SpaceX says it secured top-tier credit ratings ahead of what could be the biggest IPO in history. The company plans to price shares at about $135 on June 11, with Nasdaq trading starting the next day under ticker SPCX. A valuation near $1.75 trillion would make it one of the most valuable public companies.
The key point is that the credit ratings are tied to a $20 billion pre-IPO bridge loan signed in May 2026. The loan uses SOFR-based interest margins that fall if SpaceX reaches “Single A” by at least two of Moody’s, S&P Global, or Fitch. As of June 10, SpaceX communicated the credit ratings internally, but the agencies had not publicly confirmed the assigned ratings.
SpaceX’s S-1 also shows a heavy cash burn alongside strong revenue. For 2025, it reported revenue under $19 billion and a net loss of $4.94 billion, with part of the loss linked to projects aligned with xAI. Starlink remains the main profit engine: $11.4 billion in sales and operating profit, contributing more than 60% of total revenue.
For traders, the market gap between SpaceX’s claim and formal agency announcements matters. If the final credit ratings land below Single A, borrowing costs on the $20 billion facility could stay higher, creating near-term uncertainty around capital-market expectations and risk appetite.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup Group K kicks off June 17–27 in Houston, Mexico City, Guadalajara, and Miami. Tournament favorite Portugal faces Colombia, DR Congo, and debutants Uzbekistan—yet the crypto fan tokens picture is even more lopsided than the football odds.
Crypto fan tokens by team:
Portugal has the strongest crypto footprint. Its Portugal National Team Fan Token trades under the ticker POR on the Chiliz-powered Socios.com. Token holders can influence certain fan experiences, such as selecting goal celebration songs. The underlying platform Chiliz (CHZ) is positioned as the main infrastructure for sports fan tokens, with CHZ’s market cap cited around $352 million.
Colombia’s national-level crypto presence is limited. Millonarios FC launched the MFC fan token on Socios.com in 2021, but there is no dedicated fan token for the Colombian national team.
DR Congo and Uzbekistan have no official fan tokens and no notable blockchain partnerships or crypto sponsorship deals.
Broader crypto angle:
Prediction markets such as Polymarket add a crypto-native layer by letting users bet on match outcomes, group standings, and tournament winners.
For traders, the key event-related watchlist is the crypto fan tokens ecosystem tied to Chiliz—especially CHZ—and Portugal’s POR, as World Cup-related narratives often drive short-term speculation around liquidity and sentiment.
Neutral
World Cup 2026crypto fan tokensChiliz (CHZ)Socios.comprediction markets
Coinspect has issued a wallet-security warning after attackers began exploiting a wallet-generation flaw to drain dormant crypto addresses created as far back as 2018. The key risk is that affected wallets may not need any recent activity: if the original wallet generation produced weak or predictable keys (or otherwise compromised key material), the address can still be drained years later.
The report stresses practical trader-facing guidance: treat unexplained missing funds as a possible recovery-phrase or private-key compromise. Coinspct wallet generation flaw incidents imply “revoking DeFi approvals” alone is not enough when the seed is compromised. Instead, users should migrate remaining funds to a newly generated wallet with a new recovery phrase, across every network controlled by that phrase.
Because a single recovery phrase can derive addresses on multiple chains (the article cites Ethereum, Bitcoin, Solana, BNB Chain, Polygon, Arbitrum and Avalanche), attackers could move assets chain-by-chain once they obtain or guess the key material. The warning also notes that watching/sweeper bots may rapidly steal newly deposited gas tokens (e.g., ETH, SOL, BNB), so re-funding a suspected compromised wallet can be dangerous.
Overall, the Coinspect wallet generation flaw highlights a “cold but unsafe” scenario: wallet inactivity does not eliminate key-generation risk. Traders should consider tighter operational security for long-held wallets, and verify exposure across all linked chains.
Tether is leading NEURA Robotics’ Series C funding round of up to $1.4 billion, positioning the stablecoin issuer deeper into “machine economy” infrastructure. The round is among the largest private investments in humanoid robotics and Physical AI and includes backers such as Qualcomm Technologies, Amazon, NVIDIA, Bosch, Schaeffler, the European Investment Bank, imec.xpand, and others.
NEURA will use the capital to support serial production and global deployment of cognitive robots across multiple form factors, including humanoids, robotic arms, autonomous mobile robots, and service robots. The funding also backs “NEURA Gyms” for real-world robot training and expansion of the company’s Neuraverse software ecosystem.
A key crypto-related component is Tether’s Wallet Development Kit (WDK). NEURA expects to integrate WDK into its robotic platforms so robots gain self-custodial wallet functionality, enabling them to receive payments for completed tasks, pay other systems, and execute predefined economic actions without a human-led “checkout” step.
Tether will also deploy its QVAC edge-first AI runtime inside the Neuraverse, designed to run models locally to reduce latency and improve reliability in robotics environments where cloud access may be slow or unavailable.
Traders should note: the deal strengthens the narrative of stablecoin-backed, on-device agent payments, but NEURA must still scale production, prove demand, and turn the Neuraverse into a usable developer/deployment ecosystem.
Kalshi, a US-regulated prediction market, says it has blocked 100+ potential insider trades this year while escalating enforcement and compliance. It reports opening 150+ investigations, referring 20+ cases to law enforcement, and issuing five disciplinary actions.
Key Kalshi insider trading safeguards include a risk scoring framework for proposed markets (covering nonpublic information, manipulation risk, outcome concentration, regulatory and national security exposure), employment information disclosure for higher-risk contracts (with employer/industry/job-function details), and expanded whistleblower tools for users to report suspicious activity to a 24/7 monitored team.
The update follows rising US regulatory scrutiny of prediction markets, including House Oversight probes into Kalshi and Polymarket. Traders may face tighter access and extra checks on politically or company-outcome-linked event contracts.
Crypto traders should watch whether these Kalshi insider trading safeguards reduce suspicious flow without hurting liquidity or widening spreads, which can affect event-contract pricing and hedging efficiency.
South Korea’s KOSPI has plunged 13% in eight trading days, with trading paused by emergency circuit breakers twice in one week (June 8 and June 10). The selloff was driven by margin calls and the resulting forced selling across the market.
Key stress indicators are worsening. Forced stock sales from margin calls reached about 300 billion won (~$197 million). Retail margin debt is near 38 trillion won (~$24.9 billion), leaving leveraged traders vulnerable to sharp, fast moves. KOSPI’s volatility also spiked, with a volatility index above 90 on Tuesday (record high).
Market structure is amplifying the shock. Samsung and SK Hynix together account for more than half of the KOSPI weighting, and nearly 75% of its 2026 gains. This concentration limits downside support when these chip names face selling pressure. The put-call ratio on the KOSPI 200 hit 2.5, the highest in five years, signalling heavy demand for downside protection.
For crypto traders, the main takeaway is liquidity and risk sentiment spillover: when margin calls force deleveraging in a major Asian market, it often tightens risk appetite regionally and can translate into higher volatility across correlated assets, including crypto.
Gold has officially entered a bear market for the first time since 2022. On June 9, gold prices fell more than 20% from their late-January all-time high near $5,600 per ounce, and by mid-June they traded roughly in the $4,100–$4,300 range.
The selloff accelerated on June 9 alone, when spot gold dropped 3.2% and ended a 660-day streak of trading above the 200-day moving average. Three macro forces drove the move: (1) a stronger US dollar, which raises the cost of gold for non-US buyers; (2) rising real yields, increasing the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset like gold; and (3) strong US jobs data, which pushed markets away from rate cuts and toward renewed expectations of Fed rate hikes. Additional inflation pressure came from Middle East tensions boosting oil prices.
Central bank buying—one of the main supports for gold—has not vanished, but analysts have reportedly trimmed short-term gold expectations. Long-term views (e.g., from J.P. Morgan) still lean constructive for later in 2026, suggesting gold may stabilize as inflation concerns persist.
For crypto markets, the key takeaway is that tighter financial conditions and a stronger dollar can pressure “macro hedges” and change investor behavior across assets. Interestingly, Bitcoin has shown relative resilience while gold weakens, highlighting shifting correlations under different liquidity and rates regimes.
US President Donald Trump says his administration will meet AI executives to discuss “AI equity” for Americans. The proposal is for the federal government to negotiate equity stakes in major AI firms so the public can benefit from the AI boom, with returns framed as dividends or other household benefits. The administration cites a prior example: Washington already holds a 10% stake in Intel.
Names reportedly involved include OpenAI, Microsoft, Meta, Google, Amazon, Oracle and xAI. A new detail in the later reporting: as of June 10, 2026, four days after the announcement, no formal invitations had been sent, and some companies (reported to include Microsoft and Google) were caught off guard by the public disclosure.
For investors, the market question is dilution risk. If the government secures shares, traders will focus on how the equity is obtained—new issuance, taxpayer-funded purchases, or concessions tied to regulation or procurement. Those deal mechanics could affect share prices and corporate governance.
No crypto assets or tokens are mentioned. This is described as a traditional equity arrangement, not a tokenized ownership model. Overall, the near-term outlook is uncertainty around deal terms for AI sector leaders and potential dilution tied to Trump’s AI equity talks.
Neutral
AI equityUS regulationtech sectorgovernment stakesstock dilution
FaZe Clan’s CS2 rifler Russel “Twistzz” Van Dulken has temporarily stepped away from practice for a holiday in Japan. The break follows his return to the FaZe roster around Sept. 13, 2025, ahead of ESL Pro League Season 22. Photos and reports on social media, including an unofficial fan meetup seen on his Instagram, suggest this is a planned vacation rather than a roster dispute.
Why it matters for traders: this is an esports-only update. Although FaZe launched “FaZe Forever,” a Web3 gaming initiative in Dec. 2022, the current roster activity—Twistzz’s time off—has no connection to any listed crypto tokens, protocols, or on-chain assets. No token launches, no blockchain integrations, and no measurable on-chain activity are linked to the Japan trip.
Bottom line for crypto markets: there are no direct catalysts for BTC/ETH or other major coins from this news. It may only influence sentiment around Web3 gaming brands, not trading flows or market liquidity.
Ripple has launched the XRPL AI Starter Kit, a developer toolkit for building AI-agent payment apps on the XRP Ledger (XRPL). The XRPL AI Starter Kit is designed for autonomous payment flows where software agents can create wallets, check balances, send transactions, track payments, and pay for digital services without a manual checkout loop.
The first phase emphasizes documentation and Claude-compatible tools, plus agent wallet actions and payment workflows. Ripple says the toolkit supports X402-powered payments using both XRP and Ripple USD (RLUSD). This is aimed at “machine-to-machine” payments that need fast settlement, predictable transaction costs, and programmable value transfer.
For developers and traders, the key takeaway is that the XRPL AI Starter Kit positions XRP and RLUSD as rails for continuous, small-value purchases (APIs, model inference, compute, data access, and agent-to-agent commerce) with clearer budget assumptions versus payment rails built for human checkout.
While this is an early developer release, it strengthens XRPL’s role in the broader AI-payments infrastructure race. Near-term market impact will likely depend on how quickly real agent payment use cases and RLUSD liquidity traction emerge beyond demos.
HBAR trading volume has surged over the past 30 days, with the latest live figure near $2.9B—up almost 40% after earlier snapshots showed a move above 50%. The increase is occurring while HBAR trades around $0.078 (down on the week) with market cap near $3.4B, making the signal mixed: higher activity may reflect renewed interest, but could also come from hedging, derivatives positioning, rotation, or sell-side liquidity being met.
Key drivers cited in the report are tied to Hedera’s enterprise and market-access push. The Hashgraph Group and Merck announced an EU Digital Product Passport system on Hedera, linking Merck’s M-Trust authentication with TrackTrace for verifiable product records across regulated supply chains, provenance, and related reporting.
On the derivatives side, Kalshi added HBAR to its perpetual futures lineup for US traders. HBAR perps reference CF Benchmarks’ HBARUSD index and sit alongside major crypto perpetuals, aligning HBAR with a broader trend of regulated derivatives expansion.
The volume uptick also overlaps with DePIN and AI-adjacent funding. WISeKey’s SEALCOIN subsidiary secured a $4M strategic investment commitment (including $1M from The Hashgraph Group) to expand blockchain-powered machine-to-machine and satellite transaction capabilities.
Traders should watch whether HBAR trading volume stays elevated after the news cycle fades. A durable shift would likely require stronger spot demand, deeper open interest, and evidence that enterprise usage is translating into token demand. If price continues to slide while volume remains high, the activity may be read as distribution rather than accumulation.
Gold price forecast: prices fell about 3.5% toward $4,100/oz, hitting the lowest levels since late November 2025. The move followed U.S. inflation that rose to 4.2% in May (highest since April 2023), with energy prices the main driver.
Key inflation data: headline inflation came in at 4.2% and core inflation (ex food/energy) rose to 2.9% in seven months. Energy costs increased 3.9% in May after 3.8% in April and 10.9% in March, accounting for more than 60% of the monthly consumer-price increase.
Gold price forecast: the report also worsened real household purchasing power. Inflation exceeded wage growth for a second month: hourly earnings rose 3.4% year-on-year versus 4.2% inflation, while real weekly earnings fell 0.2% in May and 0.7% from a year earlier.
Fed expectations shifted: traders modestly reduced the probability of near-term easing. Although markets still look for a possible quarter-point increase by December after stronger jobs data, the likelihood of aggressive rate cuts fell. Higher Treasury yields tend to weigh on gold because it provides no income.
Geopolitics added risk but did not spark safe-haven demand: Iran–U.S. tensions escalated with new strikes and tougher Trump rhetoric, and reports said Qatari mediators traveled to Tehran. Still, gold failed to attract strong inflows.
For traders, the takeaway is clear: hotter inflation + less dovish Fed expectations pushed the Gold price forecast lower, keeping yields as the dominant swing factor over any safe-haven bid.
Bitcoin price is sliding as traders look to the Bank of Japan (BOJ) June 16 policy decision. The article notes that Bitcoin’s average reaction to BOJ rate hikes has historically been a sell-off averaging about 22.4%, with drawdowns ranging from roughly 18% to 28% since 2024.
Key context: After each BOJ hike (Mar 19, 2024; Jul 31, 2024; Jan 24, 2025; Dec 19, 2025), BTC experienced sharp corrections (18%–28%). However, the latest setup may differ because Japan already lifted rates from -0.1% (Mar 2024) to 0.75%, and the 10-year Japanese bond yield rose to 2.68% from 0.63%, suggesting the next hike could be a smaller incremental shift.
Why traders may still watch risk quickly: The piece argues concerns about a renewed yen carry-trade unwind may be overstated, citing an analyst saying the yen carry trade has been effectively “dead” since 2024.
But on-chain signals are adding near-term pressure on Bitcoin price. Crypto analysts flag rising BTC exchange inflows tied to large “whale” wallets (100–1,000 BTC and 1,000–10,000 BTC), pushing the 30-day whale inflow sum to about $6.6B. In addition, realized activity shows whales locked in losses of more than $2.5B during the early-June decline. Short-term whales carry roughly $16B in unrealized losses, which could translate into supply during rebounds.
Overall, the BOJ decision is a macro catalyst, while exchange inflows and whale stress appear to be the immediate drivers for Bitcoin price action.
Bearish
Bitcoin priceBank of JapanYen carry tradeOn-chain whale flowsBTC exchange inflows
Stand With Crypto UK launched a campaign urging its 286,000 members to file complaints against UK banks it says are imposing blanket bank transfer restrictions on payments to FCA-registered cryptocurrency exchanges. The group argues these rules reduce retail market access and often do not reflect a risk-based view of individual customers.
Citing a UK Cryptoassets Business Council report, the campaign claims about 40% of crypto transfers are blocked or restricted by banks. It also says 80% of surveyed exchanges saw an increase in declined or limited transfers, including at least one exchange reporting roughly £1 billion in rejected transactions over a year.
ClearBank CEO Mark Fairless said banks should use risk-based controls rather than broad blocks, arguing targeted interventions better support competition and allow regulated firms to operate.
The campaign arrives alongside UK stablecoin policy work, including reviews of reserve/holding requirements and potential changes to Bank of England caps for pound-denominated stablecoins, plus proposals to extend tokenized-market settlement hours. For traders, the immediate effect is higher compliance friction and potential exchange liquidity sentiment risk tied to bank transfer restrictions, not a direct change to token fundamentals.
Neutral
UK crypto regulationbank transfer restrictionsFCA exchange accessstablecoin frameworkexchange liquidity sentiment
US President Donald Trump said the United States will strike Iran again while pressing Tehran to sign a “meaningful” deal, escalating already tense Middle East conditions.
In comments at a White House event for the Secure America Act, Trump warned: “We hit them hard yesterday, and we’re going to hit them hard again today,” and repeated that the US would continue attacks while negotiations remain stalled. The remarks followed Trump’s earlier criticism of Iran on Truth Social.
The immediate market reaction was risk-off. Oil prices rose after the threats. US crude climbed to about $89.72 per barrel (nearly 2% on the day) and Brent rose to around $92.74 per barrel (+~1.3%). US stock futures weakened, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down more than 600 points in early trading.
US Central Command said the latest strikes were linked to the downing of a US Army Apache helicopter. No final public account from Iran was provided, and Iranian media reported no offensive operations in the Strait over the prior 24 hours.
Trader takeaway: Trump warns Iran of new strikes alongside higher oil prices, which typically tightens global risk sentiment and can pressure crypto via reduced liquidity and rising hedging demand.
If tensions persist, analysts have flagged potential supply-risk scenarios for crude—an environment that often keeps volatility elevated across BTC and large-cap altcoins.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei says the US government should have authority to block developers from releasing risky AI models. He argues for “responsible scaling policies,” where the higher the risk of AI models, the stronger the required safety and testing before deployment.
Amodei has pushed this agenda since leaving OpenAI in 2021. In June 2025, he published an op-ed calling for federal transparency laws and risk mitigation requirements for AI companies. The framework gained momentum through state-level action, including California’s SB 53 (late 2025), which mandates safety testing and cybersecurity measures for frontier AI models, alongside New York’s AI regulations.
A separate conflict has intensified his message. In February 2026, Anthropic refused Pentagon demands to modify its Claude models for military use, including lifting certain safety safeguards. The refusal led to a temporary federal ban on Anthropic products, a supply-chain risk designation, and legal disputes. A partial resolution followed in March 2026, after a federal court restored some access to Anthropic’s models.
Notably, the article highlights that Amodei’s regulation path has no direct intersection with crypto or digital assets, despite broader industry interest in blockchain-based AI and tokenized compute markets.
Neutral
AI regulationUS government oversightAnthropicPentagon safety disputerisk mitigation
US CPI rose 4.2% year-over-year in May, the fastest pace in three years, matching economist expectations. On a monthly basis, CPI increased 0.5%, also in line with forecasts. Energy prices drove the headline jump amid heightened Middle East tensions and oil-market volatility.
Crypto focused on the CPI “core” measure (excluding food and energy). Core CPI came in at 2.9% year-over-year and 0.2% month-on-month, which was below the 0.3% consensus. This softer core reading kept crypto volatility low: Bitcoin traded roughly in the $60K–$62K range, while Ethereum moved only slightly.
With the Fed’s next rate decision due on June 17, markets appear to have already priced in a rate hold. The report’s CPI signals a supply-side energy shock rather than demand-driven inflation, giving policymakers room to maintain current rates. Overall, the data is elevated but not “emergency-level,” supporting risk assets without forcing an immediate hawkish repricing.
Aave Gross Revenue Tops $2.19B Since 2020 as Lending Demand Holds. According to the Aave income statement, Aave has generated over $2.19B in gross protocol revenue since early 2020 through 2026 YTD.
Yearly figures highlight the post-bear-market rebound: $177.12K (2020), $252.45M (2021), $137.41M (2022), $105.26M (2023), $456.47M (2024), $907.70M (2025), and $333.14M so far in 2026. The article links the acceleration to Aave’s core lending activity: borrowers pay interest, liquidation penalties and fees, while suppliers provide liquidity.
The lending engine is backed by scale metrics: Aave has more than $12B in total value locked and nearly $10B in active loans across multiple chains (Ethereum as the largest, plus Base, Arbitrum, Avalanche, Polygon, BNB Chain, Gnosis, Mantle, Optimism and others). Aave also points to continued product momentum with Aave V4, where recent deposit growth signals early demand as lending caps increase.
For institutional expansion, eligible clients can access Aave lending markets through BitGo qualified custody via Narval’s institutional DeFi gateway, aiming to reduce reliance on unmanaged browser-wallet flows via whitelisting, approval workflows and transaction verification.
Aave Gross Revenue Tops $2.19B Since 2020, reinforcing a “durable DeFi lending” narrative—though traders will still watch whether higher revenues translate into safer risk conditions, sustainable DAO earnings and resilient credit infrastructure.
Solana (SOL) is taking heavy losses as the broader crypto market weakens. The article notes SOL fell to around $60 earlier in the month (its lowest since end-2023) and is trading near $63, down about 33% on the month, with market cap below $40B.
Despite the bearish tape, multiple indicators point to a potential rebound in Solana. Analyst Ali Martinez says the TD Sequential indicator has flashed a buy signal, implying price could move toward $77. Solana’s RSI (daily) reportedly slid to ~15—its lowest ever—while RSI readings below 30 typically signal oversold conditions and a possible bounce.
Other traders are also leaning cautiously bullish. An X user (Henry) called the setup “absolutely bullish,” targeting a W-shaped recovery above $88 if bulls reclaim $79.9. However, they warn that losing the key support around $60 could be damaging.
Still, downside risks remain. Another X user (cyclop) expects a short-term drop to the $30–$40 zone (last seen around Oct 2023). Longer term, they project a potential run to $300 within 1–2 years.
Fund flow data adds pressure: spot SOL ETF flows have turned negative, with outflows exceeding inflows over the past few days. The article cites that issuers such as Bitwise, Fidelity, Grayscale, and Invesco may need to sell real SOL to back the shares. Separately, rising exchange inflows (reduced self-custody) can increase near-term selling pressure.
Overall, Solana’s technical “buy” signals conflict with bearish flow and support-level risk, setting up a high-volatility trading environment.
Neutral
Solana (SOL)Technical AnalysisSpot SOL ETF FlowsRSI / TD SequentialMarket Volatility
Meta has agreed to lease a 168-megawatt AI data center in Jamnagar, India, from Reliance Industries. Reliance will build and deliver the facility within two years, with an option to scale. Meta says the project will help it scale AI infrastructure globally and deepens its long-term investment in India’s economy.
The Meta–Reliance agreement also builds on prior partnerships: Meta invested $5.7B in Jio Platforms in 2020 and later expanded work through a joint venture, helping make Meta’s open-source AI models available to Indian enterprises and developers.
Meta is further supporting operations with renewable energy contracts, signing deals with CleanMax and Fourth Partner Energy for nearly 1 gigawatt of clean power across northern and southern India. These renewable supply arrangements align with Meta’s stated goal of matching all operations with 100% clean energy.
Broader context: India is actively expanding data-center capacity to meet hyperscaler demand. With policy incentives such as a 20-year tax exemption for hyperscalers using Indian data centers for overseas clients, more AI infrastructure investment is expected. Overall, this is a corporate infrastructure signal rather than a crypto-specific catalyst, but it may influence tech-sector sentiment tied to AI capex.
Neutral
MetaReliance IndustriesIndia AI data centersrenewable energy contractshyperscaler capex
U.S. spot bitcoin ETF demand is increasingly concentrated in two issuers: BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) and Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC). Together, they are capturing most new capital, while smaller bitcoin ETF funds are struggling to move overall market direction.
Farside Investors data shows this dominance was clear in early 2026 and persisted through weaker sentiment. On Jan 14, total bitcoin ETF net inflows were $840.6M; IBIT brought in $648.4M and FBTC added $125.4M—over 90% combined. On Apr 17, inflows totaled $663.9M, with IBIT and FBTC contributing $284M and $163.4M (about two-thirds). Even during drawdowns, bitcoin ETF capital often flows to IBIT/FBTC while rivals see heavier redemptions.
The backdrop is a difficult year for crypto ETFs: bitcoin is down about 29% year-to-date, and spot bitcoin ETF redemptions have appeared in waves from mid-May to early June. Despite that, the two leading bitcoin ETF products have repeatedly acted as a stabilizing force, sometimes remaining positive or redeeming less than competitors.
This points to a “winner-take-most” structure. Large allocators—advisers, hedge funds, family offices, pensions, and other institutions—prioritize liquidity, trading volume, and issuer reputation, which strengthens BlackRock and Fidelity’s distribution advantages. Meanwhile, smaller funds like Franklin Templeton’s EZBC, VanEck’s HODL, Valkyrie’s BRRR and WisdomTree’s BTCW typically post single-digit-million daily flows and often have limited impact.
For traders, this implies bitcoin ETF price/liquidity dynamics may increasingly track IBIT and FBTC flows, amplifying short-term momentum while increasing concentration risk long-term.
Shotgun.fun has launched a high-performance, non-custodial trading terminal promising to return up to 100% of trading fees to users. The company says cashback starts at 50% and scales with trading volume.
The platform positions its edge around “fee-free” style execution rather than charging standard terminal fees, with tools including one-click chart trading, limit orders (dip buys, stop-loss, take-profit, trailing stops), trader discovery and real-time copy trading, and multi-wallet management plus portfolio performance tracking.
Shotgun.fun also highlights incentives and transparency: a multi-layer referral program (up to 50% revenue share across five tiers) and features aimed at exposing insider-wallet activity so traders can view trades and potentially mirror them.
Leadership is Miguel Loures and Pedro Maurício, founders behind Pulsar Finance, which reportedly grew to over one million users before acquisition by Terraform Labs. Shotgun.fun launches with Solana support, with more blockchains and “agentic trading” planned.
For traders, Shotgun.fun’s fee-rebate model could slightly improve trading economics and encourage higher turnover, especially for high-volume users and active strategies using limit orders and copy trading. However, as this is a sponsored launch announcement, market-wide impact is likely limited near-term unless adoption metrics and execution quality prove out.
SpaceX IPO plans to raise $75B by selling 555.6M shares at $135 each, valuing the company at about $1.75T. The syndicate lead is Goldman Sachs, with Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase also participating alongside 21–23 banks total.
A key focus for the Street is the underwriting cost. SpaceX is negotiating fees below 0.75%, far under the usual 3%–7% range for many IPOs. Even so, the total fee pool for a $75B deal is estimated around $500M, with most compensation concentrated among senior banks (Goldman, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan). Smaller “junior” banks are reportedly left with lower-prestige distribution and marketing roles.
For crypto traders, the SpaceX IPO also includes a balance-sheet signal. In its S-1, SpaceX disclosed it holds 18,712 BTC (about $1.45B at recent prices). That position is less than 0.1% of the targeted $1.75T market cap, but it adds a crypto beta layer: if BTC falls sharply, SpaceX’s reported assets take a hit even if core businesses (rockets and Starlink) perform well.
SpaceX plans to list on Nasdaq under ticker SPCX, targeting June 2026. To trade ahead of the listing, exchanges have reportedly launched pre-IPO products tied to SpaceX shares, creating synthetic exposure vehicles.
Traders should watch for early volatility around the SpaceX IPO pricing process, plus any correlation between BTC moves and speculative positioning in these pre-IPO instruments.
WTI crude futures on NYMEX settled at $90.03 per barrel on June 10, up $1.83 (+2.07%)—but still below the key $91 level. The market had priced a “YES” vs “NO” outcome around whether WTI would close above $91, and the settlement at $90.03 strongly supports a NO outcome.
Traders link the move to the 2026 Middle East conflict involving the U.S., Israel, and Iran. The biggest risk is disruption to supply routes through the Strait of Hormuz, which can trigger fears of a near-term supply squeeze. In addition, CME Group’s WTI curve showed steep backwardation, a signal the market is leaning toward tight supply rather than pure demand changes.
What to watch next: any further escalation or resolution around the Strait of Hormuz, potential OPEC+ decisions on production levels, and near-term inventory data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). The article’s key takeaway for WTI crude is that geopolitical volatility remains a driver, even though the specific $91 close threshold was not breached.
Neutral
WTI crudeMiddle East tensionsOPEC+ outlookStrait of HormuzOil market volatility
At the Cloudflare Investor Day on June 9 at the NYSE, CEO Matthew Prince and President Michelle Zatlyn laid out a growth plan aimed at $5B+ in annual recurring revenue (ARR). The event, joined by CFO Thomas Seifert and senior leaders Mark Anderson and Stephanie Cohen, emphasized that Cloudflare’s network can be the foundation for AI-driven apps that need speed, security, and scale.
Cloudflare Investor Day messaging leaned heavily into AI as the main growth tailwind. The company recently reported Q1 2026 revenue of $639.8 million, up 34% year over year, and management suggested the path to the $5B+ ARR target is achievable.
Notably, the Cloudflare Investor Day included zero references to cryptocurrency initiatives, blockchain partnerships, or any token-related ventures. Instead, it framed the investment case through traditional enterprise metrics and AI opportunities.
Analyst reaction was reportedly positive, with some firms reportedly raising price targets after the mix of strong recent results and a credible long-term framework.
U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren has urged the SEC to delay the SpaceX IPO, arguing the filing still lacks protections needed for accelerated approval.
SpaceX reportedly plans to raise up to $75B at a valuation near $1.75T–$2T, with pricing around $135 per share and Nasdaq trading under ticker SPCX shortly after.
In her letter, Warren flagged five risk areas tied to the SpaceX IPO: (1) valuation and disclosure gaps, including assumptions that may imply roughly 100x 2025 revenue; (2) governance and shareholder rights concerns, such as a dual-class structure giving Musk 10x voting power and limits/conditions on shareholder action; (3) conflicts of interest and related-party disclosure, including references to xAI and Tesla; (4) index-inclusion effects, warning passive funds could be forced to buy on faster index entry, potentially driving $15B–$30B into S&P 500, Nasdaq-100 and Russell 1000 trackers; and (5) investor-protection issues affecting both retirement and retail investors.
Warren also requested clearer risk disclosures before the registration statement becomes effective, including removing or revisiting elements like mandatory arbitration for certain disputes.
For crypto traders, the key angle is policy and market-structure risk: if the SpaceX IPO proceeds as planned, some headlines have suggested capital rotation away from cryptocurrencies; delays could reduce near-term “IPO hype” and re-balance attention toward crypto rather than tech/SpaceX exposure.
US stocks slid Wednesday as investors weighed renewed Middle East geopolitical risk. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq both fell, with the S&P 500 down 0.9% and the Nasdaq down 1.19% after Trump warned the US could launch additional Iran strikes. The Dow dropped more than 650 points (‑1.3%).
Oil spiked on the rhetoric. WTI crude gained nearly 3% to above $90/bbl as traders priced in a higher geopolitical risk premium and focused on the Strait of Hormuz. Market participants warned that prolonged conflict could tighten oil supplies and add inflation pressure.
Tech sector pressure continued via semiconductors. Micron, AMD, and Broadcom extended a pullback after months of AI-infrastructure-driven gains. Some analysts linked the weakness to profit-taking ahead of the SpaceX IPO (June 12), though others framed it as normal consolidation.
Inflation data offered limited relief. US headline inflation rose to 4.2% (highest since 2023), while core inflation increased 0.2% in May versus 0.3% expected; core rose to 2.9% YoY, still above the Fed’s long-term target. The softer monthly core print briefly supported equities, but the headline move reinforced caution about the Fed’s outlook.
Traders are now watching Iran negotiation headlines alongside inflation prints. For now, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq selloff looks tied to a risk-off mix of escalating conflict signals, higher energy costs, and ongoing tech weakness—likely keeping near-term volatility elevated.
Bearish
US equitiesS&P 500 & NasdaqIran geopoliticsoil spikesemiconductors
Bitcoin layer-2 network Botanix will wind down in July after saying it failed to find sufficient DeFi demand. The team asked users to withdraw funds and warned that assets would become unrecoverable after July 9.
Botanix said it never reached product-market fit and generated only minimal fees—about $10 over the past day—despite launching an EVM-equivalent design intended to let developers port Ethereum apps with little modification. It also cited competition from established platforms and from wrapped Bitcoin used on general-purpose Ethereum layer-2 networks as “cheaper and easier” alternatives.
Key figures and figures in context:
- Funding: Botanix Labs raised $8.5 million in a 2024 seed round, including participation from Bitcoin influencers Dan Held and Eric Wall.
- On-chain TVL: value of assets deposited in Botanix smart contracts fell to about $120,000, down from a peak of $26.3 million in September (per DeFi Llama).
- Product direction: Botanix acknowledged Bitcoin is largely treated as a reserve asset rather than an application platform.
For traders, this is a liquidity/usage signal for Bitcoin layer-2 DeFi plays, even if the direct market impact is likely limited due to the small fee and TVL base.
Anchorage Digital said it supports the US Treasury’s proposed GENIUS Act AML and sanctions framework for payment stablecoin issuers, arguing the rules strike the right balance between compliance and innovation. In a public comment letter, Anchorage backed placing AML obligations on regulated stablecoin issuers under the Bank Secrecy Act, but urged Treasury to clarify how secondary-market sanctions liability works.
Key request: Anchorage argued issuers should not face strict liability for failing to independently identify sanctioned users when users trade via smart contracts on secondary markets. It also asked for clearer guidance on enterprise-wide AML program expectations and correspondent account requirements, warning that ambiguity could increase operational and legal risk.
The proposal, issued in April by FinCEN and OFAC, would classify payment stablecoin issuers as financial institutions and subject them to AML, customer due diligence, and suspicious activity reporting, along with enhanced monitoring and recordkeeping.
Industry feedback is mixed. Crypto derivatives exchange Hyperliquid and venture firm Paradigm submitted a separate comment letter saying the framework could pull secondary-market activity into the issuer’s compliance perimeter. They criticized an interpretation that treats smart-contract interactions as an ongoing “provision of services,” potentially creating sanctions exposure even without visibility into counterparties.
Overall, traders should watch for rule-finalization timelines and any subsequent guidance, as GENIUS Act AML clarifications could affect stablecoin issuer risk, exchange settlement assumptions, and near-term regulatory sentiment.