Crypto research firm BIT says Bitcoin (BTC) is likely to stay in its current correction for about the next two months, with the cycle low most likely occurring in September. BIT notes July historically tends to be strong for BTC, but past patterns often show a follow-on two-month pullback after those rallies.
The report links the softer risk appetite this summer to the absence of optimistic catalysts such as the “Genius Act,” which supported markets last year. BIT also flags weak trading volumes and high downside risk. In its view, low liquidity reduces the market’s ability to trigger a sustained uptrend, meaning downside pressure could persist into the coming weeks.
BIT advises investors to favor strategies aimed at steadier returns rather than aggressive directional bets while monitoring macroeconomic conditions, central bank policy, institutional demand, and regulatory developments. The article does not provide investment advice.
Bitcoin (BTC) fell nearly 20% in June, its weakest monthly performance since June 2022. At the time of writing, BTC was trading around $58,600 and had slipped below $60,000.
On the monthly chart, June printed a large red candle with almost no upper or lower shadows. This “shadowless” structure is a Marubozu pattern, which traders typically read as strong one-sided selling with minimal countertrend bounce. The month’s closing level also matched the session’s low, reinforcing the idea of persistent bearish pressure.
Analysts cited the pattern as more than just a headline drawdown. Because such extended, one-direction selling is rare on a monthly timeframe, they warn the downtrend may continue. A potential bottom is being watched in a lower range of roughly $48,000 to $55,000.
For traders, the immediate implication is that BTC may remain pressured while market structure stays bearish. Dip-buying could be difficult unless BTC reclaims key levels and develops a reversal candle with visible counter-shadows. Until then, the Marubozu setup keeps downside risk elevated for the near term, while longer-term bulls may need confirmation before increasing exposure.
Disclaimer: This is not investment advice. Crypto markets are volatile; do your own research.
Bitcoin saw a sharp fall in millionaire addresses during the first half of 2026. According to Finbold’s H1 2026 Cryptocurrency Market Report, Bitcoin wallet addresses holding at least $1 million fell from 148,084 on Jan. 1 to 121,431 by June 30.
That is a loss of 26,653 “millionaire addresses” (down 18%) in six months. The largest decline came from the $1 million–$10 million tier, which dropped from 131,716 to 107,989 (down 23,727). Higher-value wallets also weakened: addresses worth $10 million or more fell from 16,368 to 13,533 (down 2,835).
The decline continued after Q1. By end of Q1 2026, millionaire addresses were already down to 127,494 (−20,590 from the start of the year). During Q2 alone, the count fell further by 6,063 to reach 121,431.
This H1 2026 trend reverses H1 2025, when Bitcoin added 26,758 millionaire addresses (from 155,569 to 182,327). The article notes that the data may reflect “price-driven reclassification” rather than pure capital flight: falling BTC prices can push addresses below $1 million or $10 million thresholds. Even so, Bitcoin’s millionaire cohort showed broad on-chain wealth contraction as BTC fell about 34.2% from roughly $88,700 (Jan. 1) to $58,315 (June 30).
Key takeaway for traders: Bitcoin millionaire address counts weakened alongside price, with the most pressure near the $1M threshold, suggesting on-chain distribution remains under stress.
Edel Finance disclosed a flash-loan-assisted oracle manipulation that drained about $403,000 from its xStock lending reserves on Edel Lending. Security firm Blockaid detected the exploit as it unfolded.
The attacker distorted the exchange rate between wGOOGLx and GOOGLx. Because the oracle reported wGOOGLx collateral at roughly 78x its correct price, the attacker borrowed against inflated collateral and created bad debt of around $403,000 in the protocol.
Blockaid says the attacker deployed new exploit contracts for the campaign. Blocked funds moved quickly through Tornado Cash, and Etherscan transaction/wallet records provide starting points for follow-up tracing.
In response, Edel paused all V1 contracts immediately and kept V1 offline. Users were advised not to interact with V1 during the pause. Edel stated it preserved protocol records to identify affected balances and pledged full 1:1 depositor restoration, with bad debt absorbed by the team.
Edel plans a V2 rollout featuring a redesigned oracle architecture aimed at preventing the specific exchange-rate manipulation used in the attack. Restored balances are expected to become available inside the Edel application after V2 deployment, though no firm timeline was provided.
The team is coordinating with exchanges and ecosystem partners and has extended a whitehat settlement offer to the attacker, offering a defined window to return remaining funds in exchange for an authorized security bounty. A technical post-mortem is expected, and Edel referenced EIP-01 as a next step for governance over protocol risk parameters and supported collateral.
Bitcoin closed June with its steepest monthly decline in three years, dropping about 20% and printing a bearish Marubozu monthly candle. The candle is described as full-bodied with minimal wicks, suggesting sellers controlled price from open to close.
Technical analysts interpret this Marubozu as a continuation signal, especially after months of sideways-to-lower trading. Several analysts have adjusted near-term projections: a potential support/bottom zone is cited at $48,000–$55,000 (about 10%–20% further downside). Some scenarios warn that deteriorating macro conditions could push Bitcoin below $48,000, with an extreme downside range mentioned at $40,000–$45,000.
The article links the move to macro headwinds and shifting institutional sentiment. For traders, the key implication is “path of least resistance” remains lower, while short-term rallies may face selling pressure unless a fundamental catalyst changes sentiment. It also flags elevated volatility risk around monthly/quarterly options expirations as traders position for the next leg.
Notably, the prior worst-month reference is June 2022, when the Terra ecosystem collapse shook crypto markets. The current setup is framed as more gradual but persistent.
Overall, Bitcoin’s Marubozu candle aligns with a cautious outlook: watch $48,000–$55,000 closely, but be prepared for deeper moves if macro risk worsens.
Crypto analysts say a Bitcoin liquidation heatmap points to a “liquidity squeeze” that could trap both bulls and bears before the next move.
According to analyst Seth, Bitcoin has already cleared long-liquidation demand: when BTC dipped to around $57,800, about $1.16B in leveraged long positions were liquidated. After a rebound toward $59K, Seth notes another ~$1.16B long-liquidity cluster forming near $57.8K, as traders again try to buy the dip—sometimes with extreme leverage (up to 100x).
Seth’s key warning is the upside: if price re-enters the $62,000 area, nearly $4.14B in cumulative short liquidations could force short-covering and accelerate a short squeeze toward/around $62K.
A second view comes from trader SantinoCripto and analyst Ali Martinez. They highlight a major liquidity concentration between $50,000 and $57,000, suggesting BTC may revisit that zone over the next 1–2 months. Ali Martinez adds that a drop to $50K could liquidate roughly $70M in long positions, potentially increasing selling pressure and helping establish a deeper “bear market floor.”
Despite near-term uncertainty, historical context remains supportive. The article cites data showing July has been one of Bitcoin’s stronger months, with an average monthly return around 7% and positive finishes in most of the past 13 years.
For traders, this Bitcoin liquidation setup implies two possible paths: a volatility spike from a $62K short-squeeze, or a flush toward the $50K–$52K liquidity pocket before the next rally. Managing leverage and watching liquidation levels closely is critical given the potential for fast reversals.
Neutral
Bitcoin liquidation heatmapliquidity squeezeshort squeezeleverage & liquidationsBTC key zones
AUD/USD is under renewed selling pressure as US Treasury yields surge and global markets shift to risk-off. The pair fell below 0.6500 during Asian and early European trading, reflecting a flight toward the safe-haven US dollar.
The driver is a jump in US 10-year Treasury yields to the highest level in weeks. The move follows stronger-than-expected US data and hawkish Federal Reserve commentary, reinforcing expectations that the Fed may keep rates higher for longer. Higher yields raise the opportunity cost of holding lower-yielding and riskier currencies such as the Australian dollar, pressuring AUD/USD.
Risk-off sentiment also hits commodity-linked currencies. With equities trading lower, the AUD—often viewed as a proxy for global growth and China-linked commodity demand—tends to weaken versus safe havens like the JPY and CHF.
Rate divergence is widening. The RBA is holding its cash rate at 4.10% with a cautious stance, while Fed messaging suggests further tightening risk due to persistent inflation. That policy gap supports the USD on a yield-differential basis and adds downward pressure to AUD/USD.
Technically, AUD/USD is testing support around 0.6480–0.6500. A clean break could open declines toward 0.6400 (last seen in early November). Resistance sits near 0.6550, then 0.6600. Traders will watch upcoming US inflation prints and Fed speeches for direction.
Former Goliath Ventures CEO Christopher Alexander Delgado pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering tied to a $400M crypto Ponzi scheme. The DOJ said Goliath promised monthly returns from digital asset liquidity pools between Jan 2023 and Jan 2026, but prosecutors allege investor funds were used to pay earlier investors, cover withdrawals, finance luxury spending, and fund business events.
Delgado admitted the scheme caused at least $250M in investor losses and agreed to forfeit an extensive portfolio of assets. The DOJ listed eight properties, 11 vehicles, 30 watches, 50+ luxury bags and wallets, at least 29 pieces of jewelry, plus bank accounts and crypto wallets. Sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 8, with penalties of up to 20 years per fraud count and up to 10 years for money laundering.
The plea follows Delgado’s public apology on TV (May 12, via WFTV), where he said he was cooperating with authorities and that about $160,000 remained in the company account at arrest. The case has also raised questions about financial institutions processing Goliath funds. A proposed class action filed March 12 alleges JPMorgan ignored suspicious transactions and enabled fund routing—about $253M passing through a JPMorgan account, including around $123M later transferred to Goliath wallets at Coinbase. Separate complaints cited Bank of America and direct flows to Coinbase wallets.
The Swiss Franc (Swiss Franc) continues to drift lower versus the US Dollar, with USD/CHF edging up toward 0.8100. This move persists even after Switzerland reported solid retail sales.
Swiss retail sales rose 1.2% month-over-month (seasonally adjusted), beating the forecast of 0.5%. The data signals resilient consumer demand and would normally support the Swiss Franc by lowering the probability of aggressive Swiss National Bank (SNB) easing. However, the Swiss Franc’s decline shows external drivers are dominating.
The key factor is renewed US Dollar strength. Traders expect the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates higher for longer, widening the interest-rate differential. Higher US yields make USD-denominated assets more attractive, pulling capital away from the Franc.
Risk and safe-haven dynamics are also shifting. Although the Swiss Franc is usually considered a safe-haven, markets appear to favour the US Dollar due to its liquidity and yield advantage.
For traders, 0.8100 is a key psychological and technical level. A sustained break above it could extend Franc weakness and open the door to a push toward 0.8200.
Overall, the Swiss Franc (Swiss Franc) is being priced more by US policy expectations and global positioning than by Switzerland’s domestic growth data.
Edel Finance was hit by a flash-loan oracle exploit that manipulated the wrapped xStocks exchange rate, briefly inflating wGOOGLx collateral value by about 78x. This allowed the attacker to borrow far beyond the collateral’s real value, creating significant bad debt.
The exploit quickly spilled into liquidity. After user confidence deteriorated, Edel Finance total value locked (TVL) fell from roughly $630,000 to about $947, alongside a net outflow of an estimated $630,000 (largest on record). A $100,000 inflow earlier could not offset the accelerating withdrawals.
Edel Finance contained the damage, but the incident exposed ongoing weaknesses in oracle and collateral pricing across tokenized lending markets. Unless oracle protections and collateral validation are fully strengthened, confidence may remain fragile.
For traders, this flash-loan oracle exploit is a near-term liquidity and risk-management signal for tokenized lending DeFi: expect heightened withdrawal pressure, slower capital return, and more scrutiny of oracle design and collateral valuation. Longer term, recovery will depend on sustained deposit growth, stabilizing TVL, and reduced daily outflows as users reassess platform security.
Open USD is being pitched as a partner-led “digital dollar” network rather than “just another stablecoin.” The initiative is tied to the Open Standard and is backed by 140+ partners, including Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, Coinbase and BlackRock.
Key details highlighted in the announcement and follow-up reporting: Open USD is designed as a token (OUSD) under the Open Standard, with no explicit mint/redeem fees stated. After a small management fee, most reserve earnings flow to participating partners. The project is slated for launch later in 2026, with reports of native Solana support from day one and other chains possibly added around rollout.
Market signal: Circle shares reportedly fell more than 17% on the reveal day, underscoring investor concern that a partner-driven model could compete with incumbents tied to USDC.
For crypto traders, the main trading-relevant angle is how Open USD could change stablecoin distribution and economics. If reserve yield is shared across payments brands, exchanges and fintech partners, adoption could accelerate in card-like settlement and merchant/consumer checkout flows. The timeline (later 2026) also implies near-term uncertainty, with execution details likely to drive actual liquidity, chain routing, and relative competitive pressure versus existing large dollar tokens.
A Shanghai crypto forex case has resulted in five prison sentences after authorities said an illegal foreign exchange network used crypto to move $29.4M abroad.
The Shanghai Jing’an District People’s Procuratorate said nine people were arrested, with five defendants receiving terms from 2.5 to 6 years. Fines ranged from 300,000 to 1.5 million yuan (about $44,150–$220,780).
Prosecutors said the group helped domestic clients transfer more than 200 million yuan (about $29.4M) overseas over three years. The operation was linked to clients seeking funds for property purchases, emigration, and study abroad, and it expanded via regular agents.
The case began after China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange flagged unusual transactions tied to a company in July 2024. Authorities alleged the company used crypto features and on-chain transfer activity to make flows harder to trace and evidence easier to preserve, while processing over 170 million yuan (about $25M) through a domestic client manager who later left and started another currency conversion business.
China continues to tighten enforcement against crypto-linked laundering, underground banking, and cross-border transfers, even though mainland China bans crypto trading and related financial services.
For traders, this crypto forex case highlights that compliance risk around cross-border crypto transfers remains high, particularly for OTC and China-facing intermediaries.
Utorg announced it has received full authorization under the EU’s MiCA regulation, effective July 1, 2026—the day the MiCA transitional period ends and unapproved crypto-asset service providers can no longer serve European users. The company says its MiCA license clears it to operate across all 29 EEA member states.
MiCA is the EU’s unified crypto regulatory framework, requiring consumer protection and compliance measures such as segregating customer funds from company assets, disclosing fees upfront, and allowing users to file complaints with national regulators. If a MiCA-authorized platform fails, user asset protections apply under EU law.
Utorg also highlighted ongoing EU oversight through reporting obligations and supervisory review. The platform is available to EEA residents from July 1 via its app, including a non-custodial multi-chain wallet and a crypto card accepted by 80M+ merchants, with Google Pay and Apple Pay support.
For card users, Utorg claims no issuance/maintenance/top-up fees and states it meets MiCA-mandated AML/KYC requirements. It also holds a PCI DSS Level 2 certificate for payment security.
Market context: in the run-up to July 1, many firms reportedly reduced or exited European operations, leaving fewer licensed options for users. Traders may view this as incremental regulatory tightening that can improve trust in compliant on/off-ramps and wallets, while limiting access to services from non-authorized providers.
A dense US macro schedule is set to shape risk sentiment for crypto markets ahead of the July 28–29 FOMC meeting. Key releases run July 1–15, with each step potentially changing rate-path expectations.
NFP (June jobs report) arrives Thursday, July 2 at 8:30 a.m. ET, about two weeks after the Fed’s hawkish June hold. May payrolls rose 172,000 and the unemployment rate stayed consistent with a tight labor market. A materially softer NFP would complicate the case for a July hike, but the Fed’s next signals will also come from subsequent inflation data and FOMC minutes.
FOMC minutes follow Wednesday, July 8 at 2:00 p.m. ET. This is the first meeting under Chair Kevin Warsh. Rates were held at 3.50%–3.75%, and the dot plot shifted toward at least one potential 2026 rate hike. Warsh notably abstained from submitting his own dot, putting more emphasis on how the committee discussed the trade-off between still-elevated inflation and resilient employment.
CPI (June) lands Tuesday, July 14 at 8:30 a.m. ET, 15 days before the July decision. May headline CPI was +4.2% YoY (energy-led), while core CPI was +2.9% YoY. CPI is the last major inflation read before the meeting, so continued headline strength or renewed core pressure would be hawkish.
On July 14, JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs also report Q2 earnings before market open, adding to volatility even though they are not direct crypto catalysts.
Traders should also note the holiday-adjusted calendar around early July liquidity, and the sequence effect: NFP first, then minutes (July 8) contextualizing policy debate, and CPI (July 14) as the final inflation leg before the July FOMC.
Tron Network in June reached all-time highs in both active users and transaction volume, according to on-chain analytics from Lookonchain. Active accounts rose to 26.97 million (record), while total transactions climbed to 385.77 million, marking Tron’s strongest monthly performance to date.
The increase in Tron active users signals broader adoption, while higher transaction volume suggests faster on-chain activity across the ecosystem. Analysts note Tron’s growth is closely linked to its low fees and high capacity, with heavy usage for USDT transfers being a key driver.
Tron traders should note: rising on-chain activity often reflects real usage, but it does not automatically translate into sustained TRX price strength. Price performance can also be influenced by broader crypto market trends, investor demand, and macro conditions.
Bottom line: June’s data points to continued expansion of Tron’s use cases, but traders should watch whether this momentum flows through to TRX market pricing rather than assuming a direct price outcome.
Bullish
TronOn-chain activityUSDT transfersNetwork adoptionTRX price outlook
Ripple (XRP) is being cited as enabling real-time cross-border payments between Japan and Thailand. Crypto researcher SMQKE posted evidence and a transaction flow diagram showing Japanese yen (JPY) moving through XRP and being converted into Thai baht (THB).
The accompanying slide references Ripple’s collaborations with multiple financial institutions, but the core case study centers on Thailand’s Siam Commercial Bank (SCB) and Japan-based SBI Remit. According to the presentation, Ripple’s technology allowed individual fund transfers by routing JPY into THB deposits held in SCB savings accounts.
Key statistic: the implementation reportedly reduced settlement time from about two business days to roughly 2–5 seconds, supporting the claim of “real-time” international settlement.
The document also includes a quoted statement attributed to SCB Chief Strategy Officer Dr. Arak Sutivong, saying SCB was proud to be the first institution to use Ripple’s blockchain network for real-time Japan–Thailand payments, with plans to expand to additional markets.
SMQKE linked the discussion to CoinDesk reporting that Thailand’s central bank has announced plans for a baht-backed stablecoin for interbank settlement (with public consultation expected before year-end). While Ripple’s direct involvement in the stablecoin plan was not claimed, traders are likely to read the XRP payment corridor as reinforcement of Ripple’s existing cross-border infrastructure in Thailand.
Community reactions on the post also debated whether payments utility should translate into XRP price performance, highlighting the usual adoption-to-price uncertainty for crypto investors.
Neutral
RippleXRP paymentscross-border settlementsThailand stablecoinSiam Commercial Bank (SCB)
The US Department of Commerce has lifted export controls on Anthropic’s frontier AI models Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5. Anthropic says public access will resume, starting the next day, after officials reviewed the deployment and compliance requirements.
The restrictions were imposed on June 12, when US authorities raised concerns about a reported “jailbreak” technique that could make Claude Fable 5 output software vulnerability information. Anthropic initially suspended access for all users and disabled the models to comply with an export directive that applied to foreign nationals, including foreign-national employees.
Anthropic now says redeployed versions of Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 will include new classifiers designed to block more cybersecurity-related tasks, addressing government concerns about potential misuse if safeguards are bypassed. The company attributes the clearance to “a series of productive conversations” with the US government and says it is expanding cooperation on testing, safeguards, and misuse tracking.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the US worked with Anthropic over two weeks to analyze and approve Claude Fable 5 while strengthening alignment with government requirements. White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles emphasized deploying the best AI technology “as quickly and safely as possible.” The episode follows external debate about recall standards and continued discussions over frontier AI oversight.
Neutral
AnthropicClaude Fable 5AI export controlscybersecurity safetyUS Commerce Department
Phantom has hired three Ventuals creators—Alvin Hsia, Emily Hsia and Aris Samad—to its trading and data teams, following the shutdown of Ventuals’ OpenAI- and Anthropic-themed perpetual futures on Hyperliquid.
The move supports Phantom’s deeper push into perpetual futures and Hyperliquid-based trading products. Phantom CEO Brandon Millman said the team’s expertise will help Phantom move faster in building always-on derivatives linked to the Hyperliquid ecosystem, which he described as having strong liquidity and transparent onchain infrastructure. Phantom also reiterated that it is the largest distribution partner within Hyperliquid and plans to keep expanding its perps focus.
For traders, the key takeaway is that talent and product know-how are consolidating around Hyperliquid-style perpetual markets at the wallet layer (Phantom’s self-custody wallet adding trading features). Ventuals previously gained attention for offering perpetual contracts tied to private-company valuation narratives (including OpenAI and Anthropic), but those products were closed.
Broader context: perennial (non-crypto-native) expansion of perpetual futures continues, with regulated Kalshi launching its own perpetuals after receiving approval. Overall, Phantom’s hire reinforces market confidence in perpetual futures as a core growth area, though it does not directly change liquid spot demand in the near term.
Bitcoin (BTC) slid below $59,000 and hovered around $58,700 as U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF outflows rose to a record $4.5B in June, per SoSoValue. On June 30 alone, Bitcoin ETF outflows totaled about $222.6M and extended a nine-day losing streak. BlackRock’s IBIT accounted for the largest withdrawals (about $3.55B for June).
The drop is also tied to weaker U.S. spot demand signals. CryptoQuant flagged a negative Coinbase Premium Index and deeply negative “apparent demand,” while long-term holders/whales reportedly continued accumulating. Technically, BTC closed below the 200-week moving average for the first time since 2023, a widely watched marker for potential deep-cycle lows.
Traders now focus on $58,000 support. If it breaks, the next major area is near $50,000 (around the Aug 2024 low near $49,445). A stabilization may require BTC to reclaim key moving averages (30-day and 200-day) to improve sentiment. Analysts remain split—some see a mid-cycle correction, while others warn the structure stays fragile without improving ETF flows and spot inflows. Net-net, Bitcoin ETF outflows and liquidity/demand indicators look more decisive than price alone.
Bearish
Bitcoin ETF outflowsBTC support levelsSoSoValue dataCryptoQuant demand200-week moving average
OpenUSD (OUSD) is a new US dollar stablecoin project overseen by Open Standard and backed by 140+ companies, including Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, American Express, Coinbase, BlackRock, BNY, Standard Chartered, ICE, OKX, Bybit, Ripple, and major blockchain platforms like Solana and Base. The consortium expects a later 2026 launch.
For traders, OUSD’s main differentiator is its “zero-fee + reserve earnings sharing” structure. Open Standard says businesses can mint and redeem OpenUSD with no fees and no volume limits. Reserve earnings are designed to be shared with partners after a small management fee. Governance is structured around Open Standard’s partner board rather than a single controlling issuer.
The rollout may pressure USDC’s competitive position. The earlier coverage flagged Circle’s stock slide after the announcement, and the later article adds an analyst view that OUSD’s design principles could affect USDC revenue sharing, distribution partnerships, or product focus.
What to watch: OUSD’s launch timing, reserve-revenue mechanics in practice, and whether big payment networks increase issuance or distribution support—factors that can shift liquidity and trading flows across USDT/USDC alternatives.
Neutral
OpenUSDStablecoinsUSDC vs USDTReserve governancePayment network consortium
Global Miranda Miner Group (GMMG) partnered with the Philippine Digital Asset Exchange (PDAX) to launch a Crypto Technical Analyst Executive Course aimed at closing risk management gaps among local retail investors. The inaugural face-to-face batch just ended at the PDAX office in Pasig City with 30 participants.
The rollout comes after 2026 market volatility, including a Bitcoin (BTC) drop in February and large-scale liquidations in May. GMMG CEO Arlone Abello—known as “Coach Miranda Miner”—said trading performance depends more on risk appetite and time tolerance than on price prediction alone. The program uses GMMG’s proprietary FEAST Trading System and covers technical analysis, market psychology, risk management, and trading execution.
Key topics include support and resistance identification, risk-reward balancing, and exposure management before placing trades. Besides crypto, the course highlights regulated alternative investment options available on PDAX, including conservative fixed-income instruments such as Retail Treasury Bonds (RTBs).
The next PDAX-GMMG batch is scheduled for July 11–12, 2026, with plans to expand the training to Cebu, Davao, and Baguio later in the year. Graduates in the first cohort came from healthcare, law enforcement, engineering, legal, maritime, entrepreneurship, and universities.
Bitcoin fell to about $58K, its lowest level in roughly a year, briefly trading under $58,000 and intensifying bear-market fears. One market-maker warning suggests the “bottom” may not yet be in place, citing missing the typical trigger for a durable reversal: renewed spot buying. Persistent spot Bitcoin ETF outflows and soft over-the-counter demand are limiting fresh bids.
Key demand signals remain weak. The Coinbase Premium (a proxy for US/institutional flows) fell about 15% in 24 hours to around -110 and has been negative since late April, indicating US investors leaning toward selling. Analysts also highlighted potential additional supply concerns linked to Strategy’s STRC financing structure, arguing it could introduce extra selling once it begins operating.
Positioning in derivatives adds to volatility risk. The article notes a long-skewed derivatives setup (roughly 70.7% longs; 2.41 long/short ratio) with barely positive funding and high open interest, raising the chance of a squeeze if price drops further. Technical/indicator context: RSI is near 30 (edge of oversold) and the move is described as downtrend. Support highlighted near $57,753 and a break could open the door toward lower levels; resistance is near $60,724.
Traders’ near-term watchlist includes US non-farm payrolls and whether Bitcoin can defend key support levels. Overall, the report frames Bitcoin as still under pressure into late summer/autumn unless spot demand returns.
London Blockchain Summit will host the “London Blockchain Institutional Tokenisation Summit” on July 7 at DLA Piper in London. The event is aimed at helping tokenization move from pilots to real institutional markets by mapping the full lifecycle of real-world assets (RWA) on-chain—issuance, trading, financing, custody, collateral, and post-trade infrastructure.
The summit brings together banks, asset managers, financial infrastructure providers, market makers, and exchanges from TradFi and DeFi. Speakers include Sebastien Guglietta (Laser Digital/Nomura), Vadim Khramov (Edge Capital), Myles Harrison (AMINA Bank), and Theo Golden (Baillie Gifford). Institutions and platforms represented are Galaxy Digital (GLXY), BlackRock (BLK), NYSE, State Street (STT), Clearstream, NatWest (NWG), and Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
Key agenda pillars cover: (1) legal, custody, and settlement foundations for institutional-ready tokenization; (2) the infrastructure gap needed for tokenized assets to be traded, financed, and used as collateral at scale; and (3) which asset classes (e.g., gold, commodities, equities) face structural hurdles that digital infrastructure can solve.
Notable sessions include “Tokenised Funds: From Wrapper to Operating Model,” focused on integrating tokenized funds into authorized structures rather than creating a “digital twin.” Another panel targets tokenized equities and the steps required to scale liquidity. The summit also includes a “Future of Trading” discussion on how more mature tokenization market structures could reshape trading dynamics.
SEO note: The institutional tokenization focus is central to the summit’s purpose, with tokenization discussed throughout its legal, infrastructure, and market-structure agenda.
Nearly 1,700 UK investors have filed a group action in London’s High Court against Binance and founder Changpeng Zhao (CZ), seeking at least £150 million in damages over alleged losses from crypto derivatives.
The claim targets Binance Holdings and Nest Exchange (UAE-registered). Plaintiffs allege Binance offered and promoted leveraged products—futures, options and leveraged tokens—to UK customers from late 2019, including after the UK FCA’s restrictions took effect.
Investors argue Binance breached the UK Financial Services and Markets Act by supplying regulated products without authorization. The lawsuit covers leveraged tokens, futures contracts and options losses, and reportedly excludes spot crypto trading losses.
The UK FCA retail ban started on Jan. 6, 2021, restricting sales, marketing and distribution of crypto derivatives and crypto ETPs. Binance says it will defend the case and claims it limited UK access and sought additional user information after the ban.
For traders, this Binance crypto derivatives lawsuit is mainly regulatory and legal “headline risk.” Near-term market impact will likely hinge on court timelines and whether any remedies or access constraints emerge during the process.
Neutral
Binancecrypto derivativesUK FCAclass actionLondon High Court
A Florida man, Christopher Alexander Delgado (34), has pleaded guilty in a Goliath Ventures crypto Ponzi scheme. Prosecutors said investors sent at least $400 million for promised returns from crypto “liquidity pools”, but only about $1 million went into legitimate crypto assets.
Delgado admitted causing at least $250 million in investor losses and agreed to forfeit luxury homes, cars, watches, bags and jewelry. He pleaded guilty to wire fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and money laundering. Each wire-fraud count carries up to 20 years in federal prison, while money laundering carries up to 10 years.
Authorities allege the crypto Ponzi ran from January 2023 to January 2026, using personal referrals, marketing materials, and high-end networking events to appear legitimate. Prosecutors said investor funds were used for business gatherings and personal spending, including purchases of at least six residences (about $1.15m–$8.5m each), multiple luxury vehicles, Rolex watches, and dozens of Louis Vuitton items.
For crypto traders, the key takeaway is reputational risk and heightened regulatory scrutiny around “yield” products. While this case does not directly target BTC trading, it reinforces bearish sentiment toward similar schemes and can increase caution across the broader market for yield-seeking strategies tied to centralized claims.
LG Electronics is piloting an onchain advertising on Arbitrum network via its Blockchain Research Lab. The project aims to record ad performance in a shared, verifiable system so advertisers, publishers, and auditors can independently check campaign data instead of relying on closed platform reports.
In digital advertising, impressions, clicks, and conversions are often measured across separate systems, which can lead to disputes, delayed reconciliations, and later audits. LG’s onchain advertising on Arbitrum test uses Arbitrum as neutral infrastructure to store a reviewable activity record for approved parties.
LG says ad fraud is a key driver, as automated ad buying can make fake traffic harder to distinguish from real users, weakening trust in results. Privacy shifts are another factor: tightening data rules and platform restrictions reduce available user information, making targeting and performance tracking more difficult. LG also notes that user engagement has not always risen despite higher ad volume, increasing demand for clearer proof of what worked.
The pilot is early, so wider adoption depends on cost, privacy design, publisher support, and advertiser demand. LG’s effort positions blockchain mainly as a verification layer for ad accountability, not as speculation.
Global ad spending is forecast to reach $1.3T in 2026, which could increase the value of standardized, verifiable reporting if the model scales.
U.S. President Donald Trump disclosed that his Trump crypto revenue topped $1 billion in the latest U.S. Office of Government Ethics filing. The report cites about $635M in royalties tied to Trump’s memecoin and more than $500M from token sales linked to World Liberty Financial.
The filing also details additional crypto-related stakes, including exposure to BTC and ETH via Trump-affiliated entities and a reported position in CoreWeave. For traders, this “Trump crypto revenue” headline is more of a governance-and-regulatory signal than a direct liquidity or protocol catalyst.
Market impact is likely mixed. It may keep crypto in the mainstream spotlight and affect short-term risk sentiment, but it can also increase compliance and oversight attention around politically connected token sales—raising the odds of volatility as traders watch for follow-on details on token structure, liquidity, and custody.
Neutral
Trump crypto revenueMemecoinWorld Liberty FinancialRegulatory riskBTC
Bitcoin (BTC) has logged a weekly close below its 200-week moving average (WMA) for the first time since October 2023, an extremely rare technical breakdown in Bitcoin’s 17-year history. Traders widely view the 200-week line as a “line in the sand” between structural bull markets and prolonged crypto winters.
The break triggered sharp volatility and forced more than $320 million in leveraged long positions to be liquidated within 24 hours. Analysts note that sustained weekly closes under the 200-week WMA have historically coincided with major macro bear-market lows.
In 2026, market structure may differ due to heavier institutional and corporate treasury exposure. Financial commentator Peter Schiff warned that key support levels are fragile. He highlighted MicroStrategy (a major BTC holder) and noted that if Bitcoin holds below $58,000, price could face a “technical void” down toward August 2024 lows near $49,000. A further failure there could open the door to a macro retest of the prior cycle’s $20,000 peak.
At the time of reporting, BTC was down about 53% from its record high, per CoinGecko. For traders, this sets up a key watchlist around $58,000 and then ~$49,000, with liquidation-driven moves increasing the risk of both fast downside and volatility spikes.
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded record $4.5B net outflows in June 2024, the worst monthly performance since launch in January 2024. The selling pressure extended to nine straight trading days, adding another $222.6M in net withdrawals on June 30.
Flows were highly concentrated: BlackRock’s IBIT led with about $3.55B of the month’s outflows, while Fidelity’s focus remained a smaller share of the withdrawals. Market narratives cited macro uncertainty and higher rates, alongside rotation into other opportunities.
For traders, spot Bitcoin ETF flows are a near-term signal. If net outflows persist, they can act as a real demand shock that pressures BTC demand and sentiment. If the trend reverses, it may suggest improving risk appetite and support near-term price action.
Key risk: sustained spot Bitcoin ETF outflows may move BTC more than sentiment alone because daily flow prints directly affect perceived spot demand and liquidity expectations.