Jane Street's resumed Bitcoin trading amid scrutiny highlights ongoing tensions between market manipulation allegations and regulatory oversight.
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Institutional inflows into Bitcoin ETFs signal a shift in market dynamics, potentially leading to a more sustained rally despite prevailing fear.
The post Bitcoin eyes eight straight green days as ETF inflows fuel the rally appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitmine's massive Ethereum holdings amplify market influence, posing risks of price volatility and liquidity challenges if liquidation occurs.
The post Bitmine buys 60,999 ether, boosting holdings to 4.6M tokens worth over $10B appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The joint venture could significantly enhance AI integration in business operations, reshaping industry standards and boosting economic growth.
The post OpenAI in advanced talks with major private equity firms for $10B joint venture: Report appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Abra's Nasdaq listing could accelerate mainstream adoption of digital asset management, reshaping financial services and investment landscapes.
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South Korea Fines Bithumb $24M, Imposes 6-Month Partial Suspension Over AML Violations
South Korea’s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) has fined cryptocurrency exchange Bithumb 36.8 billion won ($24.6 million) and ordered a six-month partial suspension of new-user services after uncovering millions of anti-money laundering (AML) violations, according to local reporting.
The FIU’s investigation found roughly 6.65 million breaches of the country’s AML and customer verification rules. About 3.55 million involved failures to verify customer identities, while 3.04 million cases concerned transactions that should have been blocked but were allowed.
Authorities also identified 45,772 transactions with 18 unregistered overseas exchanges.
The sanctions, part of ongoing regulatory oversight of South Korea’s top crypto platforms, include a reprimand for Bithumb’s CEO and a six-month suspension for the exchange’s reporting officer.
Existing customers can continue trading, while the restrictions primarily affect new user account activity, including deposits and withdrawals.
Bithumb, founded in 2014, is one of South Korea’s largest exchanges by trading volume. The fine is the country’s largest imposed on a virtual asset exchange, slightly surpassing a 35.2 billion won penalty handed to Upbit in 2025.
The violations were uncovered during on-site inspections of South Korea’s five largest crypto exchanges between 2024 and 2025.
Regulators have emphasized that strict compliance with customer verification and AML obligations is critical to maintaining market trust.
The announcement comes just weeks after Bithumb accidentally sent billions of dollars worth of Bitcoin to users during a promotional event.
The exchange had planned to distribute small cash rewards through a “Random Box” event at around 6 p.m. local time. Winners were supposed to receive between 20,000 and 50,000 Korean won.
Instead, staff reportedly entered the payment unit as Bitcoin rather than won.
As a result, some users received at least 2,000 BTC each, worth roughly 196 billion won per person based on prices near 98 million won per Bitcoin at the time, according to social media screenshots and accounts.
The operational error briefly caused Bitcoin prices on the platform to drop over 10% below broader market levels. Bithumb stated the incident did not result in any customer losses.
The FIU will finalize the fine after giving Bithumb at least 10 days to submit its opinion.
Authorities said the enforcement action signals continued tightening of crypto market oversight in South Korea.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading near $74,000.
This post South Korea Fines Bithumb $24M, Imposes 6-Month Partial Suspension Over AML Violations first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
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Bitcoin Price Roars Above $74,000 as Market Sentiment Improves
The price of Bitcoin pushed above $74,000 early Monday, as easing geopolitical tensions and improving risk sentiment helped lift the broader crypto market.
The move capped one of bitcoin’s strongest weekly performances since the outbreak of the Iran–Israel War in late February.
The rally coincided with signs of de-escalation in the Middle East. Two commercial tankers transited the Strait of Hormuz on Sunday for the first time since the conflict began, after Iran indicated its shipping restrictions would apply only to vessels linked to its adversaries.
At the same time, Donald Trump said the United States was in talks with Tehran, helping calm energy markets. Oil prices retreated from recent highs, the U.S. dollar weakened and equity futures turned positive, signaling a broader shift toward risk assets.
The move higher also triggered a wave of short liquidations in crypto derivatives markets. Roughly $344 million in positions were wiped out over the past 24 hours, with bearish traders accounting for more than 80% of the total, according to Bitcoin Magazine Pro data.
Market participants are now watching whether the bitcoin price can hold momentum above the $74,000 region.
A sustained break could open the door to a move toward $80,000, a level that previously served as support late last year before prices slid during the early-2026 correction.
For now, traders are also bracing for macro signals from the upcoming policy meeting at the Federal Reserve, which begins Tuesday and could influence risk appetite across global markets.
Later on Wednesday, the market will hear the Fed’s interest-rate decision and Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference, with rates expected to remain steady.
Despite being down from its October peak, Bitcoin price has outperformed some traditional assets during the conflict, though volatility could increase depending on short-term selling and Fed signals.
Earlier today, Strategy, led by Michael Saylor, bought 22,337 more bitcoin for $1.57 billion, raising its total holdings to 761,068 BTC. The average acquisition bitcoin price cost is $75,696 per coin, giving the holdings a current market value of about $50 billion.
Tokyo-listed investment firm Metaplanet said they also secured approximately $255 million from global institutional investors as it accelerates a corporate strategy centered on accumulating Bitcoin. The company has additional warrants that could lift total funding to roughly $531 million for bitcoin purchases.
At the time of writing, the bitcoin price is near $73,800.

This post Bitcoin Price Roars Above $74,000 as Market Sentiment Improves first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
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Metaplanet Raises $255 Million, Eyes $531 Million Bitcoin Buying Spree
Tokyo-listed investment firm Metaplanet has secured approximately $255 million from global institutional investors as it accelerates a corporate strategy centered on accumulating Bitcoin, with additional warrants that could lift total funding to roughly $531 million.
The capital was raised through a placement of new shares priced at 380 yen ($2.39) each, representing a small premium to the market price.
The financing package also includes fixed-strike warrants exercisable at 410 yen ($2.57) per share, which carry a 10% premium to the placement price and could generate an additional $276 million if fully exercised before their March 2028 expiration, according to CEO Simon Gerovich.
The fundraising effort forms part of the company’s broader push to expand its bitcoin treasury. Metaplanet said it intends to allocate up to 56.9 billion yen, or about $357 million, toward purchasing additional bitcoin between April 2026 and March 2028.
The firm currently holds 35,102 BTC, valued at roughly $2.6 billion at recent market prices. The holdings place Metaplanet among the largest corporate bitcoin treasuries globally, though still well behind industry leaders such as Strategy and MARA Holdings.
Metaplanet’s management has outlined aggressive accumulation targets. The company aims to increase its holdings to 100,000 BTC by the end of 2026 and 210,000 BTC by the end of 2027, part of a strategy to position bitcoin as the centerpiece of its balance sheet and long-term capital structure.
Beyond the share placement and fixed-price warrants, the company’s board also authorized the issuance of 100 million new “MS Warrants.”
These instruments are tied to the company’s modified net asset value, or mNAV, a metric comparing the firm’s market capitalization with the value of its bitcoin holdings.
The mechanism allows warrants to be exercised only when Metaplanet’s shares trade above a specified multiple of that metric, a structure designed to ensure any new equity issuance increases bitcoin holdings on a per-share basis.
The company also suspended the exercise of older warrants representing up to 210 million shares, a move intended to limit dilution and prioritize the new financing structure tied more directly to its bitcoin treasury strategy.
Not all of the newly raised capital will go toward bitcoin purchases. According to company disclosures, about 21.1 billion yen ($132 million) will be used to repay borrowings under Metaplanet’s credit facility, while roughly 6.3 billion yen ($39.5 million) will be allocated to support its bitcoin income generation business, including margin collateral for options underwriting.
Metaplanet currently maintains a $500 million credit facility backed by bitcoin collateral, with approximately $280 million drawn as of March 11. The company has said it aims to keep borrowings below 10% of the net asset value of its bitcoin holdings to maintain financial flexibility.
Shares of Metaplanet rose nearly 5% Monday as bitcoin climbed above $73,000, reflecting investor interest in companies adopting treasury strategies tied directly to the digital asset.
The firm has rapidly expanded its holdings over the past year, increasing from fewer than 2,000 BTC at the start of 2025 to more than 35,000 BTC today.
Last week, the company announced plans to expand beyond holding bitcoin by launching two subsidiaries—Metaplanet Ventures and Metaplanet Asset Management—and disclosed a planned investment in Japanese stablecoin issuer JPYC Inc.
The company said Metaplanet Ventures would deploy about ¥4 billion ($25 million) over the coming years to back startups building bitcoin financial infrastructure in Japan, including lending, payments, custody, derivatives and compliance tools.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading near $74,000.
Earlier today, Strategy, led by Michael Saylor, bought 22,337 more bitcoin for $1.57 billion, raising its total holdings to 761,068 BTC. The average acquisition cost is $75,696 per coin, giving the holdings a current market value of about $50 billion.

This post Metaplanet Raises $255 Million, Eyes $531 Million Bitcoin Buying Spree first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
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Strategy (MSTR) Spends $1.57 Billion to Buy 22,337 More Bitcoin, Holdings Reach 738,731 BTC
Strategy, the bitcoin treasury company led by executive chairman Michael Saylor, purchased another 22,337 bitcoin for about $1.57 billion last week, continuing one of the largest corporate accumulation strategies in the crypto market.
The company disclosed in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that the purchases took place between March 9 and March 13 at an average price of $70,194 per coin. The acquisition brings the firm’s total holdings to 761,068 bitcoin.
Strategy said its cumulative bitcoin holdings were acquired for roughly $57.61 billion at an average price of about $75,696 per coin. At the current price near $74,000, the company’s holdings carry a market value close to $50 billion.
The stash represents more than 3.4% of the fixed 21 million supply of Bitcoin, reinforcing MSTR’s status as the largest corporate holder of the asset.
Last week, Strategy purchased 17,994 bitcoin for about $1.28 billion at an average price of $70,946 per coin, bringing the company’s total holdings to 738,731 bitcoin.
At the time of writing, Strategy’s stock (MSTR) is trading up 4.40% in pre-market. Bitcoin is trading slightly shy of $74,000.
The latest purchases were financed through a mix of equity sales and preferred stock issuance.
The purchases were funded through at-the-market sales of Strategy’s Class A common stock, MSTR, along with issuances of its perpetual Stretch preferred shares, STRC.
The firm also operates several preferred-equity issuance programs tied to its capital-raising strategy. These include at-the-market programs for STRK, STRC, STRF, and STRD totaling $21 billion, $4.2 billion, $2.1 billion, and $4.2 billion respectively.
Those offerings sit alongside the company’s broader “42/42” initiative, a plan to raise $84 billion through a combination of equity sales and convertible notes to fund additional bitcoin purchases through 2027.
Each preferred share class targets a different investor profile.
STRD carries a 10% non-cumulative dividend and is non-convertible, positioning it as the highest-risk, highest-return option.
STRK pays an 8% non-cumulative dividend and includes a conversion feature that offers potential equity upside. STRF, also non-convertible, provides a 10% cumulative dividend and is structured as the most conservative of the offerings.
STRC features a cumulative dividend with a variable rate paid monthly, designed to adjust over time and keep the shares trading close to their $100 par value.
Saylor hinted at the acquisition before the official disclosure in a post on social media that referenced Strategy’s bitcoin tracker. The message stated that “Stretch the Orange Dots.,” a reference to the firm continuing to buy throughout the price changes.

This post Strategy (MSTR) Spends $1.57 Billion to Buy 22,337 More Bitcoin, Holdings Reach 738,731 BTC first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
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AI Pivot Won’t Save Everyone, Wintermute Tells Bitcoin Miners
Bitcoin miners are caught in the tightest squeeze of the network’s history, and a new Wintermute report argues that simply waiting for the next bull run is no longer a strategy.
Instead, the firm says miners will have to reinvent themselves as infrastructure and treasury managers if they want to make it to the next halving.
Wintermute analyst Jasper De Maere says the current mining cycle is structurally different from prior ones in 2018 and 2022. Bitcoin’s design cuts block rewards in half every four years, but this time the price has not doubled over the same window, which means miner revenue is shrinking in real terms.
On a rolling four‑year basis, Bitcoin has only returned about 1.15x in this epoch, far below the 10x–20x multiples seen in earlier cycles.
In past cycles, huge price gains covered up a lot of problems. Miners could count on bull markets to bail out weak margins after each halving.
Today, with institutions, ETFs, and corporate treasuries in the mix, Bitcoin trades more like a mainstream macro asset, and those explosive 20x runs are less likely.
For miners that built their business on the assumption of permanent hypergrowth, Wintermute frames this as a regime change, not a bad quarter.
Under the hood, Bitcoin mining has a very simple cost structure: energy and compute. That simplicity means there are not many ways to protect profits when revenue falls. Wintermute’s analysis shows gross margins in this epoch peaked around 30%, a level that marked the bottom during prior bear markets, not the top.
Earlier epochs saw long stretches where miners enjoyed 70–80% margins; now, the “good times” look more like prior stress points.
Transaction fees are not saving the day either. Fee spikes tied to hype cycles and mempool congestion show up on charts, but they fade fast and rarely contribute more than a few percent of total miner revenue over time.
Wintermute notes that even when you include fees, the margin lines for each cycle barely move apart, especially in the current epoch. In other words, the protocol’s built‑in “second revenue stream” is not acting as a reliable backstop.
One path out of the squeeze is getting plenty of attention: pivoting into high‑performance computing (HPC) and AI workloads. Big tech firms and AI startups are racing to lock in power and data center capacity, and they do not want to wait five to ten years for new grid connections and construction.
Miners, who already control cheap power and built‑out sites, are a natural shortcut.
Wintermute points out that sites once valued at roughly 1–7 dollars per watt as pure mining operations have changed hands at close to 18 dollars per watt after being repositioned for AI compute, helped by deals like HUT’s work with Google and Anthropic.
Public‑market investors have rewarded miners that announce credible AI plans with higher valuations and cheaper capital through equity and convertible debt.
The catch is that not every miner has the location quality, balance sheet, or operational capacity to turn into a data‑center business.
That is where Wintermute sees a second, underused lever: active balance sheet management. Miners together hold close to 1% of all Bitcoin, a legacy of the “HODL” playbook that dominated earlier cycles.
At the same time, many listed miners have been selling down parts of their treasuries to cover tighter margins and debt, with some even wiping out holdings altogether.
Instead of letting reserves sit idle until they are dumped in a liquidity crunch, Wintermute argues miners should treat BTC like a working asset. On the “active” side, that means using derivatives strategies such as covered calls and cash‑secured puts to earn yield on holdings, at the cost of taking some market risk.
On the “passive” side, miners can deploy coins into on‑chain lending markets, including a new wrapped‑BTC market on Wildcat that Wintermute has highlighted, to generate interest income.
Wintermute’s bottom line is that Bitcoin’s design is working, but the easy era for miners is over. Difficulty can still adjust, yet it cannot overcome slower price growth, a fee market that has not scaled, and rising energy costs that eat into every block reward.
The AI pivot will likely reshape the upper tier of the industry, turning some miners into full‑blown infrastructure companies.
This post AI Pivot Won’t Save Everyone, Wintermute Tells Bitcoin Miners first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
As Bitcoin climbs and holds above $73,000, several of Wall Street’s biggest private-credit funds have capped, stretched, or halted withdrawals, according to recent filings and reports tied to BlackRock, Blackstone, Morgan Stanley, Cliffwater, and Blue Owl.
JPMorgan has also marked down some private-credit loan portfolios and reduced lending against parts of the same market, a sign that the pressure is moving beyond investor queues and into the financing that supports the asset class.
Investors asked to withdraw more money than several funds were willing or able to return on schedule. The pattern points to a market built on steady income and smoother marks running into a basic liquidity problem when demand for cash rises: the underlying loans do not trade like public bonds and are harder to sell quickly.
The gap between promised access and actual liquidity sits at the center of the issue. It is also the part most likely to travel beyond private-markets specialists.
For crypto, the distinction is clear even before any price reaction enters the picture. A gated private fund and a 24/7 traded asset handle liquidity in very different ways. One depends on quarterly windows and the manager's discretion. The other trades continuously, for better and for worse.
The pressure is visible in the numbers.
| Firm / fund | Fund size | Withdrawal requests | Allowed or standard cap | Reported outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BlackRock / HPS Corporate Lending Fund | $26B | 9.3% | 5% | Capped repurchases |
| Blackstone / Bcred | $82B | 7.9% | 5% | Record request level above threshold |
| Morgan Stanley / North Haven Private Income Fund | $7.6B | 10.9% | 5% | Capped withdrawals |
| Cliffwater Corporate Lending Fund | $33B | 14% | 7% paid, 5% guaranteed floor | Limited withdrawals |
| Blue Owl | $1.6B | Not stated in the cited report | Changed terms | Quarterly withdrawals halted |
| JPMorgan | $22B exposure cited in coverage | Not applicable | Not applicable | Reduced lending against some collateral |
The ratios are more telling than the top-line figures. BlackRock’s fund faced demand equal to about 1.86 times its 5% cap. Morgan Stanley’s fund faced roughly 2.18 times its cap. Cliffwater saw requests equal to 2 times the 7% it planned to honor, and 2.8 times the standard 5% gate. Blackstone’s Bcred reached 1.58 times the 5% threshold that lets it restrict payouts. Those are not tiny overruns.
So far, the market has not had to digest a clear wave of forced sales at disclosed discounts. That marks the dividing line between a liquidity-management problem and a valuation problem. Still, JPMorgan’s move adds a harder edge.
When a bank lends less against private-credit assets after marking down some portfolios, it changes the economics around those funds even if investors never read the filings. Financing gets tighter. Asset sales become more expensive. Confidence takes another hit.
The filings and reports point to the same mechanism across several products. Private-credit funds offered investors periodic ways to redeem, but the assets under them are private loans that do not move through a deep public market.
Managers can smooth marks in calm periods because they are not forced to print a public price every minute. But when redemptions exceed the cap, the smoothing stops looking like stability and starts looking like a delay.
That distinction shapes where the next pressure may show up. If managers can continue to meet a portion of requests each quarter while keeping loan performance intact, the situation stays inside the box marked limited liquidity.
If requests keep outpacing those windows, managers will have fewer clean options. They can continue to ration cash. They can sell loans. Or they can change fund terms. Each of those choices carries consequences for the market’s growth outlook.
The private-credit market has grown to about $1.8T, according to an IMF note. That scale helps explain why a cluster of redemption caps now reads as more than product-level noise. The system does not need a crisis to feel a slowdown. It only needs investors and lenders to act more cautiously at the same time.
That caution is already visible in public signals around the sector. A Barron’s report cited in earlier coverage said the VanEck Alternative Asset Manager ETF was down 23% in 2026. That shows that public markets are already repricing the firms tied most closely to the trade.
For Bitcoin, the cleanest interpretation is structural and centered on market design. Crypto markets are volatile, but they are transparent about that volatility in a way private-credit products are not.
A holder can sell Bitcoin at any time the market is open to them, which is effectively all the time.
A holder in a private-credit vehicle may learn that liquidity exists only inside a quarterly gate. The difference describes how access works, rather than settling the question of which asset is safer.
The private-credit pitch was built on two ideas at once: stable income and tolerable access. Recent events have not yet disproved the income side. They have, however, tested the access side in public. JPMorgan’s tighter lending, tied to marked-down collateral, adds a second layer of pressure because it suggests the firms financing the system are also adjusting their view of the risk.
The next question is whether managers can clear the queue without changing how the market prices these loans.
The bull case for the sector is a contained slowdown. In that version, funds continue to honor a portion of withdrawals, managers sell selected assets without taking large disclosed hits, and banks other than JPMorgan do not rush to widen haircuts or pull back financing across the board.
The pressure then stays concentrated in products with heavier retail or wealth-channel exposure. Fundraising slows, but the market avoids a broad reset in valuations.
For crypto, that setup gives Bitcoin a narrative edge without requiring a macro accident. The contrast is simple: Wall Street products can ration exits, while Bitcoin remains continuously tradable. That framing can help BTC relative to traditional risk assets even if the direct flow link remains thin.
The bear case is more mechanical. If withdrawal requests remain above caps for another quarter and managers begin selling assets into a thinner secondary market, the focus shifts from access to pricing.
A loan sold below the last stated value becomes a reference point for the next trade. Once that happens, lenders may tighten terms further, other banks may follow JPMorgan, and investors may question whether net asset values are keeping pace with market reality. In that version, liquidity pressure can feed valuation pressure, and valuation pressure can feed more withdrawals.
In a broader liquidity event, Bitcoin often behaves first like a liquid asset. Investors sell what they can. The safer argument, based on the material cited above, is that the issue strengthens Bitcoin’s long-term case as an asset without redemption windows, while leaving short-term price direction open.
There is also a middle ground, and it may be the most likely one. Private credit can keep growing while losing part of the sales pitch that helped it reach a wider base of investors. A market can survive a queue.
What becomes harder to sustain is the language that treats those products like near-cash income tools. Once withdrawals exceed caps across several large names, the burden shifts. Managers then have to show that limited liquidity is a manageable feature, rather than the defining fact of the product.
For now, the market has a cluster of capped or halted exits, a bank that is lending less against some of the same assets, and a set of public numbers that show the line is getting longer.
The next quarter will show whether managers are simply pacing withdrawals, or whether the industry has to start proving what those loans are worth when someone actually needs to sell them.
The post Over $172B in Wall St private credit funds limit withdrawals as investors rush for the exit while Bitcoin climbs appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Circle’s USD Coin (USDC) has officially unseated Tether’s USDT in transfer volume for the first time in seven years. The shift marks a defining moment for digital assets, cleanly splitting stablecoin leadership into two distinct categories: total supply and transactional velocity.
While Tether remains the undisputed heavyweight in the stablecoin market, USDC has become the primary lubricant for the actual movement of capital across the cryptocurrency ecosystem.
According to a recent research note from Mizuho, USDC accounted for 64% of the transfer volume between the two major stablecoins.
That translates to roughly $2.2 trillion in adjusted transaction volume for USDC, compared to $1.3 trillion for USDT. Mizuho noted this is the first time since 2019 that USDC has led by this metric.
The gap became impossible to ignore in February. Data compiled by Allium pegged total stablecoin transfer volume at $1.8 trillion for the month. Within that pool, USDC was responsible for approximately $1.26 trillion, while USDT accounted for just $514 billion.
Yet the broader market's supply structure continues to heavily favor Tether.
CryptoSlate's data shows that USDT has a massive $184 billion in total market capitalization, while USDC's supply is at roughly $79 billion. By those figures, the circulating supply of USDT remains 2.36 times that of USDC.
This stark divergence between dormant supply and active transfer volume has become the defining feature of the current market. It also highlights the growing importance of underlying settlement rails.
Mizuho researchers attributed the transfer flip to significantly faster on-chain usage, noting that adjusted stablecoin volumes grew more than 90% year-over-year. According to the firm, transaction velocity is increasing rapidly, signaling that stablecoins are changing hands more frequently across a much wider array of financial workflows.
While Circle issues USDC natively across 30 different blockchains, one network sits at the undeniable center of this newfound velocity.
By the numbers, the Solana blockchain provides the clearest link between the rising USDC transfer totals and the underlying market structure that demands constant, repeated movement.
Data from Grayscale illustrates the sheer scale of this activity. Solana processed a staggering $650 billion in stablecoin transactions in February, more than doubling its previous record and leading all competing blockchains for the month.

What makes that headline number remarkable is the relatively small base of capital parked on the network, a dynamic that points to extreme asset turnover.
According to DeFiLlama, the entire stablecoin base on Solana sits at a modest $15.7 billion. USDC represents 53.81% of that local liquidity pool, amounting to roughly $8.4 billion. Outside of Ethereum, where USDC maintains a massive $55 billion supply, Solana is the network with the token's largest absolute presence.
The intensity of USDC circulation on Solana is unprecedented. Token Terminal reported that monthly USDC transfer volume on the network skyrocketed 300% year-over-year, hitting $880 billion in February 2026 alone.

These figures describe a blockchain architecture specifically optimized for repeated, high-speed settlement. Token Terminal also noted that Solana’s median transaction fee fell to a one-year low of $0.00047 during the same period.
Indeed, ultra-low fees naturally support frequent routing, algorithmic rebalancing, and complex settlement strategies between market makers and trading venues throughout the trading day.
Meanwhile, it is worth noting that USDC transfer activity also surged on its largest home base. Token Terminal data showed monthly USDC transfer volume on Ethereum surpassed $1.7 trillion in February, reflecting a 250% year-over-year increase.
Essentially, the complete flow picture clearly spans multiple networks. However, the data coming out of Solana is drawing immediate industry attention because it puts stationary balances and hyper-active movement into the same frame.
This is because a relatively small pool of stablecoins is generating a torrent of transfers, which perfectly explains how USDC built a commanding lead in volume without coming close to matching Tether’s footprint in total supply.
The spike in Solana transfer volume coincides with a fundamental change in what is actually driving activity on the network’s decentralized exchanges.
In late 2024 and early 2025, memecoins were the dominant force. Data from Blockworks shows that highly speculative tokens accounted for more than 60% of all decentralized exchange activity on Solana during that window.
That retail-driven surge pushed trading volumes to record highs, briefly doubling those on Ethereum.
More recently, the landscape has matured. Blockworks data now indicates that stablecoin-related swaps have taken over, accounting for about 70% of all blockchain activity on the network.

This structural shift perfectly aligns with the February stablecoin transaction records tracked by Grayscale and the massive jump in USDC transfer volume tracked by Token Terminal.
This change in composition has massive implications for how transfer volume accumulates.
Workflows that rely heavily on stablecoins tend to involve repeated transfers among a web of intermediaries. Trading flows routinely split across multiple legs to find the best available price. Every single hop between exchanges, market makers, hedge funds, and payment applications adds to the aggregate transfer totals as balances relentlessly rotate.
Because Solana’s median transaction fee is practically zero, these microscopic, multi-step routing strategies can scale without eating into profit margins.

Meanwhile, the blockchain technology is only half the story. Policy shifts and platform rules have heavily influenced stablecoin routing over the last year, particularly for institutions operating under strict compliance frameworks in the United States and Europe.
The United States permanently altered the landscape in July 2025 by enacting the GENIUS Act, which established a comprehensive federal framework for payment stablecoins. Across the Atlantic, Circle secured a highly coveted Markets in Crypto-Assets license in Europe in January 2025.
Those regulatory milestones had immediate market consequences. Binance and other leading crypto trading platforms delisted all non-compliant stablecoin pairs, specifically targeting USDT, before March 31, 2025.
Since then, Tether's USDT trading access on some of the world's largest exchanges was severely curtailed within the European bloc. This compliance moat naturally redirected a massive portion of European exchange flow toward regulated alternatives like USDC.
Traditional payment infrastructure has also deeply intersected with the USDC and Solana routing ecosystem.
In December, Visa announced that its United States issuer and acquirer partners had begun settling fiat obligations in Circle’s USDC directly over the Solana blockchain. Initial participants included Cross River Bank and Lead Bank, with a broader domestic rollout scheduled throughout 2026.
Circle is simultaneously pushing a major cross-border expansion to strengthen its institutional plumbing.
The company is actively scaling the Circle Payments Network, a system that allows traditional financial institutions to send USDC internationally and convert it directly into local fiat currencies via banking partners. The network currently boasts 55 institutional members and reached $6 billion in volume this year.
These developments present why the USDC competitive signal flashing in the 2026 data is undeniable. It shows that stablecoin dominance is no longer a single-variable equation, and that the market now measures success through two metrics that can, and clearly do, diverge for extended periods.
The post Tether still holds more cash, but Circle’s USDC is now moving more of crypto’s money appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin climbed back into the $73,500 to $73,800 resistance band over the weekend, reaching its highest level since the Iran war and Trump tariff turmoil began to shake global markets.
The move comes even as crude remains above $100, supply through the Strait of Hormuz has been disrupted, and investors have cut back expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts.
As of press time, CryptoSlate data shows Bitcoin at about $70,470, up 0.33% over 24 hours, 1.09% over seven days, and 5.7% over 30 days.
The price action stands out because the chart structure does not yet show a clean trend in the market. The market has mostly respected defined reaction zones.

About three-quarters of all tests of support and resistance levels over the last few months have ended in rejection rather than acceptance. That gives the current test of the upper band a narrower meaning than a simple breakout call. Bitcoin has repaired the panic damage. It still has to prove it can stay above the panic ceiling.
The clearest near-term resistance sits at $73,500 and $73,800. Those two levels form a top channel pair in the active zone and have produced repeated rejections in the recent stretch of the data.
The first support band below sits at $72,000 and $71,500. Below that, $68,000 remains the next major line where price repeatedly found buyers during February and early March.

The immediate question is whether Bitcoin can convert resistance into support, given the still-hostile macro backdrop.
That backdrop has not eased. Oil has surged after the Iran conflict disrupted flows, with AP reporting disruption of more than 12 million barrels per day across the Gulf system. The same shock has fed into inflation expectations and raised doubts about how much room the Fed has to cut this year.
Bitcoin is rising into a heavy resistance band before the outside world has improved. The structure says buyers have regained control of the upper half of the range. It does not yet show that they have escaped it.
The recovery through $68,000 looks accepted. So does the later move back through $71,500 and $72,000. Those levels did not hold as one-off spikes. Price spent time above them, built higher lows, and kept returning to the upper part of the structure.
That sequence carries more weight than the latest wick into the $73,500 to $73,800 band because it shows where buyers already proved they would defend the market.
The current move into $73,500 and $73,800 looks more vulnerable. The data is bounce-heavy, the overhead zone is tight, and the market is reaching it while oil, inflation, and trade-policy stress are still unresolved. A rejection here would fit the pattern better than an immediate straight-line run to the next band.
| Zone | Role now | What the data suggests |
|---|---|---|
| $73,500 to $73,800 | Primary resistance | Repeated recent rejection area, needs a hold above to count as acceptance |
| $72,000 to $71,500 | Primary support | Most important near-term floor after the recovery from the panic selloff |
| $68,000 | Secondary support | Major reaction level during the mid-range consolidation |
| $77,100 | Next upside target | Opens only if price accepts the current upper band |
The broader market picture offers a partial explanation for why Bitcoin could keep pressing higher even in that setup. U.S.-listed Bitcoin ETFs did not lose their demand base during the latest macro shock.
After outflows of $227.9 million on March 5 and $348.9 million on March 6, the funds posted five straight positive sessions: $167.1 million on March 9, $246.9 million on March 10, $115.2 million on March 11, $53.8 million on March 12, and $180.4 million on March 13. Those figures show that larger buyers did not disappear when macro pressure rose.
That distinction helps frame the current setup. If ETF demand had collapsed at the same time price hit the upper band, the chart would look more like a short-covering bounce running out of fuel. Instead, the latest flow numbers show steady support from fund inflows while Bitcoin retests the highs of the post-shock recovery.
That is one reason the $72,000 to $71,500 floor now carries more weight than the latest intraday print above $73,500. Support shows where buyers are willing to defend size. Resistance shows where sellers are still active.
In that sense, the most important recent move was the reclaiming of $71,500 and $72,000 after the macro panic, rather than reaching $74,000. That recovery showed that buyers were willing to absorb supply while the oil shock was still live and rate-cut expectations were still being marked down.
The macro climate still argues for caution. The oil shock continues to ask questions about inflation, growth, and how long high rates might stay in place.
Recent FT reporting cited estimates that put the likely inflation effect at 0.5 to 0.6 percentage points, while projecting a 0.3-point hit to global GDP growth. The Fed is still expected to hold rates steady, with markets rethinking how many cuts remain plausible this year.
Meanwhile, the Trump tariff fight is still running. The Supreme Court decision that disrupted key tariff measures has forced the administration to reopen trade probes and look for new legal paths.
Put simply, the outside-world pressure has not gone away. Bitcoin is rising while the macro picture remains messy.
The base case from the channel data is a range-acceptance fight between $72,000 and $73,800. Buyers have already shown they can defend the lower part of that band. Sellers have not yet given up the upper edge. If that continues, Bitcoin can keep grinding higher in steps without producing a decisive breakout.
The bull case needs more than a print above resistance. It needs time above resistance. If Bitcoin holds $73,500 on a retest and stops falling back under $73,800, the next obvious structural target is $77,100. That level sits as the next upper channel boundary in the framework and would be the first place to test whether the move is becoming a broader trend rather than another rejection cycle.
The bear case is simpler. A rejection from $73,500 to $73,800, followed by a loss of $72,000, would bring $71,500 back into focus. If that fails, the market would likely revisit $68,000, which has served as the most durable support line. That would not erase the medium-term recovery, but it would weaken the view that Bitcoin is already trading as a stronger macro hedge through this shock.
There is also a low-probability, high-impact case that sits outside the chart. If the Iran conflict widens further, if oil spikes again, or if rate expectations reset sharply higher, forced selling could overwhelm the channel structure in the short run. The chart would still matter, but headline risk would likely take over first.

The most defensible conclusion from the data is that Bitcoin has staged a real recovery but has not completed a clean breakout.
The upper resistance band is still the key test. Traders who want confirmation should watch for acceptance above $73,500 and $73,800, not just another touch. Traders looking for early weakness should watch whether the market can still hold $72,000 on the next pullback.
That leaves the market with a straightforward map.
| Scenario | Trigger | Likely path |
|---|---|---|
| Base case | Bitcoin holds $72,000 but fails to stay above $73,800 | Range trade continues, with repeated tests of the upper band |
| Bull case | Bitcoin holds above $73,500 after a breakout | Price targets $77,100 as the next clear channel boundary |
| Bear case | Bitcoin rejects the upper band and loses $72,000 | Price retests $71,500, with $68,000 back in play |
| Macro shock case | War, oil, or rates worsen sharply | Headline risk overrides the range and raises liquidation risk |
For now, the clearest take is simple. Bitcoin has climbed back to the top of its recent range even as war, oil, inflation pressure, and tariff uncertainty continue to pull on global markets. The recovery through $68,000, $71,500, and $72,000 looks real. The market has not yet shown the same acceptance above $73,500 and $73,800.
If Bitcoin can live above that band, $77,100 becomes the next measured target inside this framework.
If it cannot, the move still looks like a strong recovery inside a range that has rejected the price more often than it has released it.
The post Bitcoin price confirms recovery hitting highest price since start of Iran war and Trump tariff chaos appeared first on CryptoSlate.
World Liberty Financial is offering “guaranteed direct access” to its business development team to investors who lock up $5 million in WLFI tokens for six months, Reuters reported on Mar. 13.
The arrangement creates what the project calls “Super Nodes,” a tier that sits above ordinary governance participants and gets prioritized treatment for partnership discussions.
At current prices, that means staking 50 million WLFI tokens and committing to a 180-day lockup. In return, Super Node holders get governance voting power weighted by amount and duration, plus front-of-the-line access to the team handling business development and compliance.
This is the same venture that says its mission is to “democratize access to financial opportunities” and is seeking a US national trust bank charter.
| World Liberty’s stated pitch | What the new structure actually does |
|---|---|
| “Democratize finance” | Creates a premium lane for large holders |
| Open financial access | Requires roughly $5 million in WLFI for top-tier access |
| Governance participation | Makes lockup size and duration central to influence |
| Community-driven project | Prioritizes investors who can commit the most capital |
| Crypto as access expansion | Crypto becomes a gatekeeping mechanism |
And the same venture that generated more than $460 million for President Donald Trump's family in the first half of 2025, with 75% of new token sale proceeds flowing to the family.
A project tied to the sitting president's family is monetizing proximity at a posted price while trying to move deeper into regulated finance.
The governance staking proposal passed on Mar. 12 with 99% of ballots cast in favor, though Reuters could not independently verify how many individual token holders participated.
The Feb. 25 proposal restructures the way WLFI allocates governance power and commercial attention.
Unlocked token holders must now stake for at least 180 days to vote. The proposal eliminates existing voting power limitations in favor of a new weighted formula based on the amount staked and remaining lockup duration.
The proposal creates two tiers above ordinary participants: “Nodes” require 10 million WLFI (about $1 million), while “Super Nodes” require 50 million WLFI (about $5 million) and provide guaranteed direct access to the WLFI team for partnership discussions.
Reuters reported that WLFI later clarified that the access is to business development and compliance teams, not to Trump or his family members.
The project's “Meet our team” section, which had listed Trump family members, was removed from the website following the questioning.
The venture is selling a commercial fast lane while branding itself as an open finance platform. At the same time, it seeks federal regulatory approval for a banking charter.
| Tier | WLFI required | Approx. value | What holders get |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard holder | Below Node threshold | — | Basic token ownership / limited role |
| Node | 10 million WLFI | ~$1 million | Governance staking privileges |
| Super Node | 50 million WLFI | ~$5 million | Node benefits plus guaranteed direct access for partnership discussions |
| Lockup rule | — | — | 180-day minimum staking period |
In January, a WLFI subsidiary filed an application with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to establish a national trust bank focused on USD1 stablecoin issuance, redemption, and digital asset custody.
A trust bank moves a crypto business deeper into the federally supervised perimeter.
In February, lawmakers pressed the OCC over the application and raised conflict-of-interest concerns. Crypto.com received conditional approval for a similar charter in February, showing WLFI's bank push sits within a broader trend.
This is a Trump-linked venture that monetizes access and simultaneously seeks a regulatory stamp that would make it appear to be infrastructure. Even without evidence of quid pro quo, the appearance problem is legible to anyone who understands how proximity works in regulated industries.
Reuters reported that WLFI generated more than $460 million for the Trump family in the first half of 2025 and that 75% of new token sale proceeds go to the family under current terms.
WLFI's own Mar. 3 token terms use slightly broader wording, stating that DT Marks DeFi and affiliates are entitled to 75% of “net protocol revenues” after deductions.
Even using a narrower framing, a $5 million Super Node purchase implies roughly $3.75 million flows to the Trump family.
The proposal frames Super Nodes as more than prestige. Its rationale says Super Nodes help “prioritize partnership deal flow” and create a USD1 distribution network in which each Super Node acts as a “mini-distributor.”
The $5 million lane is a commercial channel strategy to expand stablecoin adoption.
World Liberty put a dollar figure on being prioritized. It structured that prioritization as a distribution franchise for a stablecoin the venture wants to issue through a federally chartered trust bank.

WLFI's Gold Paper says its mission is to “democratize access to financial opportunities” and “democratize finance.”
The same document discloses that tokens were offered in the US only to accredited investors.
The Super Node tier makes the contradiction impossible to miss. The project moved from an implied hierarchy, accredited investors only, to an explicit hierarchy with a posted $5 million threshold.
| Number | What it shows |
|---|---|
| $5 million | Cost of the Super Node access tier |
| 180 days | Minimum staking lockup |
| $460 million+ | Reuters-reported amount made by the Trump family in H1 2025 |
| 75% | Share of new token-sale proceeds Reuters says goes to the family |
Everyone understands what pay for access means. Finance is being wrapped in new technology, and the core mechanism remains familiar: pay more, get heard faster, gain governance weight, and secure commercial opportunities others do not.
Reuters noted that critics say the arrangement clashes with World Liberty's stated mission.
The venture clarified that access is for business development teams, but this clarification does not address the tension between democratization branding and stratified access.
World Liberty Financial is stress-testing one of crypto's oldest claims: that tokenized governance distributes power more fairly than traditional finance. In this model, governance depends on how much capital you can lock in for how long and what strategic value you can offer.
If WLFI's version works, other projects may copy the playbook. Stake a large size, get governance preference, distribution rights, and access to business development channels.
The industry would move toward a model in which tokens function as a hybrid of a lobbying budget, a channel-partner franchise, and a private membership card.
| Broader issue | Why readers should care |
|---|---|
| Pay-to-play finance | Access is being openly monetized |
| Crypto governance | Influence shifts toward capital-heavy participants |
| Regulated-finance overlap | Venture is also seeking a U.S. banking license |
| Public trust | “Democratization” rhetoric clashes with elite access pricing |
The Super Node proposal already passed. The trust bank application is alive. The most natural outcome is normalization: pay-for-access mechanics become standard inside crypto governance, even if critics keep attacking the optics.
If the bank charter process advances and USD1 adoption expands, institutional partners may decide that the access tier filters serious counterparties. WLFI becomes a politically branded stablecoin platform, and the $5 million lane starts to look like a business development fee.
If ethics pressure and charter scrutiny intensify, the access product becomes a reputational drag.
Crypto's newest premium product is access. World Liberty Financial is making that explicit with a $5 million price tag, a six-month lockup, and a governance system that ties voting power to committed capital.
The venture promised to democratize finance, but it sold tokens only to accredited investors. Now it is charging $5 million to skip the line while seeking a federal banking charter.
The post Trump-backed WLFI is selling $5 million access while pitching finance for everyone appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Polymarket and Kalshi are trying to raise money at valuations that put them in the top tier of consumer-fintech names, even as Washington moves closer to writing new rules for the product they sell. Both companies are reportedly in early fundraising talks that could value each at around $20 billion.
That fundraising chatter is taking place in the middle of a political storm.
Iran-related contracts turned prediction markets from a quirky forecasting niche into a question about insider information and incentives around war. Reuters reviewed Polymarket markets tied to the timing of attacks and Khamenei's removal and found about $529 million wagered on timing-of-attack contracts and about $150 million on Khamenei-related contracts, alongside claims of unusually well-timed trading that generated about $1.2 million in profit across six accounts.
Now lawmakers are drafting legislation, and the CFTC said it's also moving toward new rulemaking.
Wall Street believes that probabilities will become part of the information system. But Washington is standing in its way because it believes the system can reward the wrong people at the worst moments.
Prediction markets convert attention into transactions and transactions into fees, while also producing a live probability feed that can be packaged as data.
That second product is the part that pulls prediction markets out of the gambling bucket and into the same group as market data, polling, and financial terminals, because the output is designed to look and behave like a quote.
Media partnerships have started doing the distribution for them. CNBC signed a multi-year deal with Kalshi to integrate its probabilities into TV and digital programming starting in 2026, which puts event-contract pricing into the everyday flow of business news.
Dow Jones signed an exclusive deal with Polymarket to bring prediction market data into The Wall Street Journal, Barron's, and MarketWatch products, which effectively treats a contract price like a piece of reporting infrastructure that can sit next to earnings, rates, and election coverage.
Those deals also tighten the consequences of a scandal, because the markets are no longer a novelty that people can ignore. Once probabilities are embedded in mainstream outlets, they start shaping what readers think is plausible, urgent, or imminent. This is why regulators believe the platforms have to answer a higher standard around integrity, surveillance, and settlement.
It also explains why the companies' valuation kept rising even as the Iran markets drew political heat.
The market's cleanest edge is early knowledge, and the Iran contracts clearly showed that these platforms deal with the kind of information governments try to control.
On March 2, there was about $529 million wagered on timing-of-attack markets and around $150 million on contracts related to Khamenei's death and removal from office. Just six accounts made $1.2 million in profit from these contracts, all funded just several hours before the raids that killed the Iranian leader.
Multiple other reports of newly created accounts making unusually well-timed Iran bets also began popping up as the conflict escalated. This kind of mainstream reporting pulled Polymarket out of the crypto novelty category and landed it in the midst of government surveillance and enforcement.
The main issues these platforms now face are trust and fairness.
A prediction market only works when people believe the rules are stable, the outcomes are adjudicated consistently, and the playing field isn't tilted toward insiders. When the underlying event is military action, that trust problem becomes political, because the incentive to trade early becomes an incentive to leak sensitive and even classified information.
That's why the policy response escalated so fast.
Rep. Mike Levin and Sen. Chris Murphy are already working on legislation aimed at reining in prediction markets after the Iran bets. This puts Congress directly in charge of defining what event contracts should be allowed to cover.
Separately, CFTC Chair Michael Selig said the agency submitted an advance notice of proposed rulemaking to the White House budget office and would move soon on a prediction-markets rule proposal. This tells us a regulatory framework is in the works that could affect everything from contract design and monitoring to enforcement priorities.
The choice Washington faces is pretty straightforward, even if the implementation is technical.
Regulators can treat prediction markets as legitimate event contracts and build stronger monitoring and clearer limits, which could help the category keep scaling with a more defined rulebook.
They can also fence off categories tied to war, assassination, and leadership removal, because those contracts concentrate the insider-information risk and create ugly incentives.
A snapshot shows why this collision is hard to smooth over:
| Flashpoint | What was reported | Why it grabbed attention |
|---|---|---|
| Valuation talks | ~$20 billion each for Polymarket and Kalshi (early talks) | Venture pricing collides with legal risk |
| Iran timing markets | ~$529 million wagered | Event contracts attached to military action |
| Khamenei-related markets | ~$150 million wagered | Death and leadership outcomes as tradable contracts |
| Suspicious profit claims | ~$1.2 million across six accounts | Insider information fear tied to timing |
| Kalshi payout dispute | ~$54 million in claimed winnings | Trust fight inside the regulated player |
Kalshi’s own dispute shows why regulation alone doesn't end the trust question.
On March 5, Kalshi was sued for failing to pay $54 million to users who bet that the Iranian Supreme Leader would leave office before March 1. The class action suit, filed in California, alleges that the company didn't invoke a “death carveout” provision until after the Iranian leader was killed to avoid paying customers.
Kalshi, however, says its rules about trading on death outcomes were explicit, and that it reimbursed fees and losses so users didn't lose money.
That's the kind of tension investors and policymakers are now dealing with.
Investors want growth, distribution, and a clean case for a probability feed that belongs in the mainstream.
Users want rules that feel stable when outcomes become contentious and emotionally loaded.
Regulators want to prevent a market from turning sensitive state action into a tradable instrument where the best trade is the best leak, because that risk becomes a governance problem the moment these prices start shaping the information environment.
The post Iran war bets turned Polymarket and Kalshi into the next fight over what people should be allowed to trade appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Global markets are reacting strongly ahead of President Donald Trump’s expected White House speech today, with equities surging and oil prices falling after reports that the United States is allowing some oil tankers to pass through the Strait of Hormuz to stabilize global supply.
The development comes after days of heightened geopolitical tensions involving Iran and the United States. The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most critical energy chokepoints, responsible for transporting roughly 20% of global oil supply.
Reports that tankers are now being allowed to pass through the strait have eased fears of a major disruption to global energy markets. As a result, oil prices dropped sharply, triggering a powerful rally across U.S. stock markets.
The market reaction has been immediate. U.S. equities surged at the open, with major indexes posting strong gains.
The S&P 500, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, and Russell 2000 all climbed significantly as investors interpreted the tanker news as a signal of possible de-escalation in the Middle East conflict.
Tech stocks led the rally, with major companies such as Nvidia, Meta, Tesla, Apple, and Google all trading higher. In total, the U.S. stock market added hundreds of billions of dollars in market value, approaching the $1 trillion mark during the early session.
The logic behind the rally is straightforward: if oil supply remains stable, inflation pressure may ease, which could reduce economic uncertainty and support risk assets.
Energy markets were extremely sensitive to the situation in the Strait of Hormuz over the past week. Any threat to the route can send oil prices soaring due to fears of supply disruptions.
However, the latest reports suggesting the United States is allowing some tankers to pass through the strait have helped calm markets.
Oil prices dropped sharply after the announcement, reinforcing the perception that global supply chains may remain intact despite ongoing geopolitical tensions.
For financial markets, lower oil prices often translate into lower inflation expectations, which tends to support stocks and other risk assets.
President Trump is expected to address the situation during a White House press conference later today. Investors are closely watching the speech for signals about the next steps in U.S. policy.
Key questions markets are asking include:
Markets have already partially priced in a positive outcome, meaning the tone of the speech could play a decisive role in determining the next move across global assets.
While traditional markets have already reacted, the cryptocurrency market is watching closely.
Bitcoin has recently shown surprising resilience during geopolitical instability. In many cases, major macro developments initially move traditional markets such as oil and equities before spilling over into crypto.

If global risk sentiment continues improving, capital could rotate back into digital assets, potentially supporting Bitcoin and the broader crypto market.
On the other hand, if the speech signals escalation or renewed uncertainty, volatility could return across both traditional and crypto markets.
For now, Bitcoin traders are waiting to see whether the macro rally in equities will translate into momentum for the crypto market as well.
With oil prices dropping and U.S. stocks surging ahead of President Trump’s speech, global markets are positioning for potential stabilization in the Strait of Hormuz situation.

However, the final market reaction will likely depend on the tone and details of the announcement. Investors across equities, commodities, and cryptocurrencies are now waiting to see whether the speech confirms de-escalation — or introduces a new wave of uncertainty.
If risk appetite continues improving, Bitcoin could become the next asset to react.
While U.S. President Donald Trump has actively lobbied for a multinational military coalition to reopen the strategic waterway, Beijing has formally responded with a message of de-escalation. The friction between the world's two largest economies, coupled with a tightening energy supply, has positioned Bitcoin as a focal point for investors seeking a hedge against systemic risk.
In a direct response to President Trump’s call for China to deploy warships to the Strait of Hormuz, the Chinese Foreign Ministry has signaled a firm preference for diplomacy over military intervention. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian stated on Monday that "all parties should immediately cease military operations" to prevent a regional catastrophe that could further cripple global economic growth.
The Strait of Hormuz is a critical chokepoint through which approximately 20% of the world’s oil flows. Trump’s administration argued that since China is a major beneficiary of Middle Eastern oil, it should share the burden of securing the passage. Instead of joining the U.S.-led coalition, China is prioritizing "head-of-state diplomacy," though Trump has threatened to delay his upcoming summit with Xi Jinping if cooperation is not met.
Amidst this geopolitical standoff, the Bitcoin price has shown remarkable resilience. After consolidating near $70,000 for much of early March, the premier cryptocurrency surged past $73,000 today, marking an 8% increase over the past week.

Market analysts are now eyeing the $75,000 level as the next immediate target. The breakout above $73,400—a level aligned with the 50-period moving average—suggests that the "Expertise" of the bulls is currently dominating the narrative.
The rising appetite for $Bitcoin reflects a shift in market sentiment. While the S&P 500 has faced pressure due to soaring oil prices (now exceeding $100 per barrel), BTC is increasingly being viewed as a "digital gold" alternative.
China's refusal to join the military coalition adds a layer of uncertainty to global trade. If the Strait remains blocked and the U.S. continues its unilateral military pressure, energy prices are expected to stay elevated. For the crypto market, this often translates to two scenarios:
As the "Who, What, and Why" of this crisis unfold, the path to $75,000 for Bitcoin seems clear, provided it can maintain its support above $72,000. Investors are closely watching the upcoming diplomatic meetings, as any further escalation in the Middle East or a breakdown in U.S.-China trade talks could provide the final push needed for BTC to hit new all-time highs.
As of today, March 16, 2026, $Ethereum is up 7% in the past 24 hours with 13% gain over the past week.
This sudden volatility to the upside has liquidations of short positions reaching over $123 million, suggesting that the "bear trap" may have finally snapped shut. With institutional interest peaking due to the launch of products like the BlackRock iShares Staked Ethereum ETF (ETHB), the path toward $3,000 appears increasingly clear—provided key support zones hold.
The short answer is: Potentially, but confirmation is key. The break above $2,250 is the first higher-high Ethereum has printed on the daily chart in months. For this to transition from a "relief rally" to a full-blown bull run, $ETH must now flip $2,250 into a support floor and challenge the next major liquidity cluster near $2,450.

| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Current Price | $2,260 - $2,270 |
| 24h Change | +7.2% |
| 7d Change | +13.1% |
| Key Resistance | $2,450 / $3,000 |
| Critical Support | $2,200 / $2,050 |
Analyzing the recent technical structure, the breakout occurred following a "double-bottom" pattern near the $1,950 zone. The charts indicate a sharp vertical move that has pushed the Relative Strength Index (RSI) into the bullish 60-65 range, suggesting there is still room for growth before reaching "overbought" territory.

The next logical target for bulls is the $3,000 mark. This level isn't just a psychological milestone; it represents a major historical supply zone where Ethereum struggled during the previous quarter. If the current momentum continues, driven by increased on-chain activity and ETF inflows, we could see a test of $3,000 by late April 2026.
Despite the optimism, the bull run is not yet "guaranteed." Technical analysts point to two critical risk areas:
Expert Insight: "The $2,150 to $2,250 range has been a thick liquidity node. Breaking above it with high volume is a strong signal, but we need to see the crypto market stabilize here to avoid a sharp rejection," notes a senior analyst at CoinDesk.
A major driver behind this 7% pump is the surging institutional adoption. The recently launched BlackRock iShares Staked Ethereum ETF (ETHB) saw over $15.5 million in trading volume on its debut. Unlike standard ETFs, this product offers exposure to staking rewards, making it highly attractive for pension funds and large-scale investors looking for yield in a volatile market.
The start of 2026 was widely hyped as the “Year of the AI Agent.” Instead of simple chatbots, these new systems—built with frameworks like OpenClaw—are designed to actually take action: signing transactions, managing portfolios, and executing trading strategies on their own. The vision was simple: an autonomous system that could run financial strategies with little to no human involvement.
But the reality is turning out to be more complicated. Early experiments and a few high-profile technical mishaps are raising questions about how reliable these systems really are. AI might be able to trade faster than humans, but that doesn’t always mean it trades better. In one case, a simple decimal mistake reportedly wiped out $441,000, while some flagship models—including GPT-5—have seen their trading capital drop by more than half within weeks. For now, the idea that AI agents can consistently generate trading alpha is being seriously tested.
In February 2026, the crypto community witnessed a nightmare scenario. Lobstar Wild, an AI agent developed by an Open AI researcher, was tasked with distributing small token rewards to community members. Due to a session crash and a subsequent "parsing error" regarding decimal places, the agent lost track of its wallet state.
Upon rebooting, instead of sending a few dollars, it autonomously signed a transaction for 52 million tokens—roughly 5% of the total supply—valued at $441,000. The funds were sent to a random address, highlighting a critical flaw: when an AI has the authority to sign transactions without a "human-in-the-loop," a simple bug becomes a financial catastrophe.
To see if these errors were isolated incidents, the platform NOV1.ai launched a systematic experiment in late 2025. Six leading AI models were given $1,000 each to trade crypto perpetuals on Hyperliquid for 17 days without human intervention.
| AI Model | Return (17 Days) | Behavior Profile |
|---|---|---|
| Qwen | +22% | Disciplined; few trades; strict Stop-Loss/Take-Profit. |
| DeepSeek | +5% | Moderate activity; followed clear trends. |
| Claude | -31% | Inconsistent execution. |
| Grok | -45% | "FOMO" trader; chased Twitter sentiment too late. |
| Gemini | -57% | Over-trader; 238 trades in 17 days (high fees). |
| GPT-5 | -62% | Analysis paralysis; hesitated on winning signals. |
The results were shocking. The flagship GPT-5 lost more than half of its capital. The data shows that AI agents often replicate the worst human trading habits: Gemini acted like an overactive day trader, Grock fell victim to social media hype, and GPT-5 suffered from "analysis paralysis."
The adoption is growing rapidly; for instance, Crypto.com recently integrated OpenClaw into its ecosystem to provide users with AI-driven trading assistants. However, the ease of deployment has led to significant security gaps.
Security firm Consensus recently discovered over 21,000 publicly accessible OpenClaw instances that were completely unauthenticated. This means API keys, wallet access, and chat logs were exposed to the open web.
Furthermore, an analysis of Clawhub (a repository for agent "skills") revealed that out of 3,000 community-contributed skills, 341 contained malicious code. These included:
Using a pre-made trading bot without auditing the code is currently one of the fastest ways to lose your $Bitcoin or other assets.
AI trading in 2026 is a powerful tool, but it is not a "get rich quick" button. The takeaway from the recent volatility is clear:
Global markets are once again facing rising geopolitical tension. News surrounding Iran, the United States, and Israel — including concerns over the Strait of Hormuz — has triggered uncertainty across traditional financial markets.
Yet despite these developments, the cryptocurrency market has shown surprising stability. Bitcoin continues to trade near the $70,000 level, resisting the kind of sharp panic selling that often accompanies geopolitical crises.
This unusual market behavior is raising an important question: why is Bitcoin ignoring the Iran war?
When the first headlines about escalating tensions appeared, the crypto market initially reacted with a short-term sell-off. Bitcoin briefly dipped as traders reduced risk exposure across global markets.
However, the decline was short-lived. Within hours, buyers stepped in and the market stabilized. Bitcoin quickly returned to the $70K range, suggesting that demand remains strong despite the uncertain macro environment.
This pattern — a quick dip followed by strong recovery — has become increasingly common in recent years.

One of the biggest reasons Bitcoin is showing resilience today is the growing presence of institutional investors.
Large companies, hedge funds, and ETFs have significantly increased their exposure to Bitcoin over the past few years. These investors often take longer-term positions and are less likely to panic during short-term geopolitical events.
Institutional demand can therefore act as a stabilizing force in the market, helping absorb selling pressure during moments of uncertainty.
Another reason Bitcoin is holding strong is its growing role as a macro asset.
In the past, geopolitical crises often caused crypto to fall sharply as investors rushed into traditional safe havens such as the US dollar or government bonds.
Today, however, Bitcoin is increasingly being viewed as an alternative store of value. Some investors now treat BTC as a hedge against monetary instability, geopolitical risk, and long-term inflation.
This shift in perception is gradually changing how Bitcoin reacts to global events.
The current tensions are particularly sensitive because of the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic shipping route through which roughly 20% of global oil supply passes.
Any disruption in this region could push oil prices significantly higher, which would have a direct impact on inflation and global financial markets.

Historically, rising inflation and monetary instability have often strengthened Bitcoin’s long-term narrative as an alternative financial asset.
For now, Bitcoin appears to be consolidating around the $70K level while global markets digest geopolitical developments.
If tensions escalate further, short-term volatility could increase. However, the fact that Bitcoin has remained relatively stable during such a major geopolitical event suggests that the market structure has matured.
In other words, crypto may no longer react to global crises in the same way it did during its early years.
Instead of collapsing under pressure, Bitcoin may gradually be evolving into a global macro asset that responds differently to geopolitical shocks.
The Iran crisis is testing financial markets once again. Yet Bitcoin’s ability to remain stable near $70,000 despite rising geopolitical tensions is an important signal.
Rather than triggering panic selling, the conflict appears to be highlighting Bitcoin’s growing role in the global financial system.
Whether this resilience continues will depend on how geopolitical events unfold — but one thing is becoming increasingly clear: Bitcoin is no longer just a speculative asset.
It is becoming part of the global macro landscape.
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Shiba Inu coin price's 8% rally coincides with unusual 441 billion SHIB shuffle on Singapore's exchange.
$76,000,000 out, 11% up: the strange case of XRP's March rally.
Metaplanet, Japan’s publicly listed Bitcoin treasury company, has secured up to $531 million in new capital. The fundraise combines a direct share placement and a series of fixed-strike warrants.
New shares were sold to institutional investors at a 2% premium to market, raising approximately $255 million. The warrants, set at a 10% premium, add potential access to another $276 million upon exercise.
Together, the instruments position the company for a major push toward its 210,000 BTC target.
The share placement portion of the raise closed with global institutional investors at a 2% premium over market price.
Metaplanet brought in roughly $255 million through this transaction, representing the confirmed and immediate capital from the raise.
The involvement of international institutions in the placement reflects broader interest in Metaplanet’s Bitcoin strategy. This part of the deal stands on its own and delivers capital to the company’s treasury regardless of the warrants.
The second component consists of fixed-strike warrants issued to investors at a 10% premium above market. These warrants can generate an additional $276 million for Metaplanet if holders choose to exercise their rights.
Exercise is most likely when the company’s share price stays at or above the warrant’s strike price over time. Until then, Metaplanet holds the premium income collected from selling the warrants to investors.
CEO Simon Gerovich shared the details on social media, confirming the total potential capital at $531 million. He described the warrants as tools designed to monetize the company’s equity volatility. Every dollar from the full raise, if realized, is earmarked for Bitcoin accumulation.
The warrant mechanism is a key distinction between this raise and a plain secondary share offering. In a standard share sale, a company issues new equity and immediately dilutes existing shareholders in the process.
Metaplanet’s approach uses the market’s appetite for its stock as a funding source without forcing dilution at scale. This design gives the structure an edge in managing shareholder perception while raising capital.
Investors who buy the warrants are paying for the option to acquire shares at a locked-in price in the future. Metaplanet receives that payment upfront and channels it alongside the share placement proceeds.
Both pools of capital flow into Bitcoin purchases. Bitcoin was priced near $73,394 per coin at the time Gerovich made the announcement.
Metaplanet has become Japan’s most prominent corporate Bitcoin holder and is frequently compared to MicroStrategy.
The company has been building its Bitcoin reserve relentlessly, guided by a long-term target of 210,000 BTC. This raise brings it measurably closer to that goal.
The next thing to track is full warrant exercise, which would deliver the entire $531 million into Bitcoin. If the stock holds, all the capital flows directly into Bitcoin purchases.
The post Metaplanet Raises $531M Through Share Placement and Warrants to Accelerate Bitcoin Accumulation appeared first on Blockonomi.
STRC, Strategy’s preferred stock, has emerged as a powerful Bitcoin accumulation tool in the market. Last week, the instrument raised $1.18 billion for the company in a single week.
Strategy then used those proceeds to purchase 22,337 Bitcoin. That purchase exceeded seven times the weekly mined supply of 3,150 coins.
The scale of this activity is drawing growing attention across both traditional finance and the broader crypto space.
STRC did not exist eight months ago. Yet, it is now generating trading volumes that no other fixed income product can match.
Last week alone, it recorded $2.2 billion in weekly trading volume. On a single day, volume reached $740 million.
Typically, preferred equity products trade quietly in institutional accounts. However, STRC is behaving more like a high-demand growth asset.
Its 11.5% dividend makes it attractive to income-focused investors. At the same time, every dollar flowing into it converts directly into Bitcoin on Strategy’s balance sheet.
The dividend obligation remains fixed and backed by over $2 billion in cash. Strategy also holds over $55 billion worth of Bitcoin as further backing.
This structure gives investors a yield-bearing product with Bitcoin exposure underneath. That combination is rare in traditional financial markets.
As analyst Rob Wallace noted on X, STRC is “becoming the Bitcoin accumulation machine Saylor has always dreamed of.” The product is eliminating thousands of potential future Bitcoin holders by absorbing supply permanently.
Over the last two weeks, STRC raised $1.557 billion in total. That pace, even conservatively projected, could generate another $16 billion before the end of the year.
Strategy is currently purchasing Bitcoin at 2.66 times the global daily mining rate. This means the company is absorbing supply far faster than the network can produce new coins.
As that gap widens, available Bitcoin on the open market continues to shrink. The effect on long-term price dynamics is straightforward to trace.
If STRC raises $16 billion more this year as projected, Strategy’s Bitcoin stack would grow by nearly 30%. Notably, this growth would not dilute common MSTR shareholders.
That structure separates STRC from typical equity raises. It also makes the model more sustainable than critics suggest.
Some market observers have called Strategy’s model a Ponzi scheme. However, similar criticism followed Bitcoin at $1, $100, and again at $10,000.
The company’s approach depends on continued belief in Bitcoin’s long-term appreciation. The historical track record of Bitcoin’s price has so far supported that thesis.
The full scale of this machine has not yet been tested in a bull market. That moment, should it arrive, could reshape the pace of institutional Bitcoin accumulation further.
The post Strategy’s STRC Raises $1.18B in One Week, Buying Seven Times Bitcoin’s Weekly Mined Supply appeared first on Blockonomi.
For decades, the mechanics of sending money home stayed the same. A worker in London or Dubai would visit a physical storefront, hand over cash, and pay a significant fee. Their family back home would wait a few days, travel to a local agent, and collect the funds in local currency. While traditional wire services and money transfer operators (MTOs) moved the world’s capital for over a century, the high costs and slow speeds of these legacy systems have created a gap for more efficient alternatives.
We are seeing a quiet shift in how global workforces move value. It isn’t just about sending cash anymore. Instead, a growing number of people are using decentralized networks to bypass traditional banking rails entirely. They are moving away from “pure” currency transfers toward utility-based remittances—using digital tokens to buy gift cards, mobile data, and vouchers that have immediate local value.
Traditional cross-border payments are often expensive for the people who need them most. According to World Bank data, the global average cost of sending $200 remains around 6%. In some corridors, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, that figure can climb much higher.
The friction comes from the “correspondent banking” model. When you send money internationally, it rarely travels in a straight line. It passes through multiple intermediary banks, each taking a small fee and adding a layer of delay. For the unbanked or underbanked—approximately 1.4 billion people globally—this system is either too expensive or entirely inaccessible.
Cryptocurrency was supposed to solve this by providing a peer-to-peer alternative. However, the “last mile” problem remained: how does a recipient in a rural area actually spend Bitcoin or stablecoins? This is where utility-based vouchers have become the missing link.
Rather than sending crypto and hoping the recipient can find a liquid exchange to convert it to cash, senders are increasingly choosing to convert digital assets directly into purchasing power.
This trend treats value transfer as a functional tool. If a worker needs to pay for their family’s groceries, internet, or phone bill, they don’t necessarily need to send fiat currency. They can send a digital voucher that covers the specific need.
This method solves several problems at once:
For example, a developer working in Europe might want to send a gift to a sibling in South America for their birthday. Instead of dealing with bank swift codes and three-day wait times, they can use a crypto gift-card marketplace to buy apple gift card with crypto, sending the code directly to the recipient’s email. The recipient gets the value instantly, and the sender avoids the complexities of the international banking system.
The shift to utility-based vouchers is powered by the maturing infrastructure of decentralized finance. High-speed, low-cost networks like Solana, Polygon, and various Layer-2 solutions have made the “micro-remittance” viable. Sending $20 used to be impossible because the transaction fee might be $5. On modern networks, that fee is often less than a cent.
This has changed the frequency of transfers. Instead of sending one large lump sum once a month, users can send smaller amounts as needs arise. If a family member needs a mobile top-up or a grocery voucher today, the sender can facilitate that in real-time.
Stablecoins play a massive role here as well. Because they are pegged to the US Dollar or Euro, they remove the volatility risk that often scares people away from using assets like Bitcoin for daily needs. A sender can hold their savings in a stablecoin and only convert it into a localized voucher at the moment of purchase.
For the global workforce—including gig workers, freelancers, and migrant laborers—the primary goal is the preservation of value. When you move money across borders, you lose value to:
Utility-based vouchers act as a hedge. By converting digital assets directly into a service or a product voucher, the user locks in the value of that item. In countries experiencing high inflation, holding value in a digital asset and only converting it to a specific retail voucher when needed is a practical survival strategy.
Furthermore, this setup eliminates the need for the recipient to have a bank account. As long as they have a smartphone and an email address, they can receive and use the value. This “leapfrogging” of traditional banks mirrors how many developing nations skipped landline telephones and went straight to mobile.
The bridge between the blockchain and the physical store is built by platforms that aggregate thousands of brands. These marketplaces act as an abstraction layer. They handle the complex backend work of interfacing with retail POS systems and regional distributors, while providing a simple interface for the crypto user.
These services have expanded the definition of what a “remittance” looks like. We are no longer just talking about cash in an envelope. We are talking about:
This ecosystem allows for a more granular way of supporting family members abroad. A sender can ensure that the value they send is used for its intended purpose, such as a subscription for an educational tool or credit for a grocery store.
As this space grows, it is moving into a more regulated environment. Most reputable platforms now implement tiered verification systems. While small transfers might be frictionless, larger amounts typically require standard identity checks to comply with Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Global Sanctions laws.
For the user, security is the biggest priority. Because digital vouchers are like cash—once the code is revealed, the value is gone—trusted marketplaces have become the standard. Users look for platforms with a long track record and a wide range of supported tokens to ensure they aren’t forced into using a specific currency that might have high network fees at the time of purchase.
The shift from cash transfers to utility-based vouchers is likely just the beginning. As “programmable money” becomes more common, we might see even more specialized forms of value transfer.
Imagine a smart contract that automatically sends a grocery voucher to a recipient only when certain conditions are met, or a decentralized payroll system that allows a worker to split their paycheck: 70% to their local bank, 20% to a long-term crypto savings vault, and 10% directly into digital vouchers for their family back home.
The traditional banking rails aren’t going to disappear overnight, but they are no longer the only game in town. For the millions of people who live and work across borders, the ability to turn digital tokens into tangible, local utility is more than just a technical novelty. It is a faster, cheaper, and more direct way to take care of the people who matter most.
By bypassing the middleman and focusing on the end-use—whether that’s data, food, or digital entertainment—the global workforce is rewriting the rules of the remittance economy. The future of money might not look like a bank statement; it might look like a library of digital vouchers, instantly accessible anywhere in the world.
The post Beyond the Wire: The Rise of Utility-Based Remittances appeared first on Blockonomi.
Structure Therapeutics delivered impressive Phase 2 results for aleniglipron, its oral GLP-1 obesity treatment, on Monday morning, propelling GPCR shares up roughly 10% during early market hours.
Structure Therapeutics Inc., GPCR
The ACCESS II clinical trial demonstrated placebo-adjusted weight reduction of 16.3% with the 180 mg dosage and 16.0% with the 240 mg dosage following 44 weeks of treatment. Importantly, neither dosage exhibited signs of weight loss plateauing.
These outcomes favorably compare against competing oral GLP-1 therapies. Novo Nordisk’s oral version of Wegovy achieved 13.6% weight reduction in Phase 3 trials. Meanwhile, Eli Lilly’s orforglipron candidate delivered approximately 12.4% in Phase 2 studies and 11.2% in Phase 3.
Previous data released in December had demonstrated 14.2% weight loss with a reduced dosage. Participants maintaining that lower dosage for 53 weeks ultimately achieved 16% weight reduction, suggesting sustained therapeutic benefits over extended treatment periods.
The safety and tolerability profile remained favorable. Within the ACCESS Open Label Extension trial, only 2% of participants discontinued due to adverse events. The body composition substudy reported a 3.4% discontinuation rate. Structure’s strategy of initiating treatment at a conservative 2.5 mg dose appears instrumental in supporting patient adherence.
These positive results have sparked acquisition speculation within the investment community. H.C. Wainwright’s analyst Ananda Ghosh previously identified aleniglipron this month as “the most acquirable asset in obesity.” The investment firm elevated its price target to $114. Citizens maintained its Market Outperform rating while adjusting its target downward to $113.
Leerink Partners confirmed its Outperform rating alongside a $90 price target following the data release. The firm emphasized the favorable tolerability characteristics and dose-dependent response as particularly encouraging findings.
RBC Capital Markets adopted a more cautious perspective. Analyst Trung Huynh observed that orforglipron demonstrated comparable Phase 2 performance before delivering weaker Phase 3 results. He identified an atypically minimal weight gain among placebo participants as a potential statistical anomaly deserving scrutiny. RBC maintained its Outperform rating on Lilly with a $1,250 price target.
“It’s difficult to characterize these results as meaningfully differentiated from Orfo or oral Wegovy until we get a more robust data set,” Huynh wrote.
Structure Therapeutics has scheduled an end-of-Phase 2 consultation with the FDA during Q2 2026. Phase 3 clinical trials are anticipated to launch during the second half of 2026. Data from both high-dose cohorts in Phase 2 will determine which dosage advances into late-stage development.
Despite Monday’s rally, the stock remains down 23% year-to-date entering the trading session, although it has surged 155% over the trailing twelve months. Trading at $59.80, GPCR shares sit considerably below Wall Street’s consensus price targets, which span from $90 to $140.
Cantor Fitzgerald had previously identified this 44-week data readout as a significant catalyst for the stock. That prediction materialized accurately.
Monday’s price appreciation elevated GPCR’s market capitalization to roughly $3.81 billion.
The post Structure Therapeutics (GPCR) Stock Jumps 10% After Breakthrough GLP-1 Weight Loss Data appeared first on Blockonomi.
The XRP price is again in focus as investors await a possible push from the increasing XRP ETF market. At the moment, the token is trading at approximately $1.41. Most people believe that the next major XRP price is $1.50.
On the other hand, Remittix (RTX) is attracting users who are only interested in payment-focused cryptocurrency platforms. As the market is witnessing an increasing number of ETFs and other crypto ecosystems, it is likely to gain momentum soon.


Source: Tradingview
The rise of the XRP ETF market has become an important development for investors watching the XRP price. Exchange-traded funds allow people to gain exposure to XRP through traditional financial markets without directly buying the asset.
Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas recently praised the performance of these funds despite difficult market conditions. According to him, the XRP ETF products have shown surprising strength even while the XRP price dropped sharply after launch.
Balchunas explained that it is rare for a new ETF to maintain inflows during a market decline. In many cases, investors quickly pull their money out. However, the XRP ETF products have managed to keep a large amount of capital invested. He believes this is likely because of strong support from long-term XRP believers rather than casual traders.
When the funds first launched, they attracted significant demand. On Nov. 24, the XRP ETF market recorded a single-day inflow of more than $164 million, showing strong early interest from investors. Later, market conditions became more difficult. The worst outflow happened on Jan. 29, when almost $93 million left the XRP ETF market in one day.
The XRP price also declined during that period, so the total net assets held by the ETFs dropped. Data shows that combined assets peaked at about $1.65 billion in January but have since fallen to roughly $971 million.
Despite this decline in numbers, the long-term inflow patterns indicate that many investors are remaining loyal to their bets. The market remains dominated by two main players: Canary Capital, which has more than $260 million in XRP ETF holdings, and Bitwise, which has more than $260 million in XRP ETF holdings as well. Should XRP be able to rise past the resistance at $1.50, the ETFs might provide the fuel for the next move upwards.
Although XRP is gaining traction from institutional investment funds such as ETFs, Remittix is focusing on building real-world financial tools powered by blockchain. Remittix is building a PayFi product that will simplify the transfer and conversion of crypto to the average customer.
Here is why Remittix is gaining attention:
The XRP price could be driven next by the success of the XRP ETF market as a market of interest to investor traffic. While the institutional demand increases and XRP breaks the $1.50 resistance, it may generate the force to trigger another rally.
Meanwhile, innovation in the crypto industry is on a steady rise. The fact that the Remittix wallet is increasing the number of downloads indicates that lots of people are considering new platforms where they can use financial applications in their daily lives.
Discover the future of PayFi with Remittix by checking out their project here:
Website: https://remittix.io/
Socials: https://linktr.ee/remittix
The post A New XRP ETF Could Set New Highs For XRP Price As $1.50 Is Current Resistance appeared first on Blockonomi.
Bitcoin (BTC) surpassed $74,000 briefly earlier today, reaching its highest point since the start of February.
Some analysts are optimistic that a more substantial move to the upside could be forming, especially if the asset breaks above key resistance levels.
The primary cryptocurrency started the business week on the right foot, with its valuation surging to almost $74,400 (per CoinGecko’s data) following Donald Trump’s latest remarks regarding the war in Iran. The US President threatened to send troops to Kharg Island and urged America’s NATO allies to form a coalition to reopen the Strait of Hormuz by deploying military ships in the area.
Meanwhile, spot BTC ETFs have attracted hundreds of millions of dollars in inflows over the past several days, a factor that could also have contributed to the asset’s recent price strength.

According to the popular analyst Ali Martinez, a more significant rally could be on the way. In a recent post on X, he claimed that BTC might be forming a local bottom that often comes before a big move north. Martinez noted that Bitcoin’s funding rates have recently flipped negative: a development that has preceded “every major relief rally” in the last four years.
The most recent example dates back to May 2025, when BTC was trading near $95,000. Once funding rates turned negative, the market quickly shifted, and the asset climbed to a historical peak of over $126,000 within months, the analyst reminded.
Besides that, Martinez pointed out that more than 33,000 BTC have been withdrawn from exchanges in the past week. CryptoQuant’s data shows that just a few days ago, the amount of coins stored on such platforms dipped to a six-year low of approximately 2.73 million. This is considered a bullish factor because it reduces immediate selling pressure.

Other analysts on X also think BTC could chart further gains in the near future. Ted, for instance, described the $72,000-$74,000 range as “strong resistance zone,” predicting that a decisive break above it could open the door for an uptrend to as high as $78,000.
Analysts like Leshka.eth remain somewhat cautious about BTC’s short-term prospects. The X user argued that the price is slowly grinding higher within a descending channel toward the $76,000-$80,000 region, warning that a rejection here could trigger a painful crash to as low as $40K.
The analyst who goes by the moniker Klarck also envisioned a potential pullback. They foresaw a bull trap at around $74,000, a “liquidity grab” at $65,000, $62,500, and $60,000, and an eventual plunge to new lows.
BTC’s Relative Strength Index (RSI) is one technical indicator suggesting a price plunge could be imminent. The ratio has surpassed 70, meaning the price has pumped too much in a short period and could be due for a pullback. In contrast, readings under 30 suggest the asset is oversold and on the verge of a potential rally.

The post ‘Stop Shorting Bitcoin,’ One Analyst Says as Fresh Price Targets Emerge appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Digital asset investment products attracted $1.06 billion in inflows last week, extending their streak to three consecutive weeks of positive flows. The inflows arrived during intense geopolitical tensions, which appear to have strengthened the perception of digital assets, especially Bitcoin, as a relatively safe haven compared with traditional markets.
Since the Iran crisis began, assets under management in digital asset exchange-traded products have climbed 9.4% and reached a total of $140 billion.
According to the latest edition of CoinShares’ Digital Asset Fund Flows Weekly Report, roughly three-quarters of last week’s investment activity was captured by Bitcoin, which drew $793 million. Over a three-week period, cumulative allocations have reached $2.2 billion, which has narrowed the gap with the earlier five-week phase when about $3 billion left the sector. At the same time, short Bitcoin products added $8.1 million, which means that investors still hold mixed views.
Ethereum attracted $315 million last week, pushing its year-to-date performance toward a near-neutral level, which was supported in part by new US staking ETF launches. Other digital assets also received fresh capital. For instance, Solana added $9.1 million, Sui $3.1 million, and Chainlink $2.4 million. Multi-asset investment products drew an additional $2.5 million.
On the other hand, XRP appears to have bucked the trend as it suffered its second week of outflows of $76 million. Litecoin also saw a minor withdrawal of $0.3 million during the same period.
The US dominated regional activity and accounted for 96% of recent digital asset investments. Canada and Switzerland contributed $19.4 million and $10.4 million, respectively. Hong Kong also recorded $23.1 million, its largest weekly inflow since August 2025. Germany posted a $17.1 million outflow, which is its first weekly reduction of the year, while Sweden and the Netherlands experienced smaller outflows of $0.5 million and $0.2 million, respectively.
Tensions in the Middle East continued to escalate. Amid these developments, BTC has reclaimed a major resistance level at 71,300. According to experts, this suggests that some risk capital is beginning to flow back into the market. However, liquidity remains concentrated between 72,700 and 74,000. In a statement to CryptoPotato, a Bitunix analyst explained,
“If prices stabilize above 71,300, the market could enter a new zone of liquidity competition in the short term. On the downside, support liquidity around 69,000 and 70,200 will be closely watched. With geopolitical uncertainty still elevated, the short-term structure of the crypto market continues to be driven primarily by shifts in risk appetite and the distribution of derivatives liquidity.”
The post Bitcoin Leads $1.06B Surge in Digital Assets Amid Geopolitical Turmoil appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The biggest meme coin has caught the recent green wave sweeping through the cryptocurrency market, with its price rising to a 10-day high.
Whales are waking up, too, hinting that the real rally might only be starting.
The cryptocurrency sector, especially the meme coin niche, has registered a substantial uptick over the past 24 hours. The undisturbed leader, Dogecoin (DOGE), soared by 6% daily, while its market capitalization once again surpassed $15 billion.
Given the whales’ recent accumulation, the OG meme coin could be poised for an additional increase. The renowned analyst Ali Martinez revealed that this cohort of investors has acquired 470 million DOGE in the past 72 hours. The stash is worth roughly $47 million (calculated at current rates).
Following the latest buying spree, the whales boosted their total possessions to almost 36 billion coins, representing 23.5% of Dogecoin’s circulating supply.
Such accumulation is typically considered bullish for the price as it reduces the amount of tokens available on the open market and signals growing confidence among major holders. Whales are known as experienced investors who rarely jump on the bandwagon without proper knowledge or research, leaving unanswered questions about whether they know something we don’t. In the aftermath, smaller players might be encouraged to join the ecosystem as well, thereby injecting fresh capital.
Some industry participants support the bullish outlook. X user Trader Tardigrade claimed that DOGE “is breaking out” from a certain setup that has historically preceded “a massive pump.” For their part, CoinQTS described $0.125 as a “key level to watch,” predicting a rally to as high as $0.50 should the price break above $0.13.
The recent DOGE exchange netflow may also sit well with bulls. Data show that outflows have consistently outweighed inflows over the past weeks, indicating that investors have shifted from centralized platforms to self-custody methods, thereby reducing immediate selling pressure.

On the contrary, Dogecoin’s Relative Strength Index (RSI) should serve as a warning that a short-term correction may also be on the horizon. The technical analysis tool measures the speed and magnitude of price changes to assess potential reversal points. It runs from 0 to 100, with ratios above 70 considered bearish territory, while anything below 30 is considered a buying opportunity. Currently, the RSI stands at around 76.

It is no secret that the world’s wealthiest person is keen on Dogecoin and has, over the years, endorsed it publicly, which has led to substantial price gains. Not long ago, Musk confirmed that X Money, the platform’s upcoming payments feature, will go live next month. It is expected to allow users to send and receive funds directly through X, with a strong emphasis on integrating digital assets into the effort.
X user Fuel wondered what would happen if Musk made DOGE the default currency for the new feature, suggesting such a move could push the price to $0.50 or even $1.
Many commentators on the post believe that Dogecoin will not play such a central role in X Money, with some describing the token as a “joke just like all meme coins.”
The post 470,000,000 DOGE in 3 Days: Is Dogecoin Ready to Rally? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin’s price surged above $74,400 today, marking a multi-week high and reigniting optimism across the broader cryptocurrency market, as evidenced by the rise in altcoins.
The rally came amid renewed buying pressure, a wave of institutional demand, and yet another behemoth purchase by Michael Saylor’s Strategy.
BTC rose to around $74,400 earlier today, then dipped slightly to its current price of about $73,700. The bulls regained control amid anticipation of macroeconomic developments, including inflation data releases, PPI, and more.

The move comes on the back of considerable institutional involvement last week. Data shows that investors in BlackRock’s IBIT BTC ETF bought a total of $600 million last week, marking five consecutive days of positive inflows.
Moreover, news just broke out that Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) has bought another $1.57 billion worth of BTC during the same week, at an average price of around $70,194 per bitcoin. The largest corporate holder now owns a whopping 761,068 BTC worth $57.61 billion.
Today’s increase led to more than $300 million in liquidated short positions, which indicates the prevalent dominance of the bulls, at least for the time being. The good news is that this Bitcoin momentum is also transitioning through the rest of the market, and many altcoins are also charting considerable increases, painting the entire heatmap green.

With Bitcoin already testing major resistance near $74K, some analysts say the next phase of the market could be consolidation or a breakout. These are market conditions that generally favor altcoins.
As Bitcoin captures headlines with its latest rally, the attention is also shifting toward emerging altcoins that promise real-world utility in revenue-generating sectors. One of the projects gaining traction among early adopters is GCoin, the native utility token of the PlayNance ecosystem.
GCoin is designed to power a fully-fledged Web3 gaming and entertainment infrastructure, enabling real-time on-chain interactions through multiple platforms and digital experiences. Within its ecosystem, the token serves as a powerful economic engine, facilitating transactions, gameplay mechanics, and rewards.
According to the official website, the token is already actively used across the PlayNance ecosystem, powering:
The ecosystem itself processes an average of 1.5 million on-chain transactions every day, all executed using G Coin as the settlement and utility layer. PlayNance itself was founded in 2020 and specializes in non-custodial financial games and entertainment. Key products within the ecosystem include PlayW3’s social gaming aspect, PlayBlock, designed for high-frequency, real-time gasless transactions, and more.
G Coin is having its token generation event (TGE) in less than 36 hours, but interested parties can already buy the altcoin on its official sales page.
So far, almost 14 billion tokens have been sold, and the price is structurally increasing. This means that users have to participate quickly to lock in more favorable conditions. The project’s current market cap is around $40 million, and there are more than 200,000 holders, underscoring strong interest in what the project has to offer.
The smart contract has been audited by the market leader, CertiK.
Disclaimer: The above article is sponsored content. CryptoPotato doesn’t endorse or assume responsibility for the content, advertising, products, quality, accuracy, or other materials on this page. Nothing in it should be construed as financial advice. Readers are strongly advised to verify the information independently and carefully before engaging with any company or project mentioned and to do their own research. Investing in cryptocurrencies carries a risk of capital loss, and readers are also advised to consult a professional before making any decisions that may or may not be based on the above-sponsored content.
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The post Bitcoin Price Soars to $74K, but Investors Are Already Eyeing New Altcoin GCoin This Week appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The Tom Lee-chaired former Bitcoin mining giant has announced the acquisition of almost 61,000 ETH in the past week, which has pushed its total stash to nearly 4.6 million tokens.
In addition, BitMine said it increased its investment in existing ‘moonshot’ exposures such as Eightco by an additional $80 million to support the latter’s $50 million purchase of OpenAI equity, making it the only publicly listed entity to give investors direct exposure to the company behind ChatGPT.
“Since the start of the Iran war, crypto prices have outperformed and Ethereum has outperformed the S&P 500 by 2,450bp. This is a meaningful outperformance in a mere two weeks,” said Thomas “Tom” Lee, Chairman of Bitmine.
Lee added that higher oil prices will trigger concerns of slowing growth for the global economy, which would push investors to buy growth stocks such as MAG7, software, and crypto.
In its latest Ethereum acquisition of 60,999 tokens, Lee explained that the firm he chairs has ramped up the pace of such purchases as they believe the asset is in the final stages of the mini-crypto winter.
He asserted that BitMine has “staked more ETH than other entities in the world. At scale, the ETH staking rewards are $272 million annually.”
The company’s total stash, which includes its ETH fortune, 196 BTC, a $200 million stake in Beast Industries, a $83 million stake in Eightco, and $1.2 billion in cash, has risen to $11.5 billion. Its Ethereum holdings represent 3.81% of the entire asset supply.
While being the first in the Ethereum treasury world, BitMine is the second overall in crypto, trailing only to Michael Saylor’s Strategy, which announced its latest gigantic BTC purchase earlier today.
The post Tom Lee Calls the Bottom: Why Bitmine Just Bought Another 61,000 ETH appeared first on CryptoPotato.