YouTube is rolling out a new Shorts feature called “Make a video with my avatar,” letting eligible creators generate short clips that use a realistic digital avatar of their own face and voice. The rollout is underway in the YouTube app and YouTube Create, powered by Google’s Veo 3.1 video model.
Key details for users: prompts can produce clips up to about eight seconds, with the option to stitch clips for longer videos. Only the account holder can generate and delete their avatar videos at any time (older videos remain unless manually removed). The content includes AI disclosures and digital watermarks to flag AI generation. At launch, availability is limited (initially mobile users outside Europe).
The move arrives as generative video tools expand across the tech sector, raising concerns about AI deepfakes. YouTube is effectively democratizing AI video creation while emphasizing labeling and watermarking. The article also notes rising compute costs in the space, citing OpenAI’s reported shutdown of its Sora video app after six months.
For traders: this is a media/AI policy and platform feature update, not a direct crypto catalyst. Still, it may marginally influence sentiment around broader “synthetic media” regulation and trust topics linked to the tech cycle.
Coinbase has withdrawn its support for the latest CLARITY Act draft, citing “significant concerns” with the Tillis–Alsobrooks Senate compromise. The core dispute is stablecoin economics: the draft would ban passive yield on stablecoin balances and restrict access to transaction-size data needed to calculate volume- or activity-based rewards.
Coinbase says it earned about $1.35bn from stablecoins in 2025, largely tied to its USDC distribution arrangement with Circle. If yield is removed or structurally constrained, Coinbase estimates roughly $800m in annual revenue risk—making the issue central to its business model.
CEO Brian Armstrong previously said “no bill than a bad bill,” and Coinbase has now escalated its objection as the language tightened again on yield. The broader market implication is political: while some large investors (including Andreessen Horowitz) back CLARITY for clearer SEC/CFTC legitimacy, the bill’s passage is still fragile and vote math is complicated by competing factions.
Timing is critical. Senate Banking Committee markup is targeted for late April, with warnings that a May deadline could cause the bill to miss its window during midterm-season. Traders should watch the markup schedule and how any final CLARITY wording addresses USDC/stablecoin yield economics, since renewed setbacks have already weighed on related crypto stocks.
UBS now expects a significant upswing in EUR/SEK after consecutive Swedish inflation disappointments. Sweden’s CPI came in at 1.8% y/y in February 2025, below the Riksbank’s 2.0% target for a third month. Core measures also softened: CPIF fell to 1.9% from 2.1% and producer prices declined 0.3% m/m.
UBS argues this should tilt monetary policy toward earlier Riksbank rate cuts, while eurozone inflation remains more persistent (core above ~2.5% early 2025). Swap pricing reflects the divergence: about 75 bps of Riksbank cuts vs 50 bps of ECB cuts in 2025, widening by roughly 25 bps compared with early 2024.
The bank also points to weaker Swedish growth (Q4 2024 GDP +0.2% q/q) and rising unemployment (7.8% in Feb 2025), versus relatively steadier eurozone data. On positioning, CFTC data shows speculative net shorts on the Swedish krona rose 15% for the week ending March 7, 2025, and options demand for EUR/SEK calls above 11.60 has increased.
Technicals support the UBS view: EUR/SEK broke above its 200-day moving average in early March 2025 and cleared the 11.50 resistance level.
Key risks include a sudden Swedish inflation rebound, ECB cut timing shifting, or a risk-on/risk-off reversal that benefits the more risk-sensitive krona. Traders are advised to watch upcoming Swedish inflation prints and Riksbank guidance for confirmation of the EUR/SEK trend.
Stablecoin activity is accelerating sharply, supported by regulatory momentum and real-world payments use cases. The report cites Chainalysis data showing Stablecoin Adjusted Volume rose 133% from 2023 to $28 trillion in 2025, with monthly volume reaching a record $7.2 trillion. That scale surpasses major traditional payment rails such as U.S. ACH and Visa.
Usage signals are also rising: Artemis data shows Adjusted Transaction Volume exceeded 8.1 trillion through March 2026, with transactions nearing 2 trillion, while Stablecoin Addresses climbed to 51.6 million over the last 30 days.
Looking ahead, Chainalysis projects stablecoin volume could exceed $719 trillion by 2035, driven by generational wealth transfers and point-of-sale adoption. With an estimated $80–$100 trillion shifting from boomers to millennials and Gen Z—nearly half of whom hold crypto—stablecoins could add over $508 trillion in transaction volume. The article also highlights a potential policy tailwind: the GENIUS Act in the U.S. in 2025 boosted growth, while the Clarity Act (stalled in the Senate) could further improve the stablecoin growth path if passed.
For traders, the key takeaway is that stablecoins are not just a speculative narrative; their Stablecoin volume growth suggests improving liquidity and on/off-ramp efficiency across crypto markets and TradFi-to-crypto rails.
Bitcoin Depot cyberattack resulted in an unauthorized transfer of about 50.9 BTC (≈$3.66M). In its US SEC 8-K filing, the company said it detected the breach on March 23 after attackers accessed parts of its internal IT systems and obtained credentials tied to its digital asset settlement accounts.
Using the compromised settlement credentials, the attackers accessed company-controlled wallets and moved Bitcoin without authorization. Bitcoin Depot said the incident was contained to its corporate environment and that there was no evidence customer-facing platforms or personal data were affected. It has launched incident response, hired external cybersecurity experts, and notified law enforcement. Preliminary losses are estimated at $3.66M, but the final fiscal impact may change as investigations continue. The firm also noted it holds cybersecurity insurance, though recovery is not assured.
For crypto traders, this Bitcoin Depot cyberattack underscores ongoing “off-chain” operational risk, where attackers target internal systems and credential security rather than blockchain protocol flaws. While the company expects no material effect on overall operations, similar custody/settlement incidents can temporarily raise perceived risk premia around custodians and crypto-ATM/fintech infrastructure.
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson reignited his online feud with the XRP community after a harsh X (Twitter) insult. A user argued that Hoskinson’s personal image harms Cardano’s institutional adoption and contrasted him with Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, claiming Garlinghouse better represents the “product.”
Hoskinson responded by stressing what he sees as a core architectural difference: decentralization. He said Cardano does not require “liking, agreeing, or endorsing” him—positioning the dispute as more about ideology than personalities.
The latest clash also connects to Hoskinson’s earlier regulatory criticism. The Cardano founder previously attacked Garlinghouse over the Digital Asset Market “Clarity” Act, where Garlinghouse has supported the legislation, while Hoskinson remains skeptical it can survive the current political environment.
For traders, this is primarily narrative-driven. No tokenomics, protocol upgrades, or concrete regulatory outcomes are announced here; instead, the Cardano founder’s messaging could influence sentiment around Cardano vs. XRP and keep attention on U.S. digital-asset policy debates. In the short term, social-media-driven volatility is possible for XRP and ADA during periods of heightened engagement. Over the long term, market direction will likely depend more on any measurable CLARITY Act developments, exchange/institutional flows, and broader crypto risk conditions than on the personal dispute itself.
Neutral
CardanoXRPRippleCrypto RegulationSocial Media Feud
Binance founder CZ faces renewed scrutiny on social media as rival exchange OKX escalates a public dispute over personal claims.
According to the report, targeted attacks on Binance and Changpeng Zhao (CZ) have intensified, moving from earlier crypto-market controversies to allegations about his personal life and a recently published book.
CZ says “falsehoods” about his personal life are being spread. He insists his divorce is legally finalized and offers to wager up to $1 billion to prove it, while refusing to publish court documents to protect his ex-wife’s privacy.
OKX’s CEO responds by demanding specific proof: he says he will apologize only if CZ can produce a signed divorce protocol. The OKX CEO also argues that because both OKX and Binance operate under regulatory oversight, any revelations about Binance’s leadership and CZ’s asset separation could create legal complications. He highlights whether CZ’s Binance shares were legally separated from his ex-wife, drawing an analogy to major celebrity divorce asset-division examples.
The article notes that Binance remains the largest exchange by trading volume, but it has also faced billions in fines tied to its early “regulatory gray-area” approach. It links the current exchange rivalry to the fallout environment after the FTX collapse and CZ’s outspoken role during that period.
For traders, the key takeaway is that Binance founder CZ’s disputes are now being used as an exchange-level narrative tool by competitors—more a sentiment and reputation catalyst than a direct market-structure change in this story.
South Korea exchange Bithumb is pursuing a legal recovery after the Feb. operational error that triggered the Bithumb mistaken Bitcoin payout. The exchange filed for provisional asset seizure orders to freeze accounts tied to the incident, targeting about 7 BTC (≈$496,000) in the unresolved portion.
The problem began on Feb. 6 when a staff member entered “rewards” as Bitcoin instead of Korean won during a promotion, unintentionally distributing 620,000 BTC across hundreds of accounts. Bithumb said the initial event briefly pressured the BTC/KRW price by ~15% amid volatility, then pledged to compensate users at 110% of losses and offered an emergency protection fund.
But not all recipients returned the BTC. Some users dispute Bithumb’s liability, while legal experts expect court actions to rely on unjust enrichment claims against users who kept or sold the BTC. Authorities also warned that selling the BTC could worsen the holder’s exposure if courts rule against account holders.
Separately, regulators are tightening exchange controls, with a requirement for exchanges to reconcile balances every five minutes. Lawmakers are also revisiting proposals to cap individual ownership stakes in crypto exchanges, and Bithumb reportedly pushed back its IPO timeline to 2028.
For traders, the key risk is execution and resolution: whether the Bithumb mistaken Bitcoin payout-linked BTC can be frozen, reclaimed, or liquidated via court. That process can add short-term volatility and counterparty/settlement risk in KRW-linked markets.
Neutral
BithumbBitcoin payout disputeCourt injunctionSouth Korea regulationExchange risk controls
Six Democratic U.S. senators accuse Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche of a glaring conflict of interest after ProPublica reported he held crypto while signing a DOJ memo that dismantled the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team (NCET). The senators claim Blanche owned BTC, ETH, and SOL and promoted the rollback of crypto enforcement via a memo titled “Ending Regulation by Prosecution.”
They argue the conflict is worse because Blanche signed an ethics agreement in Feb 2025 to divest within 90 days and not participate in matters affecting his digital-asset interests. ProPublica says the DOJ enforcement rollback memo was issued in Apr 2025—before divestment was completed. Reportedly, the portfolio rose during the window, with BTC gains estimated around +34% (about $105,000). Blanche later exited by transferring holdings to adult children and a grandchild rather than fully liquidating, which ethics experts say may be technically compliant but conflicts with the spirit of recusal rules.
The senators also point to a Jan 2026 Chainalysis report claiming illicit crypto activity rose +162% year over year, arguing the rollback had negative consequences. They demand internal ethics-review communications and records related to crypto contacts and the memo. The DOJ said the issues were properly flagged, addressed, and cleared but gave no specifics. For traders, this controversy can swing sentiment between “regulatory relief” narratives and renewed compliance scrutiny, adding headline risk to spot BTC, ETH, and SOL.
Neutral
DOJ Crypto EnforcementConflict of InterestNCET RollbackUS Ethics ReviewBTC ETH SOL
Hyperliquid’s HYPE price outlook is mixed: bullish technical signals persist, but broader crypto sentiment remains extremely cautious.
HYPE recently traded around $39.80, up 3.28% in 24 hours. It also gained in HYPE/BTC (+3.08%) and HYPE/ETH (+4.22%). Over longer windows, HYPE is up 15.09% over the last month and more than +208% year-over-year, following an all-time high of $59.31 (Sept 18, 2025).
Despite the momentum, projections expect a short-term pullback. The analysis forecasts HYPE could fall to about $29.95 within five days (roughly -23% from the current level). Traders should watch key support at $37.75, $36.78, and $35.77, with resistance near $39.73, $40.73, and $41.70.
Technicals are largely constructive: 26 of 27 indicators lean bullish, and moving averages (daily/weekly, including multiple EMAs/SMAs) show buy interest. However, oscillators are less consistent. RSI(14) near 57.14 is neutral, while Stoch RSI suggests a potential overbought condition (92.49). Momentum tools like MACD and ADX are more neutral, implying limited directional acceleration.
Sentiment conflicts with the chart. The Fear & Greed index is 14, labeled “Extreme Fear,” creating a disconnect that could increase volatility for HYPE.
For traders, this sets up a “buy-the-dip vs. risk of quick downside” environment around HYPE’s support levels, with sentiment-driven whipsaws remaining the key risk.
Neutral
HyperliquidHYPEPerpetual TradingTechnical AnalysisFear & Greed Index
Reports say Zondacrypto—an Estonia-licensed exchange founded in Poland—is facing liquidity issues, triggering a new political dispute over crypto oversight. Local media and the Brussels Signal portal cite user complaints about failed or delayed withdrawals. A Recoveris analysis quoted by Polish outlets claims Zondacrypto has lost over 99% of its reserves, with Bitcoin (BTC) holdings falling from 55+ BTC (Aug 2024) to 0.18 BTC (Mar 2026).
Zondacrypto CEO Przemysław Kral rejects the claims, calling the withdrawal problems “temporary technical issues” and pointing to cold-wallet reserves. He says the firm’s BTC reserve balance stood at 4,500 BTC as of April 1, and accuses outlets of panic based on incomplete data (hot-wallet focus).
The liquidity issues have become a political flashpoint in Warsaw. Poland has not yet fully transposed EU Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) rules into national law. A center-left bill drafted under PM Donald Tusk was vetoed twice by President Karol Nawrocki, leaving the Polish financial regulator KNF without clear power over firms operating under foreign licenses. Finance Minister Andrzej Domański and Interior Minister Marcin Kierwiński warned that thousands of investors could be harmed.
Poland is expected to hold another parliamentary vote to override the veto. Meanwhile, the National Prosecutor’s Office opened an investigation into alleged irregularities at Zondacrypto. The government says the new bill will protect investors, while opposition figures argue the exchange’s Estonia registration would have exempted it from Polish rules until summer.
The US Treasury cybersecurity information-sharing program is set to expand to eligible crypto firms through the Office of Cybersecurity and Critical Infrastructure Protection. Participating companies would receive timely, actionable threat intelligence—such as real-time alerts and analysis—at no cost.
The initiative follows recommendations from the White House’s Digital Asset Markets Working Group, and it aims to give crypto firms access similar to what traditional financial institutions already receive. Treasury said eligibility details will be clarified in upcoming guidelines.
This announcement arrives as crypto security concerns intensify, including reported breaches tied to nation-linked actors. The article cites a case involving North Korea-linked hackers allegedly stealing $280 million from the DeFi platform Drift. It also references security work pursued by the Solana Foundation after incidents.
For traders, this is mainly a policy and risk-management update. The US Treasury cybersecurity information-sharing program could modestly improve confidence around exchange/custody controls, but near-term price impact is likely limited unless participation expands quickly or measurably reduces hack frequency and severity.
Neutral
US TreasuryCybersecurityCrypto RegulationRisk ManagementDeFi Security
OpenAI’s Chief Revenue Officer Denise Dresser says enterprise AI is already driving more than 40% of the company’s total revenue. She links this shift to an “agentic workflow” model, where businesses move beyond basic AI assistants (emails, summaries) to deploy “teams of agents” that coordinate with each other, maintain context across sessions, and take actions inside business tools with less constant human oversight.
OpenAI reports strong growth indicators: it reached $25B annualized revenue in February (up from $20B end-2025). Codex, its AI coding agent, has surpassed 3 million users. Paying business users rose to 9 million in February from 5 million in August. Across all OpenAI products, weekly active users reached 910 million.
The company also launched “ChatGPT Agent,” designed to plan trips, book hotels, research competitors, generate slide decks, and place online orders. However, OpenAI argues most enterprises still need a simpler integration path so they can use enterprise AI agents without rebuilding their existing workflows.
Finally, OpenAI is preparing for an IPO; CFO Sarah Friar confirmed retail investors will receive an allocation. The company frames agent-based systems as the default next interface for business interaction with AI.
Bitcoin is holding above the psychologically important $70,000 level this week, supported by improving short-term signals and renewed institutional interest in the IBIT ETF.
On the technical side, Bitcoin stayed above the daily pivot and short-term moving averages. Momentum indicators such as MACD and the Awesome Oscillator turned toward buying pressure after weeks of sideways action. However, Bitcoin has not reclaimed the 100- and 200-day moving averages, suggesting any upside move may still be consolidation rather than a confirmed trend change.
For institutional activity, IBIT remains a key read-through for large investors because of its close relationship with Bitcoin’s price. The article flags near-term resistance around $41.57 for IBIT; a break could help extend upside. If support levels weaken, sellers may re-emerge.
Traders are also watching a near-term trading band for Bitcoin between $67,700 and $71,700. A prior rebound from roughly $66,500 to $72,600 within a short window is seen as evidence of strong demand, but fast rallies often need sustained liquidity to continue.
One analyst model (0xAralez) suggests Bitcoin could rally toward $73,000 before potentially retesting the $70,000 and $67,000 zones, with a later pullback target near $63,000—consistent with cycle-style surge-and-correct behavior.
On-chain context is improving: long-term holders are reportedly in more profitable positions than short-term traders, a pattern that has historically preceded stronger Bitcoin moves. Overall, Bitcoin’s current consolidation looks like positioning supported by institutional flows—until key resistance is clearly broken.
Bullish
BitcoinIBIT ETFInstitutional FlowsTechnical AnalysisOn-chain Data
Bitcoin reclaimed the $72,000 support level after volatile trading tied to confusion over a tentative U.S.–Iran ceasefire eased. The move lifted Bitcoin to about $72,571, and the total crypto market valuation rose from an intraday low near $1.41 trillion to roughly $1.45 trillion.
Price action was choppy: Bitcoin slipped back to around $70,500 twice as reports on ceasefire terms conflicted. Sentiment improved after U.S. officials confirmed separate negotiations involving Israel and Lebanon, reducing fears of a full breakdown. That confirmation helped trigger an afternoon risk-on rally, adding roughly $2,000 in hours, with a peak around $72,571 by 1 p.m. ET.
The volatility also forced liquidations. Coinglass data shows $115 million wiped out in total positions over 24 hours: $95 million in liquidated shorts and $20 million in liquidated longs. Bitcoin accounted for more than one-third of total liquidations (article notes $307 million across digital assets).
Derivatives positioning remains constructive. Deribit data highlights heavy activity around the $80,000 call strike for June expiry, suggesting traders are pricing a more bullish longer-term outlook as implied volatility rises into the June options window.
Bullish
BitcoinCeasefire optimismDeribit optionsLiquidations$72,000 support
South Korea’s Seoul Administrative Court overturned a Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) order that imposed a three-month partial suspension on Dunamu, the operator of crypto exchange Upbit. The FIU sanction followed a February 2025 AML inspection and allegations of Anti-Money Laundering (AML) compliance failures.
The court said enforcement was weakened because AML rules for transactions below 1,000,000 won were not specific enough. It also criticized the regulator for failing to provide clear AML guidance on what Dunamu had to do. The judge found no evidence of “grave misconduct” and said it was difficult to prove intent or gross negligence.
The dispute began after the FIU alleged Upbit dealt with unregistered overseas virtual asset providers (VASPs) and that customer due diligence and verification processes were inadequate. Dunamu sued and, in March 2025, won an injunction that temporarily paused the suspension during the case.
For traders, the ruling is a modest positive for South Korea exchange risk sentiment and reduces near-term regulatory tail risk. However, it does not remove AML expectations—it mainly limits the FIU’s ability to impose major sanctions when practical compliance standards and regulator guidance are ambiguous. Watch for follow-up rulemaking or enforcement clarification in future AML headlines.
Neutral
South Korea RegulationFIU BanUpbitAML ComplianceCourt Ruling
CoinDesk says Gemini is evaluating the sale of parts of its Europe operations, with interest focused on its closed UK and EU units. The core value for buyers is regulatory access, not necessarily purchasing the full Nasdaq-listed Gemini business.
This comes after Gemini announced in February that it would cut about 25% of staff and wind down activities in the UK, the EU, other European jurisdictions, and Australia, while keeping the US and Singapore as main hubs. Reuters reported the layoffs could affect up to 200 employees. Gemini framed the retrenchment as a move toward profitability.
Licenses are central to deal talks. Gemini said it received a Malta MiCA license in Aug 2025, enabling EU “passporting.” In the UK, FCA disclosures point to Gemini Payments UK authorized for e-money and payments, and Gemini Intergalactic UK listed on the cryptoasset register. However, any buyer still needs FCA/MiCA change-of-control approvals; permissions are not automatically transferable.
For traders, Gemini’s Europe restructuring adds compliance and execution uncertainty to regulated-crypto exchange exposure. Public market performance has also deteriorated sharply: Reuters noted the IPO priced at $28 in Sept 2025, and the stock closed at $4.87 on Apr 9, 2026. Gemini also disclosed February departures of COO Marshall Beard, CFO Dan Chen, and CLO Tyler Meade.
New York prosecutors led by Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg and State Senator Zellnor Myrie introduced the CRYPTO Act. The New York crypto law would amend the state Financial Services Law to make unlicensed virtual currency business activity a criminal offense, not only a civil violation.
Under the CRYPTO Act, penalties scale by transaction size. A baseline charge starts as a Class A misdemeanor. It escalates to a Class E felony if an operator transfers $25,000+ in 30 days or $250,000+ in a year. The top tier is a Class C felony for $1 million+ in a year, with a maximum 5–15 years in prison.
Bragg argues New York’s BitLicense regime creates a “gap” because ignoring licensing has lacked criminal consequences. He frames state enforcement as a backstop after April 2025 federal enforcement pullbacks, including the DOJ disbanding its National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team. The bill still needs New York legislative approval, with no timeline given.
For traders, the main risk is compliance-related disruption: if the New York crypto law advances, exchanges, brokers, and market-makers without NY licensing may face higher risk premiums and liquidity impacts, especially for smaller or offshore-facing venues.
Neutral
New York regulationCRYPTO Actcrypto compliancecriminal penaltiesBitLicense
Adam Back renewed his denial that he is Satoshi Nakamoto, posting on X “i’m not satoshi” (Apr 8, 2026). A new historical/sources analysis had linked Back to Satoshi using shared language and community history, but Back called it coincidence and warned of confirmation bias.
Back argues his early work in privacy, electronic cash, and cryptography—including Hashcash—overlaps with Bitcoin’s themes, yet overlap is not proof of identity. He says he does not know who Satoshi Nakamoto is and that “no one” knows. He also cited disclosed Satoshi-related emails from the COPA case tied to Craig Wright, saying they suggest Back and Satoshi are separate people.
Other crypto leaders weighed in. Ripple CTO David Schwartz noted people’s thinking can change over time. Michael Saylor pushed back on stylometry-only conclusions, pointing to historical email exchanges as evidence of distinct individuals.
For traders, this is a high-attention headline about the Satoshi Nakamoto identity, but it does not change BTC protocol or supply. Near-term price impact is likely limited, mainly tied to brief sentiment swings around Bitcoin’s origin narrative.
Binance Wallet is adding prediction markets on BNB Smart Chain via a direct integration with third-party platforms, starting with Predict.fun. Users can trade on-chain shares priced from $0.01 to $0.99, which represent the market-implied probability of each real-world outcome. When the event resolves, correct outcome shares settle at $1, letting traders take positions across categories such as sports, economics, and crypto.
Binance calls the setup “hybrid” infrastructure to reduce onboarding friction by using existing exchange balances and familiar trading mechanics. It also emphasizes that Binance prediction markets are not provided by Binance ADGM entities, and access requires holding a dedicated “Prediction Account” powered by the Binance keyless wallet. Binance further frames its role as an access layer, noting wallet services are provided by Binance Barbados Limited and are not supervised by a financial services regulator.
The launch arrives amid heightened US regulatory pressure on prediction markets, including CFTC legal moves and disputes over state-level interference. For traders, this improves prediction markets access and potentially liquidity, but key watch items remain liquidity depth, probability-price volatility, settlement/resolution risk, and jurisdiction/third-party dependency.
Toncoin surged over 5% to around $1.30 after Telegram CEO Pavel Durov said the TON network activated Catchain 2.0. The upgrade reportedly boosts block generation speed by ~6x and enables sub-second transaction confirmations, aiming to improve TON performance for payments and consumer use.
Durov framed this as the first step in the “Make TON Great Again” plan. The next step targets lower transaction fees; if delivered, fees could drop by about 6x. Validator voting occurred on April 8–9, and Catchain 2.0 went live afterward. While the main-chain block reward remains 1.7 TON, the higher block frequency is expected to raise validator earnings per cycle and increase token issuance (inflation could rise from ~0.6% to ~3.6%).
Market support for the upgrade also mattered: Binance and Bithumb reportedly completed wallet maintenance to handle the network change.
Beyond infrastructure, the ecosystem added trading and institutional rails. Rakuten Wallet announced spot Toncoin listings from April 15, and partnerships were cited for business access to USDT on TON, plus enterprise wallet infrastructure for Telegram-based financial products.
Price action is showing an early recovery attempt: Toncoin closed near $1.2868, and technical levels flagged $1.2620/$1.2509/$1.2477 as the first support cluster. Upside resistance is around $1.3168, with a potential path toward $1.34–$1.36 and then $1.40; a drop below ~$1.21 would suggest TON remains stuck in consolidation.
White House-linked officials are urging Congress to move the CLARITY Act (Digital Asset Market Clarity Act) quickly, aiming for Senate Banking Committee markup later in April and the possibility of passage in May. The goal is to tighten U.S. crypto market structure and reduce regulatory uncertainty ahead of the narrowing legislative window.
Support is building across the policy and regulator landscape. David Sacks (former White House AI and crypto policy lead) argues that after the GENIUS Act set stablecoin regulatory baselines, the CLARITY Act would add needed structure for the wider digital asset market. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also pushed the Senate Banking Committee to accelerate the bill.
Regulators signaled implementation readiness: CFTC Chair Michael Selig and SEC Chair Paul Atkins said they are prepared to carry out the CLARITY Act if it passes, under “Project Crypto,” framing it as protection against potential regulatory reversals under future administrations.
The bill’s sticking point remains stablecoin yields. Earlier Senate delays in January and March were tied to unresolved disputes, especially around whether stablecoin holders can receive “passive” income. The latest reporting also highlights a DeFi safeguard effort, updating language so non-custodial protocol developers are less likely to be treated as financial intermediaries.
On timing, Sen. Cynthia Lummis said markup is planned for late April, while Sen. Bernie Moreno warned that missing May could push meaningful U.S. digital asset policy to after the November 2026 midterms.
For traders, the CLARITY Act is a near-term catalyst for regulatory-risk pricing—particularly for stablecoin- and exchange-adjacent strategies tied to yields, payments, and compliance expectations—while outcomes around stablecoin yield restrictions could still drive volatility.
SHIB exchange netflow has turned negative amid an ongoing price decline, according to CryptoQuant. As of Thursday, April 9, SHIB exchange netflow fell to -24,320,300,000 SHIB (down 0.81% over the period). The negative SHIB exchange netflow means traders withdrew far more tokens from exchanges than they deposited, a pattern that often signals reduced immediate selling pressure and potential accumulation.
Market sentiment across crypto remains fearful, but the SHIB exchange netflow data offers a counter-signal: some investors appear to be buying into weakness rather than exiting. However, the article notes that netflow alone has not translated into a visible upside move yet.
Price action is still soft. At the time of writing, SHIB trades around $0.00000599, down 0.41% over the past 24 hours. Despite the bullish-leaning SHIB exchange netflow trend, sellers still appear to control short-term direction, implying traders may need confirmation from both on-chain buying pressure and sustained price stabilization.
Key figure: -24.3B SHIB netflow (CryptoQuant, Apr 9).
Neutral
SHIBExchange NetflowOn-chain SentimentAccumulation vs SellingMarket Liquidity
Spartans.com says its Prediction Markets has evolved into a global forecasting sportsbook, tied to a monthly $7,000,000 world-record prize pool and a $5,000,000 first-place leaderboard award. The platform lets users place bets using Prediction Markets on topics ranging from Bitcoin (2026 price) forecasts to outcomes of major elections, with wagers earning leaderboard points. The release positions the site for “sharps” who apply macroeconomics and geopolitics research to gain an edge, and it also bundles traditional sports coverage (e.g., soccer and NBA-style live markets) where every dollar wager contributes to the monthly standings. The key trading takeaway is that Prediction Markets are being marketed as a high-reward, information-driven alternative to typical casino play—especially when top-rank rewards can boost effective returns—potentially drawing more retail attention to crypto-linked narratives, but without directly changing spot/liquidity fundamentals.
The article frames April 2026 market conditions as a split between established coins and newer entrants. It highlights BNB weakening after a break below $570 support and Ethereum (ETH) testing a high-stakes zone near $2,100.
For BNB, momentum is described as bearish despite RSI moving toward oversold. The piece points to a potential “accumulation zone” between $400 and $500, aligning with Fibonacci retracement levels and a longer-term trendline.
For Ethereum, whale activity surged as ETH approached $2,100. The write-up cites a rejection around $2,120–$2,150, but also notes improving demand signals (including higher net taker volume). A decisive move above roughly $2,140 is framed as the path toward $2,300, while failure could revisit $1,950.
BlockDAG (BDAG) is promoted as the main trade theme, with a “final” presale phase priced at $0.0000061 and an advertised 95x upside. The article claims BlockDAG has broader exchange readiness and a Q2 roadmap tied to DEX rollout and a Super App launch, and suggests a longer-term target of $1 as adoption and liquidity expand. Traders are reminded this is a paid post, not investment advice.
U.S. growth is weakening, but inflation remains too hot for an easy Fed “rescue,” keeping macro uncertainty elevated for Bitcoin and crypto risk.
Economic data shows a sharp slowdown: Q4 2025 real GDP growth was revised down to 0.5% (from 4.4% in Q3). At the same time, inflation stayed sticky. February PCE inflation was 2.8% YoY (headline), while core PCE rose to 3.0% YoY. Monthly PCE gains were both 0.4%, signaling price pressure that hasn’t quickly returned to the Fed’s 2% target.
Traders are therefore stuck between two incomplete signals. The GDP downgrade can support a “rates easing” narrative, but the inflation print keeps that path conditional. Yields have remained restrictive: the 10-year Treasury yield hovered around ~4.3% after the releases, and real yields stayed high enough to preserve competition from safer assets—raising the hurdle for non-yielding assets like BTC.
Labor data adds nuance: payrolls grew ~178k in March and unemployment was near ~4.3%, suggesting the Fed can afford to wait. For households, the practical effect is continued pressure from still-high borrowing costs (mortgages, credit cards, and consumer financing).
Bitcoin’s market behavior reflects this ambiguity. While BTC is up on the week, it’s not breaking into a fully sustained risk-on regime. A key offset is spot Bitcoin ETF demand, with about $470M of inflows cited on April 6, supporting structural demand even if macro conditions remain mixed.
The next 30–90 days are framed as a decision window: incoming inflation data, yields, ETF flow momentum, and further growth prints will determine whether the environment shifts toward a friendlier “rates story” or turns into a riskier “stagflation” setup.
Neutral
U.S. macroFed & rate cutsSticky inflationBitcoin ETFsTreasury yields
The White House Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) published a 21-page analysis arguing that banning stablecoin yield under the CLARITY Act would do little to protect bank lending. The CEA projects traditional lending would rise by only about 0.02% (roughly $2.1B), with 76% of the benefit going to large banks rather than community lenders. It also estimates a net welfare loss of around $800M, implying consumer returns would be hit more than the financial system would gain.
CEA’s core claim is that when consumers buy stablecoins, funds are typically routed into Treasury bills and then redeposited into the banking system, leaving aggregate deposits broadly unchanged even if stablecoin yield is restricted. In an extreme scenario—stablecoins growing sixfold and reserves becoming effectively unlendable—the lending boost from a stablecoin yield ban reaches just 6.7%, which the report calls implausible.
Coinbase’s CPO Faryar Shirzad welcomed the findings, while banking industry groups pushed back, saying the model may misread how deposit flows return to banks once they shift from lendable deposits into reserves. Traders are watching whether this White House-backed stablecoin yield economic rebuttal can keep momentum for the Senate Banking Committee markup scheduled for late April, ahead of a potential May window.
BlockDAG (BDAG) is drawing heavy attention after reaching a $300M market cap and posting a sharp momentum move (cited as a recent $0.4 jump on CoinMarketCap). The article claims BDAG is trading around $0.0000061 and frames this as a “last window” for Batch 4 participation, targeting a potential 95x ROI narrative.
Alongside BlockDAG (BDAG), the piece highlights broader market moves: Zcash (ZEC) is said to be up about 6%, nearing a $257 liquidity zone after reclaiming the $250 area; risk is noted if profit-taking pushes price back toward $240. Avalanche (AVAX) is discussed in the context of institutional and RWA-focused activity, including multi-chain subnet upgrades, with the article noting a recent price dip of over 4% despite ongoing development.
For traders, the most actionable catalyst mentioned is BDAG becoming tradable on several venues (including BitMart, XT.com, LBank, Coinstore, Biconomi, and Ascendex). The roadmap outlined includes further exchange coverage later in April, then DEX integration and liquidity incentives in May, and a “Super App” launch by June.
Overall, the article positions BlockDAG (BDAG) as the highest-momentum opportunity versus steadier majors like ZEC and AVAX, emphasizing exchange availability and fast-moving price momentum as near-term drivers.
CryptoPotato reports that four AI chatbots were asked which coin could outperform if the US–Iran war ends. The market context is a drawdown since 2025 highs, with uncertainty easing after a newly announced two-week ceasefire.
Grok (X) expects BTC to be the most market-moving “geopolitical hedge,” calling for an upside pump if a definitive peace deal is reached. Google’s Gemini also selects BTC, arguing investors may rotate from gold and fiat back into crypto, even projecting a potential jump to $100,000. Perplexity agrees on BTC’s upside, highlighting its liquidity and ease of fast capital rotation.
ChatGPT is more diversified: it favors “high-beta, risk-on” assets rather than BTC alone, citing that past BTC reactions to major news were often only +5% to +15%. It instead picks ETH and SOL for larger upside, and also flags meme coins (DOGE, PEPE, WIF) as possible beneficiaries—while warning that meme volatility can reverse quickly.
Despite the upside narrative, the article notes persistent downside risk. Some traders argue any ceasefire “pump” could be followed by further sell-offs and new lows. One pessimistic view targets a move toward $30,000 even after the ceasefire.
Key takeaway for traders: a US–Iran de-escalation narrative could lift BTC and the broader risk complex, but positioning should factor in the risk of a short-term rally that fades.