Revolut has received full Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) approval to operate as a licensed UK bank and has launched Revolut Bank UK. The new bank will roll out deposit and current accounts for retail and business customers, with eligible deposits protected up to £120,000 by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS). Existing Revolut UK customers will be migrated to the new bank in staged groups over several months. The banking licence also clears the way for Revolut to expand into lending and broader credit products in the UK. Parallel applications for full licences and charters are underway in other markets — including Peru and a federal banking charter application in the United States — reflecting a wider fintech and crypto-industry trend of seeking traditional banking credentials (similar to Kraken’s limited Fed master account and charter pursuits by Circle, Paxos and Ripple). The move may improve depositor confidence and product scope, while drawing regulatory and industry scrutiny as banking trade groups debate crypto firms’ access to bank-like privileges.
Bitcoin has climbed toward $71,000, up about 7% from recent Sunday lows, outperforming major equity indices and gold during a period of geopolitical stress tied to the Iran conflict. Analysts point to limited downside sensitivity and signs of seller exhaustion as bitcoin reacts mutedly to fresh headlines. BTC’s short-term correlation with software stocks has weakened, while its correlation with gold has flipped positive (to about +0.16 from –0.49 a week ago), suggesting traders may increasingly view bitcoin and gold as beneficiaries of U.S. dollar weakness. Spot bitcoin ETF flows have improved after months of outflows: BlackRock’s IBIT drew nearly $1 billion of inflows so far in March after losing over $3 billion between November and February. Analysts say a sustained return of ETF demand and reduced marginal selling could support a broader bitcoin recovery into Q2. Key points: BTC ≈ $70.4K–$71K (+7% from weekend low); IBIT inflows ≈ $1B in March; BTC–gold correlation flipped to +0.16; software-sector correlation weakening. Primary keywords: Bitcoin, BTC price, spot bitcoin ETF, ETF inflows, gold correlation. Secondary/semantic keywords: seller exhaustion, software stocks, IBIT, market stabilization, institutional flows.
Fundstrat co-founder Tom Lee said Bitcoin passed a key stress test after BTC held above $70,000 during a sharp oil-driven market shock tied to Middle East tensions. Speaking at the Future Proof conference in Miami, Lee argued the crypto market has already endured its major deleveraging—peaking with last October’s mass unwind—and much speculative leverage is gone. He suggested the weekend’s price action, when Bitcoin remained resilient as Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz sent oil sharply higher, signals BTC is re-emerging as a credible store of value. Lee noted gold had outperformed during the October deleverage but said that dynamic has shifted. At the time of the report, Bitcoin traded near $70,000, largely flat on 24‑hour data, up ~3% over the week and ~7% over two weeks, but still down ~12% year-on-year and ~44% below the October 2025 ATH. On-chain flows showed about 29,000 BTC withdrawn from exchanges while price traded between $65,000–$75,000, contrasting earlier sell-off patterns when exchange balances were rising. Lee also commented on broader markets, expecting March to end positive and forecasting possible S&P 500 gains but warning of a potential 20% pullback when markets stop reacting to good news.
Glassnode data shows median seven-day spot trading volume across the top 500 crypto assets has fallen from above $120m per asset in late 2024 to roughly $20–30m by early March 2026 — a decline of about 75–80%. During the same period Bitcoin (BTC) spot volumes held up, fluctuating between approximately $8bn and $15bn on a seven-day rolling basis. The divergence indicates capital concentrating in larger, more liquid assets as traders reduce speculative exposure to altcoins. BTC price stabilized near $70,600 at the time of reporting, with immediate resistance around $72,000 and support between $66,000–$68,000; a dense volume profile near $70,000 marks an important equilibrium zone. The data suggest increasing market concentration in BTC and a small set of large-cap tokens, with potential implications for liquidity, volatility and rotation opportunities depending on macro sentiment and Bitcoin’s ability to hold key technical levels.
Backpack Exchange CEO Armani Ferrante announced on a Twitch live stream that the platform’s Token Generation Event (TGE) will take place this month. The published tokenomics specify an initial unlock equal to 25% of total supply: 24% allocated to Backpack Exchange points holders (earned through trading and engagement) and 1% to Backpack NFT holders. The token is Solana-based and the exchange emphasizes a regulatory-first, user-centric approach. Details on broader token utilities (fee discounts, governance, staking) are expected but not yet finalized. The exchange has highlighted prior regulatory approvals and a compliance-focused strategy. No exact TGE date was given; further timing and claim procedures will be announced soon. Traders should note the substantial immediate unlock, potential short-term sell pressure, and the importance of upcoming disclosures about remaining 75% allocation and vesting schedules.
Ethereum (ETH) traded around $2,022 on March 11, 2026, showing a marginal intraday recovery but with weak conviction: volume was 55.35M versus a 90-day average of 534.27M (≈59.6% of normal). Market cap stood at $245.95B. On-chain metrics show record active addresses (836k in early February) but retention collapsed to 14.2% (versus a 2021 cycle low of 23%), indicating many one-off interactions rather than repeat users. Exchange net positions flipped from buying to selling after active-address peaks; exchange inflows have accelerated, suggesting growing preparation to sell. Long-term holders added ~250k ETH in February while exchange balances hit multi-year lows, creating opposing flows that leave price range-bound. Key technical levels: immediate pivot at $2,027 (20-day EMA flip), resistance cluster $2,027–$2,150 (decisive zone), upper Bollinger band ~$2,118.95, downside supports $1,965, $1,900–$1,920, $1,838 and a bearish threshold near $1,750. Monthly quantitative forecast is $1,817.81 (≈-10%), quarterly $3,129.48 (+54.8%) and 12-month $3,178.63 (+57.2%) — illustrating a wide uncertainty band. Indicators: RSI ~44 (neutral), MACD bearish but narrowing, ADX ~34.7 (strong trend), 50-day MA ~$2,247 and 200-day MA ~$3,313 (both well above price). Conclusion for traders: near-term setup is bearish until ETH convincingly reclaims $2,027–$2,150 on meaningful volume; current price is more a hold for long-term holders than a buy for new entrants. Consider adding only below structural support (~$1,854 lower Bollinger band) or after a volume-backed break above $2,160.
ING warns that the Netherlands’ economy, while underpinned by a diversified base—advanced technology, logistics, sustainable agriculture—and strong fiscal buffers, faces pronounced downside from escalating geopolitical and war risks. Key domestic strengths include a tight labor market, heavy public/private investment in the energy transition, a robust pension system and a AAA credit rating. ING identifies three principal transmission channels for conflict: energy disruptions (integrated EU gas networks), trade route closures (high exposure via the Port of Rotterdam), and financial market contagion (capital flight, higher borrowing costs). ING modelling suggests a severe regional escalation could reduce annual GDP growth by roughly 1.5–2.5 percentage points. Sector vulnerabilities vary: energy-intensive horticulture and export-oriented high-tech manufacturing (supply-chain risk for firms like ASML) are highly exposed; finance and domestic services are somewhat insulated but sensitive to volatility and macro slowdowns. National and EU buffers—strategic reserves, accelerated renewables, trade diplomacy and cyber-defense—are cited as mitigants. ING’s base case does not forecast recession but flags a significant downside scenario if conflicts persist or cascade. For traders, the report implies potential short-term volatility in European markets, energy and shipping-exposed equities, and currency moves; longer-term effects hinge on energy-security policy shifts and supply-chain realignments.
Neutral
NetherlandsGeopoliticsEnergy SecurityTrade RisksMacro Outlook
Gold outperformed Bitcoin through 2025 into early 2026, with gold up ~65% and peaking at $5,608 while Bitcoin fell about 44% from its high to trade near $70,000. Analysts including Lyn Alden and Fidelity’s Chris Kuiper say a pendulum between gold and Bitcoin has precedent and a rotation back into Bitcoin is plausible. Recent ETF flow data shows a record one‑day $3 billion outflow from GLD and a reversal for Bitcoin ETFs — a 30‑day net inflow of $273 million as of March 6 after a $1.9 billion outflow in February; Bitcoin ETFs added roughly 4,021 BTC while gold ETF holdings declined materially. Views diverge on timing: BitMEX co‑founder Arthur Hayes keeps a $250,000 year‑end BTC target but awaits renewed central bank easing before buying. Fidelity highlights rising U.S. debt and the link between Bitcoin and global money supply, arguing Bitcoin is more sensitive to liquidity cycles while gold reacts to short-term shocks and reserve buying. Traders should watch ETF flows, central bank policy shifts, and geopolitical risk as catalysts that could prompt rotation between gold and Bitcoin.
Solana (SOL) is forming two bullish-leaning chart structures that traders are watching: a seven-month descending channel and a large cup-and-handle pattern. Analysts cited in the report mark $100 as the critical near-term resistance. A decisive reclaim of $100 and a break above the channel resistance would shift the short-to-medium-term structure toward bullish, with one analyst projecting an intermediate target near $250. The cup-and-handle, if confirmed by a breakout above its upper boundary, implies a much larger long-term target (analyst projection near $1,000), but the pattern remains incomplete. For now, both setups are potential rather than confirmed; traders should wait for clear breakout confirmation and sustained momentum before taking sizable long positions. Key keywords: Solana, SOL price, $100 breakout, descending channel, cup-and-handle, breakout confirmation, technical target.
Neutral
SolanaSOL pricetechnical analysisbreakoutcup and handle
Professional traders price low odds that Bitcoin (BTC) will break out to $78,000 in late March, despite renewed ETF inflows. Derivatives data from Deribit show March 27 $78,000 call options trading at roughly $704, implying under a 17% probability of BTC rising about 12% from current levels. US-listed Bitcoin ETFs recorded $414 million of net inflows between Monday and Tuesday, but that failed to offset $576 million of net outflows earlier in the week. Futures market indicators also show limited demand for leveraged longs: the 1–2 month annualized futures premium has remained below a 4% neutral threshold even after a 16% four-day rally. Macro risks are weighing on sentiment — ongoing Middle East conflict, disappointing US jobs data (92,000 job cuts vs. an expected 55,000 increase), rising oil prices and tightening credit conditions — undermining conviction that ETF flows alone will drive a sharp near-term rally. Institutional support via MicroStrategy-related yield products and potential at-the-market share issuances could sustain longer-term spot demand, but traders will likely wait beyond March for a decisive move above $78K. This is market commentary, not investment advice.
Binance.US appointed Stephen Gregory as CEO effective March 9, replacing Norman Reed (who will remain as an adviser). Gregory is a compliance-focused executive with prior senior roles at Currency.com (U.S. CEO), Gemini and CEX.io. The hire signals a regulatory-first pivot as Binance.US seeks to stabilize under increased U.S. scrutiny and distance itself from enforcement and governance issues tied to the global group. Binance.US plans to expand its Earn and staking products, broaden access to DeFi and tokenized assets, and package on-chain strategies in formats acceptable to U.S. regulators, banks and institutional counterparties. The move aims to reassure counterparties and policymakers that Binance.US can operate as a ring-fenced, compliance-heavy U.S. venue while competing with Coinbase, Kraken and broker‑dealers on product breadth and liquidity. For traders, the announcement highlights a likely shift toward regulated yield products, staking services and tokenized-asset gateways on a platform emphasizing stronger compliance controls—factors that may affect liquidity, product availability and counterparty access on Binance.US.
TD Securities warns that structural copper scarcity in 2025 is being amplified by a pronounced buying skew from Commodity Trading Advisors (CTAs). Rising demand from electrification — EVs, renewable energy and grid upgrades — is outpacing supply expansion, while declining ore grades, regulatory delays and capital constraints slow new mine output. TD’s models show CTAs and other systematic trend-followers have built near multi-year high net-long positions in copper futures, triggering buy orders as prices breach technical thresholds (e.g., 20/50-day moving averages, volatility breakouts). Low exchange inventories (LME/COMEX) and backwardated curves align fundamentals with technical signals, so algorithmic buying can magnify uptrends. Risks include rapid CTA-driven unwinds if momentum reverses, which could accelerate downswings. Key monitoring points: exchange inventory levels, Chinese import and PMI data, progress on major mining projects (Chile, Peru, DRC), and technical price levels that could flip systematic flows. Traders should note heightened volatility potential, consider hedging or scaled execution strategies, and watch CTA positioning data and physical stock indicators for early signs of trend persistence or reversal.
Scotiabank’s FX Strategy team identifies weakening bullish structure in USD/CAD and growing selling pressure, signaling a shift toward range-bound trading. Technical indicators—lower highs, RSI retreat from overbought, flattening moving averages—and above-average volume on declines support the bearish momentum thesis. Key levels: immediate resistance 1.3650–1.3680, primary resistance 1.3750; immediate support 1.3450–1.3480, primary support 1.3350 (200‑day MA). Fundamentals back the view: divergent Fed vs. BoC policy and firmer oil prices strengthen CAD via yield differentials and trade terms. Options risk reversals favor CAD calls and leveraged funds have trimmed net long USD positions. Trading implications: shift from trend-following to range strategies (mean reversion, oscillators, boundary entries with tight stops). Watch Canadian CPI, US NFP, central bank speeches and WTI moves for range tests or breakout triggers. Risk management should focus on defined support/resistance and readiness for a breakout that would restart a directional trend.
Grammarly has disabled its Expert Review AI feature following widespread criticism from academics, authors and journalists who said the tool imitated named experts — including deceased scholars — without consent. Launched as part of Grammarly’s AI agents expansion, Expert Review generated feedback framed as if coming from specific scholars, journalists and editors. Critics condemned Grammarly’s prior opt-out approach, which required experts to manually remove themselves, calling it unacceptable. Superhuman CEO Shishir Mehrotra (Grammarly’s parent company) and Grammarly product director Ailian Gan said the company will redesign the feature to give experts greater control and transparency. The company acknowledged it "missed the mark" and committed to reworking the tool. The announcement follows online backlash, public posts from prominent writers and editors, and calls for stronger consent and attribution practices in AI products.
Ripple has launched a $750 million share buyback and tender offer running through April to repurchase shares from employees and early investors, signaling a company valuation near $50 billion. The move follows a November funding round that raised $500 million at a $40 billion valuation from institutional backers including Fortress Investment Group and Citadel Securities. Ripple says the buyback will provide liquidity to long-term stakeholders, reduce the share count held by external investors, and reinforce corporate control without going public. Separately, Ripple joined Mastercard’s Crypto Partner Program to integrate blockchain into Mastercard’s payments infrastructure and announced the planned acquisition of BC Payments Australia Pty Ltd as part of efforts to obtain an Australian Financial Services Licence. The announcements produced a modest positive market response for XRP, which traded around $1.39 (+~0.7% over 24 hours) at reporting. The buyback does not change XRP’s circulating token supply directly but may improve investor confidence and ease selling pressure from shareholders converting equity-related gains into token sales. Primary keywords: Ripple buyback, $750M tender, $50B valuation, Mastercard partnership, Australian licence, XRP price.
MUFG Bank’s March 2025 analysis finds the EUR/USD exchange rate exhibited surprising resilience during the compound oil-price volatility of 2024–early 2025. Despite large swings in Brent crude driven by geopolitical supply disruptions and changing demand, the euro fell only modestly versus the dollar. MUFG cites structural drivers: reduced European oil dependency (renewables rising to 44% of EU power in 2024 and natural gas decoupling from oil), record strategic petroleum reserves, diversified supply sources, and high FX market liquidity (EUR/USD spot volume > $1.2 trillion daily). Monetary policy also mattered — narrower interest-rate differentials as the ECB adopted a cautious, predictable stance while the Fed managed more complex inflation dynamics — which limited carry-trade flows and dollar appreciation. MUFG’s proprietary Currency Resilience Index and real-time liquidity data show EUR/USD maximum drawdown near -2.3% with quick recovery (7 days) versus larger drawdowns in peers (e.g., USD/CAD -4.1%). The bank warns risks remain — sudden ECB/Fed shifts, severe geopolitical escalation, or a synchronized global recession could widen downside — but overall fundamentals point to limited near-term EUR/USD downside amid energy-driven volatility. Primary keywords: EUR/USD, oil price shock, MUFG, forex resilience. Secondary/semantic keywords included: ECB, Fed, energy security, liquidity, renewables, carry trade.
Neutral
EUR/USDOil PricesMUFG AnalysisForex LiquidityECB vs Fed
Commerzbank economists say the Federal Reserve remains deliberately cautious due to persistent inflation risks, notably elevated services inflation (reported at 4.2% annually), rising wage growth (~4.5%), and core PCE near 3.8% versus the 2.0% target. Policymakers emphasize data-dependent decisions and risk management, citing housing costs and tight labor markets as drivers of stickier price pressures. Commerzbank flags three primary risks: services inflation persistence, potential wage-price spirals, and supply-chain vulnerabilities from geopolitical tensions. The bank’s models suggest inflation could be more persistent than markets expect, supporting a higher-for-longer rate outlook. Financial markets are reacting across bonds, equities and FX as participants parse Fed guidance, dot plots and meeting minutes. Globally, other central banks (ECB, BoE, BoJ) also influence capital flows and import prices. For traders, the key takeaways are: data releases on core PCE, services inflation, and wage indicators will drive volatility; bond yields and dollar strength may remain elevated if inflation surprises; and risk positioning should account for a prolonged restrictive-rate environment. This analysis is not trading advice.
Bearish
Federal ReserveInflationMonetary PolicyMacro DataInterest Rates
Goldman Sachs has become the top institutional holder of a major XRP exchange-traded fund after a period of understated accumulation. The investment bank increased its stake through the ETF vehicle, overtaking other institutional investors. The development highlights heightened institutional interest in XRP-linked products and suggests confidence in the token’s regulatory standing and market potential. Key points: Goldman Sachs now holds the largest position in the XRP ETF; accumulation was described as "quiet," implying gradual buys rather than a single large entry; this move may signal increased institutional adoption of XRP exposure via ETFs. Primary keywords: XRP ETF, Goldman Sachs, institutional accumulation. Secondary/semantic keywords: institutional investor, ETF holdings, market confidence, XRP exposure.
Regulators worldwide are shifting crypto from ambiguity toward “permissioned growth”: markets that favour firms able to obtain clear licenses and meet supervision rather than borderless, offshore operators. The US OCC’s February 2026 proposed rulemaking (linked to the GENIUS Act) embeds stablecoin issuance and certain custody activities into prudential-style oversight. The UK has published a defined timeline for firms to seek authorization under its new cryptoasset regime (application window expected Sept 30, 2026–Feb 28, 2027; regime in force Oct 25, 2027). Hong Kong already has a stablecoin issuer regime and AML/CFT expectations, though no licensed stablecoin issuers appear on the regulator’s register yet. Stablecoins sit at the center of this regulatory migration because they touch payments, custody, reserves and consumer protections, drawing them into traditional financial supervision. As a result, compliance is moving from a peripheral add-on to a product design requirement: reserve disclosures, custody arrangements, sanctions screening, onboarding and communications will be evaluated as licensing controls. The practical outcome for traders and institutions is that access rails — regulated custody, broker‑dealer channels, compliant fiat on‑ramps and stablecoin issuance — will determine how institutional capital engages with Bitcoin and other crypto assets. Growth may slow but become more investable and intermediated, rewarding firms that can clear licensing, audits and ongoing supervision.
Mastercard has launched the Crypto Partner Program, bringing together more than 85 crypto-native firms, payment providers and financial institutions — including Ripple, Solana, Circle, Binance, Gemini, Paxos, Polygon and PayPal — to integrate digital assets into real-world payments. The initiative aims to combine on-chain capabilities (speed, programmability, efficiency) with Mastercard’s global card rails and compliance frameworks to support practical use cases such as cross-border remittances, business payouts and corporate settlements. Mastercard says the program will enable two-way knowledge sharing: crypto partners will drive product innovation while Mastercard provides guidance on standards, risk management and regulatory compliance. The program builds on Mastercard’s prior crypto work (since 2019 partnerships with firms like Wirex, BitPay and Coinbase) and targets enterprise and institutional adoption to deliver faster, more transparent and programmable global payments. For traders, the announcement highlights growing institutional integration of crypto infrastructure with legacy payment rails — a development that could increase on-chain transaction demand and adoption for involved projects while shifting regulatory and compliance expectations across the sector.
FDIC Chair Travis Hill told the American Bankers Association that the GENIUS Act, passed in July, does not give the FDIC authority to insure stablecoin deposits. Under the law’s framework for payment stablecoins, the FDIC would be prohibited from insuring stablecoin holder deposits or allowing issuers to claim FDIC coverage. A proposed agency plan would also ban “pass-through insurance,” which would have insured stablecoin holders’ interests in bank reserve accounts beyond standard corporate deposit coverage. The GENIUS Act establishes a regulatory framework for payment stablecoins and will be fully implemented either 18 months after enactment or 120 days after related regulations are finalized. Hill emphasized stablecoin issuers must fully back dollar-pegged coins. His remarks came amid broader U.S. legislative debates over a market-structure bill that addresses stablecoin yield, tokenized equities and other issues; the ABA has lobbied to prevent payment stablecoins from becoming deposit substitutes that pay interest. The clarification limits expectations that the federal government will directly insure retail stablecoin holdings and underscores ongoing regulatory scrutiny of stablecoin design and yield features.
Shiba Inu (SHIB) has fallen substantially year‑over‑year and is trading in the mid‑$0.000005 range with market cap around $3–3.5 billion. Recent on‑chain data show exchange reserves dropped to a five‑year low (~80–81 trillion SHIB per CryptoQuant), a short‑term bullish signal because it reduces immediate selling pressure. Technical indicators also point to potential near‑term upside: the weekly RSI is close to 30 (near oversold) and SHIB is approaching the breakout point of a falling‑wedge pattern — a structure that historically preceded large rallies for the token and that some analysts say could lead to major gains in a future altseason. Offsetting these positives, token burn activity has weakened (daily burns down roughly 30%, weekly burn counts below ~5 million in the latest update) and Shibarium’s adoption remains stalled after a mid‑2024 security exploit that collapsed daily transactions from millions to the hundreds. Circulating supply stays extremely large (~hundreds of trillions), keeping long‑term inflationary pressure intact. Traders should weigh reduced exchange supply and oversold technicals (short‑term bullish) against lower burn rates, massive circulating supply and Layer‑2 setbacks (medium‑to‑long‑term bearish) when sizing positions and choosing timeframes.
Rosie Rios, the 43rd U.S. Treasurer, appeared in a 2025 video cited by crypto commentator SMQKE asserting she served on Ripple’s board and expressed bullish views on XRP. Rios highlighted Ripple’s utility for cross-border payments, particularly in Asia-Pacific markets such as Singapore and Japan, noting integrated wallets, custody solutions and payment rails that enable real-time settlement and simplified liquidity management. Ripple’s site later confirmed Rios left the organization on January 15, 2026, but her prior comments are presented as reflective of Ripple’s infrastructure-focused strategy and institutional ambitions. The article frames Rios’s involvement as lending institutional credibility to Ripple and argues XRP’s long-term value derives from operational utility rather than short-term speculation. Primary keywords: XRP, Ripple, cross-border payments, institutional adoption. Secondary keywords: Rosie Rios, liquidity management, custody, real-time settlement.
Across Protocol has proposed converting its DAO into a U.S. C‑corporation, AcrossCo, by offering ACX holders a token-for-equity swap or an immediate USDC buyout. The non‑binding governance “temperature check” (The Bridge Across) would create AcrossCo to hold intellectual property, manage development, partnerships and commercialization. ACX holders could convert tokens 1:1 into AcrossCo shares (direct conversions for holders with >5 million ACX; smaller holders via a special purpose vehicle) or accept a buyout at $0.04375 per ACX paid in USDC — roughly a 25% premium to the 30‑day average. The proposal says the buyout funds would come from the protocol’s liquid treasury and argues a corporate wrapper will enable enforceable contracts and institutional deals. Market reaction was immediate: ACX price jumped (~85% at peak), market cap tripled toward ~$45M, 24‑hour spot and derivatives volumes spiked dramatically and open interest surged. The temperature check is non‑binding; community feedback is open now with a possible governance vote in early April if feedback is favorable. Key implications for traders: evaluate the exchange ratio and buyout valuation, weigh immediate liquidity versus potential equity upside, monitor on‑chain activity and derivatives flows for volatility, and watch governance milestones that could trigger further price moves. Primary keywords: ACX, Across Protocol, token-for-equity, DAO to C‑corp, USDC buyout.
Bullish
ACXDAO to C‑corpToken-for-equityUSDC buyoutCross-chain bridges
Foundry Digital plans to launch an institutional-grade Zcash (ZEC) mining pool in the United States in April 2026. Built on the same infrastructure and compliance framework as Foundry USA Pool, the service targets institutional and publicly traded miners by offering compliance-focused tooling, transparent payouts, real-time reporting, and dedicated operational support. Foundry says the pool aims to attract regulated hashrate to Zcash, improving network security and diversifying existing pool concentration (ViaBTC and F2Pool currently hold large shares). The announcement follows rising institutional interest in Zcash, including a developer-funded push (over $25 million) for a privacy-focused wallet, and comes amid ZEC’s volatile price action after a sharp 2025 rally and subsequent retracement. For traders: the move could increase institutional participation and hashrate decentralization for ZEC, which may be supportive for long-term network resilience; however, immediate price effects are uncertain and depend on how quickly institutional miners allocate capital and whether the pool materially shifts mining distribution.
PEPE is trading near $0.0000033 after recent selling pushed price into a key near-term support band (~$0.0000031–$0.0000033). Price has bounced off the midline of a descending channel and is stabilizing with short upward spikes but limited momentum. Technical indicators show RSI around 38 (bearish but not oversold) and a slightly negative MACD with small histogram bars, suggesting bearish momentum is slowing and consolidation is likely. Traders and chart analysts note a defended demand zone historically attracting buyers; if $0.0000031–$0.0000033 holds, a confirmed breakout above the channel and the nearby resistance at $0.0000039–$0.0000040 would be bullish and could open the door to aggressive upside. Speculative Fibonacci-based scenarios mentioned by analysts include very large multi‑x rallies if a strong breakout occurs, but timing and probability are uncertain. Conversely, a break below the $0.0000031–$0.0000033 support increases the likelihood of deeper losses toward prior lower floors. Key takeaways for traders: watch PEPE support at ~$0.00000330, monitor buying volume and breakout confirmation above $0.0000039–$0.0000040, and manage risk for a potential move lower if support fails.
Former President Donald Trump said markets remain resilient and predicted oil prices would fall during a private Florida event, prompting debate among economists and energy analysts. Experts note Trump gave no price targets or timeline. Analysts point to mixed 2025 fundamentals: rising global oil inventories (+3.4% commercial inventories), modest demand gains (102.4 million bpd, +1.2% quarter), and slight OPEC+ production declines (40.8 million bpd, -0.8%). Brent traded near $78.42 (-5.2% quarterly). Energy analysts highlighted structural headwinds — renewable adoption, EV growth, and grid/storage improvements — that weigh on long-term oil demand. Economists stressed that presidential rhetoric can sway short-term sentiment but that policy actions, Fed policy, supply shocks, and OPEC+ moves drive sustained price trends. Traders should monitor inventories, OPEC+ decisions, IEA data, inflation and employment prints, and geopolitical events; treat political comments as potential short-term volatility triggers rather than grounds for long-term position changes. Primary keywords: oil prices, market resilience, OPEC+, Brent. Secondary/semantic keywords: inventories, demand, renewable energy, EV adoption, Fed policy.
Replit, an AI-powered in-browser coding platform, secured $400 million in a Series D round led by Georgian Partners and reached a $9 billion valuation on March 11, 2026 — tripling from a $3 billion valuation in September 2025. Investors included G Squared, Prysm Capital, Coatue, Andreessen Horowitz, Craft Ventures, Y Combinator, Accenture Ventures, Okta Ventures, Databricks Ventures, and angel participants Shaquille O’Neal and Jared Leto. Replit’s strategic pivot from a pro-developer IDE to a broader audience—students, hobbyists and non-programmers—combined with AI features like the Ghostwriter pair programmer and a “vibe coding” philosophy, underpins rapid user growth. The company reported a $150 million annualized run rate in late 2025 and is targeting $1 billion in ARR by end-2026, driven by enterprise plans, AI monetization, education expansion, and a growing marketplace. The $9B valuation positions Replit among the most valuable private developer-tool firms but brings intensifying competition from Microsoft (GitHub Copilot/Codespaces), Google, Amazon, and startups like Codesandbox and GitPod. Traders should note this as a major validation of AI-assisted developer tools and cloud IDEs, signaling increased investor appetite for AI-native infrastructure and developer productivity plays.
Neutral
AI developer toolsStartup fundingCloud IDEGenerative AIVenture capital
Strive (NASDAQ: ASST) raised the dividend on its SATA preferred stock to a 12.75% yield (a 25 bp increase) and declared a $1.0625 per-share dividend payable April 15 to holders of record April 1. The company disclosed it holds roughly 13,311 BTC on its balance sheet and has earmarked $50 million to buy 500,000 shares of Strategy Inc.’s Series A variable-rate perpetual preferred (STRC). Management is tilting the treasury toward yield-bearing instruments and Bitcoin exposure to amplify returns in the current high-rate, high-volatility environment. The richer SATA coupon is intended to attract income-focused investors but increases obligations and raises sustainability questions if operating performance lags. The BTC and preferred-stock allocations add mark-to-market volatility and credit risk to Strive’s capital structure; owning SATA effectively underwrites both Strive’s core operations and its leveraged macro bet on Bitcoin and risk assets.