A sponsored educational guide explains key crypto order types and how crypto bots automate execution to reduce mistakes and emotion-driven trading. It highlights crypto order types as the “vocabulary” of trading and shows how bots like 3Commas convert them into always-on rule sets.
Core orders covered:
- Market order: fills immediately at the best available price, but the exact fill price can worsen in fast/thin markets.
- Limit order: sets a target price; fills only if the market reaches it.
- Stop-loss: trigger price exits to cap losses.
- Stop-limit: stop triggers a limit sell, reducing crash slippage risk but risking “no fill” if price gaps.
- Trailing stop: a moving stop that locks gains during upward trends and sells on a pullback.
When to use each: market for speed, limit for planned entries/exits, stop-loss for pre-defined risk control, and trailing stops for trending markets.
The guide then maps these crypto order types into bot strategies:
- SmartTrade: attach take-profit and stop-loss (including trailing) when opening a position.
- DCA bots: buy in increments using scheduled base and limit “safety orders,” then take profit after recovery.
- Grid bots: place buy/sell limit ladders in a range to profit from volatility, with breakout risk.
Risk management advice includes pairing entries with stop-losses, sizing positions to limit damage, granting bots trading-only permissions (no withdrawals), whitelisting IPs where possible, and backtesting with fees/slippage.
Overall, the piece is about execution consistency—not new trading signals.
Neutral
crypto order typestrading botsrisk managementDCA strategygrid trading
Aptos unlock is scheduled for July 12, 2026 around 15:30 UTC, with about 11.31M APT set to release. The headline dilution looks small, but the article argues the market impact can still matter in a weak Layer-1 tape where order books are thin.
Trackers disagree on the percentage of supply because they use different denominators (total supply vs circulating/float vs market-cap proxies). Reported shares range roughly from ~0.54% to ~0.94%, and can reach ~1.9% under other calculations. The consistent point is the token amount: ~11.31M APT.
The allocation is split across community programs, core contributors, investors, and the foundation, so trading impact depends on recipient behavior. Community grants may sell slowly, while contributor/investor tokens could hit the market faster—meaning the unlock is only the start of the selling window.
Why traders should care: CoinGecko data cited in the article shows Aptos printed an all-time low of $0.5545 on June 30, 2026 and has modest 24h fees (~$5,288.99). Low fee monetization suggests demand strength may not be absorbing incremental supply, so even low dilution can amplify downside if marginal sellers meet fewer buyers.
Risk framing for traders: focus on the first 24–72 hours after the Aptos unlock, monitor large recipient wallets for exchange deposits vs staking/OTC moves, and watch derivatives (funding rates, open interest) for positioning shifts. A low dilution event can become a “non-event” if liquidity is adequate, but can turn into a price pressure trigger if funding turns negative and spreads/depth worsen.
A new Crypto Daily ranking orders crypto live-betting sportsbooks by how much in-play depth they offer and whether bettors can verify bet settlement via a public on-chain record.
The list highlights five platforms:
1) Dexsport — over 100 in-play markets per match, built-in cash-out, and a real-time on-chain settlement desk. It supports multi-chain non-custodial wallet usage.
2) Cloudbet — deepest live market coverage and Bet Builder, with long operating history; it trails on custody because it holds funds under an offshore license and uses tiered identity checks.
3) Stake — strong live interface and pricing speed, plus Same Game Multi; limited by custodial control and withdrawal verification.
4) BC.Game — the fastest live-odds refresh with streaming and a Bet Builder; casino-first model and heavy wagering on bonuses.
5) Thunderpick — responsive live bet acceptance and a football + esports blend; fewer deep markets and custodial BTC/ETH/USDT balances.
Traders should note: this is not a simple “most markets” or “best price” contest. The ranking prioritises crypto live-betting sportsbooks where live depth is paired with proof as bets settle, which may change how bettors size risk when cash-outs and settlement timing matter.
Disclaimer: information is general and not legal or financial advice. Gambling involves risk.
The Coinbase Bitcoin Premium has stayed negative for 50 consecutive days since May 19, hitting the longest discount streak on record (latest: -0.0742%). The Coinbase Bitcoin Premium compares BTC prices on Coinbase versus Binance; a negative reading typically signals weaker U.S. demand relative to offshore venues.
BTC has rebounded from about $58,000–$59,000 to the $64,000–$65,000 resistance zone, but the Coinbase Bitcoin Premium remains weak. Traders are focused on whether BTC can break and hold above $65,000; otherwise, selling pressure may return into the $64,000–$65,000 range.
Key levels highlighted: support sits near $62,000–$62,500. If that fails, $60,000 is the next downside reference, with a deeper move risking a retest of $58,000–$59,000.
ETF flow context also points to cooled U.S. spot demand, with reported net outflows of about $6.35B over 30 days. While the Coinbase Bitcoin Premium is a widely used proxy, it remains one signal within a broader market picture.
Polymarket political trading remains highly active among U.S.-linked wallets even with geoblock controls. According to the Allium-linked dataset cited in the report, U.S.-linked wallets generated $571 million in Polymarket political-market volume over the past year and were the largest national cohort. The sample identified 3,776 U.S.-linked wallets, ranking ahead of Hong Kong (about $422 million).
The article notes the data is directional, not a complete census: Allium’s country tags cover roughly 6% of Polymarket political-market wallets and are based on on-chain behavior rather than IP addresses. Polymarket documentation lists the U.S. among restricted jurisdictions and says VPNs or similar tools are prohibited for bypassing geographic restrictions. However, the report argues the geoblock does not erase on-chain traces: stablecoin and wallet activity can still be observed on-chain even if the frontend rejects users by location.
Market positioning is also discussed. U.S.-linked wallets skew more toward geopolitics: geopolitical markets made up about 46% of U.S. notional volume versus roughly 36% across the platform. Election-market share was lower for the U.S. cohort than for global traders.
Finally, the report finds no clear forecasting edge for U.S.-linked wallets. In resolved markets, U.S.-linked wallets backed winners at a rate close to the broader platform, suggesting participation/access pressure matters more than superior information.
Related regulatory scrutiny is highlighted, including a U.S. House Oversight probe seeking documents on KYC, access controls, and suspicious-trading monitoring.
On Solana, on-chain analyst Specter says it found “wallet-level exposure” tying attacker-linked addresses from the BONK DAO governance attack to wallets connected to the founder of Realms and “crypto_notte.” The finding is not proof of who executed the BONK DAO governance attack. It only indicates possible on-chain links such as direct transfers, shared counterparties, or funding paths.
This new attribution layer arrives after BonkDAO reported a malicious governance proposal that drained about $20 million worth of BONK from its treasury. BonkDAO said the attacker used DAO voting power through Realms governance infrastructure, rather than a direct smart-contract exploit, to route treasury assets.
Specter frames its work as a quick investigation into the BONK DAO governance attack mechanics, shifting attention from the voting/transfer route to whether the exposed wallets reflect normal market operations (e.g., exchange funding, OTC movement, intermediary addresses) or stronger control by the attacker.
Traders should treat this as incremental intelligence for investigators and risk monitoring, not an immediate confirmation of individual culpability. Focus on Solana treasury-drain fallout, potential exchange/wallet risk flags, and any subsequent legal/compliance actions that could affect liquidity around BONK.
MicroStrategy sell Bitcoin: the company says it sold 3,588 BTC for about $216 million to fund dividends tied to its digital credit securities (notably STRC). CEO Michael Saylor stated MicroStrategy still holds 843,775 BTC and $2.55 billion in USD reserves (as of 7/5/2026), but a separate filing suggests the $2.5 billion reserve may be maintained and replenished rather than used as the stated “runway.”
A new repurchase program was also announced, authorizing up to $2 billion to buy back dividend-yielding STRC and MSTR stocks (up to $1 billion each). However, the article notes that in the latest week MicroStrategy did not actually buy shares, and that a prior filing indicated $1.1 billion worth of MSTR was sold—adding opacity to how the company is funding dividends.
Key market reference points: STRC is reportedly trading at about $88 versus a $100 target, implying stress in the BTC-backed corporate debt complex. The piece argues that repeated dividend support while shrinking BTC exposure can create a “discount-to-yield” dynamic similar to past Bitcoin trust episodes (e.g., GBTC’s discount/trap behavior), potentially prolonging volatility.
Net for traders: MicroStrategy sell Bitcoin signals active liquidity management and potential pressure across MSTR/STRC-related instruments, especially if BTC stays range-bound or declines. Watch for further BTC sales, dividend policy changes, and discount widening/narrowing in STRC and related tickers (STRF, STRE, STRK, STRD, STRC).
The CLARITY Act faces a narrow window to pass the U.S. Senate, with August 7, 2026 framed as the last credible session day before the summer recess. After a missed July 4 White House signing target, advocates are treating the CLARITY Act deadline as make-or-break for 2026 enactment.
For traders, the core issue is market structure. The proposed CLARITY Act aims to clarify how regulation is split across tokens treated as securities vs commodities, including guidance on decentralization tests, exchange listings, custody roles for brokers/banks, and stablecoin issuer requirements. A clearer path could improve liquidity and capital deployment into U.S. venues, but it still depends on later rulemaking.
The bill’s odds and details are influenced by a Supreme Court ruling (Trump v. Slaughter) on agency commissioners’ for-cause removal, which changes bargaining leverage in ethics and governance provisions. Bloomberg reports the Office of Government Ethics disclosure referenced very large reported Trump-related crypto income, pushing senators to tighten conflict-of-interest language—potentially affecting how regulators later supervise digital-asset markets.
If the CLARITY Act slips into fall/2027, the article expects the status quo to harden: more enforcement and guidance-by-memo rather than stable rulemaking. That could keep listings clustered offshore, delay stablecoin and custody integrations, and raise risk premiums for U.S. projects.
Actionable takeaway: prepare scenario plans for both August passage and delayed outcomes, update listing and custody roadmaps, and strengthen documentation for decentralization/commodity-status narratives well ahead of any final text.
Bearish
U.S. Crypto RegulationCLARITY ActStablecoinsSEC vs CFTCMarket Structure
Crypto sportsbook bettors are warned not to rely on promotions and to do seven checks before funding. The guide prioritizes reading the betting “lineup” yourself and confirms where the risks sit: (1) custody—whether the crypto sportsbook holds funds or pays to your own wallet; (2) settlement transparency—prefer verifiable/on-chain settlement records over private ledgers; (3) supported coins and networks—confirm the stablecoins (e.g., USDT/USDC) and the exact blockchain network to avoid wrong-network losses; (4) true cashier costs—review withdrawal fees, caps, and any staged exits, not just “fee-free” deposits; (5) market depth and odds margin—the odds cut can differ (roughly ~4% vs ~7% cited), affecting tournament-wide returns; (6) audits and payout history—look for independent, named audits and a track record; (7) verification and terms—understand KYC/AML triggers and read bonus wagering/withdrawal conditions upfront.
It then profiles five named crypto sportsbooks and what they emphasize on the transparency axis: Dexsport (non-custodial, on-chain verifiable settlement; multi-chain support), Cloudbet (long operating history, conservative rewards), Stake (competitive pricing and live betting; Stake Shield/VIP approach), BC.Game (largest coin menu; custodial model with heavier wagering terms), and BetPanda (broad sports categories; cash-out on live bets but thinner market depth and mixed feedback). Traders are urged to verify current terms and local legality before depositing.
Neutral
Crypto SportsbookWorld Cup BettingCustody & SettlementStablecoins & NetworksOdds Margin
Bitcoin surged nearly 10% this week, trading around $64,023 and briefly topping a two-week high above $64,500. Market maker Wintermute says this move looks like a textbook “relief rally”—a short-term recovery rather than a fundamental market shift.
Wintermute points to a mix of supportive signals: improving macro conditions, a more dovish Federal Reserve tone, and better Ethereum-related and institutional-adoption headlines. It also cites a flip in Bitcoin ETF flows: ETFs ended a 10-day outflow streak, adding over $222M on July 2, and then attracting more than $265M on Monday (per Farside Investors).
However, Wintermute warns against extrapolating from one data point. It wants ETF inflows sustained across consecutive sessions before interpreting the move as a real reversal instead of a one-off, squeeze-driven “relief rally.” Until the broader capital-flow picture turns, Wintermute expects BTC to grind higher modestly from here, but not to confirm a durable trend.
Contextually, BTC is still about 50% below its October all-time high (~$126,080), keeping traders cautious about chasing the bounce.
Neutral
BitcoinETF flowsMarket makingRelief rallyFed outlook
BonkDAO said a malicious governance proposal triggered a token-weighted vote that drained about $20M worth of BONK from its treasury. Investigators identified exchange wallets that accumulated BONK ahead of the vote to reach the required quorum, after which the “Yes” outcome executed the treasury transfer automatically per protocol.
The earlier on-chain analysis put the amount at roughly $21.2M (4.426T BONK) and noted the attacker likely spent about $4.4M buying BONK to secure voting power. BonkDAO also flagged lingering legal risk: even if the transfer was valid on-chain, courts could still view it as self-dealing or fraud.
In the latest update, BonkDAO says it is working with exchanges, bridges, the Solana Foundation, and law enforcement to manage fallout and pursue recovery. Traders should watch BONK for short-term volatility as confidence in memecoin DAO governance and treasury controls is questioned.
Potential mitigations now being emphasized include timelocks, higher quorum thresholds, voting-concentration alerts, proposal review windows, multisig/council checkpoints, and splitting treasuries into separate buckets to limit damage from a single approval. Overall, this BonkDAO treasury drain highlights growing governance and operational risk where token-weighted systems can become an execution path before meaningful intervention.
CryptoQuant analyst CryptoOnchain warns the Bitcoin rally looks fragile because offshore leverage is rising faster than U.S. spot demand. Over the past two weeks, BTC rose from about $58,500 to above $63,500. But Binance funding rates have jumped 860% versus the 90-day baseline, signaling aggressive long positioning in derivatives.
Meanwhile, the Coinbase Premium Index has stayed negative for the full 14-day period, ranging roughly from -0.09 to -0.17. The analyst treats this divergence as evidence that the Bitcoin rally is being driven more by speculative offshore leverage than by sustained U.S. institutional spot buying.
Additional on-chain context is provided by the NVT Golden Cross metric: it fell 579% from its 90-day baseline. In the analyst’s view, a drop in NVT while price rises suggests network transaction activity is not keeping pace with market capitalization growth.
Implication for traders: until the Coinbase premium returns to neutral or positive, the Bitcoin rally may remain vulnerable to a sudden correction. Overextended longs could be liquidated if momentum weakens, potentially triggering a leverage flush.
Key levels to monitor: BTC’s derivatives funding behavior (Binance) and the Coinbase Premium Index as a proxy for renewed U.S. spot demand. In the near term, this setup leans risk-on for trend traders, but it increases tail risk of pullbacks. Over the longer term, confirmation of real spot demand would be needed to make the rally more sustainable.
Nuvion is integrating Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin into its AI-powered global banking and payments platform. The upgrade is designed to speed up cross-border settlement, improve liquidity and treasury management, and reduce typical frictions from correspondent banks and delayed clearing.
A key feature is that enterprises can connect fiat and digital assets through a single API, avoiding the need to choose between legacy banking rails and blockchain networks. Nuvion says the RLUSD integration supports near real-time settlement and embedded stablecoin payments inside business applications.
Nuvion also positions the platform as programmable and “borderless,” with enterprise-grade compliance and infrastructure. Ripple’s regulated RLUSD is available on the XRP Ledger (XRPL) and Ethereum, which Nuvion says can broaden liquidity across Ripple’s digital payments network while giving businesses access to multiple blockchain ecosystems.
Overall, the move highlights ongoing institutional adoption of regulated stablecoins and strengthens the RLUSD push into enterprise payment rails.
AI is the dominant theme across global earnings calls in H1 2026, with mentions rising about 310% to ~780 from ~190 in H2 2025. FactSet data shows a record 337 S&P 500 executives referenced AI, the highest in a decade. Market participants appear to treat this surge in AI mentions as growing confidence in AI’s corporate strategy and valuation impact.
In prediction-market pricing, Anthropic’s valuation reaching $1.25 trillion by December 31 is implied as highly likely, with a quoted probability of 90.5%. The article frames the move as consistent with scenarios where AI-linked companies gain major valuation momentum.
What to watch next: any strategic announcements from Anthropic and partners such as Amazon and Google, further AI technology integration into corporate roadmaps, and potential regulatory shifts affecting AI-heavy businesses.
Bullish
AI mentionsearnings callsAnthropic valuationprediction marketsS&P 500 tech sector
A Paris appeals court has cleared Marine Le Pen to run in the 2027 French presidential election after reducing a prior five-year ineligibility ban. Her embezzlement conviction was not overturned, so she must serve one year of house detention with an electronic tag.
Le Pen has not yet confirmed her candidacy. If she decides not to run, Jordan Bardella (leader of France’s National Rally) is widely expected to be the party’s nominee.
Prediction markets reacted immediately. Market activity suggests Le Pen’s clearance is supportive of her potential candidacy, while her legal obligations may limit how actively she can campaign. The article notes pricing moved toward higher implied odds for Le Pen in the 2027 race.
What to watch next: any formal announcement from Le Pen, and how her detention/monitoring schedule affects campaign visibility. Traders should also monitor Bardella positioning and any shifts in poll standings, since those are likely to drive further changes in prediction market contracts.
Neutral
French electionprediction marketsMarine Le Penlegal verdictJordan Bardella
Privy launched global fiat onramps that let users buy crypto directly inside apps using a card, aiming to reduce onboarding drop-offs at the funding step. The rollout combines signup, wallet creation, and funding into a single flow.
In the US and EU, Stripe Crypto Onramp powers payment processing plus KYC and compliance. Privy’s global aggregator then routes users in 100+ other countries through the best available local providers, delivering funds straight to a destination wallet. Supported rails include cards, Apple Pay, Google Pay, and ACH (in eligible markets).
Privy positions this as a developer-focused infrastructure upgrade beyond authentication and wallet creation. It already offers wallet and stablecoin infrastructure and onchain money movement. The company cites scale across “120M+ global accounts,” “180+ countries,” and “$15B+ monthly processing volume.”
For crypto traders, the news is mainly about payments and onboarding UX. Better fiat access and fewer steps can support user growth and volume over time, but it is unlikely to change near-term macro supply/demand dynamics. Stripe Crypto Onramp is again referenced as the compliance-and-payment backbone for US/EU within Privy’s new flow.
Neutral
fiat onrampembedded walletsStripe Crypto OnrampKYC compliancecrypto onboarding
Tether has invested $20 million in Brazil’s Mercado Bitcoin to accelerate tokenized finance across Latin America. The Tether investment will support Mercado Bitcoin’s push into tokenized assets, stablecoin payments, lending, and broader blockchain-based financial services.
Mercado Bitcoin says it has 4.5M+ users and has issued over 2B Brazilian reais (about $370M) in tokenized assets. The platform operates under nearly a dozen licenses in Brazil and Europe, including a payment institution license from Brazil’s central bank, and runs an integrated onchain financial infrastructure.
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino said the platform is among the most comprehensive regulated onchain finance offerings in the region, citing its licensing, tokenization infrastructure, and bundled financial services. In February, Mercado Bitcoin also reported deploying $20M+ in tokenized private credit on the Bitcoin sidechain Rootstock.
This Tether investment aligns with the stablecoin issuer’s strategy of backing blockchain financial infrastructure. Tether (USDT) reported about $1.04B in net profit in Q1 2026 and said it uses those profits for strategic investments, including a $134M round for Stablecoin Development Corporation and an investment in remittance firm LemFi to integrate USDT as a settlement layer across Africa and Asia.
Overall, the Tether investment strengthens the tokenization and USDT payment rails theme—important for traders watching stablecoin adoption, RWA growth, and regulated onchain finance expansion.
The article argues that the biggest advantage in the AI tech sector will come from AI adoption, not just from building frontier models. Drawing on political scientist Jeff Ding’s “diffusion theory,” it contrasts the “leading sector” idea (who invents the biggest new industry wins) with the diffusion view: general-purpose technologies create long-term power when they are embedded across ordinary work over decades.
A key mechanism is “skill infrastructure”—education and training systems that broaden engineering capacity, standardize best practices, and link research to industry. Inside companies, the author says AI strategy often becomes either a procurement decision (choosing the best vendor/model/tool) or a moonshot lab demo. The diffusion approach shifts focus to organizational know-how: redesigning workflows, making learning shareable, and compounding improvements.
The piece frames successful enterprise AI as diffusion that is organizational, not merely technical. It highlights how early electrification gains required decades of re-architecting factories around electric motors—an analogy for decentralized, right-sized AI use across many roles and processes.
Practical steps discussed include: building an internal capability “ladder” for employee maturity, running adoption sprints and hackathons to engage the “crowd,” packaging learning into reusable artifacts (skills, repos, configs, sandboxes), and using guardrails/sandboxing to make autonomy safe. It also emphasizes unified, “tidy house” data environments to avoid fragmented access.
Finally, the article connects diffusion to geopolitics: true “sovereign AI” depends on diffusion-friendly design, interoperability, and (properly understood) open-source architectures, not a single homogeneous global model.
Overall, the central thesis is that AI adoption wins through patient embedding and incentives that reward sharing—rather than flashiest breakthroughs.
Neutral
AI adoptionenterprise AI strategyskill infrastructurediffusion theoryopen-source interoperability
Grayscale Research said it expects Strategy’s Bitcoin sale to be misread by the market, arguing the $216 million Strategy’s Bitcoin sale actually strengthens the company’s financial position and may help Bitcoin form a more durable bottom.
In a July 6 report, Grayscale Research head Zach Pandl said Strategy’s financing structure remains well supported despite concerns after Bitcoin briefly slid toward $61,000 before rebounding above $63,000. Grayscale noted Strategy holds 843,775 BTC worth nearly $53 billion and carries about $7 billion in debt.
Key figures behind the bullish case:
- The $216 million Strategy’s Bitcoin sale increased Strategy’s U.S. dollar reserves to about $2.55 billion.
- Those reserves are enough to cover roughly 17 months of preferred equity dividend obligations (under $2 billion annually under Grayscale’s estimate).
- Strategy also introduced a treasury framework allowing it to issue shares or sell Bitcoin to maintain adequate dollar reserves for dividends.
Grayscale added that reducing financing pressure could be indirectly positive for Bitcoin. Instead of being bearish, the sale may ease investor fears about Strategy’s balance sheet and funding needs.
Market reaction so far has leaned constructive. STRC shares rose Monday and were higher again in premarket. Binance also launched trading for STRC tokenized stock. Meanwhile, Bitcoin rebounded after the initial selloff, trading around $64,000 after touching a 24-hour low near $61,275, with volume up about 77%. The rebound was also supported by renewed net inflows into BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF after prior outflows.
Overall, Grayscale’s take reframes the $216 million Strategy’s Bitcoin sale from a stress signal into a liquidity-buffering move, aligning with current price recovery and ETF inflow momentum.
Made in USA Inc. announced it has acquired a complete XRP Ledger (XRPL) infrastructure stack to power a blockchain-based “Made in USA” verification and supply chain platform. The company says the system will combine AI with XRP Ledger to generate tamper-resistant digital records that verify the origin and authenticity of U.S.-made products.
The acquisition includes proprietary domains, AI-powered verification tools, blockchain infrastructure, digital authentication technologies, and supply chain software. It also features a hybrid design: sensitive business data stays on private XRPL networks, while immutable authenticity proofs are anchored to the public XRP Ledger for independent verification.
The deal was disclosed in a Form 8-K filed on June 26, 2026. Under the agreement, Made in USA Inc. will acquire core technology assets from its affiliate, Made in USA One LLC, in exchange for 5 million restricted shares of common stock. The filing states the transfer covers blockchain infrastructure, AI verification technology, intellectual property, and related digital assets.
The article frames this as part of a broader enterprise shift toward XRPL use cases beyond payments, citing recent reports of nearly 1 million AI agent transactions on XRP Ledger. If successfully deployed, the platform could improve compliance workflows and transparency across manufacturing, retail, regulators, and consumers—potentially strengthening enterprise confidence in the XRP Ledger ecosystem.
EDX Markets, an institutional crypto exchange, raised a $76M Series C led by SBI Holdings to expand institutional crypto trading infrastructure. The funding will support spot trading, clearing and settlement services, new product development, and international growth.
This Series C follows earlier Series B backing in January 2024 from major traditional finance players. EDX runs a US-focused institutional spot exchange and a Singapore-based perpetual venue for eligible non-US institutional clients. Its market-structure push is underpinned by institutional-grade technology partnerships and a focus on smoother execution.
A new update: EDX integrated Ripple Prime in May, allowing institutional clients to access EDX liquidity via Ripple’s prime brokerage. The partners also plan to support RLUSD as a settlement and collateral asset. EDX has processed up to $685M in daily trading volume, suggesting growing demand for institutional execution.
For traders, this is mainly a market structure and liquidity-rail upgrade rather than an immediate direct catalyst for coin prices. Over time, better clearing and settlement rails could improve spreads and fill quality for institutional flows, with limited short-term impact on major tokens.
Neutral
EDX MarketsSBI HoldingsInstitutional crypto tradingMarket structureRipple Prime
UK Reform leader Nigel Farage said he will resign as MP for Clacton and stand in a by-election after a crypto “gift” scandal. Farage claimed he committed no wrongdoing, after UK authorities reportedly probed whether he received millions of dollars’ worth of donations and “gifts” from crypto-linked figures, including Christopher Harborne (a crypto billionaire) and George Cottrell (a convicted fraudster tied to a crypto casino).
Farage also said he is the subject of two investigations by the UK parliamentary standards commissioner related to these “gifts,” which he claims were given “on an unconditional basis.” He said the funds from Harborne would be used for security due to threats and attacks. The by-election timing could take weeks or months, and Farage previously won Clacton in July 2024 with 46.2%.
From a trading perspective, this crypto “gift” scandal adds to ongoing political scrutiny of digital-asset influence. In the US, Public Citizen reported about $189 million in crypto-related spending to back candidates favored on digital asset policy for the 2026 election cycle, while criticism continues over Donald Trump’s 2025 disclosures that included $1.4 billion in crypto-related earnings.
For markets, the immediate impact is more sentiment/regulatory-risk than direct token fundamentals, but heightened enforcement and election-related narratives can still drive volatility around BTC and major altcoins.
Bitcoin spot ETF inflows rebounded sharply: BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) posted about $209.4M net inflows on July 7 (its strongest in weeks), lifting total U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF net inflows to about $265.7M after two consecutive inflow days. Earlier, spot ETFs had just ended a prior stretch of heavy outflows, so the move is best viewed as a reversal test, not a confirmed breakout.
The rebound aligns with improving spot activity. BTC traded roughly in the $61,275–$64,597 range, while 24h volume jumped over 90%. Traders will watch whether sustained Bitcoin spot ETF inflows can push price through the first key resistance near $65,955 (and toward the ~$66K area).
Flows are still mixed by issuer: FBTC (+$9.7M), BITB (+$4.8M), ARKB (+$33M) and the Bitcoin Mini Trust (+$42.3M) added inflows, while Grayscale’s GBTC continued outflows (~-$44.5M). IBIT also had an earlier daily outflow around ~$40.4M last week, reinforcing that confirmation is still required.
Catalysts are also in focus. BIT highlighted July seasonality and attention on the CLARITY Act, with an Aug. 7 U.S. Senate deadline before recess. Even with reports that Strategy sold about ~$216M BTC, ETF buying may be offsetting some sell pressure.
Trading takeaway: this is likely “choppy but tradable.” If Bitcoin spot ETF inflows extend for several sessions and price holds higher lows into U.S. close, risk appetite could improve; otherwise, mixed issuer flows and legislative timing may cap upside.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) says it is poised to release its first major SEC crypto rule as soon as July. The proposal, known as “Regulation Crypto,” would create temporary exemptions from securities registration for certain crypto developers launching crypto investment contracts.
The SEC crypto rule also outlines room for limited fundraising and a “safe harbor” for issuers that step back from managerial efforts tied to a security. Details were previously discussed by SEC Chair Paul Atkins in March. The SEC also referenced broader work on tokenized securities and an earlier taxonomy for how digital assets are defined and treated.
In parallel, the SEC agenda flags additional crypto policy items, including rules covering asset custody and crypto market structure. The agenda is still under review by the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, and the proposed rule would be the first full rulemaking of its kind under Atkins, which matters because formal rules can be harder to change than staff guidance.
For traders, the SEC crypto rule could improve regulatory clarity for compliant fundraising and tokenized securities—potentially supporting risk appetite around July as market participants price in reduced compliance friction.
Tokenized equities saw a major jump in June, reaching a record $3.86B in on-chain trading volume, up 145% from May. The rally was driven by tokenized SpaceX shares.
SpaceX (SPCX) accounted for $1.19B, or about 31% of all tokenized equities trading. Backpack Securities’ SPCX was the top contract at $1.08B, followed by xStocks’ SPCX at $852M.
The report also notes that while established tokenized names such as Nvidia, Tesla, SPY and QQQ stayed active, none matched the attention flowing into SpaceX. Demand appears to be shifting toward high-profile, newly catalyzed assets after SpaceX’s $75B IPO, the largest on record, valuing the company at about $1.8T on a fully diluted basis.
Broader sector data showed market cap for tokenized assets reaching a record $1.53B in June, up 6.64% month-on-month and extending a 15-month growth streak.
For traders, this is a clear example of how tokenized equities can concentrate liquidity quickly around a single narrative—potentially increasing volatility and liquidity differentials inside the tokenized-assets market. Tokenized equities are now showing stronger “event-driven” flows tied to major corporate milestones.
(Keyword check: tokenized equities; tokenized equities)
The US Treasury sold $52B in 52-week bills on July 7, with yields landing close to 3.86%–3.94%, clearing broadly in line with expectations. The auction’s bid-to-cover ratio was 3.14, showing strong demand, while only 17.61% of bids were awarded. These 52-week bills mature on July 8, 2027.
For traders, the key takeaway is the nearly 4% risk-free return. At this level, the opportunity cost for holding higher-volatility assets rises. Historically, when rates were near zero (2020–2021), even modest DeFi yields could attract capital. Now, yields on government instruments compete directly with crypto returns.
The article also highlights why “tokenized Treasury” products matter for DeFi flows. Tokenized US Treasuries, including offerings referenced from major asset managers (e.g., BlackRock and Franklin Templeton) and various DeFi protocols, can channel capital into on-chain wrappers that track Treasury yields.
Overall, strong bid demand for these 52-week bills suggests institutions are comfortable locking in capital for a full year near 4%. That can pressure crypto risk appetite short-term, especially for yield-seeking strategies, unless broader rate expectations shift.
Bearish
US Treasury52-week billsrisk-free yieldtokenized TreasuriesDeFi
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian attended the funeral procession for Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in Najaf, following Khamenei’s death after an Israeli airstrike earlier this year. Pezeshkian, a member of Iran’s Interim Leadership Council, attended as part of an extended state funeral.
The event is widely interpreted as an Iran leadership continuity signal during a leadership transition. It suggests that a stable head of state may be in place by end-2026, affecting expectations for Iran’s political stability. Market pricing reportedly increased confidence in continuity, with odds pointing to Mojtaba Khamenei maintaining a leading role.
What to watch next includes any official announcements from Iran’s Assembly of Experts about Mojtaba Khamenei’s position. Additional signals from the IRGC endorsing a permanent leadership council could further reinforce the Iran leadership continuity narrative. Traders should also monitor international recognition and Iran’s economic stability, as these factors could shift assessments of governance stability.
Overall, this is a geopolitical leadership-transition read-through rather than a direct crypto policy change, but it can influence risk sentiment tied to Middle East escalation or de-escalation.
Neutral
Iran leadershipKhamenei funeralGeopolitical riskPrediction marketsMiddle East
The European Parliament has adopted a policy stance urging the European Commission to review whether DeFi and NFTs should be brought more clearly under the EU’s crypto rulebook after MiCA’s transition period ended on July 1.
The lawmakers stressed that the vote does not amend MiCA or create new legal obligations. Instead, it highlights areas currently outside the framework, including DeFi, staking, crypto lending/borrowing, NFTs, and tokenized financial assets, and calls for consistent application across EU member states to avoid market fragmentation.
For traders, this keeps the regulatory “gap” focus on DeFi while MiCA-compliant euro stablecoins continue to attract liquidity. Decta data cited in the report shows euro stablecoins growing 128% in combined market cap to about $673.9m over the past year, with combined trading volume up 43.1%. The report also takes a relatively supportive tone toward tokenization and euro-denominated stablecoins if rules are applied consistently.
Potential market impact: near-term price action could stay range-bound for DeFi/NFT exposures, while future legislative proposals may reprice risk premiums between DeFi/NFT platforms and regulated euro stablecoins.
Over the last 48 hours, Whale Alert style on-chain monitoring highlighted institutional behavior that could steer Bitcoin (BTC) trading. Reports citing Arkham Intelligence and Glassnode point to a major BTC movement: MicroStrategy reportedly transferred 3,588 BTC (about $216M) at an average price near $60.2K, suggesting a targeted treasury liquidation or repositioning.
At the same time, Binance exchange flows rose, with whale inflows reaching roughly $5.2B in recent months. This implies “smart money” is increasingly using exchange liquidity for hedging and rebalancing rather than simply exiting.
On-wallet profiling suggests the large transfers are led by established corporate treasury entities (not retail). Price action remains choppy in the $60,000–$64,000 range, but liquidity clusters show renewed interest from wallets holding 1,000–10,000 BTC, indicating buy-side defense building under current levels.
Technically, a 12-hour TD Sequential buy signal aligns with the on-chain pattern, a setup traders often watch for local bottoms during extended downside. Traders should monitor $60K support closely: as long as it holds, this Whale Alert narrative leans more toward strategic accumulation and a potential rebound than a breakdown.
Bullish
Whale AlertBTC on-chainInstitutional walletsBinance inflowsLiquidity support