The sanctions may strain EU-Russia relations further, potentially complicating diplomatic efforts and impacting global energy markets.
The post EU sanctions to target Russian condensate imports from Yamal LNG by 2027 appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Trump's Beijing visit amid Iran tensions highlights geopolitical complexities, impacting market confidence and diplomatic relations.
The post Trump to visit Beijing May 14 amid Iran war, market odds drop 17.5 points appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Iran's move may temporarily ease geopolitical tensions, but traders should remain cautious as the situation could quickly change.
The post Iran allows oil tankers to cross Strait of Hormuz, easing tensions appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Labour's electoral struggles in London could trigger leadership challenges, impacting party stability and future political strategies.
The post London housing crisis threatens Labour’s control in local elections appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The prolonged internet blackout in Iran highlights escalating internal instability, potentially accelerating regime change discussions globally.
The post Iran internet blackout hits 57 days amid rising regime change speculation appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Bitcoin Magazine

VanEck Flags Dual Bullish Signals for Bitcoin as Funding Turns Negative, Hash Rate Slips
Bitcoin’s latest onchain and derivatives data point to a constructive setup, with VanEck highlighting negative funding rates and a clustered hash rate drawdown alongside softer volatility and cautious positioning.
The firm notes in their latest report that realized volatility fell from about 56% to 41% as US‑Iran tensions eased, while the 7‑day average funding rate dropped to roughly -1.8%, its lowest level since 2023 and in the 10th percentile of readings since late 2020.
Since 2020, bitcoin’s average 30‑day return during periods of negative funding has been 11.5%, compared with 4.5% across all periods, with a 77% hit rate for positive performance. When annualized funding sank below -5%, subsequent 30‑day returns averaged 19.4%, and 180‑day returns reached 70%, making negative funding a recurrent contrarian buy signal. VanEck also reports that 19 of the top 50 180‑day return windows since 2020 began on days with negative funding, despite such periods representing only about 13.6% of the sample.
On the mining side, the 30‑day moving average hash rate has fallen to the 16th percentile over 30 days and 9th percentile over 90 days, while difficulty has slid to the 5th and 6th percentiles on those horizons.
Three sustained hash rate decline episodes have appeared since December 2025, the densest cluster since China’s 2021 mining ban, with the latest drawdown of about 6.7% ending on April 15, 2026. Across seven completed historical drawdowns, bitcoin was higher 90 days later in six cases, with a median gain of 37.7% and a 63.1% median gain over 180 days.
Derivatives and onchain activity reflect guarded sentiment rather than capitulation. Put premiums relative to spot volume are more than six times their April 2024 level, while active supply over the last 180 days slipped to 28.4%, signaling greater holder dormancy.
Long‑tenured cohorts, particularly 7‑10 year and 10+ year holders, increased spent volume to the 85th and 90th percentiles of the past four years, but VanEck stresses that such movements do not always represent outright selling.
Taken together, the firm concludes that negative funding and hash rate stress form a reinforced bullish backdrop for bitcoin.
“Both mining rate drawdowns and negative funding rates have been associated with strong forward BTC returns. As such, we have become increasingly bullish on bitcoin,” the analysts wrote.
Editorial Disclaimer: We leverage AI as part of our editorial workflow, including to support research, image generation, and quality assurance processes. All content is directed, reviewed, and approved by our editorial team, who are accountable for accuracy and integrity. AI-generated images use only tools trained on properly license material. In Bitcoin, as in media: Don’t trust. Verify.
This post VanEck Flags Dual Bullish Signals for Bitcoin as Funding Turns Negative, Hash Rate Slips first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

DOJ Drops Criminal Probe of Fed Chair Powell, Clearing Path for Warsh
The Department of Justice ended its criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Friday, removing the last major obstacle to Senate confirmation of Kevin Warsh as the central bank’s next leader — a development with consequences for monetary policy and Bitcoin.
U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro announced the closure of the probe, which had been launched over alleged cost overruns on a $2.5 billion renovation of the Fed’s Washington headquarters.
Pirro said she was transferring the matter to the Fed’s own inspector general, calling for “a comprehensive report in short order.” She left open the possibility of reopening criminal proceedings if warranted.
The investigation had no legal foundation. A federal judge, James Boasberg, quashed DOJ subpoenas in March after a prosecutor conceded the government had found “essentially zero evidence” of a crime, branding the justification as “thin and unsubstantiated.” Powell himself called the probe a political weapon, stating in January that it was “a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the President.”
Senator Thom Tillis, a North Carolina Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, had vowed to block Warsh’s confirmation until the probe ended, describing it as “bogus.” His opposition, combined with unified Democratic resistance, had stalled the nomination. With the investigation now closed, leadership expects a swift committee vote and floor confirmation before Powell’s term expires on May 15.
Warsh, 56, a former Fed governor and Stanford professor, testified before the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday and pledged “strict independence” from the White House on rate decisions. “The president never once asked me to commit to any particular interest rate decision, period,” Warsh said.
Senator Elizabeth Warren called him a “sock puppet” for Trump, while Republicans praised his qualifications.
For Bitcoin, the stakes are significant. The cryptocurrency has traded in the $70,000–$92,000 range this year as the Fed held rates steady at 3.5%–3.75%, with traders watching every signal from the central bank.
Lower interest rates historically reduce yields on conventional assets, pushing capital toward risk assets like Bitcoin. When the DOJ first launched its probe in January, Bitcoin climbed toward $92,000 as institutional investors read the attack on the Fed as a threat to dollar credibility and a potential catalyst for rate cuts.
Warsh is considered more hawkish than Powell on inflation, having called the Fed’s post-pandemic rate response “the biggest policy error in 40 or 50 years.”
Should he take the helm on May 15 and maintain a restrictive stance, Bitcoin bulls betting on rate-cut-driven liquidity expansion may find themselves waiting longer than expected.
This post DOJ Drops Criminal Probe of Fed Chair Powell, Clearing Path for Warsh first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

7 Reasons JPX Should Reconsider Its Proposed Digital Asset Exclusion From TOPIX
A closer look at why the consultation’s proposed deferral sits awkwardly inside a rules-based benchmark and what a better path forward might look like.
JPX Market Innovation & Research (JPXI) is considering a new rule that would defer companies whose principal asset is cryptoassets from new inclusion in TOPIX and other periodically reviewed indices. The proposal is measured in tone, and the underlying concern, how to treat a newly emerging category of issuer, is a reasonable one for any index provider to think about.
But the specific rule under consultation raises real questions. It would affect companies like Metaplanet, Remixpoint, and ANAP Holdings, along with a growing set of Japanese issuers whose business models are fully legitimate, fully regulated, and fully aligned with long-standing corporate treasury practices.
Here are seven reasons JPXI should reconsider the proposal before February 2026.
TOPIX is designed to function as a broad, neutral, investable benchmark of the Japanese equity market. Its methodology already contains objective tools for that purpose: liquidity screens, free-float-adjusted market capitalization criteria, continuation buffers, and established treatment for delistings and other listing-quality events.
A crypto-asset screen is a different kind of test. It doesn’t measure liquidity, free float, turnover cost, market capitalization, or listing quality. It looks instead at the composition of a company’s balance sheet.
That’s a meaningful departure from how TOPIX eligibility has historically worked, and it deserves a clearer justification than the consultation currently provides. If a company satisfies TOPIX’s ordinary eligibility requirements, deferring it because of one category of asset introduces a new kind of judgment into a methodology that has been valued precisely for its objectivity.
The consultation refers to companies whose “principal asset is cryptoassets,” but leaves several administrative questions open:
These aren’t edge cases. They determine which companies the rule actually applies to. Index methodology gains its credibility from rules that are objective, measurable, and consistently administrable, and a clearer definition would help everyone: issuers, investors, and JPXI itself.
A practical concern follows from the definitional question. If direct Bitcoin holdings by the parent company are disfavored, but equivalent exposure through other structures is not, the rule becomes sensitive to legal form rather than economic substance.
Consider the asymmetry:
The economic exposure in these cases can be very similar. The index treatment would be quite different. That creates an incentive for issuers to restructure toward less transparent forms of exposure rather than disclose direct holdings on the balance sheet. A benchmark rule generally works better when it encourages clear disclosure rather than the opposite.
The consultation contemplates deferring new inclusion while not applying the rule to existing constituents. This is understandable from a stability standpoint, no one wants unnecessary index churn.
But it also creates an internal tension in the rule’s logic. If Bitcoin treasury exposure were genuinely incompatible with TOPIX, it would be difficult to justify exempting current members. And if it isn’t incompatible, it’s worth asking why new entrants meeting the same investability criteria should be treated differently.
Reconciling that asymmetry would strengthen the proposal considerably.
The consultation says the deferral would apply “for the time being,” without specifying a review period, exit standard, or sunset mechanism. In practice, that leaves the timeline open-ended.
The timing matters here. October 2026 will be the first periodic review under the next-generation TOPIX framework in which Standard and Growth market companies can become eligible through the new process. A deferral that coincides with that review, without a defined path back to eligibility, could function as a longer-term exclusion even if it isn’t framed that way.
A clearer review cadence, or an explicit sunset, would make the proposal easier to evaluate on its merits.
JPXI is not the only index provider thinking about this. MSCI recently considered a threshold-based approach to digital-asset treasury companies and ultimately did not adopt a blanket exclusion, acknowledging the need for further work to distinguish operating companies from non-operating or investment-like entities. FTSE Russell has not announced a comparable rule.
The common thread is that the classification question is genuinely unsettled. Operating companies that hold Bitcoin alongside other business lines: media, energy, retail, mining, infrastructure, don’t fit neatly into existing categories, and the global index community is still working out how to think about them.
Given that, there’s a reasonable case for JPXI to engage further with issuers and market participants before codifying a rule, rather than moving ahead of where the broader conversation has landed.
If the underlying concern is that some listed companies have become more concentrated or investment-like, that concern is worth addressing, but it isn’t unique to cryptoassets. Concentrated holdings can take many forms: listed equities, private-company stakes, fund interests, real estate, or other non-operating assets.
A framework that applies consistently across these categories would likely be more durable than a single-asset rule. It would also sidestep the definitional and arbitrage concerns above, since the test would focus on the economic characteristic JPXI actually cares about rather than on one particular asset class.
Several paths could accomplish this:
None of this is to say JPXI’s instinct to think carefully about a new category of issuer is wrong. It isn’t. Bitcoin treasury companies are relatively new, and their prominence in Japan has grown quickly enough that questions about how to treat them are worth taking seriously.
But the specific rule on consultation is narrower, vaguer, and more open-ended than the questions it’s trying to answer. A clearer definition, a defined review period, and an asset-neutral framing would go a long way toward addressing the underlying concerns while preserving what has made TOPIX a trusted benchmark: objective, rules-based eligibility that reflects the Japanese equity market as it is.
That combination, substance over form, clarity over ambiguity, neutrality across asset classes, seems like the stronger path forward.
Bitcoin For Corporations has organized a coalition letter urging JPXI to withdraw the proposed exclusion and preserve TOPIX as a neutral, rules-based benchmark. The public comment period closes May 7, 2026 and every signature strengthens the case that this issue matters to issuers, investors, and market participants worldwide.
If the arguments above resonate, add your name. Individuals and organizations from any jurisdiction can sign.
→ Sign the coalition letter at topix.bitcoinforcorporations.com
You can also review the full position letter, see who has already signed, and share the campaign with your network from the same page. The deadline is firm, and the window to shape JPXI’s final decision is short.
Disclaimer: This content was prepared on behalf of Bitcoin For Corporations for informational purposes only. It reflects the author’s own analysis and opinion and should not be relied upon as investment advice. Nothing in this article constitutes an offer, invitation, or solicitation to purchase, sell, or subscribe for any security or financial product.
This post 7 Reasons JPX Should Reconsider Its Proposed Digital Asset Exclusion From TOPIX first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Nick Ward.
Bitcoin Magazine

Nakamoto (NAKA) Launches Bitcoin Derivatives Program to Capture Volatility Income and Hedge Downside Risk
Nakamoto Inc. has launched an actively managed Bitcoin derivatives program aimed at generating income from market volatility while reducing downside exposure, according to a company statement released Friday.
The program, in operation since the first quarter of 2026, is structured as a complement to Nakamoto’s core strategy of holding Bitcoin as a treasury asset. It uses a portion of the company’s Bitcoin holdings as collateral in a derivatives strategy managed by Bitwise Asset Management through a separately managed account. Custody services are provided by Kraken Institutional.
The initiative centers on two primary components: an income sleeve and a hedging sleeve. The income sleeve involves writing covered calls and call spreads against a defined share of Nakamoto’s Bitcoin holdings. This approach seeks to capture premiums from options markets, where implied volatility in Bitcoin pricing often exceeds realized volatility.
The hedging sleeve focuses on purchasing protective puts and put spreads. These positions are designed to offset potential losses during periods of price decline, providing a buffer against adverse market moves. According to the company, premiums generated from the income sleeve may help fund the cost of these protective positions.
Tyler Evans, chief investment officer of Nakamoto and UTXO Management, said the firm views Bitcoin’s implied volatility as a consistent source of opportunity. He described the program as a structured effort to convert that volatility into shareholder value while maintaining exposure to the underlying asset.
Bitcoin used as collateral within the program remains under Nakamoto’s ownership and continues to be counted toward its reported holdings. The company emphasized that derivatives positions supplement its spot Bitcoin exposure rather than replace it.
Premiums collected through the program may be received in either Bitcoin or U.S. dollars, depending on the structure of each trade. Nakamoto said these proceeds can be allocated toward hedging costs, additional Bitcoin purchases, or general corporate needs in line with its capital allocation strategy.
The program operates under a unified investment mandate that defines limits on notional exposure, eligible instruments, counterparties, and custody requirements. It also accounts for the tradeoff between income generation and potential limits on upside participation due to call option positions.
Nakamoto framed the strategy as part of a broader effort to generate yield from its Bitcoin treasury while maintaining long-term accumulation goals. The company said the hedging component is intended to support balance sheet stability and reduce the risk of forced asset sales during periods of market stress.
Performance details from the program’s first quarter of operation are expected to be disclosed in Nakamoto’s upcoming Form 10-Q filing.
Bitcoin Magazine is published by BTC Inc, a subsidiary of Nakamoto Inc. (NASDAQ: NAKA)
This post Nakamoto (NAKA) Launches Bitcoin Derivatives Program to Capture Volatility Income and Hedge Downside Risk first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Bitcoin Magazine

Metaplanet Issues $50M in Zero-Interest Bonds to Buy More Bitcoin
Metaplanet said it will issue ¥8 billion ($50 million) in zero-interest bonds to expand its Bitcoin holdings, according to a Friday statement, extending a financing strategy that has defined its balance sheet shift toward digital assets.
The issuance marks the firm’s 20th series of ordinary bonds and will mature in April 2027. The bonds are unsecured and carry no interest, giving the company access to capital without added debt servicing costs. Proceeds are earmarked for additional Bitcoin purchases, with repayment due at par upon maturity.
The bonds were allocated to EVO FUND, a Cayman-based investor tied to Evolution Financial Group that has backed several of the company’s prior raises. Under the terms, the fund can request early redemption with five business days’ notice, while Metaplanet retains the option to redeem part or all of the issuance if it completes further financing with the same counterparty.
At current Bitcoin prices near $78,000, the raise could allow Metaplanet to acquire between 640 and 700 BTC. The company holds 40,177 BTC, valued at about $3.1 billion, making it the largest corporate Bitcoin holder in Japan and the third largest among public firms.
Metaplanet has set a target of 100,000 BTC by the end of 2026 and 210,000 BTC by the end of 2027. The latest raise follows a first quarter in which the firm added 5,075 BTC and reported a BTC Yield of 2.8%.
Metaplanet reported a ¥95 billion net loss for fiscal year 2025, driven by unrealized valuation declines tied to Bitcoin price movements. Its average acquisition cost stands at $104,106 per coin, above current market levels.
The strategy mirrors a model seen in the United States, where public firms use capital markets to accumulate Bitcoin as a treasury reserve asset. The most famous of this type of company is Strategy.
Earlier this week, Strategy disclosed it bought 34,164 bitcoin for about $2.54 billion, one of its largest purchases ever. The acquisition raised its total holdings to 815,061 BTC, surpassing BlackRock and bringing its cumulative spend to roughly $61.56 billion at an average cost near current market prices.
The purchase was funded through equity sales and its STRC preferred stock offering, which has become a key financing tool.
Despite its expanding position — now over 3.8% of bitcoin’s supply — shares slipped in pre-market trading as investors weighed the firm’s aggressive capital strategy.
Editorial Disclaimer: We leverage AI as part of our editorial workflow, including to support research, image generation, and quality assurance processes. All content is directed, reviewed, and approved by our editorial team, who are accountable for accuracy and integrity. AI-generated images use only tools trained on properly license material. In Bitcoin, as in media: Don’t trust. Verify.
This post Metaplanet Issues $50M in Zero-Interest Bonds to Buy More Bitcoin first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Ethereum traders are rebuilding bullish exposure to the second-largest cryptocurrency, with derivatives markets showing renewed demand for upside bets.
According to CryptoSlate's data, ETH has gained about 11% this month on the back of a four-week stretch of gains, its longest in nearly a year.
This uptrend pushed ETH to around $2330, its highest price level since February, and puts it on course for its first back-to-back monthly advance since July and August 2025.

As a result, ETH's price performance has shifted the market attention back to the $3,000 level after months of weaker relative performance against Bitcoin.
Deribit, the largest crypto options venue, has become the clearest expression of the renewed upside trade.
Data from the trading platform show that open interest in ETH call options has built up around the $3,200 strike, with more than $322 million in outstanding contracts. The $2,500 strike option follows closely with roughly $320 million in open interest.
Call options give traders the right to buy an asset at a set price. They typically gain value as the underlying token moves closer to the strike.
In ETH's case, the concentration around $2,500 and $3,200 shows that traders are again positioning for a move beyond the current recovery range.
Meanwhile, the large open interest does not mean every position is a direct bullish bet. Options activity can include hedging, spread trades, volatility strategies, and market-maker exposure.
US spot Ethereum exchange-traded funds (ETFs) recently delivered one of the strongest demand signals ahead of the rally, which then paused.
Data from SoSo Value showed that the 10 funds drew more than $633 million during a 10-day inflow streak that began on April 9 and ended on April 22. This is their longest inflow streak of this year and the longest since June 2025.

However, the current inflow streak ended on April 23, when the funds recorded $75.94 million in net outflows, marking their first negative session since early April.
Still, the inflow streak helps support the view that regulated investors were returning to Ethereum exposure after months in which Bitcoin attracted the larger institutional bid. ETF flows are closely watched because they show demand through spot products rather than leveraged positions on derivatives venues.
Alphractal data corroborated the trend and pointed out that its Ethereum Smart Money Flow Index, a proprietary measure of institutional activity in ETH, has also shown positive divergence from price for several weeks.

That suggests fund demand had been improving before the recovery became more visible in spot prices.
However, the latest outflow tempers that reading as it shows that Ethereum has not yet shown the same ETF-led consistency that has supported Bitcoin during stronger rallies.
For ETH, the fund-flow picture is improving, but it has not yet become strong enough to carry the market on its own.
Apart from the sustained inflows from the ETFs, Binance order-flow data also points to a gradual improvement in demand rather than aggressive accumulation.
CryptoQuant's data show that the exchange’s Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) recently registered a positive reading of about 48,400. CVD tracks the net difference between buying and selling volume. A positive reading means buy orders are outweighing sell orders.

This suggests ETH is not rising solely due to the increased speculative leverage but because buyers have returned to the market, which has helped the token stabilize after earlier declines.
Meanwhile, the relationship between ETH's price and order flow has also strengthened. The correlation coefficient was 0.66, indicating a moderately strong relationship between buying activity and price movement.
However, the signal remains measured because ETH is still trading below prior highs, and the CVD reading does not show the type of forceful spot accumulation usually associated with a confirmed breakout. Instead, it points to a rebalancing phase after a weaker stretch.
That leaves a sustained ETH uptrend dependent on whether the improvement in order flow continues.
A stronger CVD reading would support the case that spot buyers are validating the move shown in options and ETFs. A stall would leave the rally more exposed to speculative positioning.
Despite these bullish metrics, CryptoQuant data from Binance shows the main source of risk behind the ETH rally.
The exchange’s leverage ratio has climbed above the price for the first time in months. When leverage expands faster than spot price gains, it indicates traders are adding borrowed exposure more quickly than investors are buying the token outright.

That pattern can appear during early recoveries, when traders try to position ahead of a breakout before spot flows fully confirm the move.
Notably, this can support fast gains while market conditions remain favorable. It can also increase the risk of forced selling if the price reverses.
However, leveraged positions are more sensitive to moves against them. If ETH fails to hold recent gains, long positions can be liquidated, adding sell pressure to the decline.
This leverage signal sits against a more constructive set of indicators. Ethereum has posted four straight weekly gains, Deribit traders are targeting higher strikes, ETFs recently recorded a 10-day inflow streak, and CVD shows buy orders outweighing sell orders.
The risk, however, is that those signals are not moving at the same speed.
This is because ETH's move toward $3,200 would need those gaps to narrow. Spot buyers would need to keep absorbing supply, ETF flows would need to stabilize, and leverage would need to stop rising faster than price.
Without that confirmation, the same derivatives exposure supporting the rebound could amplify losses during a failed breakout.
The post Ethereum’s 4 consecutive weeks of price rallies fuel bullish bets of $3200 appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin held near $78,000 on Friday as oil prices climbed past $100 a barrel, testing whether the largest digital asset can sustain its April rebound while the US-Iran conflict keeps energy markets on edge.
The move came after President Donald Trump escalated his rhetoric over the Strait of Hormuz, saying the US Navy controlled the waterway and that no ship could enter or leave without American approval.
The comments reinforced fears that the conflict, now centered on maritime leverage rather than direct strikes, could keep one of the world’s most important energy routes shut for longer.
Brent crude rose to about $107 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate traded near $97. WTI was on pace for a weekly gain of more than 17% as stalled peace talks, tanker seizures, and the continuing blockade of Hormuz deepened concerns over supply.
Bitcoin’s response was more measured. The flagship digital asset rose to $78,300 after briefly trading above $79,000 and extended its April recovery by roughly 15%.
The advance came even as US stocks slipped, the dollar strengthened, and traders repriced the risk that higher oil could keep inflation elevated into the Federal Reserve’s next policy meeting.
That combination has turned Bitcoin into a cleaner test of the market’s inflation trade. Traders are weighing whether the token can benefit from renewed demand for scarce assets while avoiding the pressure that a stronger dollar and higher real yields usually place on speculative markets.
The Strait of Hormuz has become the main channel through which the US-Iran conflict is reaching global markets.
Before the war, about 20 million barrels of oil and petroleum products moved through the waterway each day.
However, shipping has since slowed sharply, with Iran demanding authority over vessel passage and the US blocking Iranian maritime trade. The result is a physical disruption that has carried more weight for traders than the formal ceasefire.
Trump sharpened that pressure Thursday, saying on Truth Social that the US had “total control” over the strait and that it would remain “sealed up tight” until Iran reached a deal. He also ordered the Navy to destroy Iranian boats laying mines in the waterway.
Oil traders quickly priced the risk of a longer disruption. Brent’s move above $100 revived memories of earlier energy shocks that fed headline inflation and forced central banks to keep policy tighter for longer.
For Bitcoin, that creates a complicated backdrop.
Higher oil supports the argument that investors should own assets outside the fiat system, especially if inflation rises while central banks avoid additional tightening. At the same time, an oil-driven inflation shock can lift the dollar, pressure equity valuations, and reduce liquidity across risk assets.
The first version of that trade helped Bitcoin hold its ground on Friday. The second remains the main risk for traders looking for a clean break above $80,000.
The strongest part of Bitcoin’s rally in this market resilience came from derivatives.
CryptoQuant data showed that Bitcoin’s Thursday surge from $76,351 to $79,447 was driven mainly by futures activity.
According to the firm, open interest climbed from about $24.88 billion to nearly $28 billion as the price moved higher, a pattern that points to leveraged positioning rather than a broad spot-market bid.
The rally forced a large exit from bearish positions. Bitcoin short liquidations reached about $607.9 million, while Ethereum short liquidations totaled about $581 million. Across the two assets, short liquidations totaled nearly $1.19 billion.
Long liquidations were much smaller. Bitcoin long liquidations totaled about $12.8 million, while Ether long liquidations reached about $98.5 million. Combined long liquidations totaled nearly $111.4 million.
That imbalance explains the speed of the move. Traders who had built short exposure into the March and April weakness were forced to buy back positions as Bitcoin broke higher. The buying added fuel to the rally, pushing the price quickly toward $79,000.
Alphractal data had flagged the same pressure before the move. Bitcoin perpetual futures funding had stayed negative on a 30-day average basis for 46 straight days, while open interest rose about 12% over that period.

This negative funding means bearish traders were paying to keep positions open, a crowded setup that can unravel quickly when the price turns.
The squeeze gave Bitcoin momentum, though it also raised the bar for follow-through. A derivatives-led rally can extend if spot buyers step in after the breakout. Without that confirmation, the move can fade once forced buying slows.
Meanwhile, options traders are giving Bitcoin room to rise without showing the kind of aggressive upside chasing that often marks overheated conditions.
Greeks.live data showed that 109,000 Bitcoin options expired Friday with a put-call ratio of 0.93, a max pain level of $72,000, and a notional value of $8.55 billion.

The firm said 25% of open options were set to expire in the monthly settlement, with 12% of open interest maturing at the end of May and 24% at the end of June.
Bitcoin’s implied volatility has continued to fall across major maturities, with several tenors slipping by 1 to 2 percentage points and moving below 40%. Skew metrics have also pulled back, signaling that the rebound has not been dominated by panic buying of upside exposure.
That leaves Bitcoin in a steadier position than the size of the short squeeze might suggest. Traders are not ignoring the rally, but they are not aggressively paying for calls.
Essentially, the options market is leaving space for a continuation while still pricing the risk that oil, the dollar and Fed expectations can interrupt the move.
However, Andre Dragosch, Bitwise Europe’s head of research, noted that several macro forces still favor Bitcoin. He pointed to fading recession risks, declining real interest rates if the Fed stays on hold while inflation rises, and a large gap between Bitcoin and global money supply trends.
In that framework, financial repression remains one of the strongest environments for the asset.
That view has gained traction as oil’s rally places the Fed in a narrower lane. If policymakers cut rates while energy prices remain elevated, real yields could fall, strengthening Bitcoin’s appeal.
On the other hand, if policymakers stay restrictive to contain inflation expectations, Bitcoin’s April rebound could face the same pressure that weighed on the asset earlier this year.
For now, traders are treating $78,000 as the first line of evidence. Holding that level through an oil spike, a firmer dollar, and weaker equities suggests demand has improved. However, a failed push through $80,000 would leave the move vulnerable to the same macro forces that drove previous pullbacks.
The post Bitcoin ends week resilient around $78,000 as Trump’s new rhetoric sent oil price back above $100 appeared first on CryptoSlate.
I believe the hardest question for DeFi in 2026 is whether the original dream is still alive.
The collective bargain was simple. Users would hold their own keys. Code would execute the rules. Markets would stay open. Ledgers would be visible.
Intermediaries would lose power because financial services could run on public smart contracts rather than private balance sheets.
That framing explains why decentralized finance grew so quickly after 2020. It also explains why the current moment feels so deflating.
I'd like to preface this piece by saying that I believe decentralized finance is an essential part of the world I want to live in. However, I'm also not a zealot for a system that has failed to deliver on its promises.
I believe in “strong opinions, loosely held,” and my conviction on DeFi is pretty loose right now.
The sector has now lived through years of bridge exploits, price manipulation, smart contract failures, wallet compromises, governance fights, and public liquidity stress. At the same time, institutions are adopting tokenization, digital cash, and settlement rails while leaving much of the permissionless political project behind.
The most defensible take is now much narrower than the old promise. DeFi proved that public settlement, automated markets, composability, and transparent ledgers can operate at meaningful scale.
It has yet to prove that those properties, by themselves, create a safer, more decentralized, or more accessible finance than the system it set out to challenge.
The institutional case for DeFi describes its core appeal: open financial systems built on smart contracts and shared public infrastructure. That was the optimistic version of the pitch.
Anyone with a wallet could access markets, move collateral, borrow, lend, trade, and inspect the rules. The system would be transparent by default, with settlement happening on-chain rather than inside private institutional ledgers.
The complication is that decentralization was always a layered concept. Vitalik Buterin's older framework separated decentralization into architectural, political, and logical dimensions.
A system can be architecturally decentralized because it runs across many machines, while remaining politically concentrated if decisions rest with a small group of tokenholders, teams, multisigs, foundations, front-end operators, or infrastructure providers.
That split is essential because much of DeFi looked decentralized at the transaction layer while remaining dependent on concentrated forms of control elsewhere.
The Bank for International Settlements made a sharp institutional critique in 2021 that many of us likely scoffed at at the time. It called DeFi's decentralization a structural illusion because governance needs make some centralization inevitable, and because token and validator economics can concentrate power.
BIS was drawing a line between automated settlement and unavoidable decision-making. Protocols still needed decisions about upgrades, risk parameters, collateral listings, incentives, oracle choices, emergency controls, and treasury use.
Those decisions rarely emerged from a perfectly dispersed public. They usually passed through identifiable governance channels and actors. The paper version carries the same institutional critique for policy readers.
The Financial Stability Board added another constraint in 2023. DeFi, it said, had remained mainly self-referential, with products and services interacting with other DeFi products rather than the real economy.
It also inherited familiar vulnerabilities from traditional finance, including leverage, liquidity mismatch, operational fragility, and interconnectedness. The process was new. The risk family was older.
A later governance paper from the ECB reinforced the same direction of travel by focusing on identifiable actors within DeFi governance.
That lands us at this. DeFi reduced reliance on banks for certain transactions, but it increased reliance on code, bridges, governance, front ends, wallets, oracles, custodial touchpoints, and security teams.
It shifted trust rather than removing it. That shift created genuine transparency. It also created new failure modes.

The strongest evidence against DeFi's original security pitch is the record of thefts in 2021 and 2022. A Chainalysis review put DeFi hack losses at about $2.5 billion in 2021, $3.1 billion in 2022, and $1.1 billion in 2023.
Since 2023, almost $7 billion has been stolen as hacks continue, and now AI models are creating a new (perhaps even scarier) attack vector.
The 2022 figure was especially damaging. Hackers stole $3.8 billion from crypto businesses overall that year alone, and DeFi protocols accounted for 82.1% of the funds stolen.
Cross-chain bridges made up 64% of the DeFi total, according to a 2022 hacking analysis.
Those numbers changed the meaning of transparency. DeFi users could see what happened. They could follow stolen funds, inspect transactions, and watch governance respond.
Public ledgers made the failures immediate and brutally legible. A bank breach can take months to identify and disclose. A drained pool becomes visible in the block where it happens.
| Period | Reported crypto theft context | Operational meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | DeFi hacks around $2.5B in Chainalysis' later review | DeFi became a primary attack surface during the first mass cycle of yield, leverage, and composability. |
| 2022 | $3.8B stolen from crypto businesses, with DeFi at $3.1B and 82.1% of stolen funds | The peak year turned bridges and smart contracts into the sector's clearest systemic weakness. |
| 2023 | DeFi hack losses fell to $1.1B | Security improved, activity fell, or both. The decline did not erase the previous damage. |
| 2024 | $2.2B stolen across 303 hacks, up about 21% year over year | Attackers broadened from DeFi toward private-key infrastructure and centralized services. |
| 2025 | Chainalysis reported over $3.4B stolen through early December; TRM put hack losses at $2.87B | Large centralized-service and wallet compromises drove the newest wave more than a return to 2022-style DeFi losses. |
The recent rise in crypto theft has a different composition from the 2021-2022 DeFi exploit cycle. The 2024 hacking review showed losses rising again as attacker focus shifted toward private-key and centralized-service targets.
The 2025 crime trend summary highlighted private-key compromises as a major vector. The mid-year 2025 update showed the escalation after Bybit before the year-end picture was complete.
The 2026 report preview then described more than $3.4 billion stolen in 2025, with the Bybit compromise alone accounting for about $1.5 billion.
TRM's 2025 Crypto Crime Report provides the prior-year baseline, while its 2026 Crypto Crime Report puts 2025 hack losses at $2.87 billion, with Bybit at $1.46 billion, or 51% of that total.
That nuance helps DeFi on one axis and hurts it on another. DeFi protocol exploit losses appeared to have improved since the 2022 peak.
At the same time, the broader crypto stack still looks brittle, seems to be surging again through new AI tooling, and DeFi's original user-sovereignty pitch depends on that broader stack.
If the wallet, signing process, bridge, front end, governance channel, or collateral wrapper becomes the weak point, the user experiences a system failure. Dynamic incident databases, such as DeFiLlama's hacks tracker, exist because the failure surface remains wide and constantly evolving.
Thinking back, one of the DeFi projects I was excited about in 2021 was PancakeBunny. It was a small project, but I liked the UI, the branding, the infrastructure, and I even bought some merch. I was wearing the hoodie this week when I took a moment to think back to all the other DeFi projects that had similar or greater potential and have simply died. It almost seems that the official product life cycle in DeFi includes a hack, an exploit, a pump-and-dump, or insolvency.
“On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for all [DeFi projects] drops to zero.” – Chuck Palahniuk, Fight Club
While a fairly niche project, I think PancakeBunny is a useful example because it condensed the emotional cycle into a single event. Rekt reported that a May 2021 flash-loan manipulation hit the protocol for about $45 million, pushed BUNNY from $146 to $6, and struck after the protocol had once held more than $10 billion in TVL.
The case looks like an early template: unknown protocol, rapid yield-driven growth, giant TVL, manipulation, collapse, then a token chart that never recovers the old story.
That pattern is why the security question carries more weight than any single hack. DeFi promised an alternative trust model. For many users, it became a new risk stack with fewer intermediaries to complain to when something broke.
Aave is a better current test than most smaller protocols because it remains one of DeFi's core lending venues. If a marginal farm fails, the conclusion says little about the system.
If a leading lending protocol is forced into visible crisis management, the implication is wider.
The April 2026 rsETH incident is therefore important, but it needs careful language. The Aave incident report said the event originated outside Aave, from Kelp's LayerZero V2 Unichain to Ethereum rsETH route, which had been configured as a 1-of-1 DVN path.
The report said a forged inbound packet released 116,500 rsETH from the Ethereum-side adapter, and that 89,567 rsETH were deposited on Aave. It also stated that Aave's smart contracts were not compromised and that Aave's protocol logic continued to function as designed.
The Aave governance report framed the issue as collateral, bridge, and external-asset risk rather than an exploit of Aave itself.
That caveat protects Aave from a false claim that its own contracts were hacked. It also reinforces the deeper DeFi problem.
In a composable system, a protocol can behave correctly and still inherit stress from the asset, bridge, oracle, market, or governance decision it accepted into its risk perimeter.
The report modeled hypothetical bad-debt scenarios ranging from about $123.7 million to $230.1 million, depending on how losses were allocated.
It also described defensive actions, including freezes of rsETH and wrsETH reserves across Aave V3 deployments, WETH freezes on several markets, and interest-rate adjustments.
That is a mature response system. It is also an admission that mature DeFi requires circuit breakers, guardians, risk stewards, emergency parameter changes, and coordinated governance.
The public forum made the human side visible. One Aave governance post argued that ETH price appreciation could worsen the bad-debt gap over time because some liabilities were effectively fixed in ETH terms while available backstops were denominated in stablecoins and dollars.
Other replies disputed parts of the framing, narrowed the issue to L2 exposure, or urged emergency coordination. The forum discussion should be treated as live stakeholder pressure with unresolved accounting.
CryptoSlate has tracked adjacent Aave pressure, including contributor departures testing Aave's lending lead and governance conflict around protocol dominance.
Still, the public nature of the debate is the point. DeFi crises happen in view. Depositors, borrowers, tokenholders, analysts, and competitors can watch the governance process unfold.
That gives DeFi a transparency advantage over closed financial systems. It also exposes how much judgment remains inside a supposedly automated system.

The claim that DeFi looks less secure than traditional finance needs more care and consideration of nuance than sentiment allows these days.
Traditional finance suffers serious cyber incidents, fraud, operational failures, and data breaches. The difference is that those failures move through legal, regulatory, insurance, and disclosure systems that are much slower and less visible than blockchains.
A bank's customer database breach, an outage, a business-email compromise, and a direct theft from a crypto bridge are all security events. They sit in different categories.
The U.S. public-company disclosure regime illustrates the difference. The SEC requires domestic public companies to disclose material cybersecurity incidents on Form 8-K within four business days after determining materiality.
The deadline starts from the materiality determination rather than the first suspicious log entry. That gives companies time to assess scope, legal exposure, operational impact, and national-security considerations.
Bank regulators use another channel. The OCC's computer-security incident notification rule requires a bank to notify its primary federal regulator as soon as possible and no later than 36 hours after determining that a notification incident occurred.
That is a regulatory notification channel rather than a public blockchain ledger.
Cost data shows the scale while preserving the comparison limit. IBM reported that financial industry enterprises averaged $6.08 million per data breach in 2024, above the global average, and that breaches involving 50 million or more records averaged $375 million.
It also put the average identification time for financial firms at 168 days and containment at 51 days. Those figures show that TradFi security failures can be expensive and slow to surface.
Of the 600 breaches analyzed in IBM’s 2025 report, an implied aggregate cost of about $2.66 billion, based on the reported global average breach cost of $4.44 million
So perhaps, DeFi is not dying because it's less secure than TradFi, but its transparency and immediate public impact create an unsolvable marketing problem.
The amount lost to exploits across DeFi and TradFi appears comparable using the figures above. Around $2.6 billion was lost in TradFi in 2025 and $2.8 billion in DeFi.
However, DeFi moved roughly $10 to $13 trillion last year, while over $28 trillion passed through Mastercard and Visa payment rails alone. When you add in FX markets and Fed funds, you move into the quadrillions in TradFi volume.
Using some napkin math, we can estimate DeFi's total volume ceiling at around $46 trillion and TradFi's at around $3.5 quadrillion. Therefore, losses work out to roughly 0.006% of volume in DeFi, compared to 0.00007% in TradFi. This is an 86-fold higher loss rate in DeFi, or 8,500%.
So that's part marketing and PR issue, but mostly a reliability red flag.
IC3 data adds another layer. The FBI said its 2025 Internet Crime Report showed nearly $21 billion in cyber-enabled crime losses reported by Americans, with more than $11 billion tied to cryptocurrency complaints.

For context, here's a small sample of DeFi exploits we've covered over the years.
1. https://cryptoslate.com/defi-users-pull-out-10-billion-from-market-as-292-million-exploit-sparks-bank-run-optics/
2. https://cryptoslate.com/six-years-after-defi-summer-is-the-sun-already-setting-on-the-decentralized-finance-revolution/
3. https://cryptoslate.com/circle-usdc-drift-hack-freeze-controversy/
4. https://cryptoslate.com/drift-hack-stabble-crypto-insider-risk/
5. https://cryptoslate.com/new-ledger-breach-didnt-steal-your-crypto-but-it-exposed-the-one-thing-that-leads-criminals-to-your-door/
6. https://cryptoslate.com/how-11-audits-couldnt-stop-balancers-128-million-hack-redefining-defi-risks/
7. https://cryptoslate.com/billions-stolen-dozens-arrested-is-crypto-crime-peaking-or-adapting/
8. https://cryptoslate.com/hackers-steal-140m-from-brazilian-central-bank-reserve-accounts-via-partner-breach/
9. https://cryptoslate.com/beyond-hacks-understanding-and-managing-economic-risks-in-defi/
10. https://cryptoslate.com/pump-fun-halts-trading-after-suffering-flash-loan-exploit/
11. https://cryptoslate.com/aave-and-yearn-finance-exploited-for-over-10m-in-stablecoins/
12. https://cryptoslate.com/hackers-steal-record-3-8b-during-2022-chainalysis/
13. https://cryptoslate.com/gravity-of-not-your-keys-not-your-coins-hits-home-as-trust-wallet-spikes-113-to-new-ath/
14. https://cryptoslate.com/hacker-self-destructs-1m-loot-gained-from-defi-exploit/
15. https://cryptoslate.com/record-amounts-of-crypto-were-stolen-in-defi-hacks-last-quarter/
16. https://cryptoslate.com/over-8k-solana-wallets-drained-of-funds-10m-estimated-missing/
17. https://cryptoslate.com/the-biggest-defi-hit-ever-poly-network-sees-600-million-crypto-heist
18. https://cryptoslate.com/latest-ethereum-defi-exploit-sees-14-million-stolen-from-furucombo/
19. https://cryptoslate.com/flash-loan-attack-on-defi-platform-belt-finance-sees-6-2-million-gone/
20. https://cryptoslate.com/defi-risks-hackers-drain-500k-in-link-wrapped-eth-and-other-alts-from-balancer-pools/
The post Crypto DeFi hacks cost 8,500% more than TradFi breaches per dollar moved appeared first on CryptoSlate.
The March and April 2026 drawdown has structural consequences, as Bitcoin ETF holders stayed steady.
Bitcoin sits near $78,000, roughly 38% below the $125,761 peak from Oct. 6, and US spot Bitcoin ETFs pulled in $1.32 billion in March, reversing a four-month outflow streak. Then, the ETFs added another $2.42 billion in net inflows between Apr. 6 and Apr. 22.
The strongest days were Apr. 17, with $663.9 million in inflows, and Apr. 22, with $335.8 million in inflows. Gemini's coin-level data show that ETF-held Bitcoin fell only from 1.38 million BTC at the October 2025 high to 1.28 million at the trough, then recovered quickly to 1.31 million.
During an interview with Crypto Prime, Bloomberg senior ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said that during a 20% drawdown, ETFs logged outflows of under $1 billion, roughly 99.5% of their assets. This happened during a genuinely hostile macro window.
Nasdaq's March update showed a 21% decline in the total digital asset market cap across the first quarter, while the Nasdaq-100 fell 4.9% and the S&P 500 fell 5.1%. ETF holders absorbed all of that without producing the exit wave skeptics had forecast.
Balchunas argued that the selling pressure came from longer-tenured crypto holders, saying that the call was “coming from inside the house.”
The ETF analyst's interpretation fits the flow data, as net ETF buying held through a historically steep drawdown while something else pushed the price lower.

The ETF wrapper places Bitcoin inside model portfolios, advisor guardrails, committee-approved position limits, and rebalancing schedules.
Buyers inside those structures operate during regular trading hours, so the rules constrain them. In a drawdown, constraint looks like discipline.
| Buyer type | Typical wrapper | Behavior constraints | Likely drawdown behavior |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spot Bitcoin ETF holder | ETF / brokerage account | Model portfolios, advisor rules, position limits, trading hours, rebalancing schedules | More likely to hold or rebalance gradually |
| Legacy crypto-native holder | Direct coin ownership | Fewer formal portfolio guardrails | More discretionary selling |
| Leveraged trader | Perpetuals / margin venues | Liquidation risk, collateral pressure | Forced selling can accelerate |
| Corporate / treasury holder | Balance-sheet allocation | Treasury policy, liquidity needs | May sell based on firm-level constraints |
| Miner | Native BTC holdings | Operating costs, treasury needs | May sell into weakness for liquidity |
Bitwise and VettaFi's 2026 advisor survey pointed out that 32% of financial advisors allocated to crypto in client accounts in 2025, up from 22% the year before, while 42% say they can now buy crypto in client accounts, and 77% name an ETF as their preferred vehicle.
EY-Parthenon and Coinbase's 2026 institutional survey adds that 73% of respondents plan to increase digital asset allocations this year, 66% already access spot crypto through ETFs or ETPs, and 81% prefer registered vehicles over direct coin custody.
EY's framing of the behavioral finding is that volatility is driving more formal risk discipline.
BlackRock reinforced its sizing logic in late 2024, recommending allocations of up to 2% for investors interested in Bitcoin, noting that larger weights can disproportionately alter overall portfolio risk.
A 2% sleeve absorbs a 38% drawdown in assets as a tolerable drag on a diversified portfolio, a math that produces slower hands.
The distribution infrastructure continues to deepen, as Bank of America opened crypto ETP recommendations to advisors across Merrill, Merrill Edge, and its Private Bank on Jan. 5, 2026.
Morgan Stanley filed for a Bitcoin ETF in January and launched MSBT on Apr. 8, and Charles Schwab announced spot crypto trading.
Each move routes more Bitcoin buying through channels in which compliance reviews, position-sizing rules, and client-agreement constraints govern execution. In these channels, discretionary panic selling is more difficult to execute.
The bull case holds that the ownership base has already begun to change in ways that compound over time.
As advisor and institutional access widen, Bitcoin's marginal buyers hold small, long-duration allocations governed by rebalancing rules.
The next drawdown finds that the buyer is less likely to exit and more likely to add. The preference for registered vehicles across both advisor and institutional surveys, the modest contraction in ETF-held BTC during a severe drawdown, and the speed of April's flow recovery all point in the same direction.
Citi's 12-month bull scenario for Bitcoin targets $165,000, anchored in sustained institutional demand and a constructive US regulatory backdrop.
The bear case locates the limit of that argument in conditions that the recent drawdown never reached. ETF holders may prove disciplined only up to a threshold, as stop-losses trigger, margin calls hit model portfolios, and allocation bands force reductions.
In that scenario, the same rules that produced restraint on the way down accelerate selling all at once. Citi's adverse 12-month scenario puts Bitcoin at $58,000, tying the lower end explicitly to stalled US regulatory progress, draining a primary ETF-demand catalyst.
The bear case also runs through redistribution. A more disciplined ETF buyer base may simply push Bitcoin's volatility onto a different set of actors, including leveraged traders, perpetual futures markets, miners, and corporate treasury holders, who operate without rebalancing guardrails.
Recent ETF resilience, on this reading, reflects a benign macro window.
| Scenario | What happens to ETF holders | What happens to other holders | Market implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bull case | Hold steady, rebalance, possibly add | More selling comes from leveraged traders, miners, or legacy holders | Ownership mix is shifting structurally; drawdowns become more cushioned |
| Base case | Moderate outflows, but no stampede | Mixed selling pressure across crypto-native cohorts | ETFs soften volatility at the margin but do not rewrite market behavior |
| Bear case | Allocation bands, stop-losses, or macro stress trigger heavier ETF selling | Broader risk-off selling spreads across all cohorts | ETF resilience proves conditional, not structural |
| Key metric to watch | ETF-held BTC and net flows in the next 20%–30% selloff | Relative selling intensity outside ETFs | Best real-world test of Balchunas’s thesis |
The next 20%-30% drawdown is the empirical test of whether ETF-held BTC contracts sharply or flows stabilize quickly, as they did in April. A repeat of the recent pattern would move Balchunas's interpretation closer to a documented market fact.
A wholesale ETF exit under sufficient macro stress would confirm the composition held only as long as conditions allowed.
The post Surprisingly Bitcoin’s paper hands are not ETF buyers as 38% plunge reveals appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Federal prosecutors have charged Gannon Ken Van Dyke, an active-duty U.S. Army soldier who the indictment says has served as a U.S. Army Special Forces master sergeant, with allegedly using classified information about a military operation to make more than $400,000 in prediction-market profits.
After months of online discourse around suspected insider trading on Polymarket and Kalshi, the case is a direct test for crypto prediction markets. Prosecutors allege that Van Dyke had access to nonpublic details of Operation Absolute Resolve, the U.S. operation to capture Nicolas Maduro and Cilia Flores, and used that knowledge to trade event contracts before the public announcement.
The immediate problem is whether markets built to price public expectations can remain credible when the best-informed potential trader is a person involved in the event itself.
In that setting, the price may reflect information, but the information may come from a source the market cannot fairly absorb.
Polymarket said in a reported statement that it identified a user trading on classified government information, referred the matter to the Justice Department, and cooperated with investigators.
That distinction separates Polymarket from the alleged trader while still putting the platform's surveillance model at the center of the case.
The political overhang sharpened after Trump was asked about suspected insider trading in prediction markets tied to war and replied that “the whole world, unfortunately, has become somewhat of a casino.”
He also said he was “not happy” with prediction markets and did not like them conceptually, which stops short of endorsing the trades but does little to quiet the market’s legitimacy problem.
The suspicion driving online debate is that some successful geopolitical trades may reflect access to restricted government timing rather than better forecasting.
The Washington Post previously reported that knowledge of the Maduro operation was limited to a close circle of national security officials, and quoted Sen. Chris Murphy arguing that such bets appeared likely to come from the White House or from people with inside knowledge, while the White House denied any staff wrongdoing.
That remains inference, not evidence, tying any Trump adviser or official to the trades.
The government's theory is narrow. The alleged advantage was having advanced knowledge of operational details.
The DOJ announcement says Van Dyke was charged with unlawful use of confidential government information for personal gain, theft of nonpublic government information, commodities fraud, wire fraud, and an unlawful monetary transaction.
The agency's release also states that the indictment is only an allegation, a caveat that should shape every reading of the case until a court ruling is issued.
The indictment alleges that Van Dyke was involved in planning and executing Operation Absolute Resolve from at least Dec. 8, 2025, through at least Jan. 5, 2026.
It also says he signed nondisclosure agreements covering classified or sensitive information connected to U.S. Army Special Operations Command work in the Western Hemisphere.
The trading timeline highlights something traders have been talking about on X for months, not just in this case, but across multiple markets. The indictment alleges that Van Dyke created a Polymarket account on or about Dec. 26, 2025, used a VPN, and bought roughly $33,934 of Yes shares across 13 Maduro- and Venezuela-related transactions between Dec. 27 and Jan. 2.
The CFTC complaint alleges that Van Dyke accumulated more than 436,000 Yes shares in the “Maduro out by January 31, 2026?” contract at an average price of about $0.074, for a cost of about $32,538.
When the contract was resolved, Yes, the complaint says he realized more than $404,000 in profit on that contract.
A low-priced event contract became a near-full-payout instrument after the public learned the outcome. The alleged edge was timing.
The CFTC says the Yes price in the January contract stayed below $0.13 from 10:00 a.m. ET on Dec. 29 through 1:15 a.m. ET on Jan. 3, except for a brief spike to about $0.22 around 10:42 p.m. ET on Jan. 2.
After President Donald Trump's public announcement, the complaint says the price rose from $0.375 at 4:21 a.m. ET to $0.955 at 4:25 a.m. ET.
Put simply, the market repriced almost instantly once the public signal arrived. The allegation is that one trader already had access to the signal.
The DOJ case supplies the criminal theory. The CFTC case supplies the market theory.
That distinction is substantive because prediction markets have often been discussed as a hybrid category, part forecasting tool, part wagering interface, part crypto-native market.
The CFTC complaint treats the relevant contract as a commodity-law instrument, and the agency's press release says this is its first insider-trading case involving event contracts.
It also says the case marks the agency's first use of the so-called Eddie Murphy Rule to bring charges based on the misuse of government information.
The CFTC is telling prediction-market users that event contracts may sit inside its antifraud perimeter when confidential government information is allegedly misappropriated for trading.
| Track | Core theory | What it tests |
|---|---|---|
| DOJ criminal case | Van Dyke allegedly misused classified government information and attempted to conceal proceeds. | Whether existing criminal and commodities-fraud tools can reach prediction-market insider trading. |
| CFTC civil case | The Maduro-related event contract is treated as a swap-like market subject to CFTC antifraud authority. | Whether event contracts can be policed like regulated markets when nonpublic government information affects price. |
| Platform integrity | Polymarket says it identified suspicious trading, referred it to DOJ, and cooperated. | Whether after-the-fact detection is enough for markets that transfer value before enforcement arrives. |
The CFTC had already been moving in this direction before the arrest.
In a March 2026 prediction markets advisory, staff described event contracts as derivatives that can fall within swap or futures-like definitions depending on structure.
The same advisory reminded designated contract markets that they must monitor trading, prevent manipulation, and protect market participants from abusive practices.
The advisory also says misappropriation of confidential information in breach of a duty of trust and confidence can fall under CFTC antifraud rules commonly described as insider trading.
That context suggests the Van Dyke complaint fits a framework the regulator had already started building.
Polymarket's reported response is important because it complicates the simplest version of the critique.
The company account is consistent across AP, ABC's account of the case, and a WIRED report on the Polymarket trades: Polymarket said it identified a user trading on classified government information, referred the matter to DOJ, cooperated with the investigation, and said insider trading has no place on the platform.
That gives Polymarket a defensible first answer. The platform can argue that the system produced a referral rather than silence.
The harder question is what happened before the referral. If the CFTC's allegations are right, the market transferred a large profit after the relevant information advantage had already been converted into positions.
That is the problem for the credibility of prediction markets. Detection after settlement can support enforcement, but market confidence depends on whether bad trades can be deterred, frozen, reversed, or made too risky before the payoff.
Current Polymarket US market-integrity materials describe a multi-layer monitoring program, real-time surveillance, investigations of unusual trading activity, potential sanctions, and referrals to regulators or law enforcement.
A filed Polymarket US rulebook also prohibits participants from trading on confidential information about an event outcome when doing so would breach a duty of trust or confidence.
Those materials show the direction of travel. They should be handled carefully in this case because the alleged trades occurred on Polymarket.com.
The current Polymarket US rulebook should remain in compliance context unless a source links it to the exact trades.
Still, the compliance architecture points to the likely industry answer.
Prediction markets will need restricted-person lists, better real-time anomaly detection, clearer treatment of government and contractor access, stronger settlement-source controls, and documented referral pathways.
The relevant issue has two layers. First, can a platform identify suspicious activity? Second, can the market convince ordinary users that they are trading against open information rather than insiders with advance access?
That timing question turns detection into a design problem. A market can maintain useful surveillance records while still leaving a credibility gap if the disputed trade has already settled.
The practical burden is to move suspicious-pattern review closer to trade entry, price movement, and resolution, especially for contracts tied to events known first by small groups of officials or contractors.
Recent coverage of the CFTC's prediction-market advisory framed the same pressure point before Van Dyke was named.
Event contracts have grown into a market-structure problem because their prices increasingly influence news coverage, political narratives, and investor sentiment. A distorted market can become a distorted signal.
That effect is sharper in crypto-native prediction markets because the product is built around fast settlement, public probabilities, and tradable attention.
Polymarket is a flagship example of blockchain-based event markets, using on-chain infrastructure and stablecoin settlement to turn current events into tradable Yes/No positions.
The Van Dyke case lands directly inside that model. If event markets are merely entertainment, insider-trading enforcement may look like a narrow criminal deterrent.
If event markets are becoming financial and media infrastructure, the standards are higher.
The next version of the industry has to go beyond the claim that markets aggregate information.
It must specify which information can be traded, who is restricted from trading, how suspicious activity is detected, and what happens when the outcome being traded is tied to classified government action, campaign strategy, corporate decisions, sports officiating, or any other small-group event.
There are two defensible takeaways from the case.
The first is favorable to prediction markets: the platform says it identified suspicious trading, referred the matter to DOJ, and the government brought charges. Under that reading, transparency and surveillance worked.
The second reading is more difficult for the industry: the alleged trader reportedly entered the market before public disclosure, the contract repriced after the announcement, and enforcement followed after the alleged profit was already created.
Under that view, the market can find the trail, but the market still has to prove it can protect price formation in real time.
The narrow prosecution centers on Van Dyke. The broader test belongs to prediction markets.
They now have to show that a public odds market can survive contact with private government information without turning every sensitive event contract into a bet against insiders.
The post Trump “not happy” with prediction markets – says world is a “casino” as Special Forces soldier arrested for insider trading on Polymarket appeared first on CryptoSlate.
As tensions in the Middle East reached a boiling point, risk assets—including $Bitcoin and major altcoins—faced a sharp "risk-off" liquidation. However, as diplomatic channels begin to signal a potential de-escalation, savvy investors are looking at the "blood in the streets" as a generational entry point.
Historically, markets overreact to geopolitical shocks. If a resolution is reached in early April, the pent-up liquidity currently sitting in stablecoins is expected to flood back into high-conviction projects that were unfairly hammered during the panic.
Potentially, as April 2026 is shaping up to be a prime recovery month. With many tokens trading at 20-30% discounts from their Q1 highs, the current "oversold" conditions on the RSI (Relative Strength Index) suggest a relief rally is imminent.
$Ethereum remains the backbone of the decentralized economy. During the recent March turbulence, ETH slipped below its psychological support, but the fundamentals remain unshaken.
Investors should monitor the ETH price closely, as its recovery usually leads the broader altcoin market.
For those with a higher risk appetite, $PEPE remains the go-to memecoin for catching rapid bounces. Memecoins often act as high-beta plays on market sentiment; when the market turns green, PEPE tends to move twice as fast as the majors.
$XRP has faced a double-whammy of geopolitical pressure and a temporary "capital flight" toward safer havens. However, its role in cross-border payments, especially in the Middle East, makes it a unique asset to watch as regional stability returns.
$Cardano is currently one of the most oversold "blue-chip" altcoins. While critics point to its slower price action, the network's resilience and growing DeFi TVL (Total Value Locked) suggest it is undervalued.
No "Top 5" list for 2026 is complete without $Solana. Despite the market-wide dip, Solana continues to lead in retail transaction volume and NFT activity.
| Asset | Risk Level | Primary Recovery Target | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ethereum | Low | $3,000 | Institutional ETF Inflows |
| Solana | Medium | $150+ | Network Scalability (Firedancer) |
| XRP | Medium | $1.50 - $2.00 | Cross-border Utility |
| Cardano | Low/Medium | $0.60 | Deep Value Recovery |
| PEPE | High | New 2026 Highs | Retail Hype & Liquidity Rotation |
Ripple’s native token continues to trade within a frustratingly narrow range. As of April 24, 2026, the digital asset is hovering around the $1.43 mark, showing a lack of momentum that has characterized its performance for months.

Despite a massive legal victory in late 2025 and a joint SEC-CFTC classification as a "digital commodity" in March 2026, the expected "moon mission" has yet to materialize. Instead, XRP is currently in a "coiled spring" phase, waiting for a catalyst to break its structural handcuffs.
The primary reason for the stagnant price action is a fundamental tension between institutional adoption and retail exhaustion. While Ripple has successfully launched its RLUSD stablecoin and expanded its cross-chain utility to Cardano and Ethereum via Wanchain, the market is currently "pricing in" these developments slowly.
Furthermore, a significant portion of the YTD decline (-44.78%) reflects a cooling off from the speculative highs of 2025. Investors are now looking for the CLARITY Act markup vote in late April to provide the next major legislative leg up. Without a fresh influx of retail FOMO, the price is largely being sustained by steady, yet quiet, institutional ETF inflows.
Looking at the 1D chart, $XRP is currently squeezed between very clearly defined horizontal boundaries. The price action is oscillating with low volatility, as evidenced by the Relative Strength Index (RSI) sitting at a neutral 54.67.

To confirm a bullish reversal, XRP needs to clear two specific hurdles:
On the flip side, if the market remains bearish or the CLARITY Act faces delays:
For those looking to trade these levels, the current environment favors a "range-bound" strategy rather than a "trend-following" one. Buying near the $1.31 support and taking profits near $1.50 has been the most consistent play for the last 60 days.
The European Union has officially adopted its 20th package of sanctions against Russia. This landmark legislation introduces a total sectoral ban on all Russian crypto asset service providers (CASPs), effectively isolating the Russian digital asset ecosystem from the European market. The move aims to dismantle the shadow financial networks Moscow has used to bypass previous restrictions.
The Council of the EU confirmed on April 23, 2026, that it is moving away from blacklisting individual exchanges to a broader, more aggressive strategy. The new measures prohibit EU operators from providing any services to, or facilitating transactions with, any crypto platform established in Russia or Belarus.
This decision follows the failure of previous targeted sanctions. For instance, after the high-risk exchange Garantex was disrupted in 2025, its operations quickly migrated to a clone platform known as Grinex. By banning the entire sector, the EU aims to end this "whack-a-mole" cycle.
The 20th package includes specific prohibitions on emerging Russian digital currencies:
Yes. As of the adoption of the 20th sanctions package, EU entities are prohibited from engaging with any Russian-based crypto service provider. This includes centralized exchanges, custodial services, and even certain decentralized platforms that are found to be facilitating Russian trade.
The move has sent ripples through the crypto news cycle, as it complicates the landscape for international firms still operating in the region. Analysts suggest that this will drive Russian volume further into unhosted wallets and peer-to-peer (P2P) networks.
The price of Bitcoin remained relatively stable following the news, as the market had largely priced in the continued decoupling of the Russian and Western financial systems.
Tether is back at the center of the crypto market narrative. In just a short span, the company minted another $1 billion USDT while also freezing $344 million worth of tokens following requests tied to U.S. law enforcement. At first glance, these may look like two separate headlines. In reality, together they reveal why Tether remains one of the most powerful forces in crypto.
For traders, this is not just stablecoin news. It is a direct signal about liquidity, regulation, market confidence, and the structure of the current rally. When Tether expands supply, the market starts asking whether fresh capital is preparing to enter risk assets. When Tether freezes funds on such a large scale, the market is reminded that even in crypto, centralized control still matters.
USDT is not just another crypto asset. It is the main liquidity rail for a huge part of the market. With a market cap close to $189 billion and 24 hour volume even exceeding that of Bitcoin, Tether remains one of the most used assets in crypto trading.
That is why a fresh $1 billion mint matters. Historically, large USDT issuances often trigger speculation that fresh buying power is entering the system. Traders immediately start asking whether Bitcoin and major altcoins could benefit from stronger liquidity conditions in the next leg of the market.
This does not always mean that prices will instantly rise. Minting can reflect inventory preparation, exchange demand, or broader market positioning rather than immediate spot buying. Still, when crypto is searching for direction, large USDT creation tends to attract attention because it can become fuel for the next move.
The second part of the story is just as important. Tether reportedly froze $344 million in USDT following requests by U.S. law enforcement. That headline reinforces a reality many traders already know but often ignore during bullish phases: stablecoins may operate inside crypto markets, but the largest ones are still deeply tied to compliance and centralized decision making.
This matters for two reasons.
First, it shows that Tether is willing and able to act quickly when authorities intervene. That may reassure regulators and institutions who want to see stronger compliance standards in digital assets.
Second, it reminds retail traders that stablecoins such as USDT are not censorship resistant in the same way as Bitcoin. Funds can be restricted, wallets can be targeted, and central issuers still have enormous control over the assets that many traders treat like cash.
That combination creates a strange but powerful market dynamic. Tether helps power crypto trading, but it also represents one of the clearest examples of centralized authority inside the market.
The market impact of this story comes from the combination of liquidity expansion and regulatory enforcement at the same time.
On one side, a $1 billion mint can be interpreted as potential fuel for market activity. On the other side, a $344 million freeze reinforces that capital in crypto is increasingly moving within a regulated and monitored framework.
That balance may shape the next phase of price action in a few ways:
In other words, this is not just a Tether story. It is a market structure story.
Current crypto conditions make this even more important. Bitcoin is holding at relatively elevated levels, but several major altcoins are under pressure. Ethereum, Solana, Cardano, and Chainlink are all showing weakness on the latest performance snapshot, while USDT remains stable and dominant.
That tells us something important about the current phase of the market. Traders are still active, but capital is not flowing with full conviction across all assets. It is concentrated, selective, and cautious.
In that kind of environment, stablecoin signals matter more than usual. A large mint can hint at incoming deployment. A large freeze can reinforce the idea that the market is becoming more controlled, more institutional, and less forgiving.
The key question now is whether this fresh USDT activity becomes a catalyst or simply another sign of defensive positioning.
The bullish case is straightforward. If the newly minted USDT starts rotating into Bitcoin and then into large cap altcoins, traders could interpret it as confirmation that the market still has room to push higher. In that scenario, Tether’s mint becomes part of a broader liquidity expansion story.
The cautious case is also valid. If the mint mainly serves as operational inventory while the freeze story dominates the narrative, the market may focus more on control, compliance, and risk than on fresh upside potential. That would support a more selective environment where only the strongest assets attract flows.
Either way, Tether is once again showing that stablecoins are not passive infrastructure. They are active drivers of sentiment and liquidity.

There are three things worth monitoring next.
First, watch whether Bitcoin reacts positively in the sessions following the USDT mint. If BTC starts absorbing liquidity and breaking higher, traders will likely treat the mint as a meaningful signal.
Second, monitor whether Ethereum and major altcoins begin to recover with stronger volume. That would suggest stablecoin liquidity is spreading beyond Bitcoin rather than staying defensive.
Third, keep an eye on further regulatory or compliance related headlines involving Tether or other stablecoin issuers. The more that enforcement and liquidity expansion appear together, the more the market may shift toward a new phase where centralized stablecoin providers become even more important than before.
Tether has always been influential, but this latest combination of aggressive minting and large scale freezing is a reminder of just how much power USDT still holds over the crypto market.
While the broader cryptocurrency market has shown signs of renewed vigor, Ethereum (ETH) is currently navigating a period of consolidation. As of April 23, 2026, the Ethereum price is hovering just above the critical $2,300 mark. Despite a slower start compared to its peer, Bitcoin, technical indicators suggest that Ethereum is priming itself for a move toward the $2,500 psychological resistance level.

Over the past week, we have observed a notable divergence in performance between the two largest digital assets. Bitcoin has surged by approximately 5%, capturing the lion's share of market capital inflow. In contrast, Ethereum has remained relatively stagnant, posting a modest 0.3% gain.
This lag in Ethereum's performance is often viewed by traders as a "coiling" phase. Historically, when BTC leads a rally, ETH frequently follows with a delayed but more volatile "catch-up" move. For Ethereum to reach the $2,500 target from its current level of approximately $2,327, it would require a price increase of roughly 7.4%. Given the current market sentiment, this move could materialize quickly if liquidity rotates from Bitcoin back into the Altcoin ecosystem.
The daily chart for ETH/USD reveals several key technical structures that define the current price action.

The chart highlights a clear horizontal support zone at $1,800, which served as a major floor earlier this year (indicated by the green circle in February). Currently, Ethereum is trading within a consolidation range between the $2,300 support and the $2,400 resistance (highlighted by the yellow circle).
The RSI (14) is currently positioned at 59.21. This value sits comfortably in the "bullish-neutral" zone. It suggests that while there is upward momentum, the asset is not yet overbought (typically above 70). This leaves significant "room to run" for the price to escalate toward $2,500 without hitting immediate exhaustion.
The current 0.3% weekly growth compared to Bitcoin's 5% can be attributed to a rise in Bitcoin dominance. Investors often flock to the safety of BTC during the initial stages of a market recovery. However, as Ethereum ecosystem activity remains high—driven by Layer 2 scaling and staking yields—the fundamental value proposition remains strong.

The immediate goal for Ethereum bulls is to flip the $2,400 level from resistance into support. If the correlation between BTC and ETH tightens, the 7.4% move required to hit $2,500 could be achieved within the next 7 to 10 days. Traders should keep a close eye on trading volume; a breakout accompanied by high volume would validate the move toward the $2,600 medium-term resistance.
Conversely, if the crypto news cycle turns bearish, a slip below $2,300 might see ETH consolidate further toward the $2,200 psychological level.
Brazil’s Finance Ministry cited investor protection concerns and rising gambling addiction as it blocked platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi.
Tennessee has become the second U.S. state to outlaw Bitcoin and crypto ATMs, making it a criminal offense to own or operate the machines.
The Justice Department moved to intervene in xAI’s lawsuit challenging Colorado’s algorithmic discrimination law.
A man created an AI-generated image of escaped wolf Neukgu "for fun." It fooled authorities, triggered emergency alerts, and derailed a nine-day search operation.
Claude maker Anthropic reported that its latest AI models scored 95-96% on political neutrality tests ahead of the 2026 midterms.
On-chain data reveals a $4 million XRP short on Hyperliquid nears total liquidation at $1.69, despite profits in Bitcoin and Ethereum.
Shiba Inu's on-chain dynamic is not in favor of bulls.
The cryptocurrency market is showing early signs of a developing bullish phase, with emerging higher lows and strengthening structure hinting at the formation of a clearer uptrend.
Actor Ben McKenzie went on national TV to blast Bitcoin, warning investors that "everyone is lying to you for money."
Overall market momentum feels significantly stronger than a month ago, according to Novogratz.
Crypto-related kidnappings in France have reached alarming levels, prompting decisive action from prosecutors. On April 24, France’s national anti-organized crime prosecutor announced 88 individuals have been formally charged.
These charges span 12 ongoing cases and include more than 10 minors among the accused. Seventy-five of those charged remain in pretrial detention.
Since 2023, authorities have recorded 135 such incidents nationwide, with the numbers rising sharply each year.
The data alone shows how rapidly this problem has grown in France. Authorities recorded 18 crypto-related kidnapping incidents throughout 2024.
That number surged to 67 over the course of 2025. So far in 2026, 47 new cases have already been logged, and the year is far from over. Prosecutors have described the trajectory as unprecedented in scope.
Vanessa Perrée, chief prosecutor at the National Anti-Organized Crime Prosecutor’s Office (Pnaco), pointed to a “significant volume of defendants” across the active cases.
She further described the pattern as “rapidly evolving criminal phenomena,” noting their direct connection to the use of crypto assets.
These cases involve abduction or unlawful detention, often accompanied by physical violence against victims. Victims are then forced to transfer cryptocurrency assets or surrender digital securities as ransom.
Perrée also flagged “the identification of people involved in several cases on a recurring basis, thus revealing the existence of structured networks.”
This pattern strongly points to organized criminal groups operating across multiple regions of France. Law enforcement has been actively cross-referencing cases to confirm these broader connections. The close coordination between agencies has proven central to advancing the investigations.
In one recent development, three men aged between 25 and 30 were arrested in connection with a November 2025 kidnapping case. The incident took place in Challes-les-Eaux, in the Savoie region.
The Chambéry gendarmerie and the National Judicial Police Unit carried out the arrests. All three suspects were subsequently charged and placed in pretrial detention.
Two of those three suspects also face charges connected to a separate December 2025 case. That incident occurred in Dompierre-sur-Mer, where a couple was abducted by three hooded individuals. The attackers forced the victims to transfer approximately 8 million euros in cryptocurrency before fleeing.
A third suspect in the Dompierre-sur-Mer case was arrested separately by the Poitiers research section. He was also charged and placed in pretrial detention alongside the others. His lawyer, Baptiste Bellet, told AFP directly: “My client contests all the facts of which he is accused.”
The wave of crypto-related kidnappings entered public consciousness after a January 2025 incident. Ledger co-founder David Balland and his partner were kidnapped in a targeted attack.
His partner was eventually released, and Balland was later found tied up inside a vehicle. The case spread widely across X, with voices in the crypto community urging stronger personal security practices.
Faced with “the magnitude of the facts” and their rapid acceleration since 2025, Perrée credited investigative units for carrying out “an in-depth work of judicial rapprochement” across cases nationwide.
She acknowledged the central office for fighting organized crime and the gendarmerie’s UNPJ in particular. The Pnaco has since committed to strengthening its criminal response throughout the entire country.
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A massive financial scandal has emerged around Mars FX, a hedge fund that allegedly collected nearly $600 million from investors before the money disappeared.
The fund, operated under the Novus umbrella and led by Wharton graduate David Choi, posted suspiciously perfect returns for years.
Regulators across multiple countries are now investigating, while auditor Deloitte faces serious legal scrutiny for signing off on financials without independent asset verification.
Mars FX reported 19% annual returns with zero losing months across its entire operating history. No legitimate investment fund has ever sustained a record like that through natural market conditions. Markets fluctuate by nature, and every real fund absorbs losses at some point along the way.
Despite that glaring anomaly, investors continued wiring money into the fund. By February 2024, the US fund alone had collected $331 million from clients. Total exposure across all associated funds reached close to $600 million in combined investor capital.
Novus told investors their money would flow to an unnamed technology partner based in the British Virgin Islands.
The firm labeled this arrangement as “proprietary and sensitive,” refusing to disclose the partner’s identity to investors. Hundreds of millions changed hands without investors knowing where their funds were actually going.
That unnamed partner was later identified as TRFX. According to reports, TRFX claims its trading platform had stopped operating in 2022—two full years before Mars FX was still actively raising capital from new investors.
Bull Theory captured the scale of the problem on X, writing, “A fund that never loses money is not a good fund. It is a fund hiding something.” That observation now looks more accurate than many investors would have hoped when they first wired their money in.
Deloitte, one of the four largest audit firms globally, issued clean opinions on Mars FX financials year after year. A lawsuit filed against the firm alleges it never independently verified that the reported assets actually existed.
The 2024 offering documents showed TRFX was neither a licensed broker nor a regulated custodian, yet Deloitte noted no significant concerns in its audit the same year.
The SEC, CFTC, UK Financial Conduct Authority, and British Virgin Islands regulators are all now involved in active investigations.
The FBI and a Manhattan grand jury have also opened proceedings into the matter. No charges have been filed, and the money remains entirely unaccounted for.
Arizona small business owner CarolAnn Tutera, 70, lost money in the earlier GPB Capital fraud and was defrauded again through Mars FX.
She said plainly: “I’m really fed up with finance guys on Wall Street.” Her frustration reflects a system that failed her twice.
Meanwhile, US regulators this week formally proposed eliminating filing requirements for smaller hedge funds and cutting enforcement staff at agencies responsible for catching exactly this kind of fraud.
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XRP is currently hovering around $1.43 as multiple data streams indicate intensifying accumulation among major holders. Despite shedding more than 20% of its value year-to-date in 2025, both blockchain metrics and market analysts signal a potential trend reversal.

Large-scale transactions on Binance represented 94.4% of total withdrawals on April 24, based on analysis from CryptoQuant’s Amr Taha. Retail participation fell to a mere 5.5% during the same timeframe.
The XRP Ledger registered 34.94 million XRP tokens moving off exchanges that day. Data from Santiment positioned this as the sixth-highest single-day withdrawal volume recorded in 2025.
Historical patterns suggest such withdrawal surges often precede upward price movements. Following a comparable whale activity spike in October of the previous year, XRP experienced a remarkable 525% rally. Another notable increase in June 2025 led to a subsequent 71% price appreciation.
The spot cumulative volume delta for XRP—which tracks genuine buying pressure—climbed from $1.08 billion to $1.39 billion, representing a $310 million increase over recent weeks. Simultaneously, Binance perpetual futures CVD declined to -$392 million, indicating futures market participants maintain net short positions.

XRP is currently positioned above its 200-day exponential moving average at $1.39. The 50-day EMA rests at $1.42, while the 20-day EMA stands at $1.43, establishing multiple nearby support layers.
The Relative Strength Index reads 53%, indicating neither overbought nor oversold conditions. The MACD indicator demonstrates diminishing downward momentum, pointing to potential trend stabilization.
Fibonacci-based resistance targets are identified at $1.45 and $1.49. Support structure remains intact within the $1.42 to $1.39 corridor.
Long position liquidations have dominated since April 18, effectively reducing market leverage and tempering excessive bullish speculation. This deleveraging has contributed to improved funding rate conditions.
Crypto analyst Ali Martinez shared technical analysis on April 24 highlighting a symmetrical triangle formation on XRP’s hourly timeframe. His projection suggests a potential 10% advance from present levels, targeting approximately $1.58 upon breakout confirmation.
Farmers & Merchants Investments, a banking institution managing $3.6 billion in assets under management, reported holdings in the Bitwise XRP ETF through recent SEC documentation. The institution’s position comprises 2,374 shares with an approximate valuation of $35,681.

The same firm maintains positions in BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF product. Goldman Sachs currently leads institutional XRP ETF ownership with holdings exceeding $152 million.
Spot XRP exchange-traded funds registered net inflows totaling $3.89 million on Thursday, pushing aggregate inflows to $1.28 billion. Combined assets under management across all XRP ETF vehicles have reached $1.08 billion, per SoSoValue tracking.
XRP achieved its all-time peak of $3.65 on July 18, 2025. Current trading stands at $1.44, with today’s price range spanning $1.41 to $1.44.
The post XRP (XRP) Price Analysis: Whales Drive 94% of Exchange Outflows Amid Institutional Accumulation appeared first on Blockonomi.
Ethereum staking activity has surged, with Grayscale Investments and Bitmine collectively committing close to $500 million within 24 hours.
On-chain data from Arkham Intelligence confirmed both transactions. Grayscale deposited 102,400 ETH worth roughly $237 million through Coinbase Prime.
Bitmine followed with an additional 112,040 ETH valued at about $259.6 million. Both firms now rank among the most active institutional Ethereum stakers globally. This activity reflects growing institutional confidence in ETH’s staking infrastructure and long-term utility.
Grayscale executed its latest staking deposit through 32 separate transactions. Funds moved from its Ethereum Trust wallet directly to Coinbase Prime.
The asset manager first activated Ethereum staking for its products in October 2025. Since then, it has accumulated nearly $38 million in net staking rewards.
The firm operates two staking-focused Ethereum products in the US market. These are the Grayscale Ethereum Staking ETF (ETHE) and the Mini ETF (ETH).
Combined assets under management for both products reached $4 billion as of April 24. Steady inflows have driven that growth since staking capabilities launched.
Grayscale CEO Peter Mintzberg shared performance figures for the first quarter of 2026. He noted that the Mini ETF ranked first among all US ETP providers.
The fund pulled in $337 million in net inflows during that period alone. Mintzberg also pointed to Ethereum’s record-breaking 200 million-plus on-chain transactions for Q1.
In a public post, Mintzberg wrote that Ethereum recorded its busiest quarter ever on-chain. He cited $180 billion in stablecoin activity and the expansion of programmable finance infrastructure.
Real usage is growing, and staking aligns with that fundamental investment thesis. Grayscale views staking as a core pillar of its Ethereum product strategy.
Bitmine Immersion Technologies now holds the top position among corporate Ethereum stakers. The firm disclosed this week that its staked ETH had reached 3.3 million units.
That amount represented 67% of its total Ethereum holdings at the time. No other corporate entity currently matches Bitmine’s scale of ETH staking.
The firm expanded its staked position further on Friday. Lookonchain reported that Bitmine staked an additional 112,040 ETH on that day.
After the deposit, total staked ETH climbed to 3.7 million units. That now equals approximately 74% of Bitmine’s overall ETH holdings.
The on-chain tracker noted that Bitmine’s cumulative staked ETH is worth $8.58 billion. Tom Lee’s firm has built what amounts to a yield-driven ETH treasury strategy.
Each additional stake reinforces its position as a dominant institutional holder. The firm’s approach is drawing attention from other corporate entities watching the ETH markets.
Across the broader Ethereum network, roughly 39 million ETH is currently locked in staking contracts. That is close to one-third of all Ethereum in existence.
Removing this supply from the open market reduces available trading liquidity. Additional institutional staking further tightens the available ETH supply pool over time.
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The United States government seized $344 million worth of USDT stablecoin this week, claiming the digital assets are connected to Iranian state entities. This action represents another escalation in Washington’s financial offensive designed to pressure Iran into diplomatic concessions.
On Friday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent revealed the sanctions. The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) targeted several cryptocurrency wallets believed to have direct connections to Tehran’s government.
“We will follow the money that Tehran is desperately attempting to move outside of the country and target all financial lifelines tied to the regime,” Bessent stated. He characterized this initiative as “Economic Fury.”
Tether responded on Thursday by freezing two wallet addresses operating on the TRON blockchain. The combined holdings in these addresses totaled $344 million in USDT. The stablecoin company confirmed its cooperation with U.S. government directives.
According to a government official speaking with CoinDesk, the targeted wallets demonstrated unmistakable connections to Iranian state operations. Evidence included transfers involving Iranian cryptocurrency exchanges and routing patterns linked to Iran’s central banking system.
U.S. intelligence agencies report that Iran has significantly expanded its use of digital currencies to bypass economic restrictions. The nation has employed sophisticated transaction methods to obscure its involvement in international financial transfers.
Iran’s central banking authorities have attempted to conceal their operations by channeling resources through cryptocurrency networks rather than conventional financial institutions. Treasury officials confirmed they’re collaborating with blockchain analysis companies and digital asset platforms to monitor these activities.
In a related development, Iran allegedly selected Bitcoin rather than stablecoins for collecting tolls at the strategically important Strait of Hormuz. The rationale: Bitcoin presents greater challenges for U.S. seizure compared to USDT. Washington now controls nearly $2 billion in frozen Iranian assets across various channels.
Friday also saw sanctions imposed on Hengli Petrochemical, a Chinese refining operation. Officials allege the company serves as a critical component in Iran’s petroleum industry.
Another session of U.S.-Iran diplomatic discussions could occur within days. President Trump plans to dispatch envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner to Pakistan for meetings with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi.
Vice President JD Vance, who participated in initial negotiations, won’t be present for this round. Iran’s Parliament Speaker, who represented Tehran previously, will also be absent from upcoming talks.
Tehran has insisted on the release of frozen assets as a prerequisite for any agreement. Trump has stated that the American naval blockade at the Strait of Hormuz costs Iran approximately $500 million daily.
Bitcoin traded around $77,800 on Thursday, slightly below its intraday peak of $78,400. The cryptocurrency has gained more than 3% over the past week.
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[PRESS RELEASE – Miami, United States, April 25th, 2026]
Potion Alpha, one of the largest trading communities in crypto with over 110,000 members, has announced a full-scale relaunch under new leadership and investment led by Stratosphere, with additional investment from Mac (@MacnBTC) and other stakeholders.
At its peak, Potion Alpha operated one of the most commercially successful trading communities in the market, driven by a highly active and deeply engaged member base. Under this new structure, a consortium led by Stratosphere, alongside MacnBTC and strategic investors, has acquired a 70% controlling stake in Potion Alpha, forming the majority ownership group as the company enters its next phase. Gabriele Leyva remains the founder of Potion Alpha and will continue to lead the community.
Originally known for its dominance in memecoin trading, Potion Alpha is now expanding beyond its roots into a broader multi-asset platform, covering perpetual futures, equities, prediction markets, commodities and macro analysis.
“The market changed. Traders are no longer sitting in one lane,” said Orangie, founder of Potion Alpha. “We built something special with memecoins. Now we are taking that same energy and applying it to everything finance.”
Potion Alpha operates through an active Discord community with regular AMAs and live market discussions where members engage directly with analysts and contributors.
To mark the expansion, the team will host a live AMA on April 27 where Orangie and the team will outline the next phase, introduce new contributors and present the full roadmap while taking questions.
Potion Alpha will also be present at Consensus Miami 2026 on May 4 and 5, where the team will meet partners and engage with the broader crypto community.
Backed by Stratosphere and new partners, the expansion includes upgrades across infrastructure, content and talent.
These changes reflect a more structured and multi-asset approach to trading, designed to improve how members access and act on opportunities across different markets.
Key changes include:
Potion Alpha remains free to join and operates one of the largest & most active trading communities, now covering a broader range of asset classes. The Discord server offers free channels, community discussion and select alpha calls at no cost. Elite membership provides access to gated channels, trading calls and tools, giving retail traders structured analytics and direct perspectives across multiple areas of the market.
Potion Alpha is a trading community founded by Orangie with over 110,000 members, operating across an active Discord and Telegram community. Initially built around memecoin trading during the 2024 cycle, it has since evolved to cover a wide range of markets and trading approaches. Potion Alpha now operates under a new ownership structure led by Stratosphere, alongside strategic investors and partners.
Community: https://discord.gg/j47XnYG4xs
Stratosphere is an ecosystem partner and elite digital asset consultancy working with founders to create sustainable and repeatable growth. The firm focuses on brand development and market direction while connecting teams to a strong network of founders, operators and partners.
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Solana’s native token has been trading in a tight range recently and remains suppressed below $100 due to ongoing bearish sentiment and macro headwinds.
According to one popular analyst, though, this might be the calm before the storm, predicting an explosive move in the short term.
As of this writing, SOL is worth around $86 (per CoinMarketCap’s data), after forming a local bottom at roughly $77 in February and a local top at $94 a month later. One person who touched on the asset’s performance is Ali Martinez, describing anything within that range as a “no trade” zone.
“Chasing candles inside this consolidation often leads to being chopped up,” he added.
Moreover, the analyst claimed that SOL’s Bollinger Bands have squeezed on the 3-day chart. The indicator, developed by John Bollinger, uses a moving average with two channels above and below it. These bands widen when the market gets volatile and tighten when things calm down.
Extreme squeeze is usually seen as a precursor of a major move, which can happen at any time. It is important to note that the direction remains unclear, meaning that a sudden crash is also in the cards.
“This high-timeframe squeeze could act like a coiled spring. The longer the price stays in here, the more energy it builds for the eventual breakout,” Martinez concluded.
Earlier this week, Bitcoin’s Bollinger Bands squeezed as never before on a monthly scale. That said, it will be interesting to follow whether SOL and BTC will break out in tandem in the near future.
Over the past few weeks, a noticeable amount of SOL has flowed from self-custody to centralized crypto exchanges. This development is typically considered a pre-sale step and could serve as a warning for impending correction.

At the same time, Solana’s Relative Strength Index (RSI) remains quite close to the bullish zone of 30 on a weekly scale. The technical analysis tool measures the speed and magnitude of recent price changes to give traders a potential idea about reversal points. It runs from 0 to 100, where readings below 30 signal the asset is oversold and due for a resurgence, while anything above 70 are interpreted as bearish territory.

The post Solana (SOL) Sits at a ‘No Trade’ Zone as a Huge Move Looks Imminent: Analyst appeared first on CryptoPotato.
A report by on-chain analyst James Check is challenging claims that quantum attacks on Bitcoin (BTC) could trigger a catastrophic market collapse.
According to the analysis, even in a worst-case scenario where Satoshi-era coins are hacked and sold, the impact would resemble typical market cycles rather than an existential crisis.
The debate about what could happen to Bitcoin if quantum computers become a reality has grown following research published in March by Google, which outlined how such advanced systems could break cryptographic keys within minutes under certain conditions.
The number that keeps recurring in these discussions is 6.9 million BTC with exposed public keys, and Check’s argument is that treating this as a single, unified threat misrepresents the actual risk.
He splits the exposure into three groups. Around 214,000 BTC sits in Taproot addresses, a newer protocol whose owners are almost certainly alive and capable of moving funds if a post-quantum solution appears. A lot of it is tied up in inscriptions, meaning a quantum attacker would sometimes be cracking cryptography to steal a digital image and a few thousand satoshis.
The bigger pool, roughly 4.996 million BTC, sits in re-used addresses. Most of this belongs to exchanges and custodians.
“Exchanges and custodians have a duty to protect clients’ funds,” Check wrote, and he is confident that institutions like Binance and Coinbase are already working on solutions.
He wants data firms with comprehensive entity labels to do a proper breakdown, expecting the genuinely high-risk portion to shrink dramatically once you strip out active institutions and living users.
What remains, and what Check considers the only credible target, is the 1.716 million BTC in Satoshi-era Pay-to-Public-Key (P2PK) addresses, assumed by most to be permanently lost coins from Bitcoin’s earliest blocks.
Check took the worst case at face value and asked whether Bitcoin’s market could absorb it. His answer, backed by several different metrics, is essentially yes, and faster than most people assume.
His “revived supply” data, which tracks coins that have been dormant for months or more re-entering circulation, shows the market routinely absorbs 10,000 to 30,000 BTC per day during bull runs. As such, selling every P2PK coin would be the equivalent of 60 to 90 days of that.
“There’s no doubt that an additional 1.716M BTC market sold will have an appreciable and depressing force on the price,” Check stated while flatly rejecting the claim that it would be fatal.
He also backed the so-called “hourglass” proposal from BIP-360 discussions, capping P2PK transactions at one per block. With around 38,000 P2PK outputs, that would exhaust them in about 264 days, which would be about the same window everyone else would need to migrate under a post-quantum upgrade.
Check ended with a question that was less technical than philosophical. He asked that, given Bitcoin works best if it is widely held, would a situation where Satoshi’s coins end up distributed to buyers instead of being frozen forever really be the disaster people are treating it as?
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Ripple’s cross-border token has slightly retraced over the past week, yet certain indicators suggest that it might be transitioning to a bullish trend.
Ethereum (ETH) failed to reach $2,500, and analysts are now divided on its short-term performance. Dogecoin (DOGE) remains the biggest meme coin by market capitalization, with some crypto commentators expecting a price explosion into undiscovered territory in the near future.
The asset’s price has been hovering between $1.40 and $1.50 over the last seven days, currently worth approximately $1.42 (per CoinMarketCap’s data). While this represents a minor 1% decline on a weekly basis, the popular analyst Ali Martinez outlined three factors suggesting that XRP’s structural shift could move from bearish to bullish.
First, he claimed that the SuperTrend indicator has flashed a buy signal for the first time since January. Second, Martinez paid attention to recent whale activity, noting that large investors purchased 300 million XRP last week alone. Such accumulations signal strong conviction from these market participants and could prompt smaller players to follow their lead.
Last but not least, the analyst argued that the amount of XRP held on crypto exchanges continues to decline – a trend often viewed as bullish because it reduces immediate selling pressure.
Martinez made an important disclaimer, stating that the breakout will be validated if the price closes above $1.55 on a daily scale. “The bullish outlook remains intact as long as XRP maintains the $1.30 support zone,” he concluded.
The second-largest cryptocurrency surged to almost $2,500 in mid-April, but has since retraced to its current $2,300. The analyst CRYPTOWZRD claimed that breaking above the $2,380 resistance and holding there could open the door to a renewed uptrend, while CryptoTony predicted:
“A reclaim of $2360 and we can talk a leg up and a safer long entry, but not for now.”
Some industry participants made rather ridiculous forecasts, and it is no surprise that Bitmine’s Tom Lee is among them. He recently envisioned a parabolic ascent to the staggering $250,000. One should keep in mind that Bitmine has been aggressively buying ETH lately and now controls over 4% of the asset’s circulating supply.
The OG meme coin has slipped below $0.10, but it remains the 10th-largest cryptocurrency with a market capitalization of around $15 billion. The analyst, using the X moniker Don, recently opined that DOGE has been trading above a certain support zone since 2021, setting the next critical resistance at $0.40. According to him, such a rise could set the stage for a jump to an all-time high of $1.
Other analysts who chipped in lately include Mikybull Crypto and Cryptollica. The former sees Dogecoin “so primed for a big move,” while the latter envisioned a possible explosion to $1.60.
Similar to XRP, DOGE has also attracted the whales who recently scooped up 330 million coins in a few days. As mentioned above, this is a bullish factor that may be a precursor of an incoming rally.
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Highly popular companies like Tesla continue to attract the kind of attention that active cryptocurrency traders understand all so well. Similar to other high-profile technology names such as Meta Platforms and NVIDIA, Tesla is also very liquid, a widely-followed and oftentimes reactive market which sees a lot of volatility during times of earnings reports, sentiment changes, macro developments, as well as changes in the market’s view on growth.
This exact combination makes it one of the best examples of an innovation-first stock that can appeal to traders who are used to headline-driven and fast-moving markets.

Traders who’ve dealt with crypto are undoubtedly used to markets where the price action tends to be shaped by several factors taken at once.
A token can move on product news, shifts in sentiment, macro conditions, investor positioning, and broader risk appetite. That’s why stocks like Tesla, Meta Platforms, and NVIDIA tend to trade in a similar way. Delivery figures, earnings, AI expectations, policy headlines, competition and wider equity-market sentiment can all affect the stock over short periods.
All of this makes it a lot easier for crypto-native traders to read the price action than the slower and less reactive parts of the equity market. Tesla comes into its very own here because it also reflects a type of market behavior that a lot of cryptocurrency traders already recognize.
High-tech and innovation-led firms like NVIDIA, Palantir, Meta, and more continue to play a very critical role in the way markets price future growth. Electric vehicles, automation, robotics, artificial intelligence, and energy transition remain a key theme in global markets.
Tesla sits with several of those themes at once. This is exactly why it remains so visible to traders, or at least one reason
For active traders, they are drawn to markets that attract sustained attention, which tend to offer more volume, clearer reactions to news and more frequent trading opportunities. Tesla remains part of that group.
Most of it usually comes down to current market conditions. There are times when crypto offers strong directional moves and clear momentum. There are other times when the market becomes choppy or range-bound. During those phases, many traders begin looking for other instruments that better fit their style.
Stocks like Tesla can become part of that wider watchlist because they combine liquidity, strong public attention, and fast reactions to market narratives.
Those traders who are already comfortable with volatility and event-driven price action can easily view these as a natural extension of their already existing approach.
Multi-market access matters when conditions change
The broader access helps traders stay selective. It’s important to understand that trades may feel pushed if the only available market is crypto. Access to additional avenues doesn’t remove risk – that’s for sure, but it can improve choice. It can allow traders to focus on the instruments showing the clearest price action or the strongest response to current market themes.
That is one reason convergence between crypto and traditional markets has become more relevant. It reflects how traders actually behave when they want to follow opportunity across different conditions.
This is where a broker like PrimeXBT becomes particularly relevant. By bringing multiple asset classes into a single environment, it removes the need for separate workflows across different markets. This allows traders to monitor a range of instruments without switching platforms each time they shift focus.
With PXTrader 2.0, its newest platform, PrimeXBT gives traders access to 350+ instruments, including crypto, indices, commodities, forex, and major stocks from one account. It supports account currencies including USD, USDT, USDC, BTC, and ETH, allowing traders to keep crypto as part of their trading capital while accessing a wider range of markets.
This includes widely traded stock CFDs such as Tesla, NVIDIA, Meta Platforms and Palantir Technologies, giving traders direct exposure to innovation-led themes alongside crypto positions.
PXTrader 2.0 also integrates TradingView-powered charts with 100+ indicators and advanced drawing tools, alongside features such as one-click trading, hedge and netting modes, and competitive spreads across key markets. This allows traders to apply the same analytical approach and execution style across both crypto and stocks, without adapting to a different platform or workflow.
Crypto is still a major part of how many traders approach innovation and risk-on themes. At the same time, those themes also appear in traditional markets through large technology names, indices, and other widely traded instruments.
A stock like Tesla, alongside other innovation-led names such as NVIDIA, Palantir Technologies, and Meta Platforms, gives traders another way to follow innovation-driven market moves while keeping the same basic trading mindset. The underlying logic remains familiar: strong participation, high sensitivity to news, and fast changes in sentiment.
Crypto–TradFi convergence is no longer just about access. It reflects a shift in how traders approach opportunity. While many still keep crypto at the centre of their activity, they increasingly look beyond a single market to follow the same themes across different instruments.
This expands flexibility, allowing traders to respond to opportunities wherever they appear, whether in crypto or stocks, depending on where momentum and liquidity are strongest. A stock like Tesla is one example of how innovation-driven themes can play out across markets under different conditions.
Brokers like PrimeXBT support this shift by combining multi-asset access with an integrated trading environment, enabling traders to move across markets using the advanced tools and competitive conditions.
Start trading with PrimeXBT.
PrimeXBT is a global multi-asset broker and crypto asset service provider trusted by traders in more than 150 countries. The platform bridges traditional and digital markets within one integrated environment, redefining versatility and innovation in online trading. Clients can access Forex, CFDs on indices, commodities, shares, crypto, and Crypto Futures, as well as buy, store and exchange cryptocurrencies directly. This unified experience extends across both the native PXTrader 2.0 platform and MetaTrader 5, supported by advanced risk-management tools and a wide range of funding options in crypto, fiat and local payment methods. Since 2018, PrimeXBT has focused on empowering traders through broad multi-asset access, fair and transparent conditions, professional-grade technology and dedicated human support. By combining expertise, trust and a client-first approach, PrimeXBT sets a benchmark of excellence in the financial industry and provides traders with the tools they need to trade, grow and succeed with confidence.
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