Kalshi and Polymarket Iran predictions show heavy speculative positioning on the 2026 Iran war, with bets totaling $200M+ across outcome markets. On Polymarket, traders placed about $115M on the odds that U.S. forces enter Iran by Dec. 31, priced at roughly 90%.
Kalshi and Polymarket Iran predictions also highlight near-term escalation fears around the Strait of Hormuz. Kalshi’s “7+ day closure” market has around $7.3M in volume, while Polymarket shows Kharg Island (a key oil terminal) losing Iranian control with a ~31% probability by June 30.
Leadership risk is priced aggressively after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s reported death. Polymarket gives Mojtaba Khamenei a ~64% chance to lead through end-2026 (about $6M volume), while a broader leadership change by year-end is ~36%.
Ceasefire and diplomacy remain uncertain. A U.S.-Iran ceasefire is priced around 70% on Polymarket with ~$87M volume. Traders also imply skepticism on diplomacy: a U.S.-Iran meeting by June 30 is ~56%, while Kalshi prices reopening the U.S. embassy in Iran at ~17%.
Operational timelines and weapons-deal outcomes are mixed. Polymarket prices a U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict ending by Dec. 31 at ~82%. Nuclear deal probabilities are low: Polymarket is ~3% for a deal by April 30, while Kalshi’s “deal before 2027” sits at ~35%.
A White House ultimatum aims to reopen the strait by April 6 or face strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure, and traders reportedly moved money ahead of deadlines.
Bearish
prediction marketsIran conflictKalshiPolymarketStrait of Hormuz
ZK Technical Analysis (Apr 4, 2026) shows ZK still trades in bearish market structure (LH/LL) and consolidates in the $0.01–$0.02 range, around $0.0173. Momentum remains weak: Supertrend stays bearish, RSI(14) is below 40 (~39.2) and drifting toward oversold, while the MACD histogram is negative.
A bullish shift needs a BOS (break of structure) above $0.02, aligned with EMA20/Supertrend resistance. Without that confirmation, the bias is range-bound to bearish. Support is highlighted at $0.0152, with $0.0140 as the decisive level—if ZK Technical Analysis confirms a breakdown below $0.0140, bearish CHoCH would strengthen and downside may extend toward $0.0055.
The earlier ZK Technical Analysis (Mar 23, 2026) similarly pointed to bearish continuation unless a daily close reclaims ~$0.0184/$0.02. The latest update adds momentum risk near oversold on RSI and refocuses the continuation trigger at $0.0140.
BTC correlation is a key trading input: BTC is only slightly up, while ZK drops more (~-2.87%), suggesting alt decoupling. If BTC falls back below about $65k, the probability of a retest of $0.0140 rises.
Traders are advised to wait for confirmation: buy the reversal only after a decisive BOS above $0.02, or position for continuation on a breakdown below $0.0140.
Solana (SOL) is under renewed selling pressure after about 1.40 million SOL (around $110 million) moved to exchanges over 72 hours, a flow that often signals holders are preparing to sell and can add short-term supply.
On-chain and technical indicators point to bearish structure. Analysts cited a breakdown from a daily bear flag and the loss of a key market-structure level near $85. SOL is also trading below a notable supply zone, suggesting acceptance at lower prices. If downside continues, the next major support range is projected around $66–$70. Any rebound toward $84–$89 may act as a retest of broken structure rather than a trend reversal.
Traders are watching $75 closely. While the short-term setup looks weak, one longer-term view highlights ongoing demand building in the $75–$85 region and notes that a reclaim above $100 could shift momentum. Higher resistance levels are flagged near $120 and $125, with a possible path to higher macro targets only if broader liquidity and ecosystem growth improve.
Current context: SOL trades near $80.92, up modestly over 24 hours, but remains down on the week. With daily volume above $1.68B, market participation is high—yet the structure and exchange inflows favor sellers unless SOL can reclaim key resistance zones.
US-Iran ceasefire odds have collapsed. Iran warned that continued tensions could trigger “regional chaos”, and traders are betting against a ceasefire by April 7.
Market pricing puts US-Iran ceasefire odds at 1.1% for April 7, down from 2% yesterday and 12% a week ago. Later dates also show weak optimism: 6.5% (Apr 15), 17.5% (Apr 30), 36.5% (May 31), 51.5% (Jun 30) and 68.5% (Dec 31).
Liquidity looks thin. Over the past 24 hours, trading volume is around $431k against a contract face value near $3.76M. Moving the April 7 market by 5 points requires roughly $12.3k of additional value, suggesting fewer aggressive position changes.
Traders are watching for catalysts that could shift sentiment, including changes in US diplomatic posture and potential action tied to Trump’s April 6 deadline, as well as intermediary signals (such as Oman). With US-Iran ceasefire odds at very low levels near-term, risk pricing remains elevated, keeping traders focused on headlines.
A crypto analyst on X, “Rawl,” published a Bitcoin price roadmap that projects a rebound to the $90,000–$96,000 area after recent pullbacks in the bear market.
The analysis says Bitcoin price action has followed an Elliott Wave plan: after a crash to ~$60,000 in February and subsequent Wave 4 and Wave 5 completion, BTC has started a new bullish phase. Rawl claims BTC has already printed Wave 1 and Wave 2, and is now trading around a choppy mid-range near $65,000 (reported trading level: $67,104).
Key upside path: once the next two waves complete, Bitcoin price could jump toward $90,000–$96,000, then likely move sideways for weeks. A subsequent decline is framed as a bullish corrective ABC wave, possibly around the time a new Federal Reserve chair replaces Jerome Powell, with the correction potentially lasting until the June FOMC meeting.
Downside alternative: Bitcoin price could dip further toward ~$71,000–$74,000 for the next Wave 2, or in a less likely scenario fall below $74,000 toward $55,000 between May and June.
Risk management: the analyst recommends taking 20%–30% profits near $90,000 and scaling back in—10%–15% if BTC revisits $74,000, and the rest if it falls toward $55,000 by June or by Q1 2027. The analyst also claims an 80% chance Bitcoin sets a new all-time high this year.
Crypto-trader takeaway: this is primarily a technical (Elliott Wave) scenario tied to macro timing (FOMC/Jerome Powell transition), which could influence both momentum trades and event-driven hedging around June.
Traders are debating the realistic XRP price target if the proposed CLARITY Act passes in the US. The article highlights that regulatory clarity could act as a catalyst, but upside may depend on retail momentum, institutional participation, and broader macro conditions.
On X, commentator John Squire shared community reactions showing a split outlook. Some expect a conservative move toward the $4–$5 area, arguing that part of the regulatory optimism is already priced in. Others forecast a stronger breakout, targeting around $8, driven by retail/speculative inflows. A more aggressive view cited by the article comes from Rasmus K Larsen, projecting $175+ by 2027, but only if adoption, liquidity, and global financial conditions align.
The piece stresses that near-term rallies may be retail-led, while institutions may scale in later—particularly if ETF-related expectations materialize, though not everyone sees a “gold rush” right away. It also warns that macro policy matters: rate cuts can lift risk appetite and amplify the CLARITY Act’s effect, while tight monetary conditions could limit liquidity and cap gains.
Base case cited: a grounded near-term XRP price target around $4 if the CLARITY Act passes without immediate institutional inflows. Higher levels may require sustained demand and deeper market participation.
UK AI venture builder Greater Things CEO Oliver von Landsberg-Sadie says four men threatened him at knifepoint during a home invasion on Friday, while his family was present. He said the attackers were looking for “crypto specifically,” and police are investigating; the victim didn’t disclose how the robbery ended. Landsberg-Sadie described it as part of an organised wave of attacks targeting people in the crypto industry, urging founders and public figures to improve personal safety.
The incident echoes a reported rise in “wrench attacks,” where criminals use violence or threats to force victims to hand over crypto assets. CertiK data cited in the article shows 72 verified global cases in 2025, up 75% from 2024, with losses exceeding $40.9m. Kidnapping was the most common method, and physical assaults also increased. Europe accounted for over 40% of incidents, with France the hardest-hit.
The article adds that criminal groups increasingly use open-source intelligence—social media, corporate filings, conference schedules, and blockchain transaction data—to build dossiers, estimate victims’ net worth, and locate them in person. For traders, this raises the risk of targeted off-exchange theft and reputational/security concerns around high-profile crypto participants—without changing core network fundamentals.
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson publicly demanded an apology from community influencer “ItsDave_ADA” after Dave criticized the Midnight bridge design and its impact on ADA.
The dispute centers on an asymmetric “Midnight bridge” at launch. Hoskinson/Dave debate whether the Cardano → Midnight route being trustless is outweighed by the reverse leg not being trustless—potentially involving delays, censorship risk, or forced fees. Dave said he was starting to “really hate Midnight” and planned further investigation.
Hoskinson replied that Midnight is positioned to add “billions” of value to Cardano’s ecosystem over time, warning that continued negativity could hurt growth. Dave countered by asking what exactly should be apologized for and how “billions” would flow into ADA, arguing the setup could instead shift value toward Midnight.
Traders’ key open point is the lack of a confirmed timeline for a fully trustless, bidirectional “Midnight bridge.” Midnight mainnet launched in late March 2026, and Hoskinson reportedly invested about $200M. As of the report, no apology has been issued—so renewed ADA narrative volatility remains possible around future bridge-upgrade expectations.
Bitcoin consolidation is drawing trader attention as large holders (“whales”) continue accumulating. On-chain data cited by analyst Ali Martinez shows whale wallets added about 10,000 BTC over the past 72 hours, even while Bitcoin traded in a choppy range near $67,100.
The report adds that addresses controlling roughly 10–10,000 BTC made notable purchases despite ongoing volatility. Broader context: Bitcoin is up about 1.2% on the week but down nearly 8% over 30 days, and is still down about 23% after Q1 2026.
Market stability signals also come from Goldman Sachs. The bank highlighted renewed institutional interest via spot Bitcoin ETF net inflows of $1.32B over the past month, following four months of outflows. It also pointed to fewer liquidations, suggesting forced-selling pressure is easing.
If Bitcoin accumulation during sideways price action continues, traders may see improved odds of a bullish breakout attempt. However, the near-term trend remains sensitive to liquidity and broader macro/geopolitical risk.
Iran begins striking US Big Tech companies as missile and drone attacks spread across the Middle East. In Dubai Internet City, debris from an intercepted incoming threat damaged Oracle’s building. Authorities reported no injuries.
Iran’s military actions also included downing a US F-15E over southwestern Iran, while an A-10 Warthog was lost in Kuwait after the aircraft was hit; one US airman was rescued and another remains missing. US officials fear the missing crew member could be used as leverage. Iran begins striking US Big Tech companies after the Revolutionary Guard threatened a wider set of US tech operators in the region, naming Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, and Google.
Separately, India resumed Iranian oil buying as Hormuz disruptions affected supply. India’s oil ministry said refiners secured Iranian crude needs (no payment hurdle) and purchased 44,000 metric tons of Iranian LPG delivered to Mangalore.
Near Bushehr, a projectile struck close to Iran’s nuclear plant, killing at least one worker and prompting warnings from the IAEA. Rosatom evacuated additional staff from the facility.
For crypto traders, Iran begins striking US Big Tech companies raises geopolitical risk, likely pushing risk-off behavior and increasing volatility across USD liquidity and oil-linked inflation expectations.
Bearish
Geopolitical riskMiddle East tensionsOracle/Nvidia US tech exposureOil supply disruptionNuclear facility security
Telegram co-founder Pavel Durov says Iran’s long-standing ban on the messaging app has failed. Durov said the Iranian government hoped for mass adoption of state-linked surveillance apps, but users instead found ways to bypass national firewalls and online controls.
He pointed to VPN and similar tools that route traffic through global servers to mask users’ IP addresses and locations. Durov claimed this created “mass adoption of VPNs instead,” adding that “50 million members of the digital resistance in Iran” are now using Telegram-like access methods. He also referenced a broader effect, saying Telegram resistance users are comparable to “over 50 million more in Russia.”
The report also connects the move to wider connectivity disruption. It notes Iran imposed a nationwide internet blackout in January 2026, amid protests, and that access is still possible via Starlink or alternative messaging. One cited alternative is BitChat, which uses Bluetooth mesh networking: nearby devices relay data through the app, potentially bypassing both satellite and standard internet routes entirely.
From a crypto-trader angle, the article frames decentralized technologies—blockchain, crypto, and encrypted messaging—as tools that can reduce the impact of state surveillance. While the news is primarily about Telegram access and censorship circumvention, the privacy/anti-surveillance narrative can influence sentiment around decentralization-related assets.
Bitcoin remains just above $67,000 after President Donald Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face “overwhelming” U.S. military consequences. Bitcoin briefly slipped below $68,000, then steadied around $67,000 as the market weighed rising geopolitical risk.
The ultimatum follows six weeks into the U.S.-Israeli “Operation Epic Fury” launched Feb. 28, 2026. U.S. officials claim 9,000+ targets have been struck, including air defenses, ballistic missile sites, naval assets and command centers. Iran has disrupted or closed the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint carrying about 20% of global oil shipments, helping push Brent/WTI crude above $100–$110 and renewing inflation concerns.
Reported flashpoints include: a claimed U.S. F-15E aircraft downing near southern Iran with rescue underway for the missing weapons officer; and a projectile hitting near Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant (IAEA confirmed, no radiation increase detected). The U.S.-Iran standoff is also drawing diplomatic involvement, with Pakistan mediating talks alongside China and Saudi Arabia; Iran reportedly rejected key overtures.
On the crypto side, separate headlines mention USDC issuer Circle allegedly freezing 16 “legitimate” wallets, per on-chain investigator ZachXBT—an issue that could add friction to stablecoin workflows.
Traders now focus on the 48-hour deadline, ongoing rescue operations, and oil-driven risk sentiment. If a deal fails to materialize, analysts expect higher BTC volatility into next week; if de-escalation signals emerge, technical support around the $65,000–$66,000 area may hold again. Bitcoin remains a proxy for how markets price headline-driven geopolitical escalation.
Bearish
BitcoinMiddle East GeopoliticsIran-HormuzOil PricesUSDC
OpenAI’s GPT-5.4 Pro has reportedly scored an IQ-equivalent 150 on a public Mensa Norway-style benchmark run by TrackingAI, up from OpenAI’s earlier o3 score of 136. The article frames this as a major step-change in AI capability signaling, arriving during a macro-heavy week focused on inflation, labor data, and central-bank messaging.
GPT-5.4 Pro’s reported 150 score is presented as outperforming 99.96% of the human population on that particular public yardstick. OpenAI’s release also claims GPT-5.4 is its most capable and efficient frontier model for professional work, with improved coding, tool use, and “computer use,” plus a context window claimed up to 1 million tokens. The piece notes OpenAI also reported gains on other benchmarks (GDPval, OSWorld-Verified), aligning directionally with the IQ-style result.
The article stresses that public IQ tests are imperfect and sensitive to test design, prompt structure, and possible familiarity effects. Still, it argues that a jump from 136 to 150—especially alongside progress in coding and long-horizon task handling—could influence enterprise budgeting, hiring, and workflow automation decisions.
For traders, the key relevance is indirect: faster AI capability improvement may shift expectations for future capex and software demand, potentially affecting sentiment around AI-adjacent tech themes rather than cryptocurrencies directly.
Neutral
AI benchmarksOpenAI GPT-5.4 Proenterprise automationmacroeconomic datacrypto market sentiment
Fed Rate Cuts Coming? The U.S. plans to refinance over $10T of maturing debt in 2026, the largest refinancing in U.S. history. The report argues this fiscal impact could meaningfully change liquidity conditions and capital flows into crypto.
Key figures cited: the average interest rate on U.S. debt is about 3.36%. A 1% rate fall could save roughly $100B annually, while each 100 basis points of refinancing may imply about $310B in interest costs. If interest payments rise, they could become the fastest-growing federal spending line, pressuring budget and funding decisions.
Market link to crypto: the article suggests that if Fed Rate Cuts lower yields on traditional assets, investors may rebalance toward alternatives like cryptocurrencies. It also highlights stablecoins as a potential beneficiary as borrowing costs decline, which could support additional inflows and trading activity.
However, the same piece notes an analyst warning: potential Fed Rate Cuts signals could trigger a 15–20% drop in top altcoins. Traders are therefore expected to watch Fed guidance and Treasury yield moves closely, as the refinancing and monetary policy could drive both short-term volatility and longer-term liquidity trends.
Bottom line for traders: Fed Rate Cuts could be a liquidity catalyst, but the path may be choppy for altcoins depending on how yields and risk appetite react during the 2026 refinancing cycle.
A post on X by “The Real Remi Relief” claims an XRP supply shock may be building as exchange-held liquidity tightens faster than demand can enter. The key figure cited is about 16 billion XRP sitting on exchanges, but the author argues not all of it is truly tradable sell-side supply.
The article highlights why exchange wallet data can mislead: some XRP is left on exchanges for convenience (not active selling), exchanges retain operational reserves for order matching, and platforms such as Coinbase provide custody services where assets may function more like long-term holdings than circulating float.
Traders are therefore focused on the gap between reported exchange balances and effective tradable float. If “real” XRP sell liquidity keeps shrinking while buy demand—especially potential institutional/regulatory investment products—continues to rise, the market could become more price-sensitive and see rapid repricing driven by scarcity rather than day-to-day news.
However, critics note that wallet classification is imperfect, so the supply-squeeze narrative could be overstated. Overall, the piece frames XRP supply shock as a scenario contingent on continued reserve drift lower plus sustained demand acceleration.
XPL’s weekly chart shows an uptrend still intact, with price now in a critical resistance cluster after a ~6.07% weekly rise. Traders are focused on whether XPL can break and hold above the key $0.1253 inflection level. A successful breakout could open upside toward $0.1384 and potentially $0.2143.
Key technical levels cited: Major support at $0.1103 (trend risk) and $0.1008; major resistance at $0.1253 (most critical), then $0.1384. Momentum indicators are mixed-to-positive: RSI is cited in the neutral-bullish zone (around mid-60s earlier in the analysis), and MACD histogram/line positioning supports accumulation.
Trading plan in the article: stay long-biased if XPL closes weekly above $0.1253; consider long entries on dips into the $0.1103–$0.12 zone, with stops below $0.1103. The bearish trigger is a breakdown below $0.1103, targeting $0.1008 and deeper risk lower.
BTC correlation remains a major driver. With BTC around the $67k–$70k range mentioned, the analysis expects BTC strength to support XPL’s move higher, while a BTC drop below the mid-60k area could increase pressure on XPL resistances.
A new Mercado Bitcoin study led by Rony Szuster finds that Bitcoin (BTC) often delivers stronger returns than safe-haven assets like gold and equities such as the S&P 500 in the 60 days after major global shocks. Using “event + 60 days” windows, the report compares periods following events including the COVID-19 outbreak and broad U.S. import tariff announcements.
In the examples cited, Bitcoin rose about 24% after the April 2023 U.S. tariff escalation, outperforming gold (+~8%) and the S&P 500 (+~4%). During early COVID-19 (March 2020), Bitcoin gained around 21%, while both gold and the S&P 500 lagged.
The latest update covers the U.S.-Iran conflict escalation. Since the tensions intensified, Bitcoin is up more than 2.2%, while gold is down about 11% and the S&P 500 down roughly 4.4% (its steepest monthly decline since 2022). Szuster warns traders not to judge Bitcoin too quickly based only on the initial aftermath, as liquidity needs can trigger selling that pressures even traditionally “defensive” assets.
For traders, the key takeaway is that Bitcoin’s relative medium-term strength versus gold and equities has been more consistent than the first few days of sell-offs, though timing risk remains around shock headlines. (Not investment advice; crypto volatility remains high.)
Bullish
BitcoinSafe-haven comparisonMacroeconomic shocksU.S.-Iran tensionsEvent-study 60 days
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin warns that today’s “AI agent security” model is dangerously weak. He cites research saying roughly 15% of agent skills/tools can include malicious instructions, and HiddenLayer research that a single malicious webpage can fully compromise an AI agent instance—triggering shell script downloads/execution without the user noticing.
To reduce risk, Buterin runs AI locally instead of relying on cloud inference. He uses a local-first setup with the open-weights Qwen3.5:35B model via llama-server on an Nvidia 5090 laptop, and he also tests other hardware. He moved to NixOS for declarative configuration and uses bubblewrap sandboxing to limit filesystem access and network ports.
For “AI agent security” in messaging and outbound actions, Buterin open-sources a messaging daemon (wrapping signal-cli and email). It can read messages freely, but outbound third-party messaging requires explicit human approval under a “human + LLM 2-of-2” rule. He extends the same principle to Ethereum wallet integrations: avoid unlimited autonomous wallet permissions, cap autonomous transactions at $100/day, and require human confirmation for anything above or for transactions with calldata that could enable data exfiltration.
Remote privacy ideas are also discussed (e.g., ZK-API concepts, mixnets, trusted execution environments), but fully homomorphic encryption remains too slow for practical use.
For traders: this is a security framework announcement rather than a protocol change, but it can influence how wallet teams design AI-assisted signing and automation around ETH holdings.
Neutral
AI agent securityVitalik ButerinEthereum walletsLocal AISandboxing
Chainlink (LINK) is holding near $8.6 as a major transfer hit thin weekend liquidity. Around 14.9M LINK moved, with nearly 14.7M landing on Binance—this is the largest inflow of the year, according to the article. Despite the sizable LINK exchange deposits, price remains stable near $8.65–$8.67, suggesting the market absorbed the flow.
On-chain data cited by the piece shows the deposits came in staged amounts (roughly 14.37M LINK total into Binance), implying controlled execution rather than a sudden flood. The underlying driver may be scheduled unlocks moving previously locked tokens into exchange custody, which can improve liquidity but also raises the risk of selling if demand doesn’t absorb the added supply.
Key condition: Exchange reserves are reported at about 141.8M LINK, close to multi-year lows. In past distribution events, falling exchange reserves paired with price weakness can worsen downside pressure; here, the article notes that reserves are not rising alongside a price drop. Derivatives also look restrained, with Open Interest around $360M, indicating limited aggressive liquidation behavior.
Traders’ takeaway: LINK has so far resisted a weekend “sell-the-inflow” reaction. The next move likely depends on follow-through from spot demand versus whether incoming LINK turns into active selling on exchanges.
FT reports that US–Iran ceasefire odds have deteriorated sharply as tensions rise. The latest move follows escalating Tel Aviv protests against the Iran war and a Houthi missile launch toward Israel. In the prediction markets, **ceasefire odds** for April 7 have fallen to ~1% YES (down from ~2%) with only four days left, effectively making the April 7 contract “dead.” **Ceasefire odds** for April 15 are ~6% YES (down from ~8%). The biggest shock is April 30, slipping to ~18% YES (down from ~24%), signaling low confidence in any near-term diplomatic breakthrough amid proxy escalation and domestic unrest.
Trading conditions look thin. Nominal sub-market volume is cited around $3.76M, but actual USDC traded is only about $431K. With a thinner order book, small flows (~$12K) can move the April 7 market by ~5 points, raising the risk of fast price swings. The largest 24h change was only about +2 points on April 30, consistent with brief optimism that quickly faded.
Watch items for traders include statements from US Secretary of State Rubio, potential intermediary steps by Oman or Qatar, any shift in Trump rhetoric, and updates from CENTCOM. Overall, the **ceasefire odds** trend remains bearish for short-term diplomacy expectations.
Neutral
US-Iran ceasefire oddsprediction marketsUSDC liquidityMiddle East tensionsgeopolitical catalysts
Prediction markets are pricing the US-Iran ceasefire as highly unlikely after protests erupted in Tel Aviv amid rising tensions. The chance of a US-Iran ceasefire by April 7 fell to about 1% YES (around 1.1%), down from 12% a week earlier.
The term structure remains bearish. April 15 is ~6.5% YES (down from 22% last week). April 30 is ~17.5% YES, May 31 ~36.5% YES, and June 30 ~51.5% YES—suggesting traders expect resolution later, or only if a catalyst emerges between April 30 and May 31.
Liquidity is thin around key dates, implying quick repricing risk. USDC volume near April 7 is about $22,948/day, and a 5-point move can cost roughly $12,367. The April 30 market also showed the biggest single move (about +2 points), highlighting event-driven volatility.
What could change pricing: de-escalation or new US-Iran ceasefire talks, plus fresh official updates (e.g., CENTCOM) and signals from intermediaries like Oman or Qatar. For crypto traders, the main impact is short-term volatility linked to the US-Iran ceasefire timeline.
Analysts say Bitcoin’s road to $300K may require a major pullback first. On X, CryptoPatel warns that every Bitcoin cycle historically saw 70–85% corrections before a new all-time high. With current signs of structural weakness, he suggests a likely correction zone at $30K–$40K.
Traders also point to weaker upside momentum around ~$66K. nehalzzzz1 notes price is “chopping” with less conviction on each push higher, while nearby liquidity beneath the current range remains largely untouched. If buyers do not step in, the path of least resistance could tilt lower toward those liquidity pockets.
The implied scenario: after a hypothetical $300K peak, a 70–85% decline would mathematically place the floor roughly between $45K and $90K, but the quoted cycle pattern could extend the drawdown deeper—making $30K–$40K a key risk area.
Timing matters: the article frames this as a possible slow drift down rather than a single sharp crash, which could mean prolonged liquidation waves and gradual erosion of bullish conviction. BTC’s prior cycle behavior is cited: the 2017 top (~$20K) was followed by an 84% crash, and the 2021 run-up to ~$69K preceded a drop to about $15.5K. Bitcoin bulls aiming for $300K are therefore advised to plan positions for high-volatility downside first.
Tether froze $3.3B in USDT linked to sanctioned actors under OFAC guidance, using Treasury authority tied to the GENIUS Act. The article says Tether can blacklist wallets quickly once suspicious addresses are identified, with freezes reported in January 2026 (IRGC-linked: $182M) and March 2026 (IRGC/Houthi-linked: $6.76M).
However, the core finding is that even after Tether froze $3.3B in USDT, about 80% of illicit crypto continues moving through decentralized and cross-chain routes. It notes that over half of Iranian-related crypto flows in 2025 reportedly involved IRGC-linked addresses, with much of it using USDT on Tron (TRX). Funds are said to be spread across multiple wallets and intermediaries, including OTC desks in Dubai and Hong Kong.
The piece also highlights the policy/tech tension: the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is stalled, and Section 309 reportedly exempts DeFi activities such as cross-chain bridges and decentralized exchanges—limiting oversight of the infrastructure used to reroute illicit funds. Enforcement therefore disrupts mainly known, already-clustered addresses, while actors can replace frozen wallets faster than authorities can label them.
Blockchain analytics firms like Chainalysis and TRM Labs are cited as key to identifying address clusters, but the article argues current tools are less effective against fully decentralized, rapidly changing networks.
GLM technical analysis (Apr 4, 2026) shows GLM trading near $0.13 with a downtrend and very low volatility. The article highlights that losses could accelerate if key support breaks.
Key levels: Resistance at $0.1370 then $0.1433 and $0.1520. Support sits at $0.1312, with critical invalidation below $0.1241 and another trigger near $0.1199. RSI (14) is around 43.7 (neutral but with downside momentum), while Supertrend is bearish and price is below EMA20.
Risk plan: Because risk/reward is weak, the suggested approach is capital protection and tight, structure-based stops. Place an “ideal tight stop” just under $0.1241, and consider ATR-based distance (1–1.5x ATR when volatility is low). Longs are discouraged unless GLM can confirm a breakout over nearby resistance levels.
Position sizing: Risk only 1–2% of account per trade (and reduce exposure further for leveraged futures). The piece also warns that low liquidity can amplify slippage and execution risk.
BTC correlation: BTC is slightly positive (~$67,330), but altcoin weakness may worsen if BTC loses its ~67k area. A BTC break above higher resistance could help GLM recover; otherwise, GLM may retest $0.1241.
Overall, this GLM technical analysis emphasizes that compression can lead to sudden moves, but the prevailing trend keeps downside risk dominant.
SBI Holdings CEO Yoshitaka Kitao reportedly told crypto circles that “XRP will be very expensive,” a remark echoed widely after being posted on X. The article links the comment to SBI’s deep institutional relationship with Ripple and highlights Japan’s role in supporting compliant blockchain pilots.
Key context for XRP traders: SBI and Ripple have worked together since 2016 via SBI Ripple Asia, exploring blockchain settlement for cross-border payment corridors. This framing suggests that XRP’s value case may increasingly depend on real transactional demand in regulated finance, not only retail speculation.
The piece also points to Japan-linked initiatives tied to Ripple’s ecosystem, including experiments in tokenized finance and plans to integrate Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin into licensed exchange environments in Japan. It further notes ecosystem support efforts on the XRP Ledger through Web3-focused alliances.
While the article treats Kitao’s statement as sentiment rather than a formal price forecast, it argues that institutional commentary can still move market expectations—especially when it aligns with credible infrastructure development. Traders should consider this as a sentiment signal around regulated adoption rather than a guaranteed catalyst.
*Disclaimer: Not financial advice.*
Jimmy Song, co-founder of non-profit ProductionReady, says Bitcoin needs a “conservative” node client to protect its monetary properties and improve decentralization. He argues against major code changes unless there is overwhelming community support, following the principle: if a change doesn’t clearly make Bitcoin better, don’t ship it.
Song links decentralization to how easy it is for everyday users to run a Bitcoin node. He argues that keeping node storage costs low helps more people verify for themselves, reducing centralization and the risk of cheating or collusion.
He also expects ProductionReady to restore Bitcoin’s 83-byte OP_RETURN data limit for arbitrary, non-monetary information. The article notes that Bitcoin Core 30 removed/raised this limit unilaterally to 100,000 bytes in 2025, triggering pushback from the community. A proposal on GitHub reportedly received about four times more downvotes than upvotes.
After Bitcoin Core 30 launched in October 2025, the number of nodes running Bitcoin Knots surged to record highs in 2025. According to Coin Dance, Bitcoin Knots reached 4,746 nodes (over 21.7% of the network), up from ~1% before the OP_RETURN-function change.
Overall, this Bitcoin conservative node client debate highlights how Bitcoin software policy can move network participation and shape market sentiment.
Mortgage rates are rising across major economies in April 2026 as the Iran–United States–Israel conflict disrupts energy flows and revives inflation risk.
In the United States, Freddie Mac reported the US 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaging 6.46% as of April 3, up from 6.38% the week prior. Rates had also reached about 6.51% on April 2. The main trigger was a repricing in bond markets: Treasury yields moved higher as investors priced in costlier energy and a slower return toward disinflation. Forecasts diverge—Fannie Mae still points to around 5.9% by end-2026, while the Mortgage Bankers Association now expects roughly 6.2%–6.4%.
In the UK, two-year fixed rates averaged 5.56% and five-year fixes about 5.54%. Major lenders (including HSBC, NatWest, Santander and Barclays) have raised fixed-rate products by up to 0.70 percentage points. With the Bank of England holding its base rate at 3.75% in March, market expectations have shifted toward possible rate hikes if energy-led inflation persists—pushing swap rates and lender funding costs higher. The repricing matters for borrowers renewing older deals: around 1.8 million households are expected to refinance in 2026, with repayments rising by about £150 per month on average.
In the eurozone, new-mortgage rates edged higher to around 3.4% early 2026. The ECB kept its deposit rate at 2.00% but warned energy shocks could lift inflation above 3%. Bond yields reacted, with the French 10-year moving from ~3.2% to ~3.8%, tightening lending conditions.
Crypto angle: the article links the macro stress—higher oil prices, higher yields, and uncertain inflation—to pressure that can spill over into risk assets including Bitcoin.
Hyperliquid’s native token, HYPE, is drawing renewed attention as the platform’s trading activity approaches an annualized ~$600M in fees. Supporters argue that Hyperliquid’s lean team, competitive execution, and an on-fee buyback model link usage to token demand, which could help sustain HYPE support over time.
However, HYPE price action has slowed and recent trading has been choppy, with the token moving within a narrow range. Traders are divided: some view current levels as still early, while others say HYPE is “already too expensive.” The debate centers on valuation—market pricing implies faster multi-year revenue growth, and analysts question whether Hyperliquid can realistically expand at that pace.
On-chain/holder dynamics also add caution. The article notes selling pressure from larger holders, which has contributed to short-term volatility and uncertainty. In derivatives liquidity, competition is intensifying, and past leaders like GMX and dYdX saw market-share shifts after periods of strong adoption.
Near term, traders may stay patient and wait for a clearer base as HYPE swings remain range-bound. Longer term, sentiment will likely track Hyperliquid’s continued fee generation and whether competition reduces its ability to meet the high growth assumptions embedded in HYPE valuation.
Bitcoin at risk as demand weakens, with BTC trading around $66,845 and momentum staying thin (about +0.42% over 24h). On-chain data and exchange behavior are pointing to fragile demand.
First, Bitcoin at risk concerns are rising because only four addresses hold more than 100,000 BTC each. Two wallets are linked to Binance, with the rest tied to Bitfinex and Robinhood. Historically, spikes in 100K+ BTC wallet counts have preceded strong rallies, but the current stagnation suggests major accumulation is not accelerating.
Second, network participation is cooling. Active sending/receiving addresses have dropped sharply, implying weaker organic demand signals.
Third, exchange flows look worse for bulls. Exchange withdrawal transactions are at one of the lowest levels in years (908 addresses). When withdrawals fall, more BTC stays on exchanges, increasing near-term sell/liquidation flexibility and adding supply fragility.
Finally, derivatives sentiment is cautious. Perpetual funding rates remain slightly positive at 0.0037%, but thin long bias and declining open interest (down 0.87% to $46.14B) indicate hesitation—traders are closing some risk even as longs edge shorts.
Overall, Bitcoin at risk looks like a setup for downside if demand fails to rebound, while a sustained rally would likely require renewed large-holder accumulation and stronger exchange outflows.