Dogecoin (DOGE) has broken above the key $0.10 level after weeks of consolidation, trading around $0.107–$0.109 on higher volume. The move follows a multi-week descending trendline break and a constructive shift in indicators: Supertrend has flipped bullish and DOGE is printing higher lows.
Momentum is supported by derivatives positioning. DOGE futures open interest has risen to roughly $1.7–$1.8B, confirming that rising prices are attracting new leverage-driven participation. However, this also increases fragility: if DOGE stalls near resistance, faster liquidations can trigger a sharper pullback.
Traders are watching two near-term scenarios for DOGE: holding above $0.10 to target the $0.118 area, or a pullback to retest $0.10 for renewed demand. Risk is elevated as RSI approaches the overbought zone near 70. Meanwhile, Bitcoin (BTC) holding in the mid-to-high $70,000s keeps broader risk appetite supportive.
Bullish
DOGE BreakoutFutures Open InterestRSI & SupertrendBTC Market MoodLeverage Risk
Bitfinex published its Change Log Version 1.131 (29 April 2026), detailing performance and UI changes to the exchange platform.
Key improvements include: an updated error screen display; timezone settings with a dropdown search; wire deposit field order; a revised layout for deposit wire providers; and updates to LZero currency movements information and data handling in the Tether (USDT) flow. The update also adds Twitter/OG card configuration per page.
Bug fixes cover many trading and account surfaces. Notable items include balances symbol renaming to XAUt for XAUT, fixes to XAUt modal company name, improved multi-order edit behavior, and language-change performance. Deposit/withdrawal reliability was also addressed, including withdrawal provider selector reset, movement address layout, and LZero withdrawal wizard button styles.
Other fixes include: persistence of the zero-fee banner closed state; making the “show liquidations” checkbox visible on small screens; multiple auth-page and logout alert layout issues; and removal of a duplicate USTBL entry.
For traders, the practical impact is mostly operational: fewer UI errors around balances, fees, liquidations, and auth/deposit/withdraw flows. The use of “Bitfinex Change Log” updates is also relevant for anyone monitoring XAUt/XAUT balances and LZero/Tether-related handling.
VerifyVASP, a Travel Rule compliance provider for virtual asset service providers (VASPs), announced it has acquired Japan-based Sygna to consolidate and scale its global Travel Rule compliance network.
The deal integrates Sygna into VerifyVASP’s “Verified Network,” which is designed to enable secure, real-time, standardized data exchange between VASPs. VerifyVASP said Sygna’s existing members will continue operating without disruption and will be progressively onboarded onto the Verified Network based on local regulatory needs.
For other Verified Network members, the acquisition is expected to expand access to more regulated counterparties, reducing friction and improving efficiency in cross-border compliance workflows.
VerifyVASP framed the move as part of ongoing regulatory enforcement by the FATF and other international bodies. Company leaders also described the acquisition as strengthening Verified Network scale, geographic reach, and interoperability for data protection requirements.
For traders, this is an infrastructure update rather than a market-moving token event: it may modestly improve confidence in cross-border crypto operations and compliance readiness for regulated exchanges and service providers, but it is unlikely to directly impact major token prices.
(Article is a sponsored press release.)
Remittix says it is moving from development to delivery for its PayFi platform and RTX token. The wallet is live on the Apple App Store (phase 1), enabling users to store and manage multi-chain crypto. A Google Play version is reportedly under development.
On the PayFi side, Remittix delivered a public live demo showing: platform login/UI, buying crypto with fiat, and the crypto-to-fiat conversion flow. The team states the platform is now in optimization, with final adjustments to the crypto-to-fiat component expected within the next week. A subsequent update is expected to confirm the next major release details, including the official platform launch date and RTX ecosystem milestones.
For trading, Remittix confirms two CEX listings for RTX: BitMart and LBank. Additional “top-tier” centralized exchange announcements are expected before the RTX token generation event. The article also highlights remaining presale capacity: 77.98% of tokens sold, with just over 14.4 million RTX left at $0.13 (about $6.1m remaining contribution capacity).
Security claims include smart contract audits and team KYC via CertiK, with Remittix reportedly ranking first on CertiK’s pre-launch token leaderboard.
For crypto traders, the practical takeaway is near-term catalysts: exchange listing headlines and PayFi wallet/platform progress that could drive attention toward RTX into launch.
On-chain data (Arkham Intelligence) says an address attributed to Vitalik Buterin (0xAb5…) is in a new phase of high-frequency selling. The pattern is described as “programmatic memecoin dumping”: the wallet auto-swaps multiple low-cap, unsolicited memecoin airdrops into ETH every minute.
Transactions are typically tens to low hundreds of dollars, while ETH inflows are recorded over the same short window—suggesting automated liquidation scripts rather than one-off discretionary sales. The article frames this as the continuation of Buterin’s stance that unsolicited tokens are “spam,” not endorsements.
This isn’t the first episode. In past years, large sales or donations of airdropped memecoins (including SHIB-era tokens) caused short-term price dislocations across targeted coins. More recent examples cited include 2025 dumps of DOJO, SPURDO and MARVIN (about 22.14 ETH total) and a CAT liquidation routed via LiFi Diamond. The article also notes ongoing ETH disposals tied to public goods and research funding, with Arkham data showing ~17,196 ETH sold since early February.
For traders, the key near-term takeaway is that “programmatic memecoin dumping” can create structural sell pressure in thin order books. If your thesis relies on memecoin support from “Vitalik wallet” narratives, this flow increases the odds of faster sell-side pressure and higher volatility. Long-term, it reinforces that unsolicited airdrops to prominent wallets may be treated as liquidity to be exited, not as a bullish signal.
Bitcoin is trading near the $77K area before the Fed decision, with markets focused on Jerome Powell’s tone on whether “high rates” will persist. Traders see potential volatility because liquidity is thin and today’s signal could come at a pivotal moment for policy.
Spot data cited in the article shows BTC ranging roughly from $75.689 to $77.837 ahead of the FOMC. Technicals are mixed: RSI stays near the neutral zone (about 54–57), while Supertrend flags a bearish bias. Key levels highlighted include support around $75,642 and $72,628, and resistance near $77,610 and $79,467.
Macro and positioning signals also point to caution. QCP Capital says the rate pause is largely priced in, so Powell’s wording may be the main catalyst. Institutional flows appear soft: US spot Bitcoin ETFs reportedly ended a nine-day inflow streak with a net outflow of about $89.7M on April 28, led by BlackRock’s IBIT. BTC futures show similar pressure.
On-chain monitoring notes net BTC inflows to exchanges (about +9.9 BTC) alongside rising exchange reserves, while inflation concerns are linked to oil after the UAE’s planned OPEC exit. The article also notes stablecoin supply growth despite a sharp market drop, reinforcing a “wait-and-see” stance.
Bitcoin sentiment remains mixed, with a portion of institutions still calling BTC undervalued, but traders may react quickly to Powell’s guidance within the expected 72K–80K trading range.
Ripple has expanded its institutional prime brokerage platform, Ripple Prime, by deepening integration with the regulated exchange Bullish. The update enables Ripple Prime clients to access regulated Bitcoin (BTC) options markets directly.
A key detail is the settlement and trading flow using Ripple USD (RLUSD), Ripple’s red-hot stablecoin, to facilitate these BTC options trades. The article notes that, beyond spot and derivatives access, the addition of BTC options increases capability for institutions seeking improved capital efficiency when operating across multiple exchanges.
Ripple Prime positions itself as a centralized hub for brokerage, clearing and financing for institutional investors supporting multiple assets. The integration comes as both companies say it responds to “maturing market demands.” Ripple Prime International CEO Mike Higgins said the new feature helps institutions improve capital efficiency across venues.
Previously, Ripple Prime users could connect to Bullish spot, perpetual swaps and dated futures. The BTC options feature also relates to Bullish’s claim that it is the second-largest crypto-settled options market by open interest for BTC.
For traders, the change is about potentially broader institutional access to BTC options through a single prime brokerage workflow, with RLUSD used for execution.
Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin has gone live on OKX, supporting spot trading across 280+ pairs, including RLUSD/XRP. OKX also accepts RLUSD as collateral for derivatives (futures and perpetuals), enabling more capital-efficient positioning via a unified order book.
The RLUSD rollout extends through Bullish: Ripple Prime clients can use RLUSD as collateral for Bitcoin options, while Bullish pilots centralized collateral management across exchanges and OTC venues.
On-chain, XRP Ledger activity remains strong: within 24 hours, 118M RLUSD were minted and burned (about 59M destroyed with a matching issuance). RLUSD is also being tested for cross-border remittances by K Bank and integrated into a cross-chain bridge connecting networks including Ethereum and Cardano.
From a compliance angle, the article notes regulatory approvals referenced as NYDFS (US) and DFSA (international). For RLUSD traders, the OKX listing and derivatives support are immediate liquidity catalysts, while Bullish expansion and compliance milestones may reinforce longer-term institutional adoption.
Aave is struggling to restart lending activity after the Kelp DAO exploit, even though lender yields remain elevated. Aave borrowing and lending events nearly stopped: as of April 28, only about $32M was borrowed, and post-hack loan activity fell to almost zero.
Yields show the protocol is offering compensation, but trust is still weak. USDC borrowing rates are reported around 6.38%. During a recent rsETH freeze, Aave at one point offered more than 13% for lending, yet lenders still did not return. This supports the view that the move is liquidity stress rather than rising demand.
Data cited from CryptoQuant shows Aave total value locked dropped to around $14B from over $25B pre-hack. Daily fees stayed around $2.8M, but large outflows occurred after the incident.
rsETH collateral rebuild efforts are underway, while other vaults reportedly remain inactive. USDC vault utilization stays near 100%, which keeps capital expensive and discourages broader lending.
For major assets, WETH is the most borrowed (about $6.5B in loans), followed by USDT ($3.7B) and USDC ($2.9B). Borrow rates spiked above 14% (APY) during the stress period, then eased to roughly 7.12% while liquidity stayed cautious.
Aave founder Stani Kulechov said the protocol is resilient across bear cycles, and the team is still working through recovery steps. Meanwhile, the slower lending backdrop is pressuring the AAVE token, which fell toward $93.21 over the past week.
GSR launched a BTC/ETH/SOL ETF with weekly rebalancing to simplify crypto exposure. The fund combines Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana into a single managed product and aims to reduce the need for constant trading decisions.
Key mechanics: the ETF resets asset ratios to target weights each week. In drawdowns, it tilts toward BTC; in up markets, it increases exposure to ETH and SOL. GSR rejects a simple market-cap-only overweight of Bitcoin and instead selects long-term leaders across layer-1 competition. The article also claims automated execution using oracles and on-chain data to keep slippage below 0.5%.
Staking contribution: the ETF reinvests proof-of-stake rewards. It cites estimated ETH staking APY of 3–5% (annual) and SOL staking APY of 6–8%, potentially adding returns beyond price moves through compounding.
Portfolio framing: BTC is positioned as the core store-of-value and liquidity component (40–50% target weight), while ETH is linked to growth and DeFi exposure, and SOL to speed and tokenization use cases.
Context and market relevance: the article notes rising institutional demand for regulated crypto wrappers, referencing advisors at firms such as Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, and suggests that broader acceptance of BTC/ETH/SOL as commodities could make allocation easier for portfolios.
Not investment advice. Traders should watch how a new BTC/ETH/SOL ETF structure and its weekly rebalancing + staking reinvestment narrative could influence flows and volatility over time.
Canada’s Department of Finance has proposed a nationwide ban on crypto ATMs, targeting cash-to-crypto kiosks used in fraud. The plan is aimed at reducing scams where victims—often seniors and vulnerable people—are pressured to deposit cash and then buy or send Bitcoin/crypto via self-service machines.
Under the proposal, crypto ATMs would be shut down in places such as gas stations and convenience stores, overriding local rules. Canadians would still be able to buy digital assets through regulated, brick-and-mortar MSBs (money-services businesses), where staff are present during business hours for compliance.
The government argues crypto ATMs are a “primary method” for scammers. It points to enforcement already underway: FINTRAC revoked licences for 84 MSBs in March, around 70 tied to “transfer of virtual currency,” including ATM Token Financial. Canada also has nearly 4,000 crypto ATMs, with more than a quarter located around Montreal.
The policy follows similar U.S. actions, including Indiana’s ban and Tennessee’s ban set to take effect July 1. For traders, the key near-term implication is tighter retail onramp access for Bitcoin, with potential dampening effects on cash-to-crypto flows as regulation shifts toward KYC and office-based compliance.
Bitcoin remains the headline asset in Canada’s policy focus.
Dogecoin (DOGE) jumped nearly 15% in a day, breaking above the $0.10 resistance level and topping near $0.112. DOGE futures drove the move: open interest rose more than 28% to $1.81B, the highest since Oct. 10. CoinGlass data showed about $21.33M of DOGE short liquidations versus roughly $451K of long liquidations, helping push positioning quickly from bearish to bullish.
Shiba Inu (SHIB) also rallied, up over 6% to around $0.00000656. A 30-minute “golden cross” (50-period MA above 200-period MA) added a short-term bullish technical signal. Binance-listed SHIB perpetual futures saw open interest increase by nearly 14%.
Traders should also monitor the U.S. Fed, with rates expected to stay at 3.50%–3.75% after the meeting, which could lift volatility after the initial meme-coin breakout.
This is market news, not investment advice.
Brent crude jumped above $115 per barrel on April 29, extending an eight-session rally and reaching the highest level since June 2022. The move follows President Donald Trump directing aides to prepare for a longer naval blockade of Iranian ports.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) warned that any shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz—normally moving about 20% of global oil and LNG—would be the largest supply shock on record, with roughly 20% of flows halted. Since late February, Iran has restricted tanker traffic through the chokepoint to near zero amid heightened U.S.-Iran pressure. Peace talks have stalled, and negotiations reportedly collapsed in Pakistan in mid-April.
Brent crude is being echoed by West Texas Intermediate (WTI), which rose above $102. Trump said Iran has requested the U.S. lift its naval blockade while negotiations continue, framing the blockade as lower risk than renewed airstrikes. Iran’s economy is under severe strain, with inflation reported around 53.7% and a record-low rial.
Markets also reacted to broader macro risk. U.S. equities edged lower as traders weighed the oil-driven shock. The 10-year Treasury yield rose to about 4.39%, while the Federal Reserve is expected to hold rates steady; Chair Jerome Powell’s inflation guidance is in focus.
For traders, Brent crude’s key implication is higher energy-cost inflation risk plus renewed geopolitical tail risk. Any sudden breakthrough that reopens the Strait could rapidly unwind the rally, but until then the energy shock is likely to keep risk sentiment fragile.
Bearish
Brent crudeIran blockadeStrait of HormuzFed policyoil shock
Bitcoin (BTC) is down about 30% since Peter Schiff’s 2025 conference call to “sell BTC.” At the 2026 event, Schiff argues the new pitch—“digital credit”—will not revive demand.
He cites Strategy’s growing BTC accumulation as a key point: Strategy’s share rose from 2.76% of total BTC supply to 3.9% (about a 40% increase in ownership concentration), yet the BTC price still fell. Strategy’s recent buying also continues (818,334 BTC total reported, with additional purchases around $255M at the conference start).
Schiff also targets Strategy’s STRC preferred stock, calling it an unsustainable “Ponzi scheme” due to an 11.5% annual yield reportedly funded via issuing new shares and attracting new investors.
In contrast, Michael Saylor at the same conference claimed a BTC supply shock could be building, citing potential $20B–$100B in new bank credit flowing into Bitcoin from major institutions, versus roughly $10B of BTC “naturally available for sale.”
Net: traders are left with a tug-of-war between BTC skepticism (Schiff) and supply-shock optimism (Saylor), which may keep volatility elevated as narratives shift.
Cardano (ADA) has turned lower after trading between moving averages since April 21. Bears broke the 21-day SMA support, pushing ADA into a fresh down leg.
Traders are now focused on the key $0.24 support, which buyers have defended repeatedly since March 24. Earlier, ADA also held around $0.235 and $0.24.
The technical outlook remains mixed: ADA is below horizontal moving-average areas, and consolidation shows doji-like indecision. If ADA stays above $0.24, the sell-off could slow near $0.244. If it loses $0.24, renewed selling pressure is likely.
Major resistance is flagged at $1.20, $1.30 and $1.40, while nearer supports sit at $0.90, $0.80 and $0.70. Overall, the next trading direction depends on whether ADA can reclaim and hold above the moving-average barriers.
Note: This is technical analysis, not investment advice.
SHIB is attempting a technical recovery after an extended downtrend. Since March 2026, the memecoin has gained about 20%, trading around $0.00000628.
Analysts are now watching the 200-day moving average near $0.0000075 (roughly 18% above current levels). This long-run mean often draws price back toward it after oversold conditions, so a move toward $0.0000075 is “mathematically plausible.”
However, the article stresses that reaching the 200-day moving average may not trigger a new bull cycle. Supply overhang is the key risk: the 2025 bear market likely created a large pool of holders with cost bases clustered near $0.0000075, increasing selling pressure.
Whale behavior is highlighted as the decisive factor. If large holders absorb selling and defend the level, SHIB could form short-term support. If they distribute into the rally, the bounce may stall and the downtrend could resume.
Traders should treat this as a resistance-test, not confirmation of a trend reversal, because SHIB has not cleared broader resistance levels that would signal structural change.
Anthropic’s Mythos is pushing the crypto industry to rethink security beyond smart-contract audits. The AI model is designed to simulate adversaries and identify how small weaknesses combine into real exploits, drawing attention to infrastructure risks such as key management, signing services, bridges, oracles, and other cryptographic layers. Recent examples include Vercel disclosing an incident that may have exposed customer API keys, prompting crypto firms to rotate credentials.
In parallel, Aave is at the center of a coordinated recovery effort after losses tied to the Kelp DAO exploit. The coalition “DeFi United” had raised about $301M in commitments, while an Aave governance plan proposes allocating up to 250,000 ETH to help restore market stability and rsETH backing.
Other tech narratives include Alchemy’s CEO arguing crypto is built for AI agents, and a Bitcoin fork proposal (“eCash”) using Satoshi-linked coins—framed by its proposer as funding rather than moving Satoshi’s BTC.
For traders, Mythos-linked security focus could increase short-term operational caution (credential rotations, audits, infrastructure reviews). The Aave/rsETH recovery is a direct catalyst for DeFi risk appetite and lending-market pricing, with outcomes tied to governance execution.
Neutral
AI securityMythosDeFi risk recoveryAaveBitcoin fork
Bitcoin’s Coinbase Premium turned negative this week, a sign that U.S. demand is weakening versus offshore markets. CryptoQuant data show BTC on Coinbase (COIN, U.S.-focused) traded at a lower price than on exchanges abroad, with the premium flipping red for the first time since early April.
The turning point comes as onchain losses spike. Bitcoin Realized Loss 7-day sum surged to about $5.97B on April 24 as BTC neared $78,000. “Realized Loss” is booked when holders sell below their purchase price, meaning buyers were likely higher up the range and used the bounce to exit rather than re-enter. CryptoQuant analyst Axel Adler Jr. suggested the loss cohort entered roughly between $80,000 and $95,000 in late 2025/early 2026.
At the time of reporting, BTC traded near $75,846 and later slipped under $76,000. Traders are watching whether realized losses continue to decline, which would suggest the overhang from “underwater supply” is working through. The realized loss reading has already fallen from the April 24 peak to about $4.7B by April 28, hinting that the selling pressure may be easing.
Coinbase Premium + realized loss trend together imply U.S. institutions are backing off just as holders increase liquidation activity.
Oil prices surge above $100 as President Donald Trump pressures Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The market is pricing a prolonged supply-shock risk tied to the US–Iran standoff.
WTI crude is back above $100, trading near $105 and up more than 6% on the day. Brent is up about 5% and trades above $110.
Trump issued a fresh warning to Tehran, urging it to accept US demands for tighter nuclear controls while negotiations remain stalled over both Iran’s nuclear program and Hormuz reopening. Reuters said price gains followed reports the US may extend a blockade of Iranian ports. The WSJ also reported Trump is preparing a longer pressure campaign.
Escalation is not limited to Hormuz. An Iranian lawmaker renewed a threat that Tehran could ask Houthi allies in Yemen to disrupt the Bab el Mandeb strait if the US continues intercepting Iranian ships.
Separately, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth faced lawmakers for the first time since the administration launched a joint war with Israel against Iran. Democrats criticized the lack of congressional authorization. Pentagon officials estimate the conflict’s cost at about $25 billion so far, mainly for munitions and operations. The Pentagon’s proposed 2027 budget totals $1.5 trillion.
Overall, the oil prices surge above $100 headline highlights rising geopolitical risk that can amplify macro volatility across financial markets.
Prediction markets are pricing a likely Powell exit tied to Kevin Warsh’s Fed nomination. In the “Powell out as Fed chair” contract, odds for a Powell exit by June 30 are near certainty at ~99.4–99.7% YES. The market also shows a major re-pricing window between May 14 and May 15, with May 15 odds around ~72.5% YES, down from ~80% the prior day.
What traders are watching is Warsh’s hawkish reputation and how that could affect the path of US rates. The analysis argues a Warsh-led Fed would reduce the likelihood of rate cuts in 2026. Liquidity is relatively thin: the article notes it would take about $2.168k face value to shift odds by 5 percentage points in the May 14 market, and the biggest single move was a ~25-point drop in May 15 odds.
A key event cited is a May 4 Senate session (Banking Committee-related) that could clarify Warsh’s confirmation timeline. For crypto traders, the takeaway is that a high-probability “Powell exit” is being paired with expectations of tighter policy/less easing—an FX and rates-sensitive backdrop that can move risk assets.
Powell exit pricing is currently very aggressive, but confirmation timing risk remains elevated into the Senate process.
Bearish
Federal ReservePowell exitPrediction marketsUS rates policyCrypto macro
Dogecoin (DOGE) open interest (OI) has surged more than 6% to about $1.5B, while Dogecoin derivatives volume jumped over 16% to $2.18B, according to Coinglass. The move coincides with DOGE reclaiming the psychological $0.10 level and with long positioning dominating the market: the DOGE long/short ratio is above 1 (Binance around 1.9; large accounts around 2.3). Options open interest also rose ~38% to roughly $1.2M.
At the same time, Shiba Inu (SHIB) exchange inflows have dropped from a prior peak near 1.5T SHIB (recorded April 10), and exchange netflow turned negative as of April 29—often interpreted as coins moving off exchanges, supporting an accumulation narrative.
Analyst Ali Martinez said a sustained 4-hour close above $0.1018 could confirm a bullish breakout for Dogecoin, targeting $0.1172 (channel top). Another analyst, Celal, suggested SHIB could rally sharply toward $0.00007.
Overall, Dogecoin OI expansion alongside SHIB inflow weakness points to rising trader activity and improving risk appetite, but these meme-coin moves can reverse quickly if leverage unwinds.
An X post attributed to Elon Musk’s Grok, shared by XRP Captain, says XRP is bullish and could rise to $4 and beyond. The forecast combines AI commentary with a chart-based breakout scenario.
The attached technical view suggests XRP is consolidating after an earlier surge, forming a narrowing structure and approaching a resistance zone near $3.50. The post outlines possible upside paths: first toward about $2.50, then extending to $4 or higher. A short-term timing note (“6d 4h”) is also shown, implying the move could develop in a near-term window, though the projection remains speculative.
A second account (Bitcoin Long) echoed the bullish bias with a timeframe comment, suggesting XRP could reach $4 in less than a year. Overall, the article highlights the growing trend of pairing AI tools with technical analysis for crypto forecasting.
Note: The piece includes a standard disclaimer that it is not financial advice.
Keywords: XRP, Grok, AI + technical analysis, $4 target, breakout level, resistance near $3.50.
The USD outlook is clouded by two forces: Fed policy risk and rising Middle East tensions, according to MUFG. The Fed faces sticky core inflation, keeping a hawkish stance. That raises the odds of “rates higher for longer,” which could slow growth or even trigger a recession. But cutting too soon could reignite inflation and weaken the dollar.
MUFG also highlights a paradox from the Middle East. Short-term safe-haven demand can support the USD, yet prolonged instability can lift oil prices and global energy costs. Higher energy-driven inflation may keep central banks restrictive, while supply-chain disruption can pressure growth—ultimately hurting USD fundamentals. The analysis notes that today’s market reaction is more nuanced than in prior decades because investors also consider US fiscal conditions and US energy exports.
Cross-asset spillovers are expected to increase. EUR/USD is especially sensitive to the Fed vs ECB stance. Risk aversion from geopolitical shocks may boost the USD versus higher-beta assets, including some emerging-market currencies vulnerable to oil import bills.
Key watch items include US core PCE inflation, the Fed’s next policy meeting and dot-plot signals, Middle East escalation vs diplomatic progress, oil price trends, and US Treasury yield spreads. With currency liquidity reportedly declining (per BIS), even small news could trigger outsized USD moves—raising the importance of risk management.
Neutral
USD outlookFed policy riskMiddle East geopoliticsFX volatilityCore PCE inflation
Trust Wallet announced that Hyperliquid (HYPE) is now listed directly inside its app, expanding the Trust Wallet self-custody offering. Binance founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao reacted by emphasizing Trust Wallet’s growing accessibility and infrastructure.
With the update, users can access over 200 perpetual futures markets from within Trust Wallet. The integration aims to reduce friction by avoiding app switching, external wallet connections, and complex bridging. Traders can deposit from supported networks and start trading quickly while keeping funds self-custodied.
The news also highlights broader market “on-ramp” activity: a major wallet adding a derivatives venue can increase engagement from retail users who prefer single-app workflows. For traders, the key watch-items are HYPE liquidity/volumes on the wallet, funding-rate dynamics across the newly accessible perp pairs, and whether this drives incremental demand for perpetual positions.
XRP is trading near $1.40 as a $1.45 liquidation cluster builds, according to analyst Xaif Crypto. Highly leveraged positions appear concentrated around $1.45, making it a potential “liquidation magnet” that can cause sharp swings if XRP rebounds into the zone.
Traders are focused on whether XRP can reclaim $1.40 and hold it as support. A clean close above $1.40 would likely shift attention to $1.45 as the next upside liquidity level, where forced liquidations could drive acceleration.
The downside risk is clear if XRP fails to defend $1.40. The article also notes unconfirmed accumulation-style signals and a possible Gaussian-curve “buy” signal historically associated with larger moves, but price remains range-bound. A long-term scenario cited in the piece suggests XRP could reach as high as $13, though it depends on broader macro liquidity and renewed retail interest.
Fidelity Global Macro director Jurrien Timmer says Bitcoin (BTC) is showing early signs of an emerging bull market despite a “kiss of death” setup in classical technical analysis.
Timmer argues that the usual sell signal—overbought stochastic readings combined with strong resistance along a trendline—has not triggered a drop. Instead, Bitcoin is holding around $79,486 and resisting pressure, suggesting sustained demand rather than a short-lived bounce.
He links the shift in tone to improving market conditions, including record inflows into Bitcoin ETFs in April 2026 and expectations of greater US regulatory clarity. Timmer also stresses that traders still need confirmation: a more structural bearish trend break likely requires consolidation above the $80,000–$83,000 zone.
Longer-term, Fidelity-linked and broader market models are already pointing to upside scenarios such as $200,000 for BTC in 2027 and beyond.
For traders, the key takeaway is a technical regime change narrative: Bitcoin failing to break lower under “overbought resistance” conditions can support upside follow-through—while the $80k–$83k area becomes the near-term decision point.
Bullish
BitcoinBTC ETFsTechnical AnalysisFidelityMacro Outlook
Czech National Bank (CNB) President Alex Michl said a potential Bitcoin reserve could improve return potential for the Czech central bank. Speaking at Bitcoin 2026, he cited a CNB test that included a $1m BTC purchase in October and a November pilot portfolio combining BTC, USD stablecoin, and tokenized deposits. CNB research found BTC can be more “efficient” than stocks and gold, largely because BTC has low long-term correlation with traditional assets—allowing returns to rise while risk stays broadly similar.
Michl also stressed Bitcoin’s extreme volatility, including the risk of sharp drawdowns, and argued that diversification is still essential for asset allocation. However, despite the positive findings, the CNB Board ultimately decided not to invest foreign reserves in BTC. For crypto traders, this keeps the macro “Bitcoin reserve” narrative supportive for sentiment, but removes the immediate policy catalyst from actual sovereign buying. At the time of the report, BTC was around the mid-$76k area with RSI near neutral.
Neutral
Bitcoin reservesCzech central bankBTC policy testingPortfolio diversificationCrypto macro
Hyperliquid has published a fee structure for its upcoming outcome tokens, a key step toward launching prediction-market-style trading on its exchange. The model charges zero fees to open positions; costs apply only when closing or settling, with better execution for traders using “aligned quote tokens” (taker fees 20% lower and maker rebates 50% higher).
The rollout is tied to HIP-4, which introduces outcome tokens and would allow users to trade binary real-world event contracts alongside Hyperliquid’s existing perps and spot positions in a single account. Hyperliquid says outcome tokens are currently on testnet and no mainnet date has been confirmed.
Competition context: prediction markets are booming, with 2025 volume rising more than 300% to about $63.5B. Hyperliquid is building to compete with incumbents such as Kalshi and Polymarket, the latter indicating that perpetual trading is “coming soon.” Hyperliquid’s earlier HIP-3 upgrade (permissionless perps for developers) has driven over 35% of all platform trading volume since its October 2025 introduction.
For traders, the zero-fee entry structure may improve liquidity and reduce friction for frequent event traders, while the incentives tied to aligned quote tokens could shift fee economics and order-flow toward those token pairings as HIP-4 matures from testnet to mainnet.
Bitcoin traders are focused on the Federal Reserve handover to Kevin Warsh ahead of his first FOMC meeting next month. Market commentary argues that after new Fed chairs start, Bitcoin has often seen a few months of downside alongside pressure on equities.
Warsh’s policy signals are mixed. He has at times supported “rate-cut” thinking, but he has also criticized keeping rates too low during the 2021–2022 inflation period and called for a more “disciplined Fed” with a smaller balance sheet. At the same time, the article notes the Fed has added about $200B in Treasuries back to its balance sheet, shifting toward “QE-light” and potentially easing liquidity conditions.
Crypto regulation and CBDC details add another layer for Bitcoin sentiment. Warsh has said digital assets are already part of the U.S. financial system and opposed a retail CBDC that could compete directly with stablecoins, while showing more openness to a wholesale CBDC for institutional settlement.
Trading takeaway: the base case is “dip-buy” only if liquidity stays supportive and Fed-transition uncertainty fades. The main bearish break risk is a more hawkish Warsh path—faster balance-sheet shrinking or a tighter stance—that could disrupt the typical post-chair correction-to-rebound pattern for Bitcoin.
Neutral
BitcoinFederal ReserveLiquidity and QE-lightCBDC vs stablecoinsMacro volatility