Iran's ability to export oil despite the blockade highlights its resilience and may influence geopolitical dynamics and market expectations.
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Increased military presence in the Strait of Hormuz may heighten regional tensions, impacting trade routes and market stability.
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Iran's threat to close the Strait of Hormuz could escalate tensions, impacting global oil markets and complicating US-Iran diplomatic efforts.
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The drone strike complicates ceasefire talks, yet market confidence in a resolution suggests traders view it as a temporary disruption.
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Ukraine's expanded energy disruption campaign against Russia reduces ceasefire prospects, complicating future negotiations and stability.
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Bitcoin Magazine

When Quantum Computers Come for Your Bitcoin: What Classical Property Law Says Happens Next
Bitcoin’s quantum debate keeps slipping sideways because people keep arguing about two different things at once.
One question is technical: if quantum computing gets good enough to break Bitcoin’s signature scheme, the protocol can respond. New address types, migration rules, soft forks, deprecations, key rotation. That is a real engineering problem, but it is still an engineering problem.
The other question is legal: suppose someone uses a quantum computer to derive the private key for an old wallet and sweep the coins. What, exactly, just happened? Did he recover abandoned property, or did he steal someone else’s bitcoin?
In April 2026, BIP-361 proposed freezing more than 6.5 million BTC sitting in quantum-vulnerable UTXOs, including an estimated million-plus coins associated with Satoshi. No longer just an abstract discussion, it’s now a live fight over ownership, confiscation, and the meaning of property inside a system that ultimately recognizes only control.
I am not taking a position here on when a quantum computer capable of attacking Bitcoin will arrive. The narrower question is the one that matters first: if it does arrive, and someone starts moving long-dormant coins with quantum-derived keys, does the law treat that as legitimate recovery or theft?
Classical property law gives a fairly blunt answer. It is theft.
That answer will frustrate some Bitcoiners, because Bitcoin itself does not enforce title in the way courts do. It enforces control. If you can produce the valid spend, the network accepts the spend. But that only sharpens the point. The harder the network leans on control, the more important it becomes to state clearly what the law would say about the underlying act.
And on that front, the law is not especially mysterious.
Old coins are not ownerless just because they are old.
It helps to begin with the narrower, more realistic version of the threat. Not all bitcoin is equally exposed. In the ordinary case, an address does not reveal the public key until the owner spends. That matters because a quantum attacker cannot simply look at any untouched address on the chain and pluck out the private key.
The real risk sits in a more limited category of outputs. Early pay-to-public-key outputs reveal the full public key on-chain. Some older script constructions do the same. Taproot outputs do as well: a P2TR output commits directly to a 32-byte output key, not a hash of one. Address reuse can also expose the public key once a user spends and leaves funds behind under the same key material. Those are the coins people really mean when they talk about exposed bitcoin.
The timeline for this scenario has compressed. On March 31, 2026, Google Quantum AI published research showing Bitcoin’s secp256k1 curve could be broken with fewer than 500,000 physical qubits, a twenty-fold reduction from prior estimates of roughly nine million. The same paper models the mempool attack vector directly: during a transaction, the public key is exposed for approximately ten minutes before block confirmation, giving a quantum adversary a window to derive the key before the spend confirms.
Current hardware remains far from these thresholds: Google’s Willow chip sits at 105 qubits and IBM’s Nighthawk at 120. But algorithmic optimization is outrunning hardware scaling. NIST’s own post-quantum migration roadmap calls for quantum-vulnerable algorithms to be deprecated across federal systems by 2030 and disallowed entirely by 2035. That federal timeline does not bind Bitcoin, but it supplies the benchmark against which institutional holders and regulators will measure Bitcoin’s preparedness.
A great many of those coins are old. Some are certainly lost. Some belong to dead owners. Some are tied up in paper wallets, forgotten backups, ancient storage habits, or estates that no one has sorted out. Some probably belong to people who are very much alive and simply have no interest in touching them.
That last point matters more than the “lost coin” crowd usually admits. From the outside, dormancy tells you very little. A wallet can sit untouched for twelve years because the owner is dead, because the owner lost the keys, because the owner is disciplined, because the owner is paranoid, because the coins are locked in a multi-party setup, or because the owner is Satoshi and would rather remain a rumor than a litigant. The blockchain does not tell you which explanation is true.
That uncertainty is precisely why property law has never treated silence as a magic solvent for ownership.
The casual “finders keepers” intuition that floats around these discussions has almost nothing to do with how property law actually works.
Ownership does not evaporate because property sits unused. Title continues until it is transferred, relinquished, extinguished by law, or displaced by some doctrine that actually applies. Time alone does not do that work. Inaction alone does not do that work. Value certainly does not do that work.
So if someone wants to argue that dormant bitcoin is fair game, the path usually runs through abandonment. The claim is simple enough: these coins have been sitting there forever, nobody has touched them, they are probably lost, therefore they must be abandoned.
The law is much stricter than that. Abandonment generally requires both intent to relinquish ownership and some act manifesting that intent. The owner must, in substance, mean to give it up and do something that shows he meant to give it up. Simply failing to move an asset for a long period is not enough, particularly where the asset is obviously valuable.
That is not some fussy technicality… it’s one of the core tenets of property law. If nonuse alone were enough to destroy title, the law would become a standing invitation to loot anything whose owner had been quiet for too long. That is not our rule for land, for houses, for stock certificates, for buried cash, or for heirlooms. It is not the rule for bitcoin either.
Take the easy edge case. If someone deliberately sends coins to a burn address with no usable private key, that begins to look like abandonment because there is both a clear act and a clear signal. But that example proves the opposite of what quantum raiders want it to prove. It shows what relinquishment looks like when a person actually intends it. Most dormant wallets do not look anything like that.
The better reading is the ordinary one: old coins are old coins. Some are lost. Some are inaccessible. Some are forgotten. Some are sleeping. None of that converts them into ownerless property.
And recent legislation has begun to formalize the same instinct. The UK’s Property (Digital Assets etc) Act 2025, which received Royal Assent on December 2, 2025, creates a third category of personal property explicitly covering crypto-tokens. In the United States, UCC Article 12 has now been adopted by more than thirty states and the District of Columbia, recognizing “controllable electronic records” as a distinct legal category. Neither regime treats dormancy as relinquishment. By formally classifying digital assets as property, both raise the bar for anyone arguing that old coins are ownerless by default.
The next move is usually to shift from abandonment to mortality. Fine, perhaps the coins were not abandoned, but surely many of these early holders are dead. Doesn’t that change the analysis?
Not in the way the raider would like.
Some early wallets invite a kind of Schrödinger’s-heir problem: the owner is confidently declared dead when the raider wants ownerless property, then treated as notionally available whenever the burdens of succession come into view. Property law does not indulge the superposition.
When a person dies, title does not disappear. It passes. Property goes to heirs, devisees, or, in the absence of both, to the state through escheat. The law does not shrug and announce an open season. It preserves continuity of ownership even when possession becomes messy, inconvenient, or impossible to exercise.
The analogy to physical property is almost insultingly straightforward. If a man dies owning a ranch, the first trespasser who cuts the lock does not become the new owner by initiative and optimism. The estate handles succession. If there are no heirs, the sovereign has a claim. Valuable property does not become unowned merely because the original owner is gone.
Bitcoin is no different on that point. Lost keys do not transfer title. Inaccessibility is not a conveyance. A stranger who derives the private key later with better tooling has not uncovered ownerless treasure. He has acquired the practical ability to move property that still belongs to someone else, or to someone else’s estate.
That conclusion matters most for the largest block of old, vulnerable coins: Satoshi’s. Whether Satoshi is alive, dead, or permanently off-grid does not change the legal classification. Those coins belong either to Satoshi or to Satoshi’s estate. They do not become a bounty for the first actor who arrives with a quantum crowbar.
Some people assume dormant bitcoin can be swept up under unclaimed property law. That confusion is understandable, but it misses how those statutes actually operate.
Unclaimed property law generally runs through a holder. A bank, broker, exchange, or other custodian owes property to the owner. If the owner disappears long enough, the state steps in and requires the holder to report and remit the asset, subject to the owner’s right to reclaim it later. The doctrine is built around intermediaries.
That framework works well enough for exchange balances. It works for custodial wallets. It works for assets sitting with a business that can be ordered to turn them over.
It does not work the same way for self-custodied bitcoin. A self-custodied UTXO has no bank in the middle, no exchange holding the bag, and no transfer agent waiting for instructions. There is no custodian for the state to command. There is only the network, the key, and the person who can or cannot produce the valid spend.
That means governments can often reach custodial crypto, but self-custodied bitcoin presents a harder limit. The law can say who owns it. The law can sometimes say who should surrender it. What it cannot do is conjure the private key.
The same problem defeats a more dressed-up version of the argument under UCC Article 12. A quantum attacker who derives the private key may gain “control” of the asset in a practical sense. But control is not title. It never has been. A burglar who finds your safe combination gains control too. He still stole what was inside.
Two analogies get dragged out whenever someone wants to dignify quantum theft with a veneer of doctrine: adverse possession and salvage.
Neither one survives contact with the facts.
Adverse possession developed for land, and it carries conditions that make sense in land disputes. Possession must be open and notorious enough to give the true owner a fair chance to notice the adverse claim and contest it. A quantum attacker who sweeps coins into a fresh address does nothing of the sort. Yes, the movement is visible on-chain. No, that is not meaningful notice in the legal sense. A pseudonymous transfer on a public ledger does not tell the owner who is asserting title, on what basis, or in what forum the claim can be challenged.
The policy rationale also collapses. Adverse possession helps resolve stale land disputes, quiet title, and reward visible use of neglected real property. Bitcoin has none of those structural problems. The blockchain already records the chain of possession.
Salvage is worse. Salvage rewards a party who rescues property from peril. The quantum raider does not rescue property from peril. He exploits the peril. In many cases, he is the reason the peril matters at all. Calling that “salvage” is like calling a pirate a lifeguard because he arrived with a boat: a euphemism masquerading as a legal theory.
This is why BIP-361 matters. It is the first serious proposal to force the issue at the consensus layer rather than wait for courts and commentators to argue over the wreckage afterward.
In broad strokes, the proposal would roll out in phases. First, users would be barred from sending new bitcoin into quantum-vulnerable address types, while still being allowed to move existing funds out to safer destinations. Later, legacy signatures in vulnerable UTXOs would stop being valid for purposes of spending those coins. In practical terms, any remaining unmigrated funds would freeze. A further recovery mechanism has been proposed using zero-knowledge proofs tied to BIP-39 seed possession, though that portion remains aspirational and incomplete.
Critically, the recovery path works only for wallets generated from BIP-39 mnemonics. Earlier wallet formats, including the pay-to-public-key outputs associated with Satoshi, have no realistic route back under the current proposal. That limitation is not incidental. It means Phase C, as currently designed, would preserve the property rights of more recent adopters while permanently extinguishing those of the earliest ones. That is a de facto statute of limitations imposed not by a legislature but by a protocol change.
The attraction of the proposal is obvious. If the network knows a category of coins is likely to become loot for whoever reaches them first, it can refuse to bless the looting. That is, in substance, a defense of ownership against a purely technological shortcut. It treats the quantum actor as a thief and denies him the prize.
But that is only half the story. The other half does not vanish merely because protocol designers would rather not observe it.
The proposal also creates a second legal problem, and it is harder to wave away. Phase B does not only stop thieves. It also disables actual owners who fail, or are unable, to migrate in time. That matters because property law does not ask only whether a rule has a good motive. It also asks what the rule does to the owner.
Calling that “theft” is too imprecise. BIP-361 does not reassign the coins to developers, miners, or some new claimant. It does not enrich the freezer in the ordinary way a thief enriches himself. But “not theft” does not end the inquiry. The closer analogy is conversion, or at least something uncomfortably adjacent to it. If the rule is that an owner had a valid spend yesterday and will have none tomorrow, not because he transferred title, not because he abandoned the coins, and not because a court extinguished his claim, but because the network decided those coins were too dangerous to remain spendable, the network has done something more than merely “protect property rights.” It has intentionally disabled the practical exercise of some of those rights.
That is what makes the freeze legally awkward. Freeze supporters can defend it as the lesser evil, and they may be right. But lesser evil is not the same thing as legal cleanliness. A rule that permanently prevents an owner from accessing his own coins begins to look less like ordinary theft and more like forced dispossession by consensus.
The strongest objections appear in the hardest cases. Timelocked UTXOs are the cleanest example. If a user deliberately created a timelock that matures after the freeze date, that owner did not neglect the coins. He did not abandon them. He affirmatively structured them to be unspendable until a future date. Yet the protocol could still freeze them permanently before that date ever arrives. Other older wallet constructions create a similar problem. If the eventual recovery path depends on BIP-39 seed possession, some earlier wallet formats may have no realistic route back at all. Estates create the same tension in another form. The owner may be dead, but title has not vanished. It passed somewhere. Freezing the coins does not eliminate the underlying property claim. It only eliminates the network’s willingness to honor it.
That is why the better description of Phase B is not “anti-theft rule” in the abstract. It is a confiscatory defense mechanism. Maybe a justified one. Maybe even a necessary one. But still confiscatory in effect for at least some owners. The proposal does not just choose owner over thief. In some cases it chooses one class of owners over another, then treats the losses of the disfavored class as the price of securing the system.
That does not make BIP-361 unlawful in any straightforward, courtroom-ready sense. Bitcoin consensus changes are not state action, so the takings analogy is imperfect unless government enters the picture directly. But as a matter of private-law reasoning, the conversion analogy lands harder. Title may remain rhetorically intact while practical control is intentionally destroyed.
That is the real symmetry at the center of the quantum debate. Letting a quantum attacker sweep dormant coins looks like theft. Freezing vulnerable coins by soft fork may be the lesser evil, but it is not costless, either materially or morally. For some owners, it begins to look a great deal like confiscation.
Classical property law is not going to bless quantum key derivation as some clever form of lawful recovery.
Dormancy is not abandonment. Death transfers title; it does not dissolve it. Unclaimed property law reaches custodians, not self-custody itself. Adverse possession does not map onto pseudonymous UTXOs. Salvage is a bad joke.
So if someone uses a quantum computer to derive the private key for a dormant wallet and move the coins, the legal system will almost certainly call that theft.
But BIP-361 shows that Bitcoin may not face a choice between theft and pristine protection of ownership. It may face a choice between theft by attacker and dispossession by protocol. Freezing vulnerable coins may be a defensible response to an extraordinary threat. It may even be the only response the network finds tolerable. Still, it should be described honestly. For some owners, especially those with timelocked outputs, old wallet formats, or no realistic migration path, the freeze begins to look less like protection than confiscation.
That is what makes the issue more than a simple morality play. Bitcoin collapses the distinction property law usually relies on between title and possession. Courts can say a quantum raider stole the coins. Courts can say a protocol-level freeze substantially interfered with an owner’s rights. But the chain will still recognize only the rules its economic majority adopts.
So the fight is not simply over whether Bitcoin should defend property rights during the quantum transition. The fight is over which property rights Bitcoin is willing to impair in order to defend the rest.
Welcome to classical politics.
This is a guest post by Colin Crossman. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.
This post When Quantum Computers Come for Your Bitcoin: What Classical Property Law Says Happens Next first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Colin Crossman.
Bitcoin Magazine

The Whole Entire Universe: 21 Million, One Painting
There are 21 million bitcoin. That number is fixed, coded into the protocol, finite. It is one of the most consequential design decisions in the history of money, and yet for most people it remains an abstraction. Green digits cascading down a black screen like something out of The Matrix, or a talking point tossed around on a podcast.
The Japanese artist On Kawara spent nearly fifty years hand-painting a date onto a canvas every day — if he didn’t finish by midnight, he destroyed it. Anik Malcolm spent 900 hours painting 21 million beads. The impulse is the same: make the abstraction physical, make the counting matter, let the labor carry the meaning.
“The Whole Entire Universe” is a concept first conceived in early 2025 and now in its third and most ambitious incarnation: a meticulous, large-format oil painting in which every single bitcoin is represented as an individual bead, painted by hand over the course of more than 900 hours. The work will debut at Bitcoin 2026 at The Venetian Resort in Las Vegas.
The premise was somewhat simple— show 21 million of something. But in working out how to do it, Malcolm stumbled into something closer to a tesseract — a shape that revealed more dimensions the longer he looked at it. Twenty-one million does not divide cleanly into a cube — its cube root is an irrational number. But if you round up to the nearest whole number, 276, and cube it, you get 21,024,576 — exactly 24,576 more than 21 million. That surplus divides evenly by six (one for each face of the cube), yielding 4,096 beads to remove per side. The square root of 4,096 is 64 — a perfect square and a power of two. Which means those removed areas can be halved repeatedly: from 64×64, to 32×32, to 16×16, all the way down to 2×2 — mirroring, with startling precision, bitcoin’s halving mechanism.
He opened the box and the pattern was already inside. To him, the work is not an illustration of Bitcoin — it is a still life of it. The most literal depiction that could be made, rendered in a form so structurally resonant that it has drawn the attention of Adam Back.
From early drawings exhibited in Lugano to digital renderings to the oil painting debuting at B26 — and a planned monumental public sculpture in Roatán — “The Whole Entire Universe” keeps demanding a bigger canvas.
I spoke with Anik Malcolm about how a simple question produced an extraordinary answer.

BMAG: The Whole Entire Universe began with a deceptively simple premise — make an artwork that shows 21 million of something. How did you land on that idea, and what was it like when your wife — herself an artist and jeweler — suggested a cube of beads? How does that kind of creative exchange between partners work for you?
Anik Malcolm: The original impetus was literally that simple — it struck me that although the 21M number is so critically important to us as bitcoiners, it’s also a number that is difficult to fathom without seeing. How simultaneously large it is in volume, but also overseeably small and “human” in scale — so I wanted to find a way of bringing the number to life, of making it graspable. My wife Una and I have collaborated on many projects over the years, both in the visual and sonic arts, so we have honed the skill well of making it a constructive flow. I suggested this idea to her in conversation, and her instantaneous response was “a cube of beads.” I loved this both for the fact that a cube is such a deeply ubiquitous symbol in bitcoin, visually and metaphorically, and that the bead was one of the very first methods of exchange — the combination just made perfect sense, and was additionally manageable in scale. I immediately set to working out the practicalities, calculator in hand, and could barely believe what I found..!
BMAG: When you started working out whether 21 million could fit into a cube, you stumbled into a series of mathematical coincidences — 276 cubed, the 4,096 remainder dividing evenly by six, the square root landing on 64 (I can’t help hearing the Beatles lyric “When I’m 64” in my head), a power of two. Walk us through that moment. Did you realize right away what you were looking at, or did it unfold gradually?
Anik Malcolm: Haha — wow, I hadn’t even made the Beatles connection yet! Fantastic. Yes, it happened very quickly. Obviously the cube root of 21M wasn’t going to be a rational number, so I knew I would have to do some tinkering to make it fit. I naturally started with the idea of rounding the cube root up to 276 and subtracting from there — as you said earlier, to reach 21,024,576, and it was already a rush when the surplus 24,576 divided cleanly into 6, meaning I could give the desired structure symmetry. That rush, however, was greatly amplified by the fact that I felt I recognized the number 4,096, and I was literally shaking when I inputted “square root of 4096” into my calculator, and when I saw the result I was absolutely dumbstruck — Una witnessing the whole process in amusement! The fact that I could not only spread the subtracted number equally over all six sides, but ALSO do so in perfect squares to obtain exactly 21,000,000 felt like a moment of divine providence, as if this symmetry had been encoded from the start and had been waiting to be found, and that there was possibly some deeper significance that someone, some day, might fathom. I knew right away that I had been entrusted with a very meaningful project.

BMAG: The pattern you found — squares halving from 64×64 down to 2×2 — mirrors bitcoin’s halving mechanism. You’ve described the piece as a “still life of Bitcoin.” How much of that connection did you set out to find, and how much of it felt like it was already embedded in the number waiting to be discovered?
Anik Malcolm: Yes — I was actually so moved by the initial finding that it wasn’t until some time later that I realized, to my EVEN greater astonishment, the obvious fact that I could divide 64 into 32, 16, 8, 4, and 2 — not only making the cube much more visually interesting, but in the process also representing both the halving function so deeply integral to bitcoin’s mechanism, but simultaneously also the exponential growth that, conversely, is a direct result of that halving. It felt that this single cube embodied everything that bitcoin is and does, and in such incredible symmetrical elegance — I was, and am still, more than a year later, absolutely in awe of the beauty of it all, which is why I have made it pretty much into my life’s work, for the time being at least. So to answer the question — I didn’t set out to find it at all, which is why I really feel I’m just a messenger, a role which permits me to stand so strongly behind it as it is not my own creation but merely a discovery.

BMAG: The oil painting debuting at Bitcoin 2026 took over 900 hours — each bead representing an individual bitcoin, painted by hand. What does that kind of sustained, meticulous labor do to your relationship with the subject? Does spending that long with 21 million change how you think about the number?
Anik Malcolm: This is a very interesting question, and one I actually pondered much during the process. As it is a two-dimensional representation of a still-theoretical 3D object, I “only” had to paint the 227,701 visible beads — each one, however, three times: body, highlight, shadow, not to mention the underlying grid.
The whole process, as you can imagine, was deeply meditative, and I found that “intrusive” thoughts would affect my efficiency, so that in itself became an exercise in recognizing, accepting, and letting go — a growth process of sorts which many report encountering on their bitcoin journey.
Next, I realized that music that was more demanding of my attention would have the same effect, so over time the playlist evolved into a soundtrack which resonated with the cube’s essence rather than rubbed against it — Arvo Pärt, David Lang, Kjartan Sveinsson, and the like, which I will also provide for listening at B26, as it forms an added dimension to the artwork’s presence.
Thirdly, I started noticing many other patterns within the numbers, many of which linked with Tesla’s “3,6,9” ideas, and I even spontaneously started reciting personal mantras as I painted, dot by dot, in a 3,6,9 pattern!
So I would say that rather than actively applying meaning to the number and its cubic manifestation, I became deeply under its influence as time progressed — physically, mentally, and spiritually. There is a certain “holiness” to bitcoin upon which I feel we all agree to a greater or lesser extent, and my experience of representing it so very literally was a true reflection of that.

BMAG: This concept has moved from drawings in Lugano to digital versions and tutorial videos to a full-scale oil painting, and you’re planning a monumental public sculpture in Roatán. What is it about this particular idea that keeps demanding a bigger format?
Anik Malcolm: Actually, both the Lugano drawings and the B26 painting (each 128×128 cm — about 4’2″) are on the smallest scale at which I could accurately represent the number! Each bead is 2mm (5/64″) — even smaller on the top face — so any smaller would have been unfeasible. I would also like to make a sculpture version of the same or similar size, hopefully within the next 12 months, as 55.2cm (under 2′) is still manageable in size. However, I met someone in Lugano who had spent years looking for a suitable idea for a monumental Bitcoin sculpture in Roatán, and felt that this worked perfectly. Even at a bead size of only 1cm (roughly ⅜”) with a 1cm gap in between for visual and kinetic effect, the cube alone quickly expands to 5.52m (approx. 18′), not counting the supporting structure and elevation from the ground. I feel that being able to be in the presence of all 21 million at such a grand and imposing scale would be an experience that would do bitcoin and all it stands for the appropriate justice.
BMAG: Adam Back has taken notice of the work. But if someone walks up to this painting at B26 with no math background and no particular interest in Bitcoin’s technical architecture — what do you want them to see or infer?
Anik Malcolm: I think my teenage daughter is a good representative of that demographic! She told me the other day that she would frequently come into the room where the painting has been drying “just to look at it for a while.” As I experienced while painting — I feel there is a deeply calming effect that the cube’s sheer symmetry and pattern exudes, floating and glowing in its abyssal setting, and combined with the provided soundtrack it becomes a deeply meditative and engrossing experience. And even on a basic math entry level — there are 21 subtracted squares visible on the painting! (Another beautiful coincidence — 1 square of 64², 4 squares of 32², and 16 squares of 16².) I feel, and hope, that both visitors of B26 and eventually the painting’s future owner will derive deep and sustained pleasure from this calm that was quietly encoded into that magical number, in the way both I and my whole family have during the journey of its creation — the calm methodical truth that is reflective of the bitcoin experience as a whole.
Fix the money. Fix the world.
“The Whole Entire Universe” by Anik Malcolm debuts in the BMAG art gallery at Bitcoin 2026, April 27–29, at The Venetian Resort, Las Vegas. Preview the work and explore more from the BMAG B26 exhibition HERE. A limited edition shirt based on the painting is available HERE.
The Bitcoin Museum & Art Gallery (BMAG) is the curatorial and cultural programming division of BTC Inc and the Bitcoin Conference. Since 2019, the BMAG conference art gallery has facilitated more than 120 BTC in art and collectible sales. Learn more about BMAG at museum.b.tc. Follow BMAG on twitter @BMAG_HQ.
Bundle your Bitcoin 2026 pass with a stay at The Venetianand get your fourth night free. Use code AFTERS for a free After Hours Pass, or get your pass alone here.
This post The Whole Entire Universe: 21 Million, One Painting first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Dennis Koch.
Bitcoin Magazine

Congresswoman Sheri Biggs Discloses Up to $250,000 BTC Investment via iShares Bitcoin ETF
Representative Sheri Biggs of South Carolina has disclosed a purchase of up to $250,000 in Bitcoin exposure via the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT), marking one of the largest single Bitcoin-related buys by a sitting member of Congress.
The Periodic Transaction Report filed with the House shows a transaction in the $100,001–$250,000 range executed on March 4, 2026 and reported in mid‑April, in line with disclosure deadlines under the STOCK Act.
The trade places Biggs among Congress’s most aggressive adopters of Bitcoin investment products, a cohort that already includes Senator David McCormick and Representative Brandon Gill, who have collectively reported hundreds of thousands of dollars in Bitcoin ETF purchases over the past year.
Biggs has previously been identified by crypto advocacy groups as strongly supportive of digital assets, and her latest filing underscores how lawmakers are increasingly gaining direct financial exposure to the sector they help regulate.
The move comes as BTC trades below recent highs but remains a central focus of Washington’s ongoing debate over digital asset regulation and potential federal Bitcoin reserve policy.
Bitcoin price rose sharply above $77,000 today after Iran announced the Strait of Hormuz had been fully reopened under a ceasefire framework, easing fears of a potential supply shock and triggering a broad risk-on move across global markets.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the key shipping route is open to all commercial vessels for the duration of a 10-day truce tied to de-escalation efforts involving Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon. The announcement signaled a temporary stabilization in a region that had been on edge for weeks over escalating tensions and threats to energy flows through one of the world’s most critical maritime chokepoints.
President Donald Trump amplified the development on social media, declaring that the “Strait of IRAN is fully open and ready for full passage,” reinforcing expectations that diplomatic momentum could continue. The White House has suggested that broader talks with Tehran remain possible within days, with additional regional meetings under discussion.
Markets reacted quickly. Oil prices fell as the geopolitical risk premium unwound, and equities and crypto moved higher in tandem. BTC pushed back into the $76,000–$78,000 range, a zone that has repeatedly acted as resistance since February’s pullback from earlier highs.
With liquidity thin and positioning crowded, BTC now sits at a key inflection point where continued geopolitical de-escalation could fuel a breakout above resistance, while renewed tensions risk sending price back toward the low-$70,000 range.
This post Congresswoman Sheri Biggs Discloses Up to $250,000 BTC Investment via iShares Bitcoin ETF first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

U.S Senator Probes Status of Binance Inquiry Over Iran Compliance Concerns
Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) has asked the Justice Department and FinCEN for updates on the status of monitors overseeing Binance, citing concerns about the exchange’s compliance program and allegations of weak anti-money laundering controls, according to Fortune reporting.
In letters sent Friday, Blumenthal referenced reports of Iranian-linked crypto flows and questioned whether Binance’s oversight structure is functioning as intended.
As part of a 2023 settlement tied to sanctions and money laundering violations, the exchange agreed to pay a $4.3 billion fine and accept two independent monitors — one reporting to the DOJ and another to FinCEN — to oversee its compliance reforms starting in 2024.
The senator’s inquiry follows media reports alleging internal investigators at Binance were dismissed after flagging more than $1 billion in transactions linked to Iranian wallets, a claim the company disputes.
It also comes amid broader scrutiny of federal monitorships, which have faced criticism over effectiveness and cost, and reports that the DOJ has reconsidered or paused some corporate oversight programs.
Earlier this year, in a letter sent to Attorney General Pam Bondi and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, a group of U.S. senators called for a “prompt, comprehensive review” of Binance’s sanctions compliance and anti-money laundering controls, citing renewed concerns over the exchange’s handling of illicit finance risks.
The letter, led by Sen. Mark Warner and joined by Ranking Member Elizabeth Warren along with Sens. Chris Van Hollen, Jack Reed, Catherine Cortez Masto, Tina Smith, Raphael Warnock, Andy Kim, Ruben Gallego, Lisa Blunt Rochester, and Angela Alsobrooks, points to internal compliance findings reportedly identifying roughly $1.7 billion in crypto transactions connected to Iranian actors, similarly to Blumenthal’s inquiry.
According to the senators, one case involved a Binance vendor allegedly facilitating $1.2 billion in transfers tied to Iran-linked entities. The letter further claims Iranian users accessed more than 1,500 Binance accounts and that the platform may also have been used by Russian actors to circumvent sanctions.
The lawmakers also raised concerns that employees who flagged suspicious activity were dismissed and that Binance has become less responsive to law enforcement requests, potentially undermining obligations under its 2023 plea agreement.
Binance previously pleaded guilty to federal violations involving sanctions breaches and anti–money laundering failures, agreeing to more than $4 billion in penalties and committing to extensive compliance reforms under U.S. oversight, including enhanced KYC and sanctions screening systems.
The senators argue that the latest allegations raise serious questions about whether those reforms have been effectively implemented and sustained, warning that allowing such flows would conflict with Binance’s commitments to the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control.
This post U.S Senator Probes Status of Binance Inquiry Over Iran Compliance Concerns first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
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Kraken Owner Payward to Acquire Bitnomial for $550M, Securing Full CFTC-Licensed U.S. Crypto Derivatives Stack
Kraken-owner Payward has agreed to acquire Bitnomial in a deal valued at up to $550 million in cash and stock, giving the firm control of a fully licensed U.S. crypto derivatives stack as it expands deeper into regulated markets.
The transaction values Payward at $20 billion and is expected to close in the first half of 2026, subject to customary conditions and regulatory filings with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Bitnomial stands out as the first crypto-native platform in the U.S. to secure all three licenses required to operate a full-stack derivatives business: a designated contract market, a derivatives clearing organization, and a futures commission merchant. Those approvals allow it to run an exchange, clear trades, and offer brokerage services within a single regulated framework.
By acquiring Bitnomial, Payward gains infrastructure that would take years to build. The exchange spent more than a decade developing a system designed for digital assets, including crypto settlement, crypto collateral, and continuous trading. The deal brings that foundation under Payward’s ecosystem, which includes Kraken and its recently acquired futures platform NinjaTrader.
Payward Co-CEO Arjun Sethi said clearing infrastructure shapes how markets function, pointing to settlement systems and margin models as the core of derivatives innovation. He said the U.S. lacks clearing infrastructure built for digital assets, which made Bitnomial’s platform a strategic target.
Bitnomial founder Luke Hoersten said the company built its exchange and clearinghouse from the ground up for crypto markets. He pointed to features such as perpetual futures, crypto-settled products, and a unified trading book across spot, futures, and options as capabilities that legacy systems cannot support without redesign.
The acquisition expands Payward’s push into derivatives, a segment that has become central to crypto trading volumes. While Kraken remains a major exchange, it trails some global competitors in spot trading and has focused on building out derivatives and multi-asset capabilities through acquisitions.
The company’s largest move came in 2025 with its $1.5 billion purchase of NinjaTrader, which gave it a foothold in U.S. futures markets and access to a large base of retail traders. The Bitnomial deal builds on that strategy by adding a fully regulated derivatives infrastructure layer.
The deal also strengthens Payward Services, the company’s business-to-business infrastructure arm. Through a single API integration, banks, fintech firms, and brokerages will be able to offer regulated U.S. derivatives alongside services such as crypto trading, staking, and tokenized equities.
Payward framed the transaction as an infrastructure play rather than a traditional acquisition, positioning Bitnomial’s regulatory stack as the foundation for building the next phase of U.S. crypto derivatives markets.
Earlier this week, Deutsche Börse acquired a $200 million stake in Kraken to expand institutional crypto services, even as the exchange disclosed limited insider-related security incidents affecting a small number of accounts. Also this week, Kraken confirmed a confidential IPO filing as its valuation dropped to $13.3 billion.
This post Kraken Owner Payward to Acquire Bitnomial for $550M, Securing Full CFTC-Licensed U.S. Crypto Derivatives Stack first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin rallied hard after Iran said it was reopening the Strait of Hormuz to commercial shipping.
Bitcoin hit the highest level since February, oil prices dropped, Wall Street notched another record, and the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield slipped to 4.24%. But here’s the catch: markets acted as if the reopening had solved the core standoff between Washington and Tehran.
Look closer, though, and the story gets more complicated. The opening is only temporary, the blockade is still in place, mine-clearing operations are ongoing, and there’s plenty of confusion about what Iran has actually agreed to.

That matters even more heading into the weekend. U.S. stocks, Treasuries, and most major markets shut down after Friday, but Bitcoin keeps trading.
So once again, Bitcoin becomes the first big, liquid market to test whether Friday’s rally was built on real progress or just hope.
The public messaging from Washington also leaves room for a reversal. Trump told Axios he expects a deal “in a day or two”, and the same report said the outline under discussion could involve the U.S. releasing $20 billion in frozen Iranian funds in exchange for Tehran giving up its enriched uranium.
The Washington Post reported that Iran had not confirmed Trump's claim that it would hand over what he calls “nuclear dust,” while also noting that earlier U.S. claims about Iranian commitments had already proved unreliable or had fallen apart.
Tehran's public posture still sits well short of the version of events that calmed markets. In the Al Jazeera liveblog, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei was quoted as rejecting any transfer of enriched uranium to the United States and dismissing U.S. statements on Hormuz as contradictory.
Even before that, Tasnim reported on April 15 that Baghaei was still defending enrichment as a non-negotiable sovereign right.
There’s still a big gap between what traders are hoping for and what’s actually been agreed to. Friday’s rally made sense as a relief move: an open Strait of Hormuz means less immediate risk for oil.
But it’s a stretch to say the big issues, like uranium, compensation, or the Lebanon ceasefire, are anywhere close to settled. That gap is hard to ignore. Trump said the American blockade on Iranian ships and ports will stay in place until Tehran reaches a deal with Washington, including on its nuclear program.
So while the Strait might be open for some ships, the bigger restrictions haven’t gone anywhere.
That’s the real setup as we head into the weekend. Oil finished lower, stocks hit new highs, and investors felt bolder, but the story behind those moves is still shaky.
We’ve seen optimism turn into doubt more than once during this conflict. The question now is whether this latest rally can actually last.
The physical market is still flashing caution. Back on April 11, CENTCOM said U.S. forces were preparing for mine-clearing in the strait, with more equipment and underwater drones on the way.
If traders really thought the Strait was back to normal, they wouldn’t still be glued to live mine-clearing updates, with shipping firms still cautious of crossing.
The last ceasefire window showed just how slow the shipping recovery can be. Only five ships made it through on Wednesday and seven on Thursday, while more than 600 vessels, including 325 tankers, were still stuck in the Gulf. Daily passage was still just 10 to 15 ships, far below the 120 to 140 before the conflict.
Friday’s late reality check didn’t really change that picture. Kpler still saw ship movement limited to approval-based corridors on Friday evening, hours after the full reopening claims, and warned that getting back to normal could take months, not weeks.
Maersk had already said in its own update that even with ceasefire news, there’s no guarantee of smooth sailing. Every transit decision is still a judgment call.
That’s why Friday’s oil drop made sense, but also why it’s fragile. U.S. crude closed at $82.59 and Brent at $90.38, a big turnaround from the stress earlier this month.
But those prices are still higher than before the conflict, and they don’t prove that shipping is back to normal or that the risk premium has disappeared for good.
The other big channel is interest rates. Friday’s oil drop helped pull the U.S. 10-year yield down to 4.24%, easing a bit of pressure just before the weekend.
But as CryptoSlate pointed out previously, if energy shocks keep coming, the next round of market moves could show up in government bond yields as well as oil prices.
That still matters because if oil bounces back over the weekend, the whole inflation and liquidity debate will be back on the table by Monday.
Bitcoin sits right in the middle of all this. It keeps trading while stocks and bonds are closed, and while most big markets are waiting for Monday to roll around.
That makes Bitcoin the first place traders can show whether they think Friday’s news was real progress or just another pause built on mixed messages. That’s especially important given how traders are positioned.
CryptoSlate’s first look on Friday showed the rally was fueled by a surge in short liquidations and a shift toward more bullish bets. A squeeze like this can keep going if the story holds up, but it can also unwind quickly if the news turns out less solid than traders had hoped.
| Weekend trigger | What it would signal | First likely BTC read |
|---|---|---|
| Tehran repeats the uranium denial or talks visibly stall | Friday likely priced rhetoric faster than diplomacy | Higher risk of BTC handing back part of the relief move toward $73k |
| The Lebanon ceasefire holds and ship trackers show more approved movement | Markets can keep extending the de-escalation window | Better odds that BTC holds the mid-$70,000s and tests $79k resistance |
| A maritime incident, shipping slowdown or renewed regional strike appears | Physical risk reasserts itself before cash markets reopen | BTC likely becomes the first liquid stress gauge of the reversal toward $70k |
The constructive case for the weekend is pretty simple. If there’s no new military escalation, if Tehran and Washington keep the rhetoric from getting worse, and if ship movements improve beyond the controlled corridors Kpler has been tracking, then Bitcoin can continue to serve as a de-escalation asset.
In that case, Friday’s squeeze was just the first leg of a cleaner repricing, not just a reflexive bounce into the close.
The bearish case is just as clear. If Iran’s pushback grows from denial into a visible collapse in talks, or if the Lebanon ceasefire starts to fray and undermines the political basis for opening Hormuz, then the market will have to rethink the oil risk premium it just removed.
Bitcoin would then be trading alone through the weekend as the first broad risk proxy available to price that gap is easing. But it didn’t prove that Washington and Tehran have settled the arguments that matter most.
Bitcoin heads into the April 18-19 weekend as a live relay for unresolved macro risk. The real signal will come from what happens after the headlines, on the water, in the talks, and in crude itself.
The post All eyes on Bitcoin this weekend as Iran is already disputing the US narrative on the Hormuz deal appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Crypto rhetoric has long prized the ability to transact without gatekeepers, to move value across borders without asking permission, and to hold assets no institution could seize.
Crypto culture treated these as design virtues, properties that builders embedded with ethical weight by deliberate architectural choice. Then the Drift exploit happened, and the backlash told a different story.
On Apr. 1, Drift suffered a major exploit. Circle later described the publicly reported losses as exceeding $270 million, while other reports put the figure around $285 million and documented criticism that Circle had not frozen stolen USDC as it moved across its cross-chain rails.
The attacker routed roughly $232 million in USDC from Solana to Ethereum using Circle's Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol. The backlash stemmed from users and observers wanting to know why Circle had not intervened sooner.
Days later, Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino posted that Tether had frozen 3.29 million USDT tied to the Rhea Finance attacker, framing the intervention as proof that “Tether cares.”
The contrast landed hard.
Circle published its formal response on Apr. 10, and its core argument was that USDC freezes occur when the law requires action. Circle is legally compelled by an appropriate authority through a lawful process.
Circle pushed back on the idea that an issuer should act as an ad hoc chain police force, arguing that open access to permissionless infrastructure is a feature, and that the bigger problem is that legal frameworks have not yet kept pace with the speed of on-chain exploits.
The stablecoin issuer also made a property-rights argument, claiming that arbitrary freezes set dangerous precedents for lawful users, and the power to freeze is a compliance obligation, constrained by lawful process and legal compulsion, authorized only through formal legal channels.
The complication is that Circle's own legal documents tell a more layered story.
USDC terms state that transfers are irreversible and that Circle carries no obligation to track or determine the provenance of balances.
Those same terms also reserve Circle's right to block certain addresses and, for Circle-custodied balances, freeze associated USDC in its sole discretion when it believes those addresses may be tied to illegal activity or terms violations.
Circle holds meaningful freeze power and frames it as a tightly bound compliance function, constrained by legal process and compulsion.
Ardoino's Rhea post was a boast, and Tether's terms grant it broad discretion by stating that the company may freeze tokens as required by law or whenever it determines, in its sole discretion, that doing so is prudent, and authorizing it to blacklist token addresses.
In February, Tether froze approximately $4.2 billion in USDT due to links to illicit activity, with $3.5 billion of that since 2023.

What Drift and Rhea forced into the open is a question that stablecoin competition had not yet fully surfaced: in a hack, what do users actually want from an issuer?
The anti-censorship instincts that shaped crypto's early culture tend to lose their force the moment users need an emergency brake. Affected protocols, exchanges holding stolen funds, and victims watching their balances drain want to know who can stop the thief.
That reframes freeze capacity as more of a consumer-protection feature.
Tether has been accumulating a record of intervention and visibility. Ardoino's Rhea post was designed to be read as a product statement, and in the context of a fresh exploit, it worked.
The emotional and practical logic is accessible, showing that one issuer froze stolen funds the same day an attacker moved them, while another issuer said legal timelines tied its hands.
This makes optics difficult for Circle regardless of the legal merits of its position.
Stablecoins are quietly differentiating themselves in emergency governance, alongside reserve composition and exchange liquidity.
The case for Circle's position is real and does not require dismissing the Drift backlash to hold. Broad issuer discretion over freezes creates risks that extend far beyond hack scenarios.
An issuer that can freeze tokens in its sole discretion when it determines it is prudent can freeze tokens for reasons unrelated to protecting victims. Politically contentious addresses, disputed transactions, regulatory scrutiny from a single jurisdiction, or simple operational error can all trigger freezes under terms as broad as Tether's.
The same capacity that lets an issuer stop a thief also lets it stop a protester, a dissident from a sanctioned country, or a business whose activity it finds inconvenient.
Circle's public writing on the Drift exploit is, among other things, a defense against that risk. The argument that emergency intervention needs new legal frameworks and safe-harbor structures is also an argument that the current situation is a problem, even when the targets are criminals.
The absence of defined standards means an issuer can act generously today and overreach tomorrow, with no formal mechanism to distinguish the two.
Tether's freeze record has not yet produced a major documented wrongful-freeze controversy, but that record is also vast and not fully transparent.
Reports on the $4.2 billion in frozen USDT withhold the details of each decision, the legal process underlying each freeze, and the error rate across thousands of enforcement actions.
Fast intervention looks different in the abstract when the process generating those interventions is opaque.
| Benefit of fast freezes | Cost of broad freeze discretion |
|---|---|
| Can slow or stop stolen funds | Can enable arbitrary intervention |
| May improve recovery odds | Can affect lawful users |
| Helps exchanges/protocols in crises | Can reflect political or regulatory pressure |
| Looks like consumer protection in hacks | Process may be opaque |
| Becomes a due-diligence feature | Wrongful-freeze risk may be hard to challenge |
The bull case for intervention-first issuers runs in a world where hacks keep coming, and recoverability keeps rising on the priority list.
More regulatory scrutiny on exchanges to show they take asset protection seriously, and more institutional users who need to demonstrate due diligence in custody and recovery. These are factors that push emergency freeze capacity to the center of stablecoin evaluation.
In that scenario, Tether's public freeze record and broad discretionary terms become genuine competitive assets. Exchanges and protocols that have experienced exploits now treat fast-intervention capacity as a due diligence criterion when choosing which stablecoin to hold as primary liquidity.
Circle has to either act faster through new legal mechanisms or accept that some market segments will treat its rule-of-law posture as a liability in crises. Ardoino's Rhea post, in retrospect, looks like an early entry in a competition that the market eventually formalizes.
The bear case for that same model runs through wrongful freezes, regulatory backlash, and the discovery that broad discretion is often a liability as much as a virtue.
A high-profile incorrect freeze, such as an address flagged as malicious that belongs to a legitimate user, a jurisdiction-specific enforcement action that appears to be politically targeted at users in other markets, or an operational error that freezes clean funds during a market stress event, turns the same emergency-governance story toxic.
In that world, Circle's insistence on lawful process and defined standards looks like principled restraint, a deliberate commitment to defined limits over speed, and users place a real premium on an issuer whose freeze decisions carry formal accountability.
The crypto community's historical skepticism toward centralized control reasserts itself as hard-won practical wisdom, grounded in the documented costs of unchecked issuer discretion.
The stablecoin winners in that scenario are the ones whose intervention power is real but bounded. Issuers who can act in genuine emergencies and demonstrate they held back in ambiguous ones.

As stablecoins deepen their role in institutional payments, treasury workflows, and regulated financial infrastructure, governance under stress becomes as material as reserve quality or distribution reach.
The question that Drift and Rhea put on the table of how much control users want an issuer to have has no clean universal answer. Institutions with large exposures and recovery obligations may want emergency brakes, while individuals holding stablecoins across politically sensitive jurisdictions may want the opposite.
Protocols with mixed user bases need to answer for both.
The real contest now is for the version of stablecoin governance that earns enough trust from enough users to become the default.
The post Crypto censorship resistance is questioned as major fight breaks out over who gets to freeze your digital dollars appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Artificial intelligence and crypto-native tools are quickly shaping a future where software agents can fund themselves, run cross-chain strategies, and move through financial markets with no one at the controls.
According to a recent report by DWF Ventures, automated and agentic activity now accounts for an estimated 19% of all on-chain transactions, with 17,000 agents launched since 2025.
The report added that the agent economy is already here.
For now, most of this machine-driven money movement happens through bots shuffling stablecoins across a patchwork of payment systems that still lean on centralized gateways, managed issuers, and card-linked rails.
Crypto is building the interfaces for machine payments before it has built the autonomy those interfaces are supposed to enable.
Before treating DWF's 19% figure as a clean measure of autonomous finance, it helps to understand what it actually measures.
Stablecoin Insider's data for the first quarter of 2026 shows that bots accounted for roughly 76% of stablecoin transaction volume, while total stablecoin transaction volume reached $28 trillion, up 51% quarter over quarter.

Retail-sized transfers fell 16% over the same period, the sharpest decline on record.
Automation, routing, and high-frequency machine activity drove that growth. Software systems moving programmatic dollars across exchanges, wallets, liquidity venues, and payment intermediaries constitute the machine economy's currently visible form.
Stablecoins are a natural fit here. They don’t swing in price, they settle on programmable rails, and they use the same units of account that most software already understands. For any automated system that needs to move money without worrying about currency risk, stablecoins just make sense.
DefiLlama currently estimates the stablecoin market at approximately $320 billion, with Ethereum holding about 52% of supply, Tron carrying $86.7 billion, overwhelmingly in USDT, Solana at $15.7 billion, led by USDC, and Base at $4.9 billion, also heavily in USDC.
The blockchains leading the way in machine-driven stablecoin flows are the ones already built for moving dollar tokens at scale. In many ways, stablecoins are turning into the first money rails used just as much by software as by people.
Payment standards for machine commerce are starting to take shape. x402, Stripe’s Machine Payments Protocol (launched in March 2026), and Google Cloud’s Agent Payment Protocol 2 are all signs that this space is picking up real momentum.
| Current machine-payment infrastructure | What full autonomy would require |
|---|---|
| Stablecoin transfers supported | Self-funding and treasury management by agents |
| Agent-to-agent or human-triggered agent calls | Independent execution without human approval |
| Payment via card-linked or bank-linked intermediaries | Native on-chain settlement end-to-end |
| Managed issuers and centralized gateways | Decentralized trust and identity systems |
| Compliance and custody handled by intermediaries | Built-in reputation, insurance, and fail-safes |
| Hybrid payment standards (x402, MPP, AP2) | Autonomous optimization across evolving market conditions |
The x402 Foundation, launched under the Linux Foundation in April 2026, includes Coinbase, Cloudflare, Stripe, Google, and Visa as participants.
Still, x402’s public dashboard showed about 75 million transactions and $24 million in volume over the last 30 days, a drop in the bucket compared to the trillions already flowing through stablecoins.
Stripe's x402 implementation routes through Stripe-managed deposit address and capture flows, while Google's AP2 explicitly supports cards and real-time bank transfers alongside stablecoins.
Artemis reports that crypto-card volume, which grew from roughly $100 million per month in early 2023 to more than $1.5 billion per month by late 2025, still settles predominantly through fiat rails.
Current infrastructure builds programmable machine-money interfaces atop centralized systems.
Visa's US stablecoin settlement product reached a $3.5 billion annualized volume run rate by late 2025. In April, the company joined Tempo as a validator on a blockchain designed for agentic commerce.
Visa's latest move confirms that the agent economy's most active builders are designing for hybrid rails.
DWF's own report concludes that true end-to-end autonomy has yet to materialize, and the architecture explains why.
A fully autonomous agent in financial markets requires a verifiable identity, custody arrangements that survive model errors, reputation systems that allow counterparties to extend credit, fail-safe mechanisms that contain damage, and funding flows that do not depend on human top-ups.
None of those layers exists at the production scale. DWF's performance data reinforce the finding that agents outperform in narrow, rules-based tasks such as yield optimization, while humans still outperform in messier trading contexts.
The current machine economy operates as automation for well-defined workflows. The conditions for independent financial decision making, such as verifiable identity, custody, reputation systems, and execution fail-safes, have yet to converge at production scale.
Chainalysis adds that bot activity, MEV, liquidity provisioning, and internal operational transfers inflate raw stablecoin volume.
BCG and Allium estimate that, of roughly $62 trillion in gross on-chain stablecoin transfer volume in 2025, only $4.2 trillion would stay after removing non-economic activity, with just $350 billion to $550 billion tied to real-economy payments.
Much of what registers as machine commerce is still market plumbing.

The bull case is that payment standards converge, regulated stablecoin issuers expand, and machine-to-machine payment flows move from proofs of concept into production.
Stablecoin market cap, currently near $320 billion, approaches the higher-end forecast of $2.3 trillion by 2030, and adjusted payment activity aligns with Chainalysis's higher-growth scenario, in which stablecoin transaction counts begin to converge with Visa and Mastercard volumes over the next decade.
The platforms that combine trusted identity, compliant dollar liquidity, and low-friction orchestration across chains and off-chain services pull ahead.
The agent economy becomes a payments infrastructure story carried on crypto rails that most users never consciously interact with as crypto at all.
The bear case aligns more closely with today's data. Bot volume in stablecoins stays elevated, but little of it converts into durable real-economy machine commerce.
Card networks and banking intermediaries absorb most machine-readable payment demand without decentralizing anything, and regulatory costs concentrate business with larger incumbents.
Stablecoins primarily grow through exchange collateral, treasury liquidity, and settlement middleware. Today's centralized infrastructure still constrains the programmable machine money at full economic scale.
BCG and Allium's finding that only $350 billion to $550 billion of gross stablecoin volume represented real-economy payments in 2025 supports this reading: the base is far smaller than headline numbers suggest, and the distance between the current stack and a genuinely autonomous-agent economy is wider than promotional narratives acknowledge.
The deeper contest running through all of this centers on who processes machine payments and where trust lies once programmable-dollar flows reach a meaningful economic scale.
Stripe, Visa, Google, and regulated stablecoin issuers run that race at least as much as any crypto-native agent platform.
Treasury data adds that stablecoin issuers hold roughly 53% of their assets in T-bills, with their holdings up approximately $70 billion since 2022.
Every incremental step in machine-driven stablecoin adoption extends demand for short-dated US government debt and embeds dollar-denominated settlement standards into automated systems worldwide.
The agent economy, as currently constructed, is more of a dollar-extension story, with the entities best positioned to control its rails being the same ones already controlling the pipes.
The post Staggering $28 trillion flows through crypto’s ‘agent economy’ – but 76% of it is just bots shuffling stablecoins appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin climbed toward $80,000 after Iran said the Strait of Hormuz was fully open to commercial traffic for the remainder of the ceasefire period, easing pressure on one of the world’s most important energy chokepoints and triggering a broader risk-on move across markets.
The largest cryptocurrency rose 5% on the news to as high as $77,700, according to CryptoSlate data. The move extended a weeklong rebound that has lifted Bitcoin nearly 7% from below $70,000 to its strongest level since the early February crash.
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The rally set off a sharp liquidation wave across leveraged crypto positions. CoinGlass data showed about $243 million in liquidations over the past 1 hour, with most of the losses concentrated among traders positioned for further downside.
For context, Bitcoin short traders lost more than $100 million during the reporting period.

Meanwhile, the total liquidations topped $720 million over a longer 24-hour time frame. Notably, this is one of the largest market wipeouts since mid-March.
The advance came as traders linked Bitcoin’s rebound to a sudden shift in the macro backdrop.
Iran on Friday declared the Strait of Hormuz completely open to commercial traffic during the ceasefire period.
In an April 17 post on X, Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi said:
“In line with the ceasefire in Lebanon, the passage for all commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz is declared completely open for the remaining period of the ceasefire.”
He added that vessels would have to follow a coordinated route set by Iran’s maritime authorities.
President Donald Trump confirmed the update and thanked Iran for reopening the waterway.
Following the news, data from oilprices.com showed that oil prices fell more than 11%. This reversed part of the war premium that had built up while the strait remained largely shut.
The Strait of Hormuz route carries roughly 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas flows, making it one of the most closely watched passages in global trade. Its narrow geography has long given Iran leverage during periods of conflict, allowing it to restrict maritime traffic and amplify pressure on energy markets.
During the recent standoff, only a small number of commercial vessels moved through the waterway each day.
Meanwhile, the latest development capped a volatile stretch in which the strait stayed mostly closed during the US-Iran war while both sides argued over the terms of a peace agreement.
For Bitcoin, the reopening of the Strait removed one of the clearest near-term threats hanging over risk assets.
This is because lower oil prices tend to ease inflation pressure and reduce fears of another surge in energy-driven volatility, a backdrop that can support speculative assets that had come under pressure during the regional escalation.
Already, the shift in tone is evident in derivatives markets, where traders began positioning for a push toward higher price targets.
On Coinbase-owned Deribit, the $80,000 call option has emerged as one of the most popular trades, with a notional value of more than $1.5 billion. The next-largest cluster of bullish positioning sat at $90,000, with about $914 million in value tied to that strike.
Prediction market activity also turned more optimistic. Polymarket data showed the odds of Bitcoin rising above $80,000 before the end of the year climbing past 88%. This is a sign that traders are increasingly treating that level as a near-term target rather than a distant upside scenario.
The post Bitcoin price jumps towards $80,000 after Strait of Hormuz shipping route declared open appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Stablecoin supply climbed to a record $320 billion this week, extending the continued surge in dollar-linked digital assets.
This comes as one of the biggest questions hanging over the sector remains unresolved in Washington: whether the income generated by the reserves backing those tokens should stay with issuers or be shared with users.
Nonetheless, the new peak underlines how far stablecoins have moved from their original role as trading tools inside crypto markets.
Over the past year, dollar-pegged tokens have been increasingly used for payments, payroll, savings, and cross-border transfers, broadening their place in the financial system as lawmakers struggle to define the rules that will govern them.
That tension now sits at the center of the debate over the CLARITY Act, a broader bill on digital asset market structure that has become mired in the Senate over the treatment of stablecoin rewards.
The latest growth in the stablecoin market has been driven by the sector's biggest names.
Tether’s USDT now stands at $185 billion in market capitalization, up about $40 billion over the past year. It is followed by Circle’s USDC, whose supply has reached $78 billion.
This means that the two issuers are firmly in command of the stablecoin market’s core liquidity.
That concentration extends to the blockchains where those tokens circulate. Token Terminal data show stablecoin supply on Ethereum has risen about 150% over three years to roughly $180 billion, giving the network around 60% market share.

Data from DefiLlama show that Tron ranks second with $86.958 billion in stablecoin, while Solana ranks third with $15.726 billion. Binance Smart Chain accounts for $13 billion, and Hyperliquid rounds out the top five with $5.229 billion.
Those figures show that stablecoins may be spreading into more parts of finance, but the market still depends on a narrow set of rails.
Ethereum remains the main home for tokenized dollar liquidity, especially where deeper pools of capital and broader decentralized finance activity matter. Tron continues to hold a major share of transfer-driven usage, helped by lower transaction costs.
Solana, Binance Smart Chain, and Hyperliquid remain smaller, but their presence in the top tier shows that stablecoin demand is broadening across networks designed for different user segments.
Meanwhile, the asset's holder base is also aggressively expanding. Token Terminal data show stablecoin holder growth has been roughly three times faster than governance token holder growth over the past five years.

That divergence suggests users are moving toward blockchain-based dollars with direct utility rather than tokens whose value depends more heavily on protocol participation or speculative positioning.
That shift helps explain why stablecoins have continued to grow even when other parts of the crypto market have moved in and out of favor. The more they behave like financial infrastructure, the less dependent they become on pure trading momentum.
That utility case is becoming clearer in consumer and business behavior.
The Stablecoin Utility Report 2026, produced by BVNK in partnership with Coinbase and Artemis, found that stablecoins are increasingly used in everyday financial activity rather than solely as trading collateral.
The report notes that users are allocating a growing share of their income and savings to dollar-pegged tokens, reflecting a shift in how those assets are viewed across markets.
Businesses are also adopting these instruments more quickly for practical use. The report found that 77% of surveyed firms use USDC, signaling that stablecoins are becoming embedded in business-to-business settlement and treasury activity, not just exchange flows.
Meanwhile, the same pattern is visible in transaction data. Ripple noted that fintechs and financial institutions have led the latest wave of stablecoin adoption, with global annual transaction volumes rising to $33 trillion last year.
Stablecoins now account for 30% of all on-chain transaction volume, a figure that reflects their central role in the broader blockchain economy.
Notably, the strongest demand is emerging where dollar access and currency stability matter most. Stablecoin adoption is rising in countries facing inflation and exchange-rate pressure, including Nigeria, where dollar-pegged tokens are actively used to preserve value and manage currency depreciation.
In those markets, stablecoins function as a savings tool, settlement rail, and payment instrument simultaneously.
As a result, industry projections show that daily stablecoin transaction volumes could reach $250 billion by 2028, while the asset supply could reach nearly $4 trillion by the end of the decade.
Whether that level is reached on schedule or not, the trend is already established.
Stablecoins are expanding because they solve specific problems that make cross-border transfers faster, dollar access easier, and value easier to store in a unit that users trust more than local currencies.
However, the market is already showing that crypto users are increasingly demanding yield on using or holding their dollar-pegged assets.
Yield-bearing stablecoins, which generate returns for holders through structures tied to tokenized Treasuries, DeFi lending, or derivatives, have begun to pull away from the broader stablecoin market.
Messari data show that over the last six months, growth in yield-bearing stablecoin supply has outpaced the broader stablecoin market by more than 15 times, with the divergence beginning around mid-October 2025.

That gap is telling. It suggests users are not satisfied with simply holding digital dollars that preserve nominal value. They increasingly want idle on-chain cash to produce income.
In some products that happens through auto-accruing designs. In others, it happens through staked variants such as sUSDe. The structures differ, but the underlying demand is the same.
The firm pointed out that the leading issuers in that segment also reveal something about where the market may be heading.
According to Messari, the biggest winners in yield-bearing stablecoins are not primarily payments companies. They tend to offer a single yield-focused asset, operating more like tokenized money market funds or deposit substitutes than like payment networks.
In other words, the market is already splitting into two lanes: transferable dollar tokens built for movement and yield-focused dollar tokens built for return.
That is the split now haunting the CLARITY Act. If payment stablecoins remain barred from sharing reserve income while yield-bearing alternatives continue to grow, lawmakers will not be deciding whether this market exists, but which version of these assets wins.
That decision is becoming more urgent as the political calendar tightens.
The CLARITY Act passed the House in July 2025 but remains stuck in the Senate as lobbying intensifies over stablecoin rewards. The GENIUS Act bans issuers from paying interest directly to holders, but it does not prohibit third-party platforms, such as exchanges, from offering yield.
That has turned stablecoin rewards into the most contentious unresolved issue in the wider push for digital asset legislation.
Banks argue that allowing such stablecoin rewards would disrupt the traditional funding model.
The American Bankers Association has warned that if stablecoins become easily accessible, yield-bearing assets, and deposits could flow out of the banking system, especially from smaller regional and community lenders.
Those institutions would then have to replace low-cost deposit funding with more expensive wholesale borrowing, squeezing net interest margins and potentially reducing credit availability.
Crypto firms like Coinbase argue the opposite. They say banning rewards would suppress innovation and preserve an uneven financial system in which stablecoin issuers collect income from reserves while users receive nothing.
They also argue that banks themselves could participate in the opportunity rather than merely defend against it.
As a result, the White House has convened several meetings since the beginning of the year to break the stalemate, but no compromise has emerged.
That has increased concern that the bill is running out of time in the legislative window. Senate Banking Committee Chair Tim Scott has yet to schedule a markup date, though supporters, including Sen. Bill Hagerty, have said they hope the committee can move the legislation before the end of April.
However, the procedural timetable leaves little margin for delay.
Justin Slaughter, vice president of Paradigm affairs, said the mechanics of a Senate floor vote generally require two to three weeks, meaning the bill would need to clear the banking committee by mid-May to reach a vote before Memorial Day.
If it slips past that point, the calendar becomes more hostile, with long non-legislative periods from Aug. 10 to Sept. 11 and again from Oct. 5 through the Nov. 3 election.
Even the text aimed at resolving the fight is slipping. Sen. Thom Tillis said the latest draft language on stablecoin yield would likely not be released this week because he wants clarity on the timing of the Banking Committee markup.
Tillis has been working with Sen. Angela Alsobrooks on a proposal designed to settle the dispute over whether crypto companies should be allowed to pay interest on idle stablecoin balances.
Markets are already reflecting that uncertainty. Polymarket data put the odds of the bill passing at 66%, down from more than 82% in February.

Stablecoin supply, meanwhile, has continued to climb.
That is what gives the current moment its shape as the market is setting new records. Stablecoins are becoming more deeply embedded in payments, savings, and business transfers. Yield-bearing alternatives are outperforming the broader sector.
Yet the most important economic question inside that expansion remains unresolved in Washington.
Patrick Witt, executive director of the President’s Council of Advisers for Digital Assets, said the dominant players across crypto remain foreign, from stablecoin issuers to centralized exchanges and DeFi protocols, and warned that without a durable market structure framework, the United States will continue to fall behind in digital assets.
For now, the market is not waiting. Tokenized dollars are scaling first, while Congress is still arguing over who should be allowed to benefit from them.
The post Clarity Act deadlock fails to stop Stablecoins smashing $320B and yield-bearing tokens surging appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Paris is currently the epicenter of the digital asset world as Paris Blockchain Week 2026 kicks off at the Carrousel du Louvre. While institutional panels discuss regulatory frameworks like MiCA, the Austrian fintech giant Bitpanda has decided to take a more "on-the-ground" approach. In a bold marketing stunt to promote its Bitpanda Fusion platform, the company deployed a flashmob of 100 "Traders" to iconic Parisian landmarks, signaling a major push for liquidity dominance in the European market.

On the morning of April 15, visitors at the Louvre and other key spots across the French capital were met with an unusual sight: 100 identically dressed "Traders." This coordinated flashmob wasn't just for show; it was a high-impact "stunt" designed to bring Bitpanda Fusion to the forefront of the conversation during the year's most important blockchain event in Europe.
The message is clear: Bitpanda is no longer just a retail broker; it is evolving into a professional-grade liquidity powerhouse. By choosing the Louvre—a symbol of history and value—Bitpanda is positioning Fusion as the bridge between traditional asset appreciation and modern digital efficiency.
At its core, Bitpanda Fusion is a liquidity aggregation platform designed to solve the fragmentation problem currently facing European traders. While most platforms provide access to a single order book, Fusion connects to 12 global trading venues simultaneously.
For those tracking the current Bitcoin price, using a platform that aggregates liquidity is essential for minimizing slippage, especially during the high-volatility periods often seen during major conferences.
The impact of the day-time stunt leads directly into an exclusive evening event. Bitpanda is hosting the Fusion Night at the iconic Le Tout Paris. Located with a panoramic view of the Seine and the Eiffel Tower, the event serves as a networking hub for partners, influencers, and industry leaders to discuss the future of the crypto exchange landscape.
For attendees, this was a chance to move beyond the flashmob and see the technology behind the brand. The event focuses on the technical superiority of liquidity aggregation and how it will redefine the trading experience for both retail and institutional clients in 2026.
The European digital asset landscape is heating up as Bitpanda announces its latest high-stakes event: the Bitpanda Fusion Trading Competition. This challenge offers a massive €50,000 prize pool and once-in-a-lifetime VIP experiences. Running from April 16 to April 30, 2024, the competition focuses on trading volume, rewarding those who can navigate the markets most effectively using the Bitpanda Fusion infrastructure.
The Bitpanda Fusion Trading Competition is a performance-based contest where users compete to achieve the highest trading volume on the Bitpanda Fusion platform. Bitpanda Fusion allows for deep liquidity and competitive pricing by aggregating multiple liquidity sources, making it a preferred choice for serious traders looking for efficiency.
To participate, users must actively opt-in and select a unique alias. This alias will represent them on the leaderboard, which is updated regularly via email to maintain a competitive "hype" throughout the two-week duration.
Participating in the challenge is straightforward, but requires specific steps to ensure your volume is tracked:
Bitpanda has structured the rewards to incentivize both whales and consistent retail traders. The total prize pool is valued at €50,000, broken down as follows:
Bitpanda Fusion is the underlying technology driving this competition. Fusion aims to provide better price execution by sourcing liquidity from various institutional partners. While this often results in tighter spreads for assets like Bitcoin, it is important to note that the "best price" refers to an aggregate and does not guarantee the absolute lowest market price at every millisecond.
Full Disclaimer:
All trades executed via Bitpanda Fusion are carried out directly by Bitpanda as your sole contractual partner. The best price refers to the aggregated price from several liquidity sources, but does not guarantee the lowest market price. Trading involves risks, including potential losses due to market fluctuations. Ensure you understand the risks before using Bitpanda Fusion. Bitpanda Fusion is provided by BAM.
FIBE — short for FinTech Berlin — is one of Europe's largest annual FinTech conferences. The 2026 edition brought together banks, brokers, startups, and investors under one roof to discuss the future of money, technology, and investing. If you're new to crypto, think of it as a massive trade show where Wall Street meets Silicon Valley — but in Berlin.
FIBE is not a crypto conference. It covers everything from digital banking to insurance tech. But in 2026, crypto had a clear and growing presence. Bitcoin, self-custody, and tokenization all had dedicated sessions and exhibitor booths. For beginners, this is a signal: crypto is no longer a fringe topic — it's becoming a normal part of the broader financial world.

One of the biggest moments of FIBE 2026 came from Yoni Assia, CEO of eToro — one of the world's most popular trading platforms. He took the stage to showcase major updates to Tori, eToro's AI companion for investors.
What's new with Tori? Three key features stood out:
For crypto beginners, this matters because it lowers the barrier to investing. You don't need to monitor markets 24/7 — an AI can do it for you.

Another standout at FIBE 2026 was Relai, a Swiss company with a very clear message: Bitcoin only, and no third parties involved.
While most financial platforms offer dozens of assets and require you to trust a broker or a bank, Relai takes the opposite approach. Their philosophy is simple — you own your Bitcoin directly, through a concept called self-custody. That means no exchange holds your coins. No company can freeze your account. Just you and your Bitcoin.
Seeing a self-custody Bitcoin company at a conference dominated by banks and brokers is significant. It shows that even in traditional finance circles, the idea of owning your own assets is gaining traction.

Perhaps the most forward-looking discussion at FIBE 2026 happened on the Club Stage, where a new investment model was introduced: tokenized real-world assets (RWAs).
The concept? Take a physical asset — like an airplane engine or a rocket motor — and turn it into a digital token on a blockchain. Investors can then buy a fraction of that asset, hold it for a short period, and sell it when they want. High liquidity, real asset backing.
For beginners: imagine owning a small piece of a Boeing engine the same way you'd buy a share of stock. That's the idea behind RWA tokenization. It's still early, but the conversation is moving fast.

Here's what you should remember from FIBE Berlin 2026:
FIBE 2026 confirmed what many in the industry have been saying: crypto and blockchain are not replacing traditional finance — they're merging with it. Whether you're just getting started or already hold your first Bitcoin, events like FIBE are where the future is being decided.
The crypto market has just experienced one of its fastest intraday moves in recent months, with over $50 billion added in market cap within a single hour.
Bitcoin surged to $78,000, breaking through key resistance levels, while Ethereum climbed above $2,450.
At the same time, data shows that more than $400 million in short positions were liquidated, accelerating the move upward and forcing bearish traders out of the market.
👉 But this wasn’t a typical crypto-driven rally.
The key trigger came from geopolitics.
Following rising tensions in the Middle East, markets had priced in a worst-case scenario: a potential disruption or closure of the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical oil transit routes.
Instead, the opposite happened:
This immediately shifted global sentiment.
👉 Markets moved from fear → relief in minutes.
As soon as the Strait of Hormuz situation stabilized, oil markets reacted sharply.
This had a direct effect on broader markets:
👉 Crypto didn’t lead this move — it reacted to macro conditions.
While the macro trigger explains the direction, the speed of the rally came from derivatives markets.
Over $400 million in short liquidations occurred in just a few hours.
This created a classic chain reaction:
👉 The result: a vertical move, not a gradual trend.
This is the key question now.
On the surface:
But structurally, this rally is driven by:
👉 That makes this move potentially fragile.
Markets are now entering a critical phase.
👉 The next move depends less on crypto itself — and more on global macro stability.
This was not just another crypto pump.
It was a global macro-driven relief rally, triggered by one of the most important geopolitical pressure points in the world.
The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz removed a major risk from markets — and crypto reacted instantly.
But relief rallies can fade just as quickly as they appear.
XRP (Ripple) officially touches the $1.50 mark this April 17, 2026. This psychological breakout follows a period of intense consolidation and is being amplified by a surge in "America-first" investment sentiment. During a recent address, President Donald Trump declared the United States the "hottest country in the world right now," a statement that has resonated with investors looking for high-growth opportunities in the domestic fintech and digital asset sectors.
As XRP flips previous resistance into support, the market is now shifting its focus to higher technical clusters. With Ripple's institutional ecosystem expanding through the recent Rakuten Pay integration and the RLUSD stablecoin crossing $1 billion in circulation, the fundamental backdrop for XRP has rarely looked stronger.
With the XRP price now at $1.50, the immediate trend is decidedly bullish. Following this milestone, the next key resistance levels are $1.60 and $1.80. Traders are watching for a daily close above $1.55 to confirm that this move isn't a "fakeout," which would pave a clear path toward the 2026 high of $1.80 and beyond.
XRP has successfully cleared the heavy sell-wall at $1.45, which acted as a ceiling for much of the first quarter of 2026. This breakout is supported by rising volume and a positive MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) crossover on the daily chart.

The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is currently at 65. While this shows strength, it is not yet in the "overbought" territory (above 70), suggesting there is sufficient momentum to reach $1.60 before a major cooling-off period is required.
President Trump’s recent remarks, as highlighted by The White House, emphasize a "Golden Age" of American economic dominance. This rhetoric has historically boosted "risk-on" assets. Investors view the current administration's stance as favorable for the crypto news cycle, particularly regarding regulatory clarity.
Furthermore, the pending CLARITY Act markup in the Senate is acting as a massive secondary catalyst. If the U.S. formalizes a framework that explicitly protects digital assets like XRP, the current $1.50 price may soon look like a bargain.
The price of Bitcoin breaks a seven-month downtrend as geopolitical shifts and prediction markets point to $84K next.
More than $1.2 million worth of wrapped XRP tokens (wXRP) have been minted on Solana as the Ripple-linked asset gains greater DeFi utility.
Rep. Sheri Biggs purchased up to $250,000 worth of BlackRock's spot Bitcoin ETF last month, padding a position she entered into last July.
Iris-scanning crypto project World expands with Tinder's U.S. human verification rollout and Zoom's Deep Face feature.
Senator Elizabeth Warren said Paul Atkins may have intentionally misled Congress by pushing back over the SEC's dwindling enforcement actions.
XRP holds key 200-week support against Bitcoin as ETF inflows top $1.1 billion and CLARITY Act decision nears, setting up a decisive move that could reshape its Spring 2026 outlook.
Enormous Shiba Inu inflows are another reflection of the problematic state of the asset that brings way too much pressure during short-term rallies.
Market might go in the wrong direction if top-tier assets fail to regain momentum after key breakthroughs.
Ripple’s Chief Legal Officer Stuart Alderoty has taken a dig at a newly released documentary directed by The O.C. star Ben McKenzie.
The integration, powered by LayerZero and Hex Trust, brings wrapped XRP (wXRP) into Solana's expansive decentralized finance ecosystem.
Ethereum trades near $2,300–$2,400 as momentum builds across the broader crypto market on April 17, 2026. The asset has recorded its strongest level since March 18, supported by steady ETF inflows and improving market participation. Traders continue to track key technical zones while sentiment remains tilted toward the upside.
Ethereum maintains trading activity close to the 100-day exponential moving average during the current session. Price action stays within the $2,300–$2,400 range as buyers and sellers test liquidity zones. Market participants monitor a key level near $2,439, where short positions may face liquidation pressure.
The recent 6 percent daily rise supports stronger positioning across short-term charts. Support remains focused near the $2,300 level, where price stability has been observed.
According to CoinGecko data, market sentiment shows around 89 percent bullish participation among community members. This reading reflects steady interest after the recent upward movement in ETH trading sessions.
Liquidity conditions continue to shape intraday movements as traders react to momentum shifts. The broader market environment also supports Ethereum, with increased activity across major crypto assets. Technical observers remain focused on whether ETH can maintain stability above support zones in upcoming sessions.
Institutional participation continues to expand, with Schwab launching spot Ethereum trading for retail clients. This development adds new access points for traditional market participants entering ETH exposure.
The move aligns with increasing demand for regulated crypto products in established financial platforms.
At the same time, leadership changes have taken place within the Ethereum Foundation. Key researchers Josh Stark and Trent Van Epps have resigned from their positions.
The transition has drawn attention from market observers tracking development progress within the ecosystem.
Security-related concerns have also emerged around Web3 infrastructure. Wu Blockchain reported that the Ethereum Foundation exposed over 100 North Korean operatives embedded within Web3 companies.
The disclosure has added focus on workforce verification and internal security across decentralized platforms.
Market data continues to reflect active participation despite these developments. Ethereum remains one of the most traded digital assets, supported by liquidity and institutional access.
CoinGecko figures place ETH market capitalization near $284 billion, reflecting ongoing trading engagement.
Price stability around key levels continues to attract short-term traders. Market behavior shows responsiveness to both technical signals and institutional updates. ETH maintains a position within a tightly watched range as participants assess direction in the next sessions.
The post Ethereum Holds $2.4K Range as ETF Inflows, Schwab Access Boost Market Activity appeared first on Blockonomi.
The Worldcoin (WLD) cryptocurrency experienced a 13.4% decline to $0.28 on Friday, April 17, coinciding with World’s announcement of a significant identity verification platform enhancement and numerous new strategic partnerships.
This downturn occurred against the backdrop of a 2.2% rally in the overall cryptocurrency sector, fueled by developments around US-Iran diplomatic progress and the resumption of Strait of Hormuz operations.
World, launched by OpenAI’s Sam Altman as co-founder, convened a presentation in San Francisco unveiling “World 4.0.” This advancement establishes World ID as comprehensive “full-stack proof of human” architecture designed for individual users, commercial entities, and artificial intelligence systems.
The technology relies on the Orb apparatus, which captures facial and iris biometric data in-person to create a distinctive cryptographic identifier. Captured imagery undergoes immediate deletion following processing, with exclusively anonymized information distributed through a decentralized infrastructure.
Daniel Shorr, a senior executive, stated during the presentation: “World 4.0 is powerful, scalable and open. In the age of AI, being human will be incredibly valuable and the internet will want to know you’re human.”
Sam Altman remarked: “World ID is on the way to being a real human network for the internet.”
The platform enhancement introduces account-based verification, multiple key functionality, and credential recovery mechanisms. World simultaneously released a standalone World ID application, presently in beta testing, enabling users to control and distribute their authentication credentials across various services.
Zoom, the video conferencing service, is incorporating World’s “Deep Face” technology to authenticate that conference attendees are genuine individuals rather than AI-generated deepfakes. Docusign, the electronic signature provider, is implementing World ID authentication within its digital document execution process.
No more deepfakes on video calls. @worldnetwork identify verification on @Zoom. pic.twitter.com/0ap0IOKR6H
— World (@worldnetwork) April 17, 2026
The dating application Tinder is extending its World ID “verified human” certification to users throughout the United States. World additionally introduced a “Concert Kit” solution designed to assist musicians in allocating tickets to authentic individuals, eliminating automated scalping operations.
Gaming sector alliances with Razer and Mythical Games were revealed, while Reddit confirmed its evaluation of World’s capabilities for automated account detection.
For enterprise applications, World is collaborating with Okta, Vercel, and Browserbase. These partnerships focus on establishing verification frameworks for automated business processes.
World unveiled “AgentKit,” a development platform connecting artificial intelligence agents to authenticated human credentials. Coinbase previously disclosed in March its intention to utilize AgentKit for its x402 AI micropayment infrastructure.
Additional established collaborators include Amazon Web Services, Shopify, Browserbase, Exa, and VanEck.
Certain observers have expressed apprehension regarding the mass collection of biometric information, especially when centralized under a single corporate entity.
WLD serves as the indigenous cryptocurrency of the World Network, distributed as compensation for identity authentication and utilized for transactional operations throughout its platform.
The post Worldcoin (WLD) Plunges 13% After World 4.0 Launch with Major Tech Partnerships appeared first on Blockonomi.
On Friday, Circle rolled out USDC Bridge, a straightforward cross-chain transfer solution constructed on its established Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP). The initiative aims to streamline and demystify the process of transferring USDC across different blockchain networks for regular users.
CCTP debuted in April 2023. The protocol currently processes more than $500 million in daily USDC transactions and received a comprehensive V2 upgrade in the previous year.
This new bridge provides users with an intuitive interface for direct CCTP engagement. Until now, CCTP was primarily utilized by developers and technically sophisticated users — the updated UI democratizes access to a much broader user base.
Circle Internet Group, CRCL
USDB Bridge operates through a 1:1 burn-and-mint mechanism. Tokens are destroyed on the originating blockchain and created natively on the receiving network, eliminating any wrapped token intermediaries.
Transaction costs are displayed upfront before users finalize their transfers. The protocol automatically manages destination chain gas requirements, eliminating a traditionally confusing element for less experienced users.
According to testing conducted by a The Block journalist, moving $20 in USDC from Ethereum’s mainnet to Optimism carried a fee of roughly $0.20. Cost structures fluctuate based on specific transaction parameters.
Circle doesn’t impose proprietary fees for CCTP usage. Users still encounter standard network gas charges on both source and destination blockchains, with expedited “fast” transactions potentially incurring premium costs.
At its initial deployment, USDC Bridge accommodates at least 17 EVM-compatible blockchain platforms. The roster includes Ethereum, Avalanche, Arbitrum, Base, Optimism, Polygon, Sonic, Monad, Sei, and World Network.
While CCTP itself maintains compatibility with an expanded network selection that encompasses Solana, Sui, and Aptos, USDC Bridge currently restricts functionality to EVM-compatible environments, temporarily excluding non-EVM alternatives.
Circle natively deploys USDC across numerous blockchain networks and on specific platforms like Polymarket. USDC maintains its position as the stablecoin sector’s second-largest asset by market capitalization.
Cross-chain bridging infrastructure has historically represented a significant pain point within cryptocurrency. Complex user interfaces, opaque fee structures, and cumbersome multi-step processes have hindered widespread adoption — especially among newcomers. Circle frames USDC Bridge as a refined alternative addressing these persistent challenges.
The bridge launch follows closely behind Circle being served with a class action lawsuit. The complaint, filed on Wednesday, concerns approximately $230 million in USDC that transacted through CCTP in the aftermath of the April 1 Drift Protocol security breach.
Over 100 plaintiffs have joined the legal action, with representation provided by law firm Mira Gibb. Circle faces allegations of aiding and abetting conversion alongside negligence charges for failing to freeze the compromised assets. Final damage amounts will be established during trial proceedings.
Circle has yet to issue a comprehensive public statement addressing the lawsuit’s specifics.
The post Circle (CRCL) Stock: New Native USDC Bridge Simplifies Cross-Chain Transfers appeared first on Blockonomi.
Bitcoin exploded beyond the $78,000 threshold on Friday, April 17, marking its strongest price level since the beginning of February. The rally was triggered after Iran’s Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi announced via X that the strategic Strait of Hormuz remains “completely open” to commercial shipping traffic throughout the duration of the existing ceasefire agreement.
President Donald Trump validated the development through his Truth Social platform, stating that negotiations to resolve the US-Israel-Iran conflict are “mostly complete.” He indicated that fundamental components have been agreed upon, with the remaining issues anticipated to be settled within the weekend.
Bitcoin reached an intraday peak of $78,343, representing approximately 4.1% growth within the trading session. Throughout the week, BTC recovered around 5%, based on information from CoinMarketCap and TradingView.

Alternative digital assets experienced similar upward momentum. Ethereum appreciated 3.3% while XRP advanced 2.4%, contributing to a widespread risk-on sentiment throughout international markets.
Brent crude oil contracts declined roughly 10% to approximately $85 per barrel. The S&P 500 index also rallied, accumulating $7 trillion in market value during the previous three weeks, as noted by The Kobeissi Letter.
Wu Blockchain disclosed on X that US-based spot Bitcoin ETFs accumulated $664 million in net capital on April 17, representing the fourth consecutive session of positive inflows. Spot Ethereum ETFs attracted $127 million, continuing a seven-day streak of inflows.
Bitcoin Archive shared on X that BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust has continuously accumulated Bitcoin for eight consecutive trading sessions, acquiring $284 million worth on April 17 exclusively. BlackRock’s cumulative purchases have reached $1.34 billion across the eight-day period.
Strategy Inc. has additionally accumulated $2.6 billion in Bitcoin during the past two weeks. Strategy’s stock price surged as much as 16% on Friday, representing its largest single-session increase since February 6.
Coinbase Global shares climbed as much as 8% while Galaxy Digital appreciated over 10% during the same trading session.
Goldman Sachs submitted documentation for a Bitcoin ETF this week, representing its initial direct entry into cryptocurrency investment products. Charles Schwab revealed intentions to introduce spot cryptocurrency trading capabilities in 2026 and indicated that clients might consider allocating up to 8.8% of investment portfolios to Bitcoin.
Morgan Stanley introduced its proprietary Bitcoin-tracking ETF last week, establishing itself as the first major banking institution to launch such a product.
Matt Mena, senior crypto research strategist at 21Shares, characterized the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz as “the risk-on signal the global markets have been waiting for.”
Bohan Jiang, senior derivatives trader at FalconX, noted that Strategy’s accumulation strategy has provided market support throughout recent trading periods.
The current ceasefire agreement is scheduled to conclude on April 22. US authorities have indicated that the naval blockade will remain operational until a comprehensive agreement is finalized. Iran has issued warnings about potentially closing the Strait once more if the blockade persists.
Axios additionally reported that US officials are evaluating the release of up to $20 billion in frozen Iranian assets in return for Iran relinquishing its enriched uranium inventory.
Derivatives market indicators suggest traders maintain a cautious stance. Funding rates for perpetual futures contracts registered negative on Friday. Put options positioned at $60,000 and $50,000 strike prices are commanding substantial premiums, reflecting hedging behavior.
Polymarket participants assessed the probability of Bitcoin reaching $80,000 during this month at 65% as of Friday, April 17.
The post Bitcoin (BTC) Surges Past $78K as Iran Reopens Hormuz Strait Amid Peace Talks appeared first on Blockonomi.
Anthropic’s latest product launch has stirred fresh debate across the design software market after reports linked its new Claude Design tool to sharp stock declines for Figma and Adobe. The release has raised new questions about how AI could reshape product design workflows.
A post from Bull Theory on X stated that no SaaS company is safe from Claude after Anthropic launched Claude Design. The post claimed Figma shares fell 12%, while Adobe dropped 4% following the announcement.
According to the post, Claude Design allows users to build prototypes, presentations, slides, and one-page documents through simple text prompts.
Instead of using manual design tools, users can describe what they need, and the system creates the first version automatically.
The tool also supports direct exports to Canva, PDF, and PowerPoint. This removes several manual steps that many teams usually handle inside traditional design platforms.
Bull Theory noted that the product is powered by Claude Opus 4.7, which launched recently. The post also mentioned that users can pass completed designs to Claude Code when they are ready for development.
This setup creates a faster workflow between product design and engineering teams. Rather than switching between separate platforms, users can move from concept to development with fewer steps.
The same post also claimed Anthropic’s stronger internal model, called Mythos, remains unavailable to the public. While that statement has not been officially confirmed, it added more attention around the launch.
As AI tools continue to improve, investors are watching closely to see how software companies respond. Markets often react quickly when products threaten recurring subscription models.
Figma has built its business around collaborative design software used by teams for prototypes, product layouts, landing pages, and presentations. Its monthly subscription model depends on users returning regularly for these tasks.
Bull Theory argued that Claude Design now performs many of those same functions from a single sentence. If users can generate prototypes faster through AI prompts, demand for traditional design subscriptions could face new pressure.
The post also stated that three separate AI labs have now launched tools that directly compete with Figma’s core services. This points to a broader shift rather than a single product release.
Adobe faces a similar challenge. While Adobe serves a wider creative market, many of its business tools also depend on design workflows that AI can now automate more quickly.
Faster design generation may appeal to startups, solo founders, and small teams looking to reduce software costs. These users often value speed and lower spending over deep customization.
However, larger companies may still rely on traditional platforms for collaboration, review systems, and team-wide design controls. Enterprise adoption often depends on security, version control, and approval workflows.
Even so, the market reaction shows that investors are paying close attention. AI-generated design is moving from early testing into direct competition with established software products.
The discussion around Claude Design reflects a wider trend across SaaS markets. As AI tools become easier to use, platforms built around repeat manual tasks may face stronger competition.
For now, the focus remains on adoption. Investors and product teams will be watching whether users treat Claude Design as a useful assistant or as a real replacement for existing design software.
The post Anthropic’s Claude Design Triggers Market Reaction as Figma and Adobe Stocks Slip appeared first on Blockonomi.
US President Trump, alongside Iran’s foreign minister, announced a major de-escalation yesterday on the war front, indicating that the Strait of Hormuz will finally be reopened.
The statement had a major impact on almost all financial markets, especially oil, given the Strait’s significance.
USOIL, for example, plunged by over 11%. It traded at $90 per barrel before the announcement, but dumped to a five-week low of under $80 within minutes.
As with many previous such major statements, reports emerged that traders had placed big orders just minutes before the announcement went live.
According to Reuters, investors shorted oil prices with a $760 million position 20 minutes before the statement on Friday. Between 12:24 GMT and 12:25 GMT, they sold a combined 7,900 lots of Brent crude futures, according to LSEG data.
Iran’s foreign minister posted on X at 12:45 GMT that the passage for all commercial vessels through the Strait was reopened completely for the remaining period of the ceasefire.
Recall that there have been several similar instances in the past few years, especially when it comes to the Middle East. For instance, one account was linked to numerous traders dating back to 2024, as it placed trades with a 100% win rate, betting on Israel’s military actions against other nations in the region.
$760M short on oil: Placed 20 minutes before the Hormuz announcement.
This is the 3rd time.
– March 23: $500M short, 15 minutes before Trump delayed Iran strikes. Oil dropped 15%.
– April 7: $950M short, hours before the US-Iran ceasefire.
Who knew again? pic.twitter.com/npKMh5nvDf
— Crypto Rover (@cryptorover) April 18, 2026
Aside from the oil’s crashing price yesterday, most other financial assets skyrocketed. Bitcoin tapped a ten-week peak at over $78,000 after the de-escalation, but its run could be in danger as Iran denied many of Trump’s other claims.
The post $760 Million Oil Shorts Placed Minutes Before Hormuz Announcement (Report) appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin’s price recovered impressively yesterday by surging to a 10-week peak of over $78,000 after US President Donald Trump said the Strait of Hormuz was opened.
However, this rally could be in jeopardy now, as Iran’s Speaker of Parliament, Ghalibaf, denied many of the POTUS’s positive statements.
Recall that Trump took to his social media to announce yesterday that the Strait of Hormuz was finally reopened, as both sides had made great progress on negotiating a permanent peace deal. Later on, he doubled down, claiming that the deal was “mostly complete,” there would be more talks this weekend, and, perhaps most importantly, that Iran had agreed to halt its nuclear program indefinitely.
Although Iranian officials confirmed the reopening of the Strait initially, further statements on the matter provided a different perspective. Ghalibaf said the key Strait will not remain open if the US blockade continues, and the passage will be conducted based on the “designated route” and with “Iranian authorization.”
“Whether the Strait is open or closed and the regulations governing it will be determined by the field, not by social media,” he added.
Ghalibaf went further, indicating that Trump made overall seven claims in one hour, but they were all false. He outlined the significance of “media warfare and engineering public opinion,” but the Iranian nation “is not affected by these tricks.”
Bitcoin reacted immediately after Trump’s initial announcement, with an impressive surge toward $77,000. As the POTUS continued to try to de-escalate the situation, BTC kept climbing and hit $78,400 for the first time since early February.
It retraced in the following hours and now sits inches above $77,000. However, given the fact that all these gains were attributed to the seemingly de-escalating tension in the Middle East, its progress could be halted soon if Iran’s claims are proven to be true.
History has shown that BTC tends to remain relatively stable over the weekend, unless there’s some major escalation, and slides once the legacy futures markets open on Sunday evening. For now, the retracement to $77,000 is not significant, but there might be more volatility in the next 48 hours.

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A cybersecurity researcher from Brazil exposed a large-scale scam operation after buying a “Ledger” hardware wallet from a Chinese marketplace listing that looked legitimate and was priced the same as the official store. The packaging appeared original from a distance, but the device was counterfeit.
When the researcher connected it to Ledger Live installed from ledger.com, it failed the Genuine Check, confirming it was not a real Ledger device. This failure led the researcher to open the device and examine its internal hardware and firmware.
Inside the shell, the researcher found a completely different chip, not the type used in a hardware wallet. The chip markings had been physically scraped off to hide identification. As per the researcher’s Reddit post, the device also contained a WiFi and Bluetooth antenna, which is not present in a real Ledger Nano S+. By analyzing the chip layout, they identified it as an ESP32-S3 with internal flash memory.
When the device booted, it initially masked itself as a Ledger Nano S+ 7704 with serial numbers and Ledger factory identity, but later revealed its true manufacturer as Espressif Systems.
After dumping the firmware and reverse engineering it, the researcher found that the PIN created on the device was stored in plaintext. The seed phrases from wallets generated on the device were also stored in plaintext. The firmware also contained multiple hardcoded domain references pointing to external command-and-control servers. These findings revealed that the device was designed to collect sensitive wallet data, with links to external servers.
The researcher also examined how the attack might work in practice. Although the hardware contained a WiFi and Bluetooth antenna, the firmware did not show evidence of wireless data transmission or WiFi access point connections. It also did not contain bad USB scripts for keystroke injection or terminal commands. Instead, the attack appeared to rely on user interaction outside the device itself.
According to them, the scam begins when a user scans a QR code included in the packaging. This QR code leads to a cloned website that looks like ledger.com. From there, users are prompted to download a fake “Ledger Live” application for Android, iOS, Windows, or Mac. The fake app shows a counterfeit Genuine Check screen that always passes. Users then create wallets and write down seed phrases, believing the setup is safe. Meanwhile, the fake app exfiltrates seed phrases to attacker-controlled servers.
The researcher decompiled the Android APK version of the fake Ledger Live app and found additional malicious behavior. The app was built with React Native and the Hermes engine. It was signed with an Android debug certificate instead of a proper signing key. It intercepted APDU commands between the app and device, made stealth requests to external servers, and continued running in the background for several minutes after being closed.
It also requested location permissions and monitored wallet balances using public keys, which allowed attackers to track deposits and amounts.
The researcher stated that this is not a zero-day vulnerability and not a flaw in Ledger’s security design. Ledger’s Genuine Check and Secure Element were confirmed to work correctly. Instead, this is described as a phishing operation combining counterfeit hardware, malicious apps, and external infrastructure. The full operation includes hardware devices with ESP32-S3 chips, trojanized apps for Android and other platforms, and command-and-control servers used for data exfiltration.
The researcher also added that fake Ledger devices have been reported before, but this case is different because it maps the full system, including hardware, apps, infrastructure, and distribution through a shell company linked to marketplace listings. The researcher has submitted a report to Ledger’s Customer Success team and is preparing a full technical breakdown with further analysis of Windows, macOS, and iOS versions of the malware.
A few years back, another Reddit user reported receiving a Ledger Nano X in an authentic-looking package, but a letter inside raised concerns due to spelling and grammar errors. The letter claimed it was a replacement after a data breach.
A security expert later found the device had a flash drive wired to the USB connector, which was intended for malware delivery and potential theft.
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The bad press facing stablecoin issuer Circle, following the $280 million exploit on the Solana trading protocol Drift, has gone up a notch after a California-based legal group filed a class action lawsuit against it, alleging it stood by while North Korea-linked hackers moved millions in stolen USDC through the firm’s own bridge, making it liable for investor losses from the attack.
However, an analyst just made a case that Circle’s hands-off approach wasn’t negligence but rather the only way it could preserve the foundational principles that make USDC viable for institutional use.
Responding to a wave of anger aimed at Circle and its CEO, Jeremy Allaire, Lorenzo Valente, the director of research at ARK Invest, claimed that had the company frozen the stolen USDC without a legal order, then the stablecoin would have become “whatever Circle feels like that day.”
According to him, there are several reasons why Circle’s inaction was the more sound path, with the first being that the incident was a “market/oracle exploit” and not a straightforward theft. This means it occupied a gray zone that includes aggressive but legal trading strategies, and having Circle decide which trades cross the line, in his opinion, can create a system with “no lawyers, no hearing, no appeal, just Circle vibes.”
Valente also warned of contagion effects, where, if stablecoin issuers freeze funds based on their own judgment, then that permission structure would spread across the entire stack and would see bridges reversing transfers, DEXs blacklisting routers, wallets blocking transactions, and oracles tweaking price feeds at will.
“The whole point of permissionless onchain finance is that none of these actors get to play judge,” he wrote.
Thirdly, the analyst explained that due process functions as a product feature rather than a limitation. “The reason institutions build on USDC is because Circle can’t wake up and zero out your balance,” he said, suggesting that a stablecoin that can fold to social media pressure can then be easily swayed into action by any sufficiently loud voice.
There is also the legal risk that the analyst feels nobody seems to want to discuss. Hackers move money fast. Within minutes, innocent liquidity providers and market makers end up holding tokens that passed through a mixer or a bridge. And if they freeze too aggressively, platforms like Circle may end up doing what could constitute theft from people who had nothing to do with the original crime. In this way, they risk facing lawsuits from downstream counterparties.
Finally, Valente decried the lack of consistency, calling out popular on-chain investigator ZachXBT, who he said had gone after Circle on multiple occasions for freezing wallets without explanation, including more than 16 business-linked addresses just days before the Drift incident. Now, the same critic wants Circle to freeze faster.
“You can’t have it both ways,” wrote the ARK researcher. “Either Circle uses broad discretion (and you don’t get to complain when they freeze something you like), or they only act under legal order.”
The lawsuit against Circle was filed by Gibbs Mura, with Jacob Robinson, a legal commentator on X, calling their allegations “dangerous, precedent-setting.” One claim is that Circle aided and abetted hackers simply by letting them use the Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol. Another is that Circle had an affirmative duty to recognize the harm and freeze assets.
Robinson doubts the suit succeeds, but noted that if it did, the risk could extend to anyone operating a bridge.
While Circle defends its choices in court and on social media, Drift Protocol is not waiting around. The project announced a collaboration with Tether totaling nearly $150 million. The plan centers on a relaunch where USDT replaces USDC for settlements.
A $100 million revenue-linked credit facility, ecosystem grants, and loans to market makers will fund a recovery pool for affected users.
However, Circle’s Allaire had already laid out the company’s position during an April 13 press conference in Seoul. It only acts when the law requires it, he said. The company does not get to step away from legal obligations to make judgment calls, even when the moral calculus feels obvious.
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Just a couple of days after a cryptic tweet on X containing XRP’s logo, the official channel behind the Solana ecosystem announced that a 1:1-backed token redeemable for Ripple’s cross-border token has launched on its blockchain.
The statement coincided with notable price gains charted by XRP and SOL today as the geopolitical tension in the Middle East eased.
XRP is a digital asset native to the XRP Ledger, a decentralized public blockchain designed for fast, low-cost transactions.
wXRP is live on Solana via @Hex_Trust and @LayerZero_Core, verify the token address on @tokens: https://t.co/1RaxyHAbMT
— Solana (@solana) April 17, 2026
The product, dubbed wXRP, will be available on the Solana blockchain through a partnership with Hex Trust, which will provide custodial services, and LayerZero’s cross-chain bridge.
The new wrapped asset is verifiable on tokens.xyz and immediately available for use in several Solana DeFi applications, including Phantom wallet, Jupiter Exchange, Titan Exchange, byreal_io, and Meteora.
The move now follows a pledge from Hex Trust from late 2025 to expand XRP’s DeFi capabilities across different chains, starting with Solana.
The ever-vocal XRP Army was quick to pick up and praise the announcement, with John Squire saying, “The flip just switched.” The timing is also quite intriguing as it comes on a day when the crypto market jumped after the de-escalation developments in the war between the US/Israel and Iran.
XRP was at the forefront of gains today, surging to just over $1.50 for the first time in almost a month. SOL briefly surpassed $90 before it slipped to just under that level now.
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