Lookonchain monitoring shows two whale addresses moved 4,154 ETH out of major exchanges in the past 7 hours, worth about $8.87M. 0xEb2a withdrew 2,004 ETH from Binance around 7 hours ago (~$4.24M) and now holds 37,468 ETH (~$80.3M). 0xC551 withdrew 2,150 ETH from Kraken around 3 hours ago (~$4.63M) and currently holds 6,683 ETH (~$14.33M). The transfers suggest accumulation off-exchange. For ETH traders, this type of exchange outflow can tighten near-term sell liquidity, but it does not automatically mean immediate price strength—whales may still redistribute later. Track further CEX inflows/outflows and whether additional ETH is moved to wallets or staking-related addresses.
The Crypto Fear & Greed Index fell to 11, placing sentiment in the “Extreme Fear” (0–25) zone, with a 12-point one-day drop on Alternative.me. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index slide is driven by weaker volatility and volume signals, more negative social/survey readings, and a shift that often coincides with rising Bitcoin dominance.
For traders, this points to a risk-off setup: lower liquidity can amplify swings, and perpetual futures funding may turn more negative as traders pay to hold short exposure. Technically, extreme fear can increase the odds of support tests and liquidation cascades, even if recoveries sometimes follow such lows.
While the article cites historical parallels (extreme fear near ~10 after the May 2021 sell-off), it stresses that Crypto Fear & Greed Index readings are not a timing tool. The market can remain in “Extreme Fear” for weeks if macro uncertainty and regulatory pressure persist.
Bearish
Crypto Fear & Greed IndexExtreme FearBitcoin DominancePerpetual FundingMarket Sentiment
Cointelegraph opinion argues that Bitcoin and Ethereum markets are missing a key transparency tool: transaction cost analysis (TCA). While crypto order books can look liquid, the final execution price often diverges from the expected one due to slippage, fragmented venues, and venue-level frictions.
Arthur Azizov (B2 Ventures) says traders should measure hidden costs—slippage, bid-ask spread, market impact, fees, and order-routing costs—so they can compare “expected” vs “actual” execution. He notes a concrete slippage example: an attempted $90,000 BTC buy finishing at $90,900 (about 1%), illustrating why execution quality needs systematic measurement.
The article highlights why TCA is harder in crypto than in equities: prices move millisecond-to-millisecond, trading is 24/7, liquidity can shift quickly, and data is scattered across exchanges. Standardization is also lacking, and there is no universal regulatory definition of best execution or how TCA should be computed.
Regulatory momentum is mentioned. In 2025, ESMA updated standards for best execution to extend beyond equities to include other asset classes, explicitly naming crypto in the expansion. The author frames this as a precedent that could push the market toward measurable execution transparency, even if it does not directly mandate TCA.
Finally, the piece claims that cloud computing, big data, and machine learning now make cross-venue TCA more feasible and cost-effective, potentially improving liquidity and competition between venues. Traders and market participants may begin demanding better execution metrics as invisible costs become visible through transaction cost analysis and enhanced best execution reporting.
Gemini Trust Company has carried out Gemini layoffs that cut about 30% of its staff during 2024 through multiple layoff rounds, according to Bloomberg. The cryptocurrency exchange says the restructuring is linked to operational efficiency efforts and a wider AI overhaul.
Alongside the Gemini layoffs, the firm has implemented AI systems across key functions, including customer support automation, compliance monitoring (transaction-pattern analysis), market analysis, and security improvements. The article also notes that these changes come after Gemini withdrew services from the UK, the EU, and Australia due to regulatory and compliance pressure, while continuing operations in jurisdictions with clearer rules such as the US, Canada, and Singapore.
Gemini’s organizational shake-up also includes an executive leadership overhaul, with replacements at the COO and CLO positions. The piece places the move in a broader industry context: exchanges have been cutting costs amid volatility and tougher regulation. It compares Gemini’s scale with Coinbase’s ~18% staff reduction (early 2023) and Kraken’s ~30% cut (Nov 2022), while Binance conducted multiple rounds of layoffs in 2023–2024.
For traders, the key takeaway is that Gemini layoffs signal ongoing cost discipline and automation across major crypto venues, while regulatory exits may affect liquidity and regional demand.
On March 20, Lookonchain reported a mysterious whale bought 17,084 ETH for 36.75M USDT. The reported average purchase price was $2,151 per ETH. Arkham labels suggest the whale may be linked to ShapeShift founder Erik Voorhees.
For traders, this ETH buying flow can add short-term spot support, especially if similar whale activity continues. However, it’s a single observed transaction, so broader market impact likely depends on whether more ETH inflows follow and how liquidity/volatility react after the purchase.
GBP/JPY is consolidating near the key resistance at 212.73, with bulls targeting a decisive break higher. The recent rise has stalled exactly at 212.73, suggesting selling pressure and profit-taking. On the daily chart, candles are small-bodied, pointing to trader indecision, while RSI is flat around 60 (neither overbought nor oversold). Volume has eased slightly during consolidation, a pattern that can precede a larger move.
For the bullish case, price would need to hold above the 210.00 psychological level and remain supported by the 50-day simple moving average (around 209.00). A failure to break 212.73 raises the risk of a deeper retracement.
Fundamentally, the pause reflects shifting expectations for monetary policy divergence between the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan. UK data (inflation and wage growth, plus upcoming UK CPI and retail sales) may influence the outlook for potential BoE rate cuts. Meanwhile, Japan’s Yen is highly sensitive to any BoJ signals about moving away from ultra-accommodative policy.
Traders also frame this through global risk sentiment, since GBP/JPY is often viewed as risk-sensitive and can strengthen during risk-on conditions (carry-trade appeal) and weaken during risk-off.
Key market catalyst: upcoming UK and Japan economic releases and central-bank commentary. A sustained daily close above 212.73 with strong volume would likely confirm trend continuation for GBP/JPY and invite fresh longs; rejection could trigger a correction.
Overall: GBP/JPY remains range-bound until the BoE/BoJ policy path or a meaningful risk-sentiment shift breaks the 212.73 ceiling.
Crypto rally in Q2 is being debated as traders weigh historical seasonality against worsening real-world risk.
In the 2025 cycle, Q2 was the most bullish quarter: total crypto market cap rose 23.4% (about $640B inflows), and Bitcoin (BTC) ended Q2 up ~30% after a Q1 ~12% correction. However, the article notes markets can rebound quickly, and crypto is already down about 18% year-to-date versus the S&P 500’s ~3.23% quarterly decline.
This time, macro data is testing sentiment. A hotter-than-expected U.S. PPI report kept Fed policy hawkish, even though nearly 99% of traders had priced in “no change.” Still, crypto finished the session down 3.24%, reinforcing that “priced-in” inflation surprises can still move prices. At the same time, prediction markets on Kalshi show U.S. President Donald Trump impeachment odds rising to 72% before 2028, consistent with signals of a weakening U.S. economy across sectors.
Geopolitics is also filtering into crypto risk appetite. After Israel struck Iran’s critical energy infrastructure, Bitcoin fell more than 2%, with “billions” reportedly lost—suggesting that the crypto market’s prior resilience to West Asia FUD may be fading. Net: the crypto rally in Q2 thesis looks less reliable as macro FUD increasingly drives expectations, making a repeat rally far from guaranteed.
Cardano (ADA) is nearing a potential resolution after six weeks of price consolidation. The article highlights a tight range with support near $0.245 and resistance around $0.304, suggesting buyers and sellers are near equilibrium.
Recent attempts to push above $0.304 have repeatedly failed, but the repeated retests imply sellers are gradually losing control. Traders are now watching Cardano (ADA) for a confirmed break above $0.304, which would shift short-term momentum toward buyers.
If ADA breaks higher, the next resistance/liquidity areas flagged are about $0.338 and $0.376. Further upside zones cited using Fibonacci levels include $0.597, $0.725, $0.966, and $1.106.
If Cardano (ADA) fails to reclaim $0.304, the range could remain intact. In that case, attention returns to downside support at $0.245. A drop below $0.245 may trigger a retest of the February low near $0.220.
The piece also notes ADA remains far below its historical peak of $3.10, framing this as late-stage consolidation where selling pressure may be diminishing over time. Overall, the next directional move for Cardano (ADA) is expected to be defined by whether $0.304 breaks or $0.245 fails.
Crypto price action remains risk-off as XRP, SHIB and DOGE struggle within a broader downtrend.
XRP: After failing to gain momentum above $1.50, XRP is back under selling pressure and reinforcing a bearish structure over the past few months. The recovery attempt near the $2 resistance zone was rejected, highlighting weak demand at higher levels. XRP is struggling to hold the $1.45–$1.50 support band. The 50-day and 100-day EMAs are trending lower and acting as dynamic resistance, while the chart continues to show lower highs and failed bullish continuation. Key trading area: resistance overhead, with consolidation most likely unless XRP can reclaim key moving averages.
SHIB: Shiba Inu attempted a modest recovery after a local bottom, but momentum faded at resistance. SHIB could not reclaim the 50-day EMA and remains trapped in a pattern of lower highs/lower lows, suggesting rebounds are likely corrective rather than impulsive. With SHIB still below major moving averages (including the 100-day and 200-day EMAs), the article argues the odds of a near-term push toward $0.00001 are low unless multiple resistance levels break.
DOGE: Dogecoin remains in a downtrend and is consolidating without clear reversal signals. The coin is trading around the $0.09–$0.10 area, still below major moving averages (50/100/200-day EMAs). The “price reset point” highlighted is $0.08—if weakness continues, traders may see a retest of that support before any meaningful recovery can start.
Overall, the piece frames XRP as the key near-term barometer while SHIB and DOGE follow bearish technical conditions.
A new analysis from XWIN Research Japan suggests recent Bitcoin selling pressure is mainly driven by short-term investors, not a shift in long-term conviction.
Macro backdrop matters. Over the past month, the S&P 500 and Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell about 3%, while the U.S. equities fear gauge (VIX) rose around 18%. The dollar strengthened and 10-year U.S. Treasury yields increased, tightening financial conditions that typically weigh on risk assets. Even gold dropped roughly 3%, contrary to its usual safe-haven behavior.
Despite this, Bitcoin gained about 6% over the same period and remains a risk asset in institutional models: its correlation with major equities is around 0.70, while it shows a negative correlation with the VIX.
On-chain data supports the “short-term flows” thesis. The Market Value to Realized Value (MVRV) ratio is near 1.3—well below the 3.5 level often associated with overheating and long-term profit-taking. This implies no broad bubble conditions and suggests long-term holders are relatively steady, while shorter-horizon traders are more active.
Implication for traders: expect higher volatility as short-term positions rebalance and take profits, but the current on-chain signals point to less structural damage than a long-term investor sell-off. Monitoring MVRV and related indicators like Coin Days Destroyed may help distinguish noise from sustained trends.
CryptoQuant data cited on X shows the Bitcoin-Gold correlation has flipped sharply negative, with the coefficient falling to -0.88 (lowest since Nov 2022). A negative Bitcoin-Gold correlation means BTC and gold are moving in opposite directions, challenging the long-running “Bitcoin as digital Gold” narrative.
The chart indicates Bitcoin-Gold correlation stayed positive in early 2025 but collapsed in the second half. In 2026, the decline accelerated as gold rallied strongly while BTC moved into a bearish phase.
At the time of writing, BTC trades around $70,500, down 5% over 24 hours. For traders, this Bitcoin-Gold correlation shift weakens gold’s diversification value for BTC and suggests BTC may be driven more by crypto-specific risk factors than by macro safe-haven flows—until the relationship stabilizes.
Crypto traders will likely watch whether the negative Bitcoin-Gold correlation persists, since multi-month extremes have historically coincided with periods when BTC diverged most from traditional hedge assets.
USD/JPY has broken below the key 158.00 level, signaling a retreat for the US dollar amid broad Japanese Yen strength. The pair is down more than 2.5% from recent highs, with prior support near 158.50 and 158.20 failing. Heavy Asian-session volumes suggest strong Yen-buying momentum.
Traders are watching technical signals closely. The RSI has slipped into oversold territory for the first time in weeks, while the MACD histogram points to growing negative momentum. If USD/JPY loses the next support area around 156.80, markets may price a deeper correction toward 155.00.
Fundamentally, the driver is central-bank divergence. The Bank of Japan is increasingly expected to adopt a more hawkish path, including reducing bond purchases and potentially further rate hikes. This narrows the interest-rate differential versus the US Federal Reserve, which is viewed as less hawkish and with its tightening cycle largely complete.
At the same time, risk sentiment has weakened, boosting demand for the Yen as a safe haven. US Treasury yields have also pulled back, reducing the dollar’s yield advantage. The article frames USD/JPY as reflecting genuine Yen strength, not just dollar weakness.
Economic impacts may include export pressure in Japan, but lower import costs could ease inflation from energy and raw materials. For FX positioning, a sustained USD/JPY slide could trigger carry trade unwinds and higher corporate hedging.
Next catalysts to monitor are BoJ communications/inflation data and US CPI, alongside global risk appetite. USD/JPY below 158.00 is now the key level for gauging two-way volatility and whether this becomes a longer trend shift or a short-term correction.
The GBP/USD surged nearly 3% on Thursday after the Bank of England delivered an unexpected unanimous 9-0 policy shift. The pair jumped from about 1.2350 to break above 1.2700 within hours of the 12:00 GMT announcement.
Key details: the Monetary Policy Committee held rates at 5.25%, but removed “further tightening” language and stressed rates must stay restrictive “for an extended period.” Services inflation stayed sticky at 6.1%, while the Bank balanced this against signs of weakening domestic demand and a softer labor market, plus global growth headwinds.
Market expectations had priced in roughly a 40% chance of a rate cut, and traders expected some dovish dissent. Instead, the vote was fully hawkish, triggering rapid repricing in sterling. Trading volumes reportedly rose to around 300% of the 30-day average, and sterling options implied volatility hit an eight-month high.
Immediate ripple effects: UK gilt yields jumped (2-year up 15 bps to 4.35%). GBP/USD momentum was accelerated by stop-loss triggers above 1.2500 and 1.2600, plus technical breaks of the 200-day moving average and the 61.8% Fibonacci level—fuelled by short-covering as speculative shorts reached their highest since Sept 2023.
Analysts revised forecasts: Goldman lifted its 3-month GBP/USD target to 1.2800, while JP Morgan pushed the first expected BoE cut timing from May to August. For GBP/USD traders, the core focus is whether upcoming UK inflation and wage data confirm the “higher-for-longer” stance and whether the BoE’s vote pattern stays tight at future meetings.
Neutral
GBP/USDBank of EnglandFX volatilityInterest ratesMacro surprises
The European Union has issued a critical diplomatic warning calling for an immediate halt to energy infrastructure strikes in conflict zones, especially amid escalating Middle East supply risks. The European Commission says recent attacks targeting oil pipelines, electrical grids and desalination plants have disrupted flows to Europe and may violate international humanitarian law.
Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson said deliberate energy infrastructure attacks threaten civilians and global economic stability. The article cites International Energy Agency data on 2024 attack counts: oil pipelines (17), electrical grids (23), desalination plants (9), and shipping terminals (14). It also notes that Red Sea rerouting increased transport costs by 40%, while rebuilding damaged infrastructure can take 6–18 months.
Market impacts are highlighted: Brent crude futures trading range of about $15 this month and European natural gas prices around 30% above the five-year average. The European Central Bank flagged potential inflationary pressure from energy disruptions, with knock-on effects including higher costs for consumers and energy-intensive industries.
Diplomatic proposals include protected infrastructure zones monitored by observers and technical assistance, alongside resilience measures such as decentralized/distributed energy and modular water purification. For traders, the key takeaway is that ongoing energy infrastructure strikes can translate into higher oil/gas volatility, inflation risk, and risk-off flows that often pressure crypto alongside broader markets.
Bearish
EU energy securityMiddle East supply riskoil & gas volatilityinflation pressuregeopolitical strikes
Gold price dropped sharply this week, falling decisively below the key $4,650/oz support level across London and New York. The move reflects renewed inflation fears plus a global liquidity crunch, pushing traders toward faster risk reduction.
Technically, breaking $4,650 marks a major support and psychological level for gold, with charts showing a bearish structure (lower highs/lows) and rising sell volumes. Momentum indicators suggest gold is oversold, raising the risk of a volatile rebound or sideways consolidation.
Fundamentally, sticky core inflation has delayed expectations for central bank rate cuts. Higher-for-longer interest rate pricing increases the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like gold, while investors rotate toward fixed-income instruments with more attractive real yields.
Liquidity pressure is also central: balance-sheet reduction (quantitative tightening), strong U.S. Treasury demand absorbing cash, and stress in funding markets can force leveraged players to sell liquid assets. That dynamic can hit gold even if it remains a traditional safe haven.
The sell-off spreads through the complex unevenly: gold is down about 8% over the past month, silver down more than 12%, while platinum is relatively steadier (down around 5%). Gold mining equities reportedly fell more than the metal (negative leverage), and physically backed gold ETFs saw continued bullion outflows.
Central banks still provide a potential floor. World Gold Council data cited in the article suggests net purchases remain positive on a quarterly basis, though moderating.
For traders, the next watched support zone is $4,500–$4,520, aligning with a 200-week moving average and a key Fibonacci level.
Bearish
GoldInflationLiquidity CrunchCentral Bank PolicyETF Outflows
Bitcoin volatility has risen sharply as Middle East tensions and macroeconomic shifts pressure risk sentiment. Exchange analysts say BTC has “re-coupled” with traditional risk assets, making oil, inflation expectations, and policy outlook key drivers.
Technically, $69,000 is the primary short-term support, marked by concentrated buy orders and heavy historical trading. Kraken VP Matt Howells-Barby warns that if $69,000 breaks, BTC could fall toward $65,000 (about a 6% correction). A further bearish scenario is a move to $54,000, cited by Ripio CEO Sebastián Serrano, if geopolitical instability persists and selling pressure continues.
Traders are watching volume and derivatives. Higher volume on downside tests would confirm conviction. Options data shows growing demand for downside hedges, with traders buying put protection below $65,000. On-chain, the number of BTC addresses holding losses has increased moderately, while long-term holder behavior remains largely unchanged.
Institutionally, US-based Bitcoin ETF flows have turned to net outflows, aligning with broader portfolio risk reduction. European and Asian products appear more mixed, suggesting different regional risk assessments.
Market signals also point to near-term technical pressure: BTC is testing its 50-day moving average, while RSI is nearing oversold conditions. Overall, analysts frame the move as externally driven volatility, not crypto-specific fundamentals, with direction likely dependent on crude oil prices, the US dollar, and equities/bonds.
Keywords: Bitcoin volatility, $69,000 support, Middle East tensions, oil prices, BTC ETFs, put options.
Bearish
Bitcoin volatilityKey support $69KMiddle East tensionsOil prices & macroBTC ETF flows
The Pentagon has asked the White House to approve a $200 billion funding request for the Iran war, a figure described as about four times over budget and potentially adding a trillion dollars in longer-term debt costs. Pentagon officials say much of the $200 billion is aimed at ramping up precision munitions and replacing rapidly depleted weapons after thousands of strikes in recent weeks.
The request is expected to trigger a major fight in Congress. Democrats are critical and question the administration’s justification, while Republicans have not yet defined a clear path to reach the Senate’s 60-vote threshold. Analysts also note that more spending does not automatically speed up production because capacity is constrained by workers, factories, and raw materials.
Cost estimates are rising quickly. The Pentagon cited about $11.3 billion in the first week, while officials and outside experts put the daily burn rate at roughly $1–$2 billion. A three-week conflict could cost $60–$130 billion; longer duration could push totals toward $175 billion (five weeks) and $250 billion+ (eight weeks). Over time, veterans’ disability claims, interest on borrowed money, and a permanently higher defense budget could add up to trillions.
Economic spillovers are already visible. Oil and gasoline prices have jumped after the U.S.-Israel attack on Iran, with national regular gas averaging $3.84 per gallon (AAA), up sharply from about a month earlier. Traders may watch how the $200 billion Pentagon request feeds into inflation expectations and risk sentiment.
For crypto traders, this is a macro-fiscal and geopolitics catalyst, with the key trigger being the $200 billion Pentagon request and its market impact.
Bearish
Pentagon fundingIran war escalationUS fiscal impactDefense munitions productionCrypto macro risk
Large Bitcoin holders (“seasoned whales”) have transferred millions of dollars to crypto exchanges as geopolitical risk lifts energy prices worldwide. Blockchain data cited an old BTC wallet moving 1,000 BTC (about $71M) to Binance. Another early adopter, Owen Gunden, transferred 650 BTC (about $46M) to Kraken.
The article links the timing to Middle East unrest. Reports say attacks disrupted major gas and infrastructure sites, pushing European and UK wholesale natural gas prices higher. Oil also spiked—Brent briefly above ~$119/bbl before easing, while US crude hovered near ~$96/bbl—raising macro anxiety and curbing risk-taking.
Price action followed. Bitcoin fell about 5% in 24 hours to around $70,439. If BTC cannot hold the $70,000–$71,000 area, analysts expect a potential move toward the $60,000–$71,000 range. Gold also dropped roughly 4.2%, suggesting investors are not rotating into safer assets selectively, but reducing overall risk exposure.
For traders, the key signal is the combination of whale selling/profit-taking signals (exchange inflows) with a broader macro-driven risk-off move tied to energy costs.
Bearish
BitcoinWhale transfersMacro risk-offMiddle East energy shockCrypto exchange inflows
Kentucky’s House Bill 380 is advancing under review in the House Committee on Banking and Insurance after amendments sparked backlash over a “hardware wallet backdoor.” Critics say the proposal would require hardware wallet manufacturers to build credential recovery capabilities, including for PIN/password and seed phrase recovery, potentially via identity-verified requests.
The Bitcoin Policy Institute argues the hardware wallet backdoor requirement is incompatible with true non-custodial self-custody, because manufacturers do not hold users’ private keys or recovery seeds. Security concerns also focus on new attack vectors and privacy risks if users must complete identity checks tied to wallet activity.
Industry groups warn of downstream market effects: if compliance costs or redesign requirements make self-custody harder, users may shift toward custodial exchanges that offer recovery services, concentrating risk in fewer entities. For crypto traders, the near-term signal is regulatory sentiment around self-custody infrastructure rather than spot token demand. Watch how hearings and amendments evolve—softening the hardware wallet backdoor language could reduce immediate risk anxiety, while escalation could raise broader concerns that other states may follow.
The Wall Street Journal reports that Jeff Bezos is seeking to raise a $100 billion AI fund to acquire and technologically overhaul legacy manufacturing firms. The plan is linked to his AI startup Project Prometheus, which is co-led by Bezos and former Google executive Vik Bajaj (launched with $6.2 billion).
Under the proposed Jeff Bezos AI fund, the vehicle would target companies in aerospace & defense, automotive manufacturing, and semiconductor fabrication (chipmaking). After takeovers, it would integrate Prometheus-style AI into factory operations, aiming to accelerate Industry 4.0 adoption at an unusually large scale.
The article highlights key AI use cases: predictive maintenance, supply-chain and logistics optimization, quality control via computer vision, and generative design. It also notes major risks: integration complexity with legacy systems, the enormous capital requirement, potential regulatory scrutiny over market concentration, and workforce disruption / job cuts that may require reskilling.
For crypto traders, the news is not a direct token catalyst, but it signals large-scale private capital moving into AI/industrial tech. That can shift risk sentiment toward “AI infrastructure” narratives and influence broader market volatility around mega-fund announcements. The outcome hinges on whether the Jeff Bezos AI fund can deliver measurable factory-floor improvements and withstand regulatory and labor pressures.
Neutral
Jeff Bezos AI fundProject PrometheusAI in manufacturingsemiconductors automationjob cuts and reskilling
Bitcoin price slipped below $69,000 on Thursday, ending a push to $76,000 and pulling BTC back into a six-week range. The move was linked to rising selling in Bitcoin futures and weaker spot follow-through from US-based investors, but multiple data points suggest a potential rebound is still possible.
Derivatives-first signals: the Coinbase premium gap turned negative, implying demand softening from the US spot market. CryptoQuant data also shows a spot vs perpetual futures imbalance: spot CVD fell by about $40.64M, while perpetual CVD dropped by about $506.75M, highlighting heavier leveraged selling. Despite that, funding rates flipped positive to ~0.05%, meaning longs are now paying shorts—often consistent with a derivatives long bias. Order-book data suggests bid-side support around the $70,000 area.
Chart/timing setup: on lower time frames, Bitcoin price is forming a fractal similar to the March 6–8 correction, where price swept internal liquidity and then reversed. The prior bounce coincided with a bullish RSI divergence (RSI equal lows while price made a lower low). A comparable divergence is developing now. Liquidation data also supports the idea of an exhaustion phase, with long-side liquidations reducing open interest and flushing over-leveraged positions.
Key levels: a reclaim of $70,000 could open a move toward $76,000. $72,000 is the pivot; a failure to stabilize above ~$73,000 (flagged by Trading Stables founder Ryan Scott) increases risk that BTC retests range lows near $62,000. A breakdown below $68,300 shifts focus to $65,000 and $62,000 liquidity.
Not investment advice.
The U.S. FBI New York office issued an FBI Tron scam alert about fake TRC-20 tokens on the Tron network. The scheme sends unsolicited TRC-20 tokens to victims’ Tron wallets, then uses websites or messages to claim “AML violations” and threaten asset freezes unless the user completes an “AML verification.”
Security analysts say these fraudulent tokens can look legitimate at first glance, using official-sounding names, token metadata, and convincing links (including SSL-like sites) and fake “verification” signals. Tron’s low fees and fast confirmations make it cheap to deploy and scale such scams.
The alert also cites rising incident volume on Tron in 2024, with scam reports increasing from 47 in Q1 2024 to 187 in Q4 2024, and estimated financial impact rising from $3.2M to $15.8M.
Trader takeaways: ignore any request for personal information after receiving unsolicited tokens, verify legitimacy via multiple independent sources, and report incidents through IC3. The FBI Tron scam is unlikely to change Tron fundamentals directly, but it can raise scam-related volatility and user risk for Tron-based token markets.
Wall Street Journal reports that Kalshi prediction markets raised more than $1B in a Coatue Management-led round, valuing the firm at about $22B. The new valuation is roughly double Kalshi’s prior $11B after its December round.
The deal lands amid a sharp rise in prediction market activity. Artemis data cited in the report shows the sector processed about $27B in January 2026 and $23.4B in February. FalconX similarly cited Artemis figures, saying overall volume neared a ~4x jump to about $64B in 2025 with acceleration into early 2026. Kalshi’s trading had already moved above $1B per week around the time of its earlier raise.
Competition is also intensifying. Crypto exchange MEXC launched a zero-fee prediction market to position event contracts as a new trading vertical. Polymarket has also been reported to seek funding around a ~$20B valuation. On paper, Kalshi’s $22B valuation keeps it slightly ahead.
For crypto traders, Kalshi prediction markets signals continued institutional appetite for event-contract liquidity. It may bring more attention to the broader “information markets” theme, potentially supporting sentiment around related event-contract trading flows.
Solana price prediction remains bearish as SOL faces renewed downside risk on both higher and short-term charts. Analysts point to two repeating technical behaviors: (1) a “January 2026” style resistance rejection, and (2) weakness after SOL was rejected from the upper boundary of a rising channel.
On the higher timeframe and in the short term, SOL keeps failing to break and hold key resistance levels. The article cites a bearish fractal setup: past rallies stalled at horizontal resistance, then reversed into fresh selling pressure. While fractals are not guarantees, the current structure is framed as a mirror image of the earlier breakdown—suggesting sellers still defend those levels.
In parallel, another chart shows SOL rotating lower after channel rejection. The expectation is a move back toward the channel mid-range and potentially toward the lower support zone. Traders are advised to watch whether channel support can slow the decline; if it breaks, price could drift further into lower-liquidity areas.
Overall, Solana price prediction implies recovery attempts are being capped, and downside risk rises unless support zones start holding again.
Ethereum price prediction: Analysts say ETH has entered a historical “MVRV buy zone,” where the MVRV ratio sits roughly between 0.8 and 1.0. This area has often coincided with periods when ETH traded near holders’ average cost, suggesting excess valuation has cooled. The chart also places ETH around $2,160, well below a prior cycle high near $4,955—supporting a view that a deep correction is largely underway. However, Ethereum price prediction notes the signal is not an immediate “buy now” trigger; historical rebounds following similar MVRV conditions varied widely, so confirmation is still developing.
Short-term structure remains fragile. ETH was rejected around the $2,400 resistance zone, repeatedly failing to hold above it. After that rejection, price broke down from a mid-range structure, shifting momentum lower. The market is now retesting the $2,150 area, which aligns with a prior consolidation level and could act as support for a relief bounce toward $2,400.
If $2,150 fails, downside risk increases. The next cited demand zones are near $1,770 and lower, which could become the key battleground for traders deciding whether this is a temporary pullback or a deeper leg down.
Key levels to watch: $2,400 (resistance) and $2,150 (support).
The US SEC and CFTC submitted a joint filing introducing a token taxonomy for US federal securities law. In the framework, most crypto assets are not securities. The filing places Solana in the “digital commodities” category, which would remove the “security” label from SOL if upheld.
The agencies list digital commodities including BTC, ETH, SOL, and 14 other assets. They also clarify that activities such as staking, mining, airdrops, and token wrapping are not automatically treated as securities transactions.
Separately, market data from CryptoRank highlights Solana’s role in stablecoin usage. Stablecoin market cap on Solana exceeds $316B. In February, SOL became the top network by stablecoin transaction volume with 37%+ share—higher than Ethereum and Tron combined. Stablecoin flow also appears to be shifting from USDT to USDC, with USDC accounting for 72%+ of Solana stablecoin volume.
For traders, clearer US regulatory classification for SOL could reduce headline risk and improve sentiment. At the same time, the stablecoin-volume surge suggests rising on-chain demand, which may support liquidity and activity around SOL.
Bullish
SolanaSEC/CFTC filingtoken classificationstablecoinsSOL price outlook
Bitcoin (BTC) pushed above its February–March range after clearing a dense on-chain accumulation cluster between $59,000 and $72,000. It briefly touched $74,000, suggesting the “supply wall” around $72K has been digested. However, BTC has slipped back below the upper boundary before the daily close, leaving the breakout’s durability uncertain.
On-chain Glassnode data points to a shift into a thinner liquidity zone between $72,000 and $82,000, where prior accumulation looks lighter—so near-term resistance may be reduced. Still, the Percent of Supply in Profit is ~60%, below the long-term average near 75% that usually signals a stronger bull regime. High short-term holder profits are also being realized: about $18.4M per hour, implying ongoing sell-side pressure that the market must absorb.
Demand signals are improving. US spot Bitcoin ETF allocations reportedly rebounded after outflows, while CME futures open interest remains low, suggesting the move is driven more by spot demand than leverage. Exchange flow data shows cumulative volume delta flipped toward net buying, and Coinbase flows stabilized and rose. In derivatives, negative perpetual funding rates point to short concentration and recent short-covering, while options positioning appears more balanced as implied volatility eased and downside hedging demand cooled.
Overall, the report frames BTC upside as possible toward the ~$78,000 True Market Mean and the ~$82,000 range ceiling, but sustained trend strength likely requires broader capital inflows and rising conviction/leverage.
Neutral
BitcoinOn-chain dataSupply wall breakoutSpot ETF flowsFutures and options
Lawmakers are moving toward further progress on the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, commonly referred to as the Crypto Clarity Act, after weeks of near-completion talks. Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee met to close remaining gaps, while updated legislative text was reportedly prepared for delivery to the White House.
The biggest sticking point has been stablecoin yield treatment. Sources say the debate—centering on how stablecoin rewards relate to “bank-line” language about savings and interest—is close to a compromise. Senators are also exploring additional, unrelated concessions to win support from banking-focused stakeholders, potentially including provisions tied to recent housing legislation.
Other unresolved issues could still delay a Senate vote. Democrats in the talks want rules to reduce the risk of senior officials profiting from personal crypto holdings, particularly targeting former and current political conflicts, and they want CFTC leadership—before new crypto rules are adopted—to include Democrats for the party’s vacant seats.
Separately, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has advanced crypto policy execution. The SEC spent the week discussing a first-ever taxonomy defining U.S. crypto asset categories. SEC Chair Paul Atkins and Republican commissioners said they want Congress to pass a law that would back the regulatory approach, while the agency continues implementing policy changes.
For traders, the Crypto Clarity Act momentum is primarily about reducing policy uncertainty: stablecoin yield and DeFi framework decisions can shift incentives for issuer behavior, exchange demand, and onchain yield products. Timing remains the key risk factor until committee and Senate hurdles are cleared.
Anchorage Digital expanded its Atlas network to add collateral management for institutional crypto lending. The new layer is designed to monitor collateral, automate margin calls, and handle liquidations across secured loans, structured products, derivatives, and other credit arrangements.
Anchorage says Atlas now supports nearly 600 participants (up fourfold from a year ago) and has processed tens of billions of dollars in settlements. It also emphasizes the product is “regulated” and “always-on,” aiming to reduce operational and counterparty risks that have historically slowed secured digital asset credit.
Atlas originally launched in April 2024 as a settlement layer for institutions transferring digital assets and dollars without escrow, omnibus accounts, or pre-funded collateral. Since then, Anchorage has broadened Atlas into triparty custody and collateral workflows—positioning custody as a wider capital-markets business.
The update arrives amid a broader US regulatory push. Anchorage was the first crypto firm to receive a national trust bank charter from the OCC in 2021. In December 2025, the OCC conditionally approved similar national trust bank charters for Circle, Ripple, Paxos, BitGo, and Fidelity Digital Assets, signaling wider moves toward federally regulated crypto banking.
Anchorage names early adopters: Cantor, Spark, and Kamino are already using Atlas-powered collateral management. Cantor selected Anchorage and Copper in March 2025 for Bitcoin financing, while Spark worked on connecting offchain custody with onchain credit. Kamino joined Anchorage and Solana Company on a structure enabling borrowing against natively staked SOL held in qualified custody.
For traders, this reinforces the trend of more “bank-grade” infrastructure around crypto credit, which can support broader institutional participation—an incremental but potentially lasting tailwind for liquidity and market stability around BTC and SOL.
Bullish
Atlas networkcrypto lending infrastructureOCC bank charterscollateral managementinstitutional adoption