US prosecutors have rejected Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm’s request for acquittal. In a Tuesday filing to the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, Jay Clayton argued Storm’s alleged criminal use of Tornado Cash was “window dressing” or “outright misdirection,” dismissing Storm’s attempt to borrow reasoning from a civil copyright case.
Storm’s lawyers had said they would rely on a 2026 Supreme Court decision, Cox Communications, Inc. v. Sony Music Entertainment, to challenge prosecutors’ claims about his intent. Clayton said the Tornado Cash conduct “bears no resemblance” to Cox, noting that a civil copyright dispute is irrelevant to the criminal allegations.
Key charges stem from a partial 2025 jury outcome. Last August, a jury convicted Storm of conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business, but deadlocked on two counts: conspiracy to commit money laundering and conspiracy to violate sanctions. This leaves open the possibility of a retrial.
Clayton added there was no evidence Storm implemented effective anti-money-laundering measures. A judge is considering an October retrial, but as of Tuesday no date had been set.
The wider context: Storm has argued that the Justice Department’s approach reflects “regulation by prosecution,” citing DOJ acting head Todd Blanche’s April 2025 memo. The parties are scheduled to meet Thursday as prosecutors press for continued proceedings on the two deadlocked counts, which Storm says could mean up to 40 years in federal prison.
Solana Foundation launched a contrarian San Francisco billboard campaign directing people to the x402 account on X with the message: “Don’t waste time with crypto.” The foundation says this is a bullish bet on a future where AI agents handle transactions in the background.
The core idea is “agentic payments”: apps, websites, or AI tools automatically charge small amounts without logins, subscriptions, or human involvement. Example flows include an agent requesting data, paying instantly, and receiving results in one step.
Solana frames x402 as a micropayments standard designed for very small transactions (often fractions of a cent). It argues traditional financial rails struggle with high fees, latency, and overhead, while Solana’s high throughput and low costs make it a natural settlement layer.
A Solana Foundation spokesperson said crypto and Solana are “on their way” to become the default way AI pays, adding that agents will gravitate toward networks where “performance wins.” The article cites that the push has generated over 15M AI-driven transactions and growing adoption of x402.
For traders, this is more narrative than a protocol change—but it reinforces Solana’s positioning as the preferred infrastructure for AI-driven commerce and could support sentiment around SOL if adoption claims translate into real usage.
Avalanche’s integration with Broadridge Financial Solutions failed to halt AVAX’s momentum. On April 6, Broadridge (NYSE: BR) expanded its governance platform to support on-chain proxy voting and initially rolled it out on Avalanche. Galaxy Digital (NASDAQ: GLXY) was reported as the first adopter, planning to use it for its May shareholder meeting.
However, AVAX extended losses, dropping nearly 10% over the past day. On-chain fundamentals weakened as capital exited the ecosystem. Total Value Locked (TVL) fell to about $720M, the lowest since July 9, 2024, signaling a loss of confidence.
Derivatives data turned more bearish. CoinGlass showed the AVAX long/short ratio falling to 0.89, implying short positions outweighed longs. Open Interest (OI) declined by roughly $37M, suggesting traders closed positions rather than adding leverage. Funding rates also flipped negative, a structure where shorts pay longs and sustain downside pressure.
Spot flows were mixed but leaned toward distribution. Taker Buy Volume rose, indicating pockets of demand, while Exchange Netflows showed more AVAX moving onto exchanges than leaving. CryptoQuant data cited net inflows of about $2.26M alongside ~$20.46M of AVAX sold after the announcement—suggesting investors positioned ahead of the news and exited when it landed.
Key takeaway for traders: the Broadridge headline did not translate into price support. AVAX weakness appears driven by TVL deterioration and bearish derivatives positioning, making rallies potentially sellable until on-chain activity stabilizes.
A new U.S. SEC policy discussion is being framed as a potential shift from enforcement-led actions toward structured rulemaking for crypto fundraising and DeFi. The article cites SEC Chair Paul Atkins and a proposed “Reg Crypto” framework that could improve compliance clarity for XRP.
Key points discussed:
- “Reg Crypto” as a capital-raising exemption under the Securities Act of 1933, aiming to let projects raise funds and distribute tokens with customized disclosures and fundraising caps, while gradually moving toward decentralization.
- An “innovation exemption” under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, intended to grant limited regulatory relief for certain DeFi experiments within defined compliance boundaries.
- Market implication for XRP: clearer fundraising and token-issuance rules could reduce legal uncertainty, supporting institutional confidence (banks, asset managers, fintech) and potentially improving liquidity and exchange participation.
The article also notes legislative friction. Lawmakers are still debating the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, including agency jurisdiction and stablecoin yield-related provisions, which may delay full congressional alignment.
Overall, traders are being encouraged to view the SEC “Reg Crypto” direction as a positive signal for XRP, even though proposals are not finalized and details could change.
The FBI’s IC3 report says total reported cybercrime losses topped $20.8B in 2025, up 26% year over year, with more than 1 million complaints filed.
A core finding is the growing link between crypto and cybercrime. Crypto-linked fraud accounted for about $11.36B in losses, making cryptocurrency the largest transaction medium used by criminals. Investment scams were the biggest category, driving $8.6B in losses, often via “pig butchering” tactics—long-term manipulation through fake trading platforms and requests to deposit increasing amounts of funds.
The report also flags that organized groups, frequently connected to scam networks in Southeast Asia, run many of these campaigns. Social engineering typically starts on social media or messaging apps and then moves victims onto controlled platforms.
Demographics matter: people aged 60+ suffered the highest losses, totaling $7.7B.
On the technology front, AI is entering the threat mix. More than 22,000 complaints in 2025 included AI-related elements, though phishing, extortion, and identity fraud remain common by volume. Investment scams still dominate financially.
Overall, cyber-enabled fraud drove nearly 85% of all reported losses. While enforcement tools like the FBI’s Recovery Asset Team can freeze some stolen funds, prevention is still the key. For traders, this crypto cybercrime trend may increase headline risk, strengthen calls for tighter controls, and heighten risk-off sentiment around exchanges and on-chain/off-chain liquidity.
Keywords covered: crypto cybercrime, FBI IC3, investment scams, pig butchering, AI scams.
Marathon Digital Holdings has executed a BTC transfer of 200 Bitcoin (about $13.84M) to a wallet Arkham Intelligence flags as typically used for selling. Earlier reporting on the same event also noted larger miner outflows during a Bitcoin pullback, raising speculation that some transfers may relate to sales, hedging, or collateral management rather than immediate spot liquidation.
On-chain history shows this receiving address has similar activity, with the last comparable transfer occurring roughly two months ago. Traders are now focused on follow-on actions—especially whether the BTC is later sent to exchanges. A subsequent exchange deposit would increase near-term supply and could pressure prices.
For context, Marathon is a public Bitcoin miner (MARA) that follows a “hold long-term, sell periodically” treasury approach to meet operational needs and react to market conditions. Market moves tied to miner transfers can shift sentiment in the short term, but they are not definitive proof of immediate spot selling.
Key trading watchpoints: BTC transfer monitoring, timing of any exchange inflows, and short-term volatility around miner-driven on-chain movements. This is not an investment recommendation.
XRP is seeing renewed momentum after a whale bought 20 million coins worth about $27 million on Upbit, reported by analyst Xaif Crypto. The large accumulation highlights confidence among major holders while XRP consolidates inside a tight trading range.
On the exchange-access side, Rakuten Wallet expanded its spot crypto lineup to include XRP plus four other assets, which could improve liquidity and support stronger spot demand.
Technically, Xaif Crypto points to “liquidation walls” on the XRP liquidation heatmap: heavy liquidity clusters sit near $1.27–$1.28 below and $1.35 above. This setup suggests a high-volatility trigger if either side is breached.
CoinCodex notes XRP is trading around $1.30 and rebounding from a macro channel floor. Bulls need to defend the $1.29 area; a breakdown could spark a fast hunt for shorts and quick downside volatility. If support holds, the compressed range may “coil” into a breakout attempt, with $1.50 flagged as the next psychological upside target.
A market commentator argues that Bitcoin (BTC) may rise toward the channel midpoint at about $300,757 without needing a full, explosive bull run.
The X post by @CoinvoTrading points to Bitcoin’s long-term ascending price channel. In this framework, a key midline acts as the divider between normal uptrends and prior bull-market expansions. If BTC simply keeps respecting the structure and works its way toward the midpoint, the $300,000 area could be reached through steady momentum rather than a parabolic surge.
The article cites historical behavior around the midpoint: when Bitcoin fails to break above the mid resistance, price tends to remain in a steadier uptrend; a decisive push through the midpoint has historically preceded stronger bull phases.
The channel bounds are given as roughly $106,712 (lower support) and about $973,197 (upper extreme), while the midpoint is placed near $300,757. A timeline marker suggests alignment around April 23, 2028 if the current trajectory holds.
Traders should treat this as a chart-based scenario, not a guaranteed forecast. Still, a sustained bid that keeps BTC inside the long-term channel could support a gradual move toward the $300k handle over time, while failure to hold structure would weaken the thesis.
Polymarket’s March 30 fee overhaul has quickly lifted trading revenue. In the first week of Q2, Polymarket generated about $7.1m in fees, with daily fees jumping from roughly $363k to around $1m within days. The higher take rate has also coincided with TVL rising to about $432m, near Polymarket’s 2024 U.S. election peak.
On-chain data cited in the report suggests Polymarket now captures about 96.8% of all on-chain prediction market fees, implying an annualized revenue run-rate of roughly $355m–$365m if current fee levels hold. This positions Polymarket as a top fee-generating DeFi venue by on-chain prediction-market share.
In parallel, ICE (owner of the NYSE) completed a $600m cash investment tied to a broader $2b commitment to distribute Polymarket event-driven data to institutions. Polymarket also plans to replace bridged USDC.e collateral on Polygon with a new 1:1 USDC-backed token, “Polymarket USD,” ahead of an April exchange upgrade.
The key offset remains regulation. The U.S. CFTC has launched an advance notice for proposed rules on prediction markets and event-based derivatives, with comments due April 30, while anti-prediction-market bills and overseas gambling actions continue to mount. For traders, the near-term signal is stronger fee generation and sustained activity, but headline regulatory risk could drive volatility around Polymarket-linked narratives.
Bitcoin is slipping below $68,000 as US–Iran tensions escalate after Donald Trump warned Iran’s “whole civilization” could be destroyed. Traders read the comments as a sign conflict risk may worsen, pushing risk assets lower.
Oil jumped sharply, supporting the broader risk-off move. US crude briefly traded above $114. Over the last 24 hours, Bitcoin fell back under $68,000. Ether slid around 3.5% to near $2,000, while BNB fell about 2% and XRP and Solana dropped roughly 4% each. Total crypto market cap fell about 2% to ~$2.4 trillion.
Institutional demand is still a counterweight: US spot Bitcoin ETFs saw their biggest single-day net inflow on Monday, at about $471 million, suggesting forward positioning ahead of potential monetary-policy shifts. However, higher oil prices, ongoing geopolitical risk, and persistent inflation concerns may limit near-term rate-cut expectations.
For traders, the near-term setup looks fragile. With limited organic demand and increased downside risk below key technical levels, Bitcoin remains sensitive to geopolitical headlines and macro developments.
Bitcoin bearish sentiment has reached an extreme level, which analyst Joao Wedson says often marks late-stage fear before market bottoms. Using his 720-day Trend Barrier Bull-Bear Indicator (TBBI), Wedson argues the current setup resembles Wyckoff-style Selling Climaxes and final shakeouts, implying downside may continue but likely in smaller moves—while a sharp “-$15k” style panic wick is still possible.
In the near term (the next few weeks), Wedson expects depressed mood to keep BTC moving sideways or drifting lower, with “hopeless” trading conditions lasting at least five more months. Traders should watch sentiment and positioning closely rather than assume an immediate reversal.
On-chain/market structure adds nuance. Glassnode reports BTC is trading in a “negative gamma pocket” between $65,000 and $70,000, where dealer hedging can amplify volatility. Resistance is building near $72,000, while support below is thinner, leaving downside sensitive to weak momentum.
A second reference point comes from Axel Adler Jr., who notes BTC is just above the 1.25x realized price level (~$67,675). As long as BTC quickly reclaims this boundary after dips, a gradual recovery toward the 1.7x realized level (~$92,038) remains possible. However, a sustained close below $67,675 would raise the odds of a deeper move toward $54,000–$58,000.
For traders, the key takeaway is that extreme Bitcoin bearish sentiment may be contrarian bullish for the long run, but BTC’s immediate tape remains fragile due to gamma-driven volatility and overhead resistance.
TRON has started voting on Proposal No. 106, which changes how the SELFDESTRUCT opcode works in the TRON Virtual Machine (TVM). The update targets better compatibility with Ethereum smart contracts.
Key changes affect both contract deletion and transaction handling. Under Proposal 106, a contract will be deleted only if SELFDESTRUCT runs in the same transaction as the contract creation. If not, the contract remains on-chain while assets can still transfer. This is meant to prevent unexpected contract removals after deployment and keep historical contract data available for auditing.
The proposal also increases the execution energy cost of SELFDESTRUCT. The current cost is zero, but if approved it will rise to 5,000 energy units. The TRON Foundation says the new fee better reflects computational resources and encourages efficient network usage.
To support the change, all TRON nodes are advised to upgrade to version 4.8.1 before implementation, otherwise transactions may fail or nodes may desynchronize. Developers are urged to review and test existing contracts on test networks, especially those relying on immediate SELFDESTRUCT-driven deletion.
Voting is open for TRON stakeholders to approve or reject the proposal.
MetaWin announced that its MetaWin loyalty rewards program will return more than $13 million to players via ongoing Cashdrops, weekly competitions, monthly races, and NFT holder-only benefits. The company says the rollout is designed to reward community loyalty and participation across its online casino and Web3 integrations.
Reward distribution details include: $1.1 million already paid in the first Cashdrop; an additional $4 million single-day Cashdrop for eligible users before April 15; $150,000 per week in Friday “Fire” prizes; $1 million monthly race leaderboards across April, May, and June; $2,000 per day in NFT holder-only competitions, five days a week; and a further $3 million single-day Cashdrop in July for active players. Together, these initiatives total over $13 million.
Sebastian Zinke, MD at MetaWin, said the MetaWin loyalty rewards program reflects a “player-first” approach and is meant to provide clear, significant, and immediate value to supporters. Users are invited to join now to qualify for a $3 million July Cashdrop.
For traders, this is primarily a gaming-platform promotional event rather than a protocol or token upgrade, but it may affect short-term sentiment around reward-driven ecosystems tied to NFTs and community engagement.
KULR Technology Group (KULR) reported weak fourth-quarter results, including elevated cash burn and negative gross margins. The core battery segment saw revenue drop sharply, and management did not provide clear explanation on the call. Profitability was further pressured by multiple impairment charges.
The article also points to strategic issues, including additional write-offs tied to KULR’s failed investment in exoskeleton developer German Bionic. The author says the combination of a deteriorating battery business and major strategic missteps makes it hard to assign value to KULR Technology’s operating performance.
Despite the company’s problems, the author reiterates a Hold rating for KULR’s common shares, citing market context: Bitcoin is down nearly 50% over the past six months, and KULR’s ATM (at-the-market) share issuance program is currently on hold. Overall, the update frames KULR Technology as facing near-term financial and execution risk, while broader crypto risk appetite remains pressured by the BTC drawdown.
Key takeaways for traders: KULR’s stock reaction may continue to track risk sentiment tied to BTC, while ongoing cash burn, gross-margin weakness, and impairment-driven losses raise downside risk until fundamentals stabilize.
Bearish
KULR TechnologyBitcoin selloffbattery revenueimpairment chargesATM program
Bitcoin price falling below $68,000 as geopolitical risk escalated ahead of a Trump-linked Tuesday 8 p.m. ET Iran deadline. BTC traded around $67,859, down 2.53% in 24 hours, after failing to sustain a brief move above $70,000. The intraday rejection left $68,000 as the key short-term level: a continued breakdown would keep downside pressure. On the upside, traders watch $69,000–$69,500 for stabilization.
Risk-off conditions were reinforced by reports of U.S. strikes near Iran’s Kharg Island, U.S.-Iran diplomatic rupture, and rising oil prices. U.S. oil was cited above $117/barrel, adding inflation concerns; one model (Kobeisi Letter) suggested CPI could rise toward 3.7% if elevated oil persists. Trading also cooled: 24h volume was about $33.66B (-9.51%) and market cap slipped ~2% to ~$1.35T—often a sign that buyers are not strongly stepping in when Bitcoin price falling.
Despite the selloff, on-chain data showed relative steadiness among long-term holders. Cryptoquant reported long-term holder supply flipped from a negative reading to a positive 30-day moving average (~+308,000 BTC), implying more coins are aging into long-term status than being sold. The article cautions that this does not automatically confirm fresh demand.
Overall, the market setup points to near-term caution while traders monitor $68,000 support and the potential next downside scenario if stress continues.
U.S. stocks fell sharply as President Donald Trump’s Iran deadline approached, with investors focused on escalation risk near the Strait of Hormuz. The Dow Jones dropped about 530 points, the S&P 500 slid roughly 1%, and the Nasdaq Composite fell around 1.3%.
The U.S. administration set an 8 p.m. ET cutoff for a deal to reopen the Strait. If talks fail, the plan is to target key Iranian infrastructure, including power plants and bridges. Trump’s remarks—warning that “a whole civilization will die tonight” while also leaving room for a last-minute breakthrough—added to uncertainty. Reports indicated negotiators do not expect a deal by the deadline, while Iranian state media said discussions continued.
Oil prices surged as supply-disruption fears intensified. West Texas Intermediate rose about 3% to above $116 per barrel, while Brent held above $110. Traders also weighed recent U.S. strikes on Kharg Island, an Iranian export hub, even though officials said targets were not oil infrastructure.
Despite the broader selloff, some equities showed relative strength. Broadcom gained about 3% after expanded artificial intelligence deals with Google and Anthropic, highlighting continued demand for AI exposure.
Crypto-trader relevance: this is a classic geopolitical “rates/oil risk” backdrop—energy inflation concerns and equity volatility can pressure broader risk assets, while oil-driven macro stress can also lift hedging demand. Watch for further headlines around the Strait of Hormuz, which can quickly shift liquidity conditions across crypto markets.
Fox Corp. will integrate Kalshi prediction market data into Fox News Channel, Fox Business Network, Fox Weather, and the FOX One streaming platform. The partnership includes real-time data visualization tied to political, economic, weather, and cultural events.
Fox says the Kalshi prediction market data will complement traditional reporting with market-based probabilities across linear and digital content. Kalshi adds that about 70% of its visitors check forecasts rather than trade. Fox also claims its media properties reach nearly 200 million people monthly, expanding distribution for Kalshi’s odds.
The move follows growing mainstream interest in prediction markets. A Federal Reserve research paper described Kalshi markets as a high-frequency, continuously updated benchmark useful for researchers and policymakers. Kalshi’s scale is also rising quickly: Reuters reported it is seeking new funding at a reported $22 billion valuation (up from $11 billion), and that weekly trading volume now tops $1 billion—over 10x 2024 levels.
Regulatory risk remains. The CFTC sued to stop Arizona, Connecticut, and Illinois from policing prediction markets, arguing federal swaps markets have exclusive authority. A Nevada judge extended a ban on Kalshi offering certain event contracts without a gaming license. Kalshi is also tightening guardrails, including blocking politicians from trading their own campaigns and banning athletes, referees, and other sports personnel from related markets.
For crypto traders, this is more “market infrastructure visibility” than token demand, but it may increase attention to event-based forecasting narratives and related regulatory headlines.
Crypto fund inflows climbed to $224 million in the latest week, according to CoinShares data, signalling renewed risk appetite despite shifting macro conditions. Crypto fund inflows were led by Switzerland at $157.5M, followed by Germany ($27.7M) and Canada ($11.2M). The US also saw inflows of $27.5M, but overall activity remained concentrated in Europe.
Asset-level flows were mixed. XRP posted the strongest gains with $119.6M inflows, its best performance since mid-December 2025, and roughly $159M total inflows for the year (about 7% of assets under management). Bitcoin added $107.3M in inflows, though it still shows net outflows of about $145M for the month so far. Short-Bitcoin products attracted $16M, suggesting traders are positioning for volatility in either direction.
Solana continued to receive steady demand with $34.9M inflows and is around 10% of total assets under management in crypto funds. Ethereum was the laggard, recording $52.8M outflows. The article links the weakness to regulatory chatter (including the US “Clarity Act”), which appears to have made investors more cautious toward ETH.
Overall, the headline $224M crypto fund inflows point to supportive sentiment, but the divergence between majors (XRP/BTC/SOL vs. ETH) highlights a market that is still selectively allocating capital.
Bullish
crypto fund inflowsCoinSharesXRP flowsBitcoin ETF/ETP flowsEthereum outflows
A new Outset Data Pulse report finds crypto media traffic fell 33% in 2025, but market rails underneath did not weaken. Tracking 349 outlets, the report shows crypto media traffic for crypto-native sites dropped from ~106M visits in January to just under ~71M by December.
Meanwhile, mainstream outlets that regularly cover crypto attracted far more attention: close to 7B visits in 2025, rising from ~367M in January to ~586M by December.
Key on-chain and DeFi usage indicators point to continued liquidity. Stablecoin supply increased from ~$216B to ~$307B (+~41%). USDT transfer volume neared ~$19T for 2025, with the fastest acceleration in the second half (October around ~$2.5T). DEX spot volume rose from ~$112B in January to ~$214B by October (about ~$1.7T for the year).
For traders, the main takeaway is decoupling: crypto media traffic is no longer a consistent proxy for on-chain momentum. The report also reports no stable lead-lag relationship between crypto media traffic and on-chain growth, suggesting weaker “attention signals” may not imply worsening liquidity or demand in the near term.
Neutral
Crypto media trafficStablecoinsDEX volumesUSDT flowsMarket signals
A new guide warns founders not to hire a crypto PR agency based on “polished decks” alone. It highlights five crypto PR agency red flags to prevent wasted spend and unverifiable results.
First, the crypto PR agency should provide named case studies with specific metrics, not just client logos. Expect at least three campaigns showing placements, syndication spread, and measurable business outcomes.
Second, coverage labeled “sponsored” or “partner content” is not the same as earned editorial coverage. Traders should treat paid placements as advertising unless the agency can show real earned media with no payment involved.
Third, the crypto PR agency should track syndication and reach beyond article counts. The article argues that secondary republications across outlets and aggregators often drive real visibility, and agencies that don’t measure this optimize blindly.
Fourth, messaging should be tailored through audience segmentation (crypto-native vs mainstream finance, DeFi vs general traders). Generic blasts risk irrelevant readers and weak market impact.
Fifth, the crypto PR agency must understand regulatory messaging and coordinate with legal counsel. The article cites ongoing SEC enforcement risk and EU MiCA disclosure requirements, warning that misleading marketing claims can create legal exposure.
Overall, the framework turns hiring into due diligence: ask direct questions on case study evidence, earned vs paid labels, syndication maps, pitch tailoring, and compliance-aware copy. The takeaway: choose the crypto PR agency that can prove outcomes with data, not one that only presents branding.
Neutral
Crypto PR AgencyEarned vs Paid MediaSyndication TrackingRegulatory ComplianceMarketing ROI
The FBI reports crypto-related fraud losses in the United States jumped to $11.4 billion in 2025, up 22% year over year. The FBI attributes the rise to more sophisticated long-term crypto investment scams, including psychological manipulation and fake platforms that imitate legitimate businesses. It also points to crypto’s anonymity as a force-multiplier for harm.
The FBI says many cases are linked to organized criminal groups, with operations reportedly concentrated in Southeast Asia, and alleges victims are exploited through human trafficking to sustain large-scale scam campaigns.
Chainalysis adds a global view: total crypto-related scam and fraud losses reached $17 billion in 2025. Fraud tactics increasingly rely on identity theft, fraudulent exchange websites, and AI-generated messages, which may be shifting the threat away from older direct cyberattacks.
In the US, reported crypto fraud incidents rose too: 181,565 complaints (up 21%) in 2025. Average loss per case was $62,604, and more than 18,600 reports showed losses above $100,000. Internet-enabled financial crimes exceeded 1 million complaints and $20.8 billion in losses, mostly driven by scams rather than classic hacking.
For traders, faster growth in crypto-related fraud losses and scam sophistication increases risks around sentiment, on/off-ramp security, and potential regulatory scrutiny. That can weigh on market confidence even if it doesn’t target a specific token.
Ethereum stablecoin supply has reached an all-time high of about $180B, rising roughly 150% over three years, according to Token Terminal. Stablecoins now account for about 60% of Ethereum’s market share, reinforcing the view that Ethereum is increasingly used as financial infrastructure.
The article links this growth to on-chain “money flow” rather than price alone, suggesting Ethereum’s real adoption signal may be mispriced. It also cites stronger institutional participation via increased inflows into Ethereum ETFs, despite near-term market volatility.
For trading levels, the piece highlights ~$1,800 as a key Ethereum technical support area that could help price move higher if it holds.
Overall, Ethereum stablecoin supply growth and ETF inflows point to underlying demand, but traders may still watch short-term volatility and whether the $1,800 support confirms the bullish thesis.
XRP losses are forcing late buyers out of the market, with Glassnode data showing an estimated realized-loss range of about $20M–$110M per day as XRP has fallen ~55% over six months to around $1.30. The key shift is “distribution into weakness”: selling pressure is coming from investors cutting risk on weakness, not from earlier profit-taking.
This creates a fragile structure for XRP price action. Earlier holders (not fully underwater) can still trim into strength, while recently bought, loss-making positions are pressured to exit—so each bounce can trigger new sell orders. Santiment also shows a 41% average decline in XRP Ledger wallet positions over the past year, the weakest mean-to-realized value reading since the FTX period.
Trading-market signals are mixed. CryptoQuant reports spot cumulative volume delta on Binance is up to about $520.2M (cash demand still present), but perpetual cumulative volume delta remains negative (~-$261M), suggesting leveraged traders have not confirmed a sustained turn.
Meanwhile, whale behavior is easing: daily whale inflows into Binance are down to ~12.6M XRP and 30-day cumulative flow is ~1.44B XRP (down from ~2.6B in March). Ripple’s broader progress (SEC settlement and product expansion) helps the long-term narrative, but XRP is still being priced as a stressed asset. Separately, XRP ETFs reportedly flipped to their first monthly net outflow of over $31M in March.
For traders, XRP losses imply elevated risk around rebounds until futures positioning and demand broaden into a cleaner reversal.
Bearish
XRPrealized lossesspot vs perpsETF flowson-chain distribution
Trump renewed threats against Iran and demanded it reopen the Strait of Hormuz by an 8:00 pm ET deadline. After reports that the U.S. struck Kharg Island, Iran’s key oil export hub, the standoff escalated.
Trump warned of wider U.S. targeting if Iran does not comply, including power plants, desalination facilities, oil sites, bridges and transport networks. He also delivered unusually aggressive rhetoric, raising concerns about escalation beyond limited strikes.
Traders are focused on the Strait of Hormuz because disruption risk around Kharg Island can tighten Iranian crude exports and lift energy-price volatility. Reports said the strikes focused on military installations and air defenses rather than directly targeting oil infrastructure, but the supply-tightening risk still matters.
Diplomacy is unclear and the deal window appears to be shrinking, while Iran warns deeper U.S. action could trigger broader retaliation and longer-term energy disruption. For crypto traders, this is a classic geopolitical risk trigger: energy shocks and macro uncertainty can quickly drive risk-off trading and higher cross-asset volatility.
Bearish
Geopolitical RiskStrait of HormuzOil Market VolatilityIran-US TensionsRisk-off Trading
Chainlink is expanding its middleware to help banks and trading firms connect legacy systems to blockchain networks for on-chain settlement. The approach is designed to avoid major infrastructure rebuilds: institutions can keep existing mainframes and workflows while routing transaction and data securely to blockchain.
The middleware focuses on secure routing, verification and automated reconciliation. It aims to improve settlement speed, reduce manual errors, and maintain auditable transaction records for compliance and monitoring. Chainlink says banks can “operate as they always have while settling transactions securely on chain,” supporting a gradual adoption path for decentralized settlement.
The rollout targets broader global access for financial institutions and can support multiple transaction types, including cross-border payments and real-time asset verification. Chainlink positions the expansion as a bridge between traditional finance and blockchain, enabling connections without replacing entrenched Wall Street operational “moats.”
For traders, this reinforces the narrative of institutional rails being built via Chainlink middleware rather than consumer-facing products, which can influence sentiment around blockchain infrastructure adoption and LINK-related ecosystem activity.
Kraken published its first monthly “Inside Kraken VIP” update, outlining new and upgraded services for high-value clients. The core change is the new Security Analyst Sessions: private one-to-one security reviews tailored to each client’s setup, covering account protections such as Master Key, Funding 2FA, and Global Settings Lock, plus authentication options from SMS to hardware keys. Kraken’s security team also walks VIP clients through modern attack flows including phishing, malware, social engineering, and account takeovers.
The update also expands the VIP referral program. VIP clients receive a personal referral link, and earn revenue share on eligible activity across spot, futures, margin, staking, and xStocks. The company says there is no referral cap and rewards are designed to reflect ongoing, targeted introductions.
Kraken reports strong demand, including a record number of private sessions booked during the period. VIP clients can access three session types: sessions with Chief Economist Thomas Perfumo (macro trends and market conditions), Product Leader Sessions across OTC, Margin, Custody, Futures, and Kraken Pro, and the newly launched Security Analyst Sessions.
Operationally, Kraken describes VIP events across Melbourne, San Francisco, and Amsterdam, and a Q1 2026 NPS survey where 97% of respondents said they want to stay in the program.
Looking ahead, Kraken signals more VIP experiences and product work, including VIP yield opportunities, upgrades to the Kraken Pro VIP Portal (including in-app Relationship Manager verification), and a private VIP community space.
For traders, this is primarily an operational and service update rather than a direct market catalyst; it may marginally improve client onboarding and risk management for high-volume participants.
Neutral
Kraken VIPCrypto SecurityReferral ProgramInstitutional OTCKraken Pro
Restaking is widely used in crypto to reuse existing Ethereum stake for new services. This article explains how AVSs (Autonomous Verifiable Services) fit into EigenLayer’s model and why “restaked security” does not automatically mean full Ethereum security.
An AVS is a service layer built on Ethereum that uses opted-in operators and restaked capital to verify offchain or narrower tasks. The key point is scope: an AVS secures the specific job it defines—such as data availability (e.g., EigenDA), oracle/external verification, bridge-related commitments, or automation—rather than securing the entire execution environment of Ethereum.
Security depends on design details: fault detection, how slashable behavior is defined, operator-set formation, and the amount of unique stake that can be slashed per AVS. EigenLayer’s operator sets can differ across services, meaning security is segmented and service-specific—not a universal blanket for all AVSs.
The article argues the risk surface expands as more AVSs add contracts, operator software, service managers, reward logic, and slashing conditions on top of the same capital base. More services can increase operational complexity and correlated stress, even if slashing is isolated by operator set. It also stresses that slashing is only meaningful if faults are observable and penalties are enforceable and fair.
Who it’s for: builders seeking verifiable offchain services, and operators/stakers who can evaluate the reward-versus-risk trade-off per AVS. Traders should treat “secured by restaking” as a service-specific security market, not a blanket claim.
In an interview, Lim Say Cheong of ComTech Gold outlined how gold tokenization can expand Real World Assets (RWA) adoption. ComTech Gold issues CGO, a token backed by 100% physical gold, built on the XDC Network.
The rationale is practical: physical gold is hard to move, costly to transport, and slow to trade. Gold tokenization uses blockchain speed, transparency and programmability to enable real-time settlement and auditability, while preserving direct ownership of audited gold bars—rather than synthetic exposure.
A major focus is Islamic finance. Lim said gold is a ribbawi asset and faces riba (interest/usury) restrictions. ComTech Gold structures CGO with full backing and a Sharia fatwa to target Islamic institutions, which Lim calls a “blue ocean” versus crowded conventional markets.
For retail users and asset managers, tokenized gold enables collateral use, easier fractional buying and selling on exchanges, and potential Sharia-compliant profit mechanisms that resemble staking concepts (via renting out/deploying gold for returns).
On adoption, Lim linked liquidity to participation: fractionalization should improve market depth and tradability. Geographically, ComTech Gold prioritises Dubai (UAE), Qatar and Singapore, with interest in Central Asia (e.g., Kazakhstan), and he expects the UAE—and eventually Saudi Arabia—to lead. He also suggested the next RWA wave could include real estate and instruments like US Treasuries and money market funds.
Overall, the interview positions gold tokenization as a credibility-driven RWA pathway for both institutions and retail investors.
Morgan Stanley is set to launch its spot Bitcoin ETF, the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MBST), with trading scheduled for April 8 on NYSE Arca under ticker MSBT. MBST is a physical spot Bitcoin fund designed to hold BTC directly (no leverage or derivatives), using Coinbase as custodian and prime broker, and BNY Mellon for administration, transfer agent, and cash custody.
A key focus for traders is the spot Bitcoin ETF fee. MBST targets a 0.14% annual fee, undercutting major peers such as BlackRock’s IBIT (around 0.25%) and Fidelity’s FBTB/FBTC (around 0.25%). The lower cost may appeal to wealth management advisors who can add Bitcoin exposure more easily without relying as heavily on third-party funds.
Earlier reporting also highlighted that a near-term NYSE Arca listing step often precedes launch, and that the market will watch the final fee closely—especially because even small basis-point changes can pressure the existing fee leaders. With BTC trading around the ~$68,000 area, additional regulated spot Bitcoin ETF supply could support sentiment, but near-term price action will likely depend on subsequent ETF flow data.
Keywords used: spot Bitcoin ETF, MBST, NYSE Arca, trading April 8, fee 0.14%, BTC flows, IBIT, Coinbase, BNY Mellon.