Japan’s 10-year JGB yield rose 1.0bp to 2.480% amid Strait of Hormuz tensions. The move also aligns with Polymarket pricing for a Bank of Japan (BoJ) rate cut after the April 2026 meeting, which stayed at 0.1% YES (unchanged vs last week). Japan 10-year JGB yield has been pushed higher as a US naval blockade risk feeds into inflation expectations, reducing the likelihood of a BoJ cut.
Oil is acting as the key transmission channel. With crude prices edging toward $100/barrel linked to Hormuz disruption, the end-June crude market shows rising risk of a move toward $90 by June 30. However, the crude options market is thin, with no recent trades, so participants are still weighing the potential magnitude of the supply shock.
BoJ rate-cut contracts are also barely liquid. Reported actual USDC volume is around $19/day, and only about $82 would shift odds by 5 points. The largest recent move in the BoJ contract was under 1bp, reflecting limited conviction behind a rate-cut path. A 0.1% YES payout would pay $1 if the BoJ unexpectedly cuts, implying traders would need a sharp geopolitical reversal or surprise economic data.
Traders should watch the upcoming BoJ meeting and any US/UN announcements related to the Middle East, as these could quickly reprice both bond-yield and oil-risk derivatives.
Bearish
Japan bondsBoJ rate cutStrait of Hormuzoil price riskinflation expectations
Trump has rejected an Iran proposal, lowering expectations for a near-term diplomatic breakthrough. In the US-Iran Diplomatic Meeting Locations prediction market, the probability of no US-Iran meeting by June 30, 2026 rose to 16.2% (up from 9% the previous day).
Market pricing suggests traders are betting on continued stalemate. In the Iranian Demands Trump Agreement segment, the odds of Trump agreeing to Iranian oil-sanction relief in April fell sharply to 2.8% YES (from 14% yesterday). Liquidity appears thin: moving odds by 5 percentage points costs about $141 in the meeting-location market and about $119 in the oil-sanctions segment, implying higher sensitivity to new information.
Key policy gap: Trump is demanding total nuclear dismantlement, while Iran wants sanction relief. The rejection of Iran’s latest proposal widens that gap.
What to watch: signals of mediation by traditional intermediaries (such as Oman or Russia), and any confirmation of a meeting location or shifts in either side’s diplomatic posture.
For crypto traders, this US-Iran meeting backdrop is a geopolitical risk narrative. If odds keep deteriorating, it can reinforce risk-off positioning and raise volatility across broader markets; however, a sudden diplomatic overture could reverse sentiment quickly, creating whipsaw conditions for risk assets and liquidity.
Bitcoin (BTC) failed to hold gains near $79,400 and slipped toward $77,000, raising near-term pullback risk.
A key signal is the Coinbase premium index, which turned negative for the first time since April 8 (around -0.04%). This suggests cooling U.S. institutional demand, shifting expectations from breakout momentum to consolidation.
BTC also failed to reclaim the short-term holder realized price near $79,200. If BTC stays below ~$79.2k–$79.4k, sellers from the recent cohort may continue to pressure the market.
On positioning, Bitfinex “whales” remain heavily long near the cycle peak (about 79,342 BTC). With no clear upside follow-through, this setup increases the odds of a short-term unwind.
For traders, the focus remains on whether BTC can reclaim ~$79.2k–$79.4k; otherwise, the negative Coinbase premium plus holder-basis failure points to consolidation or a further dip.
Ripple is expanding its institutional presence in South Korea via a new partnership with KBank, the country’s first internet-only bank and Upbit’s exclusive banking partner. Signed in Seoul on April 27, the pilot tests blockchain-based stablecoin remittances on selected corridors, starting with the UAE and Thailand.
The program runs in stages. First, it checks an app/wallet interface for remittances. Next, it links KBank customer accounts to internal systems to validate on-chain transfer stability and settlement performance. Crucially, these stablecoin remittances are expected to settle with a stablecoin rather than XRP, aiming to improve speed, lower costs, and increase transparency versus traditional correspondent banking—while reducing compliance and price-fluctuation risks. Ripple will use its Palisade SaaS digital wallet for the trial.
For Korea’s crypto rails, KBank matters because regulations require verified bank-account linking for exchange users and Korea’s “designated bank” structure can concentrate liquidity. The article also notes KBank user growth from about 2M (2020) to 15M by end-2025.
Beyond remittances, Ripple is pushing broader custody, tokenization, and settlement testing, including tokenized government bond settlement with Kyobo Life Insurance. The push aligns with upcoming stablecoin and digital-asset rules under Korea’s Digital Asset Basic Act, where stablecoins used in cross-border transactions may be treated as “means of payment.” Traders should view this as incremental rather than an immediate token catalyst, as the rollout is still a phased trial and regulatory details remain in flux for stablecoin adoption.
Neutral
RippleKBankStablecoin RemittancesSouth Korea Crypto RegulationTokenization & Settlement
Terra Luna Classic (LUNC) is rebounding with momentum: it rose about 18% in 24 hours and trading volume surged more than 360% (earlier reporting put the move near +22%). MACD has crossed above its signal line, with the histogram turning green and expanding, supporting a bullish push.
Price is moving toward a key resistance band at $0.00058–$0.00062 after bouncing from the $0.00045 support area. Rejection wicks near the supply zone suggest sellers remain active. For LUNC traders, a clean hold above $0.00062 would improve the odds of continuation, while rejection could drag price back toward the broader range and lower boundaries.
Spot flow data is mixed: spot netflows were negative (around -$293.78K), which is not a strong “panic sell” signal, but it also doesn’t confirm aggressive accumulation. The bigger risk is derivatives. Liquidations show long liquidations (about $23.24K) outweigh short liquidations (about $9.5K), meaning leveraged longs absorbed more losses. If LUNC fails to sustain above resistance, another wave of long liquidations could accelerate downside.
Key levels to watch for LUNC: $0.00062 for breakout acceptance and the previous structure near $0.00045 for downside containment.
Hyperliquid (HYPE) has rebounded sharply, with weekly futures rising over 100%, signaling renewed leverage and speculative demand. The article links this to a strong HYPE price run from the mid-$20s to above $40, alongside a higher-high / higher-low structure and buyers defending pullbacks as moving averages rise.
However, the rally appears fragile. With futures momentum outpacing spot-side volume, the market becomes more liquidation-prone. HYPE is nearing resistance in the low $40s, where prior rallies stalled, so the next move could be a shallow pullback or consolidation if derivatives demand stays elevated without matching spot accumulation.
Ethereum (ETH) is the weak spot. After stabilizing above $2,000, the market quickly slipped back into a downtrend. A key rejection occurred around the $2,300–$2,400 zone, and ETH is now trading below key short- and mid-term moving averages that have begun sloping downward—turning former support into resistance. With volume not expanding during recovery attempts and sellers driving activity spikes, ETH may test lower support levels unless buyers reclaim the $2,300 area.
Bitcoin (BTC) still has a bullish structure, but the next catalyst is close: about one week from confronting the 200-day EMA. BTC has moved from the mid-$60,000s toward the high-$70,000s with higher lows and an ascending channel, but volume growth appears insufficient for a breakout. Traders will watch whether BTC can decisively challenge the 200-day EMA, or if gains stall into consolidation just below it.
Israel’s Capital Market, Insurance and Savings Authority (CMISA) approved the launch of BILS, a shekel-pegged stablecoin issued by the exchange Bits of Gold. The decision followed a two-year pilot on the Solana blockchain. Regulators said BILS reserve assets will be held in designated and separate accounts in Israel.
The regulator’s approval supports a broader Israeli effort—linked to the Israel Tax Authority and the Finance ministry—to bring more stablecoin activity under local oversight. Bits of Gold CEO Youval Rouach said BILS is designed to create a direct bridge between the Israeli shekel (ILS) and global digital assets, enabling real-time payments, on-chain trading, and programmable finance using a regulated local currency.
The article also notes the global stablecoin market cap is over $320B, led by US dollar-pegged issuers such as Tether’s USDT. It frames BILS as one of the first Israeli shekel-pegged coins, launched when the ILS was around 0.34 USD.
Separately, US lawmakers continue debating stablecoin-related rules, including stablecoin yield and tokenized equities, with the digital asset market structure bill stalled in the Senate as of July 2025.
Neutral
Israel RegulationShekel-Pegged StablecoinSolanaStablecoin ReservesUS Stablecoin Bill
ETH faces bearish pressure after a triple-top rejection around $2,400. Ether fell about 3.4% to $2,287, marking the fourth failure to reclaim $2,400 since April 14. Price remains below the 100-day EMA near $2,350, keeping rallies capped.
Key downside focus is $2,150 support. Liquidation data shows roughly $2.5B of leveraged long positions sitting below $2,150. If ETH breaks under this level, forced selling could accelerate toward $2,050–$1,900.
Analysts also flag relative weakness in ETH versus BTC. The ETH/BTC ratio dropped below 0.032 BTC and slid under the 21-period moving average, suggesting fading relative strength. A higher timeframe pivot is near 0.026 BTC, where buyers previously stepped in.
On derivatives, Binance open interest for ETH dropped to about $2.58B, consistent with a leverage reset after recent positioning buildup. The funding rate is around -0.013% (lowest since February), with new activity dominated by shorts and earlier long exposure reduced. This setup can tighten if price stabilizes near $2,150, but the near-term technical read remains cautious.
For ETH traders, $2,400 is the ceiling and $2,150 is the trigger level to watch for liquidation-driven volatility.
Bearish
ETH price actionTriple top resistanceETH/BTC weaknessLiquidation riskDerivatives positioning
The Block reports that Patrick Witt, Executive Director of the White House Digital Assets Presidential Advisory Council, said a “major announcement” on Trump’s strategic Bitcoin reserve is expected in the coming weeks. Witt explained that since Trump signed an executive order to create the strategic reserve, his team has been studying the operating mechanism and legal interpretation to safeguard digital assets—especially Bitcoin—on the U.S. government’s balance sheet.
At the same time, lawmakers are pushing to codify the executive action into law. Senator Cynthia Lummis and Representative Nick Begich have reintroduced a bill originally called the BITCOIN Act, now renamed the “United States Reserves Modernization Act.” The proposal includes a “budget-neutral” strategy to acquire 1,000,000 BTC over five years.
For traders, these signals increase the probability of policy-driven spot demand for Bitcoin and potential changes to how U.S. reserves are structured. The strategic Bitcoin reserve narrative may continue to support BTC sentiment while market participants watch for legislative progress and any timeline confirmation from the White House.
Bullish
Strategic Bitcoin ReserveUS RegulationLegislationPolicy-driven DemandBTC Market Outlook
US President Donald Trump and his national security team show skepticism toward a new Iran deal proposal reported by the WSJ. Under the Iran nuclear deal proposal, Iran would keep the Strait of Hormuz open and pause discussions about its nuclear program. Trump discussed the proposal with aides on Monday.
US officials said Trump did not outright reject the Iran nuclear deal, but doubts remain about Iran’s sincerity and whether it will meet key US demands. The key demands are: (1) Iran stops uranium enrichment activities and (2) Iran commits to never developing nuclear weapons. The US plans to continue negotiations and the White House could respond with counterproposals in the coming days.
For crypto traders, this is a headline-driven, high-geopolitical-risk development. While progress is not confirmed, the fact that the Iran nuclear deal is still “on the table” may temper immediate risk-off moves, but any escalation around enrichment or Hormuz shipping lanes could quickly raise volatility.
Neutral
US-Iran TalksIran Nuclear ProgramGeopolitical RiskMiddle East ShippingSanctions/Negotiations
Morgan Stanley economist Seth B. Carpenter says AI diffusion is moving far faster than previous tech waves, yet major labor-market indicators remain unusually stable—evidence against an imminent wave of job cuts.
In employment data (job growth, unemployment, job openings, and quit rates), AI-exposed and less-exposed sectors do not show a systematic split. Even when youth unemployment rises, Carpenter argues the increase is largely consistent with cyclical hiring slowdowns rather than a clear structural breakdown.
The key mechanism is productivity: AI-driven gains are showing up more through output expansion than through reduced hours or headcount. This supports the “AI as an increment (more output per worker) rather than a direct substitute” view. In other words, lower costs can boost demand and create new tasks, limiting net layoffs.
Still, the main risk is timing. Faster AI adoption compresses the adjustment window. If firms quickly cash in productivity benefits and spread them broadly, unemployment could jump in the short run—similar to a recession-like adjustment until labor markets clear.
Carpenter also highlights buffers: income growth supporting demand, wealth effects on consumption, new roles within firms, and policy space (monetary easing and fiscal automatic stabilizers).
Beyond labor, infrastructure is a constraint: Morgan Stanley estimates 2025–2028 data-center capex may exceed $3T, but only about a quarter is deployed, potentially delaying AI’s full impact on the real economy.
Bottom line for traders: the news is macro-relevant (jobs, productivity, policy expectations) and framed as “AI disruption without immediate job cuts,” but near-term uncertainty depends on adoption speed, capex execution, and policy response.
Neutral
AIjob cutsproductivitylabor marketdata center capex
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio rejected Iran’s tolling demands for Strait of Hormuz passage, calling Iran’s toll system illegal and keeping a hardline US stance. The Strait of Hormuz traffic prediction market fell to 18% YES (from 20% the prior day), implying fewer expectations that normal shipping resumes soon.
With 21 days left until resolution, the Strait of Hormuz traffic market now prices a prolonged disruption risk. Odds also appear to shift against a US acceptance of Iran’s demands, as Rubio’s remarks point to continued “extraordinary sanctions.”
Market pricing details: the Strait of Hormuz contract shows about $36,459 in daily USDC volume, and $4,658 is needed to move the price by 5 points. The largest move was a brief 2-point spike at 3:48 PM, suggesting traders reacted quickly to Rubio’s rejection.
Traders watching catalysts include any CENTCOM announcements or movement by an UN coalition related to the Strait of Hormuz. Further shifts in US sanctions policy or Rubio’s next public comments are highlighted as direct drivers for price action. A contrarian setup referenced in the article is buying YES at 18¢ for a potential 5.56x payoff if Strait of Hormuz traffic normalizes by May 15, contingent on a diplomatic breakthrough within roughly three weeks.
Key crypto-linked angle: the Strait of Hormuz traffic contract settles and trades using USDC, tying geopolitics directly to on-chain/derivatives-style positioning.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzIran sanctionsGeopolitical riskUSDC prediction marketCENTCOM/UN updates
The European Union is considering sanctions on Israeli individuals and entities accused of helping Russia evade sanctions through imports of wheat from occupied Ukrainian territories. Reports say ships carrying alleged stolen grain have docked in Haifa despite Ukrainian protests.
This would be a new front in sanctions enforcement linking the Russia–Ukraine grain dispute to Middle Eastern diplomacy.
The article also highlights trader sentiment in US negotiation-focused prediction markets: odds for a “Trump agreement to Iranian demands in April” reportedly fell from 14% to 3% in one day. Meanwhile, odds for the Iranian uranium enrichment agreement sit near 0.9% with very low trading volume (about $4,778 in USDC over 24 hours), making the market prone to sharp swings on small orders.
Key catalysts to watch are White House communications and any official guidance or statements from the State Department or OFAC. A shift in rhetoric or policy ahead of end-of-month resolution dates could quickly move these markets.
Overall, the potential EU sanctions on Israeli entities introduce additional geopolitical and enforcement risk, but the direct linkage to crypto pricing is likely indirect.
Neutral
EU sanctionsRussia-Ukraine disputeprediction marketsOFACUSDC
Ethereum (ETH) traders are turning cautious after a $2,400 “triple top” pattern appears and resistance holds. The bearish setup suggests sellers are repeatedly overpowering buyers at this level, reducing the odds of near-term upside.
Market reaction remains muted. The April 30 ETH contract toward $4,000 shows low activity, while the December 31 ETH contract toward $10,000 is priced at ~4% (flat week-over-week). Reported volume is thin: only about $114 in USDC traded over the past 24 hours, signaling limited speculative interest.
Why it matters: a triple-top is a common reversal pattern. If the $2,400 resistance persists, it weakens the case for a sustained rally toward higher price targets.
What to watch next includes potential catalysts that could flip sentiment, such as public statements from Vitalik Buterin, institutional activity (e.g., BlackRock), updates to Ethereum protocol upgrades, and changes in broader geopolitical risk that affect overall risk assets.
For traders, the key implication is that current positioning looks defensive: resistance is holding, liquidity is light, and priced expectations for a $10,000 year-end move remain subdued.
Rocket Pool’s bi-weekly protocol update (21 Apr 2026) reports mixed growth signals for its Ethereum liquid staking product, rETH.
Supply and participation:
- rETH supply fell 0.7% to 335,301.
- Pending/active minipool count decreased 1.7% to 18,819.
- Node operator count rose 0.6% to 1,523.
Roadmap and governance:
- R&D continues for the Saturn Two upgrade (scoping and workshopping ongoing).
- Governance: the GMC opened Round 36.
Integrations and ecosystem:
- rETH liquid staking integrated into Whitewallet.
- A new rETH lending market is live via kpk and Morpho.
- Rocket Pool said rETH is unaffected by the recent KelpDAO incident.
Reporting and community:
- Treasury reporting from the pDAO and IMC is available.
- Rocket Pool marketing highlights rETH participation in ethStaker’s annual Ethereum staking survey and references an RPL listing (traders should verify exchange details).
Trading relevance (Rocket Pool, rETH, RPL):
The declining rETH supply and minipools suggest a short-term slowdown in deposits/activation. However, operator count growth plus new wallet and lending integrations may support user demand over time. Net impact looks more incremental than disruptive unless deposit trends reverse.
Avalanche (AVAX) dropped about 3% on the day, slipping from $9.46 to around $9.18, with market cap near $3.96B. The move tracks Bitcoin’s weakness after BTC fell below $77,000 amid leveraged derivatives stress.
Crypto liquidation rose to about $429.10M, including $284.87M long liquidations and $144.23M short liquidations, reinforcing a broader risk-off mood across altcoins. Trading data shows AVAX at roughly $9.17 (about -2.87% over 24h) and daily volume near $217.23M (+51%), suggesting sellers exiting with stronger conviction.
On the technical side, AVAX’s 14-day RSI is near 36, pointing to a neutral-to-weakly bearish setup. The 50-day moving average sits around $9.42, while shorter-term averages near $9.35 act as resistance. A key psychological support is around $9.0. A break below could open a move toward $8.50, but the article notes AVAX’s short-term outlook depends on whether Bitcoin can hold above ~$76,500.
DeFi fundamentals appear steadier: DeFiLlama reports total value locked around $656.65M (+1.69% daily). The news also highlights potential upside catalysts, including Bitwise launching an Avalanche ETF (BAVA) on NYSE with plans to stake, and AVAX-related firm AVAX One reporting Q1 revenue up to $2.4M. However, the current driver for traders is still the BTC-led derivatives flush and DeFi risk repricing.
Bearish
AvalancheBitcoin liquidationDeFi sell-offAVAX support levelsDerivatives risk-off
RLUSD’s market cap has reached a record $1.6B, adding about $370M of new supply in April (~30% growth). The article links this expansion to improving XRPL activity signals and frames it as a support for XRP’s Q2 bull case.
On-chain metrics are the centerpiece. Token Terminal data shows RLUSD transfer volume hitting new highs, with Q1 volume rising to $18.4B and March contributing over 55% of the quarter’s activity. On the liquidity side, DeFiLlama reports XRPL stablecoin total supply up more than 4% this week (~$16.7M added liquidity). RLUSD remains the dominant stablecoin on XRPL: its supply is cited at about $381M, representing ~88% of XRPL stablecoin liquidity.
The thesis is that higher RLUSD utilization (payments and settlements) increases XRPL network throughput, strengthening RLUSD’s role as the key settlement asset. That network effect is then paired with macro catalysts: the SEC’s changed stance toward XRP is said to reduce regulatory uncertainty, while institutional demand for XRP ETFs is reported at over $80M inflows so far in April (strongest since Dec 2025). The article argues that RLUSD’s liquidity depth could help sustain ETF-driven capital inflows.
Key trading takeaway: if RLUSD growth continues alongside ETF inflows, XRP may see stronger bullish momentum into Q2, supported by improving settlement liquidity on XRPL.
Crypto traders are watching “top 5 coins” coverage, with APEMARS now live at Stage 18. The presale price is $0.000288160 and the project targets a future listing price of $0.0055, highlighting a staged pricing gap. Reported presale metrics include 1,686 holders, $446K+ raised, and 23.3B tokens sold. The article also provides a “MARS150” scenario: a $1,500 allocation at Stage 18 would secure 5,205,441 tokens, then increase by 150% to 13,013,603 tokens, implying a projected value of ~$71,574 at the $0.0055 listing price.
Alongside APEMARS, the article names established “market news” leaders and ecosystem plays: Hedera (enterprise/governance focus and hashgraph scalability), Polygon (ETH layer-2 scaling for faster, cheaper transactions), and Solana (high-speed throughput and expanding developer/user base). For emerging sentiment, it flags Apeing as a community-first meme presale project, emphasizing whitelist access and security via audits.
Overall, the piece frames current rotation in the market: large caps respond to macro signals, while smaller tokens look for structured early entry. Traders are encouraged to focus on timing, presale transparency, and stage-based pricing rather than purely chasing open-market volatility.
Western Union is preparing to launch its US dollar-backed USDPT stablecoin on the Solana blockchain, aiming to speed up cross-border payments and settlement.
CEO Devin McGranahan said USDPT is nearing completion and is expected to go live with users next month. The USDPT stablecoin will be pegged 1:1 to the US dollar and issued through Anchorage Digital.
Initially, USDPT will be used within Western Union’s own transfer network as an alternative to legacy interbank rails such as SWIFT. Western Union expects near-24/7 settlement, including weekends and holidays, and potentially lower capital requirements for transfers.
Alongside USDPT stablecoin, Western Union plans a Digital Asset Network (DAN) to connect crypto wallets to its physical/agent footprint via a single API, enabling conversion from crypto into local currency at branches.
Later this year, it also plans a Stable Card to store and spend US dollar-pegged value linked to USDT, starting in dozens of countries and expanding further afterward.
For traders, this update may support the broader stablecoin infrastructure narrative, but near-term price impact will likely depend on which agent partners adopt USDPT and whether it proves meaningfully faster or cheaper than incumbents. Related competition includes MoneyGram’s USDC usage and Stripe’s stablecoin initiatives.
Neutral
USDPT stablecoinSolana payment railscross-border paymentsstablecoin adoptionAnchorage Digital
Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin is approaching $1.6B in circulating supply as institutional demand grows for a dollar-backed asset on the XRP Ledger. Data cited from XRP Ledger validator Vet suggests supply gains are steady—driven by continued minting and ongoing usage—rather than a one-time spike.
Ripple is positioning RLUSD for banks and payment service providers, with an emphasis on regulatory oversight and bank-friendly integration. RLUSD’s market cap is around $1.5B, closely tracking circulating supply, which points to more organic growth than a speculative blow-off.
Traders should watch RLUSD because the narrative is shifting toward “core payment rails” and on-demand liquidity. A potential Mastercard network integration is discussed at the planning stage, and RLUSD’s cross-chain mobility is supported via the Wanchain bridge, enabling transfers across XRPL and networks including Ethereum (ETH) and Cardano (ADA). If institutional integrations accelerate, the market is looking for RLUSD to possibly exceed $2B by year-end.
Bitget Research’s Chief Analyst Ryan Lee says the current crypto rally has a stronger base because institutional demand is replacing retail-driven speculation. The key supports cited are steady US spot Bitcoin ETF inflows, lower leverage, and improved spot-market participation.
Bitcoin (BTC) is expected to break into $80,000–$85,000 in the short term, assuming institutional demand continues to absorb volatility and supply. Ethereum (ETH) is forecast to follow with upside toward $2,800–$3,000, supported by ecosystem upgrades and broader adoption.
The report points to ETF flow data as evidence of institutional demand: US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded an eight-day net inflow streak totaling about $2.1 billion through April 23, with BlackRock’s IBIT reportedly taking roughly 75% of inflows. Lee also estimates institutional absorption is far outpacing new supply, citing that demand soaked up around nine times the BTC produced by miners over the same period.
Macro context is mixed. Gold near record highs is interpreted as capital diversifying across multiple “stores of value,” while elevated oil prices may delay rate cuts and tighten liquidity. Even so, the market’s upside case remains tied to institutional demand staying steady rather than investors reacting to macro swings.
For traders, the central takeaway is that institutional demand and ETF flows are acting as a stabilizer for BTC and ETH, making the short-term trend more constructive than prior retail-momentum cycles.
Israel’s opposition alliance, “Together – Led by Bennett,” led by Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid, aims to unseat Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Crypto Briefing prediction-market data show traders are not pricing a near-term Netanyahu leaving office. The “Netanyahu leaving office by June 30” contract is 5.5% YES (unchanged). The “April 30” contract sits near 0.1% YES, while the “June 30” contract again holds at 5.5%.
The term structure jumps roughly 5 percentage points from April to June, suggesting any catalyst is more likely in the April–June window than immediately. There are 67 days until resolution. Liquidity is modest, with about $1,762 in USDC volume across these markets and June order-book depth implying it takes roughly $9,495 to move odds by 5 points.
At 5.5 cents per YES share, payout is $1 if Netanyahu leaving office by June 30, implying an ~18.2x return—reflecting deep skepticism that the alliance can trigger a fast government change.
Traders to watch: coalition defections, upcoming Knesset sessions, and Supreme Court rulings that could affect Netanyahu’s legal standing. Overall, expectations cluster around April–June rather than an immediate political shock.
Neutral
Israel politicsNetanyahu leaving office oddsprediction marketscoalition instabilityUSDC liquidity
The UN Security Council has deadlocked on reopening the Strait of Hormuz, leaving the corridor effectively closed. In crypto prediction markets tracking Strait of Hormuz traffic normalisation, the May 15 contract fell to 18.5% YES (from 20% the prior day), signalling traders see little chance of a timely reopening. The May 31 market on lifting the US blockade also dropped to 58.5% (from 72%).
Liquidity is thin across contracts. Reported USDC volumes show $36,459 traded in the May 15 contract versus $95,253 in the May 31 contract, and order-book depth suggests roughly $4,658 is needed to move May 15 odds by 5 percentage points—meaning smaller trades can shift prices.
Watchpoints include CENTCOM and Iran’s Foreign Ministry communications/actions, and any unexpected diplomatic developments. If further escalation risk rises, the Strait of Hormuz reopening tail risk is likely to keep depressing event-based odds even before the May 15 deadline.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzUN deadlockPrediction MarketsGeopolitical riskUSDC liquidity
Fidelity Digital Assets’ Q2 2026 Signals Report says investors are stuck in a “Hope-Fear” repair phase, with Bitcoin’s net unrealized profit/loss (NUPL) at 0.21—modest gains at best and no confirmation of a durable bottom.
BTC, ETH and SOL remain deeply pressured year-to-date. Bitcoin is down 25% since Jan. 1; Ethereum down 31%; Solana down 38%. Fidelity links part of the drawdown to heavy forced selling: $2.56B liquidations on Jan. 30 and $2.13B on Feb. 4. Macro uncertainty—including shifting expectations around Fed rate cuts in 2026—has reinforced a risk-off backdrop.
On-chain and market structure signals are mixed. Bitcoin’s momentum turned negative on Oct. 18, 2025, when BTC traded near $107,000, and BTC has fallen roughly 36% since. The “yardstick” metric and hashrate weakness point to ongoing undervaluation and tighter miner activity; Fidelity disputes claims that miners are simply shifting capacity to AI workloads.
Cross-chain signals differ. Ethereum shows improved usage: transaction activity +34% QoQ, active/new addresses up 34%/18% and stablecoin transfer value exceeding $18T (30-day average transfer value rising from $59.2B to $73.4B). However, Fidelity notes lower costs can also invite spam, so the economic quality of growth is unclear.
For Solana, stablecoin transfer volume held steady through the downturn (30-day average +8% to $7.2B) and active/new addresses rose 50%/35% in Q1 2026.
Fidelity’s base case: upside depends on geopolitical de-escalation, clearer regulation, and a clearer Fed policy path. Traders should treat the current phase as repair, not late-cycle profit.
Hedera HBAR fell 1.74% in 24 hours to $0.09095, with the daily low at $0.09064 and high at $0.09309. Short-term charts point to renewed selling pressure near the end of the session, and HBAR remains 84.02% below its Sept 2021 all-time high of $0.57.
Traders should note key levels from the article. Support is monitored around $0.0890–$0.0900, while resistance sits near $0.0915 and the daily high at $0.09309. TradingView data shows MACD still slightly negative; however, the histogram suggests a mild recovery, while volume increased into the close.
Analyst COSMIC (via X) argues HBAR is still trapped in a long-term descending trend and a true breakout has not yet appeared. He highlights a “value area” and points to a threshold near $0.04801, with an extremely low region around $0.00674 to watch. The message for investors: avoid panic selling, but be ready for deeper declines—because fresh buying interest could emerge if price revisits lower levels.
Key takeaway for crypto traders: HBAR selling pressure remains dominant, but technical indicators and cited long-term “value area” levels suggest opportunities may open if support breaks or holds.
Ripple’s XRP has remained range-bound around $1.41 for 91 straight days, with unusually high trading volume despite muted price swings. According to analysts, the long sideways phase points to a “price squeeze”: key support and resistance appear to converge, which often precedes a sharper directional move.
Market activity is described as subdued not because of bullish or bearish sentiment, but due to shifts in liquidity and open positions. Traders may be reallocating capital in the background, while the narrowing trading range builds structural pressure. The article also notes that XRP is approaching a technical threshold, where volatility could increase quickly.
While the direction is uncertain—XRP could break upward or downward—rising volume during the flat period is framed as a potential technical crossroads. Investors are therefore staying cautious and looking for confirmation from the next move in this tightening range. The piece includes a standard disclaimer that it is not investment advice.
Gold price surged early 2026 on record central-bank buying and multiple Fed rate cuts, hitting about $5,595/oz in January. But the U.S.-Iran conflict and the Strait of Hormuz crisis then pushed oil above $100, lifting inflation expectations. CPI rose to 3.3% (highest since May 2024), the 10-year Treasury yield climbed toward 4.2%, and the DXY neared 99.9—an unfavorable mix for gold because it doesn’t pay interest.
By late February, gold price broke below $5,000, with reports of ETF outflows peaking around 14 tonnes in a day and margin pressure on futures. Physical gold demand held up (premiums stayed elevated), suggesting the selloff was largely “paper-driven.” As of April 27, gold is recovering slightly around $4,699, but headlines on Middle East ceasefire talks (proposal vs. cancellations) have kept the market choppy. Analysts cited include J.P. Morgan’s $6,300 Q4 2026 target and Wells Fargo’s $6,100–$6,300 range.
Bitcoin has struggled to recover in parallel. After peaking near $126,000 in Oct 2025 and closing the year ~30% lower, Bitcoin posted additional weakness: roughly -10% in January and near -15% in February. The article notes institutions are still expanding exposure—Strategy added to holdings (780,897 BTC) and BlackRock launched a Bitcoin Income ETF (BITA), while Charles Schwab enabled direct spot trading for BTC and ETH. Yet the price action has lagged because the Hormuz/uncertainty episode made Bitcoin trade more like a risk asset than a safe-haven.
Google Trends shows gold price searches dominating Bitcoin through 2026, while both wait on the Fed meeting (Apr 28–29) and Q1 GDP (Apr 30).
Bearish
Bitcoin priceGold priceFed and ratesOil shockETF flows
Solana (SOL) is stuck in a narrow $84–$88 trading range, with analysts warning that around $190 million in potential liquidations could be triggered if momentum breaks.
Key levels are now the main focus for SOL traders. A recovery and breakout above $90 (or $90–$92 resistance) could revive upside attempts, but repeated failures there have weakened bullish momentum. On the downside, support around $83–$84 is holding, yet heavy liquidity concentration between $82 and $84 raises the risk of a sharper slide. If leveraged positions push SOL below $83, liquidations may accelerate.
The article notes SOL has not reclaimed the $90–$92 band after multiple attempts. Volatility is described as still “early,” suggesting the consolidation could quickly transition into a directional move.
Longer term, SOL previously peaked in the $200–$250 zone and then entered a prolonged downturn. Some market participants view the current $80–$90 stabilization as an accumulation phase, but sentiment remains cautious while SOL fails to break above $90. Experts cite a potential catalyst if SOL can close above $100 (opening room for higher targets), while a fall toward $75 would likely intensify selling pressure.
No specific author or executive actions are mentioned; the main driver is price/derivatives positioning around the $84 area for SOL.
Bitcoin whale holdings have reached a five-month high, with wallets holding 1,000–10,000 BTC accumulating and bringing total exposure to about 3.09M BTC (last seen Nov 11, 2025). Since December, the cohort added roughly 240,000 BTC, recovering toward pre–Nov 2025 levels after an ~18% pullback from $103,500 to $85,000.
Long-term holders (LTHs) continue steady absorption: their balance is about 14.57M BTC. Recent distribution is light, with only ~42,100 BTC sold over the past 30 days, the lowest reading in 2026. Separately, Bitwise’s institutional flow data shows large investors added ~92,900 BTC in the last month, while net realized-cap selling was about 14,900 BTC—suggesting demand is outpacing supply and tightening BTC availability.
For traders, the near-term setup looks mixed. A four-hour chart points to a potential BTC double top near $79,400, with price around ~$77,731. The article highlights likely liquidity pockets at $73,700 and $74,700. A move above $80,000 would invalidate the double-top signal and flip short-term momentum bullish.
Derivatives also matter: over $1.2B sell volume hit Binance within an hour, contributing to a sharp intraday drop. Funding rates remain deeply negative (around -7% over 30 days), which could fuel a short squeeze if shorts unwind.
Key named analysts include CryptoQuant’s commentary, and Michaël van de Poppe (MN Capital), who still sees upside targets of $85,000–$88,000 for May if key levels hold. Overall, BTC whale accumulation reduces circulating supply, but near-term price action will likely revolve around the $74.7k–$73.7k liquidity zone before any sustained attempt above $80,000.