Belgium’s FSMA warned consumers about six crypto-asset service providers it says are operating without authorization under the EU’s MiCA rules. The regulator added Aurum Foundation, Bank Bit, Bithf Pro, Dxago, Global Dynamic Trade, and ZeriaFunding to its fraudulent CASP (crypto-asset service provider) list.
FSMA issued the warning days after the MiCA transitional period ended on July 1, moving national enforcement toward the MiCA licensing perimeter. It urged users to avoid offers from the named firms and to verify provider status in the official CASP register.
FSMA also highlighted key consumer risks: crypto assets are volatile, may face liquidity limitations, and are not covered by a compensation scheme that could reimburse user losses.
The report notes MiCA enforcement pressure across Europe ahead of the deadline, citing that Binance withdrew its MiCA application in Greece shortly before July 1 and planned to seek authorization elsewhere.
For traders, the development signals tighter compliance checks in the EU and potential short-term disruptions for unlicensed platforms in Belgium, while likely supporting longer-term market integrity through clearer licensing boundaries under MiCA.
Ripple’s XRP escrow is a protocol-enforced, time-locked system on the XRP Ledger. On the first day of each month, up to 1 billion XRP leaves escrow contracts, but the market often overreacts to the headline gross unlock.
Key mechanics of the XRP escrow:
- Escrow contracts created in December 2017 split supply into monthly tranches.
- The ledger enforces release conditions; Ripple cannot “push a button” to change timing.
- After the first-day release, Ripple allocates only part of the 1B XRP for institutional sales, liquidity, ecosystem funding, and operating costs.
- Within hours to days, unused tokens are relocked back into new time locks via EscrowCreate.
What matters for traders: the net release.
- The released 1B XRP is the gross figure flagged by trackers, like Whale Alert.
- Relocking typically returns ~600–800M XRP (and sometimes more), so net new supply usually lands around 200–300M XRP per month.
- This is modeled as bounded inflation (roughly 4%–6% per year) rather than open-ended dumping.
Case and context:
- July 1, 2026 saw 200M + 300M + 500M XRP moved (1B total, about $1.04B at the time).
- The article stresses that short-term price signals from XRP escrow unlocks are weak because the schedule is predictable; relock size is the real information.
The debate: decentralization vs treasury control.
- Critics argue XRP’s effective issuance is shaped by Ripple’s spending needs.
- Defenders say the schedule is transparent, capped, and on-chain verifiable.
Practical takeaway: monitor both the monthly gross unlock and the faster relock data to estimate XRP escrow net supply and gauge whether demand can absorb it.
Strategy, led by Michael Saylor, completed its second Bitcoin sale in just over a month. The firm sold 3,588 BTC for about $216 million to fund dividends on its Digital Credit securities. After the sale, Strategy’s BTC holdings fell to 843,775 BTC, while its USD reserve is $2.55 billion.
The market focus is on whether this Strategy sale could trigger another BTC selloff. Traders remember that a prior small BTC reduction (32 BTC) in late May was followed by a sharp drop, with BTC sliding into June and hitting levels under $58,000, plus pressure on Strategy’s STRC shares.
Strategy also signaled a different approach: it moved from continuous bitcoin-only buys to the Digital Credit Capital Framework, aiming to improve liquidity and maintain long-term BTC exposure. The company said it could sell up to $1.25 billion in BTC to extend the dividend runway from roughly 17.4 months to over 25 months.
CryptoQuant previously urged Strategy to pause BTC purchases and rebuild USD reserves—an approach now reflected in the latest sale. Saylor reiterated a long-term view that Bitcoin’s base layer will harden while “digital credit” expands, but traders are watching price reaction closely after the latest Strategy BTC sale as BTC briefly traded around $64,000 before slipping again.
Bearish
Strategy BTC saleBitcoin dividendsMichael SaylorDigital Credit Capital FrameworkBTC price volatility
Strategy (MSTR) said in an SEC filing that it sold 3,588 BTC last week for about $216M, cutting its holdings to 843,775 BTC. The company will use the proceeds to replenish the U.S. dollar reserve backing preferred-stock distributions; as of July 5, the reserve stood at $2.55B.
The average sale price was roughly $60,000 per bitcoin. That cadence is a sharp step-up versus about one month ago when MSTR sold only 32 BTC.
MSTR also reported no at-the-market (ATM) common-share sales and no buybacks under its repurchase programs during the week ended July. It said the full $1.25B capacity under its BTC Monetization Program remains available.
Market reaction: MSTR shares fell about 2% in pre-market trading, while BTC slipped from around $62,900 to about $61,900 after the announcement. For traders, the key signal is the accelerated bitcoin sales, which can weigh on near-term sentiment/liquidity even as MSTR continues to hold a very large BTC position.
Bearish
MSTRBitcoin salesSEC filingDividend USD reserveBTC Monetization Program
Russia launched another wave of missiles and drones at Kyiv in the early hours of July 5–6, killing at least 11–15 people and wounding dozens. The attack is the second major aerial assault on the Ukrainian capital within a week, following a larger barrage on July 1–2 that killed at least 27 across the Kyiv region.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had warned that Russia could escalate ahead of the NATO summit on July 7–8 in Ankara, Turkey. The summit is closely watched because US President Donald Trump is reportedly expected to meet Zelenskyy on the sidelines. NATO discussions are expected to focus on defense spending commitments and the future shape of Western military support for Ukraine.
Ukraine’s air defenses intercepted some incoming projectiles, but the sheer volume of the combined missile-and-drone assault still caused extensive damage across residential areas, infrastructure, and civilian buildings.
For traders, the key takeaway for crypto markets is that Bitcoin showed no significant immediate reaction after the July 5–6 strikes. Bitcoin has historically moved with broader risk assets during major shocks, but this event did not trigger a clear sell-off in the reported window.
Investors are likely to shift attention to whether NATO decisions and any Trump–Zelenskyy meeting outcomes change Western aid, and whether Russia responds with further escalation or a potential move toward negotiations. The more direct macro transmission would come via energy and inflation expectations, which can later influence risk appetite and bond markets.
Neutral
NATO SummitBitcoinKyiv StrikesDefense SpendingCrypto Market Reaction
Blockchain analytics firm Nansen says the TRUMP token’s drawdown reached $3.81B by end-June 2026. It analyzed on-chain purchases and found 988,905 of about 1.48M TRUMP-buying wallets finished in losses (around two-thirds of holders), counting both realized and unrealized losses.
About 500,000 wallets—mostly earlier buyers—together gained roughly $4B. The gap was timing-driven: some bought before a sharp rally, while many late buyers entered after the reversal, when the TRUMP token was already far below its early-2025 peak. At the time of the analysis, TRUMP traded near $1.76, down ~97% from its $75.35 all-time high shortly after launch.
The report also highlights that Donald Trump and family disclosed crypto income above $636M from TRUMP in 2025, with total crypto asset income exceeding $1.4B. Together, the on-chain loss concentration and the disclosed earnings have renewed scrutiny around project-linked revenue and retail downside.
For traders, the TRUMP token data reinforces a common momentum-to-retail-trap pattern: sharp pumps can leave most late participants underwater, increasing the risk of continued volatility and thinner liquidity after major drawdowns.
Bearish
TRUMPon-chain analyticsmeme coinsmarket volatilityprofit vs loss
SUI DeFi emissions will be closely watched after early-July routine community unlocks. The article argues that SUI’s DeFi activity can likely absorb routine community allocations, but absorption depends on where the tokens flow (on-chain incentives vs. exchanges).
In early July (July 1–3), Tokenomist flagged the July 1 release as a scheduled community “cliff,” not an investor-style shock. Reported figures included a July 3 unlock of 25,666,876 SUI (~0.3% of total supply at the time) and a smaller contributor tranche of about 7.59 million SUI around July 2. Overall, the distribution is framed as predictable rather than lumpy.
On-chain fundamentals cited from DeFiLlama show SUI TVL around $440m and daily active addresses in the tens of thousands (roughly 61k in the snapshot window). The author says this is “enough pipes” for SUI DeFi emissions to find demand, especially if new SUI is routed into staking, LPs, and lending collateral.
The key variable is flow: if recipients stay on-chain, pressure is manageable; if SUI hits exchanges quickly, traders may see sell-side volatility. The article also references a late-2026 cadence near 64m SUI/month, increasingly tilted toward community buckets.
Trader focus: map recipients (community vs. contributors), track CEX inflows vs. on-chain LP/staking additions, and monitor perps funding/OI into unlock windows. Overall, SUI DeFi emissions look more likely to be digestible than investor cliffs, but coordination and market risk-off conditions can still break absorption.
The Coinbase Premium Index measures the % price gap between BTC on Coinbase (USD) and a global reference exchange (typically Binance in USDT). A positive Coinbase Premium Index means BTC trades richer on Coinbase, often pointing to sustained US-regulated demand tied to spot ETF activity. A negative Coinbase Premium Index suggests US buyers are fading and selling, or demand is coming from outside the US.
In 2026, the indicator drew attention for timing streaks ahead of major moves: negative Coinbase Premium Index runs preceded a drawdown from about $100k to $60k, while a 14-day positive streak preceded a ~14% rally to around $78k. During June spot-ETF stress and outflows, the Coinbase Premium Index stayed negative as BTC slipped below ~$59k, helping frame a “whales vs Wall Street” split—implying accumulation may have occurred off-exchange.
For trading, focus on multi-day Coinbase Premium Index streaks (not single prints) and whether the reading is moving toward zero (selling pressure exhaustion vs. continued demand weakness). Confirm with ETF creations/redemptions, funding rates, and on-chain accumulation cohorts. Key risks include OTC blind spots, USDT/stablecoin valuation drift, and timing/venue microstructure distortions (fees, outages, ETF window arbitrage, or indicator methodology changes).
Bottom line: Coinbase Premium Index is a fast demand-lens, not a standalone buy/sell trigger—best used alongside ETF and on-chain signals to judge whether US institutions are buying or backing away for BTC.
Neutral
Coinbase Premium IndexBitcoin ETFInstitutional DemandSpot vs OTCMarket Microstructure
Bitcoin (BTC) has stabilized and climbed, gaining nearly 7% in the week ended July 5 to log its best performance since March. The main driver is a softer U.S. inflation outlook signaled by “inflation breakevens,” which compare regular Treasuries with inflation-protected bonds.
Key data: the U.S. two-year breakeven rate has fallen below 2% for the first time since 2024, while longer-term breakevens also dropped sharply. The report links this move to oil-linked inflation expectations, noting both the two-year breakeven and WTI oil have slid to levels last seen before the Iran war began in late February.
Market implications for crypto traders: falling inflation expectations weaken the case for aggressive Fed hikes and support risk assets. Since BTC typically trades inversely to the U.S. dollar (DXY), a weaker dollar would reduce a major headwind for Bitcoin.
A near-term catalyst is July 14, when the U.S. will release June CPI. One cited view is that falling oil could create a deflationary impulse that discourages rate hikes and leaves scope for cuts. However, others warn that underlying “sticky” service-sector inflation may be more structural than the headline CPI suggests, meaning markets could be underpricing how long rates stay restrictive.
Bottom line: the U.S. inflation narrative is currently supportive for Bitcoin, but traders may need to manage event risk around July 14 and watch whether the bond-market disinflation signal holds.
Bullish
BitcoinU.S. inflation breakevensFed rate expectationsDXY and FXJuly CPI event risk
Bitcoin is trading slightly lower after rebounding more than 6% last week, but it has slipped below $63K and remains stuck under the $64,000 resistance area. The key driver is continued institutional selling via U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs. CoinGlass data show $526.64 million in net outflows over the prior week, extending an eight-week consecutive withdrawal streak.
At the same time, renewed geopolitical risk is weighing on risk appetite. Concerns tied to the Strait of Hormuz resurfaced after reports that Iran may introduce new service fees for vessels using the strategically important shipping route. Traders are therefore more cautious about high-beta exposure like Bitcoin.
Technically, Bitcoin is still above the 200-week Simple Moving Average (SMA) around $62,867, which bulls view as long-term support. A sustained hold above this level keeps the recovery intact, with a potential upside target near the 78.6% Fibonacci retracement at about $65,520. However, the daily trend remains heavy: Bitcoin is below key moving averages (50-day EMA near $65,744, 100-day EMA near $69,455, and 200-day EMA near $75,471). Immediate resistance sits around $64,004.
Momentum signals are mixed. Daily RSI is near 49, and a MACD crossover suggests buyers are gradually regaining strength, but confirmation of a sustained uptrend is still missing. If Bitcoin loses the $62,867 area, the recovery could weaken further, exposing deeper support near the long-term ascending trendline around $58,000 and the yearly low near $57,800.
Ethereum starts the week with improving momentum after a strong rebound last week. ETH is trading around $1,784 and is approaching a key technical hurdle near the 50-day EMA at about $1,806.
Despite the recovery (ETH up more than 13% last week; Bitcoin and XRP also gained), the broader trend still looks cautious: Ethereum remains below the 100-day EMA near $1,972 and the 200-day EMA around $2,241.
Traders are watching momentum signals. The RSI is hovering near 57 (healthy buying pressure), while MACD stays positive, suggesting bulls are regaining control.
If Ethereum breaks above $1,806, upside targets shift to resistance near $1,972, then the psychological $2,000 area, followed by the 200-day EMA near $2,242. On the downside, the key support is around $1,385, where buyers previously stepped in.
For confirmation, ETH also needs to hold this momentum rather than fade under the 50-day level, especially given the still-bearish longer-term positioning below major moving averages.
Ukraine has requested an emergency UN meeting after a Russian overnight missile and drone attack on Kyiv on July 5–6. The strike killed at least 18 people and injured more than 34, and it was the second major offensive on the Ukrainian capital in four days.
The move comes as diplomatic pressure rises before a key NATO summit in Turkey, where U.S. President Donald Trump is expected to attend. Traders and analysts are watching whether the emergency UN meeting escalates rhetoric and reduces prospects for any ceasefire.
Crypto-relevant market signals in the report point to weaker confidence in a Russia–Ukraine ceasefire: market pricing shows lower ceasefire probabilities across multiple timeframes. The timing—immediately ahead of NATO discussions—suggests Russia may be seeking leverage over negotiations.
What to watch next is how the United States and NATO members respond, including any statements from Trump and other leaders. The outcome of the emergency UN meeting could also shift expectations for future military and diplomatic steps in the conflict, affecting risk sentiment and broader market volatility.
Spain beat Portugal 3-1 in the 2026 FIFA World Cup Round of 16 on July 6 at AT&T Stadium, advancing to the quarterfinals and ending Cristiano Ronaldo’s run. Lamine Yamal scored first, with Mikel Oyarzabal and Álex Baena adding goals.
For traders, the key crypto angle was the real-time reaction in fan token markets on Chiliz/Socios. Spain’s token ($SNFT) and Portugal’s $POR saw sharp volatility as the live score shifted. The article notes $POR trading around $0.18 during the match, alongside a major jump in trading volume during the 90-minute window.
It also frames the result as a high-signal test for gamified national-team fan tokens: rising engagement on-chain and fast order flow suggest traders actively price sports outcomes as events unfold. With major exchanges such as Kraken taking sponsorship roles in high-profile sport moments, the piece argues the sports-crypto convergence is strengthening.
Overall, this is a classic “sports headline → fan token volume spike” setup, with short-term momentum driven by match drama rather than long-term fundamentals.
Neutral
fan tokensChilizWorld Cupsports cryptoPOR/SNFT volatility
Csquare Inc., a retail colocation data center operator backed by Brookfield Infrastructure Partners, has filed an S-1 for a New York Stock Exchange IPO (ticker: CSQR). The Csquare IPO aims to raise up to $1.35 billion and would be one of the larger infrastructure offerings this year.
Csquare was formed in 2024 by Brookfield combining Evoque Data Center Solutions and Cyxtera Technologies. The company operates 64+ sites across the US, Canada, and the UK, with 389 MW of electrical capacity serving roughly 1,700 customers. Its average rack density is about 7.6 kW, but facilities can support up to 150 kW per rack for AI workloads.
Financially, the Csquare IPO comes with a growing top line: Q1 2026 revenue was $270.5 million versus $232.8 million in Q1 2025 (about 16% YoY). The company is also reported to generate $500 million–$600 million in annual EBITDA. Morgan Stanley and TD Securities are underwriting the deal, and Brookfield will retain majority voting control after listing.
Use of proceeds is focused on debt reduction, including a $734 million revolving credit facility and $4.3 billion in asset-backed notes. The article frames this as a key risk point: scaling while managing leverage will matter.
Why traders should care: the Csquare IPO is positioned as a test of investor pricing for AI infrastructure exposure in mid-2026. Because some Bitcoin miners are reportedly converting facilities for AI workloads, improved availability of high-power racks could indirectly support the AI/crypto infrastructure theme—though near-term market impact will likely be limited.
Dogecoin price prediction updates focus on a technical “retest” after DOGE broke above a long-term descending trendline on the daily chart. If buyers defend the retest, DOGE could rebuild momentum toward $0.0905 first, then the larger $0.1187 zone (near the $0.12 resistance area).
Key support is around $0.0713. A failure to hold that trendline retest would weaken the breakout and likely push DOGE back into sideways action.
However, DOGE’s outlook against Bitcoin remains a constraint. The DOGE/BTC monthly structure shows a multi-year compression phase under long-term descending resistance, and a prior 2024 breakout attempt failed. The analyst argues the next DOGE leg may require broader capital rotation and risk appetite—often linked to shifts in Bitcoin dominance or ETH/BTC strength.
Net takeaway for traders: the Dogecoin setup is bullish only on confirmation (successful retest hold). Until DOGE/BTC resolves its longer compression, timing risk stays elevated, and any DOGE spike may be liquidity-driven rather than trend-confirming.
ZachXBT said copycat meme coins using his likeness were launched across multiple chains. He stated he did not support, promote, or launch any of the tokens. ZachXBT reported that tokens sent to his donation wallet were sold on-market, then about $41,000 was donated via The Giving Block to Direct Relief and GiveDirectly for the Venezuela earthquake response.
The receipts cover donations made in USDT and SOL between June 28 and July 6. ZachXBT said he sent 25,000 USDT to GiveDirectly (July 6) and 5,000 USDT to Direct Relief, plus a third transfer of 153 SOL (about $11,000) to Direct Relief on June 28.
The update comes amid earlier controversy around ZachXBT-themed tokens, including a 2025 case where a ZACH token reportedly directed trading fees to him, and another Solana-based token that sparked disputes over token allocations. ZachXBT used the latest post to warn traders that a public figure’s name does not equal endorsement, urging checks of official posts, contract details, liquidity, and ownership before buying.
For traders, the key signal is that “ZachXBT”-branded meme coins may be hostile/unsanctioned launches, while any charity transfer is not a bullish confirmation for token holders.
South Korea has delayed enforcement against prediction market platform Polymarket and opened a formal hearing so the company can respond to concerns that it may breach gambling laws. The Broadcasting, Media and Communications Review Committee will first verify Polymarket’s legality and how the service is operated before issuing any “corrective request.”
The move follows an earlier police investigation into local Polymarket users over alleged illegal election-related gambling, with Gangwon Provincial Police beginning what was described as the country’s first such probe in early June. Under Korea’s National Gambling Control Commission Act, penalties can include fines up to 10 million won, imprisonment or higher fines for habitual gambling, and heavier punishment for operating a profitable gambling venue.
Polymarket says it uses geo-blocking (33 countries) and region restrictions to comply with sanctions, financial rules, gambling/prediction market regulations, and AML/KYC requirements.
For traders, the key is regulatory uncertainty: the hearing postpones a final decision, but ongoing cross-border scrutiny (EU ESMA guidance on event-based contracts under MiFID II, and reports of CFTC investigation in the US) keeps the sector’s risk elevated.
Risk watch: if regulators treat some prediction-market offerings as regulated gambling or financial products, access and liquidity for platforms like Polymarket could tighten quickly, even before any final ruling.
Neutral
PolymarketSouth Korea regulationgambling lawCFTC investigationprediction markets
SecondFi, operated by EMURGO, says it will not resume normal operations after a Cardano wallet security incident. EMURGO stated that even after independent audits and patch work finish, SecondFi will remain focused on asset recovery rather than product restarts.
Earlier reporting from crypto.news cited an exploit that drained about 16 million ADA from 374 affected wallet addresses. EMURGO said its future work prioritizes recovery for affected users, including a recovery fund and migration routes. It also told all users to move away from SecondFi using official methods.
To support users, EMURGO is preparing “checker” tools for wallet status verification and safe migration paths. It plans a quarantined site this week to help users confirm status and take migration steps, and it will release wallet-export functionality after app-store approval so users can move funds to safer options such as hardware wallets or other platforms.
EMURGO added that multiple independent firms are reviewing the incident and underlying code, and it warned against publishing early findings. A patch to close the identified vulnerability has been submitted, while broader review continues. The company is also working with Cardano ecosystem participants on an on-chain recovery system, but it says the system must be auditable and persistent, and an external audit is required before funds can return.
Separately, the breach event exposed users to scams via fake recovery/support accounts, so EMURGO urged users to follow only official channels. Until incident reporting and code reviews are complete, SecondFi’s role is limited to recovery and migration support.
Bitcoin surged to $64,000 for the first time in about two weeks, then was rejected and slipped to below $63,000. After June’s heavy selloff (worst month in four years), bulls only partially regained ground, while BTC dominance stays above 56%.
Pi Network’s PI token continues to underperform and is now just ~1% from its all-time low from late June, trading below $0.115 and trending downward.
Meanwhile, larger-cap altcoins largely move sideways. ETH, BNB, SOL, XRP, and TRX are up up to ~1%, while ZEC and ADA are down around ~2%. Among mid/low caps, DEXE and LIT lead gains, with LIT surging double digits and cementing a spot in the top 100 by market cap.
Market takeaway: Bitcoin’s rejection at $64K and Pi’s proximity to a potential new ATL keep downside risk elevated, even as selective alt strength appears in LIT/DEXE.
Samsung Electronics and Dunamu (Upbit operator) say they never agreed to join Open Standard’s OUSD stablecoin consortium, despite being listed as “founding partners.” South Korean firms including Shinhan Financial Group and Kbank also reportedly said they only agreed to review Open Standard’s proposal before their names appeared among 140+ listed partners.
According to Chosun Biz, a Samsung official said the company held no consultations with Open Standard and does not know what role it would play in the consortium. Dunamu and others gave similar comments, suggesting the OUSD partner roll-out may have been presented without formal sign-off.
The OUSD launch on June 30 drew major attention. Circle’s stock reportedly fell as investors weighed OUSD as a direct threat to USDC. Open Standard’s model differs from Tether and Circle because it promises to return most reserve income to partner firms after an operating fee, making membership economically meaningful.
Backers and distribution channels cited in the report include Stripe, which said OUSD will become a default payment stablecoin on its platform, and Coinbase, which confirmed OUSD support on its Base network.
For traders, the key risk is governance and credibility around OUSD—especially if partner status and commitments are disputed. This uncertainty can affect perceived adoption odds and stablecoin competitive positioning versus USDC and USDT.
Bearish
OUSDStablecoinsCircleRegulation & GovernanceSouth Korea
Norway advanced to its first-ever World Cup quarterfinal after a 2-1 win over Brazil in the Round of 16. Erling Haaland scored twice, including a stoppage-time winner, while Brazil’s lone goal came from Neymar via a late penalty. The article says Neymar’s overall conduct was viewed negatively, and Brazil suffered its earliest World Cup elimination since 1990.
For traders, the key angle is prediction markets: Norway’s win coincided with market moves that the report interprets as a reduced near-term probability of Norway elimination. Pricing also implied participants are adjusting expectations for Norway to go further—potentially toward the semifinals. The quarterfinal match is set against the winner of Mexico vs. England, which could be the next catalyst for further prediction market repricing.
Key names highlighted for quarterfinals performance include Haaland and Martin Ødegaard, with Norway coach Ståle Solbakken noted as a potential driver of tactical changes that may influence sentiment and contract odds.
Overall, this is sports-driven information, but the market focus is on how Norway’s result is being incorporated into prediction market pricing in the short term.
Neutral
Prediction MarketsWorld CupFootball UpsetSports Betting OddsVera API
SK Hynix is beginning marketing for a Nasdaq American Depositary Receipt (ADR) listing, targeting U.S. investors seeking direct exposure to high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in AI data centers. The company plans to issue up to 17.79 million new shares (about 2.5% of equity) to raise as much as 45.45 trillion won (≈$29B).
This SK Hynix Nasdaq ADR deal follows a push to improve U.S. liquidity versus previously available unsponsored over-the-counter ADR access. SK Hynix positions itself as a key HBM supplier integrated into Nvidia’s advanced GPUs, helping strengthen AI-semicaps positioning.
Timeline: confidential SEC filing in March 2026, bookbuilding starting July 6, 2026, pricing on July 9, and first trading expected July 10 under the prospective ticker SKHY.
Funds are earmarked for production capacity expansion, including new equipment and factory buildouts. For crypto traders, the impact is indirect: the SK Hynix Nasdaq ADR could shift risk appetite and AI-tech sector sentiment, but it is not a direct crypto catalyst. The main trading watchpoint is potential “capital flow” and relative re-rating between SK Hynix and U.S. memory peers, especially Micron.
Neutral
SK HynixNasdaq ADRHBM AI memoryAI semiconductorsIPO fundraising
Bitcoin price prediction remains split after BTC tested the $59,000–$61,000 support zone following a failed breakout. Traders are watching whether BTC can bounce toward $65,000 or fall deeper if support resets.
On the bullish side, BTC has reclaimed the $62,500–$62,800 area and is back above $63,000. One analyst (Ted) says a daily close above $62,800 could reopen upside momentum and put $65,000 back in play. If buyers stay in control, next resistance targets are roughly $67,000 and $70,600. However, the setup weakens if BTC loses the reclaimed $62,500–$62,800 zone, which could pull price back toward $60,000.
On the bearish side, another analyst (Kaz) points to rejection from a resistance “order block,” which trapped late long positions. If the decline continues, BTC could revisit $59,000–$61,000 within 1–2 weeks. Even if that zone holds, the chart setup suggests a rebound may form a lower high rather than a strong reversal, potentially keeping the path open toward the low-$50,000s.
Bottom line: this Bitcoin price prediction hinges on BTC defending $59K–$61K and, secondarily, holding above $62,800 for the $65K target to remain likely.
Solana price prediction: Solana network growth is accelerating, with about 1.60 million new addresses added in the past two weeks, pushing total addresses from roughly 6.8M toward 8.6M. This on-chain expansion suggests rising user participation across the Solana ecosystem, strengthening the bullish narrative, even though address growth alone does not guarantee a price breakout.
Solana price prediction (SOL/USD): Traders say SOL is still holding its short-term uptrend and has not shown clear signs of a local top. If the current Elliott Wave structure continues, SOL could target the $86–$94 resistance area. Key downside supports are highlighted near $80.38, then $78.22 and $76.52—keeping the higher-low structure intact if buyers defend them.
Upside levels discussed include $85.81, $88.79, and a main target around $93.95. A deeper pullback could drag price back toward the $71.17–$64.68 zone, which would weaken the short-term wave setup but may still fit a larger corrective pattern.
Overall, the near-term focus for traders is whether SOL maintains the higher-low structure while network address growth stays elevated—conditions that would improve odds for a push toward the $94 breakout zone.
Ethereum price prediction: analysts say ETH is rebounding from a double-bottom, attempting to reclaim a key resistance zone in the mid-$1,700s. After two sharp reactions from the same lower support area (June and July lows), ETH has moved back into a green resistance band that previously acted as support.
Traders are now watching two levels for confirmation. First, ETH needs to hold above the current mid-$1,700s zone; a clean break above it would strengthen the “double bottom” recovery thesis. Second, a broader breakout is tied to the 2026 range near prior highs. One analyst (Cryptollica) argues the current accumulation structure resembles the pre-2020 setup, where years of base-building preceded a major upside expansion. If ETH later clears the 2026 range, the chart implies a faster acceleration in the next bull move.
Technical context matters: ETH still needs confirmation above resistance before the bullish case becomes stronger. If the reclaim fails and ETH rejects the green zone, the market could return attention to the lower support area and delay the breakout narrative.
Ethereum price action also appears to be respecting a long-term rising support line drawn since 2022, reinforcing the “accumulation then expansion” scenario—especially if the 2026 resistance gives way.
Bullish
Ethereum price predictionETH breakoutDouble-bottom bounceTechnical analysis2026 range resistance
Security firm Coinspect says the “Ill Bloom” wallet vulnerability stems from weak randomness (insufficient entropy) used when generating recovery seed phrases. Because the weakness occurs at seed creation, not inside base networks, affected addresses may remain exposed across multiple chains.
Coinspect analyzed 2,114 active addresses spanning BTC, ETH, Tron (TRX), Rootstock (RBTC) and Polygon. On May 27, a coordinated sweep drained 431 vulnerable wallets for about $3.14 million, and post-disclosure tracking pushed total estimated losses above $5 million while more affected addresses are still being identified.
Coinspect stressed Ill Bloom is not a phishing or smart-contract exploit. Simply updating a wallet app or importing the same seed elsewhere does not fix the underlying entropy problem. The recommended mitigation is to create a new wallet using secure randomness and move funds to new addresses; Coinspect also released an address-checking tool to identify exposed wallets.
Early signals suggest hardware-wallet generated seeds are not affected, while higher-risk exposure is concentrated among users who created seed phrases in certain lesser-known mobile software wallets. Ill Bloom thus raises operational risk for traders holding assets on potentially impacted addresses.
Stablecoins are increasingly being used for tokenized yield rather than idling as “trading grease.” The article argues this is a “plumbing shift” that routes idle USDC/USDT into on-chain real-world asset (RWA) products—mostly tokenized short-term U.S. Treasuries—where returns now resemble money-market rates.
Key figures cited: total stablecoin supply was about $319.9B by end-May 2026 (USDT ~$184.7B, USDC ~$73.6B). Tokenized RWA value on public chains reached about $31.8B (late May 2026). Tokenized U.S. Treasury products totaled roughly $14.79B across 82 instruments with a 7-day yield around 3.35% (June 10, 2026). On-chain lending supply rates for major dollar stables (e.g., Aave V3 USDC) compressed to roughly 3.21% in June 2026, narrowing the yield spread that once justified higher smart-contract risk.
How the workflow works: stablecoins act as the cash leg. Excess balances move into tokenized Treasury wrappers (often with KYC/whitelists and issuer/custodian/legal-claim risk), while redemptions convert back to the base stablecoin. The article stresses that returns are not “guaranteed yield”—risk comes from issuer and custody, smart-contract wrappers, redemption gates, and stablecoin depeg risk.
For traders, the implication is not a new high-yield craze, but a shift in where idle liquidity sits. If stablecoins move into tokenized bills at scale, it can slightly reduce available buying power in crypto during rallies, while redemptions could provide liquidity on demand.
Soft U.S. jobs data reduced market pressure on the Federal Reserve, shifting Fed hike odds and giving the S&P 500 “more time” rather than a guaranteed rally.
June’s Employment Situation showed nonfarm payrolls up 57,000 (cooler hiring), unemployment at 4.2%, and average hourly earnings rising 0.3% m/m (3.5% y/y). The report looked like a cooldown, not a recession signal.
Trading moved quickly in rates first, not earnings. Reuters (via CME FedWatch) said the implied probability of a mid-September hold rose to 46.8% from about 35.8% the prior day—fewer hike bets. S&P 500 futures jumped about 0.4% in Asia, but the cash session ended roughly flat near 7,483; the Dow still printed a record.
Why this matters for traders: the article argues the Fed hike odds decline can support equity valuation at the margin (lower discount rates), but it does not remove the risk that growth or earnings deteriorate. The market reaction stayed selective, with limited breadth and leadership concentrated in specific names.
For crypto, the key transmission channels are macro risk appetite, the dollar, and funding/liquidity conditions driven by yields. Softer Fed pricing can be supportive, but without clear earnings/growth confirmation, relief can fade fast—especially if inflation re-accelerates or labor data worsens.
Key takeaway: Fed hike odds shifted toward a pause, but traders still need evidence from yields, sector rotation, and forward earnings revisions—this is “time,” not a free pass.
Neutral
US Jobs ReportFed hike oddsS&P 500Rates & YieldsCrypto Macro
On-chain data research firm Allium says the Polymarket ban has not stopped U.S.-linked participation in political prediction markets. In the past year, U.S.-linked wallets traded about $571M in Polymarket political contracts, even though Americans were blocked from using the offshore platform directly.
Polymarket ban failure is attributed to U.S.-linked wallets reaching the site via crypto wallets, stablecoins, and location-masking tools. The U.S. became the largest national group in the data, ahead of Hong Kong ($422M). Allium added that it could tag only about 6% of political-market wallets, so the numbers are “directional rather than exact.”
The report also highlights where U.S.-linked demand went. Geopolitics made up 46% of U.S. notional volume versus 36% for Polymarket overall. Election markets were just 16% for U.S.-linked volume (vs 32% across the platform). The biggest U.S.-linked market was a novelty contract about whether Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy would wear a suit. Five of the top 12 U.S.-linked markets related to the Iran war.
Americans did not show a clear trading edge: on resolved markets, U.S.-linked wallets backed winning outcomes 81.9% of the time vs 80.3% for everyone else.
Regulatory pressure is intensifying. The Polymarket ban failure comes as the U.S. CFTC investigates Polymarket, including business and social-media practices, while lawmakers have urged action over alleged fake advertising and user-protection issues. Meanwhile, Wisconsin and Michigan actions target prediction-market event contracts (Kalshi, Coinbase, Polymarket), and ESMA has warned Polymarket under EU rules.
For crypto traders, this reinforces that offshore prediction-market demand can persist on-chain despite access restrictions, potentially sustaining volatility around regulatory headlines.
Neutral
Polymarketprediction marketsCFTCregulationon-chain data