The IRGC has expanded its operational control in the Strait of Hormuz, creating a 500-kilometer “operational crescent” from Jask and Sirik to beyond Greater Tunb Island. The move comes amid rising Iran–US–Israel tensions, including reported blockades and higher naval activity.
Iran is reportedly enforcing new maritime coordination protocols and charging transit fees for compliant commercial vessels, while stepping up enforcement against non-compliant ships. The article frames this as tighter, more institutionalized Iranian dominance over Strait of Hormuz shipping lanes, raising the risk of disruptions to oil flows.
Crypto-adjacent prediction markets reflect a deteriorating outlook for Strait of Hormuz stability: odds for traffic “returning to normal” by May 15 are priced near 0.5% YES, and “warships through the Strait of Hormuz by May 31” sits around 8.5% YES. Earlier pricing also showed worsening odds for an “unrestricted shipping” agreement by May 31.
Traders to watch: CENTCOM updates on escorts/convoys, further IRGC/Iran statements on maritime rules, and reactions from international shipping firms and oil markets. Strait of Hormuz disruption risk is likely to remain a near-term driver of volatility and sentiment shifts.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzIRGC controlmaritime riskoil supply shockprediction markets
UK Communities Minister Miatta Fahnbulleh has resigned from Keir Starmer’s government and urged Starmer to quit amid Labour Party turmoil. The move follows recent local election setbacks and rising internal pressure, including calls from more than 70 MPs for Starmer’s resignation.
In prediction markets, contracts tied to “Starmer out by June 30, 2026?” jumped to about 68.5% YES (from 32% in roughly 24 hours). Another contract, “Starmer out by December 31, 2026?”, rose to about 85.5% YES (from 66% over the same period). The article frames Fahnbulleh’s departure as the first ministerial resignation since the Labour government formed in 2024, after her 2025 cabinet reshuffle.
Traders watching this story should monitor whether more Labour ministers resign and whether MPs move toward a no-confidence vote. Any shift in the odds, alongside leadership-contest signals or official announcements, could quickly change expectations and risk sentiment.
Overall, the data suggests sentiment is moving toward a higher probability of a Starmer leadership exit within 2026, driven by party instability rather than direct policy market pricing.
Neutral
UK politicsLabour Partyprediction marketsKeir Starmergovernment instability
Pi Network’s PI token slid about 6% on the week, pushing the Pi Network PI token out of the top 50 altcoins by market cap. This decline reflects persistent sell pressure, even as some peers gained.
Bitcoin (BTC) attempted another breakout in the past ~12 hours but was rejected repeatedly at around $82,000. After a climb to nearly $83,000 during the prior week, BTC slipped to about $79,000 before recovering over $80,000. Monday volatility followed: BTC briefly dipped near $80,250, then jumped to roughly $82,500, only to fall sharply after President Trump characterized Iran’s latest peace proposal as “totally unacceptable.” The latest rejection capped the price again near $82,000, sending BTC back under $81,000.
Market positioning remains stable for the broader crypto complex. BTC market cap is roughly $1.620T and dominance is up to 58.3%. Total crypto market cap stays near $2.8T.
Elsewhere, Ethereum (ETH) is down about 2% daily and trades below $2,300. XRP and BNB are competing for the fourth-largest spot by market cap, while most larger alts are range-bound. BUILDon (B) stands out as today’s top gainer among large alts, rising ~44% to about $0.63 and entering the top 100.
Overall, the key signal for traders is that Pi Network PI token weakness is worsening while BTC rejection at $82K suggests buyers are not yet reclaiming breakout momentum.
Bearish
Pi NetworkPI TokenBitcoin $82K RejectionAltcoin Market CapETH & XRP Signals
US prosecutors have charged Christopher Delgado, former CEO of Goliath Ventures, in a $328M crypto Ponzi scheme allegedly running from Jan 2023 to Jan 2026. Delgado apologized to investors in an ABC-affiliated WFTV interview, saying people trusted him and he “failed them.”
Authorities allege he sold “crypto liquidity pool” opportunities with guaranteed monthly returns and claimed investors could withdraw anytime. Prosecutors say those promised returns were false, and investor funds were used to keep the scheme operating, including luxury spending and buying four Florida properties totaling about $14.5M. One victim allegedly lost about $720,000.
Delgado is on bail with an ankle monitor and said only around $160,000 remained in the company bank account at the time of arrest. If convicted on all counts, he faces up to 30 years in federal prison.
For crypto traders, this crypto Ponzi scheme case is primarily a counterparty and custody-risk reminder. While it is unlikely to mechanically move major coin prices, it can pressure risk sentiment—especially for retail-focused segments—near-term.
Michael Saylor defended Strategy’s Bitcoin sales plan after renewed concerns over its ability to pay dividends. He reiterated that Strategy “should never become a net seller of Bitcoin,” arguing that limited BTC sales can still fund broader accumulation. Saylor said that even if Strategy sold one Bitcoin, it would buy “10 to 20 more Bitcoin,” framing any sales as small versus daily market liquidity.
The debate sharpened after Strategy disclosed roughly $1.5B in annual dividend obligations tied to its preferred-stock product, STRC. In the same reporting context, Strategy posted a $12.54B Q1 2026 net loss and held 818,334 BTC as of May 3, with an average cost basis of $75,537.
Traders should note the messaging remains BTC-supportive, but the dividend structure (and related cash-raising via at-the-market issuance when STRC trades near or above par) can still create periodic headline risk around timing and coverage. Near-term BTC sentiment may swing on any perceived pressure to liquidate, while the long-term plan still points to continued BTC accumulation under the Bitcoin sales plan framework.
The XRP Ledger Foundation appointed David “JoelKatz” Schwartz—an original architect of the XRP Ledger—as an Honorary Board Member. The Foundation frames the move as strengthening XRP Ledger governance and technical stewardship across the XRPL ecosystem.
The appointment follows a leadership shake-up at the Foundation. Brett Mollin was named Executive Director. Denis Angell becomes Chief Technology Officer to lead engineering work tied to amendments, standards, and production contributions. Rene Huijsen takes over operations, while Hussein “Vet” Zangana leads community efforts including communications, validator and developer engagement, and ecosystem outreach.
Schwartz also said he left full-time work at Ripple for personal reasons, adding that he still holds some XRP but has drastically reduced crypto holdings since 2013 due to a “psychological aversion to risk.”
For traders, this is primarily a governance/engineering coordination update for the XRP Ledger Foundation rather than a direct tokenomics change. Still, it could support sentiment if the Foundation’s technical roadmap and validator/community engagement improve execution speed.
Crypto inflows jumped to $857.9M, marking the 6th consecutive week of net inflows in CoinShares’ data. It was the largest weekly inflow since 24 April, and total assets under management (AuM) rose to $160B from $155B.
Bitcoin led the crypto inflows with $706.1M, taking year-to-date inflows to $4.9B. Ethereum added $77.1M after reversing the prior week’s $81.6M outflow. Solana ( $47.6M ) and Ripple ( $39.6M ) also saw stronger inflow momentum. Short-bitcoin products were the main drag, recording the biggest weekly outflow of the year at $14.4M.
The key catalyst is the CLARITY Act. A joint statement from Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks says negotiations are close to finalization, with the Senate Banking Committee (and Senator Tim Scott) set to move the bill to a vote on 14 May.
For traders, the near-term setup is constructive, but the durability of crypto inflows will likely depend on the 14 May vote outcome and any follow-up regulatory guidance.
A crypto influencer linked a recent U.S. political push to potential upside for XRP and the broader U.S. regulation outlook.
John Squire highlighted posts by Senator Cynthia Lummis, who urged lawmakers to pass the CLARITY Act out of the Senate Banking Committee. In Squire’s view, this public momentum suggests Washington is moving toward clearer digital-asset rules.
Squire also referenced prior expectations from Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse about regulatory progress “in May,” saying Lummis’s comments align with that timeline. He argued that banks and institutions are positioning themselves for deeper involvement as political attention grows.
While the article is largely commentary, the key trading takeaway is the market narrative shift: stronger political backing for crypto legislation can tighten regulatory uncertainty—an important driver for risk sentiment in tokens like XRP.
Disclaimer: This is for information only, not financial advice.
The U.S. Senate Banking Committee released a 309-page Crypto Clarity Act draft that aims to cut regulatory uncertainty by clearly defining digital assets and how they’re offered and operated. The proposal keeps the SEC–CFTC split: the SEC would oversee most token sales, while the CFTC would regulate digital commodities/spot markets once tokens are sufficiently decentralized or “mature.”
Title I (“Responsible Securities Innovation”) is designed to reduce the risk that many tokens remain treated as unregistered securities by tying more “commodity-like” treatment to decentralization and disclosure conditions. It also increases creator disclosure duties, potentially including joint liability for founders/insiders with significant allocations.
For market structure, the Crypto Clarity Act targets staking and DeFi compliance: it lists certain programmatic distributions, liquid staking, validator participation, and staking activity as acceptable network functions under specific conditions, while Titles II and III expand AML/sanctions/illicit-finance controls across centralized exchanges, mixers, and “decentralized” platforms with concentrated governance.
On stablecoins, the bill would restrict “bank-style” passive interest paid simply for holding payment stablecoins such as USDC and USDT, but allows activity-based rewards for staking, liquidity provision, governance, or loyalty programs.
Next: Senate Banking Committee markup is expected soon. Near term, traders may see sentiment shift most around stablecoin yield products and exchange/DeFi compliance readiness ahead of any formal vote.
Neutral
U.S. Crypto RegulationToken ClassificationStaking RulesDeFi & AMLStablecoin Oversight
Bitcoin (BTC) is holding near $80.8K, while Ray Dalio says BTC’s radical transparency makes it less attractive for central banks and highlights ongoing “privacy” concerns. Traders also watch a technical ceiling near the 200-day EMA (~$82.6K), where BTC has repeatedly failed and could trigger a larger pullback if broken.
On the positioning and flow side, regulated crypto investment products saw $857.9M net inflows in the latest week for a sixth straight positive week. Bitcoin ETPs captured $706.1M of the inflows, lifting year-to-date BTC fund inflows to $4.9B. Ethereum products recorded $77.1M inflows, while Solana and XRP vehicles added $47.6M and $39.6M respectively—signaling broader risk appetite across major altcoins.
Corporate/whale activity also supported the bid: Strategy bought 535 BTC for about $43M (avg ~$80,340), raising total holdings to 818,869 BTC. The article also notes BTC directional risk: failure to clear resistance may revive downside scenarios toward mid-$50K, while a clean breakout could challenge higher levels near $89K.
Key levels cited: resistance around $81.6K then ~$82.9K; downside pivot near $80.17K, with deeper support around ~$74K.
Neutral
BTCcrypto ETP inflowson-chain privacy debateStrategy buy200-day EMA resistance
Ethereum developers have cleared milestones for the Glamsterdam upgrade, targeting a credible post-upgrade floor of 200M gas limit (vs. ~60M). EIP-8037 is also finalized to raise state-creation costs, helping manage state growth as blocks get larger. Enshrined Proposer-Builder Separation (ePBS) is stabilized, reducing reliance on external relays. Glamsterdam’s timing has shifted from June to Q3 2026, with devnets already running on public Ethereum.
On-chain governance is also in focus: Arbitrum has launched a binding governance vote to move ~30,765 ETH (about $71M) in disputed ether to a wallet controlled by Aave LLC, following last month’s Kelp DAO exploit. The move is authorized by a U.S. court order, but funds remain under tight legal restrictions and cannot be deployed without further permission.
Separately, Bitmine Immersion Technologies has slowed its ether accumulation after weeks of aggressive buying, but still targets holding 5% of ether’s 120.7M circulating supply by year-end (now positioned for late 2026). Bitmine holds about 5.21M ETH and plans to stake its entire position, projecting ~$352M in annual rewards once fully deployed.
Market read-through: Ethereum price trades around $2.29K with sideways action; support near $2,266 is key, while $2,315 is the near-term recovery trigger.
Stablecoins remain in focus as regulators and banks clash over redemption and yield rules. Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey warned of a “coming wrestle” with Washington, saying dollar-pegged tokens without direct one-for-one redemption guarantees could amplify losses and stress the UK during crises. The dispute centers on redemption design: the US GENIUS Act allows holders to redeem via exchanges, while the UK requires direct par redemption from issuers.
In the US, the American Bankers Association is lobbying against parts of the Senate Digital Asset Market Clarity Act. It argues draft language still permits interest-like rewards on payment stablecoins, risking insured deposit outflows and weaker lending capacity. Senate text released near midnight was updated to block issuers from paying interest “economically or functionally equivalent” to deposit yield, but bank groups say carve-outs remain too wide.
On the technology front, Google Threat Intelligence reported what it calls the first documented case of attackers using AI to develop a zero-day exploit that can bypass two-factor authentication on a widely deployed open-source administration tool. Analysts link growing AI-enabled vulnerability research to state-aligned actors, raising broader cyber risk for exchanges and self-custody infrastructure.
Separately, a federal case is building around Goliath Ventures’ former CEO Christopher Delgado, accused by Orlando prosecutors of an alleged $328M crypto Ponzi scheme and fraud/money-laundering counts tied to diverted funds.
Trading implications: regulatory uncertainty around stablecoin redemption and “yield” features is a near-term volatility driver, while AI-driven exploit risk supports a security-risk premium for exchanges, custody providers, and payment rails.
The Cultural Landscape Foundation filed a lawsuit on May 11 against the Trump administration over renovations to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. The lawsuit seeks a temporary restraining order to stop workers from applying “American flag blue” paint to the historic basin.
At the center is a $6.9 million no-bid contract awarded to Atlantic Industrial Coatings. The foundation argues that the color change—changing the pool’s original dark grey design—was done without legally required consultation and environmental review. It says the dark grey basin was a deliberate 1922 aesthetic choice that supports the pool’s reflective function.
The lawsuit alleges violations of two federal statutes: the National Historic Preservation Act and the National Environmental Policy Act. Under the foundation’s theory, the administration failed to consider impacts on a historic property and did not conduct environmental review for a significant federal action. The request for a temporary restraining order is aimed at preventing irreversible changes, since repainting would be harder and more expensive to reverse.
The contract process also draws scrutiny. While no-bid contracting is not automatically illegal, it can face greater oversight because it bypasses competitive bidding safeguards. The reflecting pool previously underwent a major reconstruction completed in 2012, which—according to the lawsuit—followed standard federal review steps, unlike the current “American flag blue” initiative.
Keywords: lawsuit, no-bid contract, federal preservation laws, environmental review, temporary restraining order.
The European Commission is negotiating AI model access with OpenAI and Anthropic, but the outcomes differ sharply.
OpenAI says it will grant EU cybersecurity defenders access to its GPT-5.5-Cyber model. The Commission has welcomed the move, framing the model as a cybersecurity asset for government-aligned security teams. The expected use case is faster detection and response to threats using frontier AI.
Anthropic has held four to five meetings with Commission officials, but access to its Mythos system has not yet been secured. For now, EU defenders still cannot reach Mythos, despite ongoing discussions.
Beyond Brussels, the talks signal how Europe plans to integrate frontier AI into institutional infrastructure ahead of AI Act enforcement phases starting in 2025. By negotiating direct model access, the Commission is effectively relying on advanced private-sector capabilities to address increasingly sophisticated cyber threats.
The article also notes potential knock-on effects for the broader digital economy. While no direct links to crypto tools are confirmed, the same advanced models discussed for defending European institutions could later be applied to secure financial infrastructure, including the digital asset ecosystem. For traders, the immediate relevance is indirect: the main impact is regulatory and security-policy related rather than a direct catalyst for specific tokens.
Neutral
AI regulationCybersecurityOpenAIAnthropicEU AI Act
Israel’s Iron Dome air-defense systems were deployed to the UAE during the Iran conflict, confirmed by a U.S. envoy and reported by N12. The deployment marks the first overseas operational use of Iron Dome beyond Israel and the United States. During Operation Roaring Lion, Iran launched missiles and drones at the UAE; most were intercepted by a combined UAE, U.S., and Israeli defense effort.
CryptoBriefing’s prediction market coverage frames this shift as escalation rather than normalization. The “Israel-Iran Permanent Peace Deal” market is priced at 16.5% YES for a deal by June 30, 2026 (down from 16% the previous day), suggesting traders view the Iron Dome deployment as lowering the probability of a durable Israel-Iran agreement. By contrast, the “Israel Airspace Closure” market remains less impacted at 33% YES, implying no immediate expectation of Israel closing airspace.
Key watch items include further Israeli-UAE defense cooperation, Iran’s military posture, and any diplomatic engagement or negotiations following the conflict.
US prosecutors unsealed an indictment against three men accused of crypto wrench attacks that targeted cryptocurrency owners in the San Francisco and Los Angeles areas. The alleged scheme involved posing as delivery drivers, forcing entry into homes, and using threats of violence to obtain crypto seed phrases.
Elijah Armstrong, Nino Chindavanh and Jayden Rucker are accused of plotting to kidnap and rob four people. Prosecutors say victims were forced to transfer at least $6.5 million in crypto to wallets controlled by the trio. One victim allegedly moved funds totaling $6.5 million. The men were arrested in December and face charges including conspiracy to commit robbery, conspiracy to commit kidnapping, attempted robbery, and attempted kidnapping.
The case highlights why crypto wrench attacks have accelerated since 2025, citing factors such as criminals’ ability to collect personal data online, the perceived pseudonymity of crypto transactions, and the public visibility of crypto wealth. Blockchain intelligence firm TRM Labs previously linked the rise of these attacks to easier targeting and extraction of access credentials.
For traders, this raises near-term security and sentiment risk around custody and account protection, but it is unlikely to change overall token fundamentals. Still, expect short-term volatility in narratives tied to self-custody, seed-phrase safety, and physical threat risk—alongside continued law-enforcement pressure on wrench-attack networks.
Neutral
crypto wrench attacksseed phrase theftUS indictmentkidnapping and robberymarket risk sentiment
BitMEX announced an update to its WebSocket API subscription responses. From 19 May 2026 (06:00–09:00 UTC), a new field named “pool” will be added to responses for key feeds: orderBookL2, orderBookL2_25, orderBookL2_100, orderBook10, quote, quoteBin1m/5m/1h/1d, trade, and tradeBin1m/5m/1h/1d. The field will be populated in the BitMEX WebSocket API subscription response.
In BitMEX WebSocket API, “pool” indicates which liquidity pool a subscription belongs to. BitMEX says this change is required to support “protected order books,” aiming for tighter spreads and deeper liquidity for a subset of traders. The change is additive, so existing fields remain and most integrations should be unaffected.
Availability: BitMEX Testnet will support the update starting 13 May 2026 (06:00–09:00 UTC).
Key trading impact for users is primarily technical: trading systems that parse WebSocket subscription payloads may need to accommodate the new “pool” field when building or updating market-data ingestion for order book and trade streams.
Neutral
BitMEXWebSocket APIMarket DataDerivatives LiquidityOrder Book
Grayscale has filed to convert its Zcash Trust into a spot Zcash ETF, aiming to list on NYSE Arca under the ticker ZCSH. The filing says the trust will hold ZEC and that the share price should track the underlying ZEC value, minus fees and liabilities.
If approved, the Zcash ETF would provide regulated, exchange-traded exposure to a privacy-focused asset. However, the prospectus stresses that this is not approval: information may change, and shares cannot be sold until the SEC registration statement becomes effective.
The regulatory backdrop improved after the SEC closed its Zcash Foundation probe in January without enforcement action. That earlier probe (tied to subpoenas in 2023) was seen as an overhang, and its closure reduced pressure on Zcash.
Market attention also increased ahead of and alongside Zcash developments. Multicoin co-founder Tushar Jain disclosed the firm built a large ZEC position since February 2024, with ZEC reacting strongly after the announcement. At the time of the report, Zcash (ZEC) traded near $560, up meaningfully on the week, while also reflecting day-to-day volatility. ZEC’s FCMP++ upgrade—targeting privacy and scalability improvements—was also cited as a catalyst for renewed interest.
For traders, the key near-term driver is whether the SEC advances review and whether NYSE Arca listing requirements are satisfied—approval risk remains the main constraint for a Zcash ETF trade.
Singapore Gulf Bank (SGB) has partnered with Standard Chartered to strengthen cross-border settlement and multi-currency payment services across rapidly growing digital-asset corridors in the Middle East and Asia. The goal is to create smoother transaction routing and faster settlement using Standard Chartered’s clearing and correspondent banking network—supporting clients operating through these digital asset payment corridors.
SGB said the collaboration expands its correspondent banking footprint and reduces friction from “layered intermediary” banking chains that can delay emerging-market payments. Standard Chartered will provide correspondent banking and clearing support through its global network.
The announcement comes alongside SGB’s recent push into regulated stablecoin infrastructure. It operates under a Central Bank of Bahrain licence and has rolled out 24/7 payment capabilities via SGB Net, a real-time multi-currency settlement platform for digital asset firms, processing more than $2bn per month in fiat transactions (per the release). Earlier, SGB introduced a regulated platform to mint, convert, trade and hold stablecoins including USDC and USDT across Ethereum, Solana and Arbitrum networks. In November 2025, SGB also partnered with Fireblocks for custody and treasury management.
For Hong Kong, the article notes regulatory momentum: the Hong Kong Monetary Authority granted the first stablecoin issuer licences (April) to HSBC and Anchorpoint Financial (backed by Standard Chartered and others), with reserve backing, redemption guarantees, governance controls and AML requirements.
Overall, this is a move toward institutional-grade rails for stablecoins and faster payments across digital asset payment corridors, which traders may see as supportive for liquidity and settlement efficiency.
Bullish
stablecoinsbanking partnershipscross-border paymentsfiat railsMiddle East & Asia
Gold prices extend their decline, pulling further from a three-week peak, as the US dollar firms ahead of the US CPI report. The metal is pressured by the usual inverse link with the dollar, since gold is priced in USD and the US Dollar Index (DXY) rebounds from recent lows.
Traders are focused on the February CPI release. Headline CPI is expected to rise 0.3% m/m and stay at 2.9% y/y. Core CPI is forecast +0.3% m/m with the annual rate at 3.2%. A hotter-than-expected US CPI could reduce expectations for a near-term Federal Reserve rate cut and weigh on Gold. A softer print could revive bullish momentum by reinforcing monetary easing later this year. CME FedWatch currently shows about a 62% probability of a 25bp cut at the June meeting, but this can change quickly with the CPI outcome.
Technically, Gold has retreated from the $2,940 resistance area and is testing support near $2,900. A clean break below $2,900 may open room for a deeper pullback toward $2,860. Meanwhile, reclaiming $2,930 would signal renewed upside pressure.
For markets, today’s Gold + US CPI catalyst is likely to drive short-term risk sentiment and rate expectations, with safe-haven demand still supported by macro uncertainty and ongoing central-bank buying.
Neutral
GoldUS CPIUS Dollar IndexFed rate cutMacro catalyst
Commerzbank analysts say the US Dollar Index (DXY) has near-term support from rising Treasury yields as markets await the next US CPI report. The uptick in the 10-year Treasury yield is helping underpin the US Dollar Index (DXY), offsetting some bearish pressure from risk-on sentiment. Traders are increasingly focused on Fed rate expectations, with tighter “higher for longer” pricing remaining a key driver of dollar moves.
CPI is the next catalyst. A hotter-than-expected CPI could reinforce persistent inflation concerns, push yields higher, and strengthen the US Dollar Index (DXY). A softer CPI print could ease rate-hike fears, weaken yields, and weigh on the dollar. Commerzbank notes the response will depend on more than the headline figure, including core inflation components and any revisions to prior data.
For FX markets, this sets up potential volatility around CPI, but Commerzbank also highlights the lack of a decisive DXY breakout so far. That suggests traders may wait for confirmation from inflation data before taking strong directional positions.
Cardano Foundation CEO Frederik Gregaard says the “neutral blockchain settlement layer” is increasingly important as the traditional banking system becomes politicized and less durable across jurisdictions. He argues that correspondent banking works, but it can’t be relied on when geopolitical control changes.
Gregaard says blockchain can offer “parallel rails” governed by transparent rules, open standards, and deterministic execution—reducing discretionary access compared with legacy systems. He frames this as an infrastructure shift: beyond speculation, the next step is building resilient settlement technology that can support global commerce when politics and geography fragment traditional channels.
A real-world example cited is A7A5, a Russian ruble-pegged stablecoin network. The article notes it moved about $93 billion in under a year before the EU banned it in November 2025 through its 19th sanctions package. It also mentions Venezuela turning to stablecoin payments for oil sales after similar restrictions.
Overall, the core thesis is that a “neutral blockchain settlement layer” could become a more reliable back-end for cross-border payments when sanctions and political risk keep disrupting conventional finance.
The NFT market appears to be entering a mini NFT season after a strong 24-hour rebound. Sector market cap rose more than 15% in a day to $4.312B.
BoredApeYachtClub (BAYC) led the move. Its floor price surpassed 10.88 ETH, doubling over about a month. BAYC daily trading volume increased 18% to 217.58 ETH, while collection sales rose by 17.64 ETH. On-chain activity also improved: Ethereum unique wallet addresses crossed 10,000 for the first time this year, and have more than doubled since late April.
Broader demand signals followed. PudgyPenguins rose ~1%, while Normies jumped 17.41%. Total NFT trading volume climbed more than 90% across major marketplaces. OpenSea volume jumped 92.7% to $38.4M. Other venues also outperformed: Blur recorded a 266% increase to $25.4M, while monthly trading volume for NFTX and Sudoswap rose 1295% and 462%, respectively.
Sales momentum was notable. This week, the number of NFT sales increased over 139%, and in a single day it nearly doubled from 6,360 to 10,371—implying higher participation and willingness to pay up. However, weekly sales volume still fell 11.43% to ~$16.80M, and day sales volume was about $532K.
For traders, this mini NFT season read-through points to improving liquidity and demand, but it’s not a clean return to prior cycle highs yet.
Aave is coordinating with Arbitrum to run an on-chain governance vote after the Kelp DAO hack, seeking to resolve a dispute over $71 million in frozen ETH. The amended Arbitrum Improvement Proposal follows a court order by Judge Margaret Garnett, which authorizes an on-chain vote to move funds from an immobilized Arbitrum Security Council wallet to an Aave-controlled address.
If approved, 30,765 ETH would be transferred, but Aave would still face legal restrictions and would not gain unrestricted control. Further movements would require additional court permission. Voting is scheduled to begin May 15.
The core dispute remains unresolved. Forensic claims link the exploited ether to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, while U.S. terrorism judgment creditors argue that proving North Korea ownership could enable seizure to cover $877 million in unpaid awards. Aave counters that the hacked funds belong to the harmed users and that the attacker’s temporary control does not transfer ownership.
For traders, this is a governance-and-court catalyst tied to ETH settlement and “frozen-asset” uncertainty, not an immediate protocol upgrade or token issuance. The market impact on ETH may hinge on how quickly legal clarity improves after the May 15 vote.
Neutral
AaveETHArbitrum GovernanceKelp DAO HackDeFi Legal Dispute
GBP/USD rebound is facing a key technical ceiling near the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement around 1.3600. Price has repeatedly failed to push through this “pivot” zone, where the Fibonacci level closely aligns with the psychological 1.3600 resistance.
Traders are watching whether GBP/USD can achieve a sustained daily close above 1.3600–1.3610. A successful breakout would strengthen the bullish case and could open room toward the next resistance cluster near 1.3700.
If GBP/USD rejects the 1.3600 area, the article flags downside risk. Near-term support to monitor includes 1.3550; a failure to hold there could draw sellers toward the 1.3500 round number and the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement near 1.3470.
Technical signals suggest waning bullish momentum. On the daily chart, RSI is hovering near overbought levels, implying buyers may need fresh catalysts to break through.
Fundamental context remains mixed. Sticky UK inflation supports expectations that the Bank of England may stay cautious on rate cuts. Meanwhile, resilient US data provides some support for the dollar, though market pricing for Fed cuts later in the year limits the upside.
Next directional impulse is expected from upcoming releases such as UK GDP and US jobless claims. Until then, the 1.3600 standoff is the dominant theme for GBP/USD traders.
Ahead of a May 14, 2026 Senate Banking Committee vote, the American Bankers Association (ABA) is lobbying against parts of the CLARITY Act that would let crypto issuers offer interest-like rewards on stablecoins.
ABA says the “yield-bearing stablecoins” model is a “$2 trillion problem,” arguing token yield incentives could pull funds from insured bank deposits and weaken consumer loan and mortgage funding. ABA estimates yield-bearing stablecoin supply could jump from about $300B today to $2T.
The White House Council of Economic Advisers takes the opposite view, concluding stablecoins are unlikely to create systemic risk and framing the policy direction as innovation-friendly. Politically, pressure is rising as revised CLARITY Act text is expected May 11, with amendments circulating as early as May 12.
Sen. Bernie Moreno has criticized the ABA’s stance as a “banking cartel” effort to block competition. ABA counters that allowing yield-bearing stablecoins risks a “false equivalence” with FDIC-insured deposits.
For traders: the key uncertainty is how the CLARITY Act will treat yield incentives. That can affect USD-pegged stablecoin demand, liquidity, and volatility into the committee timeline.
Neutral
CLARITY Actstablecoin regulationyield-bearing stablecoinsFDIC and consumer protectionUS Senate Banking Committee
Huma Finance disclosed a Polygon V1 BaseCreditPool exploit on May 11, with losses of about $101K. The attacker carried out unauthorized drawdowns, draining 82,316 USDC and 19,075 USDC.e.
The issue traces to a credit-lifecycle logic/access-control flaw in the deprecated V1 contracts (a problem that should have been inactive). Huma says the Polygon V1 incident affected only pool owner fees and protocol fees, and did not impact user deposits. Huma also paused remaining V1 contracts on Polygon.
Importantly for traders: Huma’s Solana-based PayFi V2 deployment is described as structurally separated and fully operational, with no reported impact on PST (PayFi Strategy Token) holdings or on USD* backing strategies integrated on April 30.
Polygon V1 BaseCreditPool exploit updates mainly reinforce “legacy contract risk” in DeFi. With no claimed user-fund loss and clear architectural isolation from V2, market-wide contagion appears limited, but scrutiny of deprecated on-chain contracts and residual permissions is likely to increase. (Polygon V1 BaseCreditPool exploit keyword for tracking)
US prosecutors have charged three Tennessee men in a “wrench attack” case involving a violent robbery and kidnapping spree targeting crypto holders across California. The Justice Department says the indictment was filed March 31 and unsealed after the suspects were arrested.
Defendants are Elijah Armstrong (21), Nino Chindavanh (21), and Jayden Rucker (25). Prosecutors allege they posed as delivery workers to enter homes in areas including San Francisco, San Jose, Sunnyvale, and Los Angeles. Victims were reportedly restrained with duct tape and zip ties, threatened with firearms, and in at least one case forced at gunpoint to sign into crypto accounts.
A co-conspirator allegedly transferred about $6.5 million in digital assets to a wallet controlled by the group. US Attorney Craig Missakian called the scheme “brazen, violent, and dangerous,” while the FBI said the pattern includes robbery, kidnapping, and theft of millions worth of crypto.
This wrench attack case adds to broader concerns about physical violence used to coerce account access. Similar incidents have been reported in France, where prosecutors charged 88 people tied to alleged wrench attacks, with recorded incidents rising from 18 (2024) to 67 (2025).
Armstrong, Chindavanh, and Rucker remain in federal custody and are presumed innocent unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
In an interview, Wojciech Kaszycki (CSO of BTCS) says Europe’s MiCA regulation is accelerating crypto tokenization and institutional-grade stablecoin infrastructure, with a hard deadline of July 1, 2026.
He argues that many crypto treasury firms without operational yield models will face consolidation as licensing and compliance standards tighten across EU jurisdictions. BTCS, an “Active Treasury” company, uses Bitcoin as an anchor asset and generates yield via staking, validator operations, and tokenized Real-World Assets (RWA). The firm reported a tenfold increase in market cap after pivoting in late 2025 and has since raised capital, including a $100 million Series G.
Kaszycki cites market context: there are roughly 150–200 publicly traded companies holding digital assets, with combined exposure over $100B, and he expects passive holders to be acquired, pivot, or fade.
On tokenization drivers, he highlights three converging forces: regulatory clarity (MiCA in Europe, evolving globally), infrastructure maturity (stablecoins already large-scale, cited at ~$307B), and institutional demand for 24/7 programmable settlement. He expects stablecoin and (wholesale) CBDC layers to coexist, emphasizing interoperability.
Key trading takeaway: MiCA tokenization and stablecoin infrastructure narratives could attract institutional flows into compliant EU infrastructure, but near-term volatility may rise as firms scramble to license, meet requirements, and re-structure revenue models ahead of the 2026 cutoff.