US President Donald Trump signed two executive orders to accelerate US quantum computing and a national shift to post-quantum cryptography. One order pushes the government-wide push for the next National Quantum Strategy update and a new QC-ADDS initiative to scale quantum computing for application development and discovery science. The other order targets quantum-assisted cryptographic attacks and directs federal leaders to accelerate migration to post-quantum cryptography, warning that large-scale adversary quantum computers pose a “significant threat” to widely used encryption.
For crypto traders, this strengthens the urgency around post-quantum cryptography “ahead of Q-Day” and may keep risk-premium headlines elevated in the short term. Longer term, it supports gradual, credibility-building defensive upgrades and aligns with existing roadmaps from Ethereum and Solana, while Bitcoin remains split on protecting legacy coins.
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Post-quantum cryptographyQuantum computing policyUS National Quantum StrategyCrypto security roadmapsQ-Day risk
South Korea’s second-largest exchange, **Bithumb**, will add **Canton (CC)** to its **KRW market** on **June 23, 2026**. The listing is expected to give Korean traders direct access to CC, but technical signals remain soft: the article cites **MACD bearish** and **RSI below neutral (~46)** despite a modest daily rise.
Bithumb said deposits and withdrawals will open within two hours of the notice, with trading starting at **14:00 local time**. The exchange will support **Canton Mainnet only**, and set a **reference price of 234 KRW**. Order-flow controls apply at launch: **buy orders pause for 5 minutes** after trading begins; **sell orders** face a **5-minute price band** around the reference price; for about **two hours**, only **limit orders** are allowed.
The news also follows a Canton Network protocol update (**CIP-0119 approved**), which reduces onboarding friction by adding a **free 90-day base duration** to transfer preapprovals—aiming to address a “bootstrapping” issue where new participants previously needed CC to receive CC.
Market context: CC last traded around **$0.154** with **~$10.65M** 24h volume and a market cap near **$5.98B**. Over seven days, CC was down roughly **6–7%**, reinforcing the “weak momentum” framing.
For traders, the key takeaway is that **Bithumb’s Canton listing** may improve access and liquidity, but the current setup suggests a higher chance of **consolidation** unless CC’s momentum indicators flip.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has lifted its moratorium on transaction fee increases for InstaPay and PESONet under new digital payment pricing rules, effective alongside BSP Circular No. 1238. The Monetary Board approved the change via Resolution No. 498, based on Memorandum No. 2026-025.
Under the new framework signed by BSP Governor Eli Remolona Jr., BSP-supervised financial institutions (BSFIs) must use market-based pricing tied to quantitative analysis of delivery costs. Banks and payment service providers may adjust transfer fees, but only with regulatory oversight.
A key requirement: fees for off-us transfers (between different institutions) must not materially differ from on-us transfers (within the same institution), except for direct switching costs. For person-to-person (P2P) transfers, recipients must receive the full amount free of charges. BSP also expects electronic payment service fees to stay lower than manual or over-the-counter fees.
The circular also sets rules for digital financial marketplaces, including requirements for at least three unaffiliated providers, an advanced electronic payments license, and combined capital of at least 1 billion pesos.
BSP data show combined InstaPay and PESONet transaction value hit 13.1 trillion pesos as of May 2026 (+44% year-on-year) and volume reached 3.5 billion transactions. The update supports broader digital payments goals, with government targets to reach 60–70% of retail payments digitally by 2028 and cut per-transaction costs from 10–50 pesos to 2–5 pesos.
Overall, the BSP’s decision to lift the InstaPay and PESONet fee-hike moratorium signals a pricing reset aimed at lowering costs while improving efficiency and competition in Philippine digital payments.
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Philippines digital paymentsBSP regulationInstaPayPESONetfee pricing rules
The Philippine SEC, working with local exchanges, has issued draft market maker rules on June 17 to create a regulatory framework for market making in listed securities. The public consultation runs until July 7, 2026.
Under the market maker rules, the SEC says market making should improve liquidity, support price discovery, and enable orderly trading. Only exchange trading participants with a valid SEC license can apply as market makers, including a minimum unimpaired paid-up capital of PHP 100 million. Applicants must also show relevant trading experience, a clean regulatory/legal record, and a market making agreement with the issuer, the exchange, or an authorized third party.
Operationally, registered entities must provide continuous, firm, two-sided quotations during trading hours and hold sufficient inventory to support liquidity, except for system failures, market-wide disruptions, or force majeure. Exchanges may offer incentives such as reduced transaction fees, liquidity rebates, and better trading facilities.
The draft market maker rules also introduce reporting and oversight: market makers must submit timely trading/quotation reports, compliance certifications, and immediate notifications of material breaches. Exchanges will develop implementing guidelines subject to SEC approval. Feedback can be sent to ipsd_msrd@sec.gov.ph.
The Bank of England stablecoin rules (policy statement and draft Code of Practice) revise the UK framework for systemic GBP stablecoins. The biggest change is the removal of proposed individual and business holding caps. Instead, the Bank of England sets a temporary issuance limit of £40B (about $53B) per systemic GBP stablecoin product to contain financial-stability risk.
Key GBP stablecoin rules for traders to watch:
- No individual or business holding limits, aimed at improving real-world payments and usability.
- Asset backing: up to 70% of reserves can be short-term interest-bearing UK government debt, with the remaining 30% held as non-interest-bearing deposits at the Bank of England.
- Timeline: the consultation closes Sept. 22, 2026, with a final Code of Practice expected by year-end; regulated GBP stablecoins are planned for 2027.
Market impact angle from the article: the £40B GBP issuance cap is far smaller than major dollar stablecoins (USDT ~$186B, USDC ~$74B). If demand rises faster than the capped supply, secondary-market trading could trade above par, creating a scarcity premium rather than a typical peg-down risk.
For crypto traders, this means GBP stablecoins may become more usable for UK payments and sandbox trials, but near-term growth is structurally constrained versus USDT/USDC. Watch for liquidity and pricing divergence if issuance demand outpaces the cap.
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Bank of EnglandGBP stablecoinsstablecoin regulationissuance capreserve requirements
Taiwanese retail investors are driving a sharp increase in margin debt tied to the TSMC-fueled AI stock rally. Total margin debt has surpassed $13B, the highest level since September 2000. Taiwan’s Taiex index has hit a quarter-century high, helped by concentration in TSMC, which accounts for over 40% of the benchmark’s weighting.
The borrowing pace has been abrupt. In late May to early June, margin debt jumped by about NT$21.3B (around $680M) in a single day—suggesting speculative leverage is accumulating quickly rather than gradually. Brokerages have started to slow lending by reaching internal limits, raising collateral requirements, and increasing interest rates on margin loans.
Investors face a double-edged setup. Cooling measures may reduce risk from excessive leverage, but tighter access to margin can also force deleveraging and spark selling if traders cannot roll or expand positions.
Key takeaway for traders: this is a classic leverage-squeeze risk. If the AI/TSMC trade turns, high margin debt can amplify downside through faster liquidation and broader market spillover given TSMC’s outsized index influence.
Jordan midfielder Nizar Al-Rashdan scored his country’s first-ever World Cup goal, netting in the 36th minute vs Algeria on June 23 (Levi’s Stadium) to give Jordan a 1-0 Group Stage lead. The article links this on-pitch moment to crypto’s expanding role in FIFA 2026, where Kraken became FIFA’s first official crypto exchange sponsor on June 9, 2026, and Avalanche is powering FIFA’s NFT initiatives.
Crucially, Jordan and Algeria have no major-platform fan token or official NFT partnership, meaning the goal’s crypto impact is indirect. Traders may instead watch crypto prediction markets: research cited tournament-related crypto activity with volumes nearing $2B. A Jordan win can shift odds across multiple contracts in real time, including match winner, qualification, total goals, and first goalscorer, on venues such as Polymarket and related decentralized markets.
The piece also notes Jordan’s domestic move—Law No. 14 of 2025—creating a regulated virtual-asset market framework. For investors, fan tokens tied to team performance can be highly volatile (Argentina’s $ARG token is cited as a performance-sensitive example), but thin liquidity can increase manipulation risk. Overall, this is a crypto-first sports cycle—more adoption signals, but less direct fan-token upside for countries without established tokens.
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FIFA 2026crypto sponsorshipprediction marketsfan tokensNFTs
According to Nate Geraci of The ETF Store, Chicago Options Exchange (Cboe) is considering converting its Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) continuous futures into perpetual contracts.
The claim, posted on X, suggests traditional financial firms are under increasing pressure to keep building crypto-native products. If Cboe proceeds, the shift from continuous futures to Cboe-perpetual style products could change how traders access leverage, roll risk, and liquidity around BTC and ETH.
For market participants, the key takeaway is that Cboe may offer a new venue for BTC and ETH trading via perpetuals, potentially supporting derivatives activity and reshaping hedging strategies. However, this is still at the consideration stage, so timing and final contract terms remain uncertain.
Ethereum traders are watching liquidation clusters after analyst Ted Pillows said the order-book pressure looks balanced. In the highlighted Ethereum liquidity clusters, major upside liquidity sits near $1,900, while major downside liquidity sits around $1,600.
At the time of writing, ETH traded near $1,765—roughly between the two zones. Intraday data showed a low near $1,704 and a high near $1,768, meaning price was closer to the upper end of the day’s range but still below the $1,900 area.
Traders may use these Ethereum liquidity clusters as a “range to monitor,” because with price nearer the middle, moves in either direction could trigger leveraged positions on both sides. If ETH pushes toward $1,900, shorts may face faster liquidation/forced buying and recovery strength could challenge bearish chart setups. If ETH instead fails to hold the recovery and drops toward $1,600, it would align with bearish maps calling for deeper demand in the $1,562–$1,500 area.
The article stresses that liquidation clusters are not a price forecast by themselves. Confirmation still depends on price action, volume, and broader market direction—until one of the zones is actually tested, Ethereum remains range-bound with heightened risk of sudden breakouts.
Bitcoin volatility is back in focus after a trader warning about leverage risk as BTC rebounds toward the mid-$65,000 area. At the time of writing, BTC traded around $65,101, with an intraday range of roughly $63,226 to $65,123. The key question is whether this is a clean recovery or another liquidity sweep that triggers forced closes.
The article highlights that even a seemingly modest bounce (from about $63,000 back to $65,000) can still punish futures traders with high leverage. It points to the $64,500–$65,000 zone as the immediate battleground: holding above it would support a regain of control, while a quick rejection keeps the market vulnerable to another move lower.
Traders are advised to watch $65,000 for confirmation. If BTC slips back under the reclaimed area, attention may shift to $63,200 first and then toward the $62,000 range. Overall, Bitcoin volatility remains tied to liquidation dynamics until BTC breaks out of the current range with conviction, despite spot-style “bounce” narratives.
Bitcoin (BTC) is trading back above $65,000, but a TradingView “BTCUSDT – Bearish Continuation Setup” calls for caution after BTC rejected the $64,500–$64,700 resistance band. The analyst argues sellers still control price as long as BTC remains below this dynamic resistance structure.
Key levels in the bearish map: a first downside target at $62,200, followed by a deeper zone between $60,700 and $61,000. The setup’s invalidation is a clean hold above $64,700—important because BTC is currently around $65,101, meaning the market is testing the reclaimed “ceiling.” If BTC fails to sustain above $64,700 and reverts back below the zone, the $62,200 move is framed as the next likely leg.
Traders are also watching near-term volatility. The article notes recent intraday extremes (roughly $63,226 low and ~$65,123 high), a tight trading range that can increase leverage risk in either direction. The clearest confirmation for the bearish scenario would be a loss of the $64,500–$64,700 resistance turned support, then a drift toward $62,200.
Overall, the BTC outlook here is technical and level-driven: reclaiming and holding above $64,700 weakens the short-continuation thesis, while a failed breakout keeps downside targets in play.
Institutional flows are turning negative, with $8B in net outflows reported over the last 30 days across spot Bitcoin ETFs, stablecoins, and Strategy (BTC). The analysis (BIT, June 22) says this reversal is larger than late-2025’s slowdown and warns that, without a major catalyst, buying may not return soon.
ETF withdrawals are a key driver. SoSoValue data shows funds tracking Bitcoin posted -$2.43B in May and -$2.26B net outflows so far in June, extending a red streak to six straight weeks, including nearly -$227M outflows last week.
Stablecoin liquidity also points to risk-off. CryptoQuant shows all-exchange stablecoin reserves at $63.3B, with a 24h net flow of -$103.7M—often interpreted as exchange balance draining rather than accumulation.
Market context: BTC fell from ~$82K to ~$62K. Analyst Markus Thielen notes that while flows weakened in Q4 2025, they only stalled then; this time they reversed, implying the drawdown could be more consequential. He adds that, without a dovish Federal Reserve pivot or another clear catalyst, upside may be limited even if selling volatility creates short-term trading opportunities.
Meanwhile, Strategy’s STRC stock sold off sharply after leverage-related price pressure to ~$82.5. Even though Strategy bought $100M worth of BTC recently, Kaleo warned forced selling could reach ~50,000 BTC over the next two years—adding another overhang to institutional sentiment into the second half of the year.
Ondo Global Markets has gone live on LI.FI, enabling Ondo tokenized stocks to be accessible through 1,000+ wallets, protocols, and apps. The integration connects Ondo’s tokenized U.S. stocks and ETFs to LI.FI’s intent-based cross-chain execution network, targeting gasless and near-instant, best-price routing.
The rollout is live on Ethereum and BNB Chain, with Solana expected to come later. Ondo tokenized stocks cover 438+ tokenized U.S. equities and ETFs, including major names such as Tesla, NVIDIA, Apple, and funds like QQQ and SPY. Ondo says the tokens are backed by underlying securities held with U.S. broker-dealers, and include daily verification plus investor protection standards.
LI.FI’s model lets users specify outcomes while “solvers” handle execution paths, reducing the need to manually compare bridges or liquidity routes. The network has processed over $80 billion in volume across 100 million+ transfers and supports infrastructure used by platforms such as MetaMask, Robinhood Wallet, and Binance.
For traders, today’s key point is that Ondo tokenized stocks now have a broader distribution channel inside LI.FI’s ecosystem, potentially increasing demand for compliant tokenized-equity exposure while adding execution efficiency across major chains. Ondo tokenized stocks are now live on LI.FI, with Solana planned next.
Circle says it will bring native USDC and EURC to Cronos, plus its Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP) and Circle Mint, to expand regulated stablecoin infrastructure for crosschain payments and trading.
Native USDC will act as a dollar settlement layer for Cronos apps (1:1 redeemable for USD). Native EURC will provide euro settlement (1:1 redeemable for EUR). Circle said both assets are fully reserved and designed for compliant onchain use. The key change is that Cronos apps can integrate native USDC and EURC directly, avoiding wrapped versions and aiming for cleaner settlement flows across DeFi, payments, and tokenized market products.
Circle Mint is planned to support eligible institutional users with fiat on/offramps and API access, including deposits, withdrawals, and transfers, plus native USDC tools for payments and trading.
For crosschain liquidity, Circle’s CCTP can move native USDC between supported networks without third-party bridges by burning USDC on the source chain and minting it on the destination chain. For Cronos users, that can enable USDC transfers between Ethereum and Cronos.
Circle frames the rollout as supporting use cases such as prediction markets, payments, treasury management, and agentic workflows, aligning with Cronos’ broader onchain finance push.
Related context: Cronos is an EVM-compatible Layer-1 from Crypto.com, and the network is positioned as mobile-first for trading crypto and tokenized stocks/prediction markets.
Strategy’s Bitcoin buys are continuing to draw attention. Michael Saylor posted the firm’s BTC holdings tracker with “more dots,” hinting that Strategy Bitcoin buys could extend further even as STRC preferred-share selling slows.
On Monday, Strategy confirmed its third straight weekly BTC purchase streak. From June 15–21, it bought about 520 BTC for roughly $34.9M. Prior weeks saw about 1,587 BTC (~$100M) and about 1,550 BTC (~$101M). These buys lift Strategy’s holdings to roughly 847,363 BTC, valued near $54B at recent prices.
The streak follows a rare BTC sale: a June 1 filing said Strategy sold 32 BTC (~$2.5M) in late May to fund STRC dividends—its first disclosed BTC sale since 2022. With STRC trading around ~$82.50 (about 17% below its $100 par value), Strategy paused STRC share sales, citing an estimated effective cost/yield near ~13% that generally requires cash coverage.
Importantly for flows: these Strategy Bitcoin buys were funded via sales of Strategy’s common stock, not STRC.
Traders should watch whether this weekly Strategy Bitcoin buys pattern persists, since it can support near-term sentiment and potentially influence BTC momentum.
On June 22, 2026, the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC sanctions) designated three individuals and six entities tied to Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) for facilitating crypto-related financial transactions.
The action targets financial infrastructure used to move funds on behalf of ISIS associates across Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. OFAC sanctions include:
- Individuals: Miloud Abderrahmane (France), Abdelhakim Boukich (Syria), and Mukhtar Adamu Muhammad (Nigeria)
- Entities: Bitcoin Xchange (Syria), Spider and Alkaram (Turkey), and Nine to Nine, Manhattan Bureau de Change, and Generation Currency (Nigeria)
Key crypto-related detail: OFAC identified two TRON wallet addresses linked to Miloud Abderrahmane. OFAC also described Bitcoin Xchange as a Syria-based money services business (MSB) established in late 2020 by Boukich, which transferred funds for ISIS associates from multiple countries, including the United States.
Compliance impact for crypto markets: For VASPs, exchanges, and financial institutions, OFAC sanctions require immediate updates to sanctions screening and real-time transaction monitoring. The inclusion of specific TRON addresses highlights the need for robust blockchain analytics to detect downstream exposure and prevent processing of sanctioned parties.
What to watch next: Traders may not see immediate price moves, but compliance and KYT/KYC operators will likely increase blocked transaction volumes, audit activity, and sanctions-screening rule updates tied to TRX-related flows.
Strive (a public Bitcoin treasury company) says in a June 22 Form 8-K that it bought 759 BTC for about $50 million. The latest Strive buys BTC occurred between June 15 and June 21, with an average price of roughly $65,850 per BTC (including fees and expenses).
The purchase lifted Strive’s total holdings to 19,864 BTC, described as its biggest weekly accumulation in months and slightly ahead of Strategy’s most recent disclosed weekly buy of 520 BTC.
This accelerates from earlier weeks when Strive disclosed smaller buys (32 BTC and 73 BTC). At the same time, cash and cash equivalents rose to $144.5 million (from $141.4 million), and the company increased its Class A share count by about 1.9 million shares via an at-the-market (ATM) program.
Funding remains central. Strive continues to use its SATA Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Preferred Stock program, which pays a Bitcoin-linked dividend (annualized 13%, calculated daily). The company’s disclosures indicate proceeds from SATA and related ATM activities are used to buy more Bitcoin. Traders should also note that a separate earlier SEC filing proposed expanding both of its ATM programs by $2.1 billion each (subject to documentation/prospectus updates), increasing potential future “buy capacity” rather than creating an immediate raise.
In the broader corporate flow context, Strategy also reported selling 32 BTC at an average of $77,135 per coin. Benchmark analysts initiated coverage of Strive with a Buy rating. Overall, Strive buys BTC faster than recent weeks, reinforcing the view of sustained institutional-style demand.
Note: Strive’s earlier disclosures (late May/early June) also highlighted ongoing treasury expansion toward ~19,000 BTC, providing continuity with the latest 759 BTC buy.
The U.S. Senate passed a bipartisan 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act (85-5), inserting a temporary ban on a Federal Reserve CBDC. The measure is expected to move quickly to the House and, if signed by President Donald Trump, would legally block the Fed (or Fed banks) from issuing or creating a CBDC or any substantially similar digital asset for four years, ending in 2030.
The key trading implication is that a U.S. “digital dollar” via CBDC is effectively paused at the federal level, even though there is reportedly no active Fed CBDC project today. The push came from Republican lawmakers linking CBDC efforts to privacy and financial-surveillance concerns, following similar debates in Europe and China.
Former Fed Chair Jerome Powell previously said any CBDC concept would likely route management through banks, while new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh publicly opposed a U.S. CBDC as a “bad policy choice.” Separately, Trump’s January 2025 executive order already prohibited his administration from advancing a CBDC, and the housing bill mirrors that stance.
For crypto markets, the bill may reduce tail-risk around a U.S. CBDC launch that could reshape stablecoin, settlement, and onchain competition dynamics—at least in the next few years—though it does not directly change existing crypto regulation.
Bitcoin funding rate hits a 2-week high, with perpetual futures annualized funding rising to about 7%—the highest in nearly three weeks. The move signals growing leveraged demand from bulls, even though it remains within the typical 6%–12% neutral band.
BTC dipped toward $65,500 amid a macro backdrop that mixed crypto strength with risk-off signals. Brent crude slid to around $77.50, while equities weakened: Nasdaq 100 futures fell ~1% and SpaceX-linked shares dropped after plans to raise debt.
Traders also saw derivatives caution. On Deribit, the put-to-call ratio rose to levels showing put demand over twice call demand, implying increased downside hedging. Options positioning has leaned bearish since Friday.
At the market plumbing level, BTC orderbooks improved: major-exchange bids exceeded offers by about $12 million and liquidity dynamics helped the market avoid a clear bearish read from any failure to hold $65,000.
However, spot Bitcoin ETF flows remain a key drag. After six straight weeks of outflows, the latest weekly data points to roughly $228M in net outflows, limiting the odds of a near-term push to $70,000.
Net effect: Bitcoin funding rate strength supports sentiment, but ETF outflows plus weak broader risk assets (stocks, bonds, gold) keep upside constrained in the short term.
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Bitcoin funding rateBTC ETF outflowsDerivatives positioningOrder book liquidityMacro risk-off
Ethlabs has launched as an independent nonprofit for Ethereum core protocol research, backed by Joe Lubin, Bitmine, Sharplink and other ecosystem participants. It brings together former Ethereum Foundation researchers and says it will pursue long-term funding for protocol work while contributors cannot control research priorities, roadmaps or governance.
Ethlabs’ stated focus includes scaling, settlement and settlement speed, network capacity, native asset issuance, cross-chain interoperability, and Ethereum’s monetary design. It plans external grant administration, quarterly reporting, and annual independent audits.
The launch is framed around institutional adoption drivers such as stablecoins, tokenized assets, investment products and AI-driven commerce. Traders should also note Bitmine’s recent purchase of 52,203 ETH (about $90M), lifting its holdings to roughly 4.7% of supply.
Trading takeaway: Ethlabs strengthens the medium-to-long-term Ethereum R&D narrative, but the news is unlikely to act as an immediate ETH catalyst. Near-term price impact may remain limited unless follow-on hires, partnerships or funded research milestones become visible.
Bhutan joined the “50-in-5” campaign as its 39th member to advance a privacy-preserving digital ID ecosystem and speed up digital public infrastructure (DPI). The effort supports Bhutan’s decentralized National Identity System (Bhutan NDI), aiming to issue secure, privacy-preserving digital credentials for easier access to public and private services.
Malaysia also upgraded its MyDigital ID registration kiosks by adding real-time facial biometric verification using data from the National Registration Department (JPN). Malaysian security authorities said the change targets higher identity verification accuracy and reduces risks tied to online scams, identity impersonation, data theft, and unauthorized access. Existing users must complete periodic facial biometric checks, and the rollout will be implemented in phases. Users may register via the MyDigital ID app.
For traders, these digital ID and DPI moves are primarily government/infra policy developments rather than direct crypto catalysts, but they reinforce the wider adoption of secure identity rails—an ecosystem trend that can support long-term blockchain and privacy infrastructure narratives. The direct market effect on crypto prices is expected to be limited.
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Digital identityDPIprivacy-preserving credentialsbiometric verificationgovernment tech
Kraken used Money20/20 Europe 2026 in Amsterdam to highlight how stablecoins and embedded finance are shaping digital commerce. Kraken Co-CEO Arjun Sethi opened the event with a keynote titled “Money Open,” emphasizing where money is heading and the infrastructure needed to support it.
A second major session featured Kraken VP Payments and Blockchain Brett McClain in a Citi fireside, “Beyond Disruption: Architecting the Future of Embedded Financial Services for Digital Commerce.” The discussion focused on building financial services directly into the platforms users already rely on.
A central business message was Payward Services, Kraken’s B2B infrastructure platform. Payward Services was positioned as a single integration for stablecoin payments, tokenized asset markets, digital asset trading, funding, and more—leveraging Kraken’s operational history.
Beyond stage appearances, Kraken expanded engagement on the show floor and in Amsterdam after-hours. It ran “Kraken Coffee House” sessions at The Block with themed programming, hosted markets-focused networking with xStocks (about 100 guests), and held partner/customer dinners and a Kraken VIP happy hour (also around 100 guests).
Across conversations, the dominant themes were agentic commerce, stablecoins, embedded finance, and regulators trying to keep pace with rapid innovation—signaling where near-term product roadmaps may concentrate for compliant crypto rails.
For traders, the takeaway is not a direct token catalyst, but a clear read on how Kraken is positioning infrastructure for payments and tokenized markets—areas that can influence liquidity routes and on/off-ramp demand over time.
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KrakenMoney20/20 Europe 2026StablecoinsEmbedded FinanceAgentic Commerce
A new Ethereum staking rewards proposal, “Validator Redirected Revenue,” would let validators redirect up to 10% of Ethereum staking rewards to ecosystem development if more than 51% of validators approve. Contributor Clément Lesaege’s framework lets validators set both the redirect rate (0%–10%) and the recipient addresses.
If the community backs a non-zero rate, the same redirect level would apply across validators (with the 10% cap). Using current staking levels (~39.8M ETH staked) and an estimated 1.91% annual staking reward rate, redirecting 5% could fund about 38,000 ETH/year, while 10% could reach ~76,000 ETH/year.
The latest version highlights “cartel formation” as the main risk: a 51% majority could theoretically route funds to preferred parties. Lesaege argues reputational and price damage would make that unattractive, but critics still question whether protocol-level funding is needed given Ethereum already supports voluntary, smart-contract-based revenue sharing.
Traders should note this is still research-stage and not yet a formal Ethereum Improvement Proposal, so near-term price impact on Ethereum is likely limited unless it advances quickly or triggers major governance controversy. Keywords: Ethereum staking rewards and protocol governance.
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EthereumStaking RewardsProtocol GovernancePublic Goods FundingEcosystem Development
Blockchain gaming is moving past “tokens up, tokens down” cycles, with survival hinging less on token price momentum and more on distribution, payments, and player incentives.
The article highlights Telegram as a key distribution rail. Telegram Mini Apps (listed as “Web Apps” for bots) let developers launch low-friction game experiences inside chats, leveraging group/channel virality. For monetization, it points to TON support for USDT after Tether launched USDT on The Open Network (TON) in 2024. With wallet bots and TON integrations, teams can compress the funnel from discovery to onboarding to settlement—potentially reducing onboarding drop-off for casual users.
On durability, the piece warns that Telegram activity can still turn into “farmers” if the core loop is just “tap to claim.” It recommends tracking conversion into paying users and ongoing engagement, plus gating high-yield quests behind time/skill, and using stable-denominated pricing instead of volatile native token pricing.
Ubisoft is framed as an “institutional anchor” for mainstream publishers. Its Web3 path includes pilots around Ubisoft Quartz (Digits on Tezos), validator involvement via Oasys, and a 2023 partnership with Immutable to prototype blockchain-native game experiences—positioned as cautious scaffolding rather than a full pivot.
For traders, the key signal is not a single token rally, but a shift in blockchain gaming evaluation metrics: USDT/fiat GMV trends, D30/D90 retention by payer status, fraud-adjusted DAU, and on-chain actions tied to real gameplay.
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Blockchain GamingTelegram Mini AppsTON USDTUbisoft Web3Tokenomics & KPIs
GoMining launched the GoBTC Pay Gen1 SDK and API to help merchants, wallet providers and ecosystem partners add native Bitcoin payments to everyday products. The GoBTC Pay SDK and API move beyond a closed demo and turn GoBTC Pay into open infrastructure built on a layer 1 Bitcoin payment protocol.
Key points: GoBTC Pay is positioned as non-custodial, with settlement directly on Bitcoin (no fiat conversion before merchants receive funds). The Gen1 tools include onboarding, a web-based merchant dashboard, payment management, online integrations, and public developer documentation plus an open API for partners.
The protocol is powered by GoMining’s private 15EH/s mempool using Stratum V2 for transaction prioritisation, targeting an average 12-hour settlement window. Fees are set at 0.2% per transaction, split evenly between participating wallet providers and miners in the GoMining pool.
GoMining says it is onboarding up to 10 merchants and partners initially and that GoBTC Pay follows its prior introduction at Consensus Miami. The company’s broader thesis is that Bitcoin adoption depends on making payments easier for both consumers and merchants without changing Bitcoin’s core principles. For traders, the news is more about payment rails and adoption pathways than immediate protocol token changes—watch for follow-through in merchant integrations and any measurable increase in real-world BTC payment usage tied to GoBTC Pay and similar services.
Ric Edelman says crypto’s biggest growth story is happening off the price chart: institutional adoption and crypto tokenization are accelerating, even as market sentiment stays weak. He points to near-term pressure from outflows in Bitcoin ETF funds and rising fears linked to Mt. Gox wallet movements and broader regulatory uncertainty.
Edelman highlights tokenization momentum among major Wall Street and asset managers, including BlackRock, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, Franklin Templeton, Fidelity, State Street and Invesco. He says tokenization is expanding beyond crypto assets into equities, cash and ETFs. At the same time, many institutions are still focused on short-term career risk rather than long-horizon allocations.
A key catalyst is the fate of the U.S. CLARITY Act. Edelman argues passage would likely be viewed as a major positive because clearer rules could help institutions deploy capital. Conversely, failure or delays could trigger a short-term bearish reaction as traders reset expectations for regulatory progress. Political dynamics ahead of midterm elections are also expected to affect crypto policy momentum.
Edelman remains bullish on Bitcoin and blockchain infrastructure over the long term. He flags Ethereum (ETH) and Solana (SOL) as central to tokenization and smart-contract ecosystems, while noting near-term performance will hinge heavily on regulatory outcomes.
For traders, the setup is a tug-of-war: negative headlines and ETF flows versus steady institution-led tokenization development.
Bitmine (NYSE: BMNR) bought 52,203 ETH worth about $90M, pushing its Ethereum holdings to ~4.7% of total ETH supply and putting the firm ~94% toward its public “5% ownership” goal. The latest ETH buy supports the company’s ETH treasury strategy even as broader market liquidity remains uneven.
Bitmine also reported ~$10.7B across crypto assets, cash, marketable securities and strategic investments, including stakes linked to Eightco and Beast Industries. On-chain income is strengthening: it says 4,718,677 ETH are already staked (valued at over $8.2B). With current yields, annualized staking revenue is about $223M, while management projects up to ~$268M if all ETH is staked through MAVAN and staking partners, citing a 2.73% seven-day BMNR yield.
Separately, Bitmine’s Series A perpetual preferred stock (BMNP) began trading, adding a dividend element tied to its Ethereum treasury approach. For traders, the incremental ETH accumulation plus rising staking revenue reinforces “corporate ETH demand” sentiment, which can be supportive for ETH flows, though near-term price action may still track market volatility.
Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) used MSTR dilution to raise $335.5M, then parked about $300M in cash instead of buying Bitcoin immediately after its STRC preferred shares fell to a record low. The company sold ~2.71M MSTR shares (June 15–21), increased its USD reserve to $1.4B, and used only $34.9M to buy 520 Bitcoin (down from 1,587 Bitcoin the week before).
Why it matters: STRC dropped to a record intraday low of $82.50 because the financing channel requires issuance near its $100 stated value. Below that, new STRC issuance would raise less cash and add heavier dividend obligations. STRC later recovered above $91 but closed at $88.64; MSTR ended 2.7% lower at $109.52.
Market/trader implications: Strategy’s BTC yield fell (to 11.8% from 13%), suggesting dilution costs outweighed immediate BTC accumulation. Bitwise estimates ~96,000 Bitcoin in 2026 (about 55% of total) was financed via STRC; if STRC stays weak, Strategy may reduce BTC buying until STRC stabilizes, dividends are adjusted, or rates change. While MSTR and STRC issuance capacity remains large ($25.4B MSTR; $17.5B STRC), traders should watch whether STRC returns toward $100 to restore higher-throughput Bitcoin purchases.
Bearish
MSTR dilutionSTRC preferred sharesBitcoin treasury buyingcrypto capital structurefunding channel risk
Coinbase will tighten the VARA-USD quote increment from 0.00001 to 0.0000001, effective June 24. The change targets better order book granularity for VARA, a sub-penny token. For a typical VARA price near $0.00052, the minimum tick size falls about 100x, reducing the smallest price movement from roughly ~2% to ~0.02%.
This is a microstructure update, not a project-specific announcement. Coinbase previously made similar decimal precision changes for other low-priced tokens, including DRIFT-USD.
Why it matters for trading: a tighter VARA-USD quote increment can improve market depth and often leads to narrower bid-ask spreads, potentially lowering entry/exit costs for active traders. However, VARA remains a micro-cap with relatively low reported volumes (market cap around $3.1M and 24h volume in the low thousands of dollars), so the effect may be limited by liquidity.
Bottom line: the VARA-USD quote increment change should modestly enhance order book efficiency and execution quality, but it is unlikely to alter VARA’s broader fundamentals on its own.