Hyundai completed a corporate treasury pilot using **USDT** for cross-border settlement between Hyundai Motor America and Hyundai Motor de México. The July 13, 2026 announcement says **$20,000 USD₮** was transferred on the **Avalanche** blockchain through Axiym’s regulated settlement infrastructure.
Tether reported the full transfer and verification averaged **about seven minutes**, versus **3–4 hours or more** for traditional interbank rails. In the workflow, Hyundai Motor America converted USD to **USDT**, sent it to the Mexico unit, and the funds were converted back to local dollars. Hyundai Card helped set up the remittance structure and reviewed compliance, accounting, tax, legal, and internal control requirements.
For traders, the key signal is growing **institutional-grade USDT** settlement on a major L1 with auditable transfer and verification. Tether frames the test as an enterprise treasury use case (not retail payments), and says further pilots are intended to expand USDT liquidity and operational transparency across settlement and FX-heavy processes.
Franklin Crypto CIO Seth Ginns says crypto prices remain disconnected from fundamentals even as institutional adoption accelerates. In an interview on CoinDesk, he argued the convergence between traditional finance and crypto is progressing despite a prolonged market slump.
Ginns highlighted Franklin Crypto’s plan to build a fundamental crypto investment platform after Franklin Templeton’s acquisition of 250 Digital (from CoinFund’s liquid investment business). He also suggested that liquid crypto investments are becoming more attractive in current conditions.
Key market catalysts include: (1) Robinhood’s blockchain initiative, which may move mainstream distribution onto crypto rails; (2) growing interest in tokenized money market funds for on-chain yield with portability; and (3) broader infrastructure such as tokenized equities and stablecoin adoption.
On regulation and token economics, Ginns pointed to an upcoming Senate vote on the CLARITY Act as a potential driver of institutional certainty. He also stressed that improved tokenomics—how value accrues to token holders—will matter more for fundamental investors. As an example, Hyperliquid’s revenue-driven token buyback model was cited as supporting both fundamentals and price performance.
He added that established DeFi and infrastructure projects may regain investor attention if they strengthen value capture. Examples mentioned include Uniswap, Aave and Chainlink, along with Stellar’s push for deeper institutional engagement.
For traders, the core takeaway is that crypto prices may not be reflecting crypto fundamentals right now—but policy clarity and better tokenomics could shift sentiment later.
A meme-coin scam followed the hijacking of the X accounts of SpaceX and Starlink, which were used to promote a Robinhood-based token branded as “Sam Altman (SCATMAN).” The posts briefly pushed SCATMAN’s market cap to over $2M before it was quickly dumped and the price crashed toward zero.
On-chain data shows the attacker minted 10 trillion SCATMAN tokens and sold the full stash for 59 ETH (about $108K) soon after the shilling went live. Lookonchain also linked a second wallet that sold 59.28 million SCATMAN tokens for 14.7 ETH (about $27K). Total proceeds were roughly $135K.
SpaceX and Starlink later deleted the fake posts and regained control of their accounts.
This is another example of a meme-coin scam using influencer-style credibility and rapid rug-pull mechanics. Prior account takeovers—such as attacks on X profiles of crypto figures and organizations—have followed a similar pattern: hype generation, developer/insider cash-outs, and retail losses.
For traders, the key takeaway is that meme-coin pumps driven by hacked high-trust accounts can reverse violently within minutes, with on-chain sales often occurring immediately after the shill.
Strategy (MSTR) sold about $467M of MSTR shares via an SEC-noted at-the-market (ATM) program, raising net proceeds of $466.7M. The company used the cash to increase its U.S. dollar reserve by about $450M, pushing total USD reserves to $3.0B as of July 12, 2026.
In the same SEC filing, Strategy said the larger cash buffer is mainly for preferred-stock dividend payments and interest on outstanding debt—aiming to reduce any need to sell BTC for liabilities. During the reported week, Strategy did not buy or sell Bitcoin, keeping its Bitcoin holdings unchanged at 843,775 BTC (aggregate acquisition cost about $63.69B). The average BTC purchase price remains about $75,476 per coin (fees included).
For traders, this is a balance-sheet and liquidity management signal: MSTR share sales are funding a higher USD reserve, not indicating fresh spot BTC accumulation. Watch for whether future updates show a shift toward BTC buys, but near-term BTC supply-pressure from this window appears limited.
Jito has launched JIP-38, a DAO proposal to route JTX fee revenue into automated JTO buyback and burn. The plan will use the DAO’s full 80% share of JTX fees for at least one year after JTX goes live.
Under JIP-38, Jito DAO will receive assets collected from JTX (Jito’s planned Solana trading product). Those assets would be converted into market purchases of JTO, followed by permanent token burns to reduce circulating supply. Jito frames this as a token-centric revenue model, keeping value with the network and ensuring DAO-controlled allocation.
Nick Almond (quoted by the article) said the proposal aims to reduce concerns that value accrues to the broader equity-like network rather than the token. He described the economics as a “simple baseline”: all JTX revenue accruing to the DAO would go into JTO buyback and burn.
For traders, the key watchpoints are the DAO vote outcome, the JTX launch timeline, and post-launch fee levels. Burn records could also provide a measurable read-through to how quickly JTO supply shrinks. The article notes Jito’s broader ecosystem includes JitoSOL and BAM, but the immediate market focus is whether JTX fees reliably translate into ongoing JTO buyback and burn demand.
Bullish
JTOJTX feesbuyback and burnDeFi governanceSolana ecosystem
BitMEX announced it will delist 9 illiquid spot pairs on 16 Jul 2026 at 12:00 UTC. The affected spot contracts will be settled early at 12:00 UTC on 16 Jul 2026 ("T settle") under the exchange’s standard practice described in its Exchange Guide. BitMEX said the delisting is due to insufficient trading interest in these trading pairs.
For traders, this BitMEX delisting of illiquid spot pairs may reduce accessible liquidity for those specific markets and can trigger short-term order-book changes around the delist time. Any open positions tied to the removed spot pairs should be reviewed ahead of the settlement window to avoid forced early settlement at 12:00 UTC.
This event is operational rather than macro: it does not directly impact BTC or broader derivatives pricing, but it can affect local price discovery and spreads for the removed spot pairs. Traders who actively rotate among spot markets may reallocate liquidity to more liquid alternatives on BitMEX or elsewhere.
South Korea’s KOSPI plunged 8.95% on July 13 after an intraday circuit breaker triggered. Chip giant SK Hynix fell 15.37% to KRW 1.845 million, and analysts described the move as panic-driven, with AI and semiconductors reversing sharply.
The selloff raised fears of a wider global risk-off move that could spill into US equities and crypto. Crypto analysts linked the shock to geopolitical tensions (including fresh US–Iran hostilities), possible Bank of Japan yen intervention, and rising bond yields—factors that can tighten financial conditions and pressure risk assets.
Bitcoin (BTC) is the key focus: while some watchers say BTC is holding up, multiple analysts warn a cross-asset equity panic could break correlations and push BTC through key support. At the time of writing, BTC slipped below $63,000, after trading earlier below $58,000, briefly recovering above $64,000, and then losing momentum again.
Support levels cited by traders include roughly $61,000–$62,500, with resistance mentioned near $64,500–$65,000. If US markets follow Asia lower, expectations are for intensified crypto selling and a potential BTC downside breakout.
Overall, the article frames this as a fast-moving macro shock: BTC traders are likely to watch US stock futures, bond yields, and whether BTC can defend the $61,000 area as correlation risk rises.
Bearish
Bitcoin (BTC)South Korea KOSPIRisk-Off MacroSupport/ResistanceSemiconductors & AI
Shiba Inu (SHIB) is in a heavy downtrend as its price continues to slide, even while on-chain demand signs improve. A new record was reported for SHIB wallet growth: BSCN said SHIB added nearly 75,000 new holders between July 5 and July 6, taking total wallets to 1,676,535 (all-time high).
At the same time, SHIB’s market performance remains weak. The token trades around $0.0000042, down about 15% over the past month and roughly 95% below its 2021 peak. The article notes SHIB is still the second-largest meme coin, but its market position is fragile amid broader declines. It also references MemeCore (M), whose market cap fell below $2.5B, pushing it to the 36th-largest crypto.
Operational activity also points to limited momentum. SHIB’s burning mechanism has slowed after a brief resurgence last week, and Shibarium—its L2 scaling network—has dropped to near-idle levels. Daily transactions have fallen from millions to thousands and even hundreds, especially after the exploit last year.
Liquidity and attention are weakening too: SHIB daily trading volume is cited near $50M on July 13 versus roughly $700M a year ago. Analysts remain skeptical, with trader James Wynn calling SHIB “old, dead, and boring,” suggesting a potential multi-year wait for recovery.
A Duke University professor, Campbell Harvey, says the risk math for a Bitcoin 51% attack has changed. The attack is still technically possible, but the new factor is today’s derivatives markets.
Harvey argues an attacker could short Bitcoin during the attack using offshore derivatives liquidity, turning what was once a value-destruction scenario into a potentially profitable trade. In his “Gold and Bitcoin” research, he estimates the operation could cost about $8B—roughly 50 bps of Bitcoin’s total market value.
Other estimates discussed in the article suggest the attacker would need more than $10B in mining machines and around $1.3M electricity costs per hour, and detection would likely be immediate. Supporters push back: they cite practical economic barriers, social consensus possibly rejecting malicious blocks, and criticism that the interview misunderstood derivatives mechanics.
On Ethereum, Harvey believes the same strategy is harder. After Ethereum’s move to proof-of-stake, an attacker would need control involving more than half of liquid ETH supply to significantly control validation, which would likely drive ETH prices higher during the attempt and remove the short-selling edge described for Bitcoin.
Bottom line for traders: headlines about Bitcoin 51% attack risk could raise short-term uncertainty around BTC’s tail-risk narrative, but the market reaction will depend on credibility, exchange-level liquidity, and whether participants treat this as a risk-management scenario rather than a near-term catalyst.
Democrats are centring the Trump Clarity Act’s ethics and conflict-of-interest provisions on President Donald Trump’s recent crypto wealth disclosure, which reportedly rose by about $1.4 billion. Senate Democrats discussed the issue with ethics and anti-corruption advocates, arguing Trump should be prevented from profiting from the crypto sector his administration regulates.
A new draft of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is expected within days, but negotiators have struggled to finalise the ethics language before a Senate floor vote. The proposed ethics section would likely extend to close officials and include tighter ownership restrictions and clearer disclosure requirements. Earlier ideas involved delaying enforcement or limiting the restrictions to officials, but talks reportedly hit a wall as time ran short before the summer recess.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune signalled he wants a Clarity Act vote this month “whatever shape the bill is in.” Several Democrats, including Chris Murphy, Chris Van Hollen and Jeff Merkley, plan a press conference opposing the Clarity Act, alleging it fails to rein in “corrupt crypto schemes” and that Washington influence is driving political corruption.
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand said Trump’s 2025 income included $636 million from a memecoin bearing his name, and she pressed for rules that would bar presidents from issuing or sponsoring digital assets and require ethics reforms preventing members of Congress, the president and spouses from cashing in on office.
Trump meanwhile urged passage of the Clarity Act, framing it as a personal priority after the death of ally Lindsey Graham, while Republicans such as Cynthia Lummis back the effort.
Neutral
Clarity ActUS Crypto RegulationEthics & Conflict of InterestUS SenateTrump memecoin
Security firm Blockaid says it detected an ongoing exploit involving the Lumi Finance protocol on Arbitrum. The incident is tied to an abnormal activity pattern and, at the time of the alert, losses were estimated at about $270,000.
Blockaid stated funds were already drained when it issued the warning. Wu Blockchain independently reported the same incident, citing Blockaid’s early analysis of the attack path. Both reports point to the suspected issue being connected to the Sodium smart account.
The suspected vulnerability centers on token approvals during a UserOp (user operation) verification process used by account-based smart accounts. Attackers allegedly used a malicious Paymaster to obtain or trigger approvals from multiple accounts, allowing token transfers.
Blockaid emphasized that its exploit detection flagged the situation as ongoing, meaning users and security teams may still need to monitor for further activity; no finalized total loss figure was confirmed in the available reports. Lumi Finance did not provide a detailed on-the-record response in the provided information.
For DeFi traders, the key actionable takeaway is approval risk: after incidents like this, reviewing and revoking risky token allowances (where appropriate and using trusted tools) can reduce exposure if approvals remain exploitable. The case also reinforces broader market focus on smart-account security and the operational safety of approval flows.
Metaplanet has launched its licensed securities arm, Metaplanet Securities, after acquiring Tokyo-based Siiibo Securities for about ¥2.1 billion. The subsidiary operates under a Japan Financial Services Agency Type I Financial Instruments Business Operator license, enabling it to structure and distribute regulated Bitcoin-linked investment products.
Metaplanet Securities supports the company’s Project Nova. Project Nova explores Bitcoin-backed credit and digital credit products using blockchain infrastructure and stablecoin rails. Metaplanet is working with yen stablecoin issuer JPYC and blockchain provider Progmat to build an ecosystem where Bitcoin can be used as collateral or credit enhancement. The article does not confirm any specific product launches, yield terms, or timelines; further offerings would require additional approvals.
Market-relevant context: Metaplanet continues accumulating Bitcoin, reporting ~43,000 BTC after buying 2,823 BTC in Q2, with a stated target of 210,000 BTC by end-2027. The launch of Metaplanet Securities signals a shift from pure treasury accumulation toward regulated, Bitcoin-linked finance for Japanese investors, potentially increasing institutional-style demand tied to BTC returns via regulated structures.
The CLARITY Act is back in focus for a four-week Senate window before the August recess, with updated bill language expected this week. CFTC Chair Mike Selig urged lawmakers to act, linking the CLARITY Act to U.S. leadership in crypto and financial innovation.
For crypto traders, the key issue is remaining uncertainty. The updated CLARITY Act text may close some policy gaps, but major disputes are still unresolved—especially around “developer protections” (how much legal protection builders get when they don’t control user funds). Senate passage also requires 60 votes, so bipartisan support remains a material risk.
Near-term market reaction is likely headline-driven rather than a smooth trend. If the final CLARITY Act wording improves odds of committee progress and Senate scheduling, sentiment could turn more risk-on for compliant exchanges and infrastructure. If vote math or negotiations slip, uncertainty may persist into 2027.
Bitcoin price fell to around $63,000 (down ~1.4% in 24h), trading within the $59,000–$66,000 range for a month. The selloff was driven by renewed US-Iran tensions tied to the Strait of Hormuz, which pushed investors into a broader risk-off move, alongside profit-taking after the weekend rally.
Liquidations totaled about $253 million in 24 hours, skewed toward longs, but the flush was described as modest versus prior single-day drawdowns. In the altcoin complex, Lighter (LIT) dropped ~8%, Cardano (ADA) slid ~19%, and Jupiter (JUP) fell more than 15% amid sharply lower volume.
The key trading signal is Bitcoin ETF positioning: spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded roughly $197 million of weekly inflows, the first weekly net inflow in nine weeks after an eight-week outflow streak totaling about $2.43B in May and $4.5B in June. July has already logged about $124 million in net inflows so far. Analysts caution the structural institutional bid is not fully proven until sustained inflows appear in major products (e.g., BlackRock’s IBIT), but the flow trend is a notable swing factor.
Next catalysts highlighted include US inflation (June CPI Tuesday, PPI Wednesday), Fed Chair Warsh testimony, and ongoing regulatory developments such as the CLARITY Act reconciliation push and the July 18 GENIUS Act stablecoin deadline. Traders should weigh the bearish macro impulse from geopolitics against improving Bitcoin price ETF flow momentum.
Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev says the brokerage will expand “agentic trading,” letting eligible users authorize AI trading tools to execute crypto strategies on their behalf. After a May 2026 test of AI trading for equities and options (70,000+ AI agent accounts created), Robinhood aims to bring similar institutional-style automation to crypto with real-time execution support, user-set limits (“guardrails”), and reduced need for constant monitoring.
The roadmap also includes building “Robinhood Chain,” an AI-native Layer 2 for financial services, and pushing tokenized assets (tokenized US stocks in the EU since June 2025, 200+ offerings). For crypto traders, the key change is the move from manual retail trading toward automated, AI-led order flow as Robinhood extends from stocks/options into major crypto like BTC and ETH.
Traders should watch for early liquidity and derivatives activity shifts as retail engagement rises, while recognizing near-term broader market stability impact may be limited because adoption is still ramping.
Hyperliquid’s HIP-3 markets have surged to nearly 50% of the protocol’s perpetual futures volume, signalling a shift toward on-chain derivatives on tokenized real-world assets (U.S. stocks, commodities, and indices). As of July 12, 2026, HIP-3 open interest reached $3.68B, while cumulative volume topped $309B since the upgrade launched in October 2025.
The article says non-crypto assets now dominate seven of Hyperliquid’s top ten volume markets, challenging centralized exchange and traditional finance participation by pulling more traders toward decentralized access. For traders watching market positioning, the piece also notes that current prediction-market pricing implies scenarios where Hyperliquid’s value could continue rising, consistent with higher “YES” outcomes.
What to watch next for HIP-3: (1) partnerships and technology upgrades that could strengthen bullish “YES” scenarios, potentially lifting the asset toward a $100 target by end-2026; (2) any security incidents or regulatory setbacks that could damage confidence and flip outcomes.
Bottom line: HIP-3 activity growth is meaningful for derivatives liquidity and sentiment, especially if the tokenized-assets trend continues to attract volume into decentralized venues.
Bullish
HyperliquidHIP-3Prediction MarketsTokenized Real-World AssetsPerpetual Futures Open Interest
Iran’s IRGC says it has launched strikes against at least six US military bases in the Middle East, including sites in Jordan, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Oman. The actions follow the collapse of a ceasefire and renewed US airstrikes on Iranian targets, escalating the 2026 Iran war.
The article links the escalation to trading-implied probabilities for a US-Iran nuclear deal due by the August 13, 2026 deadline. It says recent Iran strikes appear to significantly reduce the odds, with market pricing reflecting a deterioration in diplomacy and fewer expectations of a final agreement.
Key named figures and potential negotiators include President Donald Trump, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, and mediators from Oman. The report says the next rounds of US-Iran exchanges could further shift the probability of a deal. It also notes that any move toward de-escalation—or further escalation—would likely drive rapid changes in related pricing and sentiment.
For traders, the main signal is geopolitical risk: renewed hostility typically increases uncertainty, can raise hedging demand, and may widen cross-asset risk premia ahead of major deadlines for negotiations.
Bearish
US-Iran nuclear dealMiddle East conflictGeopolitical riskPrediction marketsIRGC strikes
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson has pushed back on recent rumors claiming he would leave the project. The denial comes as the Cardano ecosystem continues work on governance and scaling, including efforts tied to throughput and coordination among developers, validators, and community participants.
For ADA traders, the key point is sentiment. Founder-level narratives can quickly affect market focus, but Hoskinson’s public reassertion is designed to remove a distraction while the network pursues roadmap delivery. The article stresses that the “real test” for Cardano is technical execution—whether upgrades advance as expected and whether governance milestones produce measurable outcomes.
In market context, the news is framed as a source-backed development rather than pure market chatter. Traders are encouraged to watch follow-up signals such as governance updates, filings or integrations, and on-chain wallet activity for confirmation. If subsequent data supports the direction, it could help stabilize or strengthen the Cardano narrative over the next few sessions; if not, attention may shift quickly.
Overall, Cardano-related headlines appear amid a broader crypto environment still weighing multiple catalysts at once (ETF flow chatter, legal/regulatory updates, exchange listings, and protocol upgrades). The article does not claim an immediate price trigger, but it suggests Cardano traders should monitor execution quality to judge longer-term conviction.
U.S. President Donald Trump has notified Congress of renewed military action against Iran, starting a 60-day military engagement window that does not require immediate congressional approval. The notification is dated July 10 and follows the breakdown of a ceasefire after Iran attacked commercial ships and U.S. bases in the Gulf region.
According to the filing, the renewed military action against Iran involves U.S. strikes on multiple Iranian sites, while Iran responded with missile and drone attacks. The move signals an escalation in U.S.-Iran relations and increases the chance of a formal “declaration of war,” though market participants still assign it a low probability.
Crypto-relevant takeaway: this renewed military action against Iran raises geopolitical risk and can drive risk-off positioning, with traders often watching for spillovers into energy prices, dollar liquidity, and overall market volatility.
What to watch next. Any further U.S. or Iranian strikes could shift expectations toward a formal war resolution. Traders will also focus on whether Trump seeks a congressional resolution and on reactions from key lawmakers, including Lloyd Doggett, as political momentum could change the timeline for escalation.
Bearish
U.S.-Iran tensionsgeopolitical riskCongress notificationMiddle East conflictcrypto market volatility
Former U.S. President Donald Trump said Iran lacks an air force, navy, and “military,” while hinting at further action “relatively soon.” The remarks come as U.S. and Israeli strikes have reportedly degraded Iran’s conventional offensive and naval capabilities. Still, Iran retains asymmetric power, including a sizable missile arsenal, amid ongoing indirect U.S.-Iran talks in Doha focused on the Strait of Hormuz.
For trading, the key signal is how Trump’s “Iran military” narrative is shifting prediction markets. The implied probability of a U.S. invasion of Iran before end-2026 has risen to about 19.5%. Related pricing also points to rising risk of an airspace shutdown: odds of a full airspace closure by July 31 increased to around 26.5%.
What to watch next: outcomes of the Doha indirect talks, any additional Trump/U.S. comments on military intentions, and potential ceasefire violations or new Iranian actions. These catalysts could quickly reprice U.S. intervention odds, with knock-on effects for broader risk sentiment.
Overall, this is an escalation-by-rhetoric story tied to “Iran military” expectations and real-time market-implied conflict risk.
Bearish
US-Iran tensionsPrediction marketsGeopolitical riskStrait of HormuzAirspace closure odds
Crypto traders need to understand what “provably fair” in crypto casinos can actually prove. The mechanism is per-round verification: the casino commits to a server seed by publishing its hash before the bet, the player provides a client seed, and a nonce increments each round. Using the game’s hashing function, players can verify the revealed server seed matches the pre-bet commitment and recompute the exact outcome for that round.
But provably fair is not a guarantee of profit. Even when each round is verifiable, the house edge can still favor the operator because payouts are fixed by the rules. The article also limits the scope: provably fair typically applies to the platform’s own algorithmic “in-house originals” (e.g., dice, crash, mines, plinko). Third-party slots and live dealer games usually rely on certified RNG and external certification rather than player seed-and-hash recomputation.
Finally, provably fair does not vouch for operator risk. It does not confirm licensing, solvency, withdrawal reliability, or bonus value. Dexsport is cited as an example where provably fair for its originals can be checked directly, while other assurances (like non-custodial settlement and smart-contract/security audits such as CertiK) address different questions than fairness verification.
The UK government has published a roadmap to scale **tokenization** of wholesale financial markets from pilots to live trading within about a year. A 54-firm taskforce led by HM Treasury’s Chris Woolard targets the first tokenized UK government bond (“digital gilt”) for early **2027**. The report estimates tokenization could add up to **£33B** in annual economic output and **£14B** in yearly tax revenue by **2035**.
In the near term, the plan prioritizes tokenized **repo** and sets a live end-to-end trial for spring 2027. Over the next 12 months, nine action groups will build execution, standards, and liquidity. The roadmap also looks beyond the inaugural bond to follow-on gilt issuance, live secondary-market trading, and Bank of England acceptance so digital gilts can be used as collateral.
Participating firms include BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Ripple. The report discusses a hybrid blockchain architecture (permissioned institutional networks layered over permissionless components) and flags settlement-finality risks from potential chain reorganizations. Industry feedback is requested by Sept. 4.
For crypto traders, this **tokenization** push strengthens the institutional RWA narrative, but the immediate trading impact is likely gradual—starting with repo trials and infrastructure/standards work.
Neutral
UK TokenizationDigital GiltTokenized RepoBank of England CollateralRWA Infrastructure
Iranian state media, via Tasnim, says several vessels were targeted for violating Iranian restrictions in the Strait of Hormuz. The move is framed as an escalation in the 2026 Strait of Hormuz crisis, tied to the wider 2026 Iran conflict after the assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
Iran has effectively closed the Strait and is enforcing its rules while a U.S. naval blockade continues affecting Iranian ports. The targeting is described as impacting about 1,600 vessels trapped in the area, with spillover risks for global oil supply chains.
Market pricing suggests traders see de-escalation as less likely by Aug. 31. The article cites YES outcome odds at 15.5%, down from 28% a week earlier, aligning with a “dual blockade” scenario and recent military actions.
What to watch: official statements from Iranian and U.S. authorities that could signal de-escalation, peace talks, or reopening of the Strait, plus changes on live vessel trackers. Related developments such as possible U.S.–Iran ceasefire negotiations may also affect expectations.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzIran-US tensionsoil supply riskshipping disruptiongeopolitical escalation
The Federal Reserve announced it will continue “Treasury bill purchases” of about $10 billion, keeping the recent pace aimed at supporting bank reserves. The Fed said the move is intended to offset expected liquidity drains in the coming months.
The Fed’s balance sheet is now around $6.7 trillion, with these Treasury bill purchases part of a broader liquidity management strategy launched last year. Purchases, together with reinvestments from maturing mortgage-backed securities, are meant to help stabilize financial markets if volatility increases.
In markets focused on gold, the decision is viewed as a mildly dovish signal. That can matter because investors often seek safe-haven assets when policy looks more supportive of liquidity conditions. However, gold-related market indicators show mixed probabilities for July 2026 price levels, and the unchanged $10 billion amount suggests limited immediate impact.
Key items for traders to watch include any future Fed guidance or changes to the purchase size and the outlook for global macro conditions and geopolitics—both of which can affect safe-haven demand.
Neutral
Federal ReserveTreasury BillsLiquidity managementGold safe-havenMacro policy
The U.S.-Iran deal appears to be unraveling as JD Vance’s diplomacy falters and a policy split with President Donald Trump grows over Ukraine military aid.
A preliminary Memorandum of Understanding—aimed at a ceasefire during the ongoing Iran-U.S. conflict—has broken down, with renewed hostilities reported on July 9, 2026. At the same time, Vance and Trump are diverging on foreign policy regarding U.S. military support to Ukraine amid the Russia-Ukraine war.
Prediction markets are reacting. Odds tied to a U.S.-Iran deal in 2026 have dropped, reflecting lower expectations for a finalized agreement. Specifically, the probability that Iran reconstruction funding would be included fell from 32% to 29% in the past 24 hours. Market pricing is also showing skepticism that any deal would cover major concessions such as limits on uranium enrichment.
Traders watching this U.S.-Iran deal shift should focus on near-term diplomatic statements from Washington and Tehran, potential renewed military actions, and any policy changes attributed to Trump or Vance.
In short, the U.S.-Iran deal outlook is weakening—geopolitical uncertainty is rising, and markets are discounting both reconstruction funding and nuclear-related concessions.
The CLARITY Act has hit a procedural deadlock in the U.S. Senate over a controversial “officeholder-specific” restriction. Sen. Elizabeth Warren supports tighter wording, while the White House opposes naming specific individuals. The stalemate delays the bill’s path toward cloture ahead of the August 7 recess.
Crypto market-structure provisions that major firms like Coinbase and Circle care about are largely settled. But passage now hinges on seven Democratic crossover votes. Two Democrats have shifted positions so far, tentatively, and traders are watching whether a third publicly supportive Democrat can help resolve the count.
Bitcoin’s move mirrors the uncertainty. After a May compromise pushed BTC near $80,000, it has fallen roughly 22% as consensus remains incomplete. Market participants will likely track the CLARITY Act amendment timeline and signals from key political actors, including President Trump, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and comments from Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong.
For traders, the CLARITY Act is now a regulation-timing catalyst: clearer progress could support risk sentiment, while continued Senate stalling may keep policy-driven volatility elevated.
Aave has selected Chainlink’s Cross Chain Interoperability Protocol (Chainlink CCIP) as the default cross-chain infrastructure across its ecosystem. The upgrade expands CCIP from existing Aave Delivery Infrastructure (a.DI) coverage to also power the Aave App and Stable Vaults.
Key change: Chainlink CCIP will handle cross-chain actions in the background, so users may not need to manually bridge assets before depositing. This includes Aave App deposits, withdrawals, vault rebalancing, yield optimization, and asset transfers across Ethereum, Base, and Arbitrum.
Stablecoin and vault details: GHO transfers and cross-chain governance already run via CCIP using Chainlink’s Cross Chain Token standard. GHO is available on eight networks. CCIP uses a lock-and-mint model when moving GHO from Ethereum to supported L2s, and a burn-and-mint approach for other network transfers to preserve supply and fungibility.
Governance: Aave governance will use a.DI so proposals approved on Ethereum can execute across other networks.
Security/architecture notes: Aave said each CCIP bridge lane is supported by at least 16 independent node operators. It also uses rate limits to restrict cross-chain value movement during abnormal conditions.
For traders, the main takeaway is incremental utility: deeper integration of Chainlink CCIP could improve cross-chain UX for Aave users and potentially lift ecosystem activity around GHO, Stable Vaults, and Aave governance—factors that can influence sentiment toward LINK and related DeFi liquidity.
The UN’s International Maritime Organization (IMO) has opposed Iran’s proposed Hormuz transit fees for the Strait of Hormuz, saying there is no clear legal basis under international law to charge in international straits.
The move comes amid heightened U.S.-Iran tensions. Iran has reportedly closed the Strait of Hormuz, while President Donald Trump has urged NATO and other allies to deploy warships to secure the waterway, crucial for global oil shipments.
Crypto traders watching geopolitical risk via prediction markets saw a quick repricing. The probability of “Iran charging Hormuz transit fees by July 15” rose to about 9% YES, up from 3% just 24 hours earlier—suggesting the IMO’s stance may hinder near-term implementation. Longer-dated outcomes remain higher, with “by August 31” priced around 51.5% YES and “by October 31” around 69.0% YES.
What to watch next is whether Iran and its parliament formally codify the fee system, and whether any further UN positions or diplomatic/military developments change the trajectory. Overall, the IMO objection points to potential delays for Hormuz transit fees, while markets still price a meaningful chance in later windows.
Meta and Amazon spending spree signals a major shift in Big Tech investment plans for 2026, with combined capital expenditures of $725 billion. That compares with $410 billion spent in 2025 by major hyperscalers including Meta, Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet. Morgan Stanley projects total U.S. hyperscaler capex could rise to $805 billion in 2026, largely driven by escalating AI infrastructure costs.
The spending focus is on AI data centers, chips, and networking equipment, reflecting fast-growing demand for compute capacity. For investors and crypto traders watching broader risk sentiment, the article highlights potential market pressure on Alphabet’s competitive position. Prediction-market pricing suggests Alphabet’s odds of being the second-largest company by market cap by end of July have fallen to 22%—down from higher implied chances earlier. Meanwhile, Apple is viewed as more likely to hold that spot, with odds around 69%.
What to watch next is how Alphabet responds in its upcoming earnings report, plus any strategic moves in AI and cloud services. Traders may also monitor Apple’s performance and product-related catalysts, as further disclosures could quickly change market perceptions and sentiment across equities and macro-linked assets.
Meta and Amazon spending spree remains the central signal that more AI infrastructure buildout could keep Tech capex elevated into 2026—supportive for the AI supply chain but a potential source of equity-relative repositioning.
Neutral
AI infrastructureBig Tech capexhyperscalersdata centersmarket sentiment