Trump's proposal discussion raises uncertainty in US-Iran diplomacy, affecting market perceptions and highlighting geopolitical complexities.
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The uncertainty surrounding US-Iran relations could destabilize regional security and impact global markets, depending on Trump's decision.
The post Trump weighs military action or talks as US-Iran ceasefire nears end appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The chancellor's critique highlights potential geopolitical instability, emphasizing the need for strategic clarity to avoid escalating tensions.
The post German chancellor criticizes US strategy in Iran conflict appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The Lebanon-Israel talks could influence regional stability, but Hezbollah's opposition and market volatility may impact diplomatic progress.
The post Lebanon-Israel talks set for April 23 in Washington amid public division appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Institutional inflows signal bullish sentiment for Bitcoin, but prediction markets remain skeptical of a near-term all-time high.
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Bitcoin Magazine

Aven Launches Bitcoin-Backed Visa Card Offering Up to $1 Million Credit Lines Without Asset Sales
Aven has introduced a bitcoin-backed credit card that allows users to borrow against digital assets without selling holdings, marking a shift in crypto-linked consumer finance, according to statements shared with Bitcoin Magazine.
The Aven Bitcoin Visa Card, unveiled today at the Bitcoin Conference 2026 in Las Vegas, provides a credit line of up to $1 million secured by bitcoin collateral. The product targets long-term holders seeking liquidity without triggering taxable events tied to asset sales.
The card combines a revolving credit line with fixed-term loan options, offering repayment periods of up to 10 years. Interest rates for both structures start at 7.99% APR, which the company said is below typical rates in the bitcoin-backed lending market.
“The industry norm for borrowing at fixed rates against bitcoin is a 1-year term. At Aven, we have 10X the industry standard, unlocking a wide variety of use cases previously not feasible,” Aven’s Sisun Lee said, speaking at The Bitcoin Conference.
Borrowers pledge bitcoin through custody and infrastructure provided by BitGo Inc. and BitGo Bank & Trust, a federally regulated digital asset trust bank. The structure separates asset custody from card issuance, which is handled by Coastal Community Bank under a Visa network license.
The product includes no annual or origination fees and offers 2% cash back on purchases. Aven positions the card as a tool that bridges crypto holdings with traditional credit access, aiming to expand the utility of bitcoin within household balance sheets.
The card also offers up to a 5-year interest-only period for added flexibility. The company is one of the few Bitcoin-backed loan providers offering both fixed-term and interest-only plans in the same product.
“At Aven we believe that the hardest money ever created deserves the best financial products. With the Aven Bitcoin Card, we’re just getting started,” Lee said.
Bitcoin-backed lending has grown with the rise in digital asset adoption, though it has faced scrutiny over risk management and collateral volatility. Fixed-rate, longer-term structures such as Aven’s may appeal to borrowers seeking more predictable repayment schedules compared with margin-style loans that can face liquidation risk during price swings.
Aven, founded in 2019, focuses on asset-backed lending products designed to lower borrowing costs. The company reports that its platform has saved customers more than $300 million in interest payments through March 2026.
The launch signals continued convergence between crypto infrastructure and regulated financial services, as firms seek to integrate digital assets into mainstream credit markets while addressing risk, custody, and compliance requirements.
This post Aven Launches Bitcoin-Backed Visa Card Offering Up to $1 Million Credit Lines Without Asset Sales first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

SEC, CFTC Chiefs Signal ‘New Day’ for U.S. Onshore Crypto, Tokenization and Future‑Proof Rules
SEC Chair Paul Atkins and CFTC Chair Mike Selig used back‑to‑back fireside chats on the Nakamoto Stage at The Bitcoin 2026 Conference to signal a reset in Washington’s approach to digital assets, tokenization, and market structure.
Atkins described it as “a new day at the SEC,” while Selig said regulators are “turning over a new page” and need to harmonize their efforts.
Atkins said the SEC is taking a new approach to digital assets and wants that activity onshore rather than pushed to foreign jurisdictions. He said the SEC and CFTC are now working together on digital assets and aim to set a new benchmark for inter‑agency collaboration.
That cooperation underpins the joint token taxonomy guidance, which draws lines between digital commodities, collectibles, and tokenized securities and offers a framework market participants can use as they classify assets.
Atkins revisited the long‑running debate over how the Howey test and existing securities laws apply to crypto. Atkins said the SEC is trying to apply that framework to digital assets, tokens, and related instruments while grappling with the boundary between securities and commodities.
He indicated that an “innovation exemption” is coming, designed to give crypto projects room to build within a defined regulatory lane instead of staying in a gray area or moving offshore.
Atkins tied that effort to Congress and said legislators need to speak clearly on digital assets so there are durable rules and so entrepreneurs can pursue their goals in the United States.
He argued that it is important to have a statute that is future proof for this space and said nothing future proofs of a market like clear statutory law drafted with emerging technology in mind. He pointed to token taxonomy guidance as a step in that direction but stressed that a statute from Congress would anchor policy across administrations.
On the recent guidance, Atkins said the agencies wanted to provide principles and definitions without publishing a prescriptive list of tokens or implying recommendations about what investors should buy. He cited President Donald Trump’s GENIUS Act on stablecoins as an example of a principles‑based regulatory model that leaves room for innovation while drawing firm boundaries around risk.
He said the SEC is focused on tokenized securities through a principles‑based approach rather than detailed product‑by‑product prescriptions.
Atkins also addressed the Clarity Act and broader crypto market structure legislation. He said there could be movement on that package in May, with the possibility of passage in June, but he cautioned that nothing is guaranteed.
If crypto structure reform does not pass, he said, industry participants should remember that elections have consequences, pointing to pivots at both the SEC and CFTC as evidence of how quickly supervisory priorities can shift.
Looking ahead, Atkins framed crypto and blockchain technology as the most exciting aspect of the current transition. He highlighted the prospect of instantaneous settlement and said faster settlement can reduce risk in the financial system.
Instant or near‑instant settlement, he argued, can shrink counterparty and settlement risk and free up capital that is now tied up in back‑office processes. He said regulators are trying to foster that outcome rather than stand in its way.
Atkins said “this is a new day at the SEC” and previewed the agency’s next step: an initiative that will allow firms to experiment on‑chain with tokenized and securitized instruments over the next few weeks.
Under that effort, companies will be able to test tokenization in a supervised environment while staying within federal securities law. He framed this as part of the coming innovation exemption, intended to open a sandbox for tokenized securities under clear parameters rather than through informal no‑action relief.
In his own session, Selig echoed the theme of regulatory reset. He said the CFTC is “turning over a new page” in its approach to digital assets and emphasized the need to harmonize the agency’s work with the SEC. For markets that trade products with both commodity‑like and security‑like features, he said, the two agencies need a coordinated framework instead of overlapping or conflicting rules.
Selig also grounded his remarks in a broader principle, saying “our country was founded on the idea of private property.” In the context of crypto, that line underscored his view that token holders and innovators should have clear, enforceable rights in law.
He suggested that a coherent crypto market structure for digital assets should respect property rights and give market participants predictable rules, rather than drive activity into less regulated jurisdictions.
This post SEC, CFTC Chiefs Signal ‘New Day’ for U.S. Onshore Crypto, Tokenization and Future‑Proof Rules first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Paystand Launches USDb Stablecoin on Bitcoin Layers for $100T B2B Payments
Paystand announced the launch of USDb, a stablecoin designed specifically for commercial-scale business finance, including accounts receivable, accounts payable, payroll, and treasury operations, on the Bitcoin network.
Paystand is a Bitcoin-powered B2B payments network that processes accounts receivable and accounts payable for more than one million businesses across North America and Latin America. The company has handled over $20 billion in payment volume and built a full-stack CFO platform through acquisitions of Yaydoo, Teampay, and Bitwage, covering AR automation, spend management, LATAM compliance, and cross-border payroll. Founded in 2013 and headquartered in Santa Cruz, California, Paystand operates Paystand.org, a non-profit advancing financial inclusion through Bitcoin.
According to a press release shared with Bitcoin Magazine, USDb is backed 1:1 by USD reserves and is native two Blockstream’s Liquid network as well as Rootstock, both layers on top of Bitcoin. The company is pursuing a dual licensing strategy to support both U.S. and international growth. In the U.S., Paystand expects to launch in a GENIUS-aligned manner and achieve full compliance by the end of 2026. Internationally, the company “already maintains licenses enabling digital asset and wallet operations in relevant jurisdictions” according to Meredith Petty, GM at Paystand. Both the U.S. and international offerings are intended to be fully backed 1:1 by USD, with any distinctions relating only to regulatory structure, distribution, and use case rather than reserve backing.
The announcement was made on stage at Bitcoin Las Vegas. Paystand positions USDb as infrastructure for the roughly “$100 trillion B2B economy”, rather than for crypto trading or retail transfers. Its integration with Rootstock and the Liquid Network should bring a significant volumes and market activity to the Bitcoin ecosystem, with Ibex serving as USDb’s first minting partner and liquidity provider.
“AI is eating labor. Bitcoin is eating capital. Stablecoins are eating financial services. USDb is where those three forces converge, and we’re launching it with the largest real-world business use case on the planet. USDb gives businesses a programmable digital dollar that works where they actually work. This isn’t infrastructure waiting for customers. This is the moment the B2B economy goes on-chain,” said Jeremy Almond, CEO of Paystand.
USDb launches with immediate adoption through Paystand’s acquisition of Bitwage in November 2025. Bitwage supports payroll and workforce payments for more than 90,000 workers and 4,500 businesses in nearly 200 countries, providing an initial cross-border payment corridor.
The stablecoin is engineered for integration with Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems and existing business workflows. It is also designed to “support AI-driven, machine-to-machine transactions as agentic systems handle more financial operations,” according to the press release.
Paystand will initially roll out USDb to its own network. Expansion to external partners, additional enterprise customers, and broader Bitcoin infrastructure providers is planned throughout 2026.
Editorial Disclaimer: We leverage AI as part of our editorial workflow, including to support research, image generation, and quality assurance processes. All content is directed, reviewed, and approved by our editorial team, who are accountable for accuracy and integrity. AI-generated images use only tools trained on properly licensed material. In Bitcoin, as in media: Don’t trust. Verify.
This post Paystand Launches USDb Stablecoin on Bitcoin Layers for $100T B2B Payments first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Juan Galt.
Bitcoin Magazine

‘Bitcoin Isn’t Going Anywhere’: Trump Officials Discuss DOJ, FBI Refocus on Crypto Crime, Not Developers
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel used a Bitcoin 2026 Conference panel to signal a shift in how the U.S. government approaches digital assets, stressing support for developers and a focus on crime rather than code.
Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal, moderating the virtual discussion, opened by asking Blanche and Patel for their Bitcoin origin stories.
Blanche said his son pushed him toward Bitcoin and called him a “clown and idiot” for not investing, while also noting that his government role bars him from owning assets. Patel framed Bitcoin and other virtual assets as economic infrastructure, saying they are assets “just like business and everything else” that “power and muscle the world.”
Grewal then pressed the officials on past prosecutions tied to crypto. Blanche said some prior FBI and Justice Department efforts were misguided, suggesting that earlier administrations pursued cases against developers in ways that cut across core rights.
He argued that the government should not treat software builders as stand‑ins for criminals and said the focus should be on “the third party criminal and not… the builders and platform builders.”
According to Blanche, aggressive enforcement caused some platforms to leave the United States and reflected a lack of understanding that “stifled innovation” and “suffocated enthusiasts.”
“In the last administration, we were stifling innovation and depriving US citizen and Bitcoin and crypto enthusiasts from doing what they should be able to,” Blanche said.
Blanche drew a line between criminal use of crypto and the underlying technology. He said the government will not excuse bad actors who use Bitcoin or other digital assets for crime, but he rejected the idea that ordinary participants should live in constant fear of prosecution.
On policy questions tied to cases such as Tornado Cash, Roman Storm, and Samourai Wallet, he said that if a person is developing software and is not the third‑party user committing a crime, “you are not going to get investigated and/or get charged.” He told coders that if they are under investigation, “your lawyer should feel very comfortable working with the FBI.”
Patel echoed that stance while stressing active enforcement against fraud. He said the FBI has spent the past year targeting scam centers that use crypto, including networks tied to foreign adversaries that seek to “police Americans and fleece them from their hard earned assets.”
His goal, he said, is for the bureau to “look at the right people” and for Americans who buy digital assets to feel their funds are safe. Patel added that the FBI is proactively investigating crime in Bitcoin and other digital assets and is pushing prevention work on the “front end” to stop schemes before they reach victims.
Asked why this moment is different for Bitcoin policy, Blanche pointed to the White House. He said the shift “starts with President Trump,” describing the current team as “by far the most pro‑crypto administration in the world” and stating that “we want to be the crypto capital of the world.”
Blanche criticized what he called “attacks on the industry” by the prior administration as “outrageous” and “ill advised,” and said the government needs to adjust its thinking about digital assets and open‑source code.
Both officials framed the emerging doctrine in simple terms: Bitcoin and code are not the targets, crime is. Patel said federal law enforcement will prosecute criminal activity “in Bitcoin or out of Bitcoin.”
Blanche said people in crypto “shouldn’t sleep with one eye open” over routine development or use, as long as they are not engaged in fraud, money laundering, or other offenses.
This post ‘Bitcoin Isn’t Going Anywhere’: Trump Officials Discuss DOJ, FBI Refocus on Crypto Crime, Not Developers first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Senator Lummis Puts Congress On The Clock, Vows May Push To Rescue Stalled Clarity Act
Speaking at The Bitcoin Conference U.S. Senator Cynthia Lummis opened her keynote by recalling her first encounter with Bitcoin, describing it as an unfamiliar concept of owning an asset that exists on a blockchain, before purchasing three tokens at roughly $300 each.
Lummis told the audience that Bitcoin first struck her as “free money” because it removes the need to trust a third party to hold or move value.
She linked that realization back to her early purchases of three bitcoin at about $300 each, when the idea of owning an asset that lives on a blockchain still felt strange.
Lummis referenced periods of war, noting that bitcoin often serves as a refuge from poor monetary policy and disrupted financial systems.
Lummis said there are women who have been able to leave dysfunctional marriages and walk away with Bitcoin as an asset that is uniquely theirs, underscoring the role of self-custodied money in personal freedom.
“Bitcoin comes with a culture that could’ve written the U.S. Declaration of Independence that we celebrate today. This is freedom money. That all people are created equal, and that this asset guarantees it,” Lummis said.
Lummis closed by promising imminent action in Washington, saying the Senate “will mark up the Clarity Act in May” and that lawmakers are going to pass digital asset legislation.
Lummis has been very vocal about the struggles around passing crypto legislation popularly known as the Clarity Act.
The Clarity Act has inched forward but remains stuck in Washington’s procedural grind, with its fate tied to a narrow legislative window in 2026.
The bill, a comprehensive market structure framework for digital assets, cleared the House more than eight months ago and has waited in the Senate Banking Committee as senators haggle over issues such as stablecoin yields and agency jurisdiction.
A January markup was pulled at the last minute, signaling early resistance and forcing drafters to rework language before bringing it back. Since then, industry groups have pressed Senate leaders to move, warning that each delay adds regulatory uncertainty and pushes activity offshore.
In April, committee dynamics shifted again when Senator Thom Tillis urged Chair Tim Scott to delay a markup into May to allow more time to sell the compromise to traditional banking stakeholders.
Reporting from policy shops and crypto lobbyists now points to the second week of May as the first realistic slot for a Banking Committee vote, following the current Senate recess.
If the markup slips past mid‑May, the odds of enactment this year drop sharply because floor time tightens ahead of summer recess and the 2026 midterm cycle.
If the bill does advance, the path would likely run through a committee markup in early or mid‑May, a full Senate vote in May or June, and potential reconciliation before a signing window that market observers place around June.
Supporters frame the Clarity Act as the companion to the GENIUS Act, handing the CFTC primary jurisdiction over most non‑stablecoin digital assets while narrowing the SEC’s reach to tokenized securities.
This post Senator Lummis Puts Congress On The Clock, Vows May Push To Rescue Stalled Clarity Act first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
The European Union’s latest Russia sanctions package, its twentieth so far, brings crypto settlement squarely into an already fractured geopolitical spotlight.
Adopted on April 23, the package adds 120 new listings and rolls out financial measures that touch just about every corner of Russia’s crypto scene. That includes service providers, decentralized trading platforms, ruble-backed tokens, payment agents, and even support for the digital rouble.
Earlier rounds of restrictions mostly went after specific exchanges, wallets, or operators. This time, the EU is aiming higher up the stack, targeting the service layer that keeps Russia-linked crypto settlement running. That means third-country platforms and tools that can keep money moving globally, even if a particular exchange gets shut down.
The EU frames these new rules as a way to close loopholes. According to Council materials, Russia is leaning more and more on crypto for international payments as traditional finance routes get squeezed by sanctions.
The package is the bloc's largest move to sanction Russia in years, with crypto restrictions among its most specific measures.
The real test now is whether Europe can actually measure crypto settlement risk at the infrastructure level. That means platforms have to dig deeper than exchange names and look at where a provider is based, which tokens are in play, which settlement agents are involved, and whether the route relies on a state-backed digital currency.

The Commission says this package brings a blanket ban on doing business with any Russian crypto asset service provider. It also covers decentralized platforms if they’re being used to get around sanctions. Now, where a provider is based and how it operates matter just as much as whether it’s been named on a sanctions list.
TRM Labs ties the measure to platform succession risk after Garantex was disrupted. Its analysis of the package points to the Garantex-to-Grinex migration and the role of A7A5 as the bridge between those systems.
Chainalysis reaches a similar conclusion from a compliance angle. Its 20th package analysis describes the measure as a move against categories of evasion infrastructure rather than single named entities.
It’s one thing to screen a wallet address or exchange name. It’s a whole different challenge to spot a service provider set up in Russia, a third-country platform with Russian liquidity, or a settlement route built around a sanctioned token.
The Financial Times had already reported that EU officials were weighing a broad ban on Russian crypto transactions.
Prior CryptoSlate coverage of that proposal shows the continuity: Brussels was already testing a broader enforcement perimeter before the package was adopted.
The new rules reach into five different parts of the crypto settlement process.
| Targeted layer | Role in the route | Compliance implication |
|---|---|---|
| Russian crypto asset service providers | Exchange and transfer access | Counterparty screening has to include establishment and operating nexus |
| Decentralized platforms enabling trading | Alternative access when centralized venues are blocked | Front-end, service, and platform exposure become relevant |
| TengriCoin / Meer.kg | Third-country venue where A7A5 is traded | Russia-linked stablecoin liquidity can create designation exposure outside Russia |
| RUBx and digital rouble support | State-linked token and CBDC settlement rails | Issuers, service providers, and infrastructure firms face instrument-level controls |
| Russian payment and netting agents | Settlement mechanics that can mask gross flows | Monitoring has to examine the route and the final address |
A7A5 gives the policy a concrete example. Chainalysis identifies TengriCoin, doing business as Meer.kg, as the Kyrgyz venue where significant amounts of the government-backed stablecoin are traded.
The Council language is broader, pointing to a Kyrgyz entity operating an exchange where significant A7A5 volumes move.
The venue turns A7A5 from background context into a named enforcement path. TRM says A7A5 served as the financial bridge between Garantex and Grinex after Garantex was disrupted, while Chainalysis describes the token as a Russia-linked stablecoin rail for sanctioned businesses seeking access to the global financial system.
A 2025 U.S. sanctions report linked the Garantex, Grinex, and A7A5 network to earlier enforcement pressure. The EU package now codifies that route-level concern in its own sanctions framework.
RUBx gives the package a second stablecoin layer. Russian state-owned conglomerate Rostec planned RUBx as a ruble-pegged token on Tron alongside a payment platform called RT-Pay.
The Commission now says the EU is prohibiting the use of and support for RUBx, as well as support for the digital rouble, a central bank digital currency under development by the Bank of Russia.
The policy signal is direct. The EU is treating a stablecoin, a CBDC project, and the service providers around them as parts of a sanctions-relevant payment architecture.
The role of the instrument carries more weight than the token ticker. If a ruble-backed asset can connect sanctioned businesses to liquidity, its issuer, venue, service provider, and supporting infrastructure all become part of the risk map.
Live market data shows these instruments are active across a huge global market. The focus here is on who can actually settle transactions.
The netting ban shows how far the package reaches into settlement mechanics. The Commission says the package prohibits transactions with agents in Russia and other third countries that offer to facilitate international transactions from Russia to bypass EU sanctions. It also bars netting transactions with Russian agents.
Chainalysis describes this as significant for crypto compliance because netting can obscure the underlying counterparties of Russia-linked flows.
For crypto firms, risk can show up in the service provider behind the scenes, the country where an intermediary is based, the token used to settle, or the payment agent moving the money. Screening now means looking at the whole route, not just searching for familiar names.

For stablecoin issuers, custodians, exchanges, payment processors, and infrastructure providers, this means stepping up checks on any Russia-linked activity. TRM points out that the package moves the focus from just screening names to figuring out if a counterparty is actually based in Russia, even if it’s a brand-new service that hasn’t been listed yet. individual designation.
Chainalysis flags third-country platforms and intermediaries as sanctions-evasion risks when Russian settlement links are detected.
One likely result is more friction. If issuers, exchanges, and service providers really enforce these rules, settling Russia-linked crypto could get pricier and less dependable. The real squeeze is on the route itself; redemption, platform access, liquidity, custody, and payment-agent relationships all come under pressure.
Another outcome is migration. Successor platforms, nested services, and third-country brokers can push activity into less transparent venues. The EU's answer is to target the architecture that lets those routes keep functioning, pairing crypto restrictions with measures against third-country financial institutions and anti-circumvention channels.
Stablecoins and the digital rouble are now firmly inside the EU’s sanctions playbook, not just sitting on the sidelines. The EU has called out crypto rails as real financial infrastructure and built restrictions around the providers, tokens, platforms, and settlement mechanics that make them work. The big question now is whether enforcement can keep up as these routes keep shifting.
The post EU sanctions Russian crypto usage for 20th time adding bans on digital rubles and anyone using Russian crypto services appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Cardano's governance system is facing two deadlines that belong in the same conversation.
JPG Store, a prominent Cardano NFT marketplace whose product page calls it the #1 Cardano NFT marketplace, began a ‘Restriction Mode' on April 23 and scheduled its ‘Complete Shutdown for May 23′.
The shutdown gives users immediate work to do. The shutdown FAQ tells users to remove listings, cancel offers, and settle or cancel loans before the final date. A separate social-login wallet notice tells users to transfer NFTs, tokens, and ADA to a self-custody Cardano wallet before access through those wallets ends.
At the same time, Cardano voters are weighing Input Output's 2026 treasury slate, where Pogun asks for ₳12.29 million to build a Bitcoin liquidity and credit engine. The process is demanding by design: treasury withdrawals require delegated representative approval from 67% of active voting stake, plus Constitutional Committee approval.
Put together, those deadlines turn Cardano's funding priorities into a live test against the stress points users can see.
The evidence supports an application-level pressure point, while broader chain-health claims would need separate support. JPG Store attributed the decision to operating sustainability, and the closure materials do not establish chain-wide failure.
That distinction is important for the ongoing treasury debate. Cardano can still pursue an ambitious Bitcoin DeFi strategy, but the case for funding it now has to sit beside a visible consumer product telling users to unwind positions and move assets.
Its ‘Restriction Mode' puts JPG Store into an immediate wind-down process. During that phase, core actions such as listings, offers, sales, and rentals are restricted, while users can still remove active orders and manage certain existing positions before ‘Complete Shutdown' on May 23.
That creates a migration problem for users and a visible comparison point for builders watching where Cardano treasury capital may go next.
Cardano's funding system is debating new infrastructure while one of its most recognizable consumer surfaces is asking people to move assets before it shuts down for good.
JPG Store winding down shows that a product with real visibility in Cardano's NFT market could not continue operating under its current model. Other parts of the ecosystem are still building, voting, and shipping, but the shutdown still adds pressure to the allocation question.
If treasury allocations are contested and voter approval is difficult to secure, the debate becomes a test of whether Bitcoin DeFi is the best near-term answer to the stress points users see.
A marketplace shutdown driven by sustainability pressure and a treasury request for new liquidity infrastructure can both be rational responses to the same ecosystem issues. Together, they set a clearer test: Cardano has to show that new funding can translate into applications, users, and liquidity, with the consumer layer as the proof point.
The closure also changes how the vote will be judged. A consumer deadline gives voters and builders a visible benchmark for any treasury ask.
Funding new infrastructure can still be rational, but the burden is higher when existing user surfaces are asking people to move assets and unwind positions.
Input Output's 2026 treasury package includes nine proposals. Pogun is the Bitcoin DeFi plank in that set, and its listed work includes a non-margin credit market, a yield application, institutional access, and a BitVM-powered trust-minimized bridge through 2026.
In plain English, the proposal aims to make Bitcoin useful within Cardano's DeFi stack. That is a coherent strategic target because it aims at liquidity alongside application growth.
The harder challenge is whether that target addresses the current weakness visible in Cardano's consumer and DeFi activity.
The live treasury withdrawal process listed Pogun as expiring May 24, with 1.04% DRep support toward the 67% threshold as of 09:30 UTC on April 24.
That can change quickly, but it captures the state of the process at a useful moment: the proposal is live, the threshold is high, and voter conviction still has to be built.
The broader request was already on the table. Input Output's teams were seeking almost $50 million for Bitcoin DeFi and Vision 2030, with the 2026 ask below the prior year's approved level.
JPG Store's closure adds pressure around how that funding case should be judged.
The Bitcoin-liquidity direction also predates Pogun. Cardano had already approved an Orion Fund first tranche tied to 50 million ADA, a $15 million first deployment, and an $80 million target.
Pogun, therefore, sits within a broader effort to connect Cardano with Bitcoin liquidity, a strategy that now has multiple pieces, from Orion to Pogun, while the consumer-product side has just set a new deadline.
The funding case has to show that those pieces connect, because a liquidity engine only strengthens the ecosystem if it eventually produces usable markets, credible demand, and applications that people return to.
The market backdrop shows why Bitcoin DeFi is tempting. The aggregate crypto market sits at around $2.6 trillion, with BTC dominance near 60.1%.
CryptoSlate's Cardano price data show ADA trading near $0.25 with a market cap of around $9 billion, while BTC trades near $77,872 with a $1.56 trillion market cap.
Those figures show the scale mismatch Cardano is trying to solve. Bitcoin liquidity is enormous, and Cardano's own asset value remains large enough to make light application usage look like an execution challenge.
Cardano's activity metrics give the other side of the frame. DefiLlama shows about $134.57 million in DeFi TVL, $49.08 million in stablecoins, $556,520 in 24-hour DEX volume, and $3,575 in 24-hour NFT volume.
The shape is more important than the exact numbers. Cardano's market value is large, while measured DeFi and NFT activity remain comparatively light.
That makes the treasury question harder and more useful. A Bitcoin liquidity push could address one clear constraint by bringing a deeper asset pool into Cardano's DeFi system.
At the same time, a consumer NFT marketplace shutdown asks whether the ecosystem also needs stronger native demand, better product economics, or funding paths that sustain applications users already recognize.
Cardano's funding system was already in transition before this week. Project Catalyst had distributed more than $150 million, while the next rounds were paused as stewardship moved from Input Output to the Cardano Foundation.
That context places the current debate inside a broader governance reset and the strongest conclusion is conditional. JPG Store's closure leaves Cardano's Bitcoin DeFi strategy alive, but harder to judge by itself.
If Pogun and related liquidity work win support, ship on schedule, and create measurable activity, the treasury push can be understood as an attempt to connect Cardano to a larger pool of capital.
In that version, consumer consolidation and Bitcoin DeFi expansion can coexist because the chain is trying to build new demand channels while some unsustainable products wind down.
If voting remains thin, activity metrics stay weak, or more consumer surfaces contract, the same proposal will face a tougher interpretation.
It will resemble a bet that a new liquidity narrative can repair problems visible in the existing application layer.
The next thresholds are concrete. JPG Store's final shutdown date is May 23. Pogun's listed treasury vote window expires May 24.
After that, the useful signals move from governance approval to delivery, usage, and liquidity. The useful question is whether the treasury process can direct capital toward constraints that users and builders can actually feel.
The post Should Cardano invest more into Bitcoin while top Cardano marketplaces like JPG Store shut down? appeared first on CryptoSlate.
AAVE, the native token of the Aave DeFi platform, is now available on the Solana blockchain network.
The move will give Solana users access to one of the largest lending protocols in decentralized finance without leaving the network.
This came less than two days after the Solana Foundation revealed that it would deploy part of its treasury into Aave.
Through this action, the non-profit joined a broader industry effort to contain the fallout from the KelpDAO rsETH $292 million exploit and restore confidence in decentralized lending markets.
On April 25, Lily Liu, chair of the foundation, said the nonprofit is lending USDT to Aave to support recovery efforts after the exploit left major DeFi protocols exposed to unbacked collateral and liquidity stress.
The step marks an unusual cross-chain intervention by Solana, which has spent years building its own DeFi economy around native lending, trading, and liquid staking applications.
It also gives the foundation a direct role in a recovery effort centered on Aave, a protocol more closely associated with Ethereum and its layer-2 networks.
Liu framed the move as support for the broader open-finance market, saying blockchain economies do not operate in isolation and that Solana’s long-term health depends on a functioning DeFi sector beyond its own ecosystem.
For Solana, the intervention signals that competition among chains does not preclude coordination when a failure threatens the market structure on which they all depend.
The April 18 $292 million exploit began with KelpDAO’s rsETH, a liquid restaking token, after attackers allegedly exploited a weakness tied to its LayerZero bridge configuration.
According to reports, the attackers were able to redeem 116,500 unbacked rsETH tokens on Ethereum before depositing the assets as collateral across Aave, Compound, and Euler, then borrowing roughly $292 million in ETH and other assets.
This action caused broader contagion, especially in Aave's lending markets, where platform users exited en masse, and resulted in WETH utilization reaching 100% within hours of the exploit.
Galaxy Research explained:
“At full utilization, Aave's design doesn't allow withdrawals, because there is no idle liquidity in the pool to redeem against. Whoever withdraws first is made whole, while whoever comes later must wait for new supply to arrive or borrowers to repay.”
Oak Research, a crypto intelligence firm, said the mass exit led to a 17% decline in total value locked in DeFi, with Aave experiencing more than $12 billion in outflows.
The firm argued the episode could have become a defining failure for DeFi because it combined a bridge misconfiguration, a systemically important lending venue, and lenders unable to withdraw funds from depleted pools.
The liquidity crunch also showed how lending protocols can operate as designed while still importing risk from outside infrastructure.
Aave pools depend on borrowers, collateral, and liquidations functioning normally. When collateral quality collapses suddenly, lenders can be left waiting for liquidity until borrowers repay, liquidations occur, or new deposits enter the market.
In response to the incident, Aave and KelpDAO helped organize DeFi United, a recovery vehicle aimed at replenishing rsETH reserves and making affected users whole.
According to DeFi United's official website, the effort has drawn commitments of nearly $240 million from several major DeFi participants, including Aave DAO, Arbitrum DAO, Mantle, Ether.fi, Lido, Kelp, Golem Foundation, and individual contributors.
Oak Research said this recovery effort is working because Aave was the protocol at risk.
In its view, the response may have been different if the losses had been isolated to a smaller restaking protocol or a bridge without broader systemic importance. Aave, as the largest DeFi lending venue, had stronger incentives to preserve its reputation and avoid a precedent in which lenders take losses from collateral accepted by the protocol.
That is what makes Solana’s support notable. The foundation is stepping into a sector-wide effort to prevent a bridge-linked collateral failure from damaging confidence in DeFi’s largest lending venue.
The move also gives Solana a strategic opening. Bringing AAVE to Solana could deepen cross-chain liquidity, broaden access for Solana users, and give Aave another distribution channel at a time when lending protocols are reassessing collateral risk, bridge dependencies, and emergency backstops.
Meanwhile, the recovery may still leave governance questions unresolved. Aave tokenholders must weigh the cost of using treasury assets against the reputational risk of allowing users to absorb losses.
While DeFi United can help close the immediate shortfall, the KelpDAO exploit has already shown that collateral standards, bridge design, and protocol risk controls are no longer separate issues.
The post Latest $290M exploit hit DeFi so hard it forced Aave onto Solana as part of rescue efforts appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin traded below $78,000 on Monday as EU markets opened for the week.
BTC price hit $77,819, down 0.28% over 24 hours, with a market capitalization near $1.56 trillion and 24-hour volume of around $32.1 billion. Total crypto liquidations stood near $295 million over the previous 24 hours on CoinGlass.
Bitcoin had been pressing the $80,000 decision area, then quickly slipped back under $78,000 before any clear fresh macro, regulatory, exchange, ETF, or issuer headline had emerged.
The immediate test is whether the drop was a short-lived leverage flush or the start of a broader risk-off move.
The distinction is substantive. A leverage flush can reset crowded positioning while leaving the larger market structure intact. A broader risk-off move usually needs follow-through across risk assets, weaker liquidity, or a new catalyst that changes how traders price the next several sessions.
For now, the evidence points to market structure first. Liquidation pressure was evident, the price level was fragile, but the cause has yet to be resolved into a single clear explanation.
The latest move landed in a zone that had already drawn attention. On Apr. 23, Bitcoin traded as high as $79,470 while moving toward the $80,000 threshold, before retracing to about $78,200.
The push was linked to forced liquidations and a more constructive macro and geopolitical setup.
Bitcoin was already testing a level where recent buyers, short sellers, and macro-sensitive traders had reasons to react. When price moves into that kind of area, the first rejection often says more about positioning than conviction.
A later CryptoSlate market-structure analysis gives the same zone a more tactical map. Bitcoin had failed to hold the upper-$78,000s after reaching the $80,000 level, while risk appetite and equities were doing more immediate work than crude oil.
The same analysis placed the constructive path around a hold of the $77,000 to $77,500 area followed by a reclaim of the upper-$78,000s.
That gives Monday's move a clean test. If buyers absorb the drop near the mid-$77,000s, the decline can remain a clearing event. If price fails there, the break starts to point to a broader reduction in risk.
The pattern also helps separate price action from explanation. Traders did not need a new headline to see why stops, hedges, or fast exits could cluster around a round-number level that had just rejected momentum. A market that has challenged $80,000 can reverse quickly when leverage is high, and the next buyer is waiting for a lower price.
That makes the first response around $77,000 to $77,500 more important than the search for a tidy headline. A fast reclaim would show demand absorbing forced flows. A stalled bounce would tell traders that the drop was spilling into spot conviction and broader risk appetite.
Recent CryptoSlate coverage explains why the $80,000 zone was crowded, why liquidations had helped shape the prior move, and why risk appetite could influence the next leg. It leaves the Apr. 27 drawdown as a live test, rather than a settled reaction to one event.
That framing separates the level from the narrative. The price zone can be real, and the catalyst can remain unresolved. Bitcoin had a clear technical pressure point, while the available evidence still leaves the trigger open.
The liquidation data adds pressure to that interpretation. Total crypto liquidations reached about $294.9 million over 24 hours, up sharply from the prior reading on the page.
CoinGlass also showed 89,011 traders liquidated and the largest single order on Binance's ETHUSDT pair at about $11.98 million.
The Bitcoin-specific page was more nuanced. BTC liquidations were about $95.55 million, split between about $38.8 million in longs and $56.75 million in shorts.
That split complicates the easy version of the move. A falling Bitcoin price often invites a simple long-liquidation explanation. The BTC-specific reading was short-heavy at the time checked, which suggests the liquidation backdrop was mixed and not a one-direction wipeout.
Still, liquidations were large enough to show forced position closure across the market, while the Bitcoin page showed activity clustered around the same hours as the European open. That supports a leverage and liquidity frame, with the immediate trigger still unresolved.
Market-cap data sets a second boundary. Global crypto market capitalization is near $2.59 trillion, and Bitcoin's dominance was around 60%. CryptoSlate's coins page shows Bitcoin's market capitalization is around $1.559 trillion.
The macro backdrop gives the move context. The Federal Reserve calendar shows a two-day FOMC meeting scheduled for Apr. 28 and 29, with a press conference on Apr. 29.
A separate Federal Reserve notice shows an Apr. 28 closed Board meeting to discuss monetary policy issues.
CryptoSlate's macro preview also framed the week as unusually compressed. Traders would get the Fed first, then GDP and PCE data shortly after, creating a tight test for rates, growth, inflation, and risk appetite.
That setup can explain why buyers may be less willing to step in aggressively. Bitcoin often trades as a liquidity-sensitive asset over short macro windows. When the market is heading into a packed policy and data sequence, traders have fewer reasons to add risk into a fast drop.
Still, the calendar is background pressure. During the Apr. 27 review window, no new Fed decision, fresh inflation print, regulatory action, exchange failure, ETF shock, or issuer announcement had emerged to explain the move.
The market had a plausible reason to be cautious, while the visible move looked more consistent with positioning and liquidity stress than a fully explained headline response.
The most defensible reading is that Bitcoin's drop below $78,000 looks like a leverage flush inside a risk-sensitive market, with no obvious fresh catalyst. That holds if the move stabilizes near the mid-$77,000s and buyers can push price back toward the upper-$78,000s.
A reclaim would suggest the market cleared excess exposure while preserving the larger range. It would also fit the pattern CryptoSlate mapped earlier: hold the $77,000 to $77,500 area, regain the upper-$78,000s, and put $80,000 back into play.
A deeper break would change the question. If Bitcoin loses the mid-$77,000s while equities weaken, yields firm, or the Fed week turns more hostile for risk assets, the same liquidation data would begin to resemble the first leg of a broader risk reduction.
That leaves the market with a precise test. The liquidation wave has shown where leverage was vulnerable. The next price reaction will show whether spot demand is strong enough to absorb the damage.
The post Bitcoin flash crashes below $78,000 at Europe market open with nearly $295 million in crypto liquidations appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The Bitcoin ETF trade sold investors a simple promise: crypto exposure inside a wrapper that looked and felt like mainstream finance. Advisors could buy it, compliance teams could understand it, and institutions could route capital into digital assets through a product that fits the rest of their strategy.
That promise worked, and the US spot Bitcoin ETF complex had reached $91.71 billion in assets under management by April 8, according to CryptoSlate data.
Given the size of the spot Bitcoin ETF market, we can clearly see that there's no lack of demand. The main problem the industry is faced with now is infrastructure.
On April 20, Grayscale amended its proposed Hyperliquid ETF filing and named Anchorage Digital Bank as custodian in place of Coinbase.
On its own, that looks like a modest filing change tied to a newer crypto product, but in context, it's a sign that issuers are starting to think harder about how much of the regulated crypto ETF market still runs through one back-office gatekeeper.
As CryptoSlate reported on April 12, funds whose launch documents name Coinbase as custodian or primary custodian account for about $77.10 billion of the market, or 84.1% of total US spot Bitcoin ETF AUM. A stricter method that excludes multi-custodian arrangements or unclear split allocations still leaves roughly $74.06 billion, or 80.8%, tied to Coinbase in some custody role. Those numbers make custody concentration part of the institutional appetite for Bitcoin, not a side detail buried in the documents.
A single filing doesn't establish a migration trend, and the market shouldn't turn one amendment into a sweeping break. Even so, custody choices inside ETFs carry real informational value because issuers, lawyers, and boards tend to repeat the safest available template. When a market that has spent years making the same custody decision starts to show variation, it's worth paying attention.
Coinbase became dominant in crypto ETF custody for practical reasons that made sense from the start.
When spot Bitcoin ETFs won approval in January 2024, issuers needed a provider with a recognizable compliance profile, institutional operating history, and an infrastructure stack that already looked credible to boards, auditors, market makers, and regulators. Coinbase had that advantage. Once the largest issuers chose it, the rest of the market inherited a strong template effect.
That pattern kept extending into 2026. Morgan Stanley’s updated filing in March named Coinbase Custody and BNY as custodians for its proposed Bitcoin exchange-traded product, which later launched as the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust.
Another blue-chip institution entered the market and plugged into the same custody backbone already supporting much of the ETF complex. That's how concentration deepens in financial infrastructure, with each new entrant reinforcing the same operational standard.
Coinbase’s own regulatory trajectory has only strengthened that position. On April 2, the company said it had received conditional approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to charter Coinbase National Trust Company. That was an important milestone, because a federal trust framework offers a cleaner supervisory map for the custody business that sits underneath products like ETFs.
Coinbase’s scale reflects institutional trust, launch readiness, and regulatory familiarity. Those strengths are also what made it the market’s central operational node. Crypto has spent years arguing about decentralization at the asset layer, while the institutional wrapper built around Bitcoin moved toward a highly concentrated custody structure. We can now clearly see that product variety expanded faster than infrastructure variety.
ETF investors spend most of their time looking at inflows, fees, and price action, though it's custody that shapes how the system functions day to day. If the wrapper is supposed to make digital assets legible to mainstream finance, then the resilience of that wrapper matters almost as much as the underlying asset. The live question now is whether the market has reached the point where resilience requires more redundancy.
Grayscale’s amended Hyperliquid ETF proposal names Anchorage Digital Bank as custodian in place of Coinbase. Anchorage brings a different regulatory and institutional profile to crypto custody. It's the first federally chartered crypto-native bank in the United States, and it's already been moving deeper into the institutional stack. Grayscale had previously tapped Anchorage as a secondary custodian for part of its Bitcoin and Ethereum trusts, while BlackRock added Anchorage in April 2025 to support its spot crypto ETFs.
That makes the Grayscale amendment look like part of a slow broadening in the custody field. The important point is that issuers now have stronger reasons to add alternatives into the mix as the category grows larger and the cost of concentration becomes easier to quantify. A market carrying more than $90 billion in spot Bitcoin ETF assets starts to look different when more than four-fifths of that exposure still depends on one custody provider in some form.
The biggest risks are in operations, reputation, and market-wide spillover.
ETF assets are segregated, custody agreements impose fiduciary duties, and the legal structure around these funds differs sharply from the exchange failures and balance-sheet collapses that shaped crypto’s earlier crises.
That architecture is important, but so is the fact that a dominant provider can still become a choke point if it faces outages, settlement disruption, licensing complications, or regulatory pressure. The larger Coinbase’s role becomes, the larger the consequences become for any event that interrupts its ability to perform that role across multiple issuers at once.
Markets mature by building backups, widening their vendor maps, and reducing the number of points where one institution’s disruption can spill across an entire category. Crypto ETFs have already done the first part of institutionalization by attracting demand and embedding themselves in mainstream portfolios.
The next part is about whether the system underneath those products can carry that growth without leaning so heavily on a single provider, even when that provider remains strong and increasingly well connected to regulators.
Hyperliquid is a newer and more politically sensitive product than a plain spot Bitcoin ETF, and its core perpetuals venue remains ring-fenced in the US.
That alone may have given Grayscale an extra reason to lean on a federally chartered custodian. Even if that turns out to be the narrow explanation, the choice still reveals something important: when issuers encounter a product with more regulatory edge, they may see value in bringing a different type of custodian into the structure. And once that habit enters the market, broader diversification becomes easier to imagine.
That is why this launch belongs in the bigger conversation around Coinbase, Anchorage, and the institutional path of Bitcoin ETFs. The category no longer needs to prove that investors want regulated crypto exposure. It needs to show that the infrastructure underneath that exposure can evolve beyond the first template that worked.
Wall Street’s relationship with crypto keeps moving through familiar stages. First came access, then came legitimacy, and the next stage is resilience. Grayscale’s switch to Anchorage doesn't settle that transition, but
it does make the direction easier to see. The ETF boom made Bitcoin legible to traditional finance. What comes next will determine how durable that wrapper looks at scale.
The post Grayscale moves away from Coinbase for new ETF product – Is Wall Street building a post-Coinbase custody map? appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Ethereum fell below the important $2,300 level after Bitcoin failed to hold its recent pump toward $79K. The move came during a broader crypto market pullback, where Bitcoin dropped below $77K and several major altcoins turned red within a short period.
The latest market data shows ETH trading around $2,277, down nearly 3% over 24 hours. This drop is important because Ethereum had recently been supported by bullish institutional headlines, including reports of major ETH accumulation by BitMine. However, the market reaction shows that short-term traders are still focused more on Bitcoin’s price action, liquidations and weak market structure than on long-term accumulation news.
In simple terms, Ethereum did not drop because of one isolated ETH-specific event. It dropped because the broader crypto market lost momentum.
The main reason Ethereum dropped is that Bitcoin rejected a key resistance zone. BTC briefly pushed toward $79K, but the move failed quickly. Once Bitcoin lost strength and fell back below $77K, Ethereum followed with a sharper decline.
This is normal during fast market reversals. ETH often behaves like a higher-beta version of Bitcoin, meaning it can rise faster during bullish momentum but also fall harder when the market turns. When BTC rejected the breakout, traders quickly reduced exposure across major crypto assets, and ETH became one of the first large-cap altcoins to feel the pressure.
The loss of the $2,300 level then made the move worse. For many traders, $2,300 is both a psychological level and a short-term technical support zone. Once Ethereum fell below it, stop-losses and leveraged long liquidations likely accelerated the decline.
The speed of the drop suggests that liquidations played a major role. Social media reports pointed to a sharp amount of value being wiped from the crypto market in a very short time, with both BTC and ETH falling almost simultaneously.
This matters because Ethereum is heavily traded with leverage. When the market moves against crowded long positions, traders are forced to close positions or get liquidated. That selling pressure can push ETH lower even if there is no major negative news about Ethereum itself.
This is why ETH can drop despite bullish long-term headlines. Institutional accumulation may support the broader narrative, but short-term leverage can still control intraday price action.
One of the more bullish headlines around Ethereum was the report that Tom Lee’s BitMine bought a large amount of ETH. This should normally support confidence in Ethereum’s long-term outlook, especially as institutional interest in ETH continues to grow.
However, today’s move shows the difference between long-term accumulation and short-term trading pressure. Big buyers can strengthen the investment case for Ethereum, but they do not automatically prevent sudden corrections. If Bitcoin rejects resistance, the market deleverages, and altcoins weaken, ETH can still drop below key levels.
That is exactly what happened here. The BitMine headline helped the Ethereum narrative, but it was not strong enough to stop the market-wide selloff.
Ethereum’s decline also fits the broader altcoin weakness. XRP, Solana, Cardano, BNB and Chainlink were all under pressure, confirming that this was not only an Ethereum problem. The market was reducing risk across major altcoins.
This is important because Ethereum usually needs broader altcoin strength to build a sustainable rally. When ETH rises while altcoins confirm the move, the market often looks healthier. But when ETH drops alongside most large-cap coins, it suggests that traders are becoming more defensive.
For now, Ethereum is still being treated like a risk asset. It is not leading the market higher. Instead, it is reacting to Bitcoin’s failed breakout and the broader weakness across crypto.
The most important level for Ethereum now is $2,300. If ETH can reclaim this level quickly, the latest drop may be viewed as a temporary shakeout caused by Bitcoin’s rejection and short-term liquidations.
A move back above $2,300 would be the first sign that buyers are trying to regain control. After that, ETH would need to push toward the $2,350 to $2,400 zone to rebuild stronger bullish momentum.
However, if Ethereum remains below $2,300, the risk of further downside increases. In that case, traders may start watching lower support areas near $2,250 and then $2,200. Losing those levels could make the ETH chart look weaker and extend the correction.
For now, ETH is in a sensitive position. The next move depends heavily on whether Bitcoin can stabilize above $76K to $77K and whether Ethereum can recover $2,300 quickly.
Ethereum’s long-term outlook has not been destroyed by this drop. Institutional buying, ETF-related interest and the broader Ethereum ecosystem still support the long-term narrative. But the short-term chart is clearly under pressure.
The problem is not that Ethereum has no bullish catalysts. The problem is that the market is not responding strongly to them yet. When bullish headlines fail to push price higher, it usually means traders are waiting for technical confirmation before taking more risk.
For Ethereum, that confirmation starts with reclaiming $2,300. Without that, the market may continue to treat ETH as weak in the short term.
If Ethereum reclaims $2,300 and Bitcoin stabilizes above $77K, ETH could attempt a recovery toward $2,350 and then $2,400. A stronger move above that zone would suggest that the selloff was only a temporary liquidation event.
But if ETH fails to recover $2,300, the bearish case becomes stronger. A continued rejection below this level could send Ethereum toward $2,250 or even $2,200, especially if Bitcoin loses the $76K support area.
The most likely short-term scenario is continued volatility. Ethereum is stuck between bullish institutional narratives and bearish short-term price action. Until ETH turns $2,300 back into support, traders should expect more sharp moves in both directions.
Ethereum dropped below $2,300 because Bitcoin’s failed $79K pump triggered a broader crypto market selloff. The move was accelerated by liquidations, weak altcoin momentum and traders reducing risk across major crypto assets.
This does not mean Ethereum’s long-term story is broken. But it does show that ETH needs stronger confirmation before the next major rally can begin. Bullish accumulation headlines are important, but price action still matters.
For now, the key level is clear: Ethereum needs to reclaim $2,300. If it does, the market could start looking for a recovery. If it fails, ETH may remain under pressure and test lower support zones.
Bitcoin gave traders a short burst of optimism after briefly pumping toward the $79K level. The move looked like a potential breakout attempt, especially after fresh institutional buying headlines entered the market. However, the momentum quickly faded, and Bitcoin dropped back below $77K, erasing the gains from the previous move.
According to the latest market data, Bitcoin is trading around $76,600, down roughly 1.7% over 24 hours. This confirms that BTC is still struggling to build a clean continuation above the $78K to $79K range. The failed move also shows that buyers are not yet strong enough to push Bitcoin into a confirmed breakout above $80K.
The key question now is simple: why did Bitcoin pump toward $79K, then suddenly lose strength?
The first reason is a classic failed breakout. Bitcoin moved higher, attracted short-term traders, but failed to hold the breakout zone. Once the price started rejecting near $79K, leveraged positions became vulnerable. The move then turned into a fast downside reaction, with reports pointing to billions being wiped from the crypto market in a short period.
This type of move often happens when the market pumps into resistance without enough spot demand to support the rally. Traders chase the move, liquidity builds above and below the price, and once momentum slows, the market reverses sharply.
In this case, Bitcoin’s drop below $77K suggests that the $79K area was not a real breakout yet. It was more likely a liquidity move, where the price pushed higher, trapped late buyers, and then quickly reversed.
One of the most interesting parts of today’s crypto news is that Bitcoin dropped even after bullish institutional headlines. Michael Saylor’s Strategy reportedly bought 3,273 BTC worth around $255 million, adding more fuel to the long-term Bitcoin accumulation narrative.
Normally, this type of news would support bullish sentiment. But today’s price action shows that institutional buying does not always create an immediate pump. Large buyers may support the bigger trend, but short-term price action still depends on liquidity, leverage, resistance levels and market confidence.
In other words, Strategy buying more Bitcoin is bullish for the long-term narrative, but it was not enough to stop the short-term selloff below $77K.
The broader institutional story remains strong. BlackRock has reportedly accumulated hundreds of millions of dollars worth of Bitcoin through spot ETF demand, while Strategy continues to add BTC to its balance sheet. This confirms that large players are still using weakness as an accumulation opportunity.
However, Bitcoin’s failure to break $80K shows that institutional demand alone is not enough. The market also needs stronger retail participation, better altcoin momentum, and a clear technical breakout. Without those elements, Bitcoin can continue to see sharp pumps and dumps inside the same range.
This is why today’s move is important. It shows a clear gap between the long-term accumulation story and the short-term trading reality.
Bitcoin was not the only asset under pressure. The latest crypto performance data shows that most major altcoins are also red. Ethereum dropped below $2,300, XRP fell by more than 2%, Solana moved lower, Cardano weakened, and Chainlink also declined.
This matters because a healthy crypto rally usually needs support from major altcoins. When Bitcoin pumps but altcoins remain weak, the move often looks defensive rather than broad-based. It means traders are not fully rotating into risk yet.
Ethereum’s weakness is especially important. ETH is trading around $2,277, down almost 3%, despite recent reports that Tom Lee’s BitMine bought a large amount of Ethereum. This shows that even bullish Ethereum accumulation headlines are not currently enough to reverse market pressure.
Another headline adding attention to the market is Peter Schiff’s latest bearish comment, where he reportedly said Bitcoin could crash “close to zero.” Schiff has always been one of Bitcoin’s most vocal critics, so the statement itself is not surprising. But the timing matters.
His comment came while Bitcoin was failing to hold a breakout and dropping below $77K. This gives the market a stronger emotional contrast: institutions are buying BTC, but critics are using the failed pump as proof that Bitcoin remains fragile.
For traders, this does not mean Bitcoin is going to zero. But it does show that sentiment is still divided. The market is not in full euphoria mode. Fear, skepticism and leverage-driven volatility are still controlling short-term moves.
One of the most important parts of today’s market setup is that stocks are reportedly hitting all-time highs while Bitcoin is struggling below $80K. That is a major signal.
If US and Asian stock markets are strong, but Bitcoin cannot hold above $79K, it suggests that crypto is not currently leading the risk-on trade. Liquidity may be flowing first into equities, while crypto remains trapped by leverage, weak altcoin demand and resistance near $80K.
This does not necessarily mean the Bitcoin trend is broken. But it does mean that BTC needs stronger confirmation before traders can call the next major breakout. For now, the market is still reacting more like a fragile risk asset than a leading momentum asset.
The most important level now is the $76K to $77K support zone. If Bitcoin can hold this area and reclaim $78K, the market may attempt another move toward $79K and eventually $80K.
However, if BTC loses the $76K zone clearly, the failed $79K pump could turn into a deeper correction. In that case, traders may start watching lower liquidity areas and stronger support zones below the current range.
For the bullish case to return, Bitcoin needs more than another quick pump. It needs to reclaim the $78K to $79K range, hold it as support, and show enough strength to challenge $80K with real volume.
For Ethereum, the key level is $2,300. If ETH remains below this zone, altcoins may continue to struggle, even if Bitcoin stabilizes.
The Bitcoin rally is not necessarily over, but today’s move is a warning sign. Bitcoin is still attracting institutional buyers, and major companies continue to accumulate BTC. However, the short-term chart shows that the market is not ready for a clean breakout yet.
The drop below $77K after a pump to $79K shows that traders are still selling into strength. It also confirms that $80K remains a major psychological and technical barrier.
For now, the crypto market is stuck between two forces. On one side, institutional accumulation supports the long-term Bitcoin story. On the other side, weak altcoins, liquidations and failed breakout attempts are keeping short-term pressure alive.
Until Bitcoin turns $79K into support and breaks $80K with conviction, the market may continue to see sharp pumps followed by fast pullbacks.
Tangem is heating up the self-custody market this spring with the launch of its exclusive Prize Draw Campaign, running from May 5 to June 6, 2026. This campaign offers users a chance to win a share of over 100 prizes, including a grand prize of $5,000 in BTC.
To participate in the Tangem Prize Draw, users simply need to purchase a Tangem wallet directly through our exclusive promo link here during the promotion period. Participation is entirely automatic; every wallet item purchased counts as one entry—for example, a 3-pack order equals three tickets—with no additional sign-up required.
The campaign features a robust selection of 104 individual prizes. Beyond the headline Bitcoin rewards, Tangem is giving away the latest tech and specialized hardware security gear.
| Prize | Quantity |
|---|---|
| $5,000 in $BTC | 1 winner |
| iPhone 17 (256GB) | 3 winners |
| Tangem Pro Kit | 5 winners |
| Tangem Ring | 10 winners |
| $50 in BTC | 25 winners |
| $10 in BTC | 60 winners |
Winners will be announced on July 5, 2026, following a 30-day "cooldown" period used to verify that only non-refunded purchases are eligible. The announcement will take place on the Tangem blog and via a live stream on the Tangem Discord.
Running concurrently with the prize draw is a significant discount on high-capacity storage. Users who purchase a Family Pack (two 3-card sets) starting with a Black or Stealth wallet can receive the second set at 50% off by using our official discount link.
Notably, both sets in the Family Pack count as separate entries for the prize draw, effectively doubling your chances to win while securing your assets at a lower cost. Eligible collections for the discounted second set include popular designs like Bitcoin, White Stealth, and the "Hold Your Freedom" series.
In an era where Bitcoin prices are pushing toward six-figure milestones, the security of your private keys is paramount. Modern hardware wallets have evolved to address sophisticated 2026 threats like AI-enabled phishing and "pig butchering" scams.
Tangem's unique approach utilizes EAL6+ certified secure element chips within a card-shaped form factor. Unlike traditional devices, Tangem is battery-free and requires no cables; users simply tap the card to their smartphone to sign transactions. This eliminates the vulnerability of a written seed phrase, as the keys are generated and stored exclusively on the card's chip.
Tangem has issued a strict warning regarding security during this campaign. Official winners will only be contacted via email from the @tangem.com domain.
While Bitcoin ($BTC) remains in a choppy consolidation range near $77,500, a handful of high-beta assets have posted double-digit gains, diverging significantly from the broader index.

Historically, vertical moves of this magnitude—often exceeding 30% in seven days—invite a period of rebalancing. For traders, this week is less about chasing the "pump" and more about identifying where the floor sits. Here are 3 tokens that soared high and need to be on every trader's radar.
Humanity Protocol (H) has been the week's standout performer, surging over 45% following a massive spike in on-chain whale activity. Large-scale transactions for $H$ recently hit a five-month high, signaling that institutional players are positioning themselves within its "Proof of Humanity" ecosystem.

However, a fundamental headwind is peaking right now. The Humanity Foundation recently presented early backers with a difficult choice: extend their vesting schedules until late 2026 or accept a 70% haircut for immediate liquidity by April 26. This creates a complex supply dynamic for the remainder of this week.
Stable (STABLE) has climbed over 30% this week, reaching a market capitalization of approximately $742 million. This rally is fueled by the evolving regulatory landscape in the United States, specifically following the GENIUS Act guidelines and new institutional reserve portfolios from major banks.

Unlike purely speculative tokens, STABLE is positioning itself as a compliance-first asset. However, after such a rapid ascent, the token is showing signs of exhaustion.
The third asset on our radar, MemeCore (M), has been the "moonshot" story of the month, gaining nearly 30% this week and pushing its valuation into the multi-billion dollar range. While the price of $M is sitting near its local highs of $4.38, technical analysts are sounding the alarm.

The project recently executed a hardfork that reduced gas fees by 99%, attracting a wave of retail interest. However, on-chain scrutiny highlights a potential risk: a discrepancy between the high market cap and relatively thin liquidity in decentralized exchange (DEX) pools.
| Asset | 7d Performance | Market Cap | Key Sentiment Trigger |
|---|---|---|---|
| Humanity Protocol ($H) | +45.48% | ~$415M | Token Unlock Decisions |
| Stable ($STABLE) | +30.12% | ~$742M | Institutional Reserve News |
| MemeCore ($M) | +29.19% | ~$5.68B | Liquidity & Social Hype |
Ethereum ($ETH) has spent much of 2026 consolidating, leading many investors to ask the golden question: will Ethereum break its previous all-time high (ATH) of $4,900? A series of technical "ceilings" and shifting macroeconomic factors are currently dictating its pace toward a new record.
While a break above $4,900 is technically possible in 2026, it remains an optimistic target rather than a guaranteed outcome for the first half of the year. Analysts from major institutions like Standard Chartered and JPMorgan have set year-end targets ranging from $5,440 to as high as $10,000, contingent on a successful breakout from the current $2,300–$2,800 accumulation zone. However, as of April 26, 2026, ETH is trading near $2,333, indicating that the bulls still have significant work to do.

In technical analysis, an All-Time High (ATH) breakout occurs when an asset surpasses its highest ever recorded price—in Ethereum's case, approximately $4,878 (often rounded to $4,900). This event is significant because it enters a "price discovery" phase where no historical sell-side resistance exists. For ETH, the $4,900 mark isn't just a number; it is the final psychological barrier that separates the current range-bound market from a parabolic bull run.
The journey to $4,900 is currently blocked by several key technical layers.

| Institution | 2026 Target | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|
| Citi | $5,440 | Sustained Spot ETF Inflows |
| Standard Chartered | $7,500 | Institutional Pension Allocations |
| JPMorgan | $10,000 | L2 Fee Slashes & Scalability |
| DigitalCoinPrice | $5,301 | Post-Halving Momentum |
While internal technicals are vital, Ethereum's trajectory is heavily influenced by Bitcoin ($BTC). Bitcoin is currently trading near $78,000, maintaining high dominance. For Ethereum to lead the market toward its ATH, we typically look for a "rotation" of capital where investors move profits from BTC into ETH. Furthermore, news regarding US-Iran geopolitical de-escalation and energy price stability—often reported by Reuters—plays a silent but massive role in risk-on sentiment for 2026.
A new Federal Reserve study links ChatGPT's launch to a sharp halving of U.S. programmer job growth—the first institutional-level evidence connecting AI adoption to measurable developer hiring declines.
Google's security team scanned billions of web pages and found real payloads designed to trick AI agents into sending money, deleting files, and leaking credentials.
Some 580 Google employees have signed the letter to CEO Sundar Pichai, citing ethical concerns over military use of AI.
Strive Inc. purchased 789 more Bitcoin while its subsidiary prepares to educate business leaders on corporate crypto adoption.
Trump said last week he didn’t like prediction markets, but then changed his tune, arguing the U.S. should not get left behind in the space.
Enterprise blockchain firm Ripple has lit up the Las Vegas Strip with a towering "Raise the Standard" billboard ahead of the highly anticipated XRP Las Vegas 2026 conference.
Strategy doesn’t miss on its regular Monday purchases as the firm scoops another $255 million worth of Bitcoin this new week.
Prominent gold advocate and vocal cryptocurrency critic Peter Schiff claims that the executive's audacious prediction of a $1 million Bitcoin is mathematically doomed.
XRP has confirmed a Golden Cross, but the real story is the 30% technical gap to the long-term 200-day MA.
Shiba Inu ecosystem records impressive growth in its onchain movements as new users continue to massively onboard the network.
Strategy expanded its Bitcoin holdings with a new 3,273 BTC purchase worth $255 million. The acquisition lifted total reserves to 818,334 BTC and returned the company to profit. However, Peter Schiff challenged Michael Saylor’s $1 million Bitcoin forecast and questioned the accumulation strategy.
Strategy confirmed it purchased 3,273 Bitcoin for about $255.0 million at an average price of $77,906. The company increased its total holdings to 818,334 BTC as of April 26, 2026. It acquired the entire stash for $61.81 billion at an average price of $75,537 per coin.
At current prices near $77,850, the holdings carry a market value of $63.7 billion. This valuation places Strategy at roughly $1.9 billion in profit. Earlier this year, Bitcoin traded below $70,000 and left the company’s position underwater.
Michael Saylor announced the purchase on X and reported a 9.6% Bitcoin Yield year-to-date in 2026. He also released the company’s Form 8-K filing with the U.S. SEC. The filing detailed that Strategy funded the purchase through its at-the-market equity program.
Between April 20 and April 26, 2026, Strategy sold 1,451,601 MSTR shares. The share sales generated $255.0 million in net proceeds after commissions. During the same period, the company sold no preferred stock.
Peter Schiff responded to Saylor’s update and targeted his $1 million Bitcoin forecast. In 2025, Saylor said Bitcoin could reach $1 million if Strategy acquired 5% of the total supply. Schiff argued that current accumulation trends do not support that outlook.
Schiff stated that Strategy now controls about 3.9% of the total Bitcoin supply. He said the company purchased 231,666 BTC since Saylor made the forecast. According to Schiff, similar price reactions to future purchases could push Bitcoin below $60,000 before Strategy reaches 5%.
He wrote that “if the next 231,666 BTC move the market as the last ones did, the price could be under $60,000.” Schiff used this calculation to dispute the $1 million target. He has repeatedly supported gold as an alternative store of value.
Schiff also criticized claims about covering a reported 11.5% yield on STRC with modest Bitcoin growth. He argued that continuous issuance raises the required price increase. He said falling STRC prices could force higher yields and strain the structure.
According to Schiff, selling Bitcoin to cover yields would pressure the market. He warned that such actions could trigger a “death spiral” unless Strategy cancels the dividend. Strategy’s latest Form 8-K filing, dated April 27, 2026, confirms the recent equity-funded purchase.
The post Peter Schiff Slams Saylor’s $1M Bitcoin Call After 3K BTC Buy appeared first on Blockonomi.
DeFi United has secured more than 132,000 ETH valued at over $300 million to address losses from the Kelp DAO exploit. Consensys and Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin pledged 30,000 ETH to support the recovery. Circle Ventures also confirmed AAVE token purchases to reduce pressure on the lending protocol.
Circle Ventures announced it is buying AAVE tokens to support market stability. The firm stated, “Strong DeFi infrastructure does not build itself.” It added that Aave helps shape onchain finance and supports its broader community.
At the same time, Consensys and Joseph Lubin committed 30,000 ETH to the coordinated recovery plan. Aave confirmed the pledge on Monday and credited the contribution for accelerating progress. It said, “The recovery would not be progressing as it is without them.”
Consensys-backed treasury firm Sharplink will also provide strategic advice to the initiative. The combined effort has now raised more than 132,000 ETH. That amount equals over $300 million at current market prices.
The exploit occurred after an attacker minted unbacked rsETH through a compromised LayerZero bridge. The attacker then used the tokens as collateral on Aave to borrow assets. This sequence left Aave with bad debt tied to the unbacked rsETH.
DeFi United directs contributions to close the remaining shortfall linked to rsETH. Last week, Aave service providers proposed allocating 25,000 ETH from the protocol’s DAO. That allocation equals nearly $58 million based on recent prices.
As of Monday, the broader effort had raised roughly $235 million worth of Ethereum before the latest pledges. Lido DAO proposed contributing up to 2,500 ETH to the plan. Ether.fi also proposed up to 5,000 ETH to support the recovery.
Kelp DAO pledged 2,000 ETH to help restore rsETH backing. Dozens of individuals have also transferred smaller amounts of ETH and stablecoins. X user DCF GOD estimated that the funding gap had already been filled if all proposals passed.
Data from The Block shows total value locked across DeFi protocols stands at nearly $82 billion. That figure reflects a decline of over 25% from $110 billion at the start of the year.
The post DeFi United Surpasses $300M After 30,000 ETH Pledge appeared first on Blockonomi.
MARA Holdings introduced a new foundation in Las Vegas to strengthen bitcoin’s long-term resilience. CEO Fred Thiel announced the plan during the Bitcoin Conference on Monday. He said the effort will address quantum risks and reinforce the network’s economic model.
Thiel said Bitcoin remains the most important decentralized system in operation today. However, he warned that the network’s future depends on active stewardship. He stated, “Bitcoin is the most important decentralized system ever created, but its future is not guaranteed.”
He described Bitcoin as a public utility that no single entity controls. Yet he stressed that participants must share responsibility for its survival. He added, “Decentralization doesn’t mean it runs on itself; it means responsibility is distributed.”
The MARA Foundation will focus on protecting Bitcoin’s core properties as sound and durable money. It will support research on emerging threats, including quantum computing. The foundation will also study ways to sustain the network’s security budget.
Thiel said transaction fees must eventually replace declining block rewards. Therefore, the foundation will encourage the development of a sustainable fee market. It will also examine technical measures that strengthen network defense.
MARA confirmed it will fund open source developers working on scaling and mining tools. The company will also back improvements to the user infrastructure. These steps aim to increase network reliability and efficiency.
The foundation will promote self-custody solutions across different regions. It plans to expand multilingual resources for global users. It will also provide technical education programs for developers and operators.
Policy engagement will form another part of the initiative. MARA intends to work with regulators through structured outreach. The company said it will provide educational materials to support informed discussions.
As part of the launch, MARA pledged $100,000 to one nonprofit organization. Three groups will compete for the award through a community vote. The company said this process reflects its commitment to shared ecosystem responsibility.
Thiel reiterated that distributed systems require collective effort. He framed the foundation as a long-term commitment beyond mining operations. He confirmed the initiative will operate independently from MARA’s bitcoin and AI mining units.
The announcement took place during a keynote address at the Bitcoin Conference. MARA did not disclose a fixed annual budget for the foundation. The company confirmed the $100,000 grant marks the first public allocation.
MARA stated that further funding details will follow in later updates. The foundation will begin operations immediately after the conference. Community voting for the nonprofit award will open in the coming weeks.
The post MARA Unveils Foundation to Strengthen Bitcoin Network appeared first on Blockonomi.
The biggest profits in crypto are often made before the crowd arrives—so where is that opportunity right now among the best cryptos to buy now?
As the market shifts toward utility-driven projects, opportunities with clear ROI potential are closing faster than ever. In this breakdown, we compare DOGEBALL crypto presale 2026 with TRON (TRX) and Cardano (ADA)—but one project is creating urgent momentum as 2nd May approaches and its presale nears its final cutoff.
With over $228K raised and 820+ participants already in, DOGEBALL is not early-stage speculation anymore—it’s a live opportunity nearing its final phase. The closer we get to 2nd May, the tighter the entry window becomes.
Live DOGEBALL Presale Data
Exclusive Bonus – Limited Time Only Presale Ending on 2nd May – Only 5 Days Left Miss this presale, and you could be forced to buy at a much higher price after launch. |
DOGEBALL is a utility-first ecosystem built on DOGECHAIN, a custom Ethereum Layer 2 designed for speed, scale, and real-world usage. It merges GameFi and PayFi, allowing users to send crypto while recipients receive fiat directly into bank accounts—globally, instantly, and without intermediaries.
What makes this stand out is execution. DOGEPAY enables crypto-to-fiat transfers across 30+ currencies with zero FX fees and near-instant settlement. For gaming, players can earn rewards and cash out instantly, eliminating traditional delays and fees.
For anyone evaluating the best cryptos to buy now, this combination of real payment infrastructure + gaming integration creates continuous token demand. $DOGEBALL is used for transaction fees, staking, and ecosystem access—ensuring utility-driven value rather than passive holding.
At its current price of $0.0004, DOGEBALL is expected to launch at $0.015. That translates to a potential ROI exceeding 3,600% within the presale phase alone.
This isn’t theoretical—it’s based on defined launch pricing. Add to that the PAY35 bonus code, which instantly boosts holdings by 35%, and the numbers become even more compelling.
Then there’s the VIP incentive: Buyer of the Week. Top buyers receive a 100% bonus on their entire weekly spend. The competition is real—recently, a $2131 buy at 23:58 UTC was overtaken by a $2320 purchase at 23:59 UTC to claim the top spot. That level of last-minute activity signals serious investor intent.
With 2nd May near, the remaining allocation at $0.0004 is shrinking fast.
Don’t Wait for 2nd May—Position Yourself Now
With the presale ending on 2nd May, waiting means risking higher entry—or missing out entirely.

TRON (TRX) continues to show strong network usage, especially in stablecoin transfers, where it handles a significant share of USDT transactions globally. This consistent activity supports price stability and gradual growth.
Recent forecasts suggest TRX could trade within a moderate range, with incremental upside rather than sharp spikes. Its strength lies in adoption and throughput—but that maturity also limits rapid ROI potential compared to early-stage entries like DOGEBALL.
For investors, TRON represents reliability—but not urgency.
Cardano (ADA) remains focused on long-term scalability through upgrades and ecosystem development. Its layered architecture continues to attract developers building decentralized applications.
Price predictions indicate steady upward movement rather than short-term surges. ADA’s value proposition is rooted in long-term adoption, which positions it differently from presale opportunities offering immediate upside.
Compared to DOGEBALL crypto presale 2026, Cardano offers stability—but lacks the time-sensitive entry advantage currently available before 2nd May.

When comparing all three, DOGEBALL stands out clearly among the best cryptos to buy now—not just for its utility, but for its timing.
The numbers are clear. The demand is visible. And the deadline—2nd May—is near.
The DOGEBALL presale is not open-ended. Once it closes, the opportunity to enter at this level disappears.
Act now. Secure your position. And enter before the price gap becomes reality.

Website: https://dogeballtoken.com/
X: https://x.com/dogeballtoken
Telegram Chat: https://t.me/dogeballtoken
DOGEBALL is among the best cryptos to buy now due to its low $0.0004 entry and expected $0.015 launch. The DOGEBALL crypto presale 2026 offers strong ROI potential before 2nd May closes.
Presale projects like DOGEBALL show higher upside due to early pricing, strong utility, and demand. Its payment and gaming ecosystem supports scalable growth beyond launch.
DOGEBALL crypto presale stands out with $228K+ raised, 820+ participants, and bonuses like PAY35 and 100% weekly rewards, making it a strong opportunity before the presale ends on 2nd May.
The post Crypto Market Alert: Best Cryptos to Buy Now as DOGEBALL Presale Closes Soon with TRON and Cardano in Focus appeared first on Blockonomi.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman apologized to Tumbler Ridge officials for not alerting police about a banned account. The company had removed the account months before a February mass shooting. Altman acknowledged the failure in a public letter released Friday.
Sam Altman sent the letter to leaders in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia. He admitted the company did not notify authorities after banning the suspect’s account. He wrote, “I am deeply sorry that we did not alert law enforcement.”
He explained that OpenAI banned the account in June 2025. The company cited activity tied to the “furtherance of violent activities.” However, internal reviewers decided the posts did not meet the threshold for imminent harm.
Altman stated that OpenAI considered contacting the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Yet the company concluded the content lacked a credible and immediate threat. As a result, staff removed the account but did not escalate the case.
He added, “While I know words can never be enough, I believe an apology is necessary.” He recognized the “harm and irreversible loss” suffered by the community. He expressed sympathy for families who lost loved ones.
The February attack unfolded in Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia. Police identified 18-year-old Jesse Van Rootselaar as the suspect. Authorities said she killed her mother and stepbrother before attacking a local school.
At Tumbler Ridge Secondary School, five children and one educator died. Twenty-five others sustained injuries during the shooting. Police confirmed that Van Rootselaar later died by suicide.
Altman said he spoke with Mayor Darryl Krakowka and Premier David Eby. He stated they shared the anger and sadness felt across the town. He said they agreed that a public apology was necessary.
He wrote, “No one should ever have to endure a tragedy like this.” He added, “I cannot imagine anything worse in this world than losing a child.” He pledged to work with authorities to prevent similar events.
After the attack, OpenAI disclosed that its systems had flagged the account months earlier. The company said it reviewed the content under its safety policies. It confirmed the account violated usage rules and led to a ban.
The firm stated that it weighed whether to alert police. However, reviewers determined the material did not show imminent danger. Therefore, OpenAI did not contact law enforcement at that time.
Premier David Eby responded publicly on X. He wrote, “The apology is necessary, and yet grossly insufficient.” He added that officials will continue supporting Mayor Krakowka and residents.
The letter emerged as other investigations examine technology platforms and violent incidents. Florida authorities are reviewing whether ChatGPT influenced a 2025 shooting suspect. Separately, a lawsuit claims Google’s Gemini deepened a man’s delusions before his death.
Altman prepares for a civil trial with Elon Musk in federal court this week. The apology letter marks his latest public statement. He reaffirmed his commitment to work with government leaders on safety measures.
The post OpenAI’s Sam Altman Regrets Not Alerting Police Before Shooting appeared first on Blockonomi.
Earlier this month, it seemed like Ethereum (ETH) was on its way to reclaim $2,500, but the bears intercepted the move.
Currently, the asset trades at around $2,300, and some analysts believe a more substantial correction could be knocking on the door. On the other hand, certain on-chain indicators suggest that the bulls might regain control in the near future.
According to X user Ted, the asset is “looking weak” right now. He claimed that Bitcoin has reclaimed its key level, while the second-largest cryptocurrency keeps getting rejected from the $2,400 resistance zone.
The analyst added that the major support zone for ETH is around $2,200-$2,250 and claimed that a drop to that range won’t be a surprise before a rebound forms.
Prior to that, Ted has been paying attention to the asset’s sideways movement lately. He predicted that this week would be “very crucial” for the market, citing uncertainty surrounding the ongoing peace talks between the USA and Iran.
“If Ethereum manages to reclaim the $2,400 level, it’ll tap the $2,470-$2,500 liquidity. And if it loses the $2,300 zone, a retest of the $2,150-$2,200 support level will happen quickly,” he stated.
Crypto Tony – a popular trader with almost 600,000 followers on X – also weighed in, saying they await a plunge to the support level of around $2,290, which could offer the opportunity for opening a possible long position.
Contrary to the aforementioned skepticism, several metrics suggest that ETH could be on the verge of a price rally. First on the list is the Relative Strength Index (RSI), which has dropped to 30. This means that the asset has entered oversold territory and could be due for an upward move.

Next is the declining amount of ETH stored on exchanges. CryptoQuant’s data shows that the figure recently tumbled to a nearly 10-year low of approximately 14.47 million. This development is seen as bullish since it reduces the immediate selling pressure.

Last but not least, there is renewed interest from institutional investors. According to SoSoValue, spot ETH ETFs have seen significant inflows lately, indicating that pension funds, hedge funds, and other big players are ramping up their exposure to the asset, forcing the issuers of these products to back the purchased shares with actual Ethereum.

The post Ethereum Under Pressure: Analyst Warns of a Potential Drop as ETH Is ‘Looking Weak’ appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Toobit is one of the most popular and award-winning international cryptocurrency exchanges. Today, it has announced a 150,000 USDT reward pool for its peer-to-peer (P2P) trading community. The event will start from April 27th and run through May 18th this year. It invites active traders to take part in a series of deposit and trading challenges, which will enable them to earn various bonuses and additional benefits.
The event is structured in a way that intends to reward both newcomers and existing high-volume traders. This will happen through two main activities.
Activity 1: New participants who make their first P2P deposit and engage in futures trading during their first week can claim a cumulative 100 USDT in Trial Funds.
Activity 2: Based on net P2P deposit volume, traders can receive up to 150 USDT in rewards and VIP Trial Passes, granting APR boosts of up to 4% on Toobit Earn products.

To take part and ensure eligibility, traders will have to register on the official campaign page.
Moreover, additional information regarding milestones, reward schedules, and terms is fully available on the Toobit announcement page.
It’s important to understand that this particular initiative follows the rollout of P2P trading on Toobit earlier this year. The move introduced a marketplace for direct USDT exchange with no transaction fees, as well as support for more than 30 fiat currencies and integrated security measures, such as the T+1 withdrawal protocol and escrow protection.
This reflects a broader industry trend in 2026, where the shift toward P2P solutions is supported and encouraged. The global cryptocurrency user base has already reached more than 560 million as of the first quarter of this year, with P2P transaction volumes in emerging markets increasing by 28% year-over-year.
As the mainstream integration of tokenized assets continues accelerating through the maturing digital economy, the demand for secure and direct fiat-to-crypto gateways has reached an all-time high, with P2P trading now accounting for a rough 22% of global retail entry-point volume.
For more information about Toobit, visit: Website
The post Toobit Rewards P2P Traders with 150,000 USDT, VIP Perks, and APR Boosts appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Investment products tied to digital assets saw $1.2 billion in inflows after extending their run to four consecutive positive weeks. CoinShares revealed that the inflows likely reflect improving institutional interest, supported by Bitcoin reaching its highest price since early February.
However, some caution remains in the market as participants await the April 28-29 FOMC decision. Total assets under management increased to $155 billion, the highest level since February 1, though it remains far below the $263 billion peak recorded in October 2025.
According to CoinShares’ Digital Asset Fund Flows Weekly Report, Bitcoin attracted $933 million in inflows, which pushed its year-to-date total to $4.0 billion. Short-Bitcoin products also brought in $16.5 million, close to the previous month’s average. This indicated steady but not increased hedging activity.
Ethereum, too, recorded $192 million over the past week – its third straight week above $190 million. Solana and XRP saw $31.8 million and $25 million, respectively, while Chainlink added $6.8 million during the same period. Litecoin and Sui also raked in smaller capital influxes of $0.5 million and $0.4 million, respectively.
Meanwhile, blockchain equity ETFs drew $617 million over the past three weeks and set record weekly levels amid growing interest in gaining exposure to the broader technology and digital asset sector among investors in recent weeks.
The United States led regional activity with $1.1 billion in inflows. Germany followed with $61.7 million, more than double the previous week. Switzerland saw a turnaround as it posted $35.2 million after recording $138 million in outflows a week earlier. Canada added $15 million, which was indicative of a broader participation across regions compared to recent weeks.
Australia and Brazil reported smaller additions of $0.8 million and $0.5 million, respectively. Besides, modest outflows were recorded in several markets, including Hong Kong, France, the Netherlands, Italy, and Sweden, reflecting mixed sentiment outside the leading regions during the same period.
Even as inflows stayed consistent, QCP Capital noted that the crypto market’s trajectory is being influenced by geopolitical factors.
BTC and ETH initially moved higher, but gains were quickly reversed as new geopolitical concerns emerged. Despite this, Bitcoin remains up more than 15% this month, supported by steady ETF demand and continued accumulation.
The firm observed that a move above $82,000 is crucial for further upside, with a CME gap near that level. Positioning remains cautious, and negative funding rates mean that there are chances for a short squeeze. Upcoming earnings, inflation data, and the FOMC decision are expected to guide near-term direction.
The post Crypto Funds Pull in $1.2B as Bitcoin Rally Revives Institutional Demand appeared first on CryptoPotato.
XRP is trading around $1.42 as the broader crypto market finds its footing following weeks of macro-driven turbulence. With Bitcoin regaining some composure and risk appetite gradually returning to digital assets, Ripple’s token is showing early signs of building momentum. The question now is whether this is the beginning of a genuine breakout or simply another false dawn at the upper edge of a months-long descending channel.
After spending the better part of Q1 2026 grinding sideways near the lows, XRP has quietly built a modest recovery setup. The asset is currently pressing against the upper boundary of the descending channel that has governed the price action since the October 2025 peak near $3.00, and for the first time in several months. The RSI has been hovering above 50, signaling that buyers are showing up with slightly more conviction than before.
The immediate overhead test is the channel’s upper boundary and the 100-day moving average, located around $1.50. Above that, the $1.80 zone is a wide supply band that served as support in late 2025 before flipping to resistance following the February breakdown. The 200-day MA is declining into that same area, adding structural weight to the resistance cluster.
A confirmed daily close above $1.80 would be the first meaningful technical break in this correction, opening the door toward the $2.40 supply zone where a heavier distribution band sits. On the downside, the trendline that price reclaimed in recent weeks and the February wick low at $1.20 remains the hard floor.

Against Bitcoin, XRP tells a different story. The pair is trading at 1,818 sats, sitting above the lower boundary of its own descending channel near 1,600 sats. While the USDT pair is challenging resistance from below, the BTC pair is declining, reflecting the fact that XRP has continued to underperform Bitcoin throughout this cycle’s corrective phase. The 100-day MA (~2,000 sats) and 200-day MA (~2,100 sats) both sit far above the current price and are still trending downward, with no sign of flattening.
The RSI on this pair hovers around 40, and there is no comparable bullish momentum building here to what is visible on the USDT chart. If the recent major low at 1,792 sats breaks on a closing basis, the next meaningful support lies at the 1,500 sats zone, with a deeper extension toward 1,200 sats possible.
On the other hand, a genuine recovery requires, at a minimum, a reclaim of the 2,000 sat level and the declining moving averages. Until XRP/BTC can clear that threshold, any dollar-denominated gains are more likely a product of Bitcoin strength lifting the broader market than XRP-specific outperformance.

The post Ripple Price Analysis: XRP Finally Shows Bullish Momentum Signs After Weeks of Consolidation appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Ethereum is trading above $2.3k as April draws to a close, ending the month in a frustratingly familiar position. It is pressing against the same $2.4k resistance zone it has now tested repeatedly since mid-March without a clean resolution. ETH sits at the threshold of what could either be its most significant breakout in months or yet another rejection at the gate.
What has genuinely changed on the daily chart over the past four weeks is not the resistance. The $2.4k zone has held firm throughout. Yet, each recent pullback has found support at a higher level, first the $2k area, then $2.1k, and now the higher trendline of the broken channel and the 100-day moving average around $2.2k are the support elements to keep an eye on. The sequence of higher lows, sustained over multiple weeks, represents quiet accumulation building beneath a stubborn ceiling.
The RSI also remains in the high-50s, which is not the kind of momentum collapse that has preceded prior failed breakouts, but still not showing enough strength for another push toward $2.4k. If the market fails to break above the mentioned level, the 100-day moving average would be the first downside target, and if it fails to hold, the price could fall all the way back below $2k and toward the critical $1.8k area that began this mild recovery.

On the 4-hour chart, a steep ascending trendline that emerged from the late-March lows is now providing dynamic support near $2.3k, keeping the short-term structure of higher lows intact. ETH is currently sitting directly on that trendline, with the RSI dropping to mid-40s following the most recent pullback from $2.4k.
At the moment, the most notable event is the trendline being tested near the $2.3k mark. Holding it keeps the bullish sequence alive and sets up another attempt at $2.4k, while a close below it opens $2.1k-$2k as the next area of interest. A breakdown of the trendline, followed by a close below the recent significant lows at $2.25k, would be the signal that a deeper pullback is coming once more.

Unlike Bitcoin, where funding rates have been persistently and deeply negative throughout the recent dataset, Ethereum’s funding picture is more mixed. The current reading of -0.0044 is negative, but the chart shows that ETH’s funding has been oscillating between modestly negative and modestly positive for much of April, rather than sustaining the unrelenting red bar dominance seen on Bitcoin’s equivalent chart.
This distinction matters. It suggests ETH’s derivatives market is not as aggressively short-positioned as Bitcoin’s, which means the potential short squeeze fuel that exists for BTC is less pronounced for ETH. On one hand, this reduces the risk of a violent downside flush if price breaks lower.
On the other hand, it means ETH will not benefit as dramatically from a forced short-covering cascade if the broader market rallies sharply. The more neutral funding environment reflects a market that is genuinely uncertain about ETH’s direction rather than one that is actively fighting a trend, and in that sense, the funding data is an honest mirror of the price action itself.

The post Ethereum Price Prediction: Most Significant Breakout Ahead or Another Painful Rejection? appeared first on CryptoPotato.