implement controls governing corporate governance structures, cybersecurity protocols, and internal audit functions. Risk management programs must address asset expansion, revenue generation, and third-party service provider relationships.
The draft regulations also establish standards for related-party transactions and affiliate arrangements. DFS indicated these enhancements support more robust supervision amid expanding stablecoin market activity. The department emphasized its framework draws upon empirical data, active supervision, and stakeholder input.
DFS has maintained regulatory oversight of stablecoin issuance since 2018. Its current framework encompasses reserve requirements, redemption guarantees, disclosure obligations, and restrictions on asset rehypothecation. The new proposal modernizes this structure for compatibility with the federal GENIUS Act regime.
The regulatory proposal initiates with a 10-day preliminary comment period. Following State Register publication, DFS will conduct a 60-day formal public comment period. Regulators will subsequently evaluate stakeholder input before issuing final rules.
DFS indicated the finalized regulation becomes operative alongside the GENIUS Act on January 18, 2027. Current DFS-licensed stablecoin issuers would benefit from a one-year transition window. Meanwhile, existing DFS stablecoin guidance continues governing licensed entities.
This proposal reflects broader collaborative efforts between DFS and fellow regulators. Recently, DFS executed a supervisory cooperation agreement with the European Banking Authority. This action underscored New York’s determination to preserve its prominent position in stablecoin regulatory oversight.
The post New York DFS Proposes Updated Stablecoin Framework for GENIUS Act Compliance appeared first on Blockonomi.
WISeKey (WKEY) connected its recent blockchain investment to orbital commerce ventures as shares continued their downward trajectory. The stock finished at $7.41, dropping 6.15%, then edged lower to $7.40 in pre-market trading. Meanwhile, SEALCOIN’s successful $4 million capital raise positions WISeKey for deeper involvement in space-based economic activities.
WISeKey International Holding AG, WKEY
WISeKey announced that SEALCOIN successfully obtained $4 million in strategic investment to advance its orbital economy initiatives. The Hashgraph Group provided $1 million, with WISeKey contributing the remaining $3 million. This capital infusion will accelerate SEALCOIN’s platform development and broader ecosystem growth.
SEALCOIN specializes in decentralized infrastructure networks, blockchain-based transactions, digital authentication, and automated device payments. The division’s mission centers on enabling protected data exchange, service delivery, and value transfers among interconnected systems. WISeKey envisions SEALCOIN facilitating operations among machines, orbital platforms, monitoring devices, and self-governing systems.
The disclosure also positions SEALCOIN within the expanding commercial space infrastructure sector. Orbital networks currently enable telecommunications, supply chain management, security operations, and IoT deployments worldwide. Consequently, WISeKey identifies opportunities for secure transaction mechanisms that extend beyond simple network connectivity.
WISeKey explained that the fresh funding will strengthen SEALCOIN’s operational framework, which operates through QAIT. The QAIT Association manages this utility token designed for machine-driven and space-connected blockchain operations. This digital asset forms the foundation of SEALCOIN’s projected transaction infrastructure.
SEALCOIN plans to integrate WISeSat orbital platforms, SEALSQ semiconductor solutions, and decentralized authentication protocols. This architecture could facilitate payment processing, telemetry offerings, positioning information, and foundational applications. The enterprise focuses on self-directed logistics, transportation frameworks, and satellite-to-device commerce.
This strategy expands WISeKey’s presence across cybersecurity, IoT, blockchain technology, and satellite communications sectors. The organization currently functions through divisions specializing in secure processors, digital verification, and orbital technology. SEALCOIN introduces a transactional dimension to WISeKey’s established technological foundation.
WISeKey emphasized SEALCOIN’s recent SPACEDROP initiative as validation for the deployment strategy. Over 45,000 individuals connected with the WISeSat satellite network throughout the initiative. The company reported that users established contact with all 19 functioning satellites during the program.
The initiative validated satellite-to-blockchain communications, network reliability, and user interaction systems. It also provided SEALCOIN with market feedback ahead of expanded commercial rollout. WISeKey positioned the initiative as preliminary validation of blockchain-integrated orbital infrastructure capabilities.
WKEY shares continued declining despite the capital announcement and comprehensive space economy positioning. The stock shed 6.15% during standard trading hours and held near $7.40 in pre-market activity. Nevertheless, the SEALCOIN investment provides WISeKey with a clear blockchain and satellite commerce trajectory.
The post WISeKey International Holding Ltd (WKEY) Stock: SEALCOIN Secures $4M Investment for Space-Based Blockchain appeared first on Blockonomi.
The May Consumer Price Index (CPI) report has just been released, showing that inflation in the United States increased precisely as economists had forecasted.
The figure surged to 4.2%, the highest level since April 2023. For its part, Core CPI (which excludes food and energy prices) has risen to a nine-month peak of 2.9% (again meeting expectations).
This is a concerning development, especially since the Federal Reserve views 2% inflation as healthy. The Kobeissi Letter now warns that the likelihood of future rate hikes is climbing: a factor that may trigger a further sell-off in the already fragile crypto market.
Somewhat surprisingly, though, BTC jumped after the disclosure, reaching almost $62,000 before reversing to the current $61,500 (per TradingView).
Most leading altcoins, including Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), and Ripple (XPR), have mirrored the movement. However, the market remains highly volatile, and the near-term price direction remains unclear.

The post Bitcoin (BTC) Price Moves as US CPI for May Hits 2-Year High appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The team behind the cryptocurrency project has made several important achievements lately, and more updates are expected in the coming weeks.
Despite the progress, PI’s price remains close to its all-time low, down 27% over the past 30 days.
Perhaps the most notable development related to Pi Network’s ecosystem is the recent transition to protocol v24. The Core Team announced the news on June 5, describing it as “one of the most challenging migrations.”
The upgrade primarily focuses on improving the underlying infrastructure that supports node operations and mainnet activity. Protocol v25 is next on the roadmap, with June 18 set as a deadline. It is important to note that the team said this update takes longer to complete, warning of a potential delay.
Moreover, Pi Network has made progress in the gaming field after CiDi Games (a Pi Network Ventures portfolio company) introduced four new games for Pioneers: Coin Whack, Fruit Stack, Gemnova, and RainbowCubes.
Another date Pi Network users are perhaps eagerly awaiting is June 28. The day is known across the community as Pi2Day because 6/28 represents the mathematical value 2π.
The team has a habit of announcing major news on PiDay (March 14), and we have yet to see whether it will do the same later this month. Some X users are already speculating that the community may witness ecosystem updates or the launch of new features; however, nothing is official yet.
Earlier this week, Pi Network said that users willing to help grow the ecosystem can invite vibe coders to bring their AI-created applications to the project’s real distribution network through Pi App Studio.
Those willing to participate should follow four key steps. First, they must identify communities of active vibe coders on social media platforms, then join and contribute to the relevant base. Later on, Pioneers are required to introduce Pi Network as a distribution network to coders and submit the designated link via the “Vibe Coder” button in the Pi mining app.
“Any creator can benefit from what Pi ecosystem has to offer: a large, engaged community of 60M+ Engaged Pioneers, plus infrastructure including global payments, Pi Wallet, Pi Ad Network, and social network access,” the message reads.
The token remains among the worst-performing cryptocurrencies, with its valuation hovering just north of $0.12. This represents a 27% decline on a monthly scale and a staggering 96% crash from the all-time high registered in February last year.
Lately, there’s been a rise in coins flowing from self-custody to exchanges, while the upcoming token unlocks remain significant. This combination is seen as bearish and is likely to negatively impact the price.

Not long ago, X user Erick Crypto said that PI’s Relative Strength Index (RSI) has reached oversold levels: a development which is typically a precursor to a rebound. He set $0.12 as a key support level, arguing that if buyers step in, “we could see a recovery move from these depressed levels.”
The post Pi Network News and PI Price Update Today: June 10 appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The broader crypto market may be experiencing bearish conditions, but XRP whales appear to be in a league of their own. Latest on-chain data suggests this cohort of investors is selling fewer tokens on exchanges, raising the question of whether they are becoming more confident in the asset.
According to an analysis by CryptoQuant researcher Pelinay, decreased selling from XRP whales, coupled with stronger demand, could trigger a rally and help the sixth-largest cryptocurrency revisit the $1.8-$2 range.
Pelinay’s analysis cited data from the world’s largest crypto exchange, Binance. Transfers of more than 1 million XRP started to decline in 2025 and have maintained that trend this year. Before the decline began, these forms of transfers were dominant on charts during certain periods, reflecting huge inflows from whales and institutional addresses.
The inflows remained consistently high between 2021 and 2025, indicating that most of these market participants used Binance.
After a 2025 peak, the 1 million+ XRP inflows began to slow down, reflecting weakening selling pressure from large holders. The decline intensified after U.S. authorities approved spot XRP exchange-traded funds (ETFs), indicating a reduced willingness among whales to offload their holdings.
Evaluating historical data, there is a clear trend of sharp spikes in the 100,000-1 million XRP and 1 million+ XRP inflows preceding major market downturns. This means inflows from these investor cohorts have increased selling pressure to the point where the asset takes major hits.
“At the far right of the chart, no such extraordinary surge is currently visible. As a result, on-chain data does not point to aggressive whale selling or widespread profit-taking at this stage,” Pelinay stated, referring to the Binance XRP inflow chart.
Although whales have been selling less XRP since 2025, the asset’s price has still retreated from the $3 region. At the time of writing, XRP was trading around $1.10, down 10% weekly and 5% in 24 hours. Pelinay attributed this price movement to leverage liquidations and broader market weakness due to the bear cycle.
At the end of the day, XRP can only climb higher if demand becomes stronger and inflows into Binance remain poor. This is because the available supply will continue to decrease while demand accelerates.
“As long as there is no renewed surge in the 1M+ XRP inflow category, this constructive market structure may remain intact,” the analyst added.
The post Ripple Whales Refusing to Sell? Why Declining Binance Inflows Could Boost XRP to $2 appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Ethereum remains under significant selling pressure after losing a major support area and extending its decline toward the lower boundary of its broader trading range. While buyers have managed to defend the range lows for now, the market structure continues to favor the bears unless ETH can reclaim several key resistance levels overhead.
On the daily timeframe, ETH remains trapped within a broad range defined by the upper blue resistance zone around $1.75K-$1.85K and the lower blue demand area near $1.45K-$1.55K.
The recent breakdown below the upper range support marked an important structural shift. ETH lost the $1.8K region and quickly dropped into the lower portion of the range, eventually finding demand just above the lower blue box around $1.5K. The sharp rejection from that zone confirms that buyers are still defending the range floor, preventing a deeper bearish continuation for now.
However, the broader trend remains weak. The asset continues to trade beneath the descending long-term trendline as well as the 100-day and 200-day moving averages, all of which are sloping lower. This alignment suggests that sellers still maintain control despite the recent bounce.
As long as ETH remains between the two blue zones, the market can be viewed as range-bound rather than trending. The lower blue box around $1.45K-$1.55K remains the primary support area, while the upper blue box around $1.75K-$1.85K now acts as the first major resistance.

The 4-hour chart provides a clearer view of the recent capitulation and subsequent rebound. After breaking below the $2K support area, ETH experienced an aggressive sell-off that drove the price directly into the lower daily demand zone. The recovery that followed appears corrective so far, with the asset still trading beneath several important Fibonacci retracement levels derived from the latest decline.
The key area to watch is the Fibonacci resistance cluster between $1.82K and $1.9K. This zone contains the 0.618 retracement around $1.82K, the 0.702 level near $1.86K, and the 0.786 retracement around $1.9K. The concentration of these levels creates a notable supply region where sellers may attempt to re-enter the market.
Given the current structure, a continued relief rally toward this Fibonacci cluster appears possible before the next major directional move develops. Such a pullback would also align with the previous breakdown area, making it a technically significant resistance zone.
If ETH is rejected from the $1.82K-$1.9K region, the recent rebound could ultimately prove to be a bearish retest within the broader downtrend. On the other hand, a decisive break above $1.9K would weaken the bearish structure and open the door for a move toward the $2K-$2.05K resistance region.

The Binance liquidation heatmap highlights a notable concentration of liquidity resting between $1.7K and $1.8K.
This liquidity cluster aligns closely with several technical resistance levels visible on the price charts, including the 0.5 Fibonacci retracement near $1.76K and the lower portion of the broader Fibonacci resistance zone extending toward $1.8K. Such confluence often attracts price action as the market seeks nearby liquidity pools before establishing its next directional move.
From a derivatives perspective, the presence of dense liquidation levels above the current market price suggests that a short-term liquidity-driven squeeze remains possible. A move into the $1.7K-$1.8K area could trigger a wave of liquidations and fuel additional upside momentum toward the higher Fibonacci levels near $1.86K-$1.9K.
As a result, the liquidation profile supports the possibility of a relief rally in the near term, although the broader trend remains bearish until ETH can reclaim the major resistance cluster overhead. The interaction between the $1.7K-$1.8K liquidity pocket and the Fibonacci resistance zone may ultimately determine whether the current rebound evolves into a larger recovery or merely another lower high within the prevailing downtrend.

The post Ethereum Price Prediction: How Close Is ETH to a Sub-$1.5K Breakdown? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Although the entire cryptocurrency market tumbled in the past 10 days or so, Cardano’s native token has taken one of the most substantial hits, perhaps due to Charles Hoskinson’s decision to take a break, which raised many eyebrows.
Santiment has now examined some of the on-chain metrics within the Cardano ecosystem, which are showing some conflicting yet promising signs.
The analysts at the monitoring company noted that many of Cardano’s on-chain age metrics had “started showing unusual behavior” for several days. For instance, Mean Dollar Invested Age, tracking the average age of capital sitting in ADA wallets, had been “steadily climbing” for an extended period, indicating that coins were remaining dormant and investors were largely holding to their positions.
However, that trend has flipped, with the metric now showing flattening and turning lower, as previously inactive tokens started moving.
The Age Consumed supports this narrative with a few major spikes. The metric tracks the movement of older, dormant tokens, and ADA has recorded multiple surges in it since late last week. One of them became the highest since April.
“This suggests that this recent flush has motivated some long-term holders to become active again,” said Santiment.
Although the company admitted that these signals do not necessarily mean that a reversal is coming, the analysts said they “do indicate that something has changed beneath the surface.” Historically, clusters of Age Consumed spikes paired with a pause or a decline in Mean Dollar Invested Age have “often appeared around key market turning points.”
ADA traded at $0.24 at the start of June. Moreover, it was close to $0.29 a month ago. The dump below $0.15 last Friday meant that it has crashed by 38% in a few days and a whopping 48% since that local peak in mid-May.
Aside from the overall market weakness, the other notable reason behind this, which could also be the culprit for the changing ADA age metrics, is the fact that Cardano’s founder, Charles Hoskinson, decided to take a break in these challenging times. He warned that the broader Cardano ecosystem could face a ‘wave of failures’ due to project shutdowns and funding difficulties.
ADA now sits at $0.16 after it was stopped at $0.17 yesterday. Its market cap has tumbled below $6 billion, making it the 19th-largest crypto asset by that metric.
The post Cardano Metrics Flash Unusual Signals During ADA Sell-Off and Hoskinson’s Break appeared first on CryptoPotato.