China’s Cyberspace Administration (CAC) has ordered Apple to remove Jack Dorsey’s “Bitchat” from the China App Store and TestFlight, effective Feb 2026. The regulator said apps with “public opinion or social mobilization” functions must pass a government security assessment before launch.
Bitchat is described as censorship-resistant because it relies on Bluetooth mesh networking and can send Bitcoin-related data without internet, central servers, Wi‑Fi, cellular connectivity, or user accounts. That makes conventional blocking methods harder. Apple told the developer it is responsible for complying with local laws.
The later report also highlights continued global traction despite the removal: the app reportedly has 3M+ downloads worldwide and 92K+ downloads in the past week. Existing installs in China are said to keep working.
For crypto traders, the key point is indirect. Bitchat supports Bitcoin transactions natively, but this is primarily a distribution and regulatory enforcement event, not a Bitcoin protocol change. Still, it signals ongoing pressure on offline, off-grid coordination tools that could matter for demand, user access, and risk sentiment around censorship resistance—likely keeping market impact limited to the broader narrative rather than BTC fundamentals.
Neutral
China RegulationApple App StoreCensorship ResistanceBitcoinBluetooth Mesh
Former US President Donald Trump sharply criticized South Korea, Australia, Japan, and NATO for what he says is insufficient help in the Iran conflict. He branded NATO a “paper tiger,” arguing the alliance is reluctant to take meaningful action despite security commitments.
The comments come amid complex Middle East geopolitics and revive long-running disputes over allied burden-sharing. Trump’s remarks also included a message aligned with “what Putin fears is the United States,” reinforcing a narrative of US strength independent of allies.
Security analysts note that these public criticisms could strain diplomatic ties and complicate coalition coordination, especially when many allies balance domestic politics, economic interests with Iran, and limits on overseas deployments.
South Korea, Japan, and Australia were singled out as major non-NATO partners, with differing legal and strategic constraints around direct military involvement. NATO leaders, in turn, have pointed to increased European defense spending and crisis-management roles as indirect support.
For traders, this is a geopolitical risk headline tied to the Iran conflict. Escalating rhetoric can lift volatility in risk assets, currencies, and energy-linked markets, and may pressure sentiment in the near term while leaving longer-term effects dependent on whether the dispute turns into follow-up negotiations or further fragmentation.
Bearish
Iran ConflictNATO Burden SharingUS AlliancesGeopolitical RiskMiddle East Security
XRP shorts pile up as liquidity thins, creating a fragile setup for sharp moves. Binance’s 30-day Liquidity Index has fallen to near zero, while market turnover has collapsed from over $200B in Jan 2025 to near inactivity. This reduces order-book depth and makes XRP price action more sensitive to directional flows.
At the derivatives level, XRP shorts pile up alongside rising Open Interest (OI) with negative funding, signaling growing short conviction while spot demand remains weak. OI climbed 3.59% to about $960M, and funding stayed negative. Early warning appeared in short liquidations of $1.82M during a recent upside push, suggesting the crowded side is already vulnerable.
Key levels: a break above $1.35–$1.36 could trigger rapid short covering toward about $1.349, fueled by dense liquidation zones in a thin order book. Support near $1.32–$1.33 is critical; if it fails, weak bid depth may amplify downside.
Exchange reserves for XRP dropped 0.19% to 2.74B, hinting at quiet absorption, which may help stabilize price for now—though the article warns volatility could accelerate once direction is chosen.
Overall, XRP shorts pile up with weak liquidity increases the odds of a fast squeeze up or a swift slide down depending on whether spot buyers step in.
After Donald Trump posted an urgent warning to Iran about opening the Strait of Hormuz (or facing severe consequences), crypto markets sold off. Commentator Levi Rietveld said the geopolitical uncertainty pressured risk assets, sending XRP and Bitcoin lower with visible “red candles” across charts. Traders tested support repeatedly as the market digested the possibility of escalation and disruption to critical infrastructure and transport routes.
Rietveld highlighted potential opportunities for XRP as conditions stabilize. XRP briefly fell to a low around $1.28, then recovered to about $1.34 (up more than 3% versus the prior day). The message’s timing and Trump’s subsequent signals that negotiation is possible reportedly increased volatility, often lifting trading volume and liquidity—an environment where XRP traders may look for entries around support and consolidation.
Key takeaway for XRP traders: expect short-term volatility until Iran’s response or a negotiated path becomes clearer. Multiple support tests suggest consolidation, which can precede renewed upward movement if selling pressure fades.
Note: This is market commentary and not financial advice. XRP remains sensitive to geopolitical headlines and liquidity changes.
Bitcoin is facing renewed downward pressure as US-Iran ceasefire talks stay uncertain and Donald Trump’s statements keep shifting the timeline. The ceasefire deadline has been postponed for the sixth time, and without an agreement by early Wednesday, the US signals it may target Iran’s energy infrastructure. Bitcoin is hovering near $70,000, while traders also await Federal Reserve meeting minutes, which could add volatility.
On market sentiment, Santiment reports the Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) at the highest level in about three months, alongside a surge in “greed.” Historically, sharp FOMO/optimism spikes can precede reversals, and Santiment warns a second bearish signal could trigger if the chaos continues and no ceasefire deal arrives.
Riot Platforms has also transferred 500 BTC, which the article interprets as miners taking profit amid the recent rally. That flow is treated as a potential bearish input.
Technical outlook from analyst Roman Trading suggests the broader structure has not reversed and downside momentum persists. He expects Bitcoin to break down below $51,000, arguing the market remains rangebound with low trading volumes even as prices rise.
Crypto traders should monitor the ceasefire window, Fed minutes, and sentiment extremes for timing risk around any potential Bitcoin breakdown.
Tokenized stocks got a real-world governance boost. Broadridge will let holders of tokenized Galaxy shares (GLXY) cast proxy votes on-chain for Galaxy’s May shareholder meeting via its ProxyVote platform.
Broadridge’s on-chain governance is built on Avalanche’s (AVAX) Avalanche-based layer-1 network. The firm plans to integrate ProxyVote into digital wallets so investors can both submit votes and receive investor materials.
Galaxy CEO Mike Novogratz called proxy voting a core feature of equity ownership, saying bringing proxy voting on-chain “is not theoretical anymore.” Broadridge CEO Tim Gokey said scalable, cost-effective governance is critical for the growth of tokenized stocks.
Market context: Shares of Broadridge (BR) and Galaxy (GLXY) rose on the day (reported +0.8% and +1.79%, respectively). The move follows recent US regulatory momentum, including SEC approval for a Nasdaq pilot to trade tokenized stocks.
Risks remain. The IMF warned that the growth of tokenized finance could amplify financial crises.
For traders, the key takeaway is that tokenized stocks are moving from experimentation toward core shareholder-rights infrastructure—potentially improving liquidity and adoption, while leaving macro/regulatory risk on the radar.
Bullish
tokenized stockson-chain governanceproxy votingAvalanche (AVAX)SEC/Nasdaq pilot
Crypto market sentiment flipped after reports of US–Iran ceasefire talks. Bloomberg said about $273M of bearish crypto positions were unwound in under 24 hours, with short sellers taking most of the losses (roughly 3-to-1 vs longs).
Bitcoin surged more than 3% and traded in a $66,634–$69,350 24-hour range. Ethereum led majors, rising about 5.1%, while SOL, XRP, and several other large-cap tokens also posted gains.
Traders should note that the move was not purely a mechanical short squeeze. Open interest in both BTC and ETH rose faster than spot prices, suggesting new capital entering the market and potentially sustaining the rally.
Still, risk remains. Polymarket places ceasefire odds by April 30 at ~30%. Several tokens (including BCH and HYPE) reportedly show negative funding rates, indicating bearish pockets not fully cleared.
Key takeaway for trading: ceasefire headlines triggered fast deleveraging on the short side, but rising open interest points to broader positioning shifts. Watch funding rates, open interest trends, and whether the ceasefire narrative becomes “confirmed” versus “headline-only.”
Bitcoin reclaimed the $70,000 level on Apr 6, topping at about $70,355 despite geopolitical stress after Iran rejected a U.S.-led ceasefire. The move kept Bitcoin’s market cap near $1.4T and came with sharp intraday swings.
The key catalyst was Strategy’s latest institutional accumulation: Michael Saylor’s firm bought 4,871 BTC for roughly $329.9M, strengthening a near-term price floor. However, derivatives data from Bitfinex Alpha suggests downside risk is building. Analysts said the market is “flashing red” as weakening spot demand and stretched positioning could amplify volatility.
A specific danger zone is highlighted below $68,000: negative gamma could trigger mechanical, programmatic spot selling if Bitcoin breaks lower. Even so, the rally did force a squeeze—about $145M of short positions were liquidated by around 1:30 p.m. EDT.
Upside is not free. Overhead supply near the $74,000–$75,000 resistance zone and a smaller buyer base may cap rebounds. Traders should watch Bitcoin’s ability to hold above $68,000 and whether spot demand improves, because Bitcoin’s price looks supported by flows more than fundamentals.
Chaos Labs, a key Aave risk management team since 2022, announced it will exit the Aave protocol. The departure adds to other recent exits, including ACI and BGD Labs, increasing uncertainty around Aave risk management as the Aave V4 upgrade approaches.
Chaos Labs says it previously oversaw risk across Aave markets as TVL grew from about $5B to $26B, with “zero material bad debt” attributed to its cautious approach. But it argues the current arrangement is unsustainable: V4 expands the scope and responsibility of risk work, while budgets and resourcing have not scaled.
Financially, Chaos Labs reports continued losses even with a $5M budget, and says an additional $1M would not eliminate the deficit. It warns that losing experienced teams may raise operational and security risk during the transition to V4.
For traders, the key question is who will fill the Aave risk management oversight gap and how governance will be handled around the upgrade—factors that can affect DeFi lending confidence, liquidity expectations, and liquidation-risk sentiment tied to Aave.
US Senator Bill Hagerty said a US crypto market structure path could advance in April. Speaking at the Digital Assets and Emerging Tech Policy Summit, he expects lawmakers to move the bill through the Senate Banking Committee starting next week. Hagerty noted “several issues still outstanding,” but said they are close and the legislation could be out of the banking committee in April.
The bill—originally the CLARITY Act when it passed the House in July—has faced congressional delays due to factors including stablecoin yield pushback and ethics concerns. If approved, it would create a broad US regulatory framework that shifts much oversight from the SEC toward the CFTC. Because both agencies are involved, the bill also needs approval involving the Senate Agriculture Committee (commodities) and the banking committee (securities).
Hagerty linked timing to the political calendar, suggesting that April progress would allow lawmakers to “get this taken care of before the midterms.” His comments echoed Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal, who previously said lawmakers were close on stablecoin yield and other market structure issues.
Separately, US crypto political groups are preparing for the next election cycle. Stand With Crypto highlighted that voting outcomes could affect the 2026 midterms. Fairshake said it has a $193 million war chest for November 2026, and Fellowship PAC appointed Tether executive Jesse Spiro as chair.
For traders, this crypto market structure timeline raises expectations for near-term regulatory momentum, but key outstanding issues and committee scheduling risk still remain.
Bullish
US Crypto RegulationMarket Structure BillStablecoin YieldSEC vs CFTCSenate Banking Committee
On-chain data cited by Darkfost shows Bitcoin LTH supply growth turning positive again after months of contraction, suggesting stronger long-term holder conviction.
Specifically, the metric flipped from a 30-day moving-average low near -674,000 BTC to roughly +308,000 BTC added on average. Because the indicator is UTXO-based, the shift may reflect coins aging from short-term holders (STH) into LTH status—more about reduced selling pressure than fresh accumulation.
The article also highlights that LTH realized price is trending upward while still below spot, implying most long-term holders remain in profit and forced selling risk stays limited.
However, derivatives and demand indicators remain soft. Open interest across major exchanges has declined from recent highs, pointing to ongoing deleveraging and subdued speculative participation. Spot inflows also appear limited, so upside may depend more on supply absorption than new capital.
Bottom line: Bitcoin LTH supply growth signals early market strength, but muted demand and falling leverage likely keep BTC range-bound in the short term. If the historical pattern of holder-behavior shifts continues, it could support a gradual bullish transition over time, though prior similar signals have sometimes failed to sustain trends.
Neutral
BitcoinLTH Supply GrowthOn-chain MetricsDerivatives Open InterestMarket Structure
Grayscale’s Head of Research Zach Pandl says leading altcoins are showing “encouraging” resilience, suggesting potential bottoming, though he cannot confirm markets have fully bottomed.
Pandl pointed to the past month’s price action despite macro headwinds from geopolitical conflict and stock drawdowns. He said Ethereum and Chainlink have gained over the last month, while the broader crypto market remains far below prior highs. Grayscale’s view is that Wall Street demand is supported by tokenization and stablecoins, improving longer-term fundamentals.
Key stats cited in the report: total crypto market cap is about $2.47T on Monday, down roughly 43% from a CoinGecko peak near $4.37T in October. Over the past month, Ethereum is up about 9.2% to ~$2,160; Solana is down about 1.9% to ~$82; Chainlink is up about 3.8% to ~$9.08. The report also notes slumping altcoin volumes, which has kept the market tilted toward Bitcoin.
Pandl said short-term traders may want clearer catalysts before increasing altcoin allocations, while longer-horizon investors could consider current levels. The article also references regulatory optimism (e.g., potential progress around crypto market structure and stablecoin-related policy) as a reason fundamentals may strengthen.
Bitcoin sentiment is mixed in the same coverage: some analysts still expect further downside (e.g., $10K scenarios), while a prediction market is leaning toward ETH weakness in the near term.
Chaos Labs will end its three-year Aave mandate after a $27m oracle and risk-engine incident and escalating governance infighting. The risk firm says it has a fundamental disagreement over how Aave should manage risk, and warns that DeFi risk managers currently face undefined legal liability when automated systems misfire.
The exit follows earlier departures from Aave Chan Initiative and BGD Labs, leaving Aave’s DAO with fewer core operators as it prepares its v4 upgrade and expands institutional-grade features. Aave has recently crossed roughly $50bn TVL and remains a top DeFi lending market share participant, making governance and risk decisions especially market-relevant.
Key trigger: In March, a misconfigured Chaos Labs oracle on Aave led to erroneous liquidations of about $26.9m tied to staked Ether collateral. Reports estimated that wrapped staked Ether was undervalued by ~2.85%, pushing at least 34 high-leverage positions below their health-factor thresholds until parameters were corrected. Chaos Labs and Aave stated there was no bad debt and users would be reimbursed, but Chaos Labs argues the legal “gray zone” remains—risk managers can move tens of millions of dollars in seconds without clear regulatory safe harbor.
For traders, the immediate takeaway is heightened governance and operational risk around Aave, with potential ripple effects on DeFi lending pricing, liquidation dynamics, and sentiment across large-cap DeFi. Over the longer term, the controversy could reshape how risk responsibilities are allocated in major lending protocols.
Bitcoin surged more than 3.5% on April 6, reclaiming the $70,000 level for the first time since March 25 and peaking near $70,200. The catalyst was an Axios report that the US, Iran and regional mediators are actively discussing terms for a potential 45-day ceasefire.
Risk appetite followed across global markets, with Ethereum rising alongside Bitcoin and the total crypto market cap returning above $2.5T. Major altcoins also participated, including SOL, XRP and DOGE.
The ceasefire track is described as a two-phase “Islamabad Accord”: first a 45-day ceasefire, then negotiations toward a permanent end to the conflict, alongside plans to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. A White House official said the proposal is under active consideration, but the President has not signed off. Separately, Trump extended his Iran strike deadline to Tuesday 8 pm ET.
Market positioning shifted quickly. Coinglass data shows $273M in bearish crypto short liquidations within 24 hours. Open interest increased as well—BTC open interest +7% and ETH open interest +11%—suggesting new capital rather than only a short squeeze.
Polymarket pricing implied about 30% odds of a deal by April 30 (up from 18% before the “Islamabad Accord” news). Traders will likely watch for any reaction around Trump’s Tuesday deadline; disappointment could reverse momentum and pull price toward the $65K–$66K support zone.
Bitcoin remains the key driver of the tape today, with the ceasefire narrative acting as the main volatility trigger for risk-on crypto flows.
ETHGlobal has named 10 Cannes 2026 finalists focused on AI agents, privacy and on-chain prediction markets. The slate includes ENShell, DIVE, maki, Défi, ALMA, npmguard, VEIL VPN, PaintGlobal, EVM PORST and Corpus.
ENShell targets safer AI agents by blocking malicious transaction execution via prompt-injection protections before a signature reaches a wallet. DIVE positions itself as an AI swarm engine to verify real-world truth for prediction markets and autonomous on-chain settlement, suggesting multi-agent oracle-style consensus rather than a single oracle. VEIL VPN aims for verifiable “no-logs” privacy at the encrypted network edge using cryptographic proofs tied to server behavior.
The event also leans on Ethereum Name Service (ENS) as an identity layer for AI agents, with prize tracks such as “Best ENS Integration for AI Agents” and “Most Creative Use of ENS.” Corpus expands the AI agents theme into product-level “agent corps” that can run go-to-market operations, trading, and treasury-like workflows as autonomous on-chain services.
Traders should view this as Ethereum-focused R&D and ecosystem signaling rather than an immediate protocol change. If these concepts mature, they could improve safety, oracle robustness, and privacy tooling—potentially supporting future on-chain infrastructure demand around ETH and ENS-related applications.
Neutral
AI agentsENSPrediction marketsPrivacy infrastructureEthereum hackathon
XRP trading volume has increased notably over the past 24 hours, according to data shared by crypto commentator X Finance Bull.
Spot volume reached about $332 million, while futures volume climbed to roughly $2.2 billion. The move comes as XRP price stayed steady, suggesting participation is growing without an immediate breakout or sharp volatility.
Exchange breakdown highlighted Binance at $79.91M, followed by Upbit at $65.83M and Coinbase at $53.51M. Additional liquidity contributions were reported from OKX, Bybit and Kraken, indicating the activity is not concentrated on a single venue.
The key signal traders may watch is the combination of rising XRP trading volume alongside price consolidation. This pattern often aligns with accumulation: traders add positions while keeping price largely within a range. Heavy futures participation (a $2.2B figure) can also mean more hedging and leverage use, which may deepen market structure.
Overall, the article frames the current setup as expanding liquidity and improving order-flow efficiency—conditions that can support steadier price action and attract further attention if volume sustains.
Bitcoin price rebound above $69,000 lifted BTC to about $70,003 on April 6, a 7-day peak, after breaking last week’s sell zone around $69,000. The flagship coin was up 4.11% over the past week and added about $55.6 billion in market cap to reach roughly $1.39T.
The move was largely driven by a short squeeze in Bitcoin derivatives. Of the $153M liquidated in the past 24 hours, $145.55M was tied to short positions, according to CoinGlass. At the same time, trader sentiment stayed mixed, raising the risk of a bull trap.
Santiment data showed a surge in optimism and FOMO buying following the rebound. It also warned that reversals often happen when crowd sentiment becomes highly optimistic—highlighting that the Bitcoin price rebound may be a temporary spike rather than a clean trend reversal.
Technically, analysts cited levels that would confirm or negate the move: a break above the two-month peak near $75,900 could support a rally toward $80,000. Conversely, a reversal below $66,715 would validate a bull trap and weaken the rebound thesis.
OpenServ, an AI-crypto project, says its SERV Nano model and BRAID “bounded reasoning” framework can match or outperform OpenAI on selected benchmarks at far lower cost and higher speed. The company positions itself as an end-to-end stack for autonomous startups: AI agents and workflow tooling on top, orchestration in the middle, and crypto monetization via token launch mechanics and ecosystem value capture below.
OpenServ’s most market-moving element is the OpenAI comparison narrative. It argues higher “accuracy per dollar” for bounded tasks (enterprise workflows where repeatability and reliability matter more than open-ended chat). However, CryptoSlate highlights key proof questions for traders and buyers: which OpenAI model versions were tested, what “matched” means numerically, whether tools/context were aligned, how tasks were selected, and how much of the cost advantage came from orchestration logic vs model choice. The benchmark claims could either validate a real infrastructure moat or simply create a token-premium before independent verification.
CryptoSlate also frames the crypto layer as a distribution and coordination venue rather than direct competition with chains. OpenServ branding around deployment on Base (EVM-aligned) and Solana (lower-cost, active retail and on-chain experimentation) is meant to broaden reach and present chain-flexibility.
In token-market terms, SERV is currently described as small-cap/low market-cap on CoinGecko in the article, meaning upside speculation exists—but also higher risk of narrative-driven volatility until evidence and customer references meet a higher bar.
A solo Bitcoin miner validated block 943,411 on April 2, earning 3.139 BTC (about $210K). The miner ran at roughly 230 TH/s—around 0.00002% of Bitcoin’s estimated ~1 Zhash/s network hashrate—yet still hit a reported “lottery” with 1 in 28,000 odds per day.
The payout included the standard block subsidy plus transaction fees. The miner used solo.ckpool.org, a solo mining service launched in 2014 that charges a 2% fee while allowing operators to keep the full block reward. CKpool data also points to this being the 312th solo block validation since launch and a 33-day gap before the prior win.
For traders, this is a mining-ecosystem datapoint, not a protocol or supply change. While solo mining is unlikely to repeat for most participants, the event reiterates that “David-versus-Goliath” outcomes can still occur under solo mining. The later report adds context: large miners have reportedly been selling BTC and shifting focus to AI infrastructure, but this specific solo win is unlikely to materially move BTC price or network stability in the near term.
Polymarket will roll out a full exchange upgrade in the coming weeks, replacing core order-book and settlement infrastructure with a rebuilt trading engine and upgraded smart contracts. The main change is Polymarket USD, a new 1:1 USDC-backed collateral token that replaces USDC.e (bridged USDC on Polygon) to reduce bridge-related friction and settlement risk.
The upgrade also updates the CTF Exchange V2 contract and the CLOB client SDK. Order structures are simplified, matching improves, and ERC-1271 signature support plus “builder codes” are added for onchain order attribution. While the SDK will auto-handle the V1→V2 switch, bot operators and integrations must update clients and re-sign orders using the new struct.
Operationally, Polymarket will cancel all open orders during a short maintenance window, clear the order books, and give at least one week’s notice for the exact timing. Most retail users will migrate via the frontend with a one-time approval prompt, while API/power users will need to wrap USDC/USDC.e using Polymarket’s collateral onramp contract.
For traders, Polymarket USD migration could affect near-term liquidity and order routing, so watch spreads and depth around maintenance. Longer term, moving off USDC.e aligns with Circle’s earlier plan to shift toward native USDC settlement rails. Broader backdrop: prediction markets remain under regulatory scrutiny (including CFTC focus), and ICE reportedly invested $600M in Polymarket in March as part of a potential larger commitment.
Ethereum price analysis shows ETH trapped in a tight $1,800–$2,100 consolidation corridor, with volatility “squeezing” like a spring before a decisive move. Traders are watching two key levels: $1,800 as must-hold support (a break could open a move toward $1,650) and $2,100 as repeated resistance. A daily close above $2,150 would weaken the bearish case.
Momentum indicators remain neutral. The RSI is hovering around the 50 line, while Bollinger Bands are starting to contract—often a precursor to higher volatility.
On-chain and supply factors are supportive. The article notes increased staking activity by the Ethereum Foundation and large “whales,” which can reduce circulating supply.
Two external catalysts are flagged for the next leg: (1) Spot Ethereum ETFs and potential SEC developments on staking-integrated products, and (2) the “Glamsterdam” upgrade later in 2026, aimed at lowering L2 fees and improving scalability.
Overall, this Ethereum price analysis frames the market as wait-and-see until ETH breaks out of the $1,800–$2,100 bracket, setting the tone for Q2 2026 positioning.
Bernstein upgraded Figure Technology Solutions (Figure Technology) with an “Outperform” rating and a $67 target price, arguing the blockchain-based lending firm is undervalued versus the current level near $32. The thesis centers on rapid loan growth: Figure Technology originated $1.2B of loans in March (+33% month-over-month), and this was the first month monthly volume exceeded $1B.
The analysts expect Figure Technology to scale toward $12B annual loan volume. Growth is attributed to rising consumer credit demand, an expanding partner network, and its blockchain lending stack, including the YLDS stablecoin. Figure Technology’s Provenance blockchain is cited as delivering 117 bps savings per loan versus traditional competitors. In Q1, loan volume reached $2.9B, about double year-on-year.
Valuation and stock context: Bernstein values Figure Technology at 25x its 2027 projected EBITDA, while noting the stock is down more than 20% year-to-date. Key risks include sensitivity of HELOC demand to refinancing trends and stress in the private credit market, with broader crypto-market dynamics (including BTC futures volatility) potentially affecting sentiment.
Source/Author: Bernstein report (cited by COINOTAG); author name shown as Sarah Chen. (Not investment advice.)
Onchain real world assets (RWAs) total about $468B globally, with $441B locked in permissioned institutional networks such as Canton and Provenance. These rails prioritize security and regulatory control, keeping most tokens largely “walled off” from fully open public blockchains.
Public, crypto-native onchain real world assets are smaller but growing, reaching roughly $27B on Ethereum, Solana and BNB Chain. Their composable DeFi-style infrastructure supports faster experimentation and interoperability.
Stablecoins remain the key liquidity engine: stablecoins exceed $300B in value and have 242M+ holders. Beyond stablecoins, 710,000+ users hold other RWAs, pointing to expanding participation beyond institutions.
For traders, the split between permissioned dominance and public-chain growth suggests ongoing liquidity building for tokenized finance. Monitor stablecoin liquidity and RWA-linked DeFi activity as these two tracks slowly converge—an onchain real world assets narrative that is more about capital flows than immediate market-wide repricing.
Polymarket is upgrading its trading stack with Polymarket USD as the new 1:1 USDC-backed collateral, replacing USDC.e. Over the next few weeks, it will also rebuild its order-matching system (CLOB v2) using new smart contracts and a full order book mechanism. During migration, existing order books will be cleared and trading will be paused for scheduled maintenance.
Most users should see only interface changes, but advanced traders and API/bot operators may need to manually wrap USDC or USDC.e into Polymarket USD. The stated goals are faster execution, lower transaction costs, improved scalability, and tighter market quality—shifting the platform to a more exchange-like setup.
Any required actions and the exact switch timing will be shared with the community as rollout progresses. This matters for crypto traders mainly through short-term migration friction and potential improvements to liquidity and spreads over time.
Polymarket says it will run a major upgrade in the next 2–3 weeks, focused on improving its on-chain prediction market’s efficiency, security, and trader experience. The revamp includes CTF Exchange V2, a redesigned hybrid CLOB order flow, and the launch of Polymarket USD.
On the trading layer, Polymarket will “completely reconstruct” its matching engine and smart contracts using CTF Exchange V2. The new approach aims to cut gas costs and speed up order matching by optimizing on-chain execution and order data structures. Polymarket also plans to clear existing order books and provide about one week’s notice before maintenance.
Polymarket USD is designed to be backed 1:1 with USDC on Polygon (replacing bridged USDC.e). Polymarket states most users will be switched automatically for trading, placing orders, and settlement, while only active traders may need minor technical steps. The stablecoin upgrade also adds EIP-1271 (ERC-1271) support to better work with multisig and smart-contract wallets such as Safe.
The update is described as the biggest change since Polymarket launched in 2020. No new details were provided about the POLY token.
For traders, the key near-term factor is operational: expect liquidity and execution changes around the maintenance window, plus potential reductions in on-chain transaction costs once Polymarket USD and the new matching system go live.
Ethereum (ETH) open interest is rising toward the July 2025 all-time high of 7.8M ETH. On Apr 6, on-chain analyst Darkfost said open interest climbed from ~5M ETH in Oct to ~7.8M ETH now, with ~36% of activity on Binance (≈2.3M ETH).
More important for risk is leverage positioning. The Binance spot-to-futures volume ratio fell to 0.13, the lowest annual level ever. Darkfost noted futures volume is about 7x spot volume (roughly $7 of futures flows per $1 of spot), a mix that he described as “difficult to interpret” and often linked to leverage-driven instability. In prior cycles, similar stretched ETH open interest and leveraged flows preceded sharp corrections.
Despite ETH trading above $2,100, Darkfost argued the upside is more speculation than organic demand. Chartist Ali Martinez mapped levels: support at $1,800 (near an 0.80 MVRV band around ~$1,880). If that breaks, downside zones cited are $1,550 and $1,070, with on-chain buy clusters near $1,584, $1,238 and $1,089. On the upside, a sustained move above $2,500 could signal holders back in profit and open room for a larger rally.
For ETH traders, the message is clear: ETH open interest is near ATH and derivatives activity looks crowded, so liquidation-aware entries and tight risk control matter most in the short term.
Bearish
ETH open interestDerivatives leverageLiquidationsBinance futuresKey support/resistance
Bernstein says Figure Technology’s tokenized credit platform may be undervalued after strong loan growth and scaling of its credit marketplace. The analysts set an “Outperform” rating on FIGR and a $67 price target, nearly double the stock’s ~$32 recent level.
Key momentum: Figure originated $1.2 billion in loans in March (+33% month-on-month), the first time monthly volumes exceeded $1 billion. Q1 originations hit $2.9 billion, more than double year-on-year, despite seasonality typically slowing HELOC demand. Figure is now tracking about $12 billion in annualized loan volume.
How the model works: Figure mainly issues home equity lines of credit (HELOCs). It uses the Provence blockchain to reduce loan-processing friction, claiming it can cut 117 basis points per loan via blockchain transactions. The company is also rolling out tokenized infrastructure, including its YLDS stablecoin.
Stock context: Even with improving operating performance, FIGR shares are down over 20% year-to-date, reflecting broader volatility in digital-asset-linked stocks and post-Nasdaq debut pressure. Bernstein notes Figure trades at ~25x expected 2027 EBITDA, a premium tied to “structural prospects” as both a tokenization platform and a profitable lender.
Risks remain: HELOC demand can be sensitive to mortgage refinancing trends, and the private credit market—central to Figure’s strategy—shows signs of increasing pressure. Overall, the report strengthens the bull case for tokenized credit in fintech, while near-term equity volatility persists.
President Donald Trump set a Tuesday deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz (8:00 pm ET). The article argues this could become a catalyst for Bitcoin price strength toward $75,000, but the path depends on market trust and the hedge narrative.
If no deal is reached, risk perception may improve for Bitcoin due to its decentralized properties, while equities could stay supported by ongoing geopolitics. If negotiations succeed, risk assets (including Bitcoin) could benefit, but a key transmission channel may run through US Treasuries rather than directly through Bitcoin.
Investors remain cautious: US stocks were mostly flat on Monday while Bitcoin jumped above $69,000 for the first time in over 10 days. Meanwhile, gold has held near $4,650 (down from a reported $5,600 peak). Traders are watching central banks’ gold sales (e.g., Turkey reported 50 tonnes sold for the week ending March 20), which reflects stress and potential fiscal instability.
The US 5-year Treasury yield rose to 4% from 3.55% in late February, signaling investors demand higher returns due to sticky inflation concerns and rising military-related fiscal pressure. An eventual ceasefire could reduce the need for alternative hedges and strengthen demand for US Treasuries, potentially weighing on Bitcoin.
Overall, the article frames a $75,000 Bitcoin rally as possible by Tuesday, but warns that confidence and supply-chain damage may not snap back quickly—even if the strait is reopened.
CryptoQuant analyst Maartunn data show XRP open interest rose to about $943M over the weekend, then climbed further to roughly $952M after a rebound. At the same time, XRP funding rates stayed negative (red), a derivatives signal that shorts are effectively paying longs—suggesting fresh bearish leverage rather than a clean long build.
The article warns that when XRP open interest increases during/after a bounce, volatility and liquidation risk typically rise. That raises the odds of a short squeeze if price pushes into nearby resistance, but the prevailing setup still points to downside pressure unless XRP can reclaim key levels.
Traders were told to monitor XRP open interest together with funding rates and price action around support near $1.34–$1.36. If XRP fails to hold above this zone, bearish control likely persists. If buyers force price into the $1.375–$1.38 area, clustered short liquidations could trigger faster upside toward roughly $1.38–$1.405, potentially lowering open interest as shorts close.
Related context: XRP is around $1.35 at writing and week-over-week is flat, while BTC gained over 4% in 24 hours—meaning the broader bounce could be fragile when derivatives positioning stays bearish.