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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

SPY Falls 1.4% After Strait of Hormuz Closure; Oil Tops $85, Risk-Off Hits Markets

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SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) fell about 1.4% to $677.68 after an Iranian Revolutionary Guard commander said the Strait of Hormuz was effectively closed. The announcement sent Brent crude above $85/barrel — the highest since July 2024 — on concerns that roughly one-third of seaborne crude exports could be disrupted. US indices plunged: the Dow fell ~1,098 points (‑2.25%), the S&P 500 dropped 190 points to 6,710, and the Nasdaq lost over 1.5% to 22,125; small caps underperformed. Traders moved from dip-buying to liquidation as geopolitical risk intensified, raising inflation expectations and Treasury yields. Technically, SPY is testing a confluence support (horizontal support plus ascending trendline); a hold could invite buyers back toward recent highs near $697, while a break could open a pullback toward the $600 area. SPY’s near-term direction will hinge on developments in the Strait of Hormuz and oil market stability.
Bearish
SPYStrait of HormuzOil pricesGeopolitical riskMarket volatility

S&P 500 Erases 2026 Gains as Iran Tensions Send Oil Above $80

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Escalating US–Iran tensions and reported attacks near the Strait of Hormuz sparked a sharp sell-off on March 3, 2026, wiping out year-to-date gains for the S&P 500. The index fell more than 2% shortly after the open to around 6,715 — a three-month low — with nearly 90% of S&P stocks declining and NYSE decliners outnumbering advancers 17-to-1. Futures had fallen overnight as reports said Iran fired on ships and President Trump warned the conflict could continue for weeks. Oil surged on supply concerns: Brent topped $80/bbl and WTI rose above $75, a roughly 10% jump in days, amid fears that disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz could choke about 13 million barrels per day. Rising oil pushed inflation fears higher, sending the 10-year Treasury yield toward 4.1% and hitting rate-sensitive sectors. Tech and semiconductors led losses (chips down 6–9% with Micron, Western Digital, Applied Materials notably weak); airlines fell 3%+ on jet-fuel costs; materials names like Freeport-McMoRan and Newmont plunged ~9%. Nvidia and other big tech also declined while some defence stocks gained on expected higher demand. Strategists warn the episode may deepen if attacks continue. Analysts cite the risk of prolonged disruption to energy infrastructure and say oil could reach triple digits if the Strait remains closed, potentially dragging the S&P toward 6,000. Market volatility is elevated (VIX ~25.4). Short-term implications: heightened volatility, risk-off flows from equities into oil, Treasuries and safe-havens; sectors sensitive to rates and input costs likely to underperform. Longer-term outcome depends on de-escalation—resolution could prompt a rebound, while prolonged conflict risks sustained stagflationary pressure and deeper equity drawdowns.
Bearish
S&P 500Geopolitical RiskOil PricesMarket VolatilityEquities Sell-off

Xage Security named Forbes America’s Best Startup Employer for third consecutive year

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Xage Security has been recognised by Forbes as one of America’s Best Startup Employers for the third year running. The honour highlights Xage’s sustained strengths in talent attraction, employee retention and workplace culture among early-stage companies. The Forbes ranking evaluates startups on criteria including employee satisfaction, company growth, and employer reputation using independent surveys, public data and employer nominations. Xage, a provider of cybersecurity solutions for industrial and critical infrastructure environments, differentiates itself through technology focused on zero-trust, identity-centric security and protection for OT/IIoT systems. The listing reinforces Xage’s market credibility at a time when cybersecurity demand is rising across industrial and supply-chain sectors. For traders watching security and industrial tech sectors, the recognition signals continued commercial traction and hiring momentum for Xage and may support investor confidence in cybersecurity firms serving operational technology markets.
Neutral
cybersecuritystartup awardsindustrial techzero-trustworkplace culture

Aave governance split: ACI exits after dispute over $51M Aave Labs budget

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The Aave Chan Initiative (ACI), a leading Aave DAO governance delegate and eight-person service team, announced it will wind down operations and not renew its contract after a governance dispute with Aave Labs over a record budget request. Aave Labs’ “Aave Will Win” proposal — seeking roughly $51 million in stablecoins and 75,000 AAVE for product development, marketing and Aave V4 expansion — passed an initial off-chain Temp Check with ~52% support. ACI criticized the package size and the inclusion of AAVE, said Labs-linked addresses self-voted, and argued requested governance safeguards (on-chain milestones, limits on self-voting) were ignored. ACI says it handled 61% of governance actions and $101M in incentives over three years and will continue governance duties until outstanding commitments are completed, then transfer infrastructure and roles to the DAO or successors over a four-month wind-down. ACI will submit an Aave Improvement Proposal to cancel its GHO funding stream, move 120 days of payments to its treasury, and cut AAVE vesting via LlamaPay after execution. The exit follows BGD Labs’ recent stepback and raises fresh centralization and voting-power concerns within the DAO. Traders should monitor governance risk, potential large stablecoin budget flows (GHO issuance), on-chain vote outcomes (ARFC and binding AIP steps), and AAVE price volatility — AAVE dropped over 11% in 24 hours after the announcement — as these developments may affect liquidity and short-term price action.
Bearish
AaveDAO governanceAAVEGHO stablecoinAave Labs budget

NEAR co-founder: AI agents will be blockchain’s primary users

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NEAR co-founder Illia Polosukhin says artificial intelligence agents — not human users — will become the primary interface for blockchain services. Polosukhin argues AI will sit on the front end, abstracting wallets, explorers and transaction details, while blockchain becomes an invisible back-end settlement layer providing trusted execution, ownership and programmable finance. He criticizes current crypto approaches to AI and governance (noting DAOs’ failures when unbounded) and warns memecoin-driven speculation harms crypto’s reputation among AI researchers. Polosukhin frames crypto’s long-term role as neutral financial rails for AI-driven actions like payments, asset management and governance voting. Key themes: AI agents, blockchain as settlement/infrastructure, DAOs and governance, reputation risks from memecoins.
Neutral
AI agentsNEARblockchain infrastructureDAO governancecrypto reputation

Machi Big Brother Liquidated on 25x ETH Long After $250K Top‑up; Six‑Month Losses Near $74M

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On‑chain traders tracked as “Machi Big Brother” was partially and then fully liquidated after depositing $250,000 USDC into Hyperliquid to support a 25x leveraged Ether (ETH) long. Arkham and Lookonchain data show the deposit occurred ~16 hours before forced liquidation; the wallet’s balance fell from about $250K to roughly $75,955 and then to near $8,500 after liquidation. Earlier reporting showed the trader had deposited millions into Hyperliquid over recent weeks; cumulative public on‑chain losses from repeated 25x ETH longs over six months are reported near $74 million. The positions began when ETH traded around $4,700 and persisted as ETH fell toward $1,900, exposing large downside risk for high‑leverage longs. The account still held on‑chain ETH balances in prior reports, but off‑chain holdings are unknown, so published loss figures may not capture the trader’s entire net worth. No public statement has been made. Key takeaways for traders: heightened liquidation pressure on ETH from large 25x longs; on‑chain transparency allows real‑time monitoring of leveraged positions; and strict risk management is essential when using high leverage because small ETH price moves can trigger rapid margin calls and account wipeouts.
Bearish
Machi Big BrotherHyperliquidETH liquidation25x leverageon‑chain tracking

BOJ expands blockchain sandbox to test reserve settlements; CBDC pilots continue

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The Bank of Japan (BOJ) has expanded a blockchain-based sandbox to run technical experiments settling commercial banks’ reserves held as current account deposits (tokenized central bank reserves). Governor Kazuo Ueda said tests will connect blockchain systems with existing payment and securities infrastructure and explore domestic interbank and securities settlement use cases. The sandbox builds on the BOJ’s participation in Project Agorá, an international initiative testing tokenized wholesale central bank deposits, smart contracts and atomic cross‑border transactions. Analysts say reserve settlement on blockchain could enable instant, 24/7 finality and reduce gridlock risk during market stress. The BOJ noted interoperability between ledger networks and traditional rails is a priority and is working with external experts to address technical, legal and operational risks, including smart‑contract vulnerabilities. Retail CBDC pilots that began in 2021 (with a 2023 pilot phase) remain active, but the BOJ has not committed to public issuance; a decision on a digital yen is expected later in its review process. For traders: these developments increase the likelihood of tokenized central bank money and faster settlement rails becoming part of the wholesale plumbing, which could lower counterparty and settlement risk and alter demand for settlement-layer liquidity. Expect gradual infrastructure risk repricing rather than immediate price shocks; monitor policy announcements, tokenized assets pilot results and Project Agorá milestones for trading signals.
Neutral
Bank of Japanblockchain settlementCBDCtokenized reservesProject Agorá

DBS Warns Geopolitical Conflict Could Weaken the Indian Rupee

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DBS Bank warns that rising geopolitical conflict risks across Asia could push the Indian Rupee (INR) into heightened volatility in 2025. Key transmission channels cited are higher global crude prices—worsening India’s import bill—and a strengthening US dollar amid global risk-off flows, prompting capital flight from emerging markets. DBS correlates regional stability indices with INR moves and estimates that a sustained 10% rise in a conflict-risk index can cause outflow pressures equal to about 0.5–0.8% of GDP for emerging-market currencies. Mitigants include India’s large FX reserves (above $600bn), diversified energy sourcing, strong services exports (IT), and prospective inclusion of Indian bonds in global indices. DBS notes that while domestic fundamentals remain solid, geopolitical shocks are non-cyclical and harder for the RBI to counter, meaning short-term INR weakness remains a material risk. Traders should monitor crude prices, USD strength, FPI flows, RBI interventions, and regional developments for signs of accelerating volatility.
Bearish
Indian RupeeGeopolitical RiskForeign ExchangeDBS BankMacro Outlook

Dimon: Crypto Firms Paying Stablecoin Yield Should Face Bank-Style Regulation

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JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warned that crypto firms offering yield on dollar-pegged stablecoins create a regulatory double standard and could threaten consumers and financial stability if not subject to bank-level rules. Dimon said paying interest on stablecoins is functionally similar to deposit-taking and should carry safeguards such as deposit insurance, capital and liquidity requirements, AML controls and regular oversight. He suggested firms like Coinbase should “become banks” if they want to offer such products. The remarks echo collapses of crypto lenders in 2022–23 (Celsius, Voyager, BlockFi) and mirror ongoing Washington debates: stalled market-structure legislation, questions over whether platforms can continue stablecoin rewards, the GENIUS Act and proposed OCC rulemaking. Talks between the White House, banks and crypto firms continue but negotiators remain far apart. For traders: the focus on regulating stablecoin yields increases the likelihood of tighter rules or bank-like frameworks that could restrict some yield products, alter liquidity in dollar-backed stablecoins, and shift flows across exchanges and DeFi — a potential source of volatility for crypto markets that rely on stablecoin funding.
Neutral
stablecoin yieldsregulationJamie DimonCoinbasemarket structure

Iran Withdrawal Spike Shows Bitcoin’s Wartime Role — Not Digital Gold

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Geopolitical escalation in the Middle East — including coordinated U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran and Iranian retaliatory attacks — has driven sharp moves in commodities and risk assets. Gold rallied above $5,400 per ounce (briefly) and Brent crude jumped toward $83/bbl as tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz fell ~70%. Bitcoin, however, behaved like a high-beta risk asset: BTC fell into the low $63k range after initial strikes, briefly rebounded toward $70k, then settled around $66–67k. On-chain data reveal a contrasting, local use-case in Iran: analytics firm Elliptic reported Nobitex (Iran’s largest exchange) saw withdrawals surge over 700% minutes after the strikes — roughly $3m moved off-platform in one hour — suggesting crypto rails were used for rapid capital flight and to preserve purchasing power amid local banking disruption. Key trading levels: support near $65k, next structural supports near $60k and the 200-week SMA (~$58.5k); upside would require a daily close above $70k to regain momentum. Macro path to watch: sustained Brent above $90 could entrench inflation expectations, delay Fed cuts, tighten liquidity and weigh on crypto. For traders: expect heightened volatility, divergence between gold and BTC as safe-haven demand concentrates in traditional assets, and localized crypto flows in crisis zones that can amplify on-chain activity but don’t necessarily translate to immediate bullish macro price action for BTC. Primary keywords: Bitcoin, Iran crypto withdrawals, Nobitex, gold, Brent crude, Strait of Hormuz.
Bearish
BitcoinIranCrypto withdrawalsGeopoliticsOil & Gold

Prediction Markets Gauge Iran Conflict Risks for Traders

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Prediction markets and betting platforms are pricing geopolitical risk from the Iran conflict, offering real‑time probabilistic signals that traders can use to gauge market sentiment and potential volatility. These markets allow participants to bet on outcomes such as escalation, strikes on US forces, or regime change, and current prices imply varying probabilities for short‑term hostile actions versus prolonged war. Key takeaways: prediction markets provide faster, often more granular signals than traditional news flows; prices reflect collective trader expectations and can move quickly on new intelligence; liquidity and platform reliability vary across markets, affecting how actionable prices are for crypto and macro traders. For crypto traders specifically, heightened geopolitical risk tends to increase short‑term volatility in BTC and ETH, push flows into perceived safe‑haven assets and stablecoins, and may disrupt on‑chain activity in the affected regions. Traders should monitor prediction market odds as part of a broader risk toolkit, watch for sudden shifts in prices that precede volatility spikes, and account for market depth and settlement rules before using these markets to hedge positions.
Neutral
Prediction marketsGeopolitical riskIran conflictCrypto volatilityMarket intelligence

EUR/GBP Falls to 0.8550 Despite Stronger Eurozone Inflation — Policy Divergence and Positioning Blamed

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EUR/GBP unexpectedly declined about 0.4% to 0.8550 despite Eurozone HICP inflation accelerating to 2.8% year-on-year (core 3.1%), outpacing the UK’s 2.3% (core 2.6%). Traders attributed the move to forward-looking central bank expectations — markets now price the Bank of England as likely to keep rates higher for longer while the ECB is viewed as more cautious despite elevated inflation. Additional drivers included quarter-end institutional selling, increased options hedging, heavy algorithmic momentum trading, and net speculative short positioning against the euro. Technicals show an 18-month narrow range (0.82–0.88) with support at 0.8520 and resistance at 0.8650. Broader influences are a stronger US dollar, geopolitical risk, energy price differentials favoring the UK, and lingering Brexit trade frictions. For traders, the key takeaways are: watch BoE vs ECB communications and UK growth indicators, monitor positioning and options flows that can amplify moves, and trade cautiously within the established range unless a clear catalyst triggers a breakout.
Neutral
EUR/GBPForexECB vs BoEInflationMarket Positioning

MARA may sell BTC as miners pivot to AI/HPC

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MARA Holdings signalled a strategic shift: after permitting miner‑generated BTC sales in 2025, the company’s 2025 Form 10‑K says it may also sell Bitcoin held on its balance sheet “from time to time” in 2026 depending on market conditions and investment priorities. MARA reported holding 53,822 BTC as of Dec. 31, 2025 (valued then at about $4.7B; roughly $3.6B at current spot near $67.7k). The disclosure follows rising mining difficulty, higher production costs (analysts estimate production cost per BTC near ~$87k versus spot ~ $69k in prior reporting), and hashprice at record lows — pressures that have pushed miners to diversify. MARA is pivoting toward vertical integration including energy generation and AI/high‑performance computing (HPC) after acquiring a majority stake in Exaion; peers like Terawulf cite AI/HPC contracts as new revenue drivers. Sectorwide signs of stress include falling revenues and large losses at some miners (e.g., Riot’s 2025 net loss and Core Scientific’s revenue decline). For traders, the key takeaways are increased BTC supply risk from potential balance‑sheet sales, continued selling pressure if mining economics stay unfavorable, and the possibility that revenue mixes will shift over time as firms monetize AI/HPC assets. Primary keywords: MARA, Bitcoin, BTC sales, mining, AI compute, HPC, hashprice.
Bearish
MARABitcoinBTC salesMiningAI/HPC

Trump’s Meme-Coin Portfolio Collapses 94%, Falling From $11.5M to $700K

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Donald Trump’s crypto portfolio, tracked by Arkham Intelligence, plunged about 94% after peaking at $11.49 million on January 20, 2025 to roughly $700,000 within weeks. The loss was driven by concentrated holdings in three politically themed meme tokens — TRUMP, TROG and GUA — rather than major cryptocurrencies like BTC or ETH. TRUMP token tumbled over 90% from its highs as social-media buzz faded, liquidity dried up and broader regulatory and market headwinds hit meme coins. Analysts note this case highlights acute concentration and liquidity risks in political meme assets; major tokens such as Bitcoin and Ethereum fell far less (around 12%) during the same period. Key trading takeaways: avoid heavy concentration in event-driven meme tokens, factor shallow order books and low liquidity into exit planning, and prioritise diversification toward more liquid, fundamentally supported crypto assets. Primary keywords: Trump crypto, meme coins, portfolio collapse. Secondary/semantic keywords included: political token volatility, liquidity risk, Arkham Intelligence, TRUMP, TROG, GUA, Bitcoin, Ethereum.
Bearish
meme coinspolitical tokensportfolio riskArkham Intelligencecrypto volatility

March 2026 Radar: AI agents, OpenClaw clones, major model releases and rising security risks

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O’Reilly’s March 2026 Radar reports a rapid acceleration in agentic AI, model competition, and security research that directly affects infrastructure and enterprise adoption. Key model releases and research updates include OpenAI’s GPT-5.3-Codex-Spark (research preview), Google’s Gemini 3.1 Pro / Nano Banana 2 (Gemini 3.1 Flash Image), Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet 4.6 and Claude Opus 4.6, Z.ai’s GLM-5, Moonshot’s Kimi K2.5 and multiple open models. The OpenClaw wave has produced many clones and personal assistants (Kimi Claw, NanoClaw, IronClaw, NanoBot, SpaceMolt), spawning sandboxing and visibility tools (Twilio’s Agent-2-Human handoff, Tailscale Aperture, OpenAI Prism) to manage agent behavior and enterprise workflows. Security is the central theme: researchers and attackers both use agents to discover and exploit vulnerabilities (hundreds of zero-days found, OpenSSL issues cited), while novel attacks target LLM APIs (Bizarre Bazaar), disguise malware as coding assistants, and steal agent credentials and secrets. Defenses and operational tooling are evolving — sandboxed runtimes, prompt-injection games (HackMyClaw), GitHub pull-request controls, Cloudflare Markdown-for-Agents, and enterprise multimodal RAG experiments — but risks remain if exploits scale. Other notable trends: recursive language-model research to reduce context rot, Waymo’s driving World Model, WebMCP/HTML→Markdown tooling for agents, and experiments in long-term glass data storage. For crypto traders: the report signals faster AI innovation, intensifying competition among models, and rising demand for cloud compute, AI infrastructure, and security solutions. Expect heightened investment and volatility in infrastructure and security-related tokens and equities, plus potential systemic risk if large-scale exploits disrupt cloud services or data availability. Primary trading implications: increased flows into AI infrastructure and security plays, short-term volatility around major model or vulnerability disclosures, and longer-term structural demand for secure compute and enterprise agent tooling.
Neutral
AI agentsModel releasesSecurity vulnerabilitiesAI infrastructureAgent tooling

Oil-driven sell-off drags Bitcoin below $70,000 as gold, stocks fall

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Bitcoin fell about 3% as global asset classes sold off after Middle East tensions closed the Strait of Hormuz, reviving oil supply fears. BTC briefly failed to reclaim and hold $70,000, sliding toward $66,000 as major US indices (S&P 500, Nasdaq) dropped roughly 2%. Gold, expected as a safe haven, also weakened sharply — analysts described gold as “smashed” despite year-to-date gains — while silver and platinum registered larger declines. Traders and analysts noted that BTC has underperformed during the rally attempt, with some technical indicators (loss of the 2021 top and 21-day SMA) signaling continued bearish control, though others see relative strength versus precious metals and shorter-term buying opportunities within the current range. Market commentators flagged higher oil volatility and the risk that prolonged geopolitical conflict could entrench market weakness. No investment advice is offered.
Bearish
BitcoinOil pricesGoldMarket volatilityGeopolitical risk

ECB warns euro stablecoins could drain bank deposits as Visa, Mastercard scale token settlement

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The European Central Bank (ECB) published a research paper warning that widespread adoption of euro‑denominated stablecoins could weaken monetary policy and drain commercial bank deposits, reducing lenders’ ability to fund the real economy—especially during stress events when deposit flight may accelerate. The paper urges strict oversight and implies that large‑scale euro stablecoin use will face tight MiCA‑era constraints on reserves, disclosure and central bank access. The warning coincides with major payment firms expanding tokenized settlement: Visa is broadening its work with Bridge to roll out stablecoin‑linked cards to 100+ countries after volumes “more than quadrupled” last year, and Mastercard plus SoFi launched SoFiUSD (a fully reserved dollar stablecoin) for settlement across Mastercard’s network. Markets treated the ECB note as a medium‑term structural risk rather than an immediate shock; BTC traded near $67–68k, ETH near $2k and SOL in the mid‑$80s at publication. Key implications for traders include increased regulatory scrutiny on stablecoins, potential constraints on euro stablecoin growth, and a narrative shift making stablecoins a central policy fault line between central banks, banks and payments platforms.
Neutral
ECBStablecoinsRegulationPaymentsMarket impact

Won Briefly Tops 1,500 vs. Dollar as Global Dollar Strength Fuels Korean Currency Volatility

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The South Korean won briefly breached the 1,500-per-dollar mark on March 3, 2025 (3:12 p.m. UTC), peaking above 1,500 before settling at 1,498.19, according to TradingView. The move reflects broad U.S. dollar strength and monetary policy divergence between the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Korea, which has widened yield differentials and encouraged capital outflows from Korea. Contributing factors include volatility in Korea’s export sectors (notably semiconductors and autos), higher energy import costs, regional geopolitical risks, and shifts in global risk sentiment. Trading volumes spiked during the breach, indicating heightened institutional activity. Analysts note Korea’s foreign exchange reserves (over $400 billion) give the Bank of Korea tools — verbal intervention, spot market intervention and swaps — to smooth disorderly moves, but prolonged weakness past 1,500 could raise import inflation and stress unhedged corporate FX debt. For traders, key indicators to watch are Fed rate decisions, US–Korea yield differentials, Korea’s monthly trade balance, forward premiums and interbank rates, and oil prices. Historical precedents include late 2008 and October 2022 episodes when USD/KRW hit similar levels during global stress. Market implication: the move is mainly driven by global dollar dynamics rather than Korea-specific collapse, but persistent depreciation would have mixed effects — aiding exporters while raising costs for consumers and importers.
Neutral
USD/KRWForexBank of KoreaDollar StrengthExport Economy

Bitcoin’s 4.64% Surge: Short Squeeze or Start of a Conviction Rally?

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Bitcoin (BTC) climbed 4.64% on March 2, 2026, moving back above $70,000 amid a short squeeze that triggered roughly $229 million in short liquidations—about 65% of the $360 million total liquidated that day. Funding rates remained deeply negative and 12-hour orderbook heatmaps showed large short liquidity clusters above spot, supporting the view that the move was largely short-driven. Skeptics call it a "fake pump" with next resistance near $78,000. Bullish counterarguments point to improving investor psychology: the Crypto Fear & Greed Index moved one point away from leaving “extreme fear,” open interest and leverage are relatively low compared with last year’s geopolitical-driven volatility, and overall speculation is subdued. Those conditions could support a conviction-led breakout if buying continues. Key stats: +4.64% intraday move, $229M in short liquidations (65% of the day’s $360M), reclaimed $70,111 level, funding rates negative, Crypto Fear & Greed Index edging up. For traders: expect elevated volatility driven by short-covering dynamics; watch funding rates, open interest, and orderbook short clusters for confirmation of a sustainable rally or a reversal back below $70k.
Neutral
BitcoinShort SqueezeLiquidationsFunding RatesMarket Sentiment

MARA Updates Treasury Policy to Allow BTC Sales While Holding 53,822 BTC

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MARA Holdings, the largest publicly traded Bitcoin miner, updated its treasury policy to permit selective Bitcoin sales to fund operations and strategic pivots into AI and high-performance computing. As of year-end, MARA holds 53,822 BTC (reported value ~$4.7B at $87,498/year-end price; current value ~ $3.6B at present spot). In 2025 the firm bought 4,267 BTC (avg $111,034) and mined 8,799 BTC, but saw a $422.2M decline in holdings value due to price moves. MARA deployed ~28% of reserves (9,377 BTC loaned; 5,938 BTC used as collateral) in lending, trading, or collateral deals, generating $32.1M in interest income in 2025. The company operates ~490,000 miners with 66.4 EH/s and ~1.9 GW energy capacity; energy costs were $179M. The policy change does not mandate sales but gives flexibility to sell depending on capital needs and market conditions; similar miners (e.g., Core Scientific) have already sold BTC to fund AI transitions. Key SEO keywords: MARA, Bitcoin miner, BTC treasury policy, BTC sales, mining economics, AI pivot, BTC lending.
Neutral
MARABitcoinBTC treasury policyBitcoin lendingAI pivot

Kansas City Fed’s Schmid: AI Could Drive Non-Inflationary, Supply-Led Growth

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Jeffrey Schmid, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, said AI has the potential to generate supply-driven economic growth without triggering inflation. Speaking to the Metro Denver Executive Club, Schmid expressed optimism that productivity gains from artificial intelligence could expand supply, easing price pressures even as growth accelerates. He discussed monetary policy and the economic outlook, reiterating the Fed’s focus on balancing growth and inflation risks. Key themes: AI-driven productivity, supply-side expansion, inflation outlook, and central bank policy implications. Primary keywords: AI, supply-driven growth, inflation, Federal Reserve, monetary policy. Secondary/semantic keywords: productivity gains, price pressures, economic outlook, interest rates.
Neutral
AIFederal ReserveMonetary PolicyInflation OutlookEconomic Growth

CFTC to Allow U.S. Crypto Perpetuals; Guidance on DeFi and Prediction Markets Imminent

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CFTC Chair Mike Selig said the agency will soon publish policy guidance to permit compliant launches of crypto perpetual futures in the U.S. and to set standards for decentralized finance (DeFi) developers and prediction markets. Speaking with SEC Chair Paul Atkins at a Milken Institute event, Selig said the CFTC is “working towards getting professional futures… here in the U.S. within the next month or so” and expects an announcement shortly. The initiative is part of a joint regulatory push called Project Crypto, which includes "innovation exceptions" to enable controlled experimentation. Selig said earlier U.S. policy pushed perpetual-futures liquidity offshore and that clearer domestic rules are needed. The CFTC plans to formalize guidance through rulemaking to provide longer-term legal certainty for products and for developers in DeFi and prediction markets (examples cited previously include Polymarket and Kalshi). SEC Chair Atkins cautioned that statutory clarity from Congress remains important after recent court decisions limited agency authority; lawmakers continue negotiating the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, though passage in 2026 is uncertain. Key keywords: CFTC, crypto perpetuals, DeFi, prediction markets, Project Crypto.
Bullish
CFTCcrypto perpetualsDeFiprediction marketsProject Crypto

Public Bitcoin Miners Sell BTC to Fund AI Shifts, Signaling More Treasury Sales

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Publicly listed bitcoin miners are increasingly selling bitcoin from their treasuries to fund pivots into AI and high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure. Major sellers include Core Scientific, Bitdeer, Riot Platforms and Bitfarms, which together account for most of a 15,096 BTC reduction from peak holdings. Notable moves: Core Scientific sold $175m (balance down from 2,537 to ~630 BTC), Riot sold ~$200m in late 2025 and liquidated nearly 1,100 BTC for the Rockdale deal, Bitdeer reduced holdings to zero, and Bitfarms cut holdings from 3,301 to 1,827 BTC. Others — Cipher Digital, Hut 8, CleanSpark and MARA — have adopted more flexible treasury policies, monetizing output or using BTC for financing while retaining varying balances (examples: MARA holds 53,822 BTC; CleanSpark ~13,513 BTC). Overall, bitcoin sits near $66k (about 50% below October highs), and miners are treating BTC as working capital rather than a long-term reserve. For traders, this trend implies continued supply pressure from balance-sheet sales as capital reallocates to AI buildouts, increasing sell-side liquidity risk during periods of price weakness. Primary keywords: bitcoin miners, BTC treasuries, AI infrastructure, BTC selling.
Bearish
bitcoin minersBTC treasuriesAI infrastructurebalance-sheet sellingcrypto market supply

Bitcoin shows relative strength as global stocks plunge amid Iran war

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Crypto markets hold up modestly as global equities tumble after the outbreak of war in Iran. Major stock indexes fell sharply — Nasdaq down ~2.5%, S&P 500 down ~2.3%, Italy’s IBEX 35 down 5.2%, Germany’s DAX down 4.1% — while commodities reacted: gold -4.3%, silver -7.5%, platinum -11.3%, and WTI crude oil +8% to ~$77/bbl. Bitcoin briefly fell toward $66,000 but recovered to trade around $68,000 (down ~1% over 24 hours and ~2% up from intraday lows). Ether (ETH), Solana (SOL) and XRP (XRP) were also down on the day but recovered from session lows. Crypto equities saw heavier selling: Robinhood (HOOD) -7%, Coinbase (COIN) -5%, MicroStrategy (MSTR) and Bullish (BLSH) -4%, Circle (CRCL) -1%. Market observers note bitcoin’s weekend liquidity and lower liquidation signs amid rising yields and geopolitical stress, suggesting adjusted positioning versus prior crises. Key takeaways for traders: heightened macro-driven volatility, relative strength in spot BTC versus equities and precious metals, continuing energy price upside, and potential for further selling from crypto miners and corporate treasuries influencing supply.
Neutral
BitcoinMarket volatilityGeopolitical riskCrypto equitiesPrecious metals

Trump Says Iran’s ’Launch Capability’ Is Running Out

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US President Donald Trump told Politico that Iran’s "launch capability" or "launch devices" are "running out." The report is brief and sourced to Politico; no additional details, timelines, or corroborating evidence were provided in the article. The item was published March 3, 2026, as a short market-news bulletin. The piece includes a standard disclaimer that it is for market information and not investment advice. Relevant keywords: Trump, Iran, launch capability, geopolitical risk, market impact.
Neutral
TrumpIrangeopolitical riskmarket newspolitico

Ripple Prime Added to NSCC Directory, Plans Post‑Trade Migration to XRPL

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Ripple completed its acquisition of prime brokerage Hidden Road and rebranded it Ripple Prime, which has now been listed in the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) directory. Hidden Road historically processed roughly $3 trillion in annual volume for more than 300 institutional clients. NSCC listing gives Ripple Prime access to U.S. centralized post‑trade clearing and settlement rails and aligns it with established financial infrastructure. Ripple says it intends to migrate portions of Hidden Road’s post‑trade settlement flows onto the XRP Ledger (XRPL) to lower costs and speed processing; this could increase institutional XRPL usage and, indirectly, demand for XRP as a liquidity or fee instrument if significant volume shifts. Ripple CTO David Schwartz described the development as an important institutional milestone; industry observers caution NSCC registration is a regulatory/operational step, not an immediate guarantee of transaction migration. The reports also note growing institutional activity on XRPL (for example, a euro stablecoin issuance) and warn of rising scams targeting ledger users, such as fraudulent NFT offers. Key SEO keywords: Ripple, Ripple Prime, NSCC, XRPL, post‑trade settlement, Hidden Road, XRP.
Bullish
RippleXRPLNSCCPost‑trade settlementHidden Road

U.S. Court Dismisses Class Action Accusing Uniswap Labs of Enabling Scam Tokens

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A U.S. federal court has dismissed a four-year class action accusing Uniswap Labs and founder Hayden Adams of facilitating the trading of scam tokens on the Uniswap protocol. Judge Katherine Polk Failla of the Southern District of New York dismissed plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice, ruling they failed to plausibly allege defendants knew of the fraud or provided substantial assistance to token issuers. The suit originally alleged 14 claims, including that Uniswap acted as an unregistered broker-dealer and profited via transaction fees. The first amended complaint was dismissed under federal securities law in August 2023; a partial affirmation by the Second Circuit in February 2025 allowed further amendment. The second amended complaint, filed May 2025, focused on state-law claims but was again dismissed in March 2026. Uniswap’s founder called the ruling a “good, sensible outcome.”
Neutral
UniswapClass ActionScam TokensDeFi LegalHayden Adams

Ondo gets ADGM approval to list tokenized U.S. stocks and ETFs on Binance MTF

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Ondo Finance’s Ondo Global Markets has received approval from the Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM) Financial Services Regulatory Authority to admit tokenized U.S. stocks and ETFs for trading on Binance’s ADGM-regulated Multilateral Trading Facility (MTF). Ten Ondo-backed tokenized securities — equity-linked note representations of major U.S. names and ETFs (Amazon, Alphabet, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, NVIDIA, Tesla, Circle, SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, Invesco QQQ) — are now available to eligible non-U.S. users. The products are structured as equity-linked notes to fit securities frameworks. This listing restores a regulated venue for Binance to offer tokenized equities after earlier suspensions, and follows Ondo’s prior regulatory approvals in Europe (Liechtenstein passporting across the EU/EEA). Ondo reports over $11 billion cumulative trading volume and roughly $600 million in TVL since launch, and has announced plans for “Ondo Perps” — perpetual futures on U.S. stocks, ETFs and commodities with up to 20x leverage outside the U.S. ADGM’s approval expands the compliant infrastructure for on-chain tokenized equities and could accelerate institutional and retail access to tradable real-world assets (RWA).
Bullish
Tokenized stocksRegulationOndo FinanceBinance MTFReal-world assets

Dogecoin risks capitulation below $0.08 as selling pressure persists

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Dogecoin (DOGE) remains in a clear bearish market structure marked by consecutive lower highs and lower lows. Price is hovering around the critical high-timeframe support at $0.08 — a value-area boundary within the broader range. A confirmed daily close below $0.08 would likely signal acceptance at lower prices and raise the risk of capitulation toward the prior structural swing low. Sustained selling volume and muted buying participation reinforce downside momentum. Conversely, a strong defense of $0.08 followed by a quick reclaim could produce a swing-failure pattern (SFP), trapping sellers and prompting a short-term relief rally. For a durable reversal, traders should look for aggressive accumulation near support and rising bullish volume. Key takeaways for traders: monitor the $0.08 close, watch volume for conviction, prepare for a possible rapid breakdown (capitulation) or an SFP-led bounce, and keep risk management tight until bullish structure is confirmed.
Bearish
DogecoinDOGEsupport levelcapitulation risktechnical analysis