The expanded World Cup format and crypto sponsorships could reshape fan engagement and investment dynamics, blending sports with digital finance.
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Mexico's top finish in Group A boosts their confidence and strategic standing, potentially altering their trajectory in the knockout stages.
The post Mexico wins Group A after Raúl Rangel’s stunning double save denies South Korea late equalizer appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The rise in crypto prediction markets and fan tokens during the World Cup highlights growing integration of blockchain in sports engagement.
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The reported killing of Nasrallah escalates tensions, jeopardizing peace efforts and ceasefire talks, with markets anticipating further conflict.
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Argentina's striker dilemma highlights the depth of talent, offering strategic flexibility but also challenging Scaloni's selection decisions.
The post Argentina faces striker dilemma after Messi hat-trick powers 3-0 World Cup win over Algeria appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

BlackRock Executive Calls Bitcoin “Too Big to Ignore”, Discusses New Bitcoin Premium Income ETF
BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager with more than $10 trillion under management, has launched a new Bitcoin exchange-traded product designed to generate monthly income for investors — a move the firm’s top ETF executive says is aimed at pulling in a wave of traditional investors who have kept their distance from the asset due to its volatility.
Jay Jacobs, BlackRock’s US Head of Equity ETFs, spoke to CoinTelegraph to discuss the launch of the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF, ticker BITA, which began trading this week. The product represents a departure from conventional Bitcoin exposure by layering a covered-call strategy on top of the firm’s existing iShares Bitcoin Trust, known as IBIT.
“You can think about this as a hybrid strategy for investors,” Jacobs said. “You both have upside opportunity in Bitcoin, as well as the ability to generate income off of Bitcoin.”
BITA holds exposure to Bitcoin through IBIT and sells call options at the money on approximately 25 to 35% of the portfolio. The premium collected from the sale of those options is distributed to holders as income.
Jacobs said the strategy targets an annual yield of between 15 and 25%, though the actual figure will depend on Bitcoin’s volatility at any given time — a direct application of the Black-Scholes options pricing model, where higher volatility produces higher premiums.
The trade-off is a cap on upside participation.
If Bitcoin rises 10%in a year and the fund is selling roughly 30%of that upside through options, the fund’s price return would be approximately 7 percent. Add the 15% income component, and total return reaches around 22% — a figure that Jacobs noted would outperform spot Bitcoin in that specific scenario.
In a major Bitcoin rally, the math tilts the other way. If Bitcoin gains 100% in a year, BITA holders would see roughly 70%in price appreciation plus 15% in income, totaling approximately 85%. That underperforms a straight long position, but Jacobs framed that outcome as an accepted trade-off, not a flaw.
One of the central themes of Jacobs’ conversation was the idea that Bitcoin’s long-criticized volatility is precisely what makes a product like BITA viable. Options prices are a function of volatility, and Bitcoin’s high historical volatility means the premiums available from selling covered calls are substantial.
“You’re monetizing volatility by selling options that are primarily driven by that volatility,” Jacobs said. For investors who have seen Bitcoin’s price swings as a barrier to entry, the product offers a different frame: volatility as a source of income rather than a source of risk.
Jacobs outlined several distinct investor profiles for BITA. Income-oriented investors seeking yield across asset classes represent one group. Long-term Bitcoin holders in a bear or sideways market represent another — people who remain bullish on the asset but want cash flow in the interim.
A third group, which Jacobs described as more institutional in character, is made up of portfolio managers who have historically required cash-flow-generating assets to justify an allocation.
“Assets that don’t have any cash flows associated with it had always been somewhat difficult, if not impossible, to put in those portfolios — Bitcoin, gold, silver — the cash flow is zero,” Jacobs said. BITA is designed to change that calculus for those investors.
Jacobs also addressed the broader trajectory of IBIT since its launch roughly two and a half years ago. He said approximately three quarters of IBIT buyers were purchasing an iShares product for the first time, indicating that Bitcoin ETFs have functioned as an on-ramp into the broader ETF ecosystem rather than just a new wrapper for existing investors.
Financial advisors on major bank platforms, who were restricted from accessing digital assets until those platforms opened up access to IBIT, represent a segment Jacobs called out as a source of growing momentum — one that is intersecting with generational wealth transfer as millennials enter higher earning years and accumulate investable assets.
This post BlackRock Executive Calls Bitcoin “Too Big to Ignore”, Discusses New Bitcoin Premium Income ETF first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

STRC Is Junk Credit in a Bitcoin Costume, and Retail Is Holding $8.8 Billion of It
There is now $15 billion sitting in three securities being marketed to bitcoin holders as the safer, smarter way to access bitcoin exposure: Strategy’s preferred stack, STRC, and SATA. The pitch is identical across all three. Tax-favored. 11.5% income. Backed by bitcoin. Money-market risk. 82.7% of the buyer base is retail. Every word of that pitch is wrong, and the security those buyers actually own is built to fail in exactly the bitcoin environment it claims to harness.
STRC is an unsecured, subordinated, perpetual preferred equity. No maturity date. No lien on a single satoshi of Strategy’s bitcoin treasury. The dividend is discretionary, which means the board can cut it at any monthly meeting with no notice, no remedy, and no vote. S&P rates the issuer B-, four notches into junk territory. None of that information appears in the marketing.
Stack those features against the words in the pitch. “Backed by bitcoin” describes a security with no claim on a single coin. “Money-market-like” describes an instrument rated four notches below investment grade with no maturity and a discretionary coupon. “Safe income” describes a payment the board controls and the funding source for which is the security itself. Each phrase in the marketing is contradicted by the indenture.
That is not a money market fund. It is speculative-grade credit-like product dressed in safe-income marketing, and 82.7% of it sits on retail balance sheets. Of the $10.7 billion notional outstanding for STRC, roughly $8.8 billion belongs to retail bitcoin holders concentrated in a single junk credit. There is no polite phrase for that exposure. It is a bag, and retail is holding it.
The structural risk in STRC is not that the dividend is high. It is that the dividend cannot be funded out of the business. Strategy’s underlying software business produces roughly $477 million in annual revenue. Total preferred dividend obligations now exceed $1.2 billion, a ratio of 3.5 to 1. The gap is not closed by earnings. It is closed by issuing new STRC shares at or above par, or diluting common shareholders of MSTR, with the proceeds recycled to pay the existing holders.
That is a reflexive funding loop. It works when STRC trades above par and breaks the moment it doesn’t. Anything that pressures the price, a credit downgrade, a missed dividend, a bitcoin drawdown, a capital markets shutdown, removes the very mechanism the dividend depends on. There is no plan B in the indenture. There is no lien on bitcoin to seize. There is no operating cash flow to redirect. There is only the next share issuance, and the next, until either bitcoin compounds the company out of the problem or the structure jams.
Then there is the dividend ratchet. The coupon has moved monthly from 9% to 11.5%, embedding $268 million in permanent annual obligations into the structure. The rate has only ever moved in one direction. Each monthly increase makes the funding gap wider, the share issuance more dilutive, and the price floor harder to hold. The mechanism designed to keep STRC attractive to new buyers is the same mechanism that compounds the burden on the issuer and accelerates the run on the funding loop when stress arrives.
The standard defense of the Digital Credit category goes like this: surely informed institutional capital is on the other side. Insurance companies need yield. Pension funds need duration. Fixed-income desks need product. Digital Credit is the institutional bridge to bitcoin.
That defense collapses on its own logic. Any institution that allocates to an unsecured, subordinated, perpetual preferred layered on a bitcoin treasury must first underwrite the underlying asset. Any institution that does the work to underwrite bitcoin allocates directly to spot bitcoin, where the credit risk vanishes and the path-dependent fragility goes with it. The institutional buyer who is both informed and rational does not exist in this product. The buyer who does exist, at 82.7% concentration, is retail.
The path-dependency math finishes the argument. Across 5,000 simulated bitcoin paths at a 10% compounding rate, the credit model produces a 12.3% probability of formal default, a 21.9% probability of dividend deferral, and a 50.7% probability of at least one forced bitcoin sale by the issuer during the eight-year cycle. At a 15% compounding rate, STRC has a 44.6% probability of ending below $85 even on paths where bitcoin recovers to new highs.
A bitcoin holder’s terminal wealth depends only on where bitcoin ends. An STRC holder’s outcome depends on every drawdown in between, because the same mechanisms that pretend to protect the dividend in calm conditions become the mechanisms that consume the holder’s principal in stress. The product is most fragile in exactly the bitcoin scenarios the underlying asset absorbs without consequence.
Bitcoin’s entire reason for existing is the removal of counterparty risk, custody risk, and opacity from monetary holdings. STRC, Strategy’s preferred stack, and similar instruments reintroduce all three under a marketing layer the underlying instrument cannot support. The alternative does not require any of that machinery: bitcoin in self-custody alongside a U.S. Treasury income ladder produces the same cash profile, with more terminal wealth and no corporate issuer in between.
The market will eventually clear the difference between the security retail thinks it bought and the security it actually owns. Anyone reading the cap table and allocating anyway is willingly underwriting Saylor’s funding plan with capital that thinks it bought a money market fund.
This is a guest post by Glenn Cameron, Global Head of Onramp Institutional. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.
This post STRC Is Junk Credit in a Bitcoin Costume, and Retail Is Holding $8.8 Billion of It first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Glenn Cameron.
Bitcoin Magazine

Bitcoin Price Falls to $62,000 as Hawkish Fed Shift Raises Risk of Deeper Pullback
Bitcoin price slipped below key support near $64,000 after a hawkish shift from the Federal Reserve erased gains tied to easing geopolitical tensions, placing the market at risk of a deeper pullback toward the $60,000 range.
The bitcoin price fell from a June 17 high of $66,315 to an intraday low near $62,000 during early June 18 trading, marking a 4% decline. Price action stabilized near $62,500, though momentum remains fragile as macro pressure builds.
The Federal Reserve held its benchmark rate steady at 3.50% to 3.75% but signaled a tighter policy path through updated projections. Policymakers reduced expectations for rate cuts and left open the possibility of further hikes. Chair Kevin Warsh also indicated a shift away from forward guidance, adding uncertainty across financial markets.
The reaction triggered a broad risk-off move. Crypto markets declined alongside equities tied to growth and liquidity, while the U.S. dollar index climbed to its highest level in over a year. Rising yields and a stronger dollar tend to weigh on assets such as Bitcoin that rely on abundant liquidity.
The decline came despite a supportive geopolitical development. The United States and Iran implemented an interim agreement that reopened the Strait of Hormuz and allowed Iranian oil exports to resume. Oil prices fell toward $75 per barrel, a move that would usually support risk assets.
Bitcoin failed to respond, underscoring the dominance of monetary policy in shaping near-term sentiment.
According to Bitcoin Magazine Pro data, attention has also turned to the upcoming June 26 Bitcoin options expiry, which carries roughly $10.5 billion in open interest. Call options cluster near the $80,000 strike, while put demand has built near $60,000. The current “max pain” level sits near $74,000, far above spot prices, leaving many bullish positions under pressure and increasing the likelihood of hedging flows.
Bitcoin price momentum has cooled. The relative strength index has moved toward neutral territory, while money flow indicators show reduced buying pressure.
On the daily chart, Bitcoin price remains below key resistance levels, including the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement near $65,000 and a broader trend resistance near $68,400. Trend indicators continue to favor sellers, reflecting the continuation of the downtrend that began after May highs.
Liquidity data highlights clear battleground levels. Significant clusters of liquidation interest sit above price near $65,000 to $67,000, while downside liquidity concentrates around $63,500 and $62,000. These zones may act as magnets for price as leverage builds.
Market participants are watching whether the $62,000 level can hold. A sustained move below this range could open a path toward $60,000 and the June low below $60,000. A deeper retracement remains possible if macro conditions tighten further, with extreme scenarios pointing toward the $50,000 region based on past cycle behavior.
Institutional flows present another challenge. U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs have recorded outflows in recent sessions, signaling reduced demand from large investors. At the same time, the Coinbase Premium Index remains negative, suggesting weaker buying activity from U.S.-based participants.
There are, however, mixed signals beneath the surface. Large Bitcoin holders have increased accumulation, with wallets holding at least 1,000 BTC reaching their highest levels since March.
Exchange reserves have also declined, pointing to continued long-term holding behavior.
For now, Bitcoin price appears range-bound between $60,000 and $70,000 as markets search for direction. A reclaim of $65,000 followed by a move above $67,000 could restore bullish momentum and shift focus toward $70,000.
Failure to hold current support, however, would reinforce downside risks as macro headwinds remain in control.
This post Bitcoin Price Falls to $62,000 as Hawkish Fed Shift Raises Risk of Deeper Pullback first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Federal Reserve Moves to Close Stablecoin Loopholes With New Customer ID Rules
The Federal Reserve proposed Thursday that payment stablecoin issuers maintain written customer identification programs, a move that signals Washington’s determination to bring digital asset markets under the same anti-money laundering discipline long applied to traditional banks — even as regulators race to finalize rules before a statutory deadline this coming January.
The proposal would require so-called permitted payment stablecoin issuers, or PPSIs, to collect from each new customer a legal name, date of birth or formation, physical address, and a government-issued identification number before opening an account.
The Federal Reserve framework mirrors CIP obligations that banks, broker-dealers, mutual funds, and futures commission merchants have operated under for more than two decades. Regulators will take public feedback on the proposal for 60 days.
The Federal Reserve’s action follows a wave of rulemaking set in motion by the Genius Act — formally, the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act — which President Trump signed into law in July 2025.
That landmark legislation created the first federal regulatory system for stablecoins, mandating 100% reserve backing with liquid assets and subjecting issuers to the Bank Secrecy Act for the first time.
The statute requires stablecoin issuers to establish effective anti-money laundering, sanctions compliance, and customer identification programs. The Genius Act becomes effective on the earlier of January 18, 2027, or 120 days after primary federal regulators issue their final implementing rules.
Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr has emerged as the most vocal voice of caution within the regulatory apparatus, even as his colleagues have embraced digital assets with new openness. Speaking in March at a Federalist Society conference in Washington, Barr warned that stablecoins face material risks around reserve asset quality, regulatory arbitrage, anti-money laundering gaps, and financial stability — concerns he argued the Genius Act’s primary text does not resolve on its own.
“While some digital asset service providers are subject to anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing requirements in their home jurisdiction, it is far too easy for bad actors to evade these restrictions and operate without detection when transacting in digital assets,” Barr said in a statement Thursday.
Barr, who previously served as the Federal Reserve’s top bank cop, contends that detailed rulemaking remains the critical instrument for translating the statute’s intent into enforceable protections.
Thursday’s proposal is the latest in a dense sequence of rulemakings from multiple agencies. In April 2026, the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and the Office of Foreign Assets Control issued a joint proposed rule requiring PPSIs to adopt written AML and countering-the-financing-of-terrorism programs and a full sanctions compliance framework.
That rule would carve PPSIs out of the existing money services business category and treat them as a distinct class of BSA-covered financial institutions — a significant structural change, given FinCEN’s finding that roughly half of known stablecoin issuers have not registered as MSBs at all.
The FDIC and OCC each issued their own notices of proposed rulemaking in parallel, covering licensing, reserves, capital requirements, and redemption standards. The CIP proposal announced Thursday is a separate, complementary rulemaking to those AML and sanctions rules.
The proposed customer identification requirements carry technical nuance tailored to stablecoin markets. Unlike banks, a PPSI can face demands for direct redemption from token holders who acquired coins on the secondary market rather than through a direct issuance relationship.
The proposal addresses this by defining an “account” to include that redemption event, meaning an individual who acquires a stablecoin on an exchange and later redeems it directly with the issuer would trigger CIP obligations at the moment of that interaction.
Purely secondary market transactions in which the PPSI is not a direct counterparty — including transfers conducted via smart contract — would not constitute an account relationship under the proposed framework.
The timeline for finalization is tight. With the Genius Act’s effective date potentially arriving as early as 120 days after the agencies publish their final rules, the window for comment, revision, and adoption is compressed. Final CIP rules are not expected before 2027, which means the statute could take effect before its customer identification architecture is fully in place.
This post Federal Reserve Moves to Close Stablecoin Loopholes With New Customer ID Rules first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

CME Group to Sue CFTC Over Bitcoin Perpetual Futures Approval in Clash Over Dodd-Frank Classification
The CME Group said that it plans to file a lawsuit against the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) over the agency’s approval of crypto perpetual futures, setting up a direct legal confrontation between the world’s largest futures exchange operator and its own regulator.
Outgoing CME CEO Terrence Duffy made the announcement on CNBC’s “Fast Money,” saying the company would file litigation today. CME later confirmed the plans to Reuters. The lawsuit targets the CFTC’s decision in late May to allow prediction market platform Kalshi to offer bitcoin perpetual futures — a first for the United States.
At the center of the legal argument is a classification dispute under the Dodd-Frank Act. Duffy contends that perpetual futures, known as “perps,” are not futures at all but swaps, and therefore subject to a different set of clearing, reporting, and trading-venue requirements.
“Under the Dodd-Frank Act, it defines what a swap is and what a future is, and when there’s two parties exchanging payments to each other, that’s deemed a swap,” Duffy told CNBC.
Perpetual futures are derivatives contracts with no expiration date. Rather than settling on a fixed date, they rely on periodic funding payments exchanged between traders. The products can carry leverage of up to 50-to-1, magnifying both gains and losses. Long a fixture on offshore crypto exchanges, they have never before been offered through domestic, regulated venues in the United States.
The CFTC changed that in late May when it approved Kalshi’s bitcoin perp contract. The agency then cleared Coinbase to connect U.S. customers to offshore perpetual futures trading. CFTC Chair Michael Selig has defended both decisions as a way to bring a major segment of crypto derivatives activity under domestic regulation.
“It’s time to approve regulated futures contracts that have no expiration date,” Selig told CNBC’s “Fast Money” earlier this week. “We’re going to make sure the product’s available, but it’s well regulated here in the U.S.”
The CFTC pushed back against CME’s legal threat. A spokesperson told Reuters the agency looked forward to addressing the claims and called the lawsuit “frivolous.”
Duffy said he had spent eight months preparing the challenge with CME’s board and made clear the company viewed the approval process itself as flawed, arguing the CFTC had cleared a novel instrument faster than typical review procedures would allow.
He also pointed to CME’s exclusive licenses on key market benchmarks, arguing that competing perpetual contracts would need to route through CME regardless of how the products are classified.
“We have an exclusive license with every single provider of the benchmarks,” Duffy said. “All of these would have to go through CME regardless of the perpetual.”
The announcement came the same day CME named Duffy’s successor. He will step down in March 2027, handing the chief executive role to President and CFO Lynne Fitzpatrick, who will become CME’s first female CEO.
CME’s lawsuit arrived on a day that proved difficult for the CFTC on another front. A federal judge in the Western District of Michigan, Paul L. Maloney, denied Polymarket’s request for a preliminary injunction against Michigan regulators and ruled that sports-related prediction market wagers are not swaps and therefore fall outside CFTC jurisdiction.
Maloney wrote that the agency’s interpretation of its own authority over derivatives was “so vast that it would encompass vast swaths of activity never understood to be associated with the financial industry.”
This post CME Group to Sue CFTC Over Bitcoin Perpetual Futures Approval in Clash Over Dodd-Frank Classification first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs turned negative on June 17, yet fund-level flows revealed a split market, with some products still attracting fresh capital.
Farside Investors recorded $82.2 million of net outflows across the US spot Bitcoin ETF group. but the split underneath that total carries more signal than the headline number.
ARKB lost $43.5 million, IBIT lost $30.8 million, GBTC lost $15.5 million, BTCO lost $6.4 million, and HODL lost $4.1 million. Yet FBTC added $14.0 million, and MSBT added $4.1 million, leaving the day as a test of product-level demand across individual Bitcoin wrappers.
The outflow arrived around the Federal Reserve's June 17 policy update, amid Kevin Warsh's first meeting as Chair, which held rates steady while shifting the forward-looking rate and inflation backdrop in a less supportive direction for risk assets.
The first ETF data after the policy reset offers a stress test for which Bitcoin products still have a bid when the macro cushion weakens.
| Fund | June 17 net flow | Direction |
|---|---|---|
| ARKB | -$43.5 million | Outflow |
| IBIT | -$30.8 million | Outflow |
| GBTC | -$15.5 million | Outflow |
| BTCO | -$6.4 million | Outflow |
| HODL | -$4.1 million | Outflow |
| FBTC | +$14.0 million | Inflow |
| MSBT | +$4.1 million | Inflow |
| Total | -$82.2 million | Net outflow |
The Fed's June statement kept the federal funds target range at 3.50% to 3.75%, while also saying inflation remained elevated relative to the central bank's 2% goal. That combination keeps pressure on assets whose strongest bid depends on easier financial conditions.
The sharper change came in the Fed's projections. The June Summary of Economic Projections put the median 2026 federal funds rate at 3.8%, up from 3.4% in March.
The median 2026 PCE inflation projection rose to 3.6% from 2.7%, which sets out the officials' projected appropriate year-end policy path; they are separate from the current target range, and the direction of travel is clear enough for markets: the expected path moved away from a quick easing setup.
That shift affects Bitcoin ETFs because the products sit at the junction of crypto risk appetite and traditional brokerage allocation. When investors expect easier policy, a spot Bitcoin ETF can look like a convenient way to add high-beta exposure through a regulated account.
When the rate path hardens, the same wrapper can become the fastest place to reduce that exposure.
Bitcoin was already trading in a weaker setting, near $63,918 on June 18, down 1.14% over 24 hours, with a market cap around $1.28 trillion and 58.2% market dominance. That gives the ETF outflow a weaker-market setting and makes the issuer split more useful, because a soft market with mixed ETF demand says more than a single aggregate outflow number. The result is a cleaner test than a broad Bitcoin price move.
The fund table shows how listed-product investors behaved inside the same macro window, while the Fed documents explain why that window became less comfortable for risk exposure.
Together, they shift attention away from the aggregate ETF total and toward which wrappers could still draw money when the policy backdrop tightened.
A single ETF outflow headline number can hide too much. Farside's all-data table shows June 16 with a small positive $10.2 million total flow, then June 17 at negative $82.2 million. The largest negative prints came from ARKB and IBIT, with GBTC also continuing to leak.
FBTC and MSBT were positive on the same day, while several other products were flat. That is a very different market signal from a day when every listed product loses money at once.
The split also weakens the easy fee-only explanation. Farside's table lists GBTC at a 1.50% fee, far above most competing products, so fee pressure remains part of the long-running GBTC story. Yet the June 17 outflow extended beyond the highest-fee product. Lower-fee wrappers sat on both sides of the ledger, with IBIT and ARKB negative while FBTC and MSBT were positive.
Fees explain structure only partly and leave the day-to-day split unresolved. The latest split therefore works as a location test for ETF demand.
Some investors may be reducing risk after the Fed reset. Others may still prefer specific issuers, platforms, liquidity profiles, or account channels.
What the data does show, however, is a product market moving unevenly.
CryptoSlate has already treated issuer dispersion as a useful signal for Bitcoin ETFs. In a previous analysis of ETF outflows, CryptoSlate noted that the issuer split can carry more information than the aggregate number when judging whether flows are noise, rotation, or real demand pressure.
June gave that framework a fresh macro test. The same distinction carries into mechanics: ETF flow data can reveal where listed-product demand is weakening or holding up, while spot-market activity needs evidence from fund operations or issuer disclosures.
ETF flows measure investor activity in the wrappers. Turning them into same-day spot-sale claims requires issuer-level proof after the SEC's July 2025 approval of in-kind creations and redemptions for crypto exchange-traded products.
The SEC said crypto ETPs could use creation and redemption processes more aligned with other commodity ETPs, reducing the need to treat every redemption as a forced cash transaction through the underlying market.
That still leaves two possibilities open: some redemptions can use in-kind processes, and issuers can still sell Bitcoin when their mechanics require it. The flow signal is still important though. It shows where investors are adding or removing exposure through listed products.
The mechanical link between a daily ETF number and spot BTC supply is more complicated than the headline data alone suggests.
The best take, then, is that June 17 showed demand being tested across individual products at the same time the rate path became less friendly.
If future flows show outflows spreading into FBTC, MSBT, and the flat issuers, the pressure would look more like a broad retreat from the ETF category. If redemptions remain concentrated while some funds keep attracting money, the better read is rotation and wrapper selection under macro stress.
For now, Bitcoin's ETF market is sending a mixed message: the aggregate flow is red, but the product ledger is uneven. The next few issuer-level rows will carry more signal than the next headline total.
The post Bitcoin ETF outflows expose split demand after Warsh’s Fed debut appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Nuvei agreed to buy Payoneer for $2.75 billion in cash in a deal centered on money movement through merchant acquiring, payouts, FX, cards, risk controls, and licenses.
The companies also placed stablecoins inside that payment stack. That gives the deal its crypto significance: mainstream stablecoin use may run through processors that already own merchant relationships, local approvals, fraud controls, FX tools, and payout networks.
Nuvei announced June 15 that it would acquire all outstanding Payoneer shares for $7.40 per share in cash. The companies said the transaction values Payoneer at approximately $2.75 billion.
The deal is expected to close in mid-2027, subject to Payoneer shareholder approval, regulatory approvals, and other customary conditions.
At closing, Nuvei said the combined company is expected to generate approximately $3 billion in annual revenue and process more than $500 billion in annual payment volume for more than 2.4 million customers.
It also said the combined business would give companies a single partner to accept, hold, and move money, including stablecoin transactions, across more than 190 countries and territories.
The companies left stablecoin-specific volume undisclosed, which keeps the claim modest. For now, the transaction points to stablecoins becoming one capability inside regulated commerce infrastructure, while any volume forecast depends on future reporting.
The crypto signal in the Nuvei-Payoneer deal comes from distribution. Payoneer remains a cross-border payments and financial platform for businesses, marketplaces, contractors, and sellers that need to move money across countries and currencies.
That network is relevant for stablecoins because token settlement still has to meet the real-world requirements of business payments.
A dollar token can settle value quickly on-chain, but a merchant or platform still needs acceptance, risk screening, currency conversion, local payout rules, reconciliation, and usable accounts.
Those functions determine whether payment speed becomes a product companies can actually adopt.
Payoneer said its network adds cross-border payouts, multi-currency accounts, a banking network, and same-day or real-time settlement in more than 150 markets.
The company also pointed to regulatory assets, including licensing for online payment services in mainland China and in-principle authorization as a cross-border payment aggregator in India under the Reserve Bank of India's framework.
Nuvei brings the merchant acceptance side. The company already describes its platform around global acquiring, alternative payment methods, issuing, currency management, fraud and risk controls, bank transfers, real-time payments, and crypto and digital assets.
Nuvei's platform reach includes 150 currencies, while the combined company is expected to operate across more than 190 countries and territories.
Put together, the deal shows stablecoin functionality moving toward back-end payment routing.
A merchant may care less about whether settlement moves through a token, a bank transfer, a card network, or a local payout provider than about cost, settlement speed, compliance, and whether funds arrive where the business needs them.

| Confirmed element | Operational meaning | Constraint |
|---|---|---|
| $2.75 billion all-cash deal | Gives the analysis a concrete payments infrastructure peg | Closing remains pending |
| More than $500 billion expected annual payment volume | Shows the scale of payment-network distribution stablecoin functionality could plug into | Stablecoin-specific volume remains undisclosed |
| 190+ countries and territories | Makes local payout, FX, and compliance coverage central to the analysis | Nuvei's 150-currency reach describes platform context |
| Stablecoin transactions named in deal language | Places token settlement inside mainstream payment infrastructure | Stablecoins are one capability inside the broader platform |
The Payoneer acquisition also extends work Nuvei had already started. Visa announced in 2023 that it was expanding USDC settlement capabilities with merchant acquirers Worldpay and Nuvei.
The program used Solana as well as Ethereum for settlement between partners. Those pilots remained limited, but they showed Nuvei operating where card settlement, merchant acquiring, and stablecoins overlap.
Nuvei then launched a blockchain payment solution in 2024 with Rain, BitGo, and Visa for Latin American merchants.
The company described a model in which businesses could use stablecoins for faster cross-border B2B payments and settlements while relying on existing card and payment infrastructure.
That history frames the Payoneer deal as distribution expansion. Payoneer gives Nuvei a wider base of cross-border customers, regulated markets, and payout relationships.
Stablecoin settlement can become more useful if it reaches that base through familiar payment products.
The strongest version of the stablecoin thesis is that blockchain settlement can reduce delays, lower costs, and make cross-border payments easier.
The Nuvei-Payoneer deal leaves that thesis intact because it assumes stablecoins can be useful. It also shows how much non-token infrastructure still surrounds that usefulness.
A Federal Reserve staff analysis published in March said payment stablecoins can help address some cross-border payment frictions.
It also noted that FX liquidity, foreign-currency inventories, compliance checks, fiat conversion, and intermediaries may remain relevant in stablecoin-based cross-border models.
That maps closely onto what Nuvei is buying. Payoneer adds more than a payout interface.
Payoneer's 2025 annual report describes a business that operates across payment services, money transmission, stored value, FX, compliance, bank and payment-service-provider relationships, and regulatory regimes.
Its India authorization is still in-principle, but the strategic asset is permissioned distribution across markets where rules, banking access, and trust shape payment adoption.
A stablecoin may move dollars across blockchains at any hour, but a corporate payment still has to enter and exit local financial systems.
Someone must handle identity checks, sanctions screening, tax documentation, local account access, chargebacks or disputes where applicable, and currency conversion.
If those functions sit around the token, processors that already own them can turn stablecoins into another settlement option while retaining the customer relationship.
Other payment networks are moving in the same direction. Mastercard said in March that it agreed to acquire BVNK, framing the deal around connecting on-chain payments and fiat rails.
That acquisition remains subject to regulatory review and other closing conditions, but the strategic language is similar. Stablecoins, tokenized deposits, and tokenized assets become usable when they plug into trusted payment networks.
CryptoSlate has tracked the same pattern in card payments.
A May analysis found that stablecoin-linked cards were routing most transactions through Visa, turning crypto balances into spending power through the same network stablecoins were expected to bypass.
Another CryptoSlate analysis argued that the control points for stablecoin payments are increasingly orchestration, compliance, reserves, FX management, and interoperability.
In that model, the token brand in front of the user plays a smaller role than the infrastructure behind it.
Nuvei's Payoneer deal fits that map as market context while leaving execution to future disclosures.
If stablecoin payments scale through processors, acquirers, card networks, and cross-border payout providers, adoption can still be real while looking less like a clean exit from legacy finance.
Stablecoins can become a settlement and liquidity feature inside companies that already manage merchant access, local payout rules, and compliance.
The distinction changes who captures value in crypto payments.
If tokenized dollars become a back-end feature, the winners may be firms that control distribution and risk instead of issuers with the largest brands.
Merchants may choose the processor that gives them the best reach, cost, settlement speed, and local payout certainty, while the token itself becomes one part of the routing decision.
The Nuvei-Payoneer deal leaves open whether stablecoins will eventually replace legacy payment rails.
It shows that large payment firms are preparing for a hybrid market in which stablecoins are packaged inside regulated money-movement platforms.
The next signals are concrete. The first is whether the transaction closes on the expected mid-2027 timeline after shareholder and regulatory review.
The second is whether Nuvei discloses stablecoin-specific payment volume, settlement corridors, merchant uptake, or cost savings after integration.
The third is whether businesses treat stablecoin settlement as a visible payment method or as hidden plumbing behind ordinary merchant and payout workflows.
The record points to absorption before replacement. Stablecoins are being packaged by mainstream payments companies.
If Nuvei can use Payoneer's regulated distribution to make token settlement useful across merchants, platforms, and cross-border payouts, stablecoins may win payments by disappearing into the rails they were expected to bypass.
The post Global $2.75B payments deal shows stablecoins moving into the rails they were meant to bypass appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has signed a $55.9 billion state budget that includes a first-of-its-kind 0.2% tax on crypto assets.
The Digital Asset Tax Act, nested deeply within the broader revenue package of Senate Bill 3019, establishes a novel privilege tax on the exchange, transfer, and custody of cryptocurrencies.
Beginning January 2027, digital asset brokers operating in Illinois will be required to collect a 0.2% fee on the value of customer transactions.
The new law represents an unprecedented approach to state-level taxation in the United States, positioning Illinois as the only state to levy a transaction-based tax specifically engineered for digital assets.
Crypto industry leaders, including Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, have sharply criticized the legislation, arguing that it creates a discriminatory tax regime.
Their primary contention is that traditional Wall Street assets, such as stocks, bonds, and derivatives, do not face an equivalent state financial transaction tax when they are bought, sold, or held in custody.
Miles Jennings, general counsel at the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, characterized the measure as one of the most hostile and anti-crypto laws in the country. He noted the stark contrast between how the state intends to treat conventional securities versus blockchain-based digital assets.
He wrote:
“There is effectively no comparable state financial transaction tax on stocks, bonds, or derivatives anywhere in the country. That means crypto is being singled out in violation of several federal laws.”
Jennings equated the policy to taxing a piece of correspondence simply because it was sent via email rather than the traditional postal service.
He argued that taxing a financial instrument merely because it happens to be recorded on a decentralized blockchain penalizes the very technological and cost efficiencies the system was designed to create for ordinary retail investors.
The passage of the digital asset tax comes as Illinois grapples with deep-seated, systemic fiscal challenges.
The state has long struggled with a structural budget deficit, heavily driven by rapidly mounting pension obligations and a steadily shrinking tax base. Legacy industries that historically anchored the state’s economy, including heavy manufacturing and agriculture, have faced steady declines.
Simultaneously, demographic shifts have led to an aging population and continued outward migration from metropolitan hubs like Chicago.
Faced with an urgent need to close funding gaps while also appeasing voters with targeted economic relief, such as reductions in the state gas tax to combat inflation and emigration, lawmakers frantically searched for untapped revenue streams. Digital assets, viewed by some as a lucrative and lightly taxed sector, emerged as a prime target.
State financial projections estimate the crypto privilege tax will generate roughly $60 million annually for Illinois coffers.
However, critics argue that the legislative process lacked the necessary public scrutiny for a policy that could fundamentally alter the state’s financial technology landscape.
Justin Slaughter, vice president of regulatory affairs at the crypto investment firm Paradigm, noted that the tax provision was introduced in the final hours of the legislative session before sine die, passing with minimal debate, analysis, or public hearings.
Slaughter said:
“The legislature has no idea what impact this will have on crypto trading in Illinois.”
He suggested the primary legislative motivation was a straightforward search for revenue, highlighting a persistent knowledge gap among state lawmakers regarding how the blockchain industry actually operates.
Slaughter added that the tax is reminiscent of proposals from earlier market cycles, where lawmakers viewed the digital asset industry primarily as a money tree.
Several cryptocurrency industry players have warned that the tax will likely backfire by driving businesses, capital, and innovation across state lines.
The Crypto Council for Innovation (CCI), a global alliance of industry leaders, previously petitioned Gov. Pritzker to issue a line-item veto for the tax provision. The group warned of severe economic consequences for ordinary consumers and the state's burgeoning startup community.
Ji Kim, CEO of the Crypto Council for Innovation, stated that other jurisdictions should view Illinois as a cautionary tale of aggressive overregulation. He noted:
“States competing for the builder and digital asset community should take note of what not to do.”
He emphasized that the tax disproportionately burdens Illinois residents for everyday digital activities, such as moving funds between their own personal wallets.
Kim noted that the legislative process was deeply troubling, as it targeted an entire industry without comprehensive studies on its potential economic fallout.
Notably, the statutory structure of the tax is particularly broad as it applies not only to active trading but also to the mere storage or transfer of digital assets.
BDO, a US-based accounting firm, said the tax will function similarly to a traditional retail sales tax. Digital asset brokers will be required to register with the Illinois Department of Revenue and add the 0.2% fee as a separate, distinct line item on customer bills.
The customer legally owes the tax to the platform, and if unpaid, the company can pursue collection as it would any delinquent bill.
The sourcing rules governing which transactions qualify are notoriously expansive. An out-of-state company could be subject to the tax if it generates at least $100,000 in annual receipts from Illinois customers, determined every quarter.
At the same time, a transaction is deemed to occur in Illinois if the customer is physically present in the state, or if auxiliary data, such as a mailing address, account information, or an IP address, indicates Illinois is their primary place of use.
Meanwhile, the penalties for non-compliance carry heavy legal weight. Brokers who fail to adhere to the state's registration and remittance guidelines could face Class 3 felony charges, which carry potential prison sentences of two to five years and steep financial fines of up to $25,000.
Julian Berridi, a product manager at the blockchain payment firm Ripple, argued that the inclusion of felony charges and the unique broker taxation model will inevitably lead to an aggressive corporate exodus from the state.
He said:
“Other states are courting crypto businesses. Illinois just gave them a reason to leave. Nobody else taxes brokers this way or backs it with felony charges. The jobs and the capital will go where they're wanted, and that isn't here.”
Beyond the anticipated corporate flight, industry analysts warn of immediate, practical disruptions for retail consumers.
Because the law taxes the holding and transferring of assets and not just traditional buy-and-sell trades, calculating the exact tax burden for complex decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols could prove mathematically and administratively prohibitive for many startups.
Rather than risk non-compliance and potential felony charges over ambiguous calculation requirements, many crypto firms may simply choose to restrict access for Illinois residents.
This geoblocking would mean cutting off access to certain trading platforms, yield-generating protocols, or custodial services entirely for users located within the state's borders.
The legislation also arrives at a particularly awkward time, shortly after Illinois adopted the Digital Assets and Consumer Protection Act, a regulatory framework that the industry had cautiously welcomed as a constructive step toward clarity.
Crypto advocates argue the new punitive tax represents a complete reversal of that legislative goodwill.
Furthermore, the state mandate directly conflicts with ongoing federal regulatory efforts. Congress is currently working to establish a unified, national tax framework for digital asset activity.
Industry groups had strongly urged Illinois to delay its tax implementation until a federal consensus was reached.
They warned that premature state-level laws could inadvertently kick-start a fragmented, fifty-state patchwork of conflicting tax codes, creating a compliance nightmare for domestic businesses.
The post Illinois’ new crypto tax puts users under a burden stocks do not face appeared first on CryptoSlate.
For years, DeFi's growth strategy was to pull users on-chain, and the next institutional wave is testing where users may never know they're touching DeFi at all.
Matt Fisher, CEO of Katana, shared with CryptoSlate how the front end owns the user. If a credit card, a fintech app, or an exchange routes deposits into Morpho or another lending protocol, the customer remembers the card.
Fortune reported that Morpho closed a $175 million raise on June 9, backed by Paradigm, a16z crypto, Ribbit Capital, VanEck, Apollo Global Management, and Circle Ventures, among others spanning crypto-native funds and traditional finance.
Fisher said:
“On-chain, DeFi is facing its biggest threat. The latest run of hacks and exploits has been a huge tax on the credibility and confidence.”
He was referring to the Drift and KelpDAO exploits, which TRM Labs linked to North Korean state actors and which together accounted for roughly 76% of 2026's hack losses through April.
The KelpDAO hit was estimated at around $290 million, built on unbacked rsETH used as collateral across Aave, Compound, and Euler. The episode resulted in $200 million in bad debt on Aave, which demanded a joint effort from protocols and retail users to cover.
Composability, which makes DeFi efficient by enabling capital to move faster via shared liquidity and cross-protocol collateral, was the cause of the bad debt.
A failure in one corner of the system cascades through markets with no direct exposure to the original problem.
Fisher still sees a path forward for the thesis:
“I think there's a degree of survivorship bias in people who have kind of been building for a long time that are still hard at work.”
He also predicted market consolidation toward a power law, with a handful of protocols absorbing most of the volume and trust.
| Stress point | What happened | Why it matters for the article |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 hack concentration | Drift and KelpDAO accounted for roughly 76% of 2026 crypto hack losses through April, according to TRM Labs. | Shows that DeFi’s credibility problem is not abstract; a small number of large incidents can define institutional risk perception. |
| KelpDAO exploit size | The KelpDAO hit was estimated at around $290 million. | Gives readers a concrete scale for the event Fisher referenced. |
| Collateral contagion | Unbacked rsETH was reportedly used as collateral across lending venues including Aave, Compound, and Euler. | Shows how composability can transmit risk across protocols that were not the original target. |
| Aave spillover | The episode left roughly $200 million in bad debt on Aave. | Makes the retail/institutional trust issue tangible: users and protocols can inherit losses from elsewhere in the stack. |
| Forward-looking risk | Future curator, bridge, oracle, or wrapped-collateral failures could make distributors more conservative. | Sets up the article’s bear case: exchanges and fintechs may hide or limit DeFi exposure to protect their brands. |
Ordinary users want the card to work and the loan to fund without having to understand why or worry about risk curators, bridge assumptions, oracle feeds, or liquidation thresholds before depositing money.
Fisher makes an analogy with a debit or credit card that lends out deposits on Morpho under the hood. If the card switches lending protocols behind the scenes, the user doesn't notice or care because the card owns the relationship.
Coinbase operates a USDC lending product powered by Morpho and Steakhouse vaults on Base, and Morpho says the integration has originated over $1.2 billion in USDC loans, with over $800 million still active and over $1.4 billion in cbBTC as collateral.
A Coinbase user borrowing against Bitcoin sees a Coinbase interface, while the collateral transfer and liquidation rules run inside Morpho's smart contracts. Bitcoin, in that flow, stops being just an asset people hold and becomes collateral that fintech rails route automatically.
Kraken runs a parallel version through its DeFi Earn product, which tells users they don't need seed phrases or manual contract signatures while routing assets through vaults and lending protocols via infrastructure built by Veda and Sentora.
Once again, the exchange keeps the user, and the lending protocol becomes invisible plumbing.
Fisher's noted:
“Crypto is moving into utility now. Distribution is a real moat in branding and trust.”
Protocols can build the lending engine, but they can't easily build the customer relationship that an app or exchange has already spent years earning.
| User-facing product | Who owns the user relationship | DeFi/backend layer | What the user sees | What happens underneath |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coinbase USDC lending / Bitcoin-backed borrow | Coinbase | Morpho + Steakhouse on Base | Coinbase app, loan, yield product | Collateral transfer, interest, liquidation rules via Morpho contracts |
| Kraken DeFi Earn | Kraken | Veda, Sentora, lending protocols | Exchange yield product | Vault routing without seed phrases or manual contract signatures |
| Future fintech card / credit app | Card issuer or fintech | Morpho, Aave, or other lending layer | Card, deposits, credit line | Deposits routed into curated DeFi credit markets |
| Asset-manager vault | Asset manager / curator | Morpho-style vault infrastructure | Risk-managed yield product | Curated collateral, vault parameters, compliance controls |
Fisher pushed back against the idea that institutional liquidity is primarily a retail giveaway, arguing for stability.
Pooled liquidity among institutional and retail depositors reduces volatility caused by large players moving in and out. If a major depositor exits all at once, deeper aggregated liquidity absorbs the shock and prevents borrowing rates from spiking for everyone left behind.
Fisher argued that scale forces builders to harden systems and test under conditions that smaller protocols never face, and that incidents resembling Aave's exposure to KelpDAO will become rarer as infrastructure matures under institutional weight.
He also pointed to insurance as an emerging layer, with institutions entering curated vaults offering depositors coverage that didn't exist before, using their own brand to backstop risks the protocol doesn't absorb directly.
Morpho V2 adds fixed-rate lending and flexible collateral terms, giving institutions tools that more closely resemble traditional credit markets.
Composability also creates a problem institutions can't ignore: shared liquidity pools expose position size, timing, and strategy to anyone watching the chain.
Fisher pointed to Zama's integration with Morpho as a fix that doesn't require institutions to wall off their own liquidity.
Starting June 23, depositors can put confidential USDC into a Steakhouse vault where deposit size, direction, and entry timing stay encrypted, while the capital still flows into the same shared Morpho vault as everyone else's.
Zama's documentation notes that privacy comes from batching deposits and reducing public signaling. Institutions can participate in pooled liquidity without broadcasting their positions, removing one of the biggest objections to using public chains at all.
The bear case is that another exploit on the scale of KelpDAO, a major curator failure, or an oracle breakdown, could push exchanges and fintechs to pull back from DeFi to protect their brands.
DeFi lending's total value locked (TVL) could contract meaningfully if distributors decide that reputational risk outweighs yield. Bitcoin-backed credit products would probably survive, but with lower loan-to-value ratios, higher rates, and tighter controls than those offered by today's Coinbase integration.
The bull case rests on the same forces already in motion accelerating, such as stablecoin clarity under the GENIUS Act, which requires permitted payment stablecoin issuers to meet Bank Secrecy Act obligations as financial institutions, giving compliance-minded protocols a clearer path to institutional distribution.
Confidential deposit infrastructure like Zama's, fixed-rate products from Morpho V2, and deeper fintech integrations could push DeFi lending toward the $50 billion range without a single new retail user needing to learn what a vault curator does.
Fisher sees venture firms playing a role beyond capital, connecting DeFi protocols with front-end providers, presenting decentralized credit to millions of users who will never open a DeFi dashboard.
| Scenario | Trigger | DeFi lending TVL direction | What happens to users | Bitcoin credit impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bear case | Another major exploit, curator failure, oracle issue, or wrapped-collateral shock | Contracts meaningfully from current levels | Exchanges and fintechs reduce DeFi exposure to protect their brands | BTC-backed loans survive, but with lower LTVs, higher rates, and tighter controls |
| Base case | More curated vaults, cautious exchange integrations, gradual compliance buildout | Moves modestly higher | Users access DeFi credit through familiar apps without seeing the protocol layer | Bitcoin collateral becomes more common inside exchange lending products |
| Bull case | Stablecoin clarity, confidential deposits, fixed-rate lending, stronger fintech distribution | Pushes toward the ~$50B range | DeFi becomes embedded credit infrastructure for apps, cards, and exchanges | BTC becomes a more widely routed collateral asset across fintech rails |
Moody's projects private credit assets under management could exceed $2 trillion in 2026 and approach $4 trillion by 2030. Morpho's $7.1 billion in TVL is a rounding error against that figure, and that gap explains why distribution outweighs brand-building as a strategy.
Protocols chasing retail attention are competing for a market that barely registers compared to the credit infrastructure already running the global economy, and the contest playing out now is over who becomes the plumbing inside that larger system.
Fisher's read is that the winners will be the ones embedded so deeply inside cards, fintech apps, and exchange products that users stop noticing they're there.
DeFi spent its first decade convincing people to come on-chain, and its next decade may depend on ensuring they never have to know they did.
The post DeFi’s next institutional wave may come from users who never see “behind the scenes” – CEO of Katana appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Options traders are building bearish positions around Strategy's (formerly MicroStrategy) flagship preferred STRC stock after the security fell to a record low, adding a new layer of pressure to one of Michael Saylor’s main funding tools for buying Bitcoin.
Strategy’s Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock, known by the ticker STRC, closed Wednesday at $89 after touching an intraday low of $88.51.
The close left the security about 11% below its stated $100 level and extended its year-to-date decline to roughly 10.7%.
The move is drawing added attention because STRC was designed to trade near $100 through monthly dividend adjustments.
Instead, the preferred stock is now trading near levels that imply investors want a higher payout for holding it, while options activity shows traders leaning toward further downside.
OptionsCharts data for STRC contracts expiring June 18 showed total put open interest of 8,951 contracts, compared with 7,906 call contracts.
That put-call open interest ratio of 1.13 is modestly bearish, but the concentration of activity is more telling. The open interest in puts stood at 1,912 contracts at the $60 strike, 1,230 at the $80 strike, and 916 at the $85 strike.
The same data showed a max-pain level of $95, above STRC's close, while net gamma exposure stood at-$1.1 million per 1% move. Negative gamma can lead dealers to hedge in ways that amplify price swings when an asset moves lower, though the effect depends on trading flows and market depth.
This option setup indicates that traders are monitoring whether the discount to par becomes persistent enough to force a change in Strategy’s dividend policy or to slow its use of STRC as a BTC funding vehicle.
Andre Dragosch, head of research at Bitwise Europe, said STRC’s weakness suggests that Saylor may need to raise the dividend or the broader rate environment may need to ease before the preferred stock can return to $100.

He estimated that a dividend closer to about $13 annually, or roughly 13% of the stated amount, would be needed to restore the stock to par under current conditions.
That creates a difficult trade-off. Raising the dividend could support STRC’s current price action and reopen the issuance channel, but it would also increase Strategy’s cash obligations.
On the other hand, leaving the dividend unchanged could preserve near-term cash costs, but it risks letting the discount widen further.
Strategy has sought to ease concerns over STRC by pointing to the size of its Bitcoin holdings, saying its reserves provide 32 years of dividend coverage. The company holds 846,842 BTC, worth about $54.2 billion at recent prices, making it the largest public holder of the cryptocurrency.

On paper, the coverage claim remains intact. Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury is worth just under $55 billion, compared with about $1.7 billion of annual preferred-dividend obligations. However, that calculation depends heavily on Bitcoin’s market price and does not answer the cash-flow question now facing investors.
CryptoQuant analyst JA Maartunn said:
“If Strategy had to sell BTC to cover those dividends, it would create selling pressure that could push BTC prices lower. That, in turn, would reduce the value of its BTC reserves and shorten the very dividend coverage it's highlighting. In other words, if sustained, it risks becoming a downward spiral.”
Indeed, the sensitivity of that claim has already become clear. Last November, Strategy claimed it had 71 years of dividend coverage, assuming Bitcoin’s price stayed flat. But since then, Bitcoin's price has halved, and the estimated coverage period has since fallen sharply.
That does not mean Strategy is close to exhausting its assets. The company still holds a large Bitcoin position and has raised cash by selling common stock.
However, the market’s concern has shifted from asset value to liquidity. Preferred dividends must be paid in cash when declared, while Strategy’s Bitcoin holdings fluctuate with the market and are not pledged as direct collateral to STRC investors.
Quinn Thompson, chief investment officer of Lekker Capital, said pressure across Strategy’s capital structure is likely to persist until the company strengthens its balance sheet and improves liquidity.
According to him, the weakness has extended beyond STRC, suggesting investors are reassessing the company’s broader financing model rather than a single preferred security.

Singapore-based crypto trading firm QCP said Bitcoin’s recent underperformance partly reflects those concerns. Bitcoin has remained below $65,000 even as broader risk assets have traded higher, with traders watching whether Strategy may need to sell more Bitcoin or issue additional MSTR shares to support its preferred-stock obligations.
QCP said Strategy’s repurchase of $1.5 billion of 2029 convertible senior notes, followed by fresh common-stock sales, has added to the overhang.
The company has raised about $200 million through MSTR sales and continued to buy Bitcoin with the proceeds, but investors remain focused on how long its cash runway can support dividend payments without adding pressure to its capital structure.
The post Strategy’s STRC draws bearish options bets as it falls to new all-time low appeared first on CryptoSlate.
With Solana trading around $70 — a fraction of its cycle high above $260 — the question on many investors' minds is simple: is SOL a good buy at current prices, or is it a falling knife? The answer depends on weighing two things against each other: where the price sits relative to Solana's historical performance, and what the network is actually doing right now.

On the technical side, SOL on the monthly chart is the most oversold it has ever been in its history. On the fundamental side, Solana just set a new single-day record for tokenized stock trading. That combination — a beaten-down price alongside accelerating real-world usage — is exactly the kind of divergence worth examining closely before deciding whether current prices represent value or a trap.
To judge whether $SOL is cheap, it helps to put today's ~$70 price in the context of where it has been:
The pattern tells the story: SOL is a high-volatility asset that has historically delivered enormous gains from depressed levels and equally brutal drawdowns from its tops. At ~$70, it sits far closer to its accumulation zones than to its euphoric peaks — which is the first reason the current price draws value-hunters' attention.
Solana's grip on tokenized stocks comes down to its core technical strengths as a blockchain:
When the cost and speed of settling a trade approach zero, the friction that holds tokenization back on other chains largely disappears — which is why volume keeps concentrating on Solana.
Here's how the two sides stack up. The bull case: SOL trades at historically oversold levels, sits on long-term support, and is winning one of crypto's fastest-growing categories outright. When price weakness and rising adoption diverge like this, the market is often pricing the asset on macro sentiment rather than what the network is doing.
The bear case: oversold can get more oversold, and a genuine turn requires a turn in broader risk appetite — likely tied to easing macro conditions and returning crypto liquidity. Until that happens, "cheap" assets can stay cheap or get cheaper.
A balanced read: at ~$70, SOL offers an arguably attractive risk-reward for investors with a long time horizon and tolerance for volatility, precisely because price is depressed while fundamentals strengthen. But it is not a low-risk bet, and nobody can reliably call the exact bottom. This is a setup that historically rewards patience and position sizing — not all-in timing.
Solana presents one of the more striking divergences in the current market: the most oversold monthly reading in its history paired with record-setting dominance of tokenized stock trading. Measured against its own historical performance, ~$70 places SOL deep in value territory rather than euphoria.
Whether that makes it a "good buy" depends on your time horizon and risk tolerance. For short-term traders, the lack of a confirmed reversal argues for caution. For long-term investors who believe in tokenization and Solana's role in it, the current setup — depressed price, record usage — is exactly the kind of moment that tends to look attractive in hindsight, even if the timing is never certain.
Solana's grip on tokenized stocks comes down to its core technical strengths as a blockchain:
When the cost and speed of settling a trade approach zero, the friction that holds tokenization back on other chains largely disappears — which is why volume keeps concentrating on Solana.
Here's how the two sides stack up. The bull case: SOL trades at historically oversold levels, sits on long-term support, and is winning one of crypto's fastest-growing categories outright. When price weakness and rising adoption diverge like this, the market is often pricing the asset on macro sentiment rather than what the network is doing.
The bear case: oversold can get more oversold, and a genuine turn requires a turn in broader risk appetite — likely tied to easing macro conditions and returning crypto liquidity. Until that happens, "cheap" assets can stay cheap or get cheaper.
A balanced read: at ~$70, SOL offers an arguably attractive risk-reward for investors with a long time horizon and tolerance for volatility, precisely because price is depressed while fundamentals strengthen. But it is not a low-risk bet, and nobody can reliably call the exact bottom. This is a setup that historically rewards patience and position sizing — not all-in timing.
Solana presents one of the more striking divergences in the current market: the most oversold monthly reading in its history paired with record-setting dominance of tokenized stock trading. Measured against its own historical performance, ~$70 places SOL deep in value territory rather than euphoria.
Whether that makes it a "good buy" depends on your time horizon and risk tolerance. For short-term traders, the lack of a confirmed reversal argues for caution. For long-term investors who believe in tokenization and Solana's role in it, the current setup — depressed price, record usage — is exactly the kind of moment that tends to look attractive in hindsight, even if the timing is never certain.
Crypto investors usually know exactly which crash they would rather see: oil, not Bitcoin.
When oil prices fall sharply, the market often reads it as good news for risk assets. Lower oil can reduce inflation pressure, improve the outlook for interest rate cuts, and support assets like Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP, and other major cryptocurrencies. In theory, an oil crash after easing geopolitical tensions should have been a bullish signal for crypto.
But this time, the market did not follow the usual script.
Oil crashed after fresh US-Iran peace headlines and signs that energy supply fears were cooling. Yet instead of surging, Bitcoin fell below $63,000, Ethereum dropped under $1,700, and more than $180 million worth of crypto longs were reportedly liquidated in just 60 minutes.
So the question is no longer simply whether lower oil is good for crypto. The real question is: did Bitcoin just ignore a bullish macro signal, or is this selloff the storm before the sun?

For Bitcoin bulls, falling oil usually sounds like a positive development.
Oil is one of the most important inflation drivers in the global economy. When energy prices rise, transportation, production, and consumer costs often rise with them. That can keep inflation sticky and make central banks less willing to cut interest rates.
But when oil falls, the opposite argument becomes stronger. Lower energy prices can ease inflation fears, increase expectations for future rate cuts, and improve liquidity conditions. In a normal market environment, that can support risk assets.
Bitcoin, in particular, tends to benefit when investors expect looser monetary policy. Lower rates reduce the appeal of cash and bonds, while making growth assets, tech stocks, and crypto more attractive. That is why many crypto traders would normally cheer an oil crash, especially if it comes after geopolitical tensions cool down.
This time, however, Bitcoin did not act like a risk asset enjoying better macro conditions. It acted like a market under pressure.
The latest crypto market performance shows a broad selloff across major coins. Bitcoin dropped more than 5% over 24 hours and slipped below the key $63,000 level. Ethereum also fell by more than 5%, trading under $1,700.
The weakness was not limited to BTC and ETH. Solana, XRP, BNB, Dogecoin, Cardano, and Chainlink were all in the red. Hyperliquid, which recently entered the top 10 cryptocurrencies by market cap, was hit even harder, falling by nearly 11%. Zcash also dropped sharply, losing more than 9% in 24 hours.
This broad weakness suggests that the selloff is not only about one coin or one isolated event. The crypto market is dealing with a larger risk-off move, and the oil crash was not enough to stop it.
The main reason may be leverage.
When prices start falling and too many traders are positioned long, liquidations can accelerate the move. A drop below important levels can force leveraged positions to close automatically, creating more selling pressure. That is how a normal pullback can quickly turn into a sharp market flush.
In this case, the reported liquidation wave shows that the market was not simply reacting to oil. It was also clearing out overleveraged traders.
There are several reasons why Bitcoin may have fallen even though oil crashed.
First, the market may already be too nervous. Even if lower oil helps the inflation outlook, traders may still be focused on short-term fear, weak technical momentum, and forced liquidations.
Second, an oil crash is not always bullish. A controlled decline in oil can be good for markets, but a sharp crash can also signal uncertainty, panic, or concerns about global demand. If traders see falling oil as a sign of economic weakness rather than relief, risk assets may not benefit immediately.
Third, crypto often moves faster than macro logic. The long-term argument may be bullish, but short-term price action can still be dominated by technical levels, leverage, and liquidity. Bitcoin can eventually benefit from lower inflation expectations, but that does not mean it has to pump instantly.
This is why the current setup feels like a reverse effect. Crypto traders got the crash they wanted in oil, but they also got the crash they feared in Bitcoin.
The optimistic case is that this selloff could be a cleansing move.
If Bitcoin is dropping mainly because of liquidations, then the market may be removing excessive leverage before attempting a recovery. In that scenario, the oil crash could still become bullish later, especially if lower energy prices support rate-cut expectations and improve risk appetite.
This would make the current move the storm before the sun: painful in the short term, but potentially healthier for the next phase of the market.
For that to happen, Bitcoin needs to stabilize quickly. Reclaiming the $63,000 to $64,000 zone would be an important first step. If BTC can recover that area, traders may start to view the latest crash as a liquidity flush rather than the beginning of a deeper breakdown.
But if Bitcoin fails to reclaim those levels, the bearish pressure could continue. A prolonged move below $63,000 would keep sellers in control and could push traders to watch lower support zones.
Bitcoin is now at an important short-term turning point.
If BTC rebounds above $63,000 and holds that level, the market could start pricing in the positive side of the oil crash: lower inflation pressure, easier monetary policy expectations, and better conditions for risk assets.
In that case, Bitcoin could recover toward the $64,000 to $66,000 range, especially if liquidations slow down and buyers return.
However, if BTC remains below $63,000, the market may continue to focus on fear rather than macro relief. In that bearish scenario, Bitcoin could face more downside pressure as traders reduce risk and wait for clearer support.
The key point is that the oil crash has not disappeared as a bullish factor. It may simply be delayed. Crypto is dealing with the immediate shock first, while the macro benefits may only matter once the liquidation wave ends.
Bitcoin bulls wanted oil to crash, but not like this.
The fall in oil prices after US-Iran peace headlines should have supported crypto by easing inflation fears and improving the outlook for rate cuts. Instead, Bitcoin dropped below $63,000, Ethereum fell under $1,700, and the broader crypto market turned red.
That does not mean the bullish macro argument is dead. It means the crypto market is currently being driven by fear, leverage, and technical pressure more than by oil.
For now, Bitcoin got the wrong crash. But if the selloff clears excess leverage and lower oil strengthens the rate-cut narrative, this could still become the storm before the sun.
Oil has crashed roughly 38% from its war-driven peak, hitting a 3.5-month low near $74 per barrel. It now sits just about $7 away from $67 — the level it traded at before the US-Iran war even started. In other words, the entire conflict premium that inflated energy prices for months has almost completely drained out of the market.

That matters far beyond the energy sector. Cheap oil sits upstream of nearly everything in the economy, and the chain reaction it sets off runs straight into the macro conditions that drive $Bitcoin and the broader crypto market. Here's why this oil crash could be one of the more underrated tailwinds for crypto right now.
The collapse traces back to one catalyst: de-escalation. With the US and Iran signing an interim peace agreement that reopens the Strait of Hormuz and clears the way for Iranian oil exports to return, the supply fears that drove crude toward triple digits during the war have evaporated.
Several forces are now compounding the downside:
The result is gasoline slipping back below politically sensitive levels and energy costs broadly resetting toward where they sat before the war.
This is the heart of why crypto investors should care. Oil is a foundational input cost across the entire economy, and when it falls, the effects ripple outward:
That final point is the bridge from a barrel of oil to your crypto portfolio.
Crypto is among the most rate-sensitive asset classes in the market. The logic runs through liquidity and risk appetite:
The recent crypto drawdown was driven in large part by the opposite of all this: a hot labor market, sticky inflation, and rate-cut hopes getting pushed further out. An oil-driven disinflation impulse flips that script.
Put the pieces together and a clear macro tailwind emerges. The single biggest geopolitical overhang on markets is lifting, energy prices are resetting toward pre-war levels, inflation pressure is easing, and the door to rate cuts is creaking back open. For an asset class that thrives on liquidity and risk appetite, that's a constructive backdrop.
A few caveats keep it honest:
The oil crash is more than an energy story — it's a macro signal. Lower oil means lower input costs, cooler inflation, and a clearer runway toward the rate cuts that have historically fueled crypto rallies. While nothing in markets is guaranteed, the chain of cause and effect points in a direction crypto holders have been waiting for: easing inflation, returning liquidity, and a macro environment that finally leans risk-on rather than risk-off.
After months of geopolitical fear weighing on Bitcoin and the broader market, a 38% oil crash toward pre-war levels is exactly the kind of quiet, fundamental tailwind that tends to matter more than the headlines suggest.
Binance is facing a major regulatory test in Europe, and the timing could not be more important for the crypto market.
According to Reuters, Binance could lose permission to serve European Union clients from next month because its MiCA license application in Greece is reportedly expected to be rejected. The report comes just before the end of the EU’s MiCA transition period, when crypto companies must secure proper authorization to continue offering services across the bloc.
For Binance, this is more than another regulatory headline. It could affect the exchange’s European operations, investor sentiment around BNB, and the way crypto users across the EU access trading, custody, and other digital asset services.
Binance applied for a MiCA license through Greece’s Hellenic Capital Market Commission. If approved, that license would allow Binance to operate across the European Union through MiCA’s passporting system.
But Reuters reported that the application is expected to be rejected, citing people familiar with the matter. Binance, however, has said it worked with regulators for months and believes it has met the requirements for MiCA authorization. The exchange also said it plans to provide another update before the June 30 deadline.
That means the situation is still not fully finalized. Binance has not officially announced an EU shutdown, and there has not yet been a confirmed final decision from the Greek regulator. Still, the risk is now serious enough to matter for users, traders, and the broader crypto market.
MiCA, short for Markets in Crypto-Assets, is the European Union’s regulatory framework for the crypto industry. It is designed to create one unified rulebook for crypto companies operating across EU member states.
Instead of dealing with completely separate rules in every country, crypto asset service providers can apply for authorization in one EU member state. Once approved, they can use that license to serve clients across the wider EU through passporting.
This is why the Binance case is so important. A MiCA license is not just a local approval. It can decide whether an exchange has access to the entire EU market.
For crypto users, MiCA is meant to bring more transparency, stronger investor protection, and clearer oversight. For exchanges, it creates a stricter compliance environment where operating without authorization may no longer be tolerated.
For European Binance users, the biggest question is whether services could be limited, paused, transferred, or restructured if Binance fails to secure MiCA approval in time.
At this stage, users should avoid panic because nothing has been officially confirmed as a final outcome. However, Binance may need to give clear guidance quickly if the deadline arrives without approval.
Possible outcomes include a last minute regulatory solution, a temporary transition plan, restrictions in some EU markets, or a broader restructuring of Binance’s European business. The exchange may also need to explain how it would protect user access, balances, withdrawals, and account services if the regulatory issue escalates.
The main uncertainty is not whether Binance remains a major global exchange. It is whether Binance can continue serving EU users under the new MiCA framework without disruption.
BNB could come under pressure if the Binance EU situation worsens. The token often reacts to Binance related headlines because traders associate BNB with the strength, reputation, and activity of the Binance ecosystem.
If Binance secures MiCA approval or finds a smooth regulatory solution, BNB could stabilize as uncertainty fades. But if the reported rejection becomes official and Binance announces service restrictions in Europe, the token may face renewed selling pressure.
This does not mean BNB would collapse automatically. Binance remains one of the largest crypto exchanges in the world, and its business extends far beyond Europe. However, Europe is a major regulated market, and losing access or facing uncertainty there would be a negative sentiment event.
For BNB traders, the next major catalyst is likely not only the broader crypto market. It is Binance’s next regulatory update.

The Binance MiCA issue is also important because it shows how Europe’s crypto market is changing.
For years, many crypto platforms operated across multiple jurisdictions under different national rules. MiCA is changing that model. The EU is moving toward a more formal licensing system where exchanges must meet clear requirements or risk losing access to users.
This could create a stronger divide between regulated and unregulated crypto platforms. Exchanges that secure MiCA licenses may gain credibility with users, banks, institutions, and regulators. Platforms that fail to secure approval could face user migration, liquidity pressure, or enforcement risk.
That makes this story much bigger than Binance alone. It is a test of how strict Europe will be with the world’s largest crypto companies under the new regulatory framework.
The next key date to watch is June 30. Binance has said it will provide another update before that deadline, which makes the coming days critical.
If Binance confirms a clear path to MiCA authorization, the market reaction could become more positive. It would remove a major uncertainty and allow the exchange to continue competing in Europe under a regulated structure.
If the reported rejection becomes official, the consequences could be more serious. Binance may have to limit services, shift users to another structure, or pause certain activities for EU clients.
For now, the safest way to frame the story is clear: Binance has not officially lost EU access yet, but its European operations are under pressure as the MiCA deadline approaches.
Binance has faced major regulatory challenges before, but MiCA is different because it affects access to the entire European Union market.
The EU is no longer only asking crypto companies to improve compliance. It is creating a licensing system where authorization determines whether platforms can legally serve users across the bloc.
For Binance, this could become one of the most important regulatory moments of 2026. For BNB, it could become a major sentiment driver. And for European crypto users, it could decide how they access one of the world’s largest exchanges in the months ahead.
SpaceX and Ethereum represent two very different bets on the future — one a stake in the most valuable private space and satellite company ever to go public, the other the leading smart-contract network underpinning most of decentralized finance. Over the past year, their performance has diverged sharply. This comparison measures each on a like-for-like basis: an Ethereum position opened one year ago versus a SpaceX position taken at its IPO, both valued against current prices.
The starting and current values for each asset:
In percentage terms, that's roughly −32% for Ethereum over twelve months and +49% for SpaceX in a matter of weeks.
Applying a $5,000 investment to each entry point makes the gap concrete.
Ethereum at ~$2,600:
SpaceX at $135:
On identical starting capital, the two positions are separated by more than $4,000 — the SpaceX holding is worth over double the Ethereum holding.
SPCX's outperformance reflects a combination of structural and market factors:

Ethereum's decline is a function of cycle timing rather than any breakdown in its fundamentals. ETH peaked near $4,950 in 2025 before entering a multi-month correction and consolidation phase, weighed down by tighter macro conditions, moderating institutional inflows, and a broad crypto risk-off period. An investor who entered near last year's elevated levels is therefore underwater today, even though the network continues to settle substantial value and remains central to DeFi and tokenization.

The critical variable is entry timing: an Ethereum position opened two years ago would show a gain today, whereas one opened a year ago, closer to the highs, shows a loss. Volatility cuts both ways depending entirely on the entry point.
A few factors temper the headline result:
Past performance and forward prospects are separate questions. SPCX has delivered the stronger return, but at ~$201 it carries elevated post-IPO risk, and a move back toward its IPO price would not be unusual for a stock that has risen this quickly. Ethereum, at ~$1,760, trades closer to historically oversold territory than to euphoria, which gives it clearer room to recover should the crypto cycle turn on easing macro conditions and renewed risk appetite.
Measured strictly on the trades described, SpaceX is the clear winner, converting $5,000 into roughly $7,444 while the same amount in Ethereum declined to about $3,385. The decisive factors were entry price and timing rather than any inherent superiority of one asset over the other.
The broader takeaway is that returns are driven primarily by entry point, time horizon, and asset type — not by which name carries more momentum at any given moment. SpaceX was the better investment over the past year; the better investment over the next year remains an open question that depends on each asset's distinct trajectory from here.
Z.ai's GLM-5.2 sits within 1% of Claude Opus 4.8 on long-horizon coding benchmarks, runs entirely on Huawei silicon, and undercuts Western frontier models by up to 82% per token.
Image generation company Midjourney is developing a full-body imaging system that combines ultrasound tech with AI smarts.
The settlement ensures that convicted Celsius founder Alex Mashinsky is unable to trade in CFTC markets or register with the regulator.
Quantum computing threatens the blockchain ecosystem, from Bitcoin to Ethereum and beyond, and Algorand has a plan to be prepared.
Another key figure at the Ethereum Foundation is stepping away from her post, continuing a recent leadership exodus.
Microsoft has warned of a sophisticated crypto-stealing malware campaign, dubbed CryptoBandits, that spreads via infected USB drives and hijacks wallet addresses, seed phrases, and private keys.
Schiff, a staunch Bitcoin critic, claims that the company's heavily leveraged crypto-treasury model is a "financial house of cards."
The leading cryptocurrency is facing the unprecedented risk of falling out of the top 20 entirely.
Buyers have slowed the decline, yet weakening rebound volume and strong resistance overhead suggest volatility will remain elevated until key support-turned-resistance levels are decisively reclaimed.
Ripple Swell's star-studded speaker lineup features high-profile figures from both Hollywood and Wall Street.
Controversial social media figure and influencer Andrew Tate experienced devastating losses totaling nearly $86,000 through leveraged Bitcoin trading during a 16-hour span on June 17–18, 2026. The blockchain analytics platform Lookonchain documented these losses as they unfolded.
Tate initiated his trading session by depositing around $100,000 worth of USDC into his Hyperliquid trading account before establishing a substantial Bitcoin long position. Following eight consecutive liquidation events, his account balance was decimated to approximately $14,219.
The influencer established a Bitcoin long position with a notional value approaching $3.8 million. This position employed 40x leverage, creating a situation where minimal price movement in the wrong direction would result in automatic liquidation.
Bitcoin‘s price tumbled from approximately $66,400 down to roughly $64,127 throughout this period. This price decline breached Tate’s calculated liquidation threshold of $65,216, prompting the exchange to automatically terminate the position.
Following the failed long position, Tate pivoted his strategy and initiated a short position valued at approximately $1 million. Short positions generate profits when asset prices decrease, however Bitcoin’s price trajectory reversed immediately afterward.
This price reversal resulted in yet another liquidation. The most significant individual loss within this trading sequence involved approximately 11.47 BTC in notional value.
Tate’s substantial losses occurred within a larger market downturn affecting numerous traders. The Federal Reserve’s June policy announcement indicated a more aggressive approach toward interest rates, creating downward pressure on speculative assets including cryptocurrencies.
Across various exchanges during this identical timeframe, over $400 million worth of leveraged cryptocurrency positions were forcibly liquidated. Long positions accounted for roughly $280 million of these liquidations.
Approximately 100,000 separate trader accounts experienced forced closures throughout the market selloff. The most substantial individual liquidation across all platforms was a $5 million long position on Binance.
Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds experienced approximately $5.8 billion in capital outflows between mid-May and early June, contributing to Bitcoin’s decline toward levels below $60,000 earlier in 2026.
This trading debacle represents a continuation of Tate’s problematic history with leveraged cryptocurrency speculation. Throughout the preceding year, he had deposited approximately $727,000 into Hyperliquid without executing any withdrawals.
By the conclusion of 2025, continuous liquidation events had completely depleted that account. The June 2026 incident mirrors this established pattern of behavior.
Tate broadcasts his trading activities openly through social media platforms. Lookonchain’s blockchain data validated the account activity sequence and final balance.
Wintermute, a prominent crypto market making firm, cautioned that temporary improvements in market sentiment don’t necessarily indicate a sustained Bitcoin recovery. The firm highlighted the potential for additional downside movements if selling pressure resurfaces.
The Coinbase premium metric, which measures U.S. institutional buying demand, had demonstrated modest improvement in preceding weeks. Nevertheless, overall market conditions remained unstable during Tate’s trading activity.
For traders employing leverage, this incident serves as a clear demonstration of the risks associated with high-leverage positions during periods of heightened market volatility.
The post Andrew Tate Suffers $86K Loss Through Multiple Bitcoin (BTC) Liquidations in Single Day appeared first on Blockonomi.
The controversial social media figure and influencer Andrew Tate experienced substantial financial losses amounting to approximately $86,000 through high-leverage Bitcoin trading operations during a 16-hour stretch spanning June 17–18, 2026. Blockchain analytics platform Lookonchain documented these losses as they unfolded.
Tate transferred roughly $100,000 worth of USDC into his Hyperliquid trading account prior to establishing a substantial Bitcoin long position. Following eight distinct liquidation events, his account balance dwindled to approximately $14,219.
Tate initiated a Bitcoin long position with a notional value approaching $3.8 million. This trade employed 40x leverage, which meant that even minimal price movements in the opposite direction could result in automatic position closure.
Bitcoin experienced a decline from approximately $66,400 down to roughly $64,127 throughout this timeframe. This price movement pushed Bitcoin below Tate’s calculated liquidation threshold of $65,216, prompting the exchange to automatically terminate the position.
Following the collapse of his long position, Tate reversed his strategy by establishing a short position valued at approximately $1 million. Short positions generate profits when asset prices decrease, but Bitcoin quickly rebounded.
This price reversal resulted in yet another liquidation event. The most significant individual loss within this series involved approximately 11.47 BTC in notional value.
Tate’s financial setbacks occurred within a broader context of market distress. The Federal Reserve’s June policy announcement conveyed a more aggressive approach toward interest rate management, creating downward pressure on speculative assets including cryptocurrencies.
Across all exchanges during this identical period, leveraged cryptocurrency positions totaling over $400 million were forcibly liquidated. Long positions accounted for approximately $280 million of these liquidations.
Close to 100,000 individual trading accounts were automatically closed during this market downturn. The single largest liquidation event market-wide was a $5 million long position on Binance.
Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds recorded nearly $5.8 billion in capital outflows between mid-May and early June, contributing to Bitcoin’s descent toward levels below $60,000 earlier in 2026.
This incident represents a continuation of Tate’s previous experiences with leveraged cryptocurrency trading losses. Throughout the preceding year, he deposited approximately $727,000 into Hyperliquid without making any withdrawals.
By the conclusion of 2025, consecutive liquidation events had completely depleted that account. The June 2026 episode represents a recurrence of this established pattern.
Tate openly broadcasts his trading activities through social media platforms. Lookonchain’s tracking data verified the account transaction history and final balance.
Wintermute, a cryptocurrency market-making firm, observed that temporary improvements in market sentiment do not necessarily indicate a sustained Bitcoin recovery. The company highlighted the potential for additional price declines should selling pressure intensify.
The Coinbase premium indicator, which measures purchasing demand from United States-based buyers, had demonstrated modest improvement in the weeks preceding these events. Nevertheless, market fundamentals remained unstable during the period when Tate executed these trades.
For traders utilizing leverage, this episode provides a clear illustration of potential consequences when high-leverage positions are established amid volatile market environments.
The post Andrew Tate’s Hyperliquid Bitcoin Trades Result in $86K Loss Within 16 Hours appeared first on Blockonomi.
Chainlink (LINK) presents a puzzling market scenario. While the protocol executes some of its most significant real-world integrations to date, the token’s valuation lingers near quarterly lows.

The token currently changes hands around $7.86–$7.90, representing over 20% decline from May peaks. Daily trading volume registers at $266.9 million against a $5.72 billion market capitalization.
The timing of this price weakness appears counterintuitive. June 5, 2026 witnessed Chainlink recording its highest quarterly active address count — the identical date when LINK touched a 90-day bottom. Network metrics climbed while token valuation declined simultaneously.
This divergence between protocol adoption and market price has captured significant attention from market participants and technical analysts.
Chainlink analyst Crypto Patel shared observations on X, noting LINK’s regulatory commodity classification while trading 87% beneath its historical peak. Drawing parallels to early Bitcoin skepticism, he stated: “That’s like buying Bitcoin when everyone called it a scam… except this time the Government already said it’s legit.” His analysis projects LINK reaching $100+, framing it as an inevitability rather than speculation.
ADI Predictstreet — FIFA World Cup 2026’s official prediction market partner — announced Chainlink as its exclusive oracle infrastructure provider on June 9, 2026.
This marks FIFA’s inaugural official prediction market partnership. The tournament encompasses 48 participating nations, 104 competitive matches, and 16 host venues spanning three countries. Chainlink’s decentralized oracle network will autonomously settle every match outcome without human intervention in distribution mechanics.
The system retrieves verified match data from authoritative sources, records outcomes on-chain, and automatically executes smart contract payouts upon result confirmation.
Chainlink’s network currently secures over $30 trillion in transaction value and counts Swift, Euroclear, Mastercard, UBS, and Fidelity International among its institutional clientele.
OKX, serving over 120 million users worldwide, has deployed Chainlink infrastructure across its X Layer blockchain platform.
This integration targets the burgeoning tokenized real-world asset sector, valued at approximately $80 trillion. Developers building on X Layer now access Chainlink’s oracle network for real-time data streams and decentralized finance functionality.
The implementation aims to enhance transaction speed, cross-platform compatibility, and data accuracy for financial products deployed on the layer.
Analyst Crypto Spaces observes LINK maintaining an extended accumulation phase characterized by ascending support levels and persistent resistance testing. Should the existing pattern resolve upward with confirmation, technical projections place the subsequent target zone between $20–$22.
Current market data shows LINK trading at $7.86 as broader cryptocurrency markets face continued headwinds throughout June 2026.
The post Chainlink (LINK) Analysis: FIFA World Cup Partnership and OKX Deal Impact Token Outlook appeared first on Blockonomi.
The blockchain metrics for Uniswap are displaying their most robust signals in several months. What sparked this shift? Standard Chartered, a prominent global financial institution, issued a $100 price projection for the protocol’s native token.

Blockchain analytics provider Santiment documented the activity spike immediately following the announcement. Their findings reveal widespread increases across numerous network indicators, signaling a resurgence in market attention toward UNI.
Participating addresses across the Uniswap protocol surged to their highest point in four months. Simultaneously, high-value transfers — substantial movements generally associated with institutional participants — hit a seven-month maximum.
Wallet creation also experienced a notable jump. Santiment documented the most substantial one-day growth in fresh UNI addresses since December’s closing weeks, further confirming the heightened engagement.
The analytics firm attributes this entire wave of activity to Standard Chartered’s price projection, rather than any protocol developments or technical updates.
Cryptocurrency market observer Zayn, known as @Zaynnode on X, disclosed a $10,000 spot purchase in UNI. He highlighted that the token had reversed an entire month’s worth of negative price movement within just several days. Zayn observed that UNI is currently positioned near price levels that preceded its significant 2020 rally, stating he’s building his spot holdings and allowing market forces to play out.
Institutional participants entering positions before widespread market movement represents a behavioral pattern closely monitored by market participants. The seven-month peak in substantial transactions indicates that significant stakeholders are establishing positions in anticipation of potential price appreciation.
The banking giant’s $100 forecast implies considerable upside potential from present valuations. This projection has redirected market focus toward Uniswap’s standing as a premier decentralized trading platform within the ecosystem.
From a technical perspective, UNI has remained confined within a descending formation for several months — characterized by progressively lower peaks and troughs. Recent purchasing momentum has elevated the asset toward the upper boundary of this formation, approximately $3.30.
Prior upward movements have encountered resistance at this zone. Surpassing this threshold would represent the first significant structural change in market dynamics for 2026.
The subsequent resistance objective stands at $4.13, representing a crucial level on the daily timeframe. Should bullish momentum persist, market observers have identified $6.34 as the following target. Conversely, price support exists within the $2.80–$2.90 zone.
Santiment’s analysis confirms that network engagement across Uniswap has climbed to multi-month peaks, propelled exclusively by the major bank’s valuation forecast.
The post Uniswap (UNI) Surges as Standard Chartered Announces $100 Price Forecast appeared first on Blockonomi.
The Ethereum Foundation’s co-executive director Hsiao-Wei Wang has announced her resignation, becoming the latest high-profile departure from the Swiss nonprofit organization overseeing the blockchain protocol’s development.
In a Thursday announcement on X, Wang revealed that her decision came after taking time away from the role for personal reflection. “I’ve come to feel that this is the right moment for me to step back,” she shared. Wang indicated she hasn’t finalized plans for her next professional chapter.
The timing of Wang’s resignation is particularly notable as it follows the exit of her co-executive director Tomasz Stańczak by only a few months. Stańczak had been instrumental in managing organizational transitions before his own departure.
The Ethereum Foundation has witnessed approximately 19 personnel departures and workforce reductions during 2026. Among these, at least eight individuals in senior leadership positions have exited within the last five months.
Responding to Wang’s announcement on X, Ethereum’s co-founder Vitalik Buterin acknowledged the difficulty of her position, stating she had undertaken “the most challenging position in the Ethereum Foundation” together with Stańczak.
To address the leadership vacuum, board member Bastian Aue has taken on expanded responsibilities. Aue previously assisted with leadership continuity during Wang’s sabbatical and has now assumed a more prominent interim role following the dual co-director departures.
These successive exits have sparked increased examination from the Ethereum ecosystem. Community members are questioning the foundation’s organizational structure, long-term strategy, and capability to maintain top talent amid intensifying competition from alternative blockchain platforms.
Buterin has responded to critics calling for more aggressive network promotion by the foundation. Last May, he clarified that the foundation is “not the ‘center of Ethereum'” but instead “one node, with a defined purpose, alongside other nodes.”
This past March, the foundation published an updated charter emphasizing decentralization as a core priority. The document outlined the foundation’s objective for Ethereum to satisfy the “walkaway test” — demonstrating that the protocol could continue operating seamlessly even if the foundation and core development team ceased to exist.
Buterin has also recently challenged conventional thinking about Ethereum’s layer-2 scaling approach, suggesting the original concept “no longer makes sense.” He contended that numerous layer-2 implementations have failed to achieve genuine decentralization, while enhancements to Ethereum’s base layer offer superior long-term scalability prospects.
In her departure message, Wang emphasized the protocol’s enduring significance beyond individual contributors. “Ethereum has always been bigger than any one role, any one organization, or any one moment,” she noted.
The foundation has yet to announce permanent successors for either co-executive director position.
The post Ethereum Foundation Loses Another Senior Leader as Co-Director Wang Steps Down appeared first on Blockonomi.
Strive CEO Matt Cole said on June 19 that the recent steep sell-off in Strategy’s STRC and his company’s SATA was caused by forced liquidation from leveraged investors and not by any deterioration in the financial strength of the issuers.
His comments came after one of the most volatile trading sessions the sector has ever seen, with STRC falling to $82.50 and SATA dropping into the low $90s before both recovered as buyers stepped back into the market.
In a lengthy post on X, the Strive chief called Thursday the most difficult day in the history of what he termed Digital Credit. According to him, investors looking for higher yields increasingly borrowed against assets such as STRC and SATA, but when prices started falling, margin calls triggered even more selling, creating a cascade that pushed prices lower regardless of fundamentals.
“What happened today was a leverage liquidation event, not a deterioration in underlying credit quality,” he wrote.
He pointed to blowups that happened in the past in leveraged Treasury trades as a parallel, saying those failures had nothing to do with Treasuries becoming bad credits and everything to do with investors overextending themselves while chasing yield on something they assumed was safe.
Talking about Strive specifically, Cole said the firm’s dividend reserves have not been touched and that the company wasn’t under any strain. Further, he pointed out that leveraged flushes aren’t necessarily a signal of weak collateral, since, if anything, they tend to happen because the collateral looked stable enough to tempt people into piling on leverage in the first place.
But when Udi Wertheimer, co-founder of Taproot Wizards, pressed Cole on why STRC’s peak had looked weak even before the crash, with the stock only reaching $97 around its last ex-dividend date, he conceded that the demand picture had softened somewhat. He blamed that on a weak Bitcoin market, jitters around Strategy’s recent corporate moves, and unease over the company using cash to pay down a convertible note.
However, Cole also said that the bigger factor was the kind of buying involved.
“If a security has billions of dollars of demand from long-only institutions, that is very different from demand driven by highly leveraged buyers,” noted the executive. “The latter can create strong demand on the way in, but also a much sharper unwind when prices move against them as we saw.”
According to him, Strive has one obvious lever with SATA if growth gets ahead of demand, which is to cut the interest rate to slow things down.
Market data shows STRC has since recovered to around $89 after the selloff, which is still some way off its $100 par, putting its effective yield near 13%, with a 30-day volatility of roughly 21%. Meanwhile, SATA, its newer and smaller sibling product, has held up somewhat better and was sitting just above $97 at the time of writing.
Strategy has said that its BTC treasury, currently valued at around $53 billion given Bitcoin’s price near $63,000, is enough to cover dividends for 32 years, considering the firm has about $1.7 billion in annual obligations. However, critics like Peter Schiff have often disputed that figure on the grounds that it assumes the cryptocurrency’s price doesn’t fall and the dividend rate doesn’t climb any higher.
The post Strive CEO: Sharp STRC, SATA Drops Were Leverage Liquidations, Not Credit Failures appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Around 30,500 Bitcoin options contracts will expire on Friday, June 19, with a notional value of roughly $1.9 billion. This event is slightly smaller than last week’s and still not enough to impact spot markets.
Crypto markets gained slightly before retreating in the second half of the week, with total capitalization hovering around the $2.25 trillion level and $70 billion leaving the space since Monday.
A signed peace deal between the US and Iran has not improved sentiment, while the new Federal Reserve Chair, Kevin Warsh, left rates unchanged as expected on Wednesday, but hikes could be on the cards if inflation continues to climb.
This week’s batch of Bitcoin options contracts has a put/call ratio of 0.78, meaning that sellers of long (call) contracts slightly outweigh short (put) contract sellers. Max pain is around $65,000, which is around $2,000 higher than current spot prices, so many will be at a loss on expiry.
Open interest (OI), or the value or number of Bitcoin options contracts yet to expire, remains highest at the $80,000 strike price on Deribit, with $1.6 billion, but short sellers still have $1.3 billion in OI at $60,000. Total BTC options OI across all exchanges has been climbing over the past week, and is at $36 billion, according to Coinglass.
Derivatives provider Greeks Live said this week that the $60,000 strike functions as a “critical threshold.”
“A sustained breach below this level would shift dealer hedging flows from stabilizing to directionally reinforcing, increasing the probability of an accelerated move lower,” it added.
Meanwhile, the $70,000 to $82,000 levels act as a “positive gamma range” where activity is expected to provide a “natural dampening effect on volatility.”
“A week of grinding calm has gutted the front of the BTC volume surface,” commented derivatives analytics provider Laevitas.
1/ Midweek Crypto Derivatives Report
2026-06-18A week of grinding calm has gutted the front of the bitcoin:native vol surface. Seven-day ATM IV has fallen from roughly 46 to 36 while the back barely moved near 43; the curve that was inverted a week ago – a classic fear-front -… pic.twitter.com/IGSHaQFna1
— Laevitas (@laevitas1) June 18, 2026
In addition to today’s tranche of Bitcoin options, around 137,600 Ethereum contracts are also expiring, with a notional value of $234 million, max pain at $1,725, and a put/call ratio of 1.0. Total ETH options OI across all exchanges is around $6 billion.
This brings the total crypto options expiry notional value to around $2.1 billion, which is a relatively small expiry event.
Crypto markets are in the red this Friday morning in Asia, with total capitalization tanking 2.4%. Bitcoin has fallen from its intraday high of $64,500 to around $62,800 at the time of writing, and another retest of the lows looks likely as momentum wanes.
Ethereum has lost 3% on the day and is about to fall below $1,700 again as it trades near its lowest levels for over a year. Altcoins suffering heavier losses include Hyperliquid, Zcash, Sui, and Avalanche.
The post A $2.1B Crypto Expiring Event Is Happening Today – How Will Markets Move? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Tokenized stocks emerged as the fastest-growing crypto coin category between January 2024 and May 2026, according to a new CoinGecko report tracking the number of coins listed across major sectors.
The category expanded by a whopping 3,314.3% during the period, after rising from just 14 listed coins to 478.
Real World Assets (RWA) followed closely as another major growth area, as it increased by 1,903.1% from 64 coins to 1,282. The sharp rise in both categories highlights growing interest in bringing traditional financial assets onto blockchain networks. CoinGecko said that the shift toward real-world asset tokenization accelerated significantly from late 2024 onward.
Despite these emerging trends, Decentralized Finance (DeFi) remained the largest non-meme crypto category by the end of the study period. The number of DeFi-related coins climbed from 549 in January 2024 to 2,328 by May 2026, which represented growth of 324.0%.
Another major theme during the period was the rapid expansion of AI-related coin listings. CoinGecko found that AI became the second-largest listed category on its platform after surging from 145 coins at the start of 2024 to 1,798 by May 2026, a rise of 1,140.0%.
In the process, AI overtook Gaming (GameFi), which had occupied the second spot for much of 2024. GameFi grew by almost 263% and ended the period with 1,379 listed coins. CoinGecko said the AI category gained momentum in October 2024 alongside the launch of the AI-themed meme coin Goatseus Maximus (GOAT).
Growth continued as artificial intelligence became a mainstream topic, further fueled by the rapid expansion of companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic, and Nvidia. Within crypto, the trend was driven by two key developments: a growing number of AI-branded meme coins and the emergence of on-chain AI agents, which attracted significant speculative attention and developer activity toward the end of 2024.
Meme coins followed a different path from the broader crypto market. 3,287 coins were listed on CoinGecko across 10 meme coin categories by May 2026. Dog-themed tokens remained the biggest group with 1,055 coins, after exploding during the 2024 meme coin craze as traders piled into Solana-based dog coins alongside the DOGE and WIF rallies.
AI Meme was another standout. This cohort grew from virtually nothing at the start of 2024 to 499 coins by May 2026 as interest in AI spread across crypto. Boy’s Club ecosystem grew into one of the largest memecoin subcategories in the crypto market and reached 346 coins. Meanwhile, PolitiFi surged ahead of the 2024 US election but stopped growing afterward. Chinese Meme was the newest trend, as it climbed to 117 coins by May 2026.
Despite the rapid growth in meme coin listings, market performance has been far less encouraging. According to CryptoRank, the meme coin sector has struggled to recover since its 2024 peak. Its overall market value has shrunk significantly despite several rebound attempts. While Dogecoin remains the dominant player, most major meme coins continue to trade well below their previous highs.
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ADA – the native token of Cardano – has been hit hard by the ongoing bear market, while recent concerning statements from co-founder Charles Hoskinson have only worsened its condition.
And as holders cling to hopes of a much-needed rebound, some factors indicate that a deeper drop may be approaching.
The asset has been in a major decline over the past several months, and the widespread crypto crash at the start of June further accelerated its downturn. ADA slipped well below $0.15 (its lowest level since late 2020) and currently trades around $0.16 (per CoinGecko’s data).
Its market capitalization has dwindled to just north of $6 billion, putting the token at real risk of losing its prestigious position among the top 20 cryptocurrencies.
Market conditions remain unfavorable, and Hoskinson’s recent comments, paired with growing weakness across the ecosystem, are only adding to the pressure. Just several days ago, Cardano’s co-founder sparked panic in the community when he said he’s “taking a break” and warned of an upcoming “wave of failures in the ecosystem.”
Meanwhile, the X account BSCN revealed that ADA’s daily trading volume, which climbed to $6.3 billion in August 2025, has recently tumbled to a mere $500 million. This trend suggests fading interest in the asset, which could hamper any chance of a meaningful recovery.
Popular analyst Ali Martinez presented another concerning development. He claimed that ADA has been forming a bearish flag since the beginning of the month and is now breaking from the structure.
“Now that Cardano has reached the $0.17 support level, the odds have significantly increased for a bigger price correction towards $0.13,” he added.
Still, not everyone is pessimistic about ADA’s short-term future. X user Sssebi recently noted that the asset reached its most oversold level (on the weekly chart) in its entire history. That said, they expect a resurgence to above $0.20 within the coming weeks. Crypto with Haris ₿ also chipped in, opining that ADA’s downfall shouldn’t be seen as the end but as an opportunity.
“Back in 2023, ADA went from around $0.22 to $1.30 in just a few months. Maybe history repeats itself. Maybe it doesn’t. But if the next bull run comes, I wouldn’t be surprised to see Cardano make another crazy move,” the X user reminded.
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The Aster DEX unveiled a huge change to its tokenomics on June 17, allocating 99% of fees generated through its platform to an ASTER token buyback, with one-to-one burns from its reserves for each token purchase.
The #48-ranked cryptocurrency witnessed a massive rebound shortly after the announcement but has since given back most of those gains.
In a post on X, the YZ Labs-supported perp exchange said its upgraded tokenomics model went live at 12:00 PM UTC on June 17. Under the new framework, 99% of daily platform fees will be used to automatically buy back ASTER through time-weighted average price purchases executed throughout the day and settled on-chain.
Every token bought back will trigger an equal burn from Aster’s reserve, with the team allocation burned first, resulting in what they called a 198% buyback: 99% repurchased and 99% burned from reserve.
However, the coins that’ll be bought back won’t disappear. They’ll go directly to stakers after being added to the protocol’s Loyalty Reward pool, which already distributes 300,000 ASTER in every epoch.
And the burn target is quite significant. Recall that the DEX launched with a total supply of 8 billion tokens, and it intends to burn that down to 3 billion, meaning more than 60% of that supply has been earmarked for destruction.
CoinGecko states that the present circulating supply is at about 2.68 billion, while the total supply is 7.82 billion, so there’s still a long way to go before the burn target is reached.
News of the new tokenomics mechanism had an immediate effect in the market. It saw ASTER’s value jump 23%, going from around $0.64 to $0.79 per CoinGecko. But it has since given back a fair bit of that gain and was trading near $0.65 at the time of writing, almost 73% below its September 2025 all-time high of $2.41.
Back in December 2025, the exchange announced a similar repurchase program, but at the time, the plan was to allocate 80% of daily fees to hoover up the token.
That was split between automatic daily buys, which took 40% of the fees, while another 20% to 40% was to be held in a discretionary strategic reserve, allowing the platform to conduct targeted purchases based on market conditions.
That announcement also coincided with a brief price uptick, with ASTER spiking 30% to $1.30, buoyed by news that ex-Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao was holding more than $2.5 million worth of the cryptocurrency.
The new plan has removed the strategic reserve approach entirely and pushed allocation much higher, with nearly all platform fee revenue going into automatic buybacks.
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