Grayscale completed its Q1 2026 review for the Grayscale Decentralized Finance Fund and the Grayscale Smart Contract Fund. In the Decentralized Finance (DeFi) Fund, Grayscale added ENA after removing AERO during the quarterly rebalance, using proceeds sold from AERO and other components based on index weights (CoinDesk DeFi Select Index method).
As of May 1, the DeFi Fund’s largest holdings were UNI (35.22%), AAVE (21.36%) and Ondo (19.83%), followed by ENA at 13.59%. Curve (5.27%) and Lido DAO (4.73%) remained smaller allocations. The update increases exposure to decentralized exchanges, lending, tokenized assets and synthetic dollar infrastructure. ENA’s move also comes as ENA is set for a separate unlock event: 171.88 million tokens (~$17.28 million), about 2.12% of adjusted released supply.
In the Smart Contract Fund, Grayscale did not add or remove assets. The basket stayed concentrated in major smart-contract ecosystems: ETH (30.14%) and SOL (29.69%) were nearly tied, with ADA (17.96%) in third, plus AVAX, HEDERA and SUI.
Grayscale also reiterates that neither fund generates income; component distributions mainly affect NAV via share dilution over time.
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs extended their inflow streak to five straight sessions, drawing nearly $1.7B as institutional demand returned. SoSoValue data shows Wednesday’s net inflows were $46.3M, with BlackRock’s IBIT leading ($134.6M) while Fidelity’s FBTC and three other funds saw withdrawals. Cumulative net inflows across the five-day run rose to about $1.69B, supporting the broader rebound.
Earlier coverage also highlighted that spot BTC ETFs reversed from the prior three-day outflow period, with net inflows totaling more than $1.1B over three days and strong daily demand (e.g., IBIT and FBTC activity).
BTC price action tracked the flow momentum, recovering from below $79K to trade in the $81K–$82K range, with traders watching $80K as key support and $84K–$85K as the next resistance zone. The article links improving risk sentiment to macro headlines (Iran reviewing a U.S.-backed ceasefire proposal), which helped crypto alongside moves in oil and safe-haven assets.
ETH ETFs also showed renewed strength: Monday net inflows were $61.29M after $101.18M on Friday, pushing ETH fund assets/flows above the $12B mark. Overall, renewed spot Bitcoin ETFs inflows suggest firmer institutional footing and may support BTC demand into the next resistance area even if macro volatility persists.
Crypto-trader takeaway: spot Bitcoin ETFs inflows (led by IBIT) are a near-term bullish signal for BTC, but keep an eye on whether inflows can hold as price approaches $84K–$85K.
In a Q1 2026 earnings call recap, Strategy’s (via BitMEX Alpha) highlighted a new trading framework centered on mNAV. Management said that at roughly 1.22x mNAV or higher, selling MSTR to buy BTC remains accretive. Below 1.22x mNAV, the priority shifts: funding obligations via BTC sales can be more accretive than issuing common equity at weak valuations. Strategy’s mNAV was cited around 1.28x, leaving MSTR near the line.
The core implication is a clearer MSTR/BTC relative-value trade. When MSTR trades too cheaply versus its mNAV (near or below 1.22x), a long MSTR and short BTC setup becomes more compelling, as management can close the gap using BTC sale optionality and capital structure levers.
For STRC, the call improved the underwriting picture. The recap cited STRC capital structure figures: about $13.5B preferred equity, $8.2B convertible debt, and a ~$64B BTC reserve. The article claims the BTC reserve can cover net debt even after a 90% BTC drop (down to ~$7,300), and that cash/BTC coverage helps extend dividend+interest funding longevity, turning STRC risk into something more measurable rather than purely narrative-driven.
BTC’s “infinite-bid / never-sells” meme was described as dead, but the structure was framed as healthier: gradual BTC sales may reduce tail-risk from forced liquidations.
Overall, the mNAV threshold is presented as the main signal for how traders may rotate between MSTR, STRC, and BTC positioning.
Neutral
Strategy Q1mNAV thresholdMSTR/BTC arbitrageSTRC dividend coverageBTC capital structure
Korea’s Ministry of Economy and Finance will follow its original plan to levy a 22% income tax on virtual-asset gains starting Jan 1. “Other income” rules will apply, with a 22% rate for amounts above 2.5 million KRW. The measure impacts about 13.26 million investors and the tax authority is drafting guidance ahead of legislation—another crypto tax headline that can reshape after-tax demand.
In Germany, the finance minister said policy may diverge from the current treatment: holding BTC/crypto for more than one year may no longer qualify for tax exemption. This crypto tax risk could increase selling pressure on longer-term BTC holders.
Offsetting that bearish macro/sovereign backdrop, US BTC spot ETFs extended net inflows for a 5th straight day (total net inflow: $46.33M). BlackRock’s IBIT led with a $135M single-day inflow, supporting near-term price momentum.
Other notable market items include: TrustedVolumes confirming a ~$6.7M exploit and engaging on a bounty; Binance Alpha opening an airdrop (245 points threshold); and OpenTrade raising $17M to expand stablecoin yield/credit infrastructure.
Traders should watch how these crypto tax developments affect BTC positioning, particularly the behavior of ETF-driven bids versus potential long-term holder profit-taking in Germany and Korea.
Arm reported 2026 fiscal Q4 results after market close, as its AGI CPU strategy shifts the company toward becoming an AI CPU supplier. Total revenue hit $1.49B (+20% YoY), beating the $1.47B consensus, while full-year revenue reached $4.92B (+23%). Licensing and other revenue rose 29% to $819M (ACV +22%), but royalties were $671M (+11%), below the $700M estimate—signaling weaker downstream consumption.
The bullish case centers on Agentic AI. In agentic workloads, the CPU’s scheduling/coordination limits can drive 50%–90% of system latency, pushing datacenter CPU core density higher. Arm cites a potential rise from ~30M cores per GW today to ~120M cores, and a UBS market view that server CPU TAM could expand from ~$30B (2025) to ~$170B (2030).
However, the key bottleneck is production. Real silicon sales are not expected to be recognized until 2027 FY Q4, with mass ramp in 2028 FY. Arm’s AGI CPU integrates HBM and relies on TSMC’s CoWoS packaging, where priority and supply are constrained—meaning supply-chain capacity may matter more than design wins in the next 12–18 months.
On Wall Street, analysts led by BofA downgraded Arm to Neutral, citing valuation risk and the mismatch between “paper orders” (~$2B+) and limited CoWoS/HBM capacity. Overall, Agentic AI upside is clear, but timing risk dominates trading narratives.
Neutral
Arm earningsAgentic AITSMC CoWoS/HBMAI CPU supply chainvaluation risk
Aave will liquidate the KelpDAO exploiter’s remaining positions to recover funds after the KelpDAO hack. Arbitrum Governance approved unfreezing 30,765.67 ETH that had been frozen by the Arbitrum Security Council as part of a coordinated remediation plan to restore rsETH’s full ETH backing and make rsETH holders whole.
Aave said the decision passed with over 90% support: 1,600 addresses backed by 190M ARB tokens voted in favor. Implementation steps include liquidating the attacker’s position on both Ethereum and Arbitrum. Aave also used internal risk controls to stop further borrowing when the attacker’s position exceeded a risk threshold.
On the market side, Aave reported bad loans estimated at roughly $170M–$230M, but the protocol is recovering. Aave stabilized TVL above $15B after an initial ~$10B outflow; vault utilization has returned closer to normal, with lending rates normalizing (average lending rate ~2.76%, borrowing rate ~4.08%). However, total lending is down ~35% over 30 days and stablecoin liquidity down ~46.3% over a month, implying slower activity despite improved risk metrics.
Separately, KelpDAO decided to move its cross-chain infrastructure to Chainlink’s CCIP ecosystem, after earlier views that LayerZero cross-chain tooling contributed to the ~$292M exploit.
American Bitcoin reported a net loss of $81.8 million in Q1 2026, versus a $59.5 million loss in Q4 2025. Despite weaker profitability, American Bitcoin’s BTC holdings climbed to 7,021 BTC by quarter-end, supported by higher production and treasury accumulation.
Key fiscal signals: mining revenue fell to $62.1 million (from $78.3 million), while operating expenses rose to $150.7 million. The company cited declining Bitcoin prices (down about 22%) and shrinking digital asset reserves as major drivers. Losses tied to asset-reserve valuation reached $117.2 million, heavily impacting the quarter.
On-chain/operational highlights: American Bitcoin mined a record 817 BTC in Q1 and purchased an additional 803 BTC. CEO Mike Ho said no Bitcoin was sold during the quarter, and that core operations remained profitable excluding non-cash, FASB-mandated valuation adjustments. Gross margin in mining stayed above 50% as energy efficiency reduced the cost to mine 1 BTC from $46,900 (prior quarter) to $36,200.
Co-founder Eric Trump emphasized scale and efficiency, noting the firm became the 16th largest public Bitcoin holder after listing eight months earlier. Shares closed at $1.25 (+1.63%) with strong recent momentum (up 40% over a month), though still down sharply over six months.
Neutral
American BitcoinBTC reservesCorporate Bitcoin miningQuarterly earningsEnergy efficiency
The White House is targeting July 4 for Congress to pass the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, with Patrick Witt (President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets) calling the timeline “challenging but achievable.” Witt said the drafting involved both banks and crypto firms, but both sides are “equally dissatisfied,” suggesting a compromise that could still face amendments and negotiation risk.
The bill’s market-impact angle includes stablecoin policy changes. Under the updated Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, deposit-like yields for USDC-style stablecoins are banned, while spending-based rewards remain allowed. Separately, U.S. agencies are also nearing a July deadline to issue rules under the prior “Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act,” with Treasury, the OCC, and the FDIC coordinating input.
For traders, the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act is a near-term catalyst for repricing compliance costs, custody expectations, and liquidity—especially in stablecoin markets. But with dissatisfaction on both sides and the potential for political or procedural delays, volatility around the bill’s passage path remains likely.
Neutral
US regulationDigital Asset Market Clarity ActStablecoinsCongress timelineUSDC yield rules
Bitcoin social sentiment has swung to a four-month high as BTC reclaimed and pushed above $80,000 earlier this week. Santiment data (Positive/Negative Sentiment at 1.37) suggests retail traders are re-engaging with bullish narratives after a fear-driven pullback linked to macro uncertainty and crypto security concerns.
Still, Santiment warns that when FOMO replaces fear, late entries often raise the odds of local tops, profit-taking, and sharp volatility. Price-wise, BTC was around ~$81,000 at the time of writing, up ~7.5% on 7 days and ~18% on 30 days, after briefly tagging ~$82,000 and pulling back within a roughly $80,800–$82,800 daily range.
Supportive inflows for Bitcoin also appeared to underpin the move: Farside Investors reported $223M net inflows into US spot Bitcoin ETFs on April 23, led by BlackRock’s IBIT, and Wise Crypto flagged IBIT YTD inflows near $3B.
However, analysts are split on breakout quality. Bitfinex called the $80,000 break potentially misleading and said the market may not be positioned for sustained upside. Separately, a commentator (IT Tech) argued Bitcoin needs to reclaim and hold near $89,000 to confirm a durable bottom, noting realized-price zones around $89,000–$112,000 where late buyers may exit.
For traders, the near-term map is clear: watch Bitcoin sentiment extremes and treat the $80K→$89K zone as the confirmation step, because derivatives-driven demand (rising open interest plus large short liquidations) can create fast rallies that unwind if spot buying fades.
Strategy CEO Phong Le says the firm has replaced the “buy and never sell” Bitcoin doctrine with a new 6-principle Bitcoin capital-management framework. The core metric is Bitcoin Per Share (BPS): management actions—such as raising debt, managing reserves, and adjusting leverage by market volatility—are aimed at maximizing BTC per share.
Le also shifts Strategy toward active balance-sheet defense: the company intends to reduce convertible debt more proactively and control the size of its dollar reserves based on credit risks.
A key update is an explicit permission to sell Bitcoin when it is beneficial for the company, rather than banning sales outright. Le noted that during the Q1 2026 earnings call, when possible sales were discussed, the market reaction was muted (“Bitcoin shrugged”). Traders largely ignored the potential overhang that Strategy holds nearly 4% of global Bitcoin supply (818,334 BTC).
Market impact: BTC rose about 2.3% intraday to above $82,800 and reached a multi-month high, suggesting corporate-selling fears are not currently driving downside positioning.
For traders, this is a narrative shift: corporate treasury management is becoming more rules-based around BPS, but with conditional sell optionality. The immediate takeaway is that the BTC market has shown resilience to “possible selling” headlines, supporting a more neutral-to-bullish stance while watching leverage, reserve size, and any actual sell executions.
Bullish
BitcoinStrategyBPSCorporate BTC holdingsLeverage and reserves
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences says AI performances and AI-written screenplays will not qualify for the Oscars (99th Oscars, March 2027).
For acting categories, roles must be credited in the film’s legal billing and be demonstrably performed by humans with their consent.
For writing categories (Best Adapted Screenplay / Best Original Screenplay), eligible screenplays must be human-authored.
The Academy did not add new restrictions for other major categories, and it did not formally ban AI for Best Visual Effects. This update is framed as a shift from an earlier draft (April 23) that was more permissive and focused on whether humans were at the core of creative authorship.
Industry context: SAG-AFTRA opposed synthetic performers after the “Tilly Norwood” AI announcement, while controversy also surrounds “On This Day … 1776,” which used real voices but AI-generated images. Under the new AI performances eligibility stance, similar projects would face tighter scrutiny for acting and writing, while visual-effects work may remain possible.
For crypto traders: this is a policy and labor signal from Hollywood’s AI debate, not a direct market/technology change. Trading impact on any single coin is expected to be minimal. Still, watch sentiment around “AI + jobs + regulation” themes because these headlines can briefly move risk appetite in the broader tech narrative.
Neutral
AI performancesOscars eligibilitySAG-AFTRAscreenplay authorshipHollywood policy
Morgan Stanley has launched a limited crypto trading pilot on its E*Trade platform, offering lower all-in fees to expand TradFi access to crypto. The broker charges about 50 basis points (bps) per trade on transaction value. For comparison, Robinhood starts at 95 bps, while Coinbase and Charles Schwab start at 60 bps and 75 bps, respectively.
The bank plans to roll out the service to all 8.6 million E*Trade clients later this year. Jed Finn, head of wealth management, said the move is “much bigger” than pricing, aiming to “disintermediate the disintermediators” by routing clients through familiar brokerage channels.
Bloomberg also reports Morgan Stanley is studying an ETP-style structure that could convert crypto holdings into exchange-traded product shares without outright selling the underlying assets. It additionally plans tokenized equity trading in 2H 2026.
For traders, the near-term takeaway is intensified fee competition and a potentially wider retail funnel into crypto-related products, though the pilot’s reach is still limited today. Morgan Stanley’s broader digital-asset push includes spot Bitcoin ETF distribution, filings for spot Ethereum and Solana ETFs, and a trust-bank charter application to support trading and staking.
Neutral
TradFi crypto on-rampE*Trade and brokerage feesETP/ETF structureSpot Bitcoin ETFTokenized assets
Morgan Stanley and Charles Schwab are rolling out direct crypto trading inside mainstream brokerage accounts, aiming to capture crypto demand without relying on clients trading on third-party venues.
Crypto trading distribution is the core move. The article says the firms can already “see” demand in their own client bases and that when clients execute Bitcoin spot trades elsewhere (e.g., Coinbase, Robinhood), brokerages lose both trading revenue and behavioral data.
Key numbers and context:
- Schwab clients reportedly hold about 20% of US spot crypto exchange-traded products, explaining why the rollout timing matters.
- Morgan Stanley’s E*Trade channel serves 8.6 million self-directed clients and generated about 1.029 million average daily revenue trades in 2025 through a channel holding $1.67T in assets.
- Schwab’s initial launch plans focus on Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), with custody and execution set up via partner rails and a phased access approach.
- Regulatory clarity in 2025–2026 is cited as enabling the buildout, including FDIC and OCC shifts, plus SEC staff interim guidance on broker-dealer registration for some crypto interfaces.
Why now:
- App-based brokers have shown weaker crypto activity during the recent slowdown (Robinhood’s crypto notional volume and revenue fell year over year), so incumbents are using “quiet time” to harden compliance, pricing, and service workflows.
What to watch for traders:
- If crypto trading becomes a routine brokerage feature and ETF inflows keep recovering, these platforms could increase BTC/ETH demand and improve liquidity.
- The upside is stronger if Schwab expands transfer capability and beyond BTC/ETH quickly. The downside is adoption staying limited if transfers are constrained by state rules or broader policy stalls (e.g., CLARITY Act momentum).
Bullish
crypto tradingbrokerage integrationspot Bitcoin ETFregulatory clarityBTC and ETH adoption
Bithumb has signed an MOU with SSI Digital (SSID), a SSI Securities subsidiary, to cooperate on establishing and operating a virtual asset exchange in Vietnam as part of the Vietnam crypto license pilot. The partnership covers exchange technology, wallet and custody systems, security and risk management, and regulatory and institutional business support.
The March deal, announced this week in Hanoi, also leaves open a possible strategic equity investment by Bithumb into an SSID-designated entity, but any move would require Vietnamese regulatory approvals.
Under Vietnam’s five-year crypto asset pilot (launched in September 2025), pilot exchange operators must be Vietnamese entities with charter capital of at least 10 trillion VND (about $380 million) and foreign ownership capped at 49%. Regulators are also drafting rules that may limit trading on unlicensed overseas platforms, increasing pressure for regional exchanges to obtain local approvals.
Competition is already intensifying: Reuters previously reported initial clearance for five firms, including affiliates linked to Techcombank, VPBank, LPBank, VIX Securities, and Sun Group. A leading bid is VPBank-linked CAEX, supported in April by OKX Ventures and HashKey Capital to meet the capital threshold.
Trader-relevant risk context: Bithumb faces heightened scrutiny in Korea after a February payout error credited 620,000 BTC instead of 620,000 won. Bithumb said it recovered 99.7% of the funds and is pursuing legal action to reclaim the remaining 7 BTC.
For markets, this Vietnam crypto license pilot headline is a medium-term catalyst for regional exchange expansion, but near-term price impact on BTC is likely limited because Vietnam has not yet approved any fully licensed exchanges under the pilot and timelines for approvals remain unclear.
Luffa announced a major brand upgrade, repositioning itself as the AI × Web3 Super Connector. The company says its AI agents are the core engine for a new infrastructure focused on sovereign identity, programmable value, and verifiable trust—aiming to solve “digital fragmentation” across identity, intelligence, value, and trust.
Key pillars include a DID-based Community layer (sovereign identity, AI agent empowerment, and on-chain governance/DAO), a Content layer that turns channels into programmable, tradable value containers (including creator influence tokenization and tiered monetization), and an Aggregation layer featuring the SuperBox open mini-program ecosystem, multi-chain wallets, and LuffaPay intent-based payments.
Luffa’s AI × Web3 Super Connector highlights include: an AI agent autonomous runtime (identity, wallet, long-term memory, and permissions), verifiable AI outputs to reduce hallucinations and improve compliance, and full-scenario coverage from prediction markets and mini-games to RWAs and creator economy governance. It also claims an “intelligent economic flywheel” where real usage revenue feeds back into AI R&D and incentives.
Market milestones (as of Feb 2026) cited by Luffa: 3M+ downloads, 2M+ registered users, and 150,000+ daily active users. Luffa says 2026 priorities are AI-driven prediction markets and intelligent derivatives to build an “intelligent trading platform.”
CEO Michael Liu framed the move as enabling AI to gain identity, execution capability, and economic agency under the AI × Web3 Super Connector positioning.
Neutral
AI × Web3Prediction MarketsDID IdentityCreator EconomyCrypto Infrastructure
Bitcoin price rebounded above $81,000 as Iran said it is reviewing a U.S.-backed proposal aimed at ending the war and easing Strait of Hormuz disruptions. The reported one-page memorandum covers a ceasefire and restoring trade routes, but reportedly excludes sensitive nuclear-program discussions. Oil prices fell for a third straight day (WTI near $93; Brent near $100), reinforcing risk-on sentiment that spilled into crypto markets.
Bitcoin price analysis signals continued bullish control: Supertrend stayed green and MACD showed a bullish crossover. Traders are watching resistance at the $84,000–$85,000 zone, while $80,000 is the key psychological support after a dip to around $80,771.
For market context, safe-haven flows appeared mixed, with gold and silver moving higher while crypto demand supported by a falling Coinbase premium suggesting only modest institutional cooling rather than a full risk-off reversal.
Bullish
BitcoinMiddle East ceasefireRisk-on sentimentBTC technical analysisOil prices
Iran is pursuing “intense diplomacy” to gradually reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil chokepoint carrying about 20% of global petroleum exports, linking the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman. Negotiations are reportedly happening through multiple channels with regional and international stakeholders, with the aim of phased, controlled shipping that addresses security concerns and helps stabilize global energy markets.
For crypto traders, the Strait of Hormuz reopening matters because sustained disruptions can quickly raise crude prices, boost geopolitical risk premia, and increase energy-market volatility. Partial normalization could ease those risk signals, but the “gradual” timeline and unclear implementation conditions mean full market stabilization is unlikely soon—potentially weeks to months.
Traders should therefore keep a wait-and-see stance. Watch for credible shipping guarantees, monitoring mechanisms, and any escalation or rhetoric reversal, since renewed transport risk would likely reprice crude uncertainty and tighten broader risk sentiment.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzIran diplomacyOil shipping riskGeopolitical de-escalationEnergy market volatility
On-chain data from Lookonchain shows a wallet suspected to be linked to Matrixport has deposited 403,289 HYPE (about $17.4M) to Hyperliquid and begun selling. The address already sold roughly 100,000 HYPE, receiving about 4.24 million USDC, and still holds over 300,000 HYPE. The selling started shortly after the deposit to Hyperliquid, a decentralized exchange focused on perpetual futures trading, where HYPE is the native token used for fees, staking and governance.
Traders are watching for continued HYPE sales because large deposits followed by market selling by institutional-linked entities can increase short-term price pressure. HYPE has recently seen higher volume and volatility, so further liquidation-like flows from the remaining balance could amplify intraday swings. Matrixport has not publicly commented, meaning the market is left to interpret the action via on-chain monitoring and wallet behavior.
South Korea’s Ministry of Finance and Economy confirmed the country’s virtual asset tax will take effect as planned in January 2025, ending months of delay speculation. Income Tax Division director Moon Kyung-ho said the National Tax Service (NTS) is finalizing the taxation plan, with an NTS notification expected to be pre-announced soon.
For execution, the NTS is coordinating with South Korea’s five major virtual asset service providers: Dunamu (Upbit), Bithumb, Coinone, Korbit, and Gopax. The meetings focus on reporting, transaction tracking, and tax collection procedures.
The virtual asset tax will apply to capital gains from virtual asset transactions. Exact rates and thresholds are expected to be detailed in the upcoming NTS notification. Market participants should prepare for compliance, including accurate record-keeping and potential tax liabilities starting January 2025.
Overall, the virtual asset tax timeline provides regulatory certainty and signals that South Korea is moving toward more formalized crypto taxation aligned with other major economies.
Neutral
South KoreaVirtual Asset TaxNational Tax Service (NTS)Crypto ComplianceExchange Reporting
XRP is showing an XRP bull flag breakout after reclaiming the $1.42–$1.43 zone, with CoinCodex pricing around $1.43 (about +4.81% on the week). Analysts say the move could mark the start of a stronger upside phase, with the next bullish target near $1.60. A resistance area around $1.66 is highlighted as the key level to confirm trend strength.
The article notes that bull flag patterns often signal continuation. After a sharp rally (the first leg previously gained about 15%), prices typically consolidate sideways. A sustained break above the consolidation range can trigger another leg higher—provided XRP holds support.
Fundamentals and microstructure are also cited. Liquidity is tightening to levels “not seen in years,” and XRP is reported near a 5-year low. Thinner order books can amplify volatility, meaning sustained buying pressure may produce sharper upside price discovery.
Institutional demand is a major catalyst in the piece: XRP ETFs recorded $81.59 million in net inflows in April. Combined with the XRP bull flag breakout setup and tightening liquidity, this points to an early volatility-expansion phase.
Traders’ key trigger levels: hold above $1.42–$1.43 to support momentum; failure there could push XRP back into consolidation and delay the $1.60 attempt. Upside invalidation is framed as a loss of the reclaimed support band; $1.66 is the next resistance to watch.
Bullish
XRPBull Flag BreakoutETF InflowsLiquidity TighteningTechnical Analysis
BNY Mellon, the world’s largest custodian bank by assets under custody (~$59T), plans to launch regulated BTC and ETH custody services in Abu Dhabi. The initial offering will cover BTC and ETH, giving institutional investors a more secure and compliance-ready way to hold digital assets.
The report frames BTC and ETH custody as a major bottleneck for traditional finance. Many institutions want strong operational security, clear legal compliance, and regulated custody standards before allocating larger capital to crypto. BNY Mellon’s expansion is expected to lower onboarding friction for pension funds, asset managers, and private equity.
For crypto traders, this is a mainstream-integration signal: when major institutions build BTC and ETH custody infrastructure, it can support a steadier institutional bid over time. Short-term volatility may still persist, but the move could improve medium- to long-term sentiment for Bitcoin and Ethereum without providing any specific price targets.
Blockaid says it detected a $5.87M TrustedVolumes exploit on Ethereum involving the TrustedVolumes resolver contract (the victim). The attacker drained assets including 1,291.16 WETH, 206,282 USDT, 16.939 WBTC, and 1,268,771 USDC.
Blockaid notes this is tied to a different vulnerability than a prior incident. In March 2025, the same operator exploited 1inch Fusion V1, costing about $5M. This time, Blockaid points to a custom RFQ (request for quote) proxy controlled by TrustedVolumes.
TrustedVolumes acknowledged the incident on X and shared wallet addresses holding the stolen funds. It reported three collection wallets received about $3.0M, $3.0M, and $0.7M respectively. TrustedVolumes also signaled openness to a bug bounty and a “mutually acceptable resolution.”
The report also frames 2026 as a high-risk period: DeFi losses to scams are already near $770M this year, with April alone seeing close to 30 incidents totaling over $600M. It adds that coordinated law-enforcement action (FBI, Dubai Police, and China’s Ministry of Public Security) helped disrupt at least nine crypto fraud scam centers and arrest 276 people.
Traders should watch for renewed risk-off sentiment around Ethereum DeFi, especially for RFQ/liquidity infrastructure, as more TrustedVolumes exploit headlines can amplify perceived smart-contract risk.
Bankrupt exchange Bittrex has asked a federal court to void its $24 million SEC settlement, arguing the SEC has moved away from the legal theory used in Biden-era crypto enforcement. Bittrex claims the SEC now treats most tokens traded on exchanges as not securities, and that continuing the Bittrex settlement would be unfair.
Bittrex also asked the SEC to return the $24 million before it is transferred to the U.S. Treasury for possible distribution to affected former customers. The motion follows the SEC’s earlier request to move the penalty to the Treasury.
The underlying case stems from the SEC’s allegation that Bittrex offered unregistered securities through its crypto trading services. Bittrex later settled for $24 million without admitting or denying wrongdoing, and shut down soon after, citing an unviable regulatory and economic environment.
For traders, this is a process-driven, case-specific development. It does not automatically reprice the market. Still, it supports the broader narrative that “tokens are securities” enforcement risk premia may continue to fade for many assets as policy shifts at the SEC.
South Korea’s Ministry of Economy and Finance says it will follow the original plan to begin virtual asset taxation on Jan 1. This is the ministry’s first public confirmation on the issue, following discussions in an emergency review meeting.
Under the current Income Tax Act, proceeds from transferring or lending virtual assets are classified as “other income.” For profits exceeding 2.5 million KRW, the applicable rate is 22% (20% national tax plus 2% local income tax). The measure targets around 13.26 million investors.
The tax authority is preparing the relevant notice and has held multiple rounds of talks with five major virtual asset operators. The government is expected to release a legislative preview soon.
For traders, clearer virtual asset taxation rules can improve compliance expectations and reduce policy uncertainty, but the 22% tax on realized gains may dampen near-term risk appetite—especially for high-turnover trading strategies.
Neutral
South Korea taxationcrypto regulationincome taxvirtual asset gainsmarket impact
Toncoin (TON) surged about 32% to around $2.89 in 24 hours, continuing a fast rally after Telegram founder Pavel Durov said Telegram will replace the TON Foundation as the ecosystem’s main driver.
The move includes validation control: Telegram is expected to become the largest validator, while new developer tools and performance upgrades are slated for the next weeks. Durov also pointed to a major economics update, with TON transaction fees cut sixfold to near zero, pushing the network toward a fee-less model—key for Telegram-native payments such as tips, bot transfers, mini-app transactions, and collectibles.
Analysts framed the announcement as a “regime change,” targeting the market’s prior bear argument that Telegram and the TON network lacked alignment. After trading around the $2.45–$2.50 area, TON then made a second push higher, hitting its highest level since Oct. 7, 2025. The rally boosted TON market cap to roughly $7.6B, briefly moving it into the top 20 and flipping LINK.
Regulatory and token-supply dynamics also entered the narrative: the article notes the potential “Clarity Act” as a tailwind and suggests 20%+ staking APR could encourage more token lock-ups. Despite the surge, earlier context warns TON fundamentals have lagged in areas like DeFi activity and fees, so this move may be more narrative/positioning-led in the near term than fundamentals-driven.
American Bitcoin (ABTC) shares climbed even after reporting an $81.8 million net loss for Q1 2026, driven by lower Bitcoin prices that cut the value of its digital-asset holdings.
In the quarter, ABTC posted mining revenue of $62.1 million (down from $78.3 million in Q4 2025). Operating expenses rose to $150.7 million. A large mark-to-market hit of $117.2 million tied to reserve revaluation was a key contributor to the loss, per the company. CEO Mike Ho said the core business remained profitable when excluding these non-cash FASB accounting adjustments, and ABTC reported it sold no Bitcoin during the quarter.
Operationally, ABTC mined a record 817 BTC and purchased 803 BTC for its treasury strategy, lifting total holdings to 7,021 BTC by end-March. The firm said gross margin stayed above 50% and improved mining efficiency, reducing the average cost to mine one BTC to $36,200 from $46,900 in the prior quarter, helped by higher production volumes and energy pricing.
Eric Trump characterized the quarter as evidence ABTC can scale efficient Bitcoin accumulation, stating it mined BTC at about a 47% discount to spot while expanding its strategic reserve. ABTC also noted it became the world’s 16th-largest corporate Bitcoin holder within eight months of going public.
Stock-wise, ABTC rose 1.63% on Wednesday to close at $1.25, up more than 40% over the past month, though still down over 72% versus six months ago.
Arbitrum’s TVL reached about $1.6B, supporting a strong May rally for ARB. The article says ARB is up 34.18% over the month, with a 4.67% gain on May 7 alone, and trading volume rising 76.3%.
On the technical side, analysts highlight key resistance near $0.13. A close below $0.1229 could trigger a new correction. A major near-term risk is token unlocking: around 11.58M ARB is expected to unlock soon, which may increase short-term selling pressure. Even with RSI at 61.84, the piece argues there is still upside potential.
Longer-term pricing scenarios cited range from roughly $0.095 to $0.15 by May 2026 (average $0.1209), with a wider 2026 band of about $0.08 to $0.31 (average around $0.21). Current reference pricing is around $0.1265.
Ecosystem updates also support the narrative: after an April vulnerability, 30,766 ETH (about $71M) was recovered and returned to Aave following participation from over 1,600 addresses in a governance vote. The Arbitrum token unlock/airdrop plan mentions 11.5% of total supply distributed in the airdrop phase, 1.1% to ecosystem DAOs, and large allocations reserved for employees/investors and the DAO treasury released gradually.
Overall, this combines improving on-chain fundamentals for Arbitrum with ARB-specific catalysts (unlock risk) that traders may watch for volatility.
OpenPayd CCO Lux Thiagarajah says global payments are converging: businesses need faster, more transparent and predictable infrastructure across payments, FX and stablecoins. Drawing from FX trading experience at J.P. Morgan, he argues that efficiency, execution timing, liquidity access, and reduced opaque FX spreads are key to profitability.
He contrasts legacy finance with modern fintech. Legacy systems are rigid, batch-based and fragmented. Fintech is API-first and modular, designed to scale quickly and orchestrate multiple rails behind a single integration.
For clients, the shift is away from single-rail point solutions toward unified financial infrastructure. They want accounts, payments, FX and increasingly digital assets via one integration, plus reliability and optionality to route transactions across traditional rails and stablecoin settlement.
Thiagarajah also highlights embedded finance and programmable payments as the next layer: platforms own the user experience, infrastructure providers handle complexity, while banks provide the regulatory foundation.
Looking ahead, he expects growth to be driven by convergence and “orchestration” across existing components. Stablecoins can operate at scale, APIs are standard, and regulation such as MiCA and the GENIUS Act is becoming clearer. The opportunity for providers like OpenPayd is to unify fragmented rails so the end user experiences it as simple.
Keywords: stablecoins, unified financial infrastructure, payments, FX, APIs, orchestration.
Reuters reports that a key set of Sam Altman’s messages from Nov. 2023 was shown at trial in federal court in Oakland.
On Nov. 17, OpenAI fired Altman as CEO, citing “not enough candor.” Two days later, during a call, CTO Mira Murati told Altman the board’s direction was “directionally very bad.” Murati also said the board wanted a leadership change that night.
In the disclosed iMessage chain, Altman floated a deal idea: having Microsoft acquire OpenAI to meet the board’s governance concerns. Murati brought Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella into the call. When asked how talks went, Murati replied that Nadella was “being diplomatic.”
Altman also asked whether he could re-enter leadership talks with the board; he was blocked. He discussed potential options such as soliciting a team-wide resignation letter, but Murati said the board did not care if everyone quit.
The court messaging details the five-day crisis around Altman’s removal and his eventual reinstatement after more than 700 employees backed him with a collective letter. The trial aims to support Elon Musk’s lawsuit narrative about how OpenAI shifted after Altman returned.
Key figures include Sam Altman, Mira Murati, Satya Nadella, board chair Bret Taylor (and earlier references to Emmett Shear, Anthropic, and Dario Amodei).