Transitioning from L2 to L1 architecture reduces costs and enhances user experience in blockchain development.
The post Torab: Binance’s market maker fund freeze impacts the crypto ecosystem, the importance of a transparent strategic reserve, and the shift from L2 to L1 architecture | Epicenter appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Tokenization could unify Europe's capital market, enhancing liquidity and efficiency, but requires robust infrastructure and regulatory alignment.
The post ECB sees tokenization as opportunity to build unified European capital market appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire says USDC freezes require legal orders, defending the firms response to criticism after the Drift exploit.
The post Circle CEO defends USDC freeze policy as criticism grows after Drift exploit appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Hamas's strategic shift from resistance to governance signals potential for larger conflicts in the region.
The post Ari Flanzraich: Understanding the October 7 attack requires a timeline of Hamas’s rise, internal Israeli threats signal political shifts, and media critiques reveal gaps in analysis | Tucker Carlson appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Kraken says insider related incidents exposed client support data tied to 2,000 accounts, but no funds were at risk.
The post Kraken says insider related incidents affected 2,000 client accounts, but no funds were at risk appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

Crypto Exchange Kraken Faces Extortion Attempt After Insider Access Incidents Involving Support Staff
Crypto exchange Kraken disclosed two insider-related security incidents involving support staff access to limited client data, followed by an extortion attempt by a criminal group, according to a company statement and comments from its chief security officer.
The firm said no systems were breached and no client funds were placed at risk in either case. Both incidents involved inappropriate access to internal support tools rather than core trading infrastructure, and access was revoked once identified.
Kraken’s Chief Security Officer Nick Percoco said the company is facing demands from attackers who claim to possess videos showing internal systems with client data. The group threatened to release the material unless Kraken complies.
“Our systems were never breached; funds were never at risk; we will not pay these criminals,” Percoco said in a public statement, adding that the company will not negotiate with the actors involved.
Kraken said about 2,000 client accounts were potentially viewed across both incidents, representing roughly 0.02% of its global user base. Affected users were notified, and the company said the exposed information was limited to support data rather than sensitive financial controls.
The first incident dates to February 2025, when the company received a tip about a video circulating on a criminal forum. An internal investigation identified a member of the support team as the source of the access. Kraken said it revoked permissions, conducted a review, and implemented additional safeguards.
A second incident emerged later after another tip referenced similar material tied to a different individual. Kraken said it again identified the source, terminated access, and notified impacted users while tightening internal controls.
The situation escalated after the latest access was shut down, when the group behind the videos issued extortion demands. Kraken said the attackers threatened to distribute content to media outlets and social platforms.
The exchange said it is working with law enforcement across multiple jurisdictions and believes there is enough evidence to identify and pursue those responsible. The company also pointed to broader insider recruitment efforts targeting firms across crypto, gaming, and telecommunications.
Security experts have warned that insider threats remain a persistent risk in digital asset markets, where support roles often require visibility into user accounts for troubleshooting. While such access is restricted, it can become a target for coercion or exploitation.
Kraken said it continues to review internal processes, strengthen monitoring systems, and limit access privileges to reduce exposure. The firm emphasized that its core infrastructure remained secure throughout both incidents.
The case comes as the industry faces ongoing security challenges tied to both external attacks and internal vulnerabilities. The combination of high-value assets and global access has made crypto platforms a frequent target for coordinated campaigns.
In a separate disclosure, Galaxy Digital reported a cybersecurity incident involving unauthorized access to an isolated development environment. The firm, founded by Mike Novogratz, said no client data or funds were affected.
Kraken said it will continue cooperating with investigators and industry partners as the case develops. The company framed the incidents as contained events while warning of a wider pattern of insider-focused threats facing technology firms.
This post Crypto Exchange Kraken Faces Extortion Attempt After Insider Access Incidents Involving Support Staff first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Capital B Buys More Bitcoin, Expands Treasury to 2,925 BTC After Debt Conversions and Equity Raise
Capital B has strengthened its profile as a listed Bitcoin Treasury Company after converting key debt instruments, raising fresh equity, and deploying part of the proceeds into additional bitcoin.
The group now holds 2,925 BTC with an acquisition value of €269.4 million, at an average cost of €92,096 per bitcoin.
The company confirmed the purchase of 37 BTC for €2.3 million, at a reference price of €60,892 per coin, as part of its ongoing Bitcoin Treasury strategy. This lifted the year‑to‑date “BTC Yield” to 1.25%, with a “BTC Gain” of 35.3 BTC and a “BTC € Gain” of €2.2 million since the start of 2026. Quarter‑to‑date, BTC Yield stands at 0.53%, with a BTC Gain of 15.2 BTC and a euro gain of €0.9 million, according to a company press release.
Alongside the treasury expansion, Capital B completed major conversions of its OCA B‑01 convertible bonds. Blockstream Capital Partners converted 17,897,600 OCA B‑01 into 32,900,000 ordinary shares, while UTXO Management converted 2,020,372 OCA B‑01 into 3,713,919 shares, at a unit conversion price of €0.544. In total, 36,613,919 new shares were issued through debt set‑off on these instruments.
Both Blockstream Capital Partners and UTXO Management also exercised their rights under legal adjustment measures linked to the free BSA 2025‑01 warrants granted in 2025.
Blockstream subscribed to 4,700,000 new shares at €0.544 per share for €2.56 million, while UTXO Management took 530,559 shares for €0.29 million, bringing total cash raised under these adjustments to €2.85 million. The company further reported the exercise of 4,464,712 BSA 2025‑01 into 637,816 shares for €0.35 million, with the warrants expiring worthless at midnight on April 10, 2026.
In March, Capital B announced a €3 million capital raise alongside amendments to existing convertible bonds to accelerate its Bitcoin treasury strategy.
The funding, backed by TOBAM and UTXO Management, could enable the company to acquire roughly 36 additional bitcoin, bringing its total holdings to about 2,880 BTC.
Following these transactions, Capital B’s issued share capital stands at 272,210,021 shares, while its fully diluted base reaches 397,622,899 shares when including remaining convertibles, warrants, and free‑share plans. On this basis, the group reports 730 satoshis of bitcoin per fully diluted share, a core metric in its strategy to grow BTC per share over time.
The company stated that an additional 60 BTC is held for operational needs, segregated from the reserve that underpins its Bitcoin Treasury KPIs. Capital B said it will continue to publish BTC Yield, BTC Gain, and BTC € Gain as supplemental indicators for investors who follow its equity‑financed bitcoin accumulation model
Disclaimer: Bitcoin Magazine is owned by Nakamoto Inc. (NASDAQ: NAKA). Nakamoto Inc. also owns UTXO Management.
This post Capital B Buys More Bitcoin, Expands Treasury to 2,925 BTC After Debt Conversions and Equity Raise first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bank Lobby Fires Back at White House, Saying Stablecoin Study Ignores Community Bank Threat
The American Bankers Association is warning that the White House’s latest stablecoin study is asking the wrong question and underestimating the threat to community banks.
On April 8, the Council of Economic Advisers released a 21‑page paper modeling what happens if payment stablecoin issuers are barred from paying yield. The analysis, tied to the 2025 GENIUS Act’s prohibition on interest for payment stablecoins, finds that banning yield would raise bank lending by only about 2.1 billion dollars, or roughly 0.02% of a 12 trillion dollar loan book.
The report also estimates that consumers would forgo around 800 million dollars in returns, producing a cost‑benefit ratio of 6.6 in which lost yield outweighs gains from slightly lower borrowing costs.
In short, White House economists concluded that stablecoin yield, under current conditions, is unlikely to trigger the sweeping deposit flight some academic studies had projected.
The American Bankers Association fired back today, arguing the CEA framed “the wrong question” by focusing on the effect of a prohibition rather than the impact of allowing yield as the market grows.
ABA chief economist Sayee Srinivasan and banking research VP Yikai Wang warned that yield‑paying payment stablecoins could accelerate deposit migration out of insured accounts, especially at community banks.
Their analysis points to a future market of 1 to 2 trillion dollars in payment stablecoins, where competitive yields on tokens backed by Treasuries and other safe assets become a direct rival to local deposits. In that scenario, they say, even single states could see multi‑billion‑dollar contractions in bank lending as cheap funding drains away.
The White House paper stresses that when consumers move cash into stablecoins, issuers reinvest reserves into Treasury bills, repos, and money‑market funds, sending most of the money back into the banking system.
That “reshuffling” means aggregate deposits stay largely flat, and, with banks currently holding over 1.1 trillion dollars in excess liquidity, the model finds little system‑wide constraint on lending.
The ABA response counters that this misses what happens at individual institutions when deposits walk out the door, forcing community banks to replace funding with higher‑cost wholesale borrowing or by raising deposit rates.
Those higher funding costs, they argue, translate into less local credit and higher loan rates for households, farmers, and small businesses that rely on relationship lenders.
The debate lands on top of the GENIUS Act, the 2025 law that created the first federal regime for payment stablecoins and hard‑coded a ban on issuers paying yield to holders.
That ban does not extend to third‑party platforms, leaving room for arrangements such as Coinbase’s USDC rewards, which share reserve income with users at rates similar to high‑yield savings accounts.
Some versions of the proposed CLARITY Act would close this channel by barring intermediaries from passing yield through, a move the CEA notes but does not fully evaluate. ABA’s authors say policymakers should treat a prohibition on yield as a “prudent safeguard” that keeps stablecoins in a payments role instead of letting them evolve into a high‑yield substitute for insured deposits.
Both sides touch on a deeper question: whether yield‑bearing stablecoins effectively create a form of narrow banking that siphons funds out of traditional credit intermediation. The CEA frames narrow‑bank‑like structures as potentially safer for payments, assuming reserves stay in Treasuries and other ultra‑safe assets, while downplaying near‑term lending losses.
The ABA warns that pushing activity into such models without a plan to preserve community‑bank lending ignores Congress’s reluctance to endorse central bank digital currencies for similar reasons.
With more than 80% of stablecoin activity already offshore and issuers holding Treasury portfolios larger than some sovereigns, the White House also flags global demand and U.S. borrowing costs as an underexplored part of the yield debate.
This post Bank Lobby Fires Back at White House, Saying Stablecoin Study Ignores Community Bank Threat first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

SEC Opens Limited Broker Exemption Path for Crypto Trading Interfaces
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has issued new staff guidance indicating that certain user-facing interfaces involved in crypto securities trading may not be required to register as broker-dealers, provided they meet a strict set of conditions designed to limit discretion, influence, and conflicts of interest.
In a statement released by the Division of Trading and Markets of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the agency outlined a framework under which websites, mobile applications, and browser-based tools that facilitate blockchain-based trading could operate outside traditional broker registration requirements for a limited period.
The guidance applies specifically to “covered user interfaces,” which include software products that help users prepare and transmit crypto asset securities transactions through self-custodial wallets. According to the SEC staff, these tools may qualify for an exemption if they function as neutral interfaces rather than intermediaries that exercise judgment or influence over trading activity.
To remain outside broker-dealer registration, interface providers must adhere to several conditions. These include refraining from recommending specific trades, avoiding solicitation of particular transactions, and ensuring users retain full control over trade parameters such as price, size, and execution preferences. The interfaces must also rely on objective, pre-disclosed criteria when routing trades or displaying execution options.
Back in March, the SEC and CFTC issued joint guidance stating that most digital assets are not securities and introduced a formal token taxonomy that classifies stablecoins, digital commodities, digital tools, and collectibles outside securities law.
The framework left only “digital securities” under traditional regulation while clarifying that activities like staking, mining, and airdrops generally fall outside the Howey Test, marking a departure from prior enforcement-heavy approaches toward a more defined regulatory structure.
The SEC also emphasized disclosure requirements. Providers must clearly outline fee structures, conflicts of interest, and any relationships with affiliated trading venues or liquidity systems. In cases where a provider connects users to multiple execution pathways, the system must allow users to sort or filter options based on neutral metrics such as price or speed, rather than editorial or promotional ranking.
Another key requirement is operational neutrality. The guidance prohibits interface operators from describing trading routes as “best” or “preferred,” or from providing commentary that could be interpreted as investment advice. The systems must also avoid discretionary decision-making in how market data is presented or how transactions are routed.
The staff statement also places limits on compensation structures. Fees must be fixed, transparent, and unrelated to trade outcomes, execution venues, or counterparty selection. This is intended to reduce incentives for interface providers to favor specific trading environments.
In addition, providers are expected to implement policies for evaluating and monitoring connected trading venues. These policies must assess factors such as liquidity, transparency, security, and reliability, and must be applied consistently across all integrated systems. Any default trading parameters must also be based on objective criteria and subject to ongoing review.
The SEC clarified that the statement is not a formal rule or binding regulation. Instead, it reflects the staff’s current interpretation of how existing broker-dealer laws under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 may apply to crypto-focused interfaces. The guidance will remain in effect for five years unless replaced or modified through future commission-level rulemaking.
Importantly, the agency stressed that the exemption is narrow in scope. It does not apply to entities that negotiate trades, provide investment advice, custody user funds, execute transactions, or otherwise engage in traditional broker functions. Any platform performing those activities would still fall under existing registration requirements.
This post SEC Opens Limited Broker Exemption Path for Crypto Trading Interfaces first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Faces Selling Strain Above $70K as Wall Street Signals Correction Near End
The S&P 500’s latest rebound has drawn a cautiously bullish response from major Wall Street firms, with Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase both signaling confidence that the recent correction may be nearing its end.
Morgan Stanley strategist Michael Wilson said the market’s recovery from its recent lows — about 7% off the trough — was holding at critical technical support levels, suggesting downside momentum may have run its course.
Wilson pointed to stronger-than-expected earnings growth, now tracking at roughly 15% on current reports and projected to climb more than 20% on a forward basis, as proof that equities still rest on a sound fundamental base. His team advises clients to buy market dips, focusing on cyclical sectors and quality growth stocks while reducing exposure to energy, which he said may have peaked following its early-year rally.
JPMorgan also urged investors to treat pullbacks as buying opportunities. Strategist Mislav Matejka said conditions favor another V-shaped recovery over the next three to twelve months.
Though volatility remains likely amid geopolitical uncertainty, Matejka sees investor sentiment and market positioning as overly bearish and expects fresh inflows to stabilize risk assets. JPMorgan projects stronger performance in international markets, emerging economies, small-cap equities, and value sectors as global growth stabilizes.
While equity analysts find renewed optimism, Bitcoin continues to stall near its upper range. Data from Glassnode shows heavy profit-taking each time prices approach $70,000 to $80,000, with more than $20 million in BTC sold every hour during recent rallies.
Bitcoin briefly climbed near $74,000 over the weekend before slipping back below $71,000 as tensions between the U.S. and Iran pushed oil higher and weighed on U.S. futures.
Over the weekend, U.S. and Iranian negotiations in Islamabad collapsed without a deal, leading the Trump administration to escalate tensions by announcing a Strait of Hormuz blockade and other maritime enforcement measures amid rising regional conflict and warnings of broader military and economic fallout.
Investor behavior, not chart resistance, has capped upside momentum as holders use strength to exit positions. Until that supply pressure eases, Bitcoin’s ceiling will remain firm within its current distribution band.
Earlier today, Strategy purchased 13,927 BTC for about $1 billion, lifting its total holdings to 780,897 BTC, with the buy fully funded through proceeds from its STRC at-the-market program.
The company’s continued accumulation contrasts with broader corporate trends, as most firms scaled back Bitcoin exposure while Strategy remains the dominant institutional buyer.
Editorial Disclaimer: We leverage AI as part of our editorial workflow, including to support research, image generation, and quality assurance processes. All content is directed, reviewed, and approved by our editorial team, who are accountable for accuracy and integrity. AI-generated images use only tools trained on properly licensed material. In Bitcoin, as in media: Don’t trust. Verify.
This post Bitcoin Faces Selling Strain Above $70K as Wall Street Signals Correction Near End first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Private credit has crossed into a dangerous phase.
After rumblings last month, the pressure point is no longer confined to underwriting quality, isolated borrower stress, or a few awkward redemption notices buried in fund updates.
The market is now dealing with something more consequential: a live collision between illiquid assets, semi-liquid fund structures, and investors who want cash back at the same time. That shift is now visible across some of the industry’s largest platforms.
Barings Private Credit Corp. capped withdrawals after investors sought to redeem 11.3% of shares in the first quarter. Apollo Debt Solutions limited repurchases after requests reached 11.2%. Ares Strategic Income Fund hit the same wall after investors asked to pull 11.6%.
The scale of the demand for exits is now large enough to change the frame. The Financial Times reported that investors sought to pull more than $20 billion from private credit funds in the first quarter. Then, the Wall Street Journal reported nearly $14 billion in requested withdrawals across a group of private-credit funds.
Capital is trying to leave, and managers are relying on quarterly caps, enlarged tenders, affiliated support, and fund mechanics to manage the gap between redemption demand and actual liquidity.
The next layer is where this starts to look less like a fund-specific issue and more like a market transition. Blue Owl disclosed that investors sought to redeem 21.9% of shares in Blue Owl Credit Income Corp. and 40.7% in Blue Owl Technology Income Corp., with both funds limiting repurchases to 5%.
Moody’s then shifted Blue Owl Credit Income’s outlook to negative and also moved its outlook on the broader BDC sector to negative. That sequence carries more weight than another gated-fund data point.
It brings flow stress, asset quality, financing costs, and confidence into the same frame. Once ratings agencies begin reacting to outflow pressure and maturity walls, the market has moved beyond temporary friction.
Private credit spent years benefiting from a simple proposition. Investors were offered high income, smoother marks than public markets, and access to lending strategies that had once been reserved for institutions.
Wealth channels helped widen the buyer base, and the product increasingly reached investors who were drawn to stable reported values and steady quarterly distributions.
That model was always dependent on a critical assumption: capital would continue to come in fast enough, or at least remain patient enough, for the structure to avoid a real liquidity challenge. The current wave of withdrawal limits shows that the assumption is now under direct pressure.
This is why the shift should be viewed as a market transition rather than a passing fund-management issue. When redemptions rise across multiple managers at once, the market begins testing the difference between reported value and realizable value.
That distinction has been manageable for years because private credit portfolios are not repriced continuously in a public market. Manager marks, model inputs, and infrequent transactions have given the sector a calmer visual profile than public high-yield or leveraged loans.
Calm marks helped support the sales pitch. Once investors begin asking for cash in size, that profile comes under scrutiny.
The challenge is already visible in the widening gap between public and private credit signals. The Wall Street Journal’s examination of private-credit valuations captured a growing question across the market, what are these funds actually worth when investors cannot freely exit and comparable public credit vehicles trade at discounts?
Mercer Capital noted that public BDC discounts are beginning to signal a disconnect between public pricing and private NAV assumptions. That gap is where the valuation debate will eventually concentrate. If public vehicles with similar exposures trade materially below stated NAV while private funds continue to report stable values close to par, investors will have an increasingly strong incentive to leave the private wrapper, accept liquidity, and re-enter exposure more cheaply in public form.
That process is already feeding a second development, the rise of dedicated secondary strategies aimed at private-credit portfolios.
The launch of a private-credit secondary strategy by Sycamore Tree is a useful signal because secondaries tend to expand when investors want out, portfolios need pricing discovery, and transactions become more urgent.
The emergence of a more active secondary market does not resolve the sector’s problems.
It introduces a market-based mechanism for forcing them into the open. Once secondary pricing starts influencing expectations, NAV stability becomes harder to defend through narrative alone.
The broad structure is easy to map. First came higher redemption requests. Then came gates and caps. Now comes a more explicit challenge to marks, ratings, and the durability of flows. That sequence shifts the market from a yield conversation into a structure conversation. It also changes the meaning of redemption limits.
Quarterly caps had long been presented as standard product design.
In the current environment, they function as the device preventing immediate price discovery across a less liquid asset base. Investors can see that. Distributors can see that. Ratings agencies can see that. The market has now started to price the structure alongside the loans.
Invoking 2008 has become common whenever a credit market shows strain, but the useful comparison here lies in structure rather than surface details.
Private credit is not a replica of pre-crisis subprime securitization. The borrower mix is different, the institutional plumbing is different, and the vehicles themselves are not identical to the pre-Lehman system.
Those distinctions are real. They do not remove the core concern. A market built on assets that do not trade frequently, funded through structures offering periodic liquidity, and distributed through channels that widened access deep into wealth management, is vulnerable to a confidence break once enough investors try to exit together.
Jamie Dimon warned this week that private-credit losses may prove larger than expected because of weaker lending standards and optimistic assumptions, even as he stopped short of describing the sector as systemic on the scale of mortgages before the financial crisis.
That position is instructive. It shows that even establishment voices inside the banking system are now openly flagging loss recognition and opacity as live issues. Those are foundational fault lines in any credit cycle. They become more dangerous when combined with concentrated distribution and vehicles that promise periodic liquidity against less-liquid collateral.
The stronger allegation, and the one supported by more evidence right now, is that private credit has been carrying a significant liquidity illusion.
Investors were encouraged to treat a portfolio of largely illiquid loans as though it could deliver both yield enhancement and controlled access to cash under stress. That proposition holds while flows remain favorable and confidence remains intact.
It weakens rapidly when multiple large managers face redemption requests for fund shares in the low double digits within the same quarter. It weakens further when public comparables trade at visible discounts, when secondaries expand, and when ratings agencies respond to outflow pressure.
The current cycle still lacks some of the characteristics that would justify calling it a full systemic break. There has been no singular default cascade across the core of the industry. There has been no market-wide forced liquidation that resets marks overnight. There has been no evidence in the public record of a unified fraud architecture spanning the sector.
Evidence for sweeping claims of coordinated concealment remains mixed and uneven. Some borrower-level controversies and governance failures strengthen suspicion around underwriting discipline and monitoring. They support deeper scrutiny. They have not yet proved an industry-wide conspiracy.
What the public record does support is a more direct conclusion. The sector is now vulnerable to a self-reinforcing cycle in which withdrawal pressure drives gates, gates intensify valuation skepticism, valuation skepticism widens discounts and deepens secondary-market activity, and those pricing signals weaken fundraising and inflows.
Once inflows slow, managers lose the easiest buffer that has helped absorb redemptions without immediate asset sales or more visible financing strain. That is the pathway that deserves the 2008 comparison, a breakdown in confidence around funding certainty before the full repricing of assets has run its course.
The next test for private credit sits in a narrow zone. If second-quarter redemptions ease, if the capped list stops expanding, and if ratings pressure remains contained, the market may absorb the first-quarter shock as a severe but manageable reset.
If outflows remain elevated into the next quarter, a more serious sequence begins to take shape. Managers would then face a harder set of choices, sell assets into a weaker transaction environment, lean more heavily on financing lines and affiliated support, or maintain withdrawal limits long enough to inflict reputational damage on the product itself.
Each path carries a different mix of price, funding, and confidence risk. None of them is benign.
This is also where the political layer becomes more important. Private credit has grown into a market large enough to matter beyond private funds and wealthy clients.
Distribution has broadened materially, and proposals to push private-market exposure deeper into retirement channels have remained active even as the sector is confronting withdrawal limits and valuation questions in real time. That sequence deserves far more attention.
A market discovering the hard edges of its own liquidity while it is still widening distribution creates an unstable policy mix. It raises the probability of future legal, regulatory, and reputational fallout once losses and lockups become more visible to a broader investor base.
Bitcoin enters this setup through macro behavior, funding confidence, and comparative transparency. That does not mean private-credit stress automatically produces a straight-line bid for Bitcoin.
Risk assets often sell together in the first phase of a credit shock, especially when liquidity is scarce, and investors need cash. The stronger case sits one step later. If private credit continues exposing the limits of opaque pricing, gated access, and manager-controlled valuation, capital may increasingly look for assets with continuous price discovery, visible collateral rules, and less dependence on private marks.
The implications for Bitcoin, therefore, run on two tracks. In an acute liquidity event, Bitcoin could face the same forced-selling pressure that hits many liquid assets first. In the subsequent repricing of trust, the asset stands to benefit from a contrast between markets that settle their stress in public and markets that defer it behind gates, models, and tender mechanics.
That is one reason this private-credit cycle deserves close attention from crypto investors. The issue extends well beyond one corner of Wall Street. It examines how capital ranks liquidity, transparency, and credibility when the credit cycle turns.
Where things stand now is clear enough. The evidence for worsening private-credit stress is strong. The evidence for a mounting valuation challenge is strengthening. The evidence for an imminent systemic break remains incomplete, but the path to one is clearer than it was a month ago because the market has begun to identify the exact points where confidence can fail.
Redemption waves across major managers, fresh gating at Barings, negative outlooks from Moody’s, and tens of billions in attempted withdrawals describe a market that has moved decisively out of the confidence phase.
What comes next depends on whether the industry can restore trust before liquidity pressure forces broader price discovery across the loans themselves.
The post Wall Street private credit crisis looms as $20B exit wave triggers fresh withdrawal limits threatening Bitcoin liquidity appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Hyperbridge, a decentralized bridge connecting the Polkadot ecosystem to the Ethereum network, suffered a major security breach that allowed an attacker to mint 1 billion unauthorized DOT tokens.
However, the hacker’s potential multimillion-dollar payday was drastically cut short to around $240,000 as there simply was not enough liquidity to cash out the fabricated assets.
While the direct financial losses from the exploit were relatively contained, the incident has sent shockwaves through the Polkadot ecosystem, driving the network's DOT native token toward its all-time low amid broader market anxieties regarding cross-chain security.
Security experts explained that the vulnerability resided in how Hyperbridge’s contracts validated incoming cross-chain messages before passing them along to the token gateway.
Blockchain security firm BlockSec Phalcon identified the root cause as a “Merkle Mountain Range (MMR) proof replay vulnerability.” This is essentially a cryptographic blind spot that allowed the attacker to recycle old, valid security proofs and attach them to malicious, newly crafted requests.
At the core of the breach was a missing input validation within the system's `VerifyProof()` function. In standard cross-chain operations, a bridge must verify that a request originating on one blockchain is authentic before executing a corresponding action, such as minting tokens, on another.
In this instance, the Hyperbridge contract failed to properly bind the submitted request payload to the validated proof. The system merely checked that a request hash had not been used before, without verifying if the proof actually matched the message it was supposed to authenticate.
By manipulating the index parameters, the attacker bypassed the system's root computation entirely. This disconnect enabled the hacker to forge a valid cross-chain message, elevate their privileges to administrator status, and command the contract to mint 1 billion DOT tokens on Ethereum.
Meanwhile, the primary token minting was preceded by an initial, quieter attack. On-chain analyst Specter noted that roughly an hour before the massive DOT fabrication, an attacker exploited a related TokenGateway contract to siphon 245 ETH, worth approximately $537,000.

These funds were rapidly fragmented, distributed across 15 separate wallet addresses in increments of roughly 16.4 ETH, and laundered through the privacy protocol Tornado Cash.
While the minting of 1 billion tokens usually signals a catastrophic, protocol-killing event, the attacker was thwarted by the very mechanics of decentralized finance: market depth.
When a hacker steals assets, they typically swap them into an automated market maker (AMM) liquidity pool for a more liquid, stable asset, such as Ethereum or a stablecoin. A liquidity pool prices assets based on the ratio of tokens held within it.
In this scenario, the bridged DOT pool on Ethereum was relatively shallow. When the attacker attempted to dump 1 billion forged tokens into the pool to extract ETH, the sheer volume of the sell order immediately overwhelmed the available liquidity.
As a result, the algorithm, rebalancing the ratio, drastically reduced the price of bridged DOT from $1.22 to tiny fractions of a cent within milliseconds.
Because the market could not absorb the massive order at stable prices, the attacker's profit was severely capped.
Blockchain analytics firm Arkham Intelligence reported that the hacker was only able to extract roughly $240,000 worth of ETH from the DOT liquidity pool.
Meanwhile, had the vulnerability been exploited in a deeper pool or with a higher-value bridged asset, the financial devastation would have been exponentially greater.
Meanwhile, this recent breach carries a heavy dose of irony for the Hyperbridge development team, arriving less than two weeks after the project published an April Fools’ Day joke about suffering a catastrophic exploit.
On April 1, Hyperbridge’s official channels posted a fake incident report claiming a $37 million breach across its Ethereum, Arbitrum, and Base deployments.
The mock post blamed fictional North Korean Lazarus Group hackers, rogue artificial intelligence agents, and even quantum computing. The post went so far as to joke that external auditors had attempted to warn the team, but developers were offline, eating KitKat bars to celebrate an engineer becoming a father.
At the time, the project brushed off community criticism of the joke, publicly boasting that their core community knew the protocol was “un-hackable.”
That hubris has evaporated as of press time, as the protocol developers were forced to halt the platform in real time.
Parity Technologies, the primary development firm behind the Polkadot ecosystem, quickly stepped in to manage the fallout. The firm clarified that the exploit was strictly isolated to Hyperbridge's Ethereum gateway contract.
It added that Polkadot’s core network, its connected parachains, and native DOT tokens remained fully secure and untouched by the breach.
Even though the underlying Polkadot blockchain was never compromised, the psychological impact of its most dominant bridge being exploited has taken a heavy toll on its native currency.
Following the news of the breach, Data from CryptoSlate showed that Polkadot’s native DOT token fell 5% during early Asian trading hours on Monday, dropping to $1.14.
The decline pushes the asset perilously close to its all-time low of $1.13. The token has been locked in a brutal downward spiral, shedding roughly 70% of its value over the past year amid a broader crypto market downturn and waning retail interest in legacy alternative layer-one networks.
For the Polkadot ecosystem, the Hyperbridge exploit is a worst-case scenario regarding market optics.
Even as developers emphasize the technical distinction between a vulnerable third-party Ethereum contract and the secure core Polkadot network, retail investors often view the brand as a monolith.
Until cross-chain infrastructure can achieve the same level of security as the underlying blockchains it connects to, these liquidity events will continue to drag down the broader market’s confidence.
Meanwhile, the Hyperbridge incident underlines a persistent and systemic vulnerability in decentralized finance: cross-chain bridges are inherently fragile.
In the Web3 ecosystem, bridges are essential infrastructure. They allow disparate, siloed blockchains to communicate, offering users greater flexibility, lower fees, and access to a wider array of decentralized applications.
However, to function, these bridges must hold massive reserves of locked assets on one side to issue corresponding “wrapped” assets on the other.
Because these protocols essentially act as massive honeypots governed by complex smart contracts, they represent the single most lucrative target for cybercriminals.
If a hacker can compromise the private keys of the bridge's validators or, as in the Hyperbridge case, exploit a vulnerability in the smart contract's code, they can seize administrative control and drain the underlying assets or print infinite supply.
Notably, the history of crypto is littered with devastating bridge exploits. In March 2022, the Ronin Network bridge, built for the Axie Infinity gaming ecosystem, was drained of over $600 million in one of the largest heists in crypto history.
Later that year, the BNB Chain’s cross-chain bridge suffered a code exploit, resulting in the unauthorized creation of 2 million BNB tokens worth roughly $566 million. Other catastrophic breaches include the $321 million Wormhole hack and the $190 million Nomad bridge exploit.
The post Polkadot Hyperbridge April Fools’ joke comes true as over 1 Billion fake DOT tokens were minted on Ethereum appeared first on CryptoSlate.
World Liberty Financial (WLFI), the decentralized finance platform backed by President Donald Trump, is navigating a deepening crisis as a precipitous drop in its token price collides with a bitter public dispute involving Tron founder Justin Sun.
The turbulence centers on two distinct but compounding controversies: accusations from Sun that the protocol's team used centralized “backdoor” mechanisms to freeze his eight-figure investment.
Additionally, the project is facing mounting market anxiety over a highly concentrated, nine-figure borrowing loop executed by the protocol’s team on a decentralized lending platform.
The confluence of these events has wiped out hundreds of millions in market value, dropping the WLFI token to an all-time low of $0.07714 and raising alarms about structural vulnerabilities within the project’s tokenomics.
The public feud reignited over the weekend, when Sun launched a blistering critique on the social media platform X.
In an April 12 post on X, Sun accused World Liberty Financial of embedding hidden smart contract functions to arbitrarily seize investor assets.
He further stated that the WLFI team was treating “the crypto community as a personal ATM” and was engaging in illegitimate actions that “were never authorized by any fair, transparent, or good-faith community governance process.”
Notably, Sun is not a fringe participant in the WLFI ecosystem. He was the project’s largest early external backer, pouring roughly $75 million into WLFI to support what was pitched as a democratized vision for decentralized finance.
However, his wallet was blacklisted by the protocol in September 2025, effectively freezing his assets. Due to the token's price fluctuations, Sun's unrealized losses tied to the frozen wallet now exceed $80 million.
In recent statements, the Tron founder characterized the protocol’s governance as “theater,” alleging that the network's technical structure fundamentally contradicts its decentralized branding.
On April 12, Sun cited on-chain records demonstrating that a single Externally Owned Account (EOA, which also sits on the protocol’s 3-of-5 multisignature wallet) executed the blacklist.
One person—one single individual—has the unilateral power to freeze any token holder's assets. Seizing those assets requires a 3-of-5 multisig vote, but freezing requires only one signature.
On-chain analysts have largely corroborated Sun's structural claims.
Pseudonymous Yearn Finance developer Banteg noted that the original WLFI token deployed in September 2024 contained no blacklist functions. The restriction capabilities were introduced via a series of smart contract upgrades in late 2025, nearly a year after Sun’s initial investment.
That timeline is central to Sun’s case because it suggests the most controversial controls were added after early investors had already committed funds.
Banteg also said Sun was placed in a separate vesting category that did not apply to the rest of the investor base.
According to that analysis, WLFI’s multisig configured a 20% initial release for Sun’s allocation, after which he transferred a portion of those tokens out. A guardian then blacklisted his wallet.
In that structure, the power to freeze a holder rested with one address, while broader seizure actions required multiple signers.
World Liberty Financial has forcefully pushed back against Sun’s narrative, characterizing his latest public campaign as a diversion to mask his contractual breaches.
On X, the project stated:
“Justin’s favorite move is playing the victim while making baseless allegations to cover up his own misconduct. We have the contracts. We have the evidence. We have the truth. See you in court pal.”
While the protocol has not publicly detailed the exact nature of the alleged misconduct, independent crypto analysts have pieced together the likely catalyst for the September 2025 freeze.
Crypto analyst Quinten François alleged that Sun had transferred a substantial tranche of WLFI to his proprietary crypto exchange, HTX, after receiving his initial 20% token unlock.
The analyst further noted that Sun offered retail investors on HTX high-yield incentives to lock in their newly vested WLFI tokens. Simultaneously, he allegedly liquidated tokens on the exchange's backend, effectively cashing out his position while using retail deposits as a buffer.
The strategy would, in theory, allow Sun to front-run the market and backfill the exchange's reserves using his future token unlocks.
In response, World Liberty Financial flagged this activity as a severe breach of the early investor agreement and used the recently upgraded smart contract controls to halt the flow of funds.
While legal threats fly between Sun and World Liberty's executives, everyday retail investors are wrestling with an entirely different existential threat: a massive, highly centralized borrowing scheme that has paralyzed protocol liquidity.
On-chain analytics firm Chaos Labs highlighted the massive concentration of WLFI collateral on Dolomite, an EVM-compatible decentralized lending protocol.
The integration has drawn intense scrutiny, in large part because Dolomite’s co-founder, Corey Caplan, concurrently serves as an advisor and Chief Technology Officer for World Liberty Financial.
According to blockchain data, the World Liberty team has deployed approximately 5 billion WLFI tokens, valued at roughly $400 million and representing nearly 98% of the asset's supply on Dolomite, across two multisignature wallets.
Against this illiquid collateral, the team has borrowed approximately $150 million in stablecoins, according to Arkham Intelligence data.
Chaos Labs explained that the borrowing utilizes a complex “looping” structure. One wallet borrowed over $40 million in USD1 against 3 billion WLFI. A second wallet borrowed $111 million in USD1 against a mix of WLFI and USDC, then used that USD1 as collateral to borrow an additional $89 million in USDC, cycling the assets to maximize leverage.

Notably, Banteg claimed that one of those wallets is “the same multisig is using 5 billion WLFI as collateral on dolomite to borrow $250 million in stablecoins.”
Meanwhile, the sheer size of the position has functionally monopolized Dolomite's liquidity pools. Utilization rates for USD1 and USDC skyrocketed to 83.4% and 90.19%, respectively, locking up the platform's capital and pushing borrowing rates into the 5% range.
Furthermore, the 5 billion WLFI posted as collateral is four times the token's entire tradable supply on major centralized exchanges, including Binance, the largest crypto exchange by trading volume.
The revelation of the Dolomite loans, coupled with the renewed spectacle of the Justin Sun dispute, has triggered a wave of risk-off behavior.
Data from CryptoSlate showed that the market panic has erased more than $700 million from World Liberty Financial’s market capitalization, dragging the valuation from $3.2 billion down to $2.5 billion in the last seven days.
During this period, the token's price plunged to an all-time low of $$0.07714 before stabilizing slightly at $0.07965 as of press time.

At the same time, the price action has been brutal for leveraged traders. CoinGlass data shows that the volatility has wiped out more than $4 million in derivative positions since April 10, with the vast majority of liquidations hitting bullish traders attempting to catch the falling knife.
Moreover, industry experts have expressed mounting concern that Dolomite could be saddled with massive bad debt if WLFI's price continues to slide. If the token drops another 75%, it would hit the liquidation threshold for the team's massive loans.
Given the token's thin secondary market liquidity, liquidating $400 million worth of WLFI to recoup $150 million in stablecoins would be mathematically impossible without driving the token price to zero.
Despite the headwinds, derivative metrics suggest speculative interest remains high.
Coinalyze data shows the token’s long-short ratio rising to 1.341, indicating that traders are actively betting on a rebound. Futures volume surged past $540 million over the weekend, marking the highest level of derivative activity since February.

At the same time, World Liberty Financial has also made efforts to quell the FUD by repaying $25 million of the stablecoin debt, thereby lowering utilization rates.
The firm also announced plans to introduce a governance proposal for a phased token unlock for early retail buyers.
Whether those assurances will be enough to calm a market spooked by opaque smart contracts and incestuous DeFi leverage remains to be seen, especially as the specter of a high-profile legal battle looms.
The post World Liberty Financial threatens top token holder with legal action as WLFI loses $700M amid token scandal appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Crypto backed Donald Trump for a reason. He gave the industry a simple political promise: less enforcement, friendlier rules, and a White House that would treat Bitcoin and digital assets as part of the American growth story instead of a threat to be contained.
That bargain helped Trump build real support inside crypto during the 2024 election cycle. It also helped bring a new type of voter into the coalition, people who saw crypto policy as part of a wider fight over innovation, markets, and state power.
The problem now is that the same community that once treated Trump as an asset is increasingly treating the Trump-branded crypto complex as a liability.
The shift has been building for months, then accelerated as WLFI slid toward its lows, as the economics of the Trump family’s token ecosystem came under sharper scrutiny, and as crypto-native reaction across X moved from rationalization to disgust.
The temperature change is hard to miss. After the 2024 election, pro-Trump sentiment on crypto timelines carried a triumphal tone.
Over the past several days, the language has turned prosecutorial. Traders, founders, and long-time market voices are now describing the Trump family’s crypto ventures as extraction, grift, and a stain on the industry’s legitimacy.
That shift has a market side and a political side. On the market side, Bitcoin has held up far better than the family’s branded ecosystem. Bitcoin remains the asset that institutions, public companies, and macro traders can still frame as scarce collateral, a sovereign hedge, or a reserve candidate.
WLFI sits in a very different bucket, a governance token wrapped in celebrity politics, concentrated economics, supply overhang, and widening distrust.
On the political side, the danger for Trump is broader. He used the crypto vote in 2024. If the industry starts to view Trump-linked tokens as a case study in how political power can be converted into private crypto wealth, the same constituency that helped him may become a source of blowback heading into the midterms.

The strongest evidence for a real break comes from the shift in language inside crypto itself. Participants tend to defend their own until losses can no longer be rationalized. Sharp practice, misaligned incentives, and personality-driven ecosystems persist longer than outsiders expect.
When that tolerance gives way, the tone flips quickly. The Trump conversation has reached that point.
“The president of the united states is the biggest crypto grifter in history. and he's done it in broad daylight.”
Chill Pill
“Trump never cared about Crypto. It’s time to admit that all of us were duped.”
Rodney
It is politicians themselves who are the antithesis of crypto.
These reactions carry weight because they are not coming from Elizabeth Warren’s office or from anti-crypto academics. They are coming from market participants, founders, and long-time industry voices who, in another context, might have been expected to defend a pro-crypto president or at least keep the focus on policy gains.
The emotional center of this moment is retail betrayal. The charge running through community reaction is simple. Trump sold the cultural authority of his name and the political authority of his office into crypto products that looked open, populist, and aligned with decentralization, while the underlying economics favored insiders, controlled access, and family-linked revenue extraction.
CryptoSlate previously reported that Trump’s crypto empire had become the center of a new influence economy, and separately that WLFI was selling $5 million “Super Node” access while pitching finance for everyone. Those two threads now converge into a public perception problem that is larger than one token.
Price action sharpened that perception. The family’s branding machine once seemed capable of lifting anything it touched. That aura has faded. WLFI is far below its September peak and trading close to its April low.
Meanwhile, Bitcoin has remained comparatively resilient. That divergence gives the backlash a clearer shape. The community has separated Bitcoin from Trump. It now also has to decide whether to separate pro-crypto policy from Trump-branded crypto products.
Those two separations are politically dangerous because they break the old package deal. Support for Bitcoin can survive while support for Trump’s crypto ventures collapses.
Several posts captured that rupture with unusual force. One widely shared line from TXMC said, “You know it’s bad when one of the biggest scammers of all time [in reference to Justin Sun] denounces the president’s business for being even bigger scammers.”
A post from Drew Austin called WLFI “quite possibly the worst and most blatant fraud” he had seen in 13 years in crypto. Hyperbole is common on X, though the direction of travel here is the point. These are not isolated sneers from outside the room. This is the room turning on the host.
The market can reprice trust without a smoking gun. A structure that feels stacked, a chart that confirms it, and a series of disclosures or allegations can be enough to make participants ask whether they ever understood the deal in the first place. WLFI now checks several of those boxes at once.
The token launched into public trading with a multibillion-dollar headline valuation, with CryptoSlate reporting a $7.4 billion valuation on day one. Public excitement looked strong. The structural questions never went away.
CryptoSlate also noted that holders voted overwhelmingly to back public trading, and tracked rising anticipation even before transfer restrictions were lifted. That helped produce the launch frenzy. It also created the conditions for a harsher reset once public price discovery met concentrated ownership, thin effective liquidity, and mounting distrust over how the system actually works.
The Trump family's economics are a major part of that reset. WLFI closed a raise above its target and has become a serious capital machine, with a much larger influence on the economy around the project.
Outside crypto media, Forbes estimated Trump’s net worth at $6.5 billion in March 2026, up $1.4 billion from the prior year, while Reuters, reporting widely across secondary coverage, put the Trump family's crypto income above $800 million in the first half of 2025 alone.
Those figures establish scale. Once the scale becomes visible, the community starts asking how the value moved, who captured it, and whether the public side of the trade ever had a fair shot.
That is where the retail anger deepens. A post from Wealthy Anon framed WLFI as “a one-way door with a MAGA flag on it.” The complaint is that Trump-linked branding created social trust while token structure, liquidity conditions, governance control, and insider economics concentrated the payoff elsewhere.
Another post from gum claimed that among 4,898 verified WLFI-holding wallets on Solana with identifiable PnL data, 4,719 were at a loss and 74 were in profit.
The market is primed to believe a retail pain narrative because the broader structure already feels predatory to many participants.
Recent scrutiny of collateral use and leverage pushed that perception further. A breakdown from Chaos Labs described a looped-borrowing structure tied to WLFI exposure on Dolomite, with two primary addresses accounting for most of the activity, and WLFI collateral utilization pushed close to its cap.
Thus, a token associated with the president’s family has become intertwined with concentrated borrowing behavior, synthetic support mechanics, and an evolving debate about how much of the visible market reflects organic demand versus internal recycling. That has consequences for sentiment even before a regulator, court, or auditor reaches a conclusion.
A clash with Justin Sun has now fed the fire. Sun’s public allegation that WLFI embedded a blacklist function and froze his wallet gave the controversy a high-drama focal point, while WLFI replied that it had the contracts, the evidence, and the truth, and would see him in court.
Sun then fired back, asking, as the largest WLFI investor, for the person behind the WLFI social media account to reveal themselves.
The deeper issue is that the community’s trust is breaking because the Trump family’s crypto products are increasingly viewed as an extraction system wrapped in populist branding. Sun became a catalyst. He did not create the sentiment.

Trump gained a real advantage from being the candidate who spoke crypto’s language in 2024. He understood that Bitcoin voters, builders, and donors wanted a president who would stop treating the industry as a permanent suspect class.
That support was instrumental, especially among people who viewed crypto as part of a wider argument about economic freedom, digital property rights, and America’s willingness to compete in frontier technology. The danger now is that Trump’s personal monetization of crypto may damage the same political channel that helped him.
That risk already showed up in policy coverage. CryptoSlate reported in 2025 that concerns about Trump’s conflict of interest were slowing broader progress on crypto policy.
Cardano's Charles Hoskinson has also argued that the TRUMP token cost crypto a much stronger Senate outcome and triggered a broader credibility crisis around the industry’s political agenda.
Whether one accepts Hoskinson’s framing in full, the direction of pressure is clear. Every Trump-linked token controversy gives opponents a simpler attack line; crypto policy became a channel for presidential self-enrichment.
The potential midterm impact follows directly from that pressure. On Polymarket, Democrats are priced at 56% to take the Senate and 86% to take the House. Prediction markets are not destiny, and they can move quickly, though those odds capture the market's live political instinct.

If Democrats gain one chamber, Trump faces heavier investigative pressure. If they gain both, the pressure escalates into a full-spectrum oversight environment, with subpoenas, hearings, document fights, and a much more aggressive public inquiry into the financial intersection of presidential power and family crypto ventures.
The constitutional mechanics still matter. House control could bring impeachment risk. Senate removal would still require a two-thirds vote, a much higher bar. Even without removal, a hostile Congress could turn the Trump crypto complex into a permanent scandal machine during the run-up to 2028.
The backlash now reaches beyond a reputational problem inside crypto. It is becoming a live electoral vulnerability. The same people who once saw Trump as crypto’s defender may now see him as the figure who turned their industry into a public punchline. Retail holders nursing losses are not a huge voting bloc on their own.
Cultural betrayal extends beyond wallet-level pain, especially when it ties into a broader accusation that power was used to privatize upside while distributing downside to loyalists and latecomers.
The market side remains fluid. CryptoSlate wrote in February that the post-election crypto rally had already completed an 18-month round trip, adding roughly $2 trillion in value and then erasing a similar amount.
From market snapshots, that separation is showing up across the broader “Made in USA” basket as well. Trump spent the past year promoting American-made crypto as a strategic category, though the current leaderboard shows that most of the biggest U.S.-linked names are trailing Bitcoin on every meaningful medium-term window.
| # | Coin | Price | 24h % | MCap | 24h Vol |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
$1.34 | +0.62% | $82.27B | $2.06B |
| 2 |
|
$1.00 | +0.01% | $78.68B | $11.22B |
| 3 |
|
$83.22 | +1.28% | $47.86B | $4.08B |
| 4 |
|
$0.09 | +0.6% | $15.55B | $1.09B |
| 5 |
|
$425.85 | +0.71% | $8.53B | $196.14M |
| 6 |
|
$8.89 | +1.27% | $6.46B | $519.72M |
| 7 |
|
$357.16 | -2.45% | $5.94B | $696.6M |
| 8 |
|
$0.15 | -0.09% | $5.02B | $81.92M |
| 9 |
|
$1.00 | +0.01% | $4.11B | $1.31B |
| 10 |
|
$53.03 | -1.49% | $4.09B | $240.03M |
Bitcoin is down 23.18% over 90 days in the ranking view, while XRP is down 35.67%, Solana is down 42.06%, Dogecoin is down 34.71%, Chainlink is down 33.96%, and Avalanche is down 34.17%. Even on the 30-day view, Bitcoin is slightly positive while most of the flagship U.S.-associated cohort remains negative.
That weakens one of the political selling points Trump leaned on most heavily, that backing American crypto projects would translate into stronger market leadership. Right now, the market is saying the opposite.
Bitcoin has held up better, and much of the “Made in USA” complex has looked more like a lagging trade than a national-champion theme.
That created the first crack in the idea that Trump automatically equals bullish crypto. WLFI and the wider Trump token complex widened the crack into something more serious. Bitcoin can still retain support as a macro asset, reserve candidate, and institutional collateral.
Trump-linked tokens can continue to erode trust at the same time. That split is the next test. If it deepens, Trump will discover that the crypto vote he used in 2024 now carries a reverse charge. Support built on policy can disappear when the community decides the family business got there first.
The post Made in USA cryptocurrencies fall as the crypto love affair with Trump family moves close to divorce appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin price fell during Asian trading hours after a weekend diplomatic push between Washington and Tehran broke down and a new US maritime order raised fresh concern over energy flows from the Middle East.
This pulled the top crypto lower alongside equities, reinforcing the market’s sensitivity to oil, inflation, and broader risk sentiment.
According to CryptoSlate's data, the largest digital asset dropped from a weekend high above $74,000 to a low of $70,540 after Vice President JD Vance said the negotiations in Islamabad had ended without an agreement.
As of press time, Bitcoin has slightly recovered to $70,877, leaving it sharply below levels reached after last week’s ceasefire announcement briefly lifted risk assets.
Meanwhile, this slide extended across other major digital assets, with Ethereum, XRP, and Solana all declining by more than 3% during the reporting period.
The move echoed a broader retreat in traditional markets as investors reassessed the odds of a near-term de-escalation in a conflict that has already shaken shipping routes, crude markets, and global expectations for growth and inflation.
As a result, the US stock market, including the S&P 500 and Dow Jones, declined by about 1%. Additionally, the Nasdaq 100 market fell 1.3%. Notably, this is consistent with the asset's struggles during a period of macroeconomic stress.
At the same time, oil prices surged as traders responded to the renewed prospect of prolonged disruption around one of the world’s most critical energy corridors.
Notably, this reversal followed a week in which risk assets had rallied on hopes that President Donald Trump’s two-week ceasefire plan could create room for a broader settlement.
That optimism began to unwind over the weekend as negotiators failed to bridge differences after nearly a full day of talks. Vance said Iranian officials were unwilling to accept U.S. terms, while Iran’s state media blamed what it described as unreasonable American demands.
The ceasefire remains in place until April 22, but the collapse of the talks left markets confronting the possibility that the pause could expire without a path to a more durable agreement.
U.S. Central Command said it would begin enforcing, under a presidential proclamation, new restrictions on maritime traffic moving into and out of Iranian ports at 10 a.m. Eastern on April 13.
The order covers ships operating in Iranian coastal waters, including port areas along the Arabian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, regardless of nationality or ownership.
At the same time, CENTCOM said the action would still allow vessels bound for non-Iranian destinations to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, preserving navigation through the corridor for broader regional trade.
Commercial crews were instructed to monitor maritime advisories, remain in contact with U.S. naval forces, and watch for further guidance through official mariner notices.
Even with those limits, traders viewed the move as a fresh escalation in Washington’s effort to tighten pressure on Tehran.
Data from oilprices.com showed that Brent crude rose more than 8% to top $103 a barrel, crossing back above the $100 level after dipping below $92 last week when ceasefire hopes returned. US oil prices officially jumped 10% at the open, rising above $105 a barrel.
The speed of that move reflected how fragile energy markets had become after weeks of war and disruption.
The Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world’s most important oil and gas chokepoints, carrying about one-fifth of global supplies. Since the US-Iran war began, traffic through the waterway has been reduced sharply.

That backdrop left Bitcoin exposed to a familiar macro chain reaction. Higher oil prices increase concern that inflation could remain sticky, which in turn threatens a longer period of tight financial conditions.
For a market that had just rallied on hopes of de-escalation, the failure of diplomacy and the return of crude above $100 forced a rapid repricing.
The magnitude of Monday’s drop also reflected a market structure that had become fragile well before the weekend talks collapsed.
Glassnode data showed that with Bitcoin near $70,800, the number of addresses in loss stood at about 13.5 million, indicating that a meaningful share of holders acquired coins above current levels.
That leaves a large cohort in drawdown and raises the odds that any rebound toward prior entry points will run into selling pressure.

The firm also said the $70,000 to $80,000 range has been marked by thin liquidity and repeated profit-taking, conditions that have capped recent bounces. One move back above $70,000 was exhausted by more than $20 million in profit realization per hour, underscoring how quickly supply has emerged as a strength.
Meanwhile, Joao Wedson, chief executive of Alphractal, pointed out that bearish traders had turned aggressive in the short term and built high leverage after a liquidity sweep above $73,000.

He said liquidity remains above $75,000, though the broader market structure has not shifted decisively. According to him, long traders remain the dominant side exposed to future liquidations, and the current phase still resembles an extended consolidation within a broader downtrend.
This is corroborated by CryptoQuant data, which noted that nearly $1 billion in sell volume hit Binance derivatives within an hour after the failed talks reinforced the market downside momentum.

According to the blockchain firm, BTC funding rates remained negative at around-0.0065%, a sign that short positions had come to dominate very short-term positioning. Historically, crowded short positioning can create the conditions for a squeeze, though those reversals tend to be smaller and shorter in bear markets.
That helps explain why Monday’s move did not look like a simple flight from crypto alone. Bitcoin increasingly trades as a liquidity-sensitive macro asset, responding to shifts in oil prices, interest rates, geopolitics, and broad investor appetite for risk.
As hopes of a ceasefire were building, crypto bounced quickly. However, when those hopes faded, the market gave back ground just as quickly.
Even as headline risk weighed on prices, one part of the market continued to show signs of resilience.
Rachael Lucas, a crypto analyst at BTC Markets, pointed out that the institutional backdrop remained constructive after US-listed Bitcoin exchange-traded funds posted their strongest weekly inflows since February.
According to her, those products took in $786 million in the week ended April 10, with BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust accounting for $612 million of that total. Morgan Stanley’s newly launched MSBT fund added $46 million in its first three trading days, a notable start for a product carrying a 0.14% fee and backed by the distribution network of 16,000 financial advisers.
That demand matters because it offers a source of absorption when older holders use rallies to cut exposure. In recent weeks, the market has struggled to sustain upside through the $70,000 to $80,000 band, where thin liquidity has combined with profit-taking and uncertainty over macro conditions. Continued ETF inflows could help offset some of that pressure if geopolitical tensions stop worsening.
Analysts at BIT Official, the crypto financial services firm formerly known as Matrixport, noted that:
“What makes this particularly notable is the parallel to 2025, when year-to-date ETF flows were similarly flat at this stage, only to be followed by a surge of nearly $30 billion in inflows. That wave of capital ultimately fueled the powerful post-April tariff policy rally, which extended through October. Viewed through this lens, the recent stabilization suggests that Bitcoin may have already absorbed the bulk of the selling pressure from January and February, with March marking the first return to positive inflows since the October correction.”
Additionally, CryptoQuant data indicate that Bitcoin is currently undervalued, noting that the top crypto has fallen below the 20th quantile of its power-law model.
The firm put the reading at 18.5%, indicating Bitcoin has spent only 18.5% of its history at similar valuation levels relative to that framework.
That signal is longer term and offers little protection against sudden macro shocks, but it does suggest that a deep downside is unfolding in a market already trading well below previous extremes.
Timothy Misir, head of research at BRN, told CryptoSlate that the market is entering the new week facing two competing forces: improving capital flows into Bitcoin investment products and rising macro risk linked to the Middle East.
He pointed to three drivers likely to set the tone over the coming sessions. The first is the conflict's trajectory itself. Any further disruption in or around the Strait of Hormuz would raise energy prices again and amplify volatility across asset classes.
The second is inflation data and Federal Reserve communication, both of which will shape whether traders begin to price a longer period of restrictive policy. The third is whether ETF inflows can continue strongly enough to absorb selling pressure within a range where holders have repeatedly taken profits.
Bitcoin, he said, is approaching an important test inside the $70,000 to $80,000 zone. Stability above $70,000 leaves room for faster upside movement, while a failure to hold there would reinforce the current range and extend the consolidation phase. Any durable move higher would likely require both sustained ETF buying and reduced profit-taking from holders looking to exit on strength.
On the other hand, Lucas said Bitcoin was testing support in the $70,500 to $71,000 range. She stated that holding that zone would leave room for a move back toward $72,000 to $73,000, while a stronger reclaim supported by sustained ETF demand would improve the near-term picture.
For now, the Bitcoin price is being driven by a geopolitical shift that quickly spilled into oil and then into every major risk asset.
The post Bitcoin price clings to $70,500 support after US-Iran talks collapse and oil spikes past $103 appeared first on CryptoSlate.
$RAVE, the native token of RaveDAO, surged by more than 4,000% over the last seven days. This move made the project reach the top 100 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization. While the broader market remains in a consolidation phase, RAVE's vertical ascent highlights the growing interest in Web3-native entertainment and decentralized event governance.

RaveDAO is a Web3-native entertainment collective designed to bridge the gap between the global electronic dance music (EDM) community and blockchain technology. At its core, the project functions as a decentralized organizer for large-scale music events, utilizing Ethereum-based smart contracts to handle everything from NFT ticketing to community governance.
Unlike many speculative tokens, the RAVE token serves several utility functions within its ecosystem:
The current Bitcoin price often dictates market sentiment, but RAVE has completely decoupled from the benchmark. According to data from major exchanges like Bitget, the rally was initially fueled by a massive short squeeze.
With over 70% of traders originally positioned to short the token during its early breakout, a cascade of liquidations forced the price higher, pushing it from under $0.50 to recent highs above $10.00. However, investors should remain cautious; on-chain data shows that wallets linked to the project's deployers moved millions of tokens to exchanges just before the pump, leading some analysts to question the sustainability of the current crypto news cycle surrounding the coin.
Bitget is one of the primary liquidity hubs for RAVE. Whether you are looking to ride the momentum or hedge your position, here is how to get started.
Visit the Bitget registration page and sign up with your email or phone number. To unlock full trading limits and ensure the security of your funds, complete the KYC (Know Your Customer) verification by uploading a valid ID.

To trade RAVE, you typically need USDC or USDT. You can deposit them from an external wallet or purchase it directly on Bitget using a credit card or P2P trading.
In the "Trade" menu, select "Spot Trading." Search for "RAVE" in the search bar and select the RAVE/USDT pair. You will see the live price chart and the order book.

Given the 4,000% move, volatility is guaranteed over the short and medium terms. Keep an eye on important support areas breaks which might signal strong crashes. Since the price just moved to 11$, the 10$ price mark can be a strong support.
From a technical standpoint, the RAVE/USD pair is currently in extreme overbought territory, with the RSI (Relative Strength Index) frequently hovering above 80. While the "Experience" and "Expertise" of the RaveDAO team in the EDM space provide a fundamental floor, the "Fully Diluted Valuation" (FDV) is significantly higher than the current market cap due to a large portion of the supply being locked.
Such supply dynamics often lead to significant price corrections when tokens are eventually unlocked. Traders should use strict stop-loss orders to protect their capital in this "high-risk, high-reward" environment.
As tensions in the Middle East reached a boiling point, risk assets—including $Bitcoin and major altcoins—faced a sharp "risk-off" liquidation. However, as diplomatic channels begin to signal a potential de-escalation, savvy investors are looking at the "blood in the streets" as a generational entry point.
Historically, markets overreact to geopolitical shocks. If a resolution is reached in early April, the pent-up liquidity currently sitting in stablecoins is expected to flood back into high-conviction projects that were unfairly hammered during the panic.
Potentially, as April 2026 is shaping up to be a prime recovery month. With many tokens trading at 20-30% discounts from their Q1 highs, the current "oversold" conditions on the RSI (Relative Strength Index) suggest a relief rally is imminent.
$Ethereum remains the backbone of the decentralized economy. During the recent March turbulence, ETH slipped below its psychological support, but the fundamentals remain unshaken.
Investors should monitor the ETH price closely, as its recovery usually leads the broader altcoin market.
For those with a higher risk appetite, $PEPE remains the go-to memecoin for catching rapid bounces. Memecoins often act as high-beta plays on market sentiment; when the market turns green, PEPE tends to move twice as fast as the majors.
$XRP has faced a double-whammy of geopolitical pressure and a temporary "capital flight" toward safer havens. However, its role in cross-border payments, especially in the Middle East, makes it a unique asset to watch as regional stability returns.
$Cardano is currently one of the most oversold "blue-chip" altcoins. While critics point to its slower price action, the network's resilience and growing DeFi TVL (Total Value Locked) suggest it is undervalued.
No "Top 5" list for 2026 is complete without $Solana. Despite the market-wide dip, Solana continues to lead in retail transaction volume and NFT activity.
| Asset | Risk Level | Primary Recovery Target | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ethereum | Low | $3,000 | Institutional ETF Inflows |
| Solana | Medium | $150+ | Network Scalability (Firedancer) |
| XRP | Medium | $1.50 - $2.00 | Cross-border Utility |
| Cardano | Low/Medium | $0.60 | Deep Value Recovery |
| PEPE | High | New 2026 Highs | Retail Hype & Liquidity Rotation |
In a high-intensity market event today, Polkadot ($DOT) experienced a sharp 5% price crash within a mere 5-minute window. The volatility resulted in the immediate wiping of $20 million in market capitalization and triggered the liquidation of over $728,000 in DOT long positions.

Early reports circulating on social media suggested a direct exploit of the Polkadot main chain. However, on-chain forensics quickly clarified that the vulnerability lies within Hyperbridge, a third-party interoperability protocol connecting Polkadot to Ethereum. The attacker successfully minted 1 billion "fake" wrapped DOT on Ethereum and dumped them into a Uniswap V4 pool, netting approximately 108.2 ETH ($237,000) in a single atomic transaction.
The exploit was not a breach of Polkadot’s core security but a failure in the Hyperbridge architecture. Hyperbridge utilizes the Interoperable State Machine Protocol (ISMP) to facilitate asset transfers. The attack targeted the EthereumHost and HandlerV1 contracts on the Ethereum side of the bridge.
The attacker (address 0xC513...F8E7) executed the following sequence in one transaction:

The source check in the TokenGateway failed because the attacker controlled the MMR root. When you control the root, you control the proof—the security check becomes a tautology.
While the primary panic centered on $DOT, the scope of the exploit was broader. Multiple Hyperbridge-wrapped assets were targeted using the same vector:
It is crucial for investors to understand that native DOT on the Polkadot Relay Chain remains secure. The "crash" was a result of market panic and automated trading bots reacting to the sudden liquidity pool imbalance on Ethereum. Users are encouraged to verify their holdings and check current rates on the Polkadot Ticker Page.
The catastrophe was made possible by two primary architectural weaknesses:
The attacker appears to be a highly sophisticated actor, with wallet history showing preparation dating back over eight months, including the use of RAILGUN for fund obfuscation.
While the broader digital asset market struggles to find its footing in 2026, Tron (TRX) has emerged as a beacon of resilience. Currently trading at $0.32, TRX has secured a 13.5% Year-to-Date (YTD) increase. This performance is particularly striking when compared to the total crypto market cap, which has retracted by an average of 22% in the same period.

As investors look for stability during high-volatility cycles, the $TRX price has decoupled from the downward trend of $Bitcoin and major altcoins. This article analyzes the fundamental drivers behind Tron’s growth and its role as a portfolio stabilizer.
Tron is a high-performance blockchain platform focused on decentralizing the internet through high throughput and low-cost transactions. Originally launched as an "Ethereum competitor," Tron has carved out a massive niche in the stablecoin and payment settlement sectors.
The primary reason for Tron’s 13.5% YTD gain lies in its utility-driven demand. During market downturns, traders often rotate out of volatile speculative assets and into stablecoins. Because the Tron ecosystem is the primary highway for TRC-20 USDT transfers, the demand for TRX (to power these transactions) remains constant even when prices for other coins fall.
Furthermore, institutional adoption has seen a steady rise. Data from CoinMarketCap suggests that Tron’s deflationary mechanism—where a portion of TRX is burned daily to cover transaction costs—is putting upward pressure on the price as the circulating supply shrinks.
Volatility is often the biggest deterrent for traditional investors entering the crypto space. However, TRX has demonstrated a significantly lower beta compared to the rest of the market.
Saudi Arabia has officially announced the full restoration of its East-West pipeline. By successfully bypassing the volatile Strait of Hormuz, the Kingdom is now pumping approximately 7,000,000 barrels per day (bpd) toward Red Sea terminals. While the immediate reaction in the financial markets has been focused on crude prices, the implications for the digital asset space are profound.
This restoration isn't just an infrastructure win; it represents a major shift toward regional stability and lower energy-driven inflation. For investors watching the latest crypto news, this development serves as a foundational pillar for a medium-term bullish environment in the cryptocurrency market.
The primary question investors ask is: Does cheaper oil mean higher crypto prices? The answer is a qualified yes, but with a delay. Historically, lower energy costs reduce global inflation expectations. When inflation cools, central banks—including the US Federal Reserve—often pivot toward a more dovish monetary policy.
As interest rate hikes pause or reverse, global liquidity increases. Since Bitcoin and Ethereum are highly sensitive to liquidity cycles, the stabilization of oil supplies through the East-West pipeline creates the exact macro conditions needed for a sustained crypto uptrend.
The East-West pipeline, spanning 746 miles from the Eastern Province to the port of Yanbu, allows Saudi Arabia to avoid the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint often subject to geopolitical tensions.
By securing this "lifeline," Saudi Arabia reduces the "risk premium" typically priced into global commodities. According to reports from Bloomberg, this bypass is a primary reason why oil prices have avoided crisis-level spikes despite ongoing regional uncertainties.
While the news is fundamentally positive, the Bitcoin price might not jump overnight. The transmission from oil stability to crypto growth follows a specific "medium-term" logic:
Saudi Arabia isn't just stabilizing oil; it’s aggressively diversifying. Under Vision 2030, the Kingdom has shown increasing interest in blockchain and digital finance. Recent collaborations involving the Saudi Central Bank in projects like mBridge—a cross-border CBDC platform—highlight a shift toward a digitized financial future.
As the Kingdom secures its oil revenue through smarter infrastructure, its ability to invest in emerging technologies increases. This "petro-liquidity" often finds its way into global venture capital, eventually trickling down into the crypto ecosystem.
A Polymarket trader walked away with $252,000 in profits after taking advantage of the UFC’s latest “scoring error.”
Crypto exchange Kraken says it's being extorted over stolen customer data, but won't yield to the criminals or negotiate.
Claude Mythos could be a potentially massive cybersecurity threat, according to early testing from the UK’s AI Safety Institute.
Three years after his Horizon Worlds avatar became a global meme, Zuckerberg is back at the avatar game, this time with a realistic AI clone.
Institutional crypto investors posted their strongest weekly inflows since January, with Bitcoin and Ethereum demand rising as XRP investments cool.
Bitcoin liquidations reached a 10,860% hourly imbalance as BTC touched $72,530 following the $100 oil price surge.
XRP derivatives market fails to show any major recovery since October 2025 amid the prolonged market downturn seen over the past six months.
Ripple USD continues to see significant activity, with over 29 million tokens removed from the Ethereum supply.
Bitcoin proved critics wrong 15 years ago following a comeback to $1.
Top analyst Willy Woo predicts that $80,000 is now the critical test level for the flagship cryptocurrency's next major leg up.
The bitcoin price prediction just hit a turning point. BTC posted back to back quarterly losses for the first time since 2022, dropping 23% from its January price of $87,500, but April has closed green 9 out of 13 times since 2013 with a 69% win rate per 24/7 Wall St.
The pattern is clear: BTC falls hard then bounces harder. While that recovery builds over months from a $1.3 trillion cap, the wallets chasing the biggest return are not waiting on BTC.
They are filling Pepeto because a working exchange, a confirmed Binance listing, and $8.9 million in committed capital tell them the setup is already in place.
BTC lost 23% in Q1 after falling from $87,500, and Q4 2025 also closed red, marking the first back to back quarterly losses since 2022 per 24/7 Wall St.
But April’s 69% win rate is one of BTC’s strongest months on record, and CME FedWatch shows 98% expect the Fed to hold at the April 28 meeting per 24/7 Wall St.
When BTC falls to levels that historically trigger rebounds and the Fed removes the threat of more rate hikes, the bitcoin price prediction shifts from fear to timing.
What if you could go back and buy BTC at $100? Or catch BNB at $0.15? Or enter Pepe before $11 billion? Every one of those followed the same pattern: a real product, early fear, and a crowd that showed up late. Pepeto is following that exact pattern right now, except this time you are not late.
The exchange is already live. PepetoSwap handles every trade at zero cost so your gains stay whole, the bridge sends your assets between ETH, BNB, and Solana chains for free, and the scanner catches dangerous contracts before your money goes anywhere near them.

The mind behind the original Pepe, the meme token that hit $11 billion on nothing but hype and 420 trillion supply, built Pepeto with real tools and a Binance listing already confirmed. SolidProof audited every contract with results on chain for anyone to check. More than $8.9 million flowed in while the market sat in fear, and that is the tell. The people inside are not waiting and hoping. They already see where this goes. Staking pays 185% APY, growing your position every day before listing day arrives.
At $0.0000001862 per token, analysts project 100x to 300x once the Binance listing opens trading. Let those numbers sink in. $750 at 100x becomes $75,000. At 300x that same $750 becomes $225,000. How often does a setup like this land in front of you with a working exchange, a clean audit, and a confirmed listing all at less than a penny? The presale is filling fast and the listing will end this price for good.
BTC trades near $71,140 with a $1.42 trillion cap, down 43% from its October 2025 all time high near $126,000 per CoinMarketCap.

The $75,000 level is the key resistance, and a clean break with volume opens the path toward $85,000 by summer.
Standard Chartered targets $120,000 by year end, and the CLARITY Act markup in late April is the next catalyst. Even the bull case at $120,000 delivers 67% from current levels, strong for a $1.3 trillion asset but taking the rest of the year to play out.
BTC carries the store of value story and April’s 69% win rate says the bounce is likely coming. But here is what it comes down to. Do you want 67% over the rest of the year from a $1.3 trillion token? Or do you want to be the person who put $750 into a presale and watched it become $75,000 to $225,000 from one listing?
Every fortune built in crypto started with one moment where someone moved while everyone else was still reading about it. BTC at $100. BNB at $0.15. Pepe at zero. The same creator who built that last one is behind Pepeto, and the Binance listing is the event that turns this presale price into history. The wallets already inside are the ones who will tell this story next year. The only question left is whether your wallet is one of them.

How do back to back quarterly losses change the bitcoin price prediction?
BTC’s first back to back quarterly losses since 2022 pushed prices lower, but April’s 69% win rate signals a bounce, while Pepeto at presale pricing delivers returns one listing can produce.
Can a presale outperform the bitcoin price prediction this cycle?
BTC at $71,140 targeting $120,000 delivers 67% over months, but $750 inside Pepeto at 100x becomes $75,000 from one Binance listing, making the presale at the Pepeto official website the faster path.
The post Bitcoin Price Prediction: BTC Needs All Year for $120,000 but $750 in This Presale Could Return $225,000 From One Listing appeared first on Blockonomi.
Explosions leave evidence. The explosion in DraftKings alternative search volume throughout 2026 has left evidence across every measurable channel. Search engines register the queries. Forums catalogue the discussions. Social platforms amplify the recommendations. And platform analytics track where the traffic ultimately lands.
The evidence points overwhelmingly in one direction. Players are leaving the traditional gambling model in growing numbers, and they are congregating around crypto-native platforms that deliver what traditional infrastructure cannot. The search volume is not just growing. It is growing with the kind of force that reshapes markets.
ZunaBet emerged ready for exactly this moment. A crypto-native casino and sportsbook that launched in 2026, it entered the market with a product built to absorb the full weight of the alternative search surge. Here is what is driving the explosion and why ZunaBet keeps catching what it throws off.
The surge radiates outward from DraftKings because DraftKings sits at the centre of traditional online gambling. It is the platform most players tried first, used longest, and know most intimately. When those players decide to search for alternatives, DraftKings is the name attached to the query.
That is a testament to what DraftKings built. From daily fantasy sports to publicly traded gambling giant, the trajectory represents peak execution within the traditional model. A sportsbook covering professional and college athletics with depth and competitive odds. A casino featuring slots, table games, and live dealer content. A mobile experience trusted by millions. Marketing that made the brand synonymous with American sports. Regulatory licences across numerous states providing legal authority and player protection.
DraftKings did everything the traditional model allows. The search surge exists because a growing number of players have concluded that what the traditional model allows is not enough. Transaction speeds limited by banking timelines. Fees imposed by intermediaries. Withdrawal windows measured in business days. Points-based loyalty returning modest value through complex conversion mechanics.
These limitations are architectural. They cannot be patched or optimised away. They are built into the foundation that traditional platforms rest on. The search surge is the market’s response to that reality.
Some platforms get lucky with timing. ZunaBet got lucky with timing and showed up prepared. The product that launched in 2026 was not hastily assembled to capitalise on a trend. It was methodically built by people who saw the trend coming.
Strathvale Group Ltd owns the platform. An Anjouan gaming license (ALSI-202510047-FI2) provides regulatory standing. The development team carries more than two decades of combined online gambling experience. That experience informed every decision in a product that arrived fully formed and immediately competitive.

The game catalog demonstrates that readiness. ZunaBet hosts 11,294 titles from 63 providers. Pragmatic Play, Evolution, Hacksaw Gaming, Yggdrasil, and BGaming lead a provider roster extending through dozens of additional studios. Slots offer extraordinary variety. RNG table games provide genuine depth. Live dealer rooms feature premium quality. Content density produced by 63 providers on one crypto-native platform establishes a benchmark that most traditional casino sections cannot approach.

The sportsbook matches the casino’s completeness. Football, basketball, tennis, and NHL cover traditional ground. Esports markets for CS2, Dota 2, League of Legends, and Valorant push into territory DraftKings has not committed to. Virtual sports and combat sports round out the offering. One account accesses everything.
Over 20 cryptocurrencies flow through the platform natively. BTC, ETH, USDT on multiple chains, SOL, DOGE, ADA, XRP, and others are processed fee-free. Withdrawals are fast. Apps serve iOS, Android, Windows, and MacOS. Live chat never closes.
Search volume measures interest. What converts interest into action is the transaction experience. This is where the DraftKings alternative search becomes a DraftKings departure.
DraftKings routes every transaction through traditional financial intermediaries. Card networks process deposits. Banks handle withdrawals according to institutional schedules. Payment processors sit between player and platform, adding time and cost. A withdrawal might take three to five business days to complete. Fees apply at various stages. These are structural realities of the infrastructure.

ZunaBet routes every transaction through blockchain systems built for one purpose: moving money fast and free. Deposits arrive at network speed. Withdrawals return to wallets with matching efficiency. No intermediaries. No fees. No external schedules.
When a player executing a DraftKings alternative search actually tests ZunaBet’s transaction process, the search typically ends. The contrast between instant and multi-day, between free and fee-laden, between direct and intermediary-routed is too stark to ignore. Interest converts to action at the moment the first transaction completes.
More than 20 supported coins keep this conversion accessible to every crypto holder. BTC, ETH, SOL, DOGE, ADA, XRP, USDT across chains, and additional tokens connect directly from player wallets. No conversions needed. No exchange fees charged.
DraftKings structures welcome promotions around state regulation and product availability. Deposit matches and free bet credits for sportsbook signups are standard. Casino offers follow comparable patterns. The promotions compete within traditional parameters.
ZunaBet designed its welcome offer to handle the volume of incoming players the search surge produces. The total reaches $5,000 plus 75 free spins distributed across three deposits. First deposit earns a 100% match up to $2,000 with 25 free spins. Second deposit receives a 50% match up to $1,500 and 25 spins. Third deposit delivers a 100% match up to $1,500 and the remaining 25 spins.

Three deposits serve the conversion pathway perfectly. A player arriving from an alternative search is in evaluation mode. They want to test before they commit. Three separate bonus events give them three structured testing opportunities, each rewarded with tangible value. By the third deposit, testing has naturally evolved into adoption.
$5,000 across three deposits substantially exceeds traditional welcome offer scales. For players arriving through alternative searches with comparison as their default mindset, the difference commands attention.
DraftKings uses Dynasty Rewards, converting wagering crowns into free bets and perks. A functional points program within traditional loyalty conventions.
ZunaBet built the loyalty system that the surging alternative-search audience has been looking for. The dragon evolution program features a mascot named Zuno and progresses through six tiers with published rakeback percentages.
Squire returns 1% rakeback. Warden returns 2%. Champion returns 4%. Divine returns 5%. Knight returns 10%. Ultimate returns 20%.

Points accumulate and convert through variable redemption mechanics. Rakeback applies automatically to every wager as a fixed continuous percentage return on the house edge. At 20%, one dollar returns for every five the house normally retains. No effort from the player. No conversion steps. No value fluctuation.
The cumulative financial advantage of 20% continuous rakeback over points-based alternatives is conclusive across any sustained period of play. The gap grows wider with every session.
Tier benefits stack further value. Free spins scale to 1,000 at upper levels. VIP club membership opens. Double wheel spins become available. Gamified progression makes each tier a genuine milestone borrowing from video game levelling mechanics.
Every program element is documented publicly. Tier requirements, rakeback rates, and associated benefits sit in open view for any player to evaluate before depositing. That transparency exceeds what traditional points programs with variable redemption rules typically provide.
A surge in incoming players tests platform quality in ways that normal traffic does not. Players arriving from alternative searches bring comparison mindsets and heightened expectations. ZunaBet holds up.
HTML5 drives a dark-themed responsive design that performs consistently across all devices. Native apps for iOS, Android, Windows, and MacOS deliver polished experiences. Over 11,000 games stay organised through effective categorisation, filtering, and search. Casino and sportsbook function as one integrated product.
Esports coverage stands as a core sportsbook pillar. CS2, Dota 2, League of Legends, and Valorant carry full markets. DraftKings approaches esports tentatively. ZunaBet made it foundational. For the audience flowing in through alternative searches, that commitment validates their decision to switch.
The team’s 20+ years of collective experience ensures the platform meets the daily-use standards of demanding players. Speed, navigation, content discovery, and section transitions all reflect deep industry expertise applied with care.
DraftKings remains a powerful platform. Brand dominance, regulatory depth, corporate resources, and millions of users secure its position in traditional gambling for the foreseeable future. For players aligned with that model, DraftKings continues to excel.
But the surge tells a different story for a different audience. It tells you that a critical mass of players has decided the traditional model no longer serves them. They want crypto-native speed with zero fees. They want game libraries numbering in the tens of thousands. They want loyalty systems returning meaningful value through automatic rakeback rather than complex point conversions. They want platforms built for the digital-first world they inhabit.
ZunaBet emerged ready to meet every one of those demands. Over 11,000 games from 63 providers. A sportsbook treating esports as essential. More than 20 cryptocurrencies processed instantly and free. A $5,000 welcome bonus structured across three deposits. And a dragon evolution loyalty program where 20% rakeback at the summit has set a standard that traditional systems will never match.
The platform is still building the operational history that establishes deep trust over time. But the surge in search volume and the rate at which those searches convert to ZunaBet registrations paint a clear picture. The market demanded something different. ZunaBet emerged with exactly that. And the evidence across every measurable channel confirms that the emergence is only accelerating.
The post DraftKings Alternative Search Volume Has Exploded — ZunaBet Emerged Ready appeared first on Blockonomi.
When Amazon launched its vehicle sales platform in late 2024, it featured just a single automaker. Today, the initiative has evolved into a comprehensive automotive marketplace.
Amazon.com, Inc., AMZN
Over the past 18 months, Amazon Autos has welcomed Kia, Mazda, Subaru, Chevrolet, and Jeep into its digital showroom. This represents substantial growth beyond the platform’s Hyundai-only debut. The program now operates in more than 130 American cities.
The purchasing process follows a streamlined model. Shoppers explore new vehicles through Amazon’s interface, arrange financing digitally, and complete the majority of documentation remotely. Final vehicle collection occurs at participating dealerships. Dealers cover listing costs while customers face no additional platform fees.
According to Amazon, hundreds of dealerships have joined the program to date. Fan Jin, director of Amazon Autos, stated, “While still early days, we are seeing a strong response from customers and dealers.”
American new vehicle sales totaled approximately $1.3 trillion last year, according to National Automobile Dealers Association data. This sector remains among the final substantial retail segments yet to transition meaningfully into digital commerce.
Amazon aims to serve as that digital connector. The marketplace employs transparent, fixed-price models — a sharp contrast to conventional dealership haggling that research shows most consumers actively dislike. Industry polling revealed buyers would prefer dental procedures over traditional car price negotiations.
However, initial performance metrics show variation. South Bay Hyundai in California, an early adopter, initially moved roughly 10 vehicles monthly via Amazon. That figure has since declined to approximately five per month. The dealership’s general sales manager pointed to challenges including paperwork errors and inventory management conflicts with in-person customers.
Meanwhile, a Glendale, California Kia franchise recorded a single sale — a $55,000 Kia Carnival — during its first six weeks. The dealer anticipates improvement but recognizes the platform’s nascent stage.
Beyond direct vehicle transactions, automotive sales could unlock substantially larger revenue opportunities for Amazon through advertising channels.
Automotive manufacturers are forecasted to invest upward of $30 billion in advertising throughout 2025. Amazon’s advertising division already ranks among its fastest-expanding business units. By attracting automotive brands to its ecosystem, Amazon positions itself to capture significant portions of that marketing expenditure.
Sky Canaves, retail analyst at Emarketer, observed: “Amazon is making a big push for advertisers who don’t typically advertise on Amazon.”
Expanding to manufacturers including Chevrolet (General Motors) and Jeep (Stellantis) places Amazon in direct rivalry with established automotive listing platforms. The move also targets Prime subscribers already accustomed to Amazon’s purchasing experience.
AMZN stock traded up just 0.05% following the expansion announcement. Wall Street maintains a Strong Buy consensus rating based on 43 Buy recommendations and three Hold ratings issued over the recent three-month period. The average analyst price target stands at $284.20 per share.
The post Amazon (AMZN) Stock: E-Commerce Giant Revs Up Vehicle Sales Nationwide appeared first on Blockonomi.
On Monday, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton delivered a Civil Investigative Demand to Lululemon, causing shares to plummet more than 3%.
Lululemon Athletica Inc., LULU
The inquiry will scrutinize whether the athletic apparel retailer has deceived customers regarding the health and safety characteristics of its merchandise.
Central to the investigation is the question of whether Lululemon’s garments contain PFAS — commonly referred to as “forever chemicals” — which would contradict the company’s marketing messaging.
PFAS compounds have been associated with hormonal imbalances, reproductive issues, and various cancers.
“Consumers deserve transparency when making health-conscious decisions for their families,” Paxton stated in his public remarks. “No company will be permitted to market dangerous, chemical-laden products at inflated prices while falsely claiming wellness and environmental responsibility.”
This statement strikes at the heart of Lululemon’s business model. The brand has consistently positioned itself as a champion of wellness and environmental stewardship, making this investigation particularly damaging to its public image.
Texas officials intend to examine Lululemon’s proprietary Restricted Substances List, quality control testing methods, and vendor management systems.
Investigators aim to verify whether the company’s products genuinely meet the safety benchmarks it publicly promotes.
In fiscal 2025, Lululemon reported revenues exceeding $11 billion, positioning itself as a premium wellness-focused lifestyle label.
This regulatory action arrives during a particularly turbulent period for the athletic wear company.
Lululemon has experienced softening sales figures and diminishing share value as 2026 unfolds.
The organization is simultaneously navigating a CEO succession and confronting demands from activist shareholders.
Additionally, Chip Wilson, the company’s founder, has been vocally advocating for board restructuring.
The Texas investigation represents yet another obstacle in an increasingly complicated landscape.
According to consensus data from 20 Wall Street analysts surveyed over the past three months, LULU carries a Hold rating. The breakdown includes one Buy recommendation alongside 19 Hold ratings.
The mean price target stands at $179.53, suggesting potential upside of approximately 11.5% from present trading levels.
The post Lululemon (LULU) Under Texas Investigation Over PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals’ in Products appeared first on Blockonomi.
Kraken confirmed an extortion attempt involving internal access claims, while it denied any system breach or fund risk. The company said it contained two insider-related incidents and limited data exposure. It also stated that affected accounts represented about 0.02% of its global user base.
Kraken reported that attackers tried to extort the firm using alleged internal access videos. However, the company said its systems remained secure, and funds stayed protected.
The firm identified two separate incidents involving support staff access and limited client data visibility. It removed both individuals quickly and enforced tighter security controls after internal investigations.
Kraken said the first case emerged in February 2025 after it received a tip about a circulating video. The company then revoked access, identified the individual, and informed affected users.
Later, Kraken received another tip about a similar video linked to a different insider. It terminated access again and notified impacted users while strengthening safeguards.
Nick Percoco, chief security officer, stated, “Our systems were never breached; funds were never at risk.” He also added that the company will not negotiate with criminal groups.
Kraken said about 2,000 accounts were potentially viewed across both incidents. However, the firm emphasized that millions of users remained unaffected by the events.
Kraken reported that extortion demands followed shortly after it blocked the latest unauthorized access. The group threatened to release materials through media channels and social platforms.
The company confirmed it will not comply with any demands from the attackers. It also said it is working closely with law enforcement agencies and industry partners.
Kraken believes the case connects to wider insider recruitment efforts targeting crypto and technology firms. It stated that investigators have enough evidence to identify suspects.
The exchange added that it continues to improve internal monitoring and employee access controls. It also said it reviews processes to prevent similar incidents.
The firm stressed that no funds were lost and no core systems were compromised. It maintained that its infrastructure remained secure throughout both events.
Galaxy Digital also disclosed a separate cybersecurity incident involving unauthorized access. The company said the breach affected an isolated development workspace.
Galaxy Digital confirmed that no client funds or account data were exposed. It stated that the incident remained contained within internal systems.
The firm acted quickly to block access and investigate the situation. It also confirmed that operations continued without disruption.
Kraken said it continues to monitor threats and cooperate with authorities. Percoco stated, “We remain committed to combating insider recruitment threats globally.”
The post Kraken Reports Insider Incidents but Confirms No System Breach appeared first on Blockonomi.
Bitcoin’s derivatives market has reached what Real Vision’s Jamie Coutts is calling a state of “excessive pessimism” after his Derivative Risk Score hit 1. Furthermore, the analyst said BTC’s 7-day moving average funding rate has fallen to the third percentile of all readings made since 2020.
But according to him, in the past, similar sustained negative funding ultimately gave way to huge upsides, with median 90-day gains of more than 43%.
In a post on X on April 13, Coutts looked at 14 times since 2016 when the main cryptocurrency had negative funding for at least 20 days, and the data revealed that after these periods ended, the average return over the next 30 days was 20.8%, with 12 out of the 14 cases ending positively. At the 90-day mark, median returns reached 43.5%, and 11 of the 14 days finished positive.
According to Coutts, there are three close comparisons to the situation currently being experienced: one happening during the 2018-2019 crypto winter, another occurring in 2020 during the COVID crash, and a third that followed China’s banning of BTC mining in 2021.
Soon after all those instances, which involved no less than 48 days of sustained negative funding, there were some pretty big upticks for BTC, with the asset returning 73.4% after 90 days in 2018-2019, 43.5% after the COVID dip, and over 42% in the aftermath of the China Bitcoin mining ban.
The researcher noted that the negative funding stretch from February to March 2026 was the third longest, having gone on for 50 days, with only the run in 2018-19 and the one in 2021 going on longer than it at 83 days and 53 days, respectively.
If those past episodes are anything to go by, then that 50-day period of bearish derivatives positioning could be the setup for a similar recovery.
However, Coutts threw in a few caveats, saying that the 14 episodes he’d analyzed were a “thin dataset” and that there were two exceptions, both in early 2018, when the perp market was “very immature,” that produced losses of 38% and 32% at 30 and 90 days, respectively.
“The signal doesn’t distinguish between a bull market correction and a structural bear market,” he wrote.
Coutts’ assessment has come at a time when Bitcoin is trying to find its footing, following jitters that hit the market after US Vice President JD Vance announced that negotiations between the United States and Iran had failed to produce an agreement that would have ended hostilities between the two.
At the time of writing, the asset was trading for about $71,000, which is more than 16% less than it was a year ago and almost 44% less than its all-time high of over $126,000 in October 2025.
Meanwhile, another market watcher, Darkfost, said that nearly $1 billion in sell volume had hit Binance derivatives just an hour after Vance’s statement. This pushed funding rates further into negative territory, with Coutts putting it at -1.73% since April 6, meaning the current episode is still developing.
On his part, Darkfost argued that when such a strong consensus forms on the short side, markets often move in the opposite direction. Still, he advised that any upside reaction could be limited if the broader trend stays weak.
The post Analysis: Rally on the Cards as Bitcoin Derivatives Flash Extreme Pessimism appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Tron founder Justin Sun, who also happens to be the single largest investor in the Trump family-linked World Liberty Financial (WLFI), has publicly demanded that the DeFi project disclose the identities behind a single anonymous wallet and a five-member group that he claims can freeze user funds.
The confrontation is centered on the control of World Liberty’s native WLFI tokens, with Sun arguing that the platform’s governance structure leaves investors exposed to unilateral decisions.
Sun based his demand on an analysis of WLFI’s smart contract structure, which was corroborated by blockchain researcher banteg, whose post on X on April 12 laid out the on-chain timelines in detail. The analyst says that the first WLFI token that was released in September 2024 didn’t have a blacklist mechanism, even though it could be upgraded.
They also say that a blacklist feature was added to the second version on August 24, 2025, 11 months after Sun put money into the project and just a week before the tokens went on sale.
There was another upgrade in November 2025, which added what banteg called “batch reallocation,” which they said was, in essence, a seizure mechanism that World Liberty apparently justified at the time as a tool to recover funds for holders that fell victim to phishing scams.
Banteg also took a look at the vesting structure that had been specifically applied to Sun, where WLFI exclusively created a separate token category for the Tron founder, called category 3. Per their post, the other 519 World Liberty investors all sit in category 1.
The analyst added that minutes after Sun activated his wallet, WLFI’s 3-of-5 multisig set his category 3 to allow 20% of his 3 billion tokens to be freely transferred, with the crypto entrepreneur moving 55 million WLFI, only to have his wallet frozen by an outside address acting as both a guardian and a signer on the 3-of-5 multisig.
The billionaire businessman is now demanding to know who is behind that address.
“I’m calling on World Liberty Financial @worldlibertyfi to publicly disclose who controls the single guardian EOA and the 3/5 multisig that govern the WLFI smart contract,” he wrote in his post on X.
According to Sun, whose involvement with WLFI started even before the project’s public launch after he bought $75 million in WLFI tokens to become the project’s largest backer, one individual has the unilateral power to freeze the assets of any token holder.
This is not what he envisioned when he put his money in the project, having said at the time that his support was rooted in WLFI’s stated mission of bringing decentralized finance to mainstream Americans. However, what he now says was never disclosed to him, or to any other investor, was the existence of a blacklisting function embedded in the smart contract, controlled by one person.
“Community governance and voting are meaningless,” he argued. “Every proposal, every vote, every claim of decentralized decision-making is theater.”
In his opinion, the real power sits with the unknown external address and the 3-of-5 multisig group, who are not answerable to anyone. But World Liberty has dismissed the accusations, writing on X:
“Justin’s favorite move is playing the victim while making baseless allegations to cover up his own misconduct. We have the contracts. We have the evidence. We have the truth. See you in court pal.”
The post Justin Sun Calls Out Trump-Linked WLFI Over Hidden Wallet That Can Freeze Funds appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Bitcoin (BTC) entered the week with a fresh decline below $71,000 on Monday, and its next move remains uncertain.
But market players expect a final upside push before a major downturn unfolds in the coming weeks.
Crypto analyst Doctor Profit believes Bitcoin could see a limited upside move in the near term before entering a broader and more aggressive decline. According to his latest assessment, the probability of Bitcoin climbing toward the $76,000 level is high. While the price could still extend beyond that zone into the $79,000 to $84,000 range, uncertainty remains about how far the current upward momentum can stretch before a reversal begins.
In his latest tweet, Doctor Profit stated that the broader trend remains bearish despite the potential for short-term gains. He expects the market to experience a significant downward move in the coming weeks and argued that the current price action could be setting up a bull trap.
In this scenario, temporary upward momentum may draw in optimistic buyers before a sharp reversal leads to deeper losses. The analyst believes this type of setup is often driven by market makers aiming to create liquidity before pushing prices lower. As a result, he does not view the recent recovery as a sign of a confirmed bottom, but rather as part of a larger corrective structure that has yet to play out fully.
A major part of his outlook is tied to expectations in traditional financial markets. He predicts a major correction in the S&P 500 within the next two months, which could potentially exceed a 35% decline.
Such a drop would be larger than the fall recorded during the COVID-19 market crash, and he expects it to have a strong spillover effect on risk assets. Hence, Bitcoin is unlikely to remain insulated if equities experience a sharp downturn, and instead could follow with an accelerated decline of its own. This anticipated “domino effect” is central to his bearish thesis.
Doctor Profit reiterated his previous analysis that Bitcoin will eventually fall into the $50,000 range or even lower after completing its current upward phase.
Bitcoin slipped as geopolitical tensions escalated following the breakdown of high-stakes negotiations between the United States and Iran in Islamabad. The talks failed to produce a resolution, as both sides blamed each other. The situation intensified after US officials stated that Iran was unwilling to accept terms, while Tehran described the demands as unreasonable.
Markets reacted more sharply to subsequent developments, particularly the warning of a potential US naval blockade in the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global oil route. The threat of intercepting vessels and escalating military action raised fears of supply disruptions and broader conflict.
The post Bitcoin Rally Could Be a Trap Before Major Collapse, Says Analyst appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Ethereum is trading below $2.2k to open the new week, holding above the critical $1.8k support zone but struggling to make any decisive move higher. The recovery from February’s lows has been frustratingly shallow, and with macro uncertainty still clouding the broader risk environment, ETH remains in a position where it needs to prove itself rather than simply hold ground.
The descending channel on the daily chart remains intact, with the 100-day MA (~$2.4k) and 200-day MA (~$2.9k) both declining overhead and forming a formidable resistance ceiling. The price has been oscillating below the $2.4k supply zone for weeks now, and every push into that area has met renewed selling pressure.
What is quietly improving, however, is the RSI. The momentum oscillator has been rising since the February capitulation and is now trending in the mid-to-high 50s. That kind of momentum divergence — the price struggling to break higher while RSI steadily rises — can often precede a more forceful breakout attempt.
Currently, holding the $1.8k support band remains non-negotiable for buyers. If the asset breaks below, it would expose ETH to $1.6k and $1.5k fairly quickly. Above, $2.4k is the level that matters most, as it is the convergence of the descending channel’s higher trendline, the $2.4k supply zone, and the 100-day moving average.

On the 4-hour timeframe, ETH has been respecting a mildly ascending trendline from the February lows. The trendline is now providing support near $2k, with the price currently at just under $2.2k after getting rejected from the upper end of the recent range. However, the $2.4k resistance zone is still within striking distance after a solid recovery over the past week.
The RSI on the 4-hour has dropped rapidly from the high-70s seen during the early April push and is now hovering around 50, which shows momentum neutrality. Yet, there is room to build in either direction.
A clean breakout above $2.4k on this timeframe, ideally accompanied by RSI holding above 60, would be the most constructive short-term development ETH has seen in months. But failure to do so keeps the range-bound structure intact and brings the ascending trendline near $2k back into focus as the next test.

Ethereum’s exchange supply ratio has continued its relentless decline, now sitting at 0.126, which is a multi-year low that reflects an ongoing trend of holders withdrawing ETH from exchanges into self-custody. The drop from the mid-2025 peak near 0.18 has been steep and consistent, mirroring the price correction almost in lockstep.
What makes the current reading particularly notable is the growing divergence between supply availability and price. ETH is trading near $2.1k–$2.2k while exchange-held supply is at levels not seen in the entire dataset. This means that there is structurally less ETH available to sell on exchanges. In previous cycles, sustained declines in the exchange supply ratio have happened before price recoveries once demand returned.
So, with the supply-side foundation quietly being built, the missing ingredient remains a clear catalyst to bring buyers back in sufficient size to translate that tightness into upward price movement.

The post Ethereum Price Analysis: Has ETH’s Structure Shifted Fundamentally After Surge to $2.2K? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The team behind the Pi Network project has introduced numerous updates, reward distributions, initiatives, and all sorts of positive announcements in the past few months, but the overall impact has been quite limited.
Aside from a brief spike propelled by the hype around the listing on Kraken, the native token’s price remains highly depressed, while the community continues to question the Core Team’s actions.
CryptoPotato has repeatedly reported on Pi Network’s consecutive updates since the beginning of the year. They began with moving to protocol version 19.6, followed by v19.9 in early March, and the highly important v20.2, which was announced on Pi Day (March 14) 2026. It carried such significance as it laid out the fundamentals for the network to begin offering smart-contract features.
The next one, version 21, was promised to be successfully completed by April 6, and the team announced the migration around that date. In the meantime, they have also begun the second migration, allowing token holders to migrate their assets to Mainnet, and introduced an RPC server for Pi Testnet.
Last but not least, the Core Team highlighted another important aspect of its services: rewards distribution. In a post from last week, they said the first batch had been successfully delivered directly to eligible validators’ Mainnet wallets after the completion of more than 526 million validation tasks by more than a million such participants.
Despite all these positive developments, though, the majority of the comments below the Core Team’s posts on X are still criticizing the lack of actual progress, and they focus on two main topics: their inability to access their assets despite completing KYC requirements, and the native token’s consistent decline.
The only development that managed to impact PI’s price performance in the past few months was the listing on Kraken in March. More precisely, the hype about the listing. The token skyrocketed before and after the announcement, surging from $0.18 to almost $0.30.
However, once the asset went live for trading, it became another classic ‘sell-the-news’ event. The hype quickly disappeared, and PI plunged by over 50% in 48 hours or so. Since then, it has failed to maintain the $0.20 support-turned-resistance. As of press time, it even trades below the pre-Kraken-listing level as it dipped to a 7-week low at $0.165 earlier today.
With over seven million tokens to be unlocked on average in the next month, the chances for a more profound correction are still quite high. Data from PiScan shows that April 15, 16, and 17 will see the highest amount of released tokens, with over 60 million PI in just these three days.

The post Pi Network’s PI Dumps to Local Lows as New Updates Fail to Boost Investor Sentiment appeared first on CryptoPotato.