MEXC announced the appointment of Vugar Usi as Chief Executive Officer, marking the exchange’s 8th anniversary and a strategic brand evolution aimed at faster global expansion under its “Infinite Opportunities” vision. This MEXC CEO transition follows an operational overhaul over the past year, including strengthened risk-control frameworks, greater transparency, and cultural/strategic reforms.
MEXC says it reached top-5 exchange status by trading volume and was the fastest-growing exchange of 2025, citing a 90.9% year-on-year increase (per CoinGecko). Under the new leadership, the platform plans to expand beyond spot crypto to offer MT5-based assets and prediction markets, while keeping its “0-fee trading” model that MEXC says has returned over $1 billion to users in the past year.
Usi previously served as COO, leading initiatives to deepen transparency and enhance risk management. The company also highlighted his public policy background to support global compliance and regulatory alignment, especially as MEXC scales into new asset classes such as equities and multi-asset derivatives.
Overall, the news is focused on leadership, product expansion, and governance upgrades rather than immediate changes to crypto market structure—more a potential positive signal for MEXC users and sentiment than a direct catalyst for BTC/ETH volatility.
Bitcoin (BTC) is approaching a key 6-month+ downtrend line, after a bounce sparked by improved Middle East ceasefire sentiment. In the 4-hour chart, BTC briefly pushed through $71,700 horizontal resistance, but was rejected almost immediately, with price retreating back below the level. Bulls must reclaim and hold the downtrend; even then, $74,000 remains a major overhead resistance.
Key downside levels are being highlighted if buyer momentum fades: a retest of $69,000 support is possible. Deeper retracement targets include the bear flag lower trendline and $66,000 horizontal support. On the daily chart, the bear market trendline has been redrawn to just touch the wick from a January retest, suggesting BTC has not yet fully reached that barrier. BTC is still above the 50-day simple moving average.
Momentum indicators are mixed. RSI on the daily timeframe is breaking above its own downtrend line, which historically can validate trend breaks. However, the broader trend remains down and the bear flag structure could still play out lower. Short-term Stochastic RSI is topping, implying that if BTC retests the downtrend, rejection risk rises. Traders should monitor follow-through over the rest of the week for confirmation of either breakout continuation or bear-flag failure.
Disclaimer: This is market commentary, not financial advice.
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Bitcoin BTCChart AnalysisDowntrend BreakRSI & StochasticBear Flag
Crypto coverage is focusing on whether XRP and the XRP Ledger truly lead in Real-World Assets (RWA). Using metrics from RWA.xyz, the article argues that Ripple is not the RWA leader by overall value and user adoption.
On distributed RWA value, Ethereum is first at $15.54B, followed by BNB Chain ($3.5B), Solana ($1.949B), Stellar ($1.41B), and Liquid Network ($1.32B). The XRP Ledger ranks 8th with $458.46M, behind Arbitrum and Avalanche.
User count is described as an even bigger weakness: the XRP Ledger is ranked 10th with under 5,000 users, while Plume has 259,000, Solana has 184,000, and Ethereum has 164,000.
The article notes one area where the XRP Ledger looks relatively stronger: represented value on-chain. It cites ZKsync Era at $2.2B versus XRP Ledger at $1.5B, putting XRP Ledger ahead of Ethereum, Solana, and Plume on that specific metric. Overall, the RWA market is portrayed as rising, with total Distributed Asset Value crossing $27.68B, 710,000+ holders, and $441.38B in Represented Asset Value.
Bottom line for traders: the RWA narrative around XRP appears mixed—stronger in represented value, but weaker in distributed value and adoption—at a time when RWA totals are still expanding.
A New York Times investigation claims it has identified the real identity behind Bitcoin’s pseudonym, Satoshi Nakamoto, naming Adam Back—55-year-old British cryptographer and Blockstream CEO—as the top candidate.
Reporter John Carreyrou says his case rests on multiple lines of evidence. First, Back has repeatedly denied the theory, but the NYT argues those denials did not weaken the links. The investigation references Back’s reaction after his name appeared in the 2024 HBO documentary “Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery,” and it also cites Satoshi-era email correspondence connected to the UK COPA v. Craig Wright dispute.
Carreyrou alleges that Satoshi’s 2008–2009 messages show discussions consistent with Back’s work: Bitcoin design ideas aligning with Hashcash and proof-of-work concepts, and cross-references to Wei Dai’s “b-money” coming via Back. The report further points to Back and Satoshi overlapping on Cypherpunk mailing lists in the 1990s, shared technical themes (decentralized e-cash, censorship resistance, node independence), and Back’s technical background in distributed systems, C++ programming, and public-key cryptography.
Finally, the NYT says AI-based text analysis filtered thousands of old Cypherpunk posts to a small set of suspects, with Back surviving stylistic checks for British spelling and specific grammar patterns.
The article stresses there is still no cryptographic proof—no signed early message from the Satoshi-era keys. Traders should expect the “Satoshi Nakamoto identity” headline to be volatility-sensitive in the short term, but likely to fade unless on-chain or verifiable evidence follows. BTC recently reclaimed the low-$70k area, with the report’s market impact remaining uncertain.
Ethereum is advancing quantum-safe cryptography to defend against future quantum attacks, even though the threat is not immediate. The article argues Ethereum’s key problem is efficiency: many post-quantum cryptography schemes can require larger signatures, more computation for verification, and weaker aggregation—each of which can increase bandwidth, storage, and validator load.
Ethereum’s consensus layer currently relies on BLS signatures to aggregate thousands of validator attestations efficiently. If Ethereum simply replaced BLS with heavier alternatives, the network could see slower block propagation and lower scalability. Ethereum’s stated approach is not a direct swap. Instead, it aims to redesign the system using SNARK-based aggregation: verify a single compact cryptographic proof rather than checking many large proofs individually.
On the execution layer, users could face modestly higher gas costs due to more complex verification. Ethereum also plans a phased migration and wallet/account upgrades such as account abstraction, so old and new cryptographic systems can coexist during the transition.
The roadmap focus is readiness around 2029, with developers prioritizing cryptographic agility (ability to upgrade algorithms over time) to avoid irreversible and potentially insecure design choices. The article also highlights indirect impacts: quantum-safe cryptography may increase pressure on data availability and blob storage used by scaling solutions.
For traders, this is mainly a long-dated network engineering narrative rather than an immediate protocol change, but it frames potential future cost pressures (gas and validator requirements) that could affect sentiment around Ethereum’s scalability and decentralization.
UBS, PostFinance and Sygnum, together with Raiffeisen, Zürcher Kantonalbank, Banque Cantonale Vaudoise and Swiss Stablecoin AG, have launched a 2026 sandbox to test a Swiss franc stablecoin and blockchain-based payment rails in Switzerland.
The Swiss franc stablecoin sandbox will run as a secure digital “live” environment. Participating banks will trial selected use cases, while Swiss Stablecoin AG provides the issuance infrastructure. The initiative is also open to other banks, companies and institutions.
The move builds on prior Swiss experiments linking blockchain finance to the Swiss franc. In 2024, Bitcoin Suisse discontinued its Swiss franc-based CryptoFranc (XCHF), including issuance and redemption.
Separately, in September 2025, UBS, PostFinance and Sygnum completed a deposit token proof of concept under the Swiss Bankers Association. That trial tested legally binding interbank payments on a public blockchain, including programmable and compliant tokenized deposit transfers, plus an escrow-like exchange involving tokenized real-world assets.
For crypto traders, this is an institutional infrastructure update rather than a retail token launch. Still, the Swiss franc stablecoin sandbox suggests continued progress toward regulated, payment-ready stablecoin rails in Switzerland.
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Swiss franc stablecoinbanking sandboxtokenized depositsblockchain paymentsinstitutional adoption
A new report argues that gold mining imposes major environmental and human-rights costs that are often ignored while gold prices soar. It cites that artisanal/small-scale gold mining (ASGM) is the largest source of human-caused mercury pollution: miners mix liquid mercury with gold ore by hand, burn it over open fire, and release mercury vapor that enters lungs, rivers, soils, and then the food chain.
For industrial mining, the article highlights cyanide leaching (heap leaching): low-grade ore is stacked and sprayed with sodium cyanide, requiring large tailings dams. It points to multiple dam failures, including Baia Mare (Romania, 2000) where an estimated 100 tons of cyanide were released after a tailings breach, followed by other disasters in Ghana (2001) and Guyana (1995).
Key metrics are presented: producing about 1 troy ounce of gold averages ~0.8–0.9 tons of CO2e, while Earthworks estimates ~79 tons of waste per ounce (and ~21 cubic meters of water consumption). The report also claims gold funding supports violence and forced child labor in areas such as the DRC, Sudan, and Venezuela.
Trading relevance: while this is not directly about crypto flows, the piece contrasts the ESG debate around gold versus Bitcoin’s energy use, saying both are comparable in scale of carbon footprint. For traders, this may modestly shift sentiment on “real-world” asset ESG narratives rather than changing market structure.
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Gold MiningMercury & CyanideTailings Dam RiskESG DebateBitcoin
Morgan Stanley plans to launch a spot Bitcoin ETF, expected to trade under the ticker MSBT, directly challenging major issuers like BlackRock. The key lever is pricing: MSBT’s management fee is set at 0.14%, undercutting BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust at roughly 0.25%.
The firm intends to distribute this spot Bitcoin ETF through its U.S. wealth-management network of more than 15,000 advisors, improving access versus many single-channel launches. The ETF is also expected to appear on major ETF tracking platforms, letting investors monitor MSBT inflows and performance in real time.
Overall, the move reinforces fee-pressure competition across the Bitcoin ETF market. With spot Bitcoin ETFs reportedly posting strong daily inflows (noted as $471M in one day in the earlier report), traders may watch whether MSBT attracts additional allocation flows and whether the inflow momentum persists after launch.
This is not investment advice; crypto assets are volatile.
Lookonchain analysis claims Polymarket insider trading around a U.S.–Iran ceasefire: a cluster of newly created wallets bet on “U.S.–Iran ceasefire by April 7” and generated about $663K combined profit, on top of another known trader adding roughly $194K. Total reported gains from the ceasefire market reach about $857K+.
The pattern is flagged as unusual for Polymarket: the wallets were funded the same day, entered the market hours before the ceasefire was posted, had no prior on-chain activity, and placed YES bets at very low odds (about 2.9%–10.3%). Reported examples include turning ~$4,000 into $129K+ and ~$18,000 into $218K+.
Separately, the ceasefire context aligns with Trump’s two-week truce plan (pause on strikes, Strait of Hormuz reopening). Iran signaled acceptance while keeping readiness, with follow-up talks expected via regional mediation.
For crypto traders, this Polymarket insider trading episode can increase skepticism toward event-driven markets and raise compliance/security headline risk. In the short term, it may dampen risk-taking on similar headline bets; longer term, any regulator or platform review could affect Polymarket liquidity and settlement confidence, with second-order sentiment impacts across prediction-market activity.
Broadridge has extended its governance platform with on-chain equity proxy voting for tokenized stocks. The firm says it processes $8T in tokenized assets per month.
Galaxy Digital (GLXY) will be the first user, using Broadridge’s system for its May 2026 annual shareholder meeting. The platform consolidates voting across registered, beneficial, and tokenized holders into one unified view, records vote data on an Avalanche (AVAX)-based Layer 1, and then distributes it to multiple chains for a multi-chain audit trail.
Galaxy also noted it issued native tokenized equity on Solana (SOL) in September 2025 via Superstate’s Opening Bell platform.
For crypto traders, this is another step in RWA governance getting production-grade. However, it is not tied to a new token launch or an immediate on-chain price catalyst, so the market impact is likely more sentiment/narrative-driven than fundamentals-led.
Markets turned risk-on after a two-week U.S.–Iran ceasefire news flow. In pre-market trading, Bitcoin rose briefly to about $72,750 before easing to just under $72,000, supporting a broader crypto-and-equities rally.
BTC briefly topped $72,750. Tech stocks also surged as Invesco QQQ gained over 3.3% and IGV posted similar strength. Gold rose more than 2% to around $4,800/oz.
Macro stress eased: oil sold off sharply. WTI fell to roughly $92 then rebounded to about $96, still down over 12.5% in 24 hours. Brent was down more than 7.5%.
Volatility compressed across both traditional and crypto markets. The VIX fell around 20%. Bitcoin volatility—BVIV—dropped more than 6% to about 46.
Bond markets stabilized as the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield fell 1.5% to about 4.2%.
Crypto-linked equities moved higher in pre-market: Strategy (MSTR), Galaxy Digital (GLXY), Coinbase (COIN) and Circle (CRCL). AI and HPC data-centre firms also gained, including IREN (+7%) and Cipher Digital (CIFR, +9%).
For traders, this is a classic risk-sentiment impulse: BTC reacts to headline de-escalation, while reduced volatility and falling yields can support momentum trades—though some gains may fade if ceasefire details or enforcement uncertainty resurfaces.
BC.GAME has launched **BC Engine**, a new rewards layer that converts gameplay-earned **$BC** into an auto-staked balance, then issues **hourly $BCD** distributions. Eligible rewards arrive as instant **$BC** with no extra staking action. The system automatically routes those $BC into **BC Engine**, where users begin receiving an hourly $BCD reward cycle, framed as continuous gameplay-linked incentives rather than a one-time bonus.
Key user-facing points include instant $BC from normal play, automatic allocation into **BC Engine**, hourly $BCD distributions, no additional wagering requirement, and the ability to withdraw to the wallet at any time.
The launch also comes with a broader rewards update: daily, weekly, and monthly rewards, level-up bonuses, and a “Welcome Shield” that the platform says is available from day one. Welcome Shield highlights include 20% loseback up to $1,000 returned and a 0x wagering requirement, with first-session protection.
For traders, this appears to be a product-side tokenomics change tied to ongoing activity (gameplay → **$BC** → **BC Engine** → hourly **$BCD**). Immediate price impact on $BC or $BCD is uncertain, but the new distribution mechanic could shift market sentiment around BC.GAME’s reward demand dynamics.
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BC EngineCrypto GamingToken RewardsHourly BCD DistributionAuto-Staking
Namibia’s central bank, the Bank of Namibia (BoN), together with the Payments Association of Namibia and other financial stakeholders, has launched the National Payment System (NPS) Vision and Strategy 2026–2030. The plan is designed to accelerate digital payments, modernize the payments infrastructure, and support inclusive economic growth.
The initiative builds on the earlier NPS Vision 2025. BoN says the country previously improved payment systems through regulatory reforms, greater interoperability across payment channels, wider rollout of digital payment channels, and adoption of global standards such as ISO 20022. It also implemented Open Banking frameworks and introduced NAMQR code standards to improve payment accessibility and efficiency.
To shape the updated NPS Vision 2026–2030, authorities carried out extensive stakeholder consultations, industry workshops, and national consumer research. BoN describes the strategy as “inclusive and evidence-based,” aiming to position Namibia’s national payment system as a driver of innovation and interoperability while aligning with broader national development priorities.
For crypto traders, the key link is that stronger, standardized digital payments rails can increase on-ramps to fintech and digital finance use cases over time, though the policy itself is not a direct crypto regulation change. The near-term effect is likely limited, but the long-term trend supports wider adoption of digital payment infrastructure.
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digital paymentsnational payment systemISO 20022open bankingAfrica fintech
US-Iran ceasefire risk appears to be pricing as “nearly certain” in prediction markets after a two-week deal was agreed ahead of President Trump’s deadline. The April 15 US-Iran ceasefire contract surged from 12% YES to 100% YES within 24 hours, and the April 30 contract also reached 100% YES. Longer-dated outcomes remain pinned near certainty, with May 31 and June 30 around 99.9%–100% YES.
At the same time, traders are cooling the “Iran regime fall by June 30” narrative: that contract fell to 8.5% YES. Liquidity and order-book mechanics matter—reported USDC trading for April 15 reached about $1.39M, and a rapid 24-point jump around 10:34 PM moved odds from 67% to 90%. The article also notes the regime-fall market is thin, so relatively small orders (around $10K) can shift odds by several points.
Next catalyst is the April 10 Islamabad talks, where confirmation of US participation could either reinforce the current US-Iran ceasefire pricing or trigger repricing. Net takeaway for traders: the US-Iran ceasefire is currently treated as a short-term high-probability event, but the market can still reprice quickly on concrete diplomatic updates.
A crypto trader identified as “Loracle” closed $5M of oil shorts on Hyperliquid early Wednesday and booked about $2M profit, according to Arkham Intelligence. The move came after U.S.–Iran ceasefire news triggered a sharp crude selloff: oil prices fell more than 15% to below $100 per barrel.
Loracle reportedly built the position last week using crude oil perpetual futures on Hyperliquid, then squared the bearish bet after the gap-down in oil. Their on-chain holdings included USDT, USDC, ETH and other assets, totaling over $8M.
Trading activity underscores that “oil shorts” and other traditional-asset derivatives are drawing meaningful liquidity on crypto venues. Hyperliquid’s WTI crude oil perpetual futures logged about $2.45B in 24-hour trading volume, outpacing ether (ETH)-linked perpetuals. The article also notes Brent oil volume was roughly $1.3B, while BTC remained the top token by overall market spot ranking.
For crypto traders, the key takeaway is that major macro headlines can rapidly transmit into crypto-linked commodities/perpetuals, creating fast opportunities—but also fast liquidation risk—around weekend/legacy-market closures.
Alchemy, a major “AWS of Web3” infrastructure provider, has launched AgentPay to make different AI payment systems interoperable. The problem: agentic payment systems coming online can’t easily “talk to each other,” forcing merchants to build a separate integration for every protocol.
AgentPay aims to solve this fragmentation. Merchants register their existing API with Alchemy, then receive a new endpoint. Any AI agent on a supported protocol can pay through that single interface, with Alchemy positioning itself as a translation layer. Alchemy says it never touches the funds.
AgentPay is designed to work with multiple payment/protocol standards—Alchemy cites one integration “for every protocol,” including examples such as x402, MPP, A2P, and L402. The company completed a private beta soft launch and plans a general release in the coming weeks.
For crypto traders, the practical takeaway is near-term ecosystem plumbing rather than a direct token-specific catalyst. Still, broader interoperability for AI agents could improve payment routing efficiency and reduce integration friction for on-chain and off-chain payment rails—potentially supporting demand for compliant payment infrastructure over time. The release timing and developer adoption will be the key watch items as AgentPay rolls out.
This week centers on “FOMC minutes and CPI”, with Fed minutes (covering the March 17–18 meeting) and US CPI landing within 48 hours. The Fed held the federal funds rate at 3.50%–3.75% after the March meeting, when oil prices rose sharply amid the Middle East conflict. Traders will parse the FOMC minutes for signs of internal disagreement on how fast (or whether) easing could come—especially as Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s term ends in May and Kevin Warsh’s confirmation remains pending.
Then, “FOMC minutes and CPI” converge again via the March CPI release (April 10, 8:30 a.m. ET). CPI will be the first inflation print fully reflecting the post-oil-spike period. February CPI was 2.4% YoY, with energy driving part of the monthly move. Markets are focused on whether March shows a one-off energy effect the Fed can “look through,” or whether services and shelter inflation are turning stickier. The Fed’s projections still implied a median of one cut in 2026, but committee members are now split, with seven projecting zero cuts. A hot CPI could reduce the odds of April 28–29 easing.
Crypto traders also face overlapping catalysts: major US bank earnings (Goldman Sachs April 13; JPMorgan April 14, alongside PPI) that can influence risk appetite; CME BTC/ETH monthly options expiry on April 24 (four days before the FOMC decision), potentially concentrating hedging/positioning flows; and the US “CLARITY Act” Senate Banking markup targeted for late April, which could reshape SEC/CFTC jurisdiction and stablecoin yield rules.
Overall, this is a macro-heavy setup where FOMC minutes and CPI can quickly reprice rate expectations, while derivatives and legislation add additional near-term volatility.
The SEC said its past crypto enforcement actions often failed to deliver meaningful investor protection. In its 2025 enforcement results, the regulator noted that since the 2022 fiscal year it pursued 95 “book-and-record violations” cases tied to $2.3 billion in penalties, but admitted several matters—especially in the crypto sector—did not clearly identify investor harm or produce tangible protection outcomes.
The SEC also acknowledged its prior strategy leaned toward case volume rather than impact, which led to resource misallocation and, at times, misreading of federal securities laws. The regulator framed the shift as a departure from the former “regulation by enforcement” approach under Chair Gary Gensler. Under current Chair Paul Atkins, the SEC’s focus is moving toward higher-impact misconduct such as fraud, market manipulation, and breaches of trust—aiming to strengthen real investor protection.
Separately, seven US lawmakers asked the CFTC and Chair Michael Selig to explain oversight of prediction markets. They raised insider-trading risks tied to event contracts related to wars and potential US military actions, pointing to trades that appeared to track real-world developments. The letter comes amid ongoing legal/regulatory disputes involving platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket, where the CFTC argues these event-based contracts are swaps while some states view them as gambling.
For traders, this signals a more selective SEC crypto enforcement posture (potentially reducing headline risk from low-impact cases), while prediction-market scrutiny could increase regulatory uncertainty around certain derivatives-style products. The SEC still reported large monetary relief overall in 2025, even as public-company enforcement declined.
Geopolitical risk from the U.S.-Iran standoff pressured crypto sentiment, keeping traders mostly in “Fear” or “Extreme Fear” since Feb 28. After “Operation Epic Fury” began on Feb 27, Bitcoin slid from a mid-January peak near $96,000 to around $65,000 by Feb 28, and repeatedly failed to reclaim $75,000.
The latest shock came after U.S. President Donald Trump’s nuclear threat remarks aimed at Iran. While headlines turned bearish, market structure looked less panicked than during typical selloffs. According to Polymarket reporting, Iran was also accepting crypto payments as tolls for ships passing the Strait of Hormuz.
Financier Anthony Scaramucci (with Galaxy Digital CEO Michael Novogratz) described Bitcoin as “resilient after crashing 40%,” while Novogratz noted uncertainty with “sellers and buyers” and low volumes—yet no “force sellers anymore.” Traders also watched politics: Polymarket odds for Trump impeachment before term end were reported around 65% (25th Amendment debate mentioned).
Peter Schiff argued the threat is likely a bluff, citing that if markets believed a near-term catastrophe probability was high, stocks and oil would already be materially worse.
Momentum improved after an April 8 ceasefire announcement (immediate agreement noted in the article). Global crypto market cap rose about 4.42% to roughly $2.45T, while Bitcoin jumped to about $71,884, up ~5.04% on the day.
For traders: Bitcoin is showing shock-absorption during headlines, and the ceasefire catalyst is supporting a near-term rebound—but fear gauges remain elevated, suggesting fragile upside.
Bullish
BitcoinU.S.-Iran TensionsCeasefireCrypto Fear & GreedGeopolitical Risk
The FDIC stablecoin rules are moving forward after the GENIUS Act was signed into law. The U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation released a 191-page proposed framework for regulating and supervising stablecoin issuers.
Key FDIC stablecoin rules require strict reserve backing (U.S. dollars or highly liquid equivalents), secure custody of underlying assets, and stronger operational controls for issuers affiliated with FDIC-insured banks. Major issuers above a size threshold would also face annual independent audits.
A crucial detail for markets: stablecoin holdings are excluded from federal deposit insurance. Only “tokenized deposits” that meet the traditional regulatory definition could receive deposit-insurance treatment similar to standard bank accounts.
The proposal also tightens “yield” marketing. Issuers would be prohibited from advertising stablecoins as interest-bearing or promoting rewards based on holding or using the token, even via intermediaries. Separate reward programs may be allowed if they are not directly tied to ownership.
The FDIC opened a 60-day public comment period (144 targeted questions). Final GENIUS implementation, especially around yield-producing stablecoins, may take months.
For crypto traders, these FDIC stablecoin rules may reduce regulatory and promotional-risk headlines around stablecoin yields, but they also add compliance uncertainty for issuers in the near term. Expect sentiment to be headline-driven until the final rule is published.
Pantera Capital CEO Dan Morehead said the U.S. holds a strategic crypto reserve and that XRP is part of it. In comments circulated by the “Good Evening Crypto” host, Morehead reportedly confirmed the U.S. has a strategic Bitcoin reserve and then expanded beyond Bitcoin, adding that authorities also hold Ripple’s XRP within a “strategic digital asset reserve.”
The article links this claim to a broader U.S. policy pushed soon after Donald Trump took office, which proposed a multi-asset strategic digital asset reserve and explicitly named XRP among eligible assets. Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse is also referenced for advocating an inclusive approach versus Bitcoin-only maximalism, arguing that different networks have distinct real-world roles.
Why it matters for traders: if XRP is indeed recognized as a reserve holding, it can boost institutional credibility and reinforce the narrative that XRP’s payment and liquidity functions have strategic value. The report frames the development as potential validation from government-level decision-making, which can affect positioning, liquidity expectations, and sentiment around XRP.
Note: the piece is framed as informational and not financial advice.
Oman signed agreements under the “Muscat Protocol” to waive transit fees for ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz, shifting oversight from Iran’s IRGC to a bilateral management system and reducing blockade risk. Crypto prediction markets reacted sharply to the US-Iran ceasefire framework.
In the April 15 ceasefire contract, traders pushed YES to 100.0% from 12% within about 24 hours. The April 30 contract also moved to 100.0% from 26% a day earlier. The largest single move came at 10:34 PM, when the April 15 market jumped by 24 percentage points after rising confidence that the fee-relief and oversight changes would enable a ceasefire.
USDC volume reached $1,385,525 over the day, suggesting meaningful speculative positioning. The article frames Oman’s decision as a diplomatic shift away from military posturing, directly countering Iran’s earlier toll impositions. Traders are now watching for further statements from Oman’s Sultan and any rhetoric changes from US and Iranian officials. A formal ceasefire announcement would likely confirm what the market has already priced in.
Bullish
US-Iran ceasefireStrait of HormuzPrediction marketsGeopolitical riskUSDC volume
U.S. House lawmakers have written to CFTC Chair Michael S. Selig, urging stronger action on alleged prediction market insider trading and criticizing what they call insufficient enforcement. They point to event contracts tied to potential U.S. military actions involving Iran and Venezuela, saying some trades appeared timed to sensitive government decisions.
The seven lawmakers say the CFTC can regulate to prevent evasion of swap-related provisions under the Commodity Exchange Act. They requested answers to six questions by April 15.
The letter comes while prediction market platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket face ongoing legal pressure from state gaming authorities, leaving the broader regulatory framework unsettled. In related developments, the CFTC’s enforcement director David Miller previously said “insider trading” can apply to prediction markets, but enforcement is likely selective and focused on cases involving misuse of confidential information.
For crypto traders, this raises regulatory headline risk for prediction-market volumes and any related derivatives activity, especially around geopolitics-linked contracts and platforms under scrutiny.
Cardano targets Bitcoin liquidity with an $80 million Orion Fund after community governance approved the first tranche. The vote unlocks 50 million ADA from Cardano’s treasury (epoch 624) to deploy $15 million initially, managed by Draper Dragon, with Draper University as an acceleration partner.
Cardano targets Bitcoin liquidity by shifting from mainly grant-based Project Catalyst funding to taking direct equity/token positions in BTC-aligned ecosystem startups. The strategic aim is to close a “$3 billion by 2030” on-chain economy gap, arguing organic TVL growth is insufficient. Current TVL is cited at about $137 million, while a Binance Research estimate (March 2025) says only ~0.79% of BTC is used in DeFi—implying a large “BTCFi” opportunity.
To make the cross-chain thesis tradable, the article points to infrastructure progress: USDCx (Circle’s xReserve model) launched on Cardano mainnet in late February, with 15M+ USDCx minted in the first seven days and TVL rising from ~$127M to ~$142M. Interoperability also expanded via LayerZero connectivity to 150+ chains. A March 26 proof-of-concept highlights a native BTC–ADA atomic swap (FluidTokens) without third-party custodians or wrapped assets. Institutional rails are also forming, with CME launching Cardano futures in February.
Near-term success depends on retaining dollar liquidity (stablecoin usage and TVL) and generating durable Bitcoin-specific activity (collateral, atomic swaps). If execution stalls, Orion may be viewed as a sign Cardano’s DeFi base is still too small to capture cross-chain BTC liquidity.
Crypto Derivatives: Block Scholes’ Week 15 analytics show volatility stays elevated but is less inverted than a week ago in BTC and ETH options. BTC now trades ~45% below its October 2025 all-time high, after a halt in the spot selloff, which helped improve risk sentiment via the Block Scholes risk appetite index. ETH’s risk appetite is higher and closer to the -0.5 level that has historically preceded bullish momentum.
Despite improving risk appetite, directional sentiment remains strongly pessimistic across crypto options. The 25-delta risk reversal still favors out-of-the-money (OTM) puts, keeping a bearish skew. For BTC, the put skew is weaker than last week, but uncertainty tied to the war in Iran remains a key overhang as Trump has set a Tuesday 8:00 PM ET deadline to reach an “acceptable” agreement.
Volatility dynamics: BTC implied volatility fell sharply over the past week but is only slightly compressed at the start of this week, while the ETH term structure “disinverts,” with shorter tenors trading a bit lower.
Notable sources/figures: Block Scholes (analytics), with references to Deribit market data snapshots (CeFi composite and cross-exchange volatility smiles/constant-maturity surfaces).
Neutral
Crypto DerivativesOptions VolatilityRisk Reversal / Put SkewBTC and ETHIran Deal Deadline
UAE-regulated tokenization firm Ctrl Alt has received direct authorization from the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), enabling it to offer regulated investment services and expand its tokenization and digital capital markets capabilities. Ctrl Alt FCA approval also places Ctrl Alt Ltd (a subsidiary of Alt Ltd) on the FCA register for UK investment firms.
Ctrl Alt says it has already tokenized over $1.2 billion in assets as of April 2026, covering real estate, private credit, funds, and commodities. In February 2026, Ctrl Alt and Billiton Diamond tokenized $280 million in UAE-held diamonds using Ripple custody.
The company also acts as a tokenization partner for the Dubai Land Department, supporting real estate tokenization on the XRP Ledger (XRPL) in coordination with Dubai’s VARA and related entities. That project targets fractional ownership and aims to grow Dubai’s tokenized real estate market to AED 60 billion (about $16 billion) by 2033.
Prior to the FCA decision, Ctrl Alt participated in the Bank of England’s Digital Securities Sandbox and Synchronization Lab program as a Synchronization Operator, where it tested issuance, trading, settlement, and synchronization with the Bank’s renewed real-time gross settlement service.
For traders, the Ctrl Alt FCA nod is another step toward regulated real-world asset (RWA) tokenization infrastructure in the UK, potentially improving institutional confidence in tokenized securities frameworks—though near-term market impact may depend on execution and liquidity.
Bullish
UK FCA approvalTokenizationRWARipple XRP LedgerDigital Securities Sandbox
The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) reports that 2025 crypto scam losses in the US reached $11.4B, up 22% year over year. IC3 logged 181,565 complaints involving crypto assets (up 21% YoY). Total IC3 complaints rose to 1,008,597.
Crypto scam losses were concentrated in common fraud categories. Investment schemes were the most frequent, followed by extortion and phishing/spoofing. Losses hit older Americans hardest: victims aged 60+ reported about $7.7B in losses, up 37%.
A key new development is the rise of AI-enabled fraud. IC3 recorded 22,364 complaints tied to AI-enabled scams in 2025, with losses nearing $893M. The FBI also highlighted crypto ATM and kiosk scams: 13,460 complaints caused $389M in losses, with dollar losses up 58% versus 2024.
California led by complaint volume (20,878), followed by Texas and Florida. The FBI cited prevention efforts including Operation Level Up (since 2024) and Operation Winter SHIELD (launched in 2026) to improve cybersecurity.
For traders, this is mainly a demand- and sentiment-risk story: higher crypto scam losses can raise regulatory and consumer-protection pressure. However, the report does not point to direct market manipulation or exchange insolvency, so near-term price impact is likely limited.
An analyst (CasiTrades) says XRP’s bullish candles over the last 24 hours are not confirmation of an uptrend. She argues the move is still inside a broader, bearish Elliott Wave structure and that resistance is holding.
Key levels for XRP traders: first target near $1.13, then a relief move before continuation lower toward $1.08. CasiTrades highlights $1.08 as aligned with the macro 0.786 Fibonacci support. A further break could push XRP to $0.87, near the macro 0.854 Fibonacci support.
Trading plan emphasis: buy only at key supports (below the 0.786 and 0.854 zones) or wait for a confirmed breakout above the 0.618 resistance, which could flip to support. Price action inside intermediate ranges is described as likely “shakeout” rather than a real reversal.
Indicators: bearish divergence is cited as evidence of XRP bullish exhaustion. RSI is said to be moving toward/into overbought conditions, implying the recent upside may already be stretched.
Bottom line for XRP: monitor whether price respects the support bands around $1.08 and $0.87; otherwise, the current strength may fade back toward the projected downside targets.
Bitcoin $100K odds in a December-31 prediction contract rose to 36.5% (from 31% the prior day) as tensions around the Strait of Hormuz de-escalated. The news boosted risk-on sentiment and triggered a short squeeze, with capital reportedly rotating from oil-linked assets into crypto.
The article highlights two order-book dynamics. Moving the $100,000 market by the same amount takes $8,405, a comparatively “thicker” book that may signal institutional participation. In contrast, the $150,000 target remains flat at 9.0% and is much thinner—only $2,029 is needed—making it more sensitive to large orders.
Despite the odds change, realized volume looks smaller: about $4,214 in USDC moved the $100,000 contract. The largest 24-hour move was a small spike around 11:31 PM that lifted prices from 34% to 36%.
The contract implies a payoff of 1 US dollar if Bitcoin hits $100,000 by year-end, corresponding to roughly a 2.74x return at a 36¢ price. The key bearish risk in the setup is that geopolitical cooling could reverse and money could flow back into oil or other traditional safe havens.
Traders are told to watch for institutional signals from BlackRock and MicroStrategy, plus any renewed change in the Strait of Hormuz situation, which could drive the next major move in these contracts.
Bullish
BitcoinPrediction MarketsGeopoliticsShort SqueezeOrder Book Dynamics