Circle has launched USDC and its Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP) on the Injective (INJ) network. The integration lets Injective developers and users use USDC for trading, lending, and payments, while transferring USDC between chains via CCTP.
Key market detail: USDC is a widely used dollar-pegged stablecoin with market capitalization above $30B. With CCTP’s burn-and-mint design, USDC can move between Injective and other supported networks (e.g., Ethereum, Solana, Avalanche) without relying on third-party bridges, aiming to reduce bridge exploit and counterparty risk.
Circle’s CCTP, launched in 2023, burns USDC on the source chain and mints on the destination chain to preserve a 1:1 peg backed by Circle reserves. Existing CCTP support includes Ethereum, Arbitrum, Optimism, and Base, and Injective is the latest addition.
For traders and liquidity providers, native USDC on Injective can simplify entry/exit and improve capital efficiency versus converting to other assets or using less efficient stablecoins. The update is also positioned to support deeper liquidity for Injective DeFi apps and potentially attract more institutional and retail participation.
Keywords: USDC, CCTP, Injective, cross-chain DeFi, stablecoin liquidity, bridge risk reduction.
TD Securities says gold could see a short-term pullback before a larger bullish move toward $5,200. The precious metal has been consolidating after a strong run, and the firm’s chart analysis points to a corrective phase within a broader uptrend.
Key drivers include shifting macro expectations. Investors are watching interest-rate policy, inflation data, and geopolitical uncertainty—factors that continue to support demand for safe-haven assets. While profit-taking may pressure gold near term as near-term rate expectations are reassessed, TD Securities argues the long-term fundamentals remain intact.
Trading implication: the pullback may act as a setup for renewed buying if gold holds key support levels. A breakdown below those supports could delay or invalidate the bullish path. The $5,200 figure is described as a medium-to-longer-term projection based on technical patterns rather than an immediate target.
For crypto traders, the move in gold matters indirectly through risk sentiment. If gold strength reflects hedge demand and/or expectations of easing monetary conditions, it can coincide with supportive liquidity conditions for broader markets. Conversely, a sharper gold selloff could signal tightening expectations and increase risk-off behavior, often pressuring crypto volatility.
Crypto-focused media outlet DL News, launched by the DeFiLlama team, will stop operating at the end of May. DL News said it could not build a sustainable, independent crypto media business, despite attempts to grow readership and revenue.
The company also pointed to a deteriorating operational relationship with DeFiLlama after internal conflicts in early 2023. In DL News’ explanation, disagreements reportedly centered on editorial independence, resource allocation, and strategic direction—creating friction that management says became irreparable.
DL News’ closure highlights broader headwinds for crypto journalism: advertising budgets have tightened, attention is fragmented across newsletters, social media, and paid subscriptions, and niche outlets often struggle to fund full editorial teams. Observers also note that close ties between crypto media and the projects they cover can raise long-term questions about editorial independence.
For traders and market participants who follow DeFi research and regulatory coverage, the shutdown may reduce the flow of specialized reporting on decentralized finance protocols, policy developments, and market analysis. While this is primarily a media-industry event, fewer credible sources can affect how quickly DeFi narratives form and how traders monitor sector-specific catalysts.
Neutral
DL NewsCrypto media shutdownDeFiLlamaDeFi journalismEditorial independence
Tokenized U.S. Treasuries on Ethereum have hit an all-time high of about $8 billion, up ~100% in six months, boosting the RWA narrative. Token Terminal data cites the core issuers behind the growth: BlackRock’s BUIDL, Centrifuge’s JTRSY, Franklin Templeton’s iBENJI, WisdomTree’s WTGXX, Ondo’s USDY, and Superstate’s USTB.
The latest reporting adds that post-issuance usage is changing the market: tokenized U.S. Treasuries are increasingly deployed as yield-bearing collateral in DeFi lending and money markets, creating more “liquidity and utility” than holding bonds passively. The activity remains heavily concentrated on Ethereum. rwa.xyz data shows Ethereum leading the tokenized Treasury market, while BNB Chain is around $3.4B and Solana, Stellar, and the XRP Ledger are each below $1B.
Key trade backdrop: tokenized Treasury demand is tied to U.S. Treasury yield levels and the speed of on-chain settlement (near 24/7). Traders should watch for rate-driven flow swings and ongoing regulatory uncertainty around custody, compliance, and investor protections—factors that can quickly affect sentiment toward Ethereum’s RWA collateral demand.
Bullish
EthereumTokenized U.S. TreasuriesRWA & DeFi LendingInstitutional AdoptionRegulation
Crypto market review highlights a mixed setup across TON, ETH, and BTC.
Toncoin (TON) has surged sharply, breaking up through major resistance and rapidly reclaiming the 50/100/200 EMAs. Momentum indicators remain strong on shorter timeframes, with rising RSI into overheated territory and expanding volume during the move. However, analysts warn the rally may be running out near the $3 area, citing a stretched, vertical “momentum squeeze” and increased risk of profit-taking after such an aggressive expansion. The article also notes that TON’s narrative is shifting toward Telegram-aligned infrastructure, which may attract speculative flows—but could also increase reversal risk if sentiment cools. Traders are therefore watching $3 for a potential exhaustion and faster retracement back toward earlier breakout zones.
Ethereum (ETH) is described as underperforming. After a stabilization attempt around the mid-$2,300s, ETH prints a bearish falling star pattern under key resistance. The setup suggests sellers may reject price near the top of the recent candle range. The broader structure still shows resistance from the 100 EMA overhead, price below the 200 EMA, and lower highs on longer timeframes—keeping rallies from sustaining follow-through.
Bitcoin (BTC) is attempting to reclaim the $82,000 level for the first time in 380 days (per the article). BTC has formed higher highs and higher lows since the mid-$60,000 breakdown, and it has recovered the 50 and 100 EMAs. The 200 EMA is being tested near $82,000, a zone that previously acted as dynamic resistance. A daily close above and a turn of that level into support could extend the uptrend; rejection could trigger another short-term pullback.
For traders, TON/ETH technical signals skew toward near-term caution, while BTC’s $82K test remains the key swing catalyst for broader risk appetite.
A new analysis argues that digital payments are mainstream, but cross-border settlement is still structurally behind—especially where payment service providers (PSP) sit in the stack. The core claim: traditional PSPs focus on execution while failing to fully explain what happens to funds after authorization.
The article highlights the “multi-track” reality for cross-border payments: cards, ACH, wire, RTP/FedNow, and stablecoin rails each behave like different operating systems (reversibility, timing, fault modes, and data formats differ). Because PSP abstractions don’t fully harmonize these rails, state fragmentation and fragmented visibility emerge—making reconciliation and exception handling harder.
Real-time payment networks (RTP, FedNow) remove the buffering window that older PSP workflows relied on. Risk checks, compliance screening, and decisioning must occur before funds move, not after—pushing control upstream in the lifecycle.
Stablecoins are framed not as a new “payment method,” but as a settlement rail that reduces the delay between accounting completion and actual arrival. The article notes a “sandwich” path (fiat-in → on-chain transfer → fiat-out) for cross-border corridors, potentially lowering cost and enabling “in-transit” capital efficiency (and potential yield), where traditional systems often leave funds idle for 24–72 hours.
Strategically, the missing layer is an end-to-end coordination/visibility layer across the full funds lifecycle. Current ecosystems are split across ~10 functional layers (execution, routing, risk/compliance, banks/warehousing, payment rails, stablecoin networks, BaaS, etc.), but no single layer provides unified lifecycle state.
Strategy could sell BTC for the first time to fund about $1.5B of annual dividend obligations tied to STRC, its ~11.5% perpetual preferred stock. That dividend burden is estimated at roughly 2.2% of its current BTC portfolio value.
Despite the potential BTC sales, Michael Saylor says Strategy will generally follow “buy more than you sell.” The firm also plans to use STRC issuance and additional equity funding to offset any BTC sold for dividends.
Market focus is whether Strategy can sustain its BTC accumulation pace. In 2026, it has already bought 145,834 BTC (~$11B) and now holds 818,334 BTC worth $65B+, making it the largest corporate institutional BTC holder. TD Cowen raised its MSTR price target to $395 and lifted expected BTC Yield to 18.2% for fiscal 2026 (and 9.6% for 2027), with a baseline assuming BTC near ~$140,000 by year-end.
For traders, the key variable is BTC price versus the ~$140,000 target. A weaker BTC path could worsen the dividend math and pressure the bullish MSTR outlook, while a rising BTC premium would likely reinforce Strategy’s leverage effect.
Bullish
BTCCorporate Bitcoin holdingsDividend financingSTRCMSTR outlook
Spot Bitcoin ETF inflows surged this week, topping $1 billion for the first time since January. BTC fell sharply to around $79,800 after failing to break a key resistance level, but analysts say the pullback may be short-lived.
Technicals point to caution then stabilization. A negative divergence in RSI on the 1-hour and 4-hour charts suggests weakening buying appetite. Traders are watching $78,500 as a weekly support benchmark. If BTC holds above it, downside could remain limited. Otherwise, a broader support band at $76,000–$78,000 is highlighted, including the daily fair value gap and the 200-day exponential moving average (which some analysts now treat as resistance). Jelle notes $78,000 as the first key support area, while Killa XBT suggests persistent selling could push support toward $76,300–$74,700.
Fund flows strengthen the bullish case. Net spot Bitcoin ETF inflows hit a weekly record of $1.05 billion (an annual high). If Friday also closes green, it could mark the strongest week for ETF inflows in four months. Swissblock’s proprietary Bitcoin Risk Index reportedly fell near zero, signaling a low-risk environment that historically aligns with reduced selling pressure and renewed accumulation near major support.
Overall, Bitcoin ETF inflows remain robust even as BTC dips, with price action likely to hinge on whether $78,500 support holds and whether traders follow through on a potential rebound toward recent highs.
IREN Limited (NASDAQ: IREN) reported IREN revenue of $144.8 million for the quarter ended 2026-03-31, down 22% from $184.7 million, as weaker Bitcoin economics and the removal of older mining hardware pressured sales. The company also posted a $247.8 million net loss, including $140.4 million of non-cash impairments tied to retired equipment.
On costs and profitability, adjusted EBITDA fell to $59.5 million from $75.3 million, while power-related costs eased by $25.9 million due to reduced mining activity. Results also included $23.7 million of unrealized losses from capped calls linked to convertible notes.
Strategically, IREN is leaning harder into AI infrastructure. It signed a five-year, $3.4 billion AI Cloud deal with NVIDIA (NVDA) for air-cooled Blackwell GPUs, with customer billing expected to ramp from early 2027. IREN said it will place the hardware inside 60MW of existing data center space at Childress and is working on power, land, construction, and compute delivery. The partnership is also tied to IREN’s 2GW Sweetwater campus, supporting its $9.7 billion Microsoft (MSFT) contract.
IREN’s wider buildout remains on track: 480MW expansion in 2026, with capacity targets rising through 2027 and beyond. In addition, it agreed to buy Spain-based developer Ingenostrum SL (Nostrum) to establish a Europe AI platform and added Mirantis to strengthen its AI Cloud software and orchestration.
Traders should note: IREN revenue pressure is linked to Bitcoin pricing, but the spend shift toward AI GPUs may support a longer-term earnings profile. IREN revenue is expected to be the key near-term headline, while GPU ramp-up is the medium-term catalyst.
Neutral
Bitcoin minersAI cloud GPUsNVIDIA partnershipEarnings and guidanceData center expansion
Coinbase posted a $394M net loss in Q1 2026 as weaker crypto market conditions reduced trading activity and pressured asset values. Total revenue fell to $1.4B (-21% QoQ), with investment-portfolio crypto asset declines driving $482M of the loss.
Trading weakness was clear: transaction revenue dropped to $756M (-23% QoQ) as market cap and volumes fell more than 20% and volatility stayed low. Still, adjusted EBITDA came in at $303M, helped by a shift toward non-trading income.
USDC remained the main stabilizer. Subscription and services revenue rose to $584M (44% of total revenue), while stablecoin revenue reached $305M, supported by ongoing USDC adoption. The quarter also saw USDC market cap around $80B, with a large share of supply linked to Coinbase products, reinforcing its role as a stablecoin distribution layer. Coinbase also said it gained spot and derivatives market share despite the broader slowdown.
Costs are being trimmed after job cuts: headcount was reduced by 14%, targeting about $500M lower annual cost base versus the 2025 exit rate. For Q2, Coinbase guided transaction revenue around $215M quarter-to-date through May 5, subscription/services revenue $565M–$645M, and restructuring expenses of $50M–$60M.
For traders, the key takeaway is that Coinbase’s earnings resilience is increasingly tied to USDC, subscriptions and other services rather than trading volumes—an important factor to watch for stability in the USDC ecosystem.
AWS has launched “Amazon Bedrock AgentCore Payments” in preview, adding stablecoin payments to AI agent execution. Developers can connect autonomous agents to funded wallets (via Coinbase or Stripe) and set per-session spending caps. When an agent needs a paid API or content source, it triggers a background on-chain micropayment and then returns the requested output—without stopping the agent’s workflow.
Key trading details: payments settle in USDC on Base and Solana. The payment flow uses the x402 open protocol, repurposing HTTP 402 “Payment Required” for machine-to-machine transactions. Users must explicitly authorize wallet access, and spend limits are enforced per session. Coinbase says its CDP Facilitator includes compliance controls such as sanctions screening and illicit-finance risk management.
Enterprise signals are already present, with Warner Bros. Discovery, Cox Automotive, Thomson Reuters, and PGA TOUR cited for exploring or using AgentCore. AWS also plans to expand beyond x402 to additional payment protocols as they emerge. Compared with other recent “agent payment” initiatives (Solana Foundation for Google Cloud access; Stripe-backed Tempo publishing an open machine payments standard), this pushes stablecoin rails toward real-time, high-frequency bot microtransactions—supportive for institutional-grade USDC usage, but likely limited near-term price impact due to a gradual rollout.
A sponsored press release claims the next crypto to hit $1 is driven by meme-coin momentum and highlights APEMARS ($APRZ) as the main “early-stage” bet. The article says $APRZ is in presale Stage 19 (“CHILL ZONE”) at $0.00032613, with a stated listing price of $0.0055—an advertised potential ROI of ~1580%. It reports $450K+ raised, 23.35B tokens sold, and 1,720+ holders at the time of writing.
It also gives a scenario: a $5,000 purchase at Stage 19 would yield ~15.33M $APRZ, and with a “ROCKET250” bonus code (+250%), holdings could reach ~53.66M $APRZ. The piece further claims a staking system offering 63% APY, with 20% of supply allocated to rewards and a 2-month post-launch lock, plus auto-compounding after the lock.
Alongside $APRZ, it briefly spotlights meme/community tokens including Apeing, Dogwifhat, Pepe, Fartcoin, and Baby Doge Coin, positioning them as culture-driven movers. Overall, the article’s message is that the next crypto to hit $1 may come from structured presales plus viral attention—repeating this theme of “next crypto to hit $1” as the central trading hook.
Coinbase’s first-quarter results showed stronger trading demand across spot, Coinbase derivatives revenue, stablecoins and on-chain products. The exchange reported $202B quarterly trading volume and an 8.6% crypto trading-volume market share, a new all-time high, driven by product innovation and derivatives growth.
Coinbase derivatives revenue rose as retail derivatives expanded. Retail derivatives reached an annualized revenue run rate above $200M, while trailing-12-month derivatives volume was up 169% year over year. The firm also highlighted that prediction markets crossed $100M annualized revenue less than two months after launch.
Beyond the main exchange engine, Coinbase said it now safeguards 12% of global crypto assets. Decentralized exchange (DEX) trading volume on its platform doubled QoQ after adding native DEX access inside the app. Borrow/lend balances also increased by $1B year over year.
Stablecoins remained central: average USDC held in Coinbase products was about $19B (over a quarter of circulating USDC). Base accounted for 62% of global on-chain stablecoin transaction volume, and x402 handled 100M+ payments, with USDC used in nearly all of them (over 99%). Coinbase also reported Base drove more than 90% of on-chain agentic stablecoin transaction volume.
Financially, Coinbase posted $303.3M Adjusted EBITDA, but a net loss of $394.1M for Q1 2026. CFO Alesia Haas said Coinbase is growing multiple product lines, and it continues aiming to widen access to crypto products and global digital payments.
eBay says it has received a takeover offer from GameStop, but the bid is non-binding and was submitted without prior discussions. eBay’s board is reviewing the proposal with legal and financial advisers and has told shareholders not to take any action yet.
The article links the situation to Ryan Cohen’s “memefied” eBay account push, including a claim that his account was permanently suspended after activity that allegedly put the “eBay community at risk.” Cohen also promoted an auction-style set of GameStop-themed items on eBay, with several listings reportedly reaching very high bids within hours.
On deal terms, the core issue for eBay is whether GameStop can deliver credible value and a closing transaction. GameStop has lined up up to $20 billion in debt financing via a TD Bank commitment letter, but the implied funding gap remains large versus eBay’s market value (about $48 billion) and GameStop’s (about $11 billion). Wall Street concerns center on how GameStop would pay and whether the offer can complete.
The piece also notes market reaction among investors: Michael Burry disclosed he sold all his GameStop shares, warning against mistaking debt for “creativity.”
For traders, this is primarily a corporate governance and capital-structure story, with eBay as the key counterparty and Ryan Cohen’s approach influencing sentiment around meme-stock dynamics. Direct crypto catalysts are not present, but any renewed meme-stock volatility could spill into broader risk appetite.
Coinbase’s US policy vice president Kara Calvert says the CLARITY Act could be marked up by the US Senate Banking Committee as early as next week. She stressed the bill needs at least 60 Senate votes and must keep bipartisan support. A HarrisX poll released Thursday found strong public demand for clear crypto rules: 70% of voters say legislation should already be passed, and 62% say the US should set global digital-finance standards.
Calvert also highlighted why the CLARITY Act previously stalled in January after Coinbase withdrew support. Key concerns included lack of legal protections for open-source software developers, a prohibition on stablecoin yield, and tighter DeFi-related regulations. She added that institutional adoption is more constrained by tax policy than market-structure rules. Under current regulations, the IRS requires exchanges to report transactions using 1099-DA forms, even for very small trades; Calvert said this creates unnecessary compliance burden.
She “hopes” tax reform legislation can advance in 2026 and pointed to proposals such as the Digital Asset PARITY Act. Calvert expects Senate action soon and legislation moving in the House within the next one to two months. For traders, the prospect of a CLARITY Act markup and broader bipartisan momentum could be a near-term sentiment driver, while any delay on taxes or stablecoin/DeFi specifics remains a key watch item.
Bullish
US RegulationCLARITY ActSenate Banking CommitteeCrypto Tax PolicyStablecoins & DeFi
The US Treasury reportedly “privately demanded” Binance comply with a 2023 monitoring deal after reports said the exchange facilitated about $1 billion in transactions tied to Iran-linked entities. The Information said Treasury pressed Binance to follow the three-year government overseen monitoring programme created under a 2023 settlement that included a $4.3 billion payout with the Treasury and the US Department of Justice.
Separately, reports also alleged Binance fired staff who had warned executives that the $1 billion had flowed through its platform to Iran-linked parties. Following subsequent scrutiny from senators, Binance said it would cooperate, saying it is working with the independent monitor and providing “full cooperation and transparency” to strengthen its anti-money laundering (AML) and compliance controls.
The renewed US focus comes as Binance leadership and political ties remain under the spotlight, including Trump-era connections and former CEO Changpeng Zhao’s 2023 AML-related guilty plea. Zhao recently said he is not seeking another CEO role, while floating ideas around revitalizing Binance.US.
For traders, the US Treasury ‘monitoring deal’ enforcement angle is a key Binance monitoring deal headline that can revive regulatory risk premiums around compliance-sensitive exchanges.
At Consensus Miami 2026, BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes argued that the Bitcoin price is mainly determined by fiat money supply expansion—not politics or regulation. Hayes said Bitcoin’s “fair value” depends on how many units of fiat exist today, how many will exist in the future, and how fast new fiat is created. He stressed that more money printing raises Bitcoin’s value versus fiat currencies.
Hayes acknowledged Bitcoin has been trading through a tough macro backdrop in 2026, with traders reacting to Federal Reserve expectations, Middle East geopolitical tensions, and ETF flows. However, he ranked these factors as secondary to the larger monetary cycle. For traders, the implication is that liquidity conditions may matter more than near-term headlines.
He also walked back a previously discussed $500,000 Bitcoin target, saying his current target is closer to $125,000, again linking upside to additional money printing. At the time of reporting, BTC was around $81,527—near its strongest level since late January—yet still roughly 35% below the late-2025 all-time high above $126,000.
On regulation, Hayes said Bitcoin’s value partly comes from being outside the regulatory apparatus, adding that proposals such as the CLARITY Act could conflict with Bitcoin’s key properties.
Gold prices held near two-week highs on Wednesday, supported by a weaker US Dollar and optimism over potential US-Iran diplomacy. The US Dollar Index (DXY) fell to a two-week low, making dollar-priced bullion more attractive to international buyers.
Markets are tracking indirect US-Iran talks mediated by Oman, with expectations that sanctions on Iranian oil exports could be eased. That prospect has weighed on the dollar by reducing geopolitical risk premiums and refocusing attention on possible changes in global oil supply. Gold has risen about 1.5% over the past three sessions.
Traders also watch the Federal Reserve for any policy signals, since interest-rate expectations influence non-yielding assets like gold. A successful US-Iran deal could bring Iran back into formal oil markets and potentially increase supply, which may pressure crude prices but also lower inflation concerns—supporting gold despite reduced pure safe-haven demand.
Key levels cited in the article: gold around $2,350/oz near the recent two-week high, with support above $2,320 and resistance near $2,370. Any setback in negotiations could quickly reverse dollar weakness and pressure gold prices, while central-bank demand remains a structural tailwind.
For crypto traders, this is a headline-driven macro mix: dollar softness and geopolitical de-risking can shift liquidity and risk sentiment, affecting BTC and broader market stability indirectly.
Neutral
Gold pricesUS-Iran talksUS Dollar weaknessSafe-haven demandFed policy outlook
President Donald Trump described a recent U.S. retaliatory strike on Iranian targets as a “light punishment,” signaling a limited, proportional use of force. While speaking to reporters, he stressed that the US-Iran ceasefire is still valid and ongoing, stating it “has already taken effect” despite the exchange of fire.
The article notes that the administration framed the operation as a measured response to provocations, but provided limited detail on the exact targets and the scale. The core message was dual: deter further Iranian action through punitive force, while avoiding escalation that could break the broader US-Iran ceasefire.
Analysts cited in the report say this approach may aim to keep diplomatic channels open and prevent a wider regional conflict. Traders and observers should watch for additional statements from Washington and Tehran, because the situation remains fluid and the ceasefire’s durability is critical.
Market relevance: any perceived risk to the US-Iran ceasefire could quickly feed into risk-off sentiment and influence oil-linked inflation expectations, which often spills over into crypto volatility. If the ceasefire continues to hold, the near-term probability of escalation premiums may fade, supporting stabilization across broader risk assets.
Neutral
US-Iran CeasefireTrumpMiddle East GeopoliticsOil Market RiskRisk Sentiment
OpenAI announced new voice intelligence features in the OpenAI Realtime API, aimed at more natural, context-aware conversations. The update introduces three models: GPT-Realtime-2 (GPT-5-class reasoning for complex real-time voice requests), GPT-Realtime-Translate (conversational translation supporting 70+ input languages and 13 spoken output languages), and GPT-Realtime-Whisper (real-time speech-to-text for live captioning and voice-controlled apps).
OpenAI says the system includes guardrails to stop abusive or harmful use cases, including spam and fraud. Availability is now via the OpenAI Realtime API. Pricing differs by model: GPT-Realtime-Translate and GPT-Realtime-Whisper are billed by the minute of processed audio, while GPT-Realtime-2 is billed by token consumption.
For traders, this is a supportive signal for the AI tech sector’s infrastructure demand, but it is not a direct crypto catalyst.
EUR/GBP remains under sustained selling pressure, with technical indicators reinforcing bearish momentum. The RSI is below the 50-neutral level and the MACD has crossed below its signal line, both suggesting the downtrend can extend.
Price is also trading below the 50-day and 200-day SMAs, a “death cross” alignment that typically limits upside bounces and favors shorts.
Key levels to watch: immediate support is near 0.8500. A decisive break below 0.8500 could trigger renewed selling and open the path toward 0.8450. On the upside, resistance sits around 0.8580, then 0.8620 (near the 50-day SMA). A recovery above 0.8620 would signal easing sell pressure and potential stabilization.
Fundamentals driving EUR/GBP: interest-rate expectations diverge between the ECB and the Bank of England. The BoE’s relatively hawkish stance helps support the GBP, while the ECB signals caution amid eurozone slowing growth. Eurozone data has been weaker (e.g., manufacturing PMI in contraction and soft consumer confidence), while UK data appears more resilient.
For traders, EUR/GBP shorts look favored while price remains below resistance. However, caution is warranted as 0.8500 is close; false breaks can cause sharp rebounds. Upcoming eurozone GDP and UK inflation releases could add volatility and shift the near-term direction.
Neutral
EUR/GBPForex Technical AnalysisBoE vs ECB RatesRSI & MACD0.8500 Support
The Mexican peso fell about 0.8% against the US dollar after Banxico cut its benchmark rate by 25 bps to 10.75%, aiming to support a slowing economy as inflation eases. Although the cut was widely expected, Banxico’s statement stayed cautious, saying inflation risks remain skewed to the upside.
At the same time, escalating military activity near the Strait of Hormuz—an energy chokepoint for roughly 20% of global oil supply—boosted risk aversion across markets. With oil-shipping concerns raising the chance of higher oil prices, investors shifted toward safe havens like USD and gold and reduced exposure to higher-yield emerging-market currencies.
For FX-sensitive businesses, the weaker Mexican peso increases the cost of peso imports and can raise debt servicing costs for dollar-denominated borrowers. Exporters may see a short-term competitiveness boost, but near-term pressure on the Mexican peso remains likely if Hormuz tensions intensify or if Banxico signals further easing.
Traders will watch incoming US economic data for the Federal Reserve path, alongside any changes in Hormuz headlines that could swing global risk appetite quickly. Overall, the combination of lower carry appeal and geopolitical-driven USD demand keeps the Mexican peso vulnerable in the short term.
Bitmine, un géant de custody crypto, accélère son programme d’accumulation d’Ethereum (ETH). D’après Ömer Ergin, président Tom Lee (Consensus 2026, Miami), Bitmine détient actuellement 5,1 millions d’ETH, soit environ 11,9 Md$ aux prix du moment.
La cible de Bitmine est d’atteindre 5% de l’offre totale en ETH. Au rythme indiqué (environ 100 000 ETH ajoutés par semaine), la part de Bitmine est déjà d’environ 4,29% et l’entreprise pourrait atteindre son objectif dans quelque six semaines. Tom Lee suggère ensuite de ralentir l’achat en fin de trajectoire, car la plupart des grands custodians auraient stoppé leurs achats malgré la volatilité.
Côté rendement, Bitmine tire des revenus via le staking : plus de 85% de ses ETH sont stakés, générant plus de 300 M$ de récompenses par an, soit ~1 M$ par jour. Cette base de yield réduit la pression de vente en période de stress de marché.
En parallèle, Bitmine élargit ses usages de capital avec un programme de buyback de 4 Md$ et l’extension de MAVAN, son produit de staking institutionnel (environ 14 Md$ d’actifs stakés, dont ETH, SOL et autres). L’entreprise investit aussi dans l’IA et des startups, avec des thèmes liés à la tokenisation des actifs financiers et à l’usage de la blockchain pour paiements et vérification.
NEAR is drawing renewed attention as an AI-linked token, with double-digit gains and bullish momentum building. Traders are watching a key technical setup: NEAR is trading within an ascending triangle pattern, but it has not yet broken above the pattern’s resistance (the supply zone), which keeps the breakout unconfirmed.
If NEAR fails to clear the supply zone, prior similar patterns suggest a sharp pullback—potentially around 25%—toward the triangle’s support. However, upside scenarios remain active. A breakout above the supply zone could extend NEAR gains by roughly 14% toward $1.7, while a stronger continuation may push NEAR to $1.8 (about +24%).
Momentum indicators support the bullish case but show it is not fully aggressive. The Aroon Indicator signals trend strength with Aroon Up at 92.85% versus Aroon Down at 78.57%, implying bulls still control the market. The article also cites steadier investor accumulation, though it has been mostly flat over the past day.
On positioning risk, a liquidation heatmap shows major liquidity clusters above current price extending toward the $1.6 area, which can amplify upward moves if bullish traders keep pressing. Still, clusters exist below price as well, meaning NEAR could drop if momentum weakens.
Overall, NEAR looks poised for continuation, but traders should wait for confirmation above the ascending triangle supply zone.
Bitcoin (BTC) fell 1.76% over the past 24 hours, dropping below $80,000 to around $79,840 after profit-taking. The move followed renewed US–Iran Strait of Hormuz negotiation risk, lifting volatility for BTC.
Catalyst: Iran’s Mohsen Rezaei said Tehran will reject a US proposal unless Iran’s “war reparations” demands are addressed. Reported talks include a 12–15 year pause in uranium enrichment, partial sanctions relief, and reopening the strait. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio rejected any transit-fee plan, and President Trump warned bombing could intensify if no final deal is reached.
On-chain/positioning: CryptoQuant data cited realized daily profits rising to 14,600 BTC on May 4 (highest since Dec 10, 2025). Short-Term Holder SOPR is 1.016, while unrealized profit margin is ~18%—a setup that can increase distribution risk. Derivatives demand still looks supported, but spot sell pressure has not fully accelerated.
Technical levels to watch: Liquidity pools cluster at $75,000, $73,000, and $70,000. BTC is just below the 200-day EMA near ~$82,162 (near-term resistance). If selling eases, $73,000–$74,000 may become a higher-low support. Upside resistance is near $86,500; reclaiming it could open $90,000–$92,000.
For traders, BTC is reacting to event-driven geopolitical headlines plus profit-taking, which keeps near-term range risk elevated.
Bearish
BTCUS-Iran TensionsOn-Chain Profit-Taking200-Day EMA LevelsDerivatives Demand
Bitcoin (BTC) is hovering near $80,400 after briefly dipping below $80,000. The key resistance is around $83,000, while on-chain analysts flag $82,000–$83,000 as a crucial decision zone.
In the short term, increased transfers from short-term holders to exchanges are adding some selling pressure. However, realized losses are falling and profit-taking appears subdued. On-chain commentary suggests futures positioning may have been tilted the wrong way, a pattern that has historically preceded failed bear-market rallies.
BTC ETF flows are a major bullish driver. Analysts cite consistently positive capital momentum through ETFs since early March, which has provided ongoing price support. While an earlier average ETF cost region acted as resistance, continued ETF buying is said to be lifting bullish sentiment.
Macro risks remain. Geopolitical tension around Iran is in focus, with the U.S. reportedly taking a wait-and-see approach. Separately, May 15 is highlighted: a new Fed chair is expected to be less supportive of monetary expansion, and oil-driven inflation is likely to complicate near-term rate cuts. Fed member Hammack also emphasized keeping policy options flexible.
Traders watching BTC should focus on whether BTC can reclaim/hold above $83,000 for continuation toward higher levels, or whether selling pressure triggers a move back toward a deeper bear-market bounce scenario (with the article citing a potential $56,000 reference point).
Bitcoin (BTC) jumped about 5% in May after posting positive monthly closes in March and April, with April settling at roughly $76,300. At Consensus 2026 in Miami, Tom Lee (Bitmine chairman, Fundstrat co-founder) said the BTC bear market appears to be over if Bitcoin can finish the month above $76,000. CoinDesk’s Bitcoin Price Index supports the strength, with BTC recently trading near the $80,000 area.
Lee also highlighted trader psychology: some investors still doubt the recovery due to the last crypto crash. He cited technical momentum from John Bollinger’s analysis, noting more bullish signals forming.
Beyond price, Lee linked the rally to macro and tech themes. Geopolitical tensions (US–Iran) and renewed interest in crypto—led by Ethereum (ETH)—were framed as making digital assets more attractive than traditional markets. He further pointed to stablecoin growth: global stablecoin transaction volumes have reportedly surpassed Visa worldwide.
In the longer view, Lee argued tokenization and AI-driven financial software will increasingly rely on blockchain and tokenized networks for fast value transfer. He referenced expectations that up to a $300 trillion securities market could migrate to blockchain platforms, reinforcing a structural bull-cycle narrative for BTC.
Solana (SOL) jumped about 2.3% in 24 hours and is testing the $87–90 area, with trading around $86.97. The move has sparked a derivatives squeeze: more than $17M in SOL shorts were liquidated as price ran ahead of expectations.
Traders view this as a potential trend shift. Analysts say SOL broke above a year-long downward trendline, but a bullish continuation likely requires a decisive close above the $90 resistance. If SOL fails at $90, the article flags a possible pullback toward the $86–84 zone.
On the upside, bulls point to strengthening intraday momentum. Ali Charts highlights the $89–90 range as the key trigger, while Crypto Melih notes strong hourly closes above roughly $89.50–90.75 could open room toward $96.90 and higher targets.
However, on-chain data is mixed. Santiment reports weekly active addresses have fallen from about 5.01M (early February) to around 2.89M, and transacting addresses are declining despite improving sentiment. This suggests optimism may be outpacing actual network usage.
Key levels to watch for SOL: resistance at $89–90 (especially $90 for confirmation), support near $84–85, and a deeper downside area around $78–80 if support breaks.
Solv Protocol said it will deprecate LayerZero bridge support and migrate $700M+ in tokenized Bitcoin infrastructure to Chainlink’s Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol (Chainlink CCIP). The move follows intensified scrutiny after a suspected $292M Kelp DAO exploit tied to LayerZero-powered bridging.
On May 7, Solv said SolvBTC and xSolvBTC cross-chain transfers will be standardized on Chainlink CCIP, with LayerZero bridging support slated for decommissioning across Corn, Berachain, Rootstock, and TAC. CTO Will Wang framed this as part of a broader security review, arguing Chainlink CCIP can provide “institutional-grade” assurances for SolvBTC/xSolvBTC.
Separately, Kelp DAO blamed LayerZero for the April 18 incident and said it is relaunching with a redesigned cross-chain system on Chainlink, citing an architecture using multiple independent validators.
For traders, the key takeaway is the ongoing DeFi shift away from weaker bridge assumptions toward Chainlink CCIP for BTC-related liquidity routing, which may reduce perceived bridge risk but is unlikely to change BTC’s fundamentals immediately.