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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

DRIFT hack traced to Lazarus: North Korea-linked infiltration

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The DRIFT hack is linked to North Korea-affiliated attackers tied to the Lazarus Group, with allegations that fake identities were used to infiltrate crypto and DeFi teams over years. MetaMask developer Taylor Monahan said North Korea-linked IT workers have targeted crypto and DeFi firms for at least seven years, affecting 40+ DeFi platforms. The Lazarus Group’s past major thefts cited in the report include the Ronin Bridge hack ($625M, 2022), the WazirX breach ($235M, 2024), and the Bybit heist ($1.4B, 2025). The latest DRIFT Protocol disclosure frames the $280M incident as the result of months of preparation. A key allegation is that team members were individually approached and hired via North Korea-linked intermediaries during conferences. One cited case (from Titan Exchange founder Tim Ahhl) describes a candidate who looked qualified on video calls but refused an in-person meeting—flagged as suspicious. Analysts at ZachXBT warn the same risk persists through job postings and interview processes, and that hiring partners may show negligence if they proceed despite red flags. Trading context: DRIFT is reported around $0.0669 in a downtrend, with weak momentum (RSI near oversold) and a bearish short-term setup near key support. For DRIFT traders, the DRIFT hack narrative increases perceived counterparty and DeFi security risk, which can pressure liquidity and sentiment in the short term until more incident details are confirmed.
Bearish
DRIFT hackLazarus GroupNorth KoreaDeFi securityToken risk premium

Bitcoin Jumps on Reported 45-Day Iran Ceasefire Talks

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Bitcoin (BTC) rebounded sharply on Monday after a quiet weekend, jumping to about $69,600—its multi-day high—following renewed U.S.-Iran ceasefire speculation. A report cited by The Kobeissi Letter, based on Axios, says the U.S., Iran and regional mediators are discussing a 45-day ceasefire. Sources describe it as a “last-ditch effort” to prevent “massive strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure,” with the possibility that the talks could ultimately lead to a permanent end to the Iran war. The market reaction appears closely tied to political deadlines. Trump previously warned Iran must reopen the Strait of Hormuz by Monday (later extended to Tuesday). He also highlighted “Power Plant and Bridge Day,” implying targeted infrastructure risks. However, the new report says mediators are considering a two-phase framework: a 45-day ceasefire while negotiations continue toward a complete end to hostilities. Despite the optimism, sources say the chances of even a partial deal before the next deadline “are slim,” because Iran has rejected recent U.S. proposals as unacceptable. For traders, the immediate takeaway is that Bitcoin is reacting to geopolitical headline risk tied to ceasefire timing. If talks fail after the deadline, BTC could face renewed volatility from escalation fears; if progress leaks, the move could extend as a risk-on relief trade.
Neutral
BitcoinIran Ceasefire TalksTrump DeadlineGeopolitical RiskBTC Volatility

XRP Rangebound Despite Volume Jump as $1.33 Breakout Near

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XRP remains range-bound as volume rises but no clear catalyst emerges. In the past 24 hours, XRP gained about 1.08% to $1.3256, while trading volume jumped roughly 23% above its weekly average. Price action stayed compressed. XRP largely held above the $1.30 support area and oscillated between $1.29 and $1.33. Higher lows formed near $1.30, yet sellers repeatedly defended $1.33, limiting upside follow-through and keeping the market in a “compression phase.” Key levels for XRP traders: support at $1.30–$1.32 and resistance at $1.33–$1.35. A firm break above $1.33–$1.35 could spark renewed buying momentum. Losing $1.30–$1.32 may bring renewed selling pressure and a retest of lower levels. Until XRP resolves the range edges, traders may stay cautious despite the volume uptick.
Neutral
XRPRangeboundBreakout LevelsTrading VolumeSupport Resistance

Polymarket Clone Script Costs: Key Build Factors and Budget Ranges

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A Coinmonks article breaks down what it costs to launch a Polymarket clone script (a ready-made prediction market software stack) and what drives the budget. The piece frames Polymarket clone script as a faster, more cost-effective alternative to building a prediction market from scratch. It typically targets event-based markets where users trade on real-world outcomes. Cost ranges cited: - Basic platform: about $25,000–$50,000, with an estimated build time of 8–12 weeks. - Advanced platform: about $50,000–$100,000, with an estimated build time of 12–16 weeks. The article lists key cost factors that can move the final spend higher, including: - Platform customization (UI/UX, dashboards, trading options, engagement tools) - Blockchain integration (smart contracts; cost varies by network and complexity) - Liquidity setup (AMM configuration and liquidity strategy to avoid low participation) - Third-party integrations (crypto wallets, payment gateways) - Compliance & licensing (varies by geography) - Security infrastructure (smart contract audits, testing, data protection) - Marketing & user acquisition (ads, community building, referrals, partnerships) - Maintenance & support (updates, bug fixes, customer support) - Scalability (server capacity and peak-trading performance) It also recommends cost control tactics such as starting with an MVP, prioritizing must-have features, and using pre-audited components to reduce security and engineering overhead. Main takeaway for traders: Polymarket clone script launches can increase competition and market access, but real trading quality depends on liquidity, security, and compliance—areas that directly affect user confidence and order-flow stability.
Neutral
Polymarket clone scriptPrediction MarketsBlockchain DevelopmentLiquidity & AMMSecurity Audits

North Korean DeFi Infiltration: Lazarus Linked to 40+ Protocols

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A cybersecurity researcher says North Korean IT workers have been infiltrating the North Korean DeFi ecosystem for at least seven years. MetaMask developer Taylor Monahan claims she has identified North Korean involvement in 40+ decentralized finance platforms, suggesting “seven years of blockchain dev experience” is credible. The Lazarus Group, a North Korea-affiliated hacking collective, is estimated to have stolen about $7B since 2017, including major hacks such as the 2022 $625M Ronin Bridge exploit, the 2024 $235M WazirX hack, and the 2025 $1.4B Bybit heist. This follows Drift Protocol’s statement that its recent $280M exploit had “medium-high confidence” of being carried out by a North Korean state-affiliated group. Drift also said meetings leading to the breach were with “third-party intermediaries” using fully constructed identities. Industry figures echoed the risk of infiltration via hiring. Titan Exchange founder Tim Ahhl said a job candidate later proved to be a Lazarus operative. ZachXBT noted these job/interview vectors are “basic” but “relentless,” urging teams to tighten counterparty checks (including OFAC screening) and identity verification. For traders, the North Korean DeFi infiltration narrative may raise perceived security risk and headline volatility around affected protocols, especially those with recent exploits.
Bearish
North Korean DeFiLazarus Groupcrypto hacksDrift ProtocolOFAC sanctions screening

Arc quantum-resistant roadmap: post-quantum wallets, signatures for USDC

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Circle has published an Arc quantum-resistant roadmap to add post-quantum security across its L1 stack—starting with user-layer cryptography. The phased plan targets the Arc mainnet launch (expected in 2026), where Arc quantum-resistant roadmap upgrades begin with opt-in “quantum-proof” wallets and signatures to reduce exposed public-key risk before “Q-Day.” After mainnet, Circle will expand post-quantum coverage to validators and supporting infrastructure, including access controls, cloud environments, and hardware security. It also flags plans for quantum privacy over balances, transactions, and other financial data. This comes after new warnings from Google and Caltech that functional quantum computers could arrive sooner than expected and weaken today’s cryptography. Circle stresses that “active addresses” that already signed transactions must migrate before Q-Day because their public keys are already exposed. For traders, this is a long-horizon security and institutional-confidence signal more than a near-term price catalyst. USDC positioning matters for market stability, but expect limited immediate impact unless broader stablecoin/chain security requirements become trading narratives.
Neutral
post-quantum securityUSDCArc L1quantum riskstablecoin infrastructure

Michael Saylor signals resuming weekly Bitcoin buys

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Michael Saylor hints that Strategy may resume weekly Bitcoin buys after a one-week pause that interrupted its BTC accumulation streak. In an X post on Sunday, he shared a StrategyTracker screenshot with “Back to Work,” implying the next round of disclosures could be returning to schedule. Strategy’s last reported purchase was about $77M of BTC on March 23, followed by a rare skip the next week. If weekly Bitcoin buys resume with the expected deployment, estimates tied to its Stretch (STRC) perpetual preferred stock could support at least ~1,821 BTC in the next tranche. Strategy also disclosed financing mechanics: new STRC shares (designed around $100 par with monthly dividend adjustments) are issued and proceeds are redirected toward Bitcoin accumulation. The company currently holds 762,099 BTC at an average cost of about $75,694, meaning the position remains underwater versus recent spot levels. Traders should note: this development is a modest demand catalyst, but near-term price action is still likely to be driven by BTC technical levels and broader risk sentiment.
Neutral
weekly Bitcoin buysStrategy BitcoinSTRC financingBTC accumulationMichael Saylor

GBP/USD rebounds above 1.3200, but geopolitical risks linger

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GBP/USD has staged a tentative recovery, retaking the key psychological 1.3200 level in early European trading. However, the broader outlook remains cautious, with persistent geopolitical headwinds and diverging central-bank policy weighing on sterling. Technically, analysts treat 1.3200 as a near-term pivot. A sustained break higher could open a move toward the 50-day moving average near 1.3280. If GBP/USD fails to hold above 1.3200, the pair may retrace toward the recent swing low around 1.3050. Momentum indicators are mixed: RSI is near 45 (not overbought/oversold), while the 200-day moving average still slopes downward, supporting a bearish bias. Fundamentals are also skewed. Geopolitical uncertainty tends to trigger “risk-off” flows into the US dollar, a factor that has historically pressured the risk-sensitive pound. Energy security concerns and current-account effects further complicate sterling valuation. On policy, the Fed’s stance is framed as the dominant driver for GBP/USD, since prolonged Fed tightening typically strengthens the dollar. Positioning looks tense: leveraged funds reportedly increased net shorts in sterling, while real-money accounts show only a slight pickup in long exposure. Upcoming high-impact UK data (CPI, retail sales, PMI) and US releases (Non-Farm Payrolls, CPI) are expected to drive volatility. Traders should watch GBP/USD around 1.3200 for breakout vs. rejection signals, because the next move is likely to hinge on geopolitics and fresh inflation/employment surprises.
Bearish
GBP/USDGeopolitical RiskBank of England vs FedFX TechnicalsInflation Data

USDC expands in South Korea via Dunamu/Upbit and major exchanges

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Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire visited Seoul to push USDC expansion through partnerships with South Korea’s largest exchange operator Dunamu (Upbit parent) and other major platforms. A memorandum of understanding with Dunamu targets USDC integration across Upbit trading pairs and wallet systems, with added focus on regulatory coordination, stablecoin security/utility education, and USDC-fueled cross-border payments. The article says Upbit processes about 80% of Korea’s crypto transactions, making the deal strategically important. Allaire also met Bithumb and Coinone executives, described as the #2 and #3 exchanges by market presence, to discuss potential USDC market-share and integration plans ahead of South Korea’s Virtual Asset User Protection Act (effective July 2024). The new law tightens rules around stablecoin issuance and trading, including real-name verification and AML expectations. USDC positioning is highlighted: it is the second-largest stablecoin by market cap (over $32B), with Circle citing monthly reserve attestations and US regulatory licensing (money transmitter licenses and New York BitLicense). The story argues that regulated USDC could improve liquidity versus fiat, reduce volatility for Korean traders seeking dollar exposure, and strengthen on-chain access to DeFi via Ethereum and Polygon. For traders, any USDC listing/integration steps may increase stablecoin depth on Korea’s venues and improve USD-pegged routing for both retail and institutional flows, potentially supporting smoother risk management around volatility.
Bullish
USDCSouth Korea RegulationStablecoin PartnershipsUpbit/DunamuCrypto Liquidity

Strait of Hormuz Deadline Spurs Volatile Asian Markets and Oil Jump

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Asian markets turned volatile after the Trump administration issued a 72-hour deadline to fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The move threatens “complete and unrestricted access,” citing economic security and American energy independence, amid heightened Iran–Western maritime tensions. Equities showed mixed results: Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 1.2%, South Korea’s KOSPI rose 0.8%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was flat, and Singapore’s Straits Times slipped 0.9%. Australia’s ASX 200 gained 0.5% on energy strength. Shipping and logistics faced near-term pressure, while energy-related stocks benefited. Oil markets reacted immediately. Brent futures rose 3.2% to $94.75/bbl and WTI climbed 2.9% to $91.40/bbl. The Strait of Hormuz handles about 21 million barrels of crude per day (roughly 21% of global petroleum consumption), so any disruption can quickly reshape supply expectations. Analysts highlighted regional exposure: Japan (88%) and South Korea (82%) rely heavily on Hormuz transit, making the Strait of Hormuz a key driver of import-cost risk for Asia. Energy shares generally rose, but airlines and parts of transportation faced headwinds from fuel-cost concerns. Diplomatic responses remained cautious, with calls for “diplomatic solutions,” “restraint from all parties,” and contingency planning by oil-importing countries. Traders are likely to watch whether diplomatic progress reduces the probability of further supply disruption—an outcome that could swing both risk sentiment and inflation expectations.
Neutral
Strait of Hormuzoil pricesAsian equitiesgeopolitical riskenergy stocks

CAD Jumps on US-Iran Ceasefire Hopes and Risk-On Shift

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The Canadian Dollar (CAD) surged in forex trading as renewed US-Iran ceasefire hopes eased Middle East geopolitical tensions. CAD/USD rose more than 0.8% early in the session, breaking above a key technical resistance level. Traders reduced safe-haven demand (selling US Treasuries and the Japanese yen) as markets shifted toward a risk-on posture. The move is closely tied to oil. Canada is a major crude exporter, and CAD typically tracks West Texas Intermediate (WTI). Reports of constructive back-channel dialogue helped lift crude futures on reduced supply-disruption fears. Forex trading algorithms then bought CAD in response to the oil-driven risk-on impulse, followed by momentum traders amplifying the trend. Experts framed the rally as a lower geopolitical risk premium supporting commodity currencies. Dr. Anya Sharma (Global Forex Insights) said markets are pricing reduced risks for Canadian heavy crude exports, with stabilizing bond yields and equity gains reinforcing a pro-growth rotation. Looking ahead, the sustainability of the CAD rally depends on diplomatic follow-through. Traders will watch official statements from Washington and Tehran. A negotiation breakdown could quickly unwind the risk-on positioning and push CAD lower again. For traders, the key takeaway is that CAD strength signals a calmer geopolitical regime and firmer energy sentiment—usually supportive of broader risk assets, including crypto, in the short term.
Bullish
Canadian Dollar (CAD)US-Iran CeasefireWTI Oil PricesRisk-On ForexGeopolitical Risk

XRP Premium FVG Setup: Short-Term Bounce Possible, Bears Still Target Lower Liquidity

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XRP remains in a bearish structure after falling more than 50% from its 2025 peak above $3.5. A crypto analyst on TradingView highlights an “XRP premium FVG” (Fair Value Gap) that could act like a magnet for price in the short term. The proposed path is tactical: first, XRP may move upward to enter the XRP premium FVG to rebalance inefficiencies. After that, the next leg depends on whether the market sweeps buy-side liquidity (BSL) at those levels. However, the article stresses a key risk: even if XRP rallies into the XRP premium FVG, the broader outlook remains bearish. Once the gap is filled, the analyst expects another reversal lower as XRP targets sell-side liquidity (SSL) below current lows. A bullish alternative exists: XRP could sustain a breakout from the premium FVG zone, shifting higher-timeframe (HTF) structure from bearish to bullish. Until such confirmation appears, the base case is a liquidity-driven bounce followed by a continuation down toward lower lows.
Bearish
XRPPremium FVGTechnical AnalysisLiquidity SweepBear Market

Ethereum Near $1,800 Support: Buy Zones vs $2,500 Breakout Trigger

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Ethereum is trading near a critical decision area around $2,000, with analysts highlighting $1,800 as key support and $2,500 as the bullish breakout pivot. Market focus is on whether Ethereum can hold the $1,800–$1,880 zone or lose it and rotate into deeper liquidity levels. Analyst Ali Martinez points to aligned on-chain metrics for Ethereum. The 0.80 MVRV band at $1,800–$1,880 historically corresponds to heavy unrealized losses and often precedes seller exhaustion followed by long-term accumulation. Using UTXO Realized Price Distribution/realized positioning, the article cites dense liquidity clusters that could act as floors: $1,880, a larger URPD cluster near $1,584, a secondary shelf around $1,238, and deeper support near $1,089. Technical structure is described as a potential ascending triangle, but the risk of a parallel channel remains if Ethereum fails to defend $1,800. In that case, downside tests could extend toward $1,550 and potentially $1,070. On the upside, reclaiming $2,500 would shift the average holder back into profit, which historically tends to mark the end of accumulation phases and improve sentiment. If Ethereum confirms above $2,500, the article projects higher resistance relevance, including targets around $4,900 and the 2.40 MVRV band near $5,900.
Neutral
EthereumMVRVURPDTechnical SupportOn-chain Accumulation

Coinbase Gets Conditional Trust Charter Approval From OCC, Faces Backlash

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Coinbase said it received conditional approval from the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to establish a national trust company charter. The move would potentially expand Coinbase’s role in the broader financial system. However, the announcement also triggered industry backlash, highlighting concerns from parts of the crypto and fintech ecosystem about the implications of a major exchange moving deeper into traditional regulated structures. For traders, the headline is mainly a regulatory catalyst. Coinbase’s trust charter could improve the company’s ability to offer more regulated services, potentially supporting sentiment around major centralized exchange (CEX) infrastructure. At the same time, backlash raises the risk of slower adoption, additional scrutiny, or reputational friction that could affect near-term expectations. Overall, Coinbase’s conditional approval is a significant U.S. regulatory milestone, but because the charter is not final and the reaction from the industry is negative, the trading impact is likely to be measured and headline-driven rather than immediately transformative.
Neutral
CoinbaseOCC approvalCrypto regulationTrust charterIndustry backlash

Polymarket inks La Liga deal, expands US/Canada visibility

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Polymarket has become the official and exclusive prediction market partner of Spain’s La Liga in the U.S. and Canada. The agreement gives Polymarket exclusive rights to use La Liga and each club’s intellectual property to build prediction markets around soccer matches. Polymarket will license La Liga branding and roll out fan-focused digital programming, including premium broadcast visibility, VIP match hospitality, and virtual meet-and-greets with La Liga legends. La Liga North America CEO Boris Gartner said the push targets younger, multicultural audiences consuming sports across multiple screens. Polymarket CEO Shayne Coplan added that the deal is expected to increase interaction and trading activity. The sports expansion comes as U.S. regulation remains a key risk. The article highlights an ongoing jurisdiction fight, with the CFTC and DOJ pursuing how prediction markets should be regulated amid arguments they are effectively gambling. The earlier coverage also notes heightened enforcement concerns and a “CFTC approval to return” backdrop, alongside ongoing competition with Kalshi. For traders, the near-term takeaway is stronger branded distribution for Polymarket event markets, which can lift engagement and volume. But the legal and compliance overhang can cap upside and raise volatility whenever regulatory headlines move.
Neutral
PolymarketLa LigaPrediction MarketsCFTC/DOJ RegulationCrypto Sports Betting

Bitcoin jumps on 45-day ceasefire hopes as shorts get liquidated

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Bitcoin (BTC) rose about 3% to around $69,120 as traders returned from the Easter break and priced in hopes for a potential 45-day Iran ceasefire. The news also lifted broader crypto risk sentiment, pushing total market value back above $2.5T. ETH led majors, up about 3.7% to roughly $2,130. SOL gained ~2%, XRP added ~2.2%, and DOGE rose ~1.7% (about $0.093), as the market responded to easing Strait of Hormuz concerns. Positioning data points to a short squeeze. In the past 24 hours, $273.8M in total crypto liquidations occurred, with shorts accounting for $196.7M. A notable example was the largest single liquidation mentioned: an ETH-USDT short of about $10.17M on Binance. BTC also traded roughly between $66,634 and $69,350, increasing intraday volatility. Traders are still watching BTC’s range trade: $65,000–$73,000. Key resistance is expected near $71,500 and again around $81,200. Follow-through likely depends on whether the 45-day ceasefire deal is confirmed or quickly walked back, with optimism supporting upside momentum and any reversal pressuring price back toward range lows.
Bullish
BTC price action45-day ceasefireshort liquidationsETH outperformancegeopolitical risk

Bitcoin Squeezes Shorts: $196M Liquidated After BTC Breaks $69K

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Bitcoin surged past $69,000, triggering a derivatives-driven short squeeze. BTC traded around $69,132, up about 3% in 24 hours, with the move described as leverage cascading into forced closures on exchanges. Liquidations underline the imbalance: over the past 24 hours, 80,963 traders were liquidated for about $273.53M total. Shorts accounted for roughly $196M, versus about $76.89M for longs. The sharpest pressure hit a 12-hour window, driving $158.21M of short liquidations as momentum accelerated. Broader market follow-through appeared as well: Ethereum rose about 3.7% to around $2,130, and XRP gained about 2.2% to near $1.34. Exchange-level data showed shorts dominating on Binance, Bitget, Bybit, and Gate during a four-hour stretch, while Hyperliquid was an outlier where long liquidations were larger. For traders, the key takeaway is that this Bitcoin move is being powered by short liquidation flows—often volatility can cool after deleveraging, but the initial squeeze can still extend price swings while leverage resets.
Bullish
BitcoinShort SqueezeDerivatives LiquidationsBTC BreakoutCrypto Volatility

Coinbase Ventures boosts crypto funding with 14 deals in Q1 2026

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Coinbase Ventures increased its crypto funding pace in Q1 2026, completing 14 funding rounds. The Coinbase Ventures activity closely mirrored Q1 2025 with the same deal count and a similarly broad investment scope. Top rounds included Mesh, which raised $75M for payments infrastructure. Midas followed with a $50M investment focused on real-world asset solutions using blockchain. Tazapay received $36M for cross-border payments aimed at simplifying international transfers. Other notable allocations covered Zodl ($25M) and Project 11 ($20M), showing Coinbase Ventures’ interest across payments, DeFi infrastructure and application layers. Additional funding included $17M for XFX, $11.5M for Based (decentralized applications), $9M for Whetstone, $8M for Latitude, and $5M for Megapot. Analytics platform CryptoRank highlighted Coinbase Ventures’ prominent role in multiple early-series rounds for Mesh, Midas and Tazapay. Management reiterated a strategy to support fintech infrastructure and payment innovation, aiming to strengthen the digital-asset ecosystem. For traders, this signals ongoing venture capital confidence in practical blockchain use cases, but it is unlikely to create immediate price impact without broader market catalysts.
Neutral
Coinbase VenturesCrypto fundingPayments infrastructureDeFi investmentBlockchain startups

Wikipedia restricts AI writing; allows limited AI copyedits and translation

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Wikipedia has published new rules restricting AI writing. The policy bans editors from using artificial intelligence (AI) to generate or rewrite article content, citing that text produced by large language models (LLMs) often conflicts with core Wikipedia content policies. The rules include narrow exemptions. Editors may use LLMs to suggest basic copyedits to their own writing, but only if the model does not introduce new, uncited information, and after human review. Wikipedia also allows LLM-assisted translation, but editors must follow the specified guidelines. Wikipedia did not detail penalties in the announcement. However, its LLM guidance warns that obviously disruptive AI misuse may be “struck or collapsed,” and repeated misuse could lead to a block or ban. The Wikimedia Foundation, which runs Wikipedia, reiterated that editorial policies remain human-centered and volunteer-driven. Separately, it has reported an ~8% year-over-year decline in human pageviews, attributing traffic pressure to search engines and AI chatbots. For traders, the broader angle in the article links AI accountability to blockchain. It argues that immutable, timestamped logs could help trace AI building, training, and usage decisions, potentially mitigating risks from deepfakes or unreliable LLM outputs. This part frames enterprise blockchain as an accountability layer for AI systems, though it is not a direct market-moving crypto protocol change. Overall, this is an information-governance update affecting AI writing workflows, not a crypto-native regulation event.
Neutral
AI writingWikipedia policyLLM complianceBlockchain accountabilityInformation governance

Bitcoin Breakout or Breakdown Looms as Crypto Markets Reopen

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Crypto markets reopen after a low-volatility weekend as Wall Street returns, with traders expecting institutional flows to restart and potentially trigger a large move. Bitcoin is cited near $67,000, while Ethereum holds above $2,000 and altcoins drift lower. The article frames today as “compression before a major move,” where liquidity returning after thin weekend trading could accelerate breakouts and amplify liquidations. Key catalysts highlighted include rising macro risk (oil price pressure and inflation fears), resumed institutional momentum (ETF activity and retirement-fund participation), and a market structure setup marked by tight weekend ranges and decreasing momentum. Two pathways are outlined: a bullish scenario if macro fears fade and Bitcoin breaks resistance (targets mention BTC at $70K+ and a rebound in altcoins), or a bearish scenario if risk-off hits and Bitcoin loses support (altcoins drop faster and liquidations increase). Traders are told the first hours after open are most important—watching volume expansion, BTC direction, and stock-market reaction to confirm whether the move becomes a trend or turns into a fakeout. Overall, the message is that Bitcoin’s next directional move could quickly reshape the broader crypto tape.
Neutral
Bitcoin price actionCrypto market reopeningInstitutional flowsETF watchMacro risk

EUR/USD Breaks 1.1500 on US-Iran Ceasefire Optimism

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EUR/USD has broken decisively above 1.1500 in early European trading, helped by growing optimism around US-Iran ceasefire talks. Traders are reassessing global risk sentiment and capital flows. Analysts point to Vienna-based indirect negotiations making tangible progress, while the move also confirms a technical breakout from a prior consolidation range. Key EUR/USD signals: the 50-day moving average has crossed above the 200-day average, and initial trading volumes rose about 35% versus the 30-day average. Support is now seen at 1.1500, with the next resistance in the 1.1580–1.1600 zone. The RSI is approaching 65, suggesting strong buying pressure without clear overbought conditions. Geopolitics could also reshape rates: a potential ceasefire may reduce the “geopolitical risk premium,” weakening demand for safe-haven USD. More stable Middle East energy risks could lower oil prices, easing inflation expectations and moderating aggressive Fed tightening pricing. That can widen or reprice the interest-rate differential that typically drives EUR/USD. Positioning matters too. CFTC data referenced in the article suggests Euro speculative shorts are crowded, increasing the risk of a short squeeze that can amplify upward moves. Broader market moves cited: European equities opened higher (EU Stoxx 50 +1.2%), Brent fell nearly 2% intraday, and US 10-year yields were up about 5 bps. Traders will watch for any diplomatic setbacks, since a renewed risk-off swing could quickly reverse the EUR/USD breakout.
Bullish
EUR/USDUS-Iran CeasefireFX VolatilityCFTC PositioningRisk-On Sentiment

Bitcoin at risk: McGlone flags $75,000 level for reversal

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Bloomberg Intelligence’s Mike McGlone warns that Bitcoin could face sharp downside unless it decisively holds above $75,000. He says the $75,000 threshold is both a technical and psychological pivot: sustained strength above it could end bearish sentiment, while failure to break and hold may keep BTC under pressure. McGlone also notes that if the bearish trend persists, Bitcoin may revisit as low as $10,000, similar to early-2020 levels. He links that earlier rally to unusually abundant liquidity, which he argues is no longer available at today’s scale. Beyond price levels, McGlone points to structural headwinds for Bitcoin. Competition has intensified since CME Bitcoin futures launched in 2017, and the market now includes millions of alternative tokens, diluting Bitcoin’s dominance. Stablecoins are highlighted as a persistent driver of the sector’s evolution, and he suggests that Ethereum and certain stablecoins could gradually surpass Bitcoin’s influence. Traders may watch $75,000 closely because prior attempts to reach it coincided with important reversals. The article also frames $75,000 as aligning with key Fibonacci retracement levels. Overall, institutional positioning and macro conditions are expected to continue shaping Bitcoin’s path in the coming months. Note: Not investment advice.
Bearish
BitcoinCrypto market analysisTechnical levelsStablecoinsInstitutional investors

US Iran Ceasefire: 45-Day Talks Intensify Before March 31 Deadline

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Negotiators from the US and Iran are intensifying talks on a US Iran ceasefire for a 45-day temporary halt to offensive operations. Mediators from multiple countries are pushing for a deal before a March 31 deadline, amid major regional and diplomatic calendar pressures. A basic framework has reportedly been agreed. The proposed US Iran ceasefire would pause military actions between US forces and Iranian-backed militias across the Middle East, with verification measures and direct military communication channels to reduce accidental escalation. Verification is the key sticking point. The US wants real-time monitoring of Iranian-backed militia movements, while Iran seeks limits on US surveillance near its borders. The plan reportedly includes satellite imagery, drone surveillance, and ground inspection teams, with international monitors deployed within 72 hours of signing. Regional support is cautious but present, including Qatar, Oman, and Switzerland as primary mediators (with UN and EU diplomatic channels also involved). Proposed milestones: immediate cessation (Days 1–7), verification setup (Days 8–21), prisoner exchange and humanitarian access (Days 22–35), then assessment/extension discussions (Days 36–45). Economic and humanitarian drivers are also cited: both countries face financial pressure, while aid delivery to affected areas in Syria, Yemen, and Iraq would be easier during a ceasefire. However, agreement depends on security guarantees for humanitarian workers and enforceable escalation/violation responses. If the US Iran ceasefire holds, it could lower regional risk premiums; if talks fail, renewed proxy conflict risk could quickly reprice geopolitical uncertainty.
Neutral
US Iran ceasefireMiddle East diplomacyCeasefire verificationGeopolitical riskMarket volatility

Will Altcoins Outperform Bitcoin in 2026? Metrics Clash

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AMBCrypto discusses whether “altcoins outperformance in 2026” is supported by market metrics. At press time, Bitcoin dominance is firm near ~60% (BTC.D ~58.79%, also ~56.51% shown), and CoinMarketCap’s altcoin index reads 38—signs that Bitcoin still leads rather than a broad altcoin-led rally. Community sentiment is mixed. Some traders expect an altcoin season around October 2026, while others warn the altcoin bottom is not in yet and anticipate an additional 20%–25% decline. One trader even describes altcoins as still in a prolonged bear market. On the demand side, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index has stayed weak since mid-January, mostly in Fear/Extreme Fear. Open interest and trading volume for altcoins have also fallen, suggesting traders are not rotating capital into smaller tokens aggressively—again contradicting “altcoins outperformance in 2026.” Market rotation evidence remains inconsistent. Over the past three months, the biggest 3-month movers in the top-10 trending set are more often lesser-known altcoins than established leaders, implying that for altcoins to truly outpace Bitcoin, large-cap names must strengthen. Takeaway for traders: “altcoins outperformance in 2026” looks more like a narrative than a confirmed trend right now. If BTC.D fails to break lower and risk sentiment stays cautious, rallies may stay selective and short-lived; a shift toward greed and rising altcoin OI/volume would be a key catalyst for a real altcoin cycle.
Neutral
Altcoin SeasonBitcoin DominanceMarket SentimentCrypto Fear & Greed IndexOpen Interest & Volume

Week Ahead: Iran deadline, Fed minutes and CPI risks for crypto markets

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Crypto markets begin the week higher as President Trump extends an Iran deadline. After his Sunday remarks, markets are reacting to a potential escalation around the Strait of Hormuz and threats involving Iranian energy targets. Key catalysts to watch (Apr 6–10): Monday’s March ISM Non-Manufacturing data; Tuesday’s renewed Trump deadline tied to Iran power plants and regional transit; Wednesday’s Fed meeting minutes; Thursday’s February PCE inflation; and Friday’s March CPI plus Michigan inflation expectations. Weekly jobless claims also land Thursday. Inflation focus is central. Analysts expect the March CPI read to reflect early energy-market effects, but traders will concentrate on “core” inflation for signs the inflation shock is spreading. Market tape: crypto markets are up about 2.4% over 24 hours, reaching roughly $2.45T during Asia trading. Bitcoin (BTC) is back above $69,000 after dipping below $67,000 over the weekend, but remains inside a two-month sideways range. Ether (ETH) is reclaiming around $2,100, also facing resistance in that zone. Trade implication: a Middle East de-escalation could support risk assets, but sticky inflation and Fed signaling could cap upside and increase volatility across BTC and ETH.
Neutral
Iran geopolitical riskUS inflation (CPI/PCE)Fed minutesBitcoin price levelsETH resistance

US bill would classify Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP and Solana as digital commodities

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A US bill would classify Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and Solana as “digital commodities,” reviving a debate over US crypto oversight and market structure. The proposal aims to clarify how federal agencies supervise exchanges, issuers, brokers, and investors, using a category system that separates securities from digital commodities. The draft’s key point is that major tokens could receive a commodity-style framework, with non-securities treatment suggested for activities such as mining, staking, airdrops, and wrapping. The bill also frames oversight around a broader taxonomy that sorts tokens based on how they are created, sold, and used over time, targeting the long-running fight over what counts as a securities transaction in crypto markets. Regulator roles remain central. The proposal outlines two legal paths: securities law under the SEC with broader oversight, or commodity treatment under a more limited CFTC role. Supporters argue Bitcoin and Ethereum have historically fit commodity-like logic, while other tokens have faced tougher questions when early sales were linked to network development or when buyers expected profit from ongoing work by an identifiable party. The XRP dispute is referenced as part of the background. For traders, the relevance is practical: reduced legal uncertainty could affect US exchange listings and potentially speed up spot ETF review timelines. The article notes that filings were still pending as of late 2025, and that BTC/ETH have clearer paths than several rival tokens. While the bill is not yet passed, the US bill debate is gaining momentum following joint SEC/CFTC guidance issued on March 17, 2026, potentially shifting sentiment around liquidity, custody, and compliance.
Neutral
US Crypto RegulationSEC vs CFTCBitcoin ETFToken ClassificationMarket Structure Bill

Hormuz blockade: Trump threatens Iran power plants; crypto reacts

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The U.S.-Iran standoff escalated as President Donald Trump warned that the U.S. military would target Iran’s power plants and infrastructure if the Hormuz blockade is not resolved by April 7. Speaking after the U.S. struck Iran’s Ghadir Bridge last week, Trump said “Tuesday” would bring “Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day” unless the Strait of Hormuz is reopened, repeating a Truth Social ultimatum. Iran rejected the demand and said it would respond “in kind” to any attack on its infrastructure. Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei stated that Iranian forces would target U.S.-linked infrastructure if Iran’s infrastructure is attacked. Iran’s president’s office spokesman Mahdi Tabatabaei added that Tehran may reopen the strait once some compensation via transit tolls is implemented. Iranian military officials also dismissed Trump’s threats. Markets are watching the likelihood of further conflict. On Polymarket, the odds of a U.S. invasion rose to 63% as the Hormuz blockade remained closed for more than three weeks. The Strait of Hormuz accounts for roughly 20%–30% of global oil consumption and transit, and the disruption has kept oil prices elevated. Brent crude closed above $109 per barrel. In crypto, risk sentiment weakened: Bitcoin has recovered from last week’s lows near $66,000 but was trading just below $69,200 at the time of writing, while the total crypto market cap was up about 2.2% over the same period. With trading resuming Monday, traders may brace for volatility tied to energy-price moves and geopolitical escalation around the Hormuz blockade.
Bearish
Hormuz blockadeUS-Iran tensionsgeopolitical riskoil pricesBitcoin volatility

US-Iran Ceasefire Odds Drop to 1% by April 7

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US-Iran ceasefire odds are sliding as the US and Iran, along with mediators, discuss a potential 45-day ceasefire, but traders remain skeptical. In the prediction market, the US-Iran ceasefire by April 7 is priced at ~1% YES (down from 12% last week). April 15 is ~6.5% (down from 22%), and April 30 is ~17.5% (down from 40%). Later dates improve but still look gradual: May 31 ~36.5%, June 30 ~51.5%, and December 31 ~68.5%. A notable shift is the implied jump from April 30 to May 31 (+~19 points), hinting at a potential early-May catalyst. Liquidity remains fragile: 24h USDC volume is about $430,773, and it costs roughly $12.4k to move the April 7 contract by 5 points—suggesting higher price impact from large orders. Traders will likely watch for CENTCOM updates and any change in Trump’s rhetoric. Fresh progress on talks, or deeper intermediary involvement (such as Oman or Qatar), could reprice the US-Iran ceasefire odds quickly.
Bearish
US-Iran ceasefire oddsgeopolitical riskprediction marketsTrump ultimatumUSDC liquidity