EdgeX says it will proactively compensate users affected by the EDGE vulnerability attack. The maximum compensation is set at 100,000 USDC per affected user.
The announcement is aimed at reducing fallout from the EDGE vulnerability incident and restoring trust around the platform’s security posture. Traders may view this as a mitigation step, but it also highlights that the event could have caused account or fund-related risk—at least temporarily.
Key detail: EdgeX plans to pay out up to 100,000 USDC as the cap for compensation related to the EDGE vulnerability attack. If claims and processing are smooth, the company may dampen negative sentiment. If delays or unclear eligibility appear, market reaction could remain cautious.
Bottom line for traders: treat the news as a security-and-recovery update. Monitor for follow-up disclosures on affected scope, claim windows, and whether any additional technical measures are announced.
Anchorage Digital, the US’s federally chartered crypto bank, partnered with EVM-compatible Layer 1 blockchain Real Finance to support the full lifecycle of tokenized real-world assets (tokenized real-world assets).
The deal combines Anchorage Digital’s regulated custody, settlement, treasury management, and institutional security with Real Finance’s issuance infrastructure, lifecycle management tools, and programmable financial primitives. The goal is to give institutions a unified framework to issue, hold, and transact tokenized financial instruments—moving beyond isolated RWA pilots toward functional onchain capital markets.
Anchorage Digital will provide regulated custody and treasury services for the Real Finance ecosystem, including the ASSET token, and act as the custody backbone as new tokenized instruments launch on Real Finance’s Layer 1 chain. Real Finance, meanwhile, is expected to drive demand for regulated custody through its issuer network and by connecting institutional clients to tokenization infrastructure.
Real Finance CEO Ivo Grigorov said tokenization alone is insufficient for institutional adoption, emphasizing the need for trusted, regulated layers spanning custody, servicing, settlement, and lifecycle management. Anchorage Digital co-founder and CEO Nathan McCauley added that real-world assets require traditional-finance-grade safeguards at scale.
The article also notes a key bottleneck for the tokenized real-world assets market: fragmentation across issuance, custody, compliance, settlement, servicing, and liquidity—often resulting in operational trust issues and disconnected counterparties. This partnership targets those gaps directly.
Neutral
tokenized real-world assetsregulated custodyAnchorage DigitalReal Financeonchain capital markets
A rare physical bitcoin (Casascius) coin—S1-COIN-25, minted by Mike Caldwell between 2011 and 2013—was redeemed this week. The tamper-evident hologram was peeled and the embedded private key was swept on-chain on Wednesday.
The redemption moved 25 BTC to a new wallet. At current prices, the stake is valued at about $1.78 million (the article cites roughly $1.70M–$1.78M range depending on timing). Casascius coins are collector-grade tokens that physically hold real bitcoin under the hologram; redeeming the physical bitcoin is a one-way action that destroys the collectible status while converting the asset fully into BTC.
Caldwell halted new Casascius production in late 2013 after regulatory guidance related to money transmitter licensing. The article notes that intact hologram coins still trade at a premium versus their face BTC value, while many Casascius units remain unredeemed across denominations.
This redemption also comes amid broader activity among long-dormant UTXOs. A separate report referenced a 2011-era wallet moving 35 BTC after 15 years of inactivity.
For traders, the key takeaway is that physical bitcoin redemptions can re-route previously illiquid, collectible-held BTC back into the market as standard on-chain BTC, which may add short-term volatility even if the overall BTC flow remains small.
Ripple’s XRP marked its 14th anniversary, but the celebration coincided with continued price weakness. XRP slid to around $1.21–$1.23, the lowest in four months, as selling pressure kept momentum subdued despite positive community messages from Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse and former CTO David Schwartz.
For XRP traders, the market focus is technical. Analysts point to $1.28 as the key resistance threshold. If XRP stays capped below $1.28, traders may see sideways consolidation. A clean reclaim and breakout above $1.28 could revive upside momentum, while failure to hold that level suggests continued volatility driven by broader crypto market risk appetite.
Bottom line: XRP anniversary optimism has not yet translated into strong price action, and $1.28 is the near-term pivot to watch for direction.
Bitcoin whales have sold about 24,602 BTC in a week, cutting whale/shark holdings by 18% and helping drive a 10% weekly drop. As of June 3, Bitcoin (BTC) traded near $66,989, after declining for eight straight weeks and nearing its weakest levels in two months.
On-chain data (Santiment) shows limited offset from small investors. Wallets holding under 0.01 BTC added only 61 BTC over the past month, which is too small to counter the sell pressure from larger holders.
Sentiment remains weak. The Fear and Greed Index fell to “extreme fear” (11) before a slight rebound to 26, typically linked to deleveraging and risk reduction.
Technically, BTC is stuck below the $70,000–$75,000 resistance band and is trading under short- and medium-term moving averages, keeping sellers in control. Analysts highlight the $65,000 region as key support, with CryptoQuant’s HODL Waves suggesting it could act as a local bottom. RSI has returned to oversold conditions, which has historically preceded rebounds—but a daily close below key support could shift attention to liquidity around $60,000.
Broader market context: crypto total market cap is around $2.40T and daily volume near $143.61B. Ethereum (ETH) is also down about 5% to ~$1,872, while BTC dominance holds near 55.93%.
The Zcash blockchain stopped producing blocks for more than four hours on June 3, 2026, halting confirmations for new transactions.
According to Zcash block explorers, the last block was #3,364,601 at 5:27 a.m. UTC. After that, no additional blocks appeared for over four hours. Zcash typically adds a block about every 75 seconds, so the pause is an unusual technical outage.
Market context: ZEC, Zcash’s native token, rose about 8% over the past week (CoinDesk data), even as the broader market faced weakness. The article notes that Zcash has not issued a public statement about the incident.
For traders, this is a network-level disruption signal. While it may not immediately change ZEC long-term fundamentals, the lack of new confirmations can affect short-term sentiment, exchange settlement reliability, and order flow—especially for users trying to move funds during the freeze.
CryptoDaily argues that Morpho’s lending growth is reigniting a key “revenue proof” debate: do trading fees and institutional activity actually accrue to tokenholders, or only to users/market makers?
On June 3, 2026, DeFiLlama shows Morpho at about $6.975B TVL with ~ $192.42M annualized fees and ~$15.77M 30-day fees. Yet DeFiLlama also lists “Revenue (Annualized)” and “Revenue 30d” as $0—indicating that, despite sizable market fees, no tokenholder revenue is being attributed to MORPHO at publication time. TokenIntel similarly frames MORPHO pricing as a governance/optionality bet, because tokenholder-captured cashflow is effectively $0.
The piece highlights institutional integration signals but warns they do not automatically translate into token cashflow. Coinbase expanded a Morpho-served lending product to accept SOL collateral (borrowing up to $100k against SOL; total originations reported above $2.3B). Shortly after, MoonPay launched “MoonPay Trade,” integrating Morpho alongside Aave and Maple—suggesting institutional/ tokenized-asset flows may route through Morpho markets.
For smaller DeFi lending tokens, the article’s trading takeaway is clear: TVL and gross fee screenshots are no longer enough. Traders are likely to reward only tokens with auditable value capture (fee shares, staking/dividend rights, buybacks tied to schedules, net-profit emissions, and minority-holder protections). The market may increasingly price governance-only structures at a discount until a verifiable accrual path is confirmed.
PI Token is trading near all-time low territory despite Pi Network’s continued gaming and protocol updates. After broader market weakness, PI fell to about $0.136, its lowest since February, following a multi-week selloff. The token has dropped roughly 22% since last month and is moving closer to the prior ATL around $0.1312.
Price action highlights lost supports: $0.18 and $0.16 have reportedly been breached, with earlier resistance near $0.20 failing multiple times. The article also flags an unlock risk: PiScan data estimates about 5.4M PI tokens scheduled for release over the next month, but several specific days could unlock 10M+ tokens (including a 16M day), which may intensify immediate selling pressure.
On the ecosystem side, Pi Network and CiDi Games (a Pi Ventures portfolio company) announced new “Pioneers” games already made available: Coin Whack, Fruit Stack, Gemnova, and RainbowCubes. The Pi Core Team also deployed protocol update v23, while v24 was expected by June 2 but lacks official confirmation.
For traders, this mix of PI Token near-ATL weakness, support breakdown, and upcoming unlock timing suggests risk of further downside in the short term even as positive headlines (gaming/protocol) emerge.
Bearish
PI TokenPi NetworkToken UnlockAll-time LowCrypto Market Sell-Off
Hyperliquid’s HIP-4 event contracts generated more than $92 million in trading volume in their first full month, according to newly released data. The average was about $3 million in daily volume during May.
Hyperliquid HIP-4 targets prediction-style, event-based contracts, and the early activity suggests traders are seeking alternatives to traditional prediction platforms. However, liquidity remains concentrated: most volume is still tied to Bitcoin-related event contracts, and the overall catalog of HIP-4 markets is still limited.
The article also frames HIP-4 as a bridge between derivatives liquidity and on-chain event trading. By expanding beyond perpetual futures into event markets, Hyperliquid could widen its user base and potentially pressure centralized venues and prediction operators over time.
For traders, the key takeaway is that Hyperliquid HIP-4 is showing early traction in on-chain event speculation, with Bitcoin as the dominant driver. If market variety and user adoption grow, HIP-4 volume could become a meaningful liquidity magnet rather than a niche product.
A Qingdao court upheld a conviction in a Bitcoin theft case involving 107 BTC. In the case, the defendant surnamed Zhang was sentenced by the Li Cang District People’s Procuratorate to 10 years and 9 months in prison and a fine of RMB 100,000. The victim’s crypto wallet was accessed quietly in early 2024, and 107 BTC were transferred out, valued at over RMB 22.54 million at the time.
Prosecutors said Zhang obtained the wallet’s recovery information (mnemonic words) during “help” with registration, then repeatedly attempted to crack the wallet in the early hours and moved the funds. Zhang claimed a “protective takeover” to prevent other theft, but investigators used the money-flow trail to show the stolen coins were layered through transfers and cashed out into about RMB 660,000.
Critically, the court ruled that Bitcoin has economic value and exclusive control characteristics, meeting the criminal-law definition of “property,” meaning BTC can be the subject of theft. The defendant appealed, but the Qingdao Intermediate People’s Court dismissed the appeal in November 2025 and maintained the original verdict.
For traders, this Bitcoin theft case is a clear judicial signal: crypto custodianship, wallet security, and on-chain tracing remain key focus areas, and enforcement risk is likely to stay elevated.
The Blockchain Association says it has secured support from 160 former national security and law enforcement officials to advance the CLARITY Act in the U.S. Senate. The letter, sent to Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Minority Leader Charles Schumer, argues the CLARITY Act would strengthen oversight rather than roll it back.
Key claims: the CLARITY Act would expand anti-money laundering (AML) and sanctions compliance tools, improve information sharing between the Treasury-led government agencies and the private sector, and enhance investigators’ ability to track illicit activity under a U.S. regulatory framework. Supporters also highlight provisions that would expand obligations tied to the Bank Secrecy Act and U.S. sanctions rules, and create a permanent interagency working group for crypto-related illicit finance investigations.
The bill is already cleared by the Senate Banking Committee in a 15–9 bipartisan vote (May) and is awaiting consideration by the full Senate after being placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar. The article also notes ongoing congressional debate about adding ethics restrictions on officials with crypto-related business interests, a point that has drawn attention given President Donald Trump’s digital asset involvement.
Separately, the Blockchain Association plans to intensify Washington advocacy, including meetings across 18 Senate offices and a virtual town hall. It cites scheduled participants such as Senator Cynthia Lummis, Representative Tom Emmer, and Patrick Witt.
For traders, the central takeaway is that CLARITY Act momentum is growing around enforcement-focused compliance—potentially supportive for “regulation clarity” sentiment across majors and liquidity, but still headline-risk until the full Senate votes.
Bullish
CLARITY ActUS SenateCrypto regulationAML and sanctionsMarket structure
The U.S. SEC has released a 2026–2030 strategic plan that makes digital assets, tokenization, and distributed ledger technology core regulatory priorities. The SEC 2030 strategy also sets an explicit goal to reduce uncertainty for crypto markets by offering “a firm regulatory foundation” through a “rational, coherent, and principled approach.”
Key objectives in the SEC 2030 strategy include investor protection and capital formation, but with a specific focus on compliant capital raising via tokenized offerings and onchain financial systems. The SEC says custody, trading, and staking should operate under “suitable oversight” without overlapping requirements.
The plan stresses regulatory division of responsibilities with the CFTC. The SEC identifies jurisdictional questions between the agencies as central to building a workable framework for crypto assets. The article notes existing coordination progress, including a March memorandum of understanding between the SEC and CFTC to strengthen information sharing.
Policy context: the strategy comes after recent SEC discussions involving tokenized equities and after the SEC delayed a proposed “innovation exemption” related to tokenized stock trading.
Broader backdrop: Congress is also considering the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, which would shift substantial digital-asset responsibilities to the CFTC. Separately, under SEC Chair Paul Atkins, the SEC rescinded its decades-old “no-deny” settlement policy in May, a move framed as improving transparency.
For traders, the SEC 2030 strategy signals a continued push toward clearer rules around tokenization and crypto infrastructure, but the pace and final scope of SEC vs. CFTC authority still matters for near-term sentiment and volatility.
TapTools, a Cardano analytics platform, announced it will wind down operations over the next two weeks after an executive exodus. The company said it can no longer sustain the service due to leadership losses, technical staffing shortages, and high operating costs.
Key departures include both co-founders plus the COO and CTO, earlier this year. TapTools attempted continuity by promoting a backend developer to CTO and shifting toward more sustainable product development, but operations still became unmanageable when that person also left.
TapTools was founded in 2022 and became widely used on Cardano, offering real-time token pricing, DeFi metrics, market insights, and project discovery tools. Despite the shutdown plan, the firm remains open to acquisition offers or external funding that could keep the platform running.
This announcement lands amid broader pressure in the Cardano ecosystem, following the May closure of NFT marketplace JPG.Store and the cancellation of Cardano Summit 2026 after a rejected treasury funding proposal.
Market context: ADA saw a mostly bearish 24-hour session, down 4.01% to about $0.2153, with bounces repeatedly sold off. Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson commented that more protocol closures could occur during the current market downturn.
For traders, TapTools’ shut-down adds another ecosystem uncertainty layer. TapTools’ role in analytics and discovery may reduce on-chain/market visibility for some users, potentially weighing on sentiment while buyers look for stability or funding outcomes.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass advanced to the Nov. 3, 2026 general-election runoff under the city’s top-two primary system, according to a New York Times report. With no candidate winning an outright majority in the June primary, the top two vote-getters move to a runoff; Bass is expected to seek a second term, while the second-place finisher (her runoff opponent) remains undecided.
For prediction market traders, the key signal is how pricing moved immediately after the confirmation. The “Karen Bass finishes first in the first round” contract rose to about 98% YES, up from 72% roughly 24 hours earlier. The “Karen Bass wins the 2026 L.A. mayoral election” market increased to about 78% YES from 64% over the same period. The article frames the larger, 26-point first-round jump as consistent with a discrete resolution event rather than gradual polling drift.
What to watch next is the official June primary tabulation confirming who finished second, since opponent identity increases uncertainty for the November matchup. The runoff date (Nov. 3) is the ultimate resolution point for the general-election contract.
Takeaway for trading: the prediction market is already pricing in near-certain advancement for Bass (first-round “YES” near certainty), but the higher-impact uncertainty is now about her runoff opponent and how that could swing the November “Bass wins” probability.
Neutral
prediction marketsLos Angeles mayoral electionKaren Basscontract oddsevent-driven repricing
Prediction market traders are increasingly betting that Bitcoin’s selloff has further to run, even as BTC slides toward ~$65,000. On Kalshi, traders price a 66% chance BTC falls below $55,000 this year and a 50% chance of sub-$50,000. They also assign a 31% probability of prices dropping under $40,000.
Polymarket shows a similar stance: roughly 67% odds of a below-$55,000 outcome and a better-than-even chance of sub-$50,000 levels. Traders also view Bitcoin as lagging versus gold in 2026, with only about a 30% chance BTC outperforms gold.
The bearish skew is tied to worsening macro and flows. Data cited from SoSo Value shows investors withdrew $2.4bn from U.S.-listed Bitcoin ETFs in May and another $1bn in the first two trading days of June, with the outflow streak continuing. K33 Research adds an “opportunity cost” narrative: some investors prefer high-flying AI stocks over holding BTC as AI-linked equities outperform and major indexes hit records.
However, capital is not exiting crypto entirely. During the dip, market share has shifted toward stablecoins, with USDT and USDC gaining as traders raise cash and wait. This combination—higher odds of lower BTC prices plus rising stablecoin inflows—could keep volatility elevated in the near term while delaying a sustainable recovery until ETF outflows cool.
Bitcoin (BTC) slid from around $74,000 to an intraday low near $65,700 in about 48 hours, extending a broad risk-off move that also pushed Ethereum below $1,900. The article says there was no single “Bitcoin failure” behind it—no protocol issue, no exchange collapse, and no major regulatory shock. Instead, the selloff is framed as a liquidity event driven by ETF outflows, long liquidations, and a sudden rotation of risk capital toward large AI and space equity fundraising.
Key mechanics cited for the BTC drop: (1) U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF flows turned negative, with roughly $2.8–3 billion withdrawn over consecutive sessions, weakening a major spot-demand channel; (2) Strategy made a small BTC sale (32 BTC) after 2022, which the article says dented sentiment at an already fragile moment for corporate-treasury holdings; and (3) leverage amplified the move—after BTC lost the ~$70,000 area, forced selling accelerated, resetting open interest and triggering additional liquidations.
Traders’ next focus is whether Bitcoin can reclaim the $70,000 level quickly. The article suggests failure to regain it would keep attention on the mid-$60,000s, with ETF flows and liquidation data remaining the key signals.
Other mentioned stories include Zcash (ZEC) restoring its Orchard shielded pool after a vulnerability fix, and several non-price market updates, but the trading takeaway centers on Bitcoin’s liquidity/flows-driven weakness tied to external (non-crypto) capital calls.
Alphabet $80B stock sale: Alphabet has filed plans to raise $80 billion to expand artificial intelligence infrastructure and “global compute.” The package combines a $30B concurrent underwritten offering and a $40B at-the-market share sale starting Q3 2026. Berkshire Hathaway also plans an additional $10B private placement.
For crypto traders, the key takeaway from the Alphabet $80B stock sale is the potential liquidity reallocation effect. When large tech raises risk capital for AI infrastructure, funding can temporarily shift away from higher-beta crypto—creating short-term pressure.
In the same market window, BTC and ETH experienced a sharp risk-off move described as liquidity-driven rather than triggered by a single protocol failure or major regulatory shock. The article cites ETF outflows and subsequent liquidations as contributors to BTC’s drop (from the mid-$70,000s toward ~$65,700) and notes ETH falling below ~$1,900.
Net: the Alphabet $80B stock sale reinforces the “AI compute race” as a tens-of-billions infrastructure capital theme, which may keep crypto markets sensitive to liquidity until positioning and funding rebalance.
The article is a 2026 guide to mobile crypto casinos, focused on phone-first usability and practical crypto casino flows. It argues that a good mobile crypto casino must be easy to navigate (lobby scanning, cashier access, clear account settings), fast on modern browsers, and able to support coins with transparent network details, coin support, and withdrawal limits.
Key “mobile crypto casinos” criteria include: readable bonus terms on small screens, visible security settings (2FA/session controls), and an exit path that is as clear as deposits (limits, pending times, identity checks, bonus restrictions). It also explains the typical process: choose a coin and network, use a deposit address/QR code, wait for confirmations, then withdraw via a destination address after checking the correct network.
The guide lists 15 platforms at a glance—such as Jack.com, 21.com, Spinzen, Chancer, Bets.io, BitStarz, Vave, PlayBet, Bet25, Lucky.fun, MyStake, Livecasino.io, Crypto-Games, Duelbits, and 7BitCasino—emphasizing browser-based play and crypto-friendly cashiers.
While presented as entertainment rather than investment, traders should note the operational risk element: on-chain deposits can be irreversible, so confirming networks and addresses matters for both small test deposits and real withdrawals. Overall, the piece is about UX + payment/withdrawal transparency for mobile crypto casinos.
Neutral
mobile crypto casinoscrypto paymentswithdrawal rulesbrowser-based gamblingsecurity & 2FA
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) reports that Filipino adults with “formal financial accounts” jumped from 48% to 58% in one year. The March 2026 Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey of 1,500 adults (age 18+) shows the same upward trend across regions, income levels and education.
Yet, many remain unbanked due to “lack of money, unemployment, and limited knowledge” about opening accounts. Among surveyed adults, 43% reported e-money accounts (e.g., e-wallets) and 21% reported bank accounts. About one in three unbanked respondents said a household member owns an account.
The BSP linked progress to digitalization initiatives, including Paleng-QR PH Plus (QR-based payments plus on-site account opening). Cash still dominates payments: Worldpay data shows cash is 42% of POS transaction value. GCash remains the largest mobile wallet by e-commerce value (41%) and POS payments (29%) in 2025, supported by wide consumer use and merchant connectivity.
A2A rails are also expanding via InstaPay and QR PH. In 2025, A2A accounted for up to 13% of e-commerce value and 7% of POS payments.
Policy direction is moving toward tokenization and CBDC use. The BSP is nearing progress on the eBayad Act to streamline government digital payments. It is also developing a wholesale CBDC roadmap for interbank settlements and securities/cross-border payments. BSP Deputy Governor Mamerto Tangonan said CBDC may be used to settle tokenized Treasury bonds, following a Treasury pilot that lacked a settlement instrument.
Key figure: BSP Governor Eli Remolona Jr. said the BSP will keep broadening access so more Filipinos can save and manage expenses.
A June 3 discussion on “Blueprint for Institutional Digital Asset Security at Scale” argues that the tokenized economy is moving from experiments to real production—without fully abandoning TradFi trust layers.
Speakers included Sanchit Mall (Visa), Yip Kah Kit (UOB), Arthit Sriumporn (Rakkar Digital), and Ray Law (Thales). Mall said stablecoin-related payments demand is already measurable, with Visa stablecoin settlement approaching an almost US$7 billion run rate this year. He also highlighted that stablecoins can support 7-day money movement versus 5-day banking schedules—boosting treasury and settlement efficiency.
Kah Kit emphasized coexistence: TradFi and DeFi will run in parallel, but institutions need trusted infrastructure for compliance, governance, custody, risk management, and security. UOB described building a unified approach for a multi-asset, multi-network future, integrating tokenized assets into existing compliance, cybersecurity, settlement, and risk frameworks.
Sriumporn argued that many security failures are behavioral, not protocol-level: people compromise. Rakkar uses multi-layer approvals, air-gapped key storage, biometric controls, and security training. Thales’ Law stressed that key control is foundational, warning that software-based key management can be copied and stolen silently.
Overall, tokenized economy adoption is being framed as a trust-and-operations upgrade: not removing intermediaries, but rebuilding trust through banks, custodians, payment networks, and security providers—supporting stablecoins and tokenized assets toward mainstream use.
TON is rebranding its native token to “Gram” as the fourth checkpoint in Pavel Durov’s “Make TON Great Again” (MTONGA) roadmap. Durov said the change should take about three weeks and that the token name will return to the one used in the project’s original white paper. A new token website and teaser logo were released.
The TON network says the transition is mostly name-only: no token swap, migration, bridge, claim, or conversion is required. The team claims every TON balance, address, contract, and position will remain unchanged. Voting is underway, with about 1.8M TON (nearly 80%) pledged in favor at the time of reporting.
MTONGA continues in parallel with earlier upgrades launched in April, including improvements aimed at higher transaction speed and lower fees. In early May, Telegram officially re-entered the ecosystem after a six-year gap, replacing the TON Foundation as a key driver. Telegram is also described as the network’s largest validator, which Durov argues helps decentralization by acting as a counterbalance rather than a single center.
Market reaction has been fast. The earlier report said TON jumped more than 15% (from around $1.95 to above $2.25) after the news, before easing toward about $2.07. In the latest update, Gram was trading around $2.02, up over 5% on the week.
For traders, the TON→Gram rebrand is a narrative/positioning catalyst tied to ongoing ecosystem delivery and renewed Telegram involvement, which may support momentum in the short term while liquidity and sentiment settle.
Bullish
TON rebrandGram tokenTelegram MTONGAcrypto price actionnetwork upgrades
US Treasury’s OFAC sanctioned Iran’s crypto exchange ecosystem, adding four platforms to its sanctions list and barring US persons and businesses from providing services. The main target is Nobitex, Iran’s largest exchange, along with Wallex, Bitpin and Ramzinex.
The action follows Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent saying the US seized nearly $1bn in crypto from Iranian exchanges and wallets since late February. OFAC frames the crackdown as part of the “Economic Fury” campaign to cut Iran off from the financial system using digital assets.
Treasury alleges Nobitex enables sanctioned entities, including payments linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Chainalysis says Nobitex sits at the center of Iran’s “digital dollar pipeline” and processes around 50% of Iran’s crypto trading volume.
OFAC also designated Nobitex executives and co-founders, including CEO Seyed Ali Khoee and chairman Amir Hossein Rad. Traders should expect heightened sanctions and compliance risk across Iran-related on/off-ramps and intermediaries, with potential knock-on effects on regional crypto liquidity. Broader global price impact is likely limited unless additional major intermediaries are targeted.
Bitcoin price fell 7% on June 3, breaking key support and hitting a nine-week low. The selloff accelerated after the US and Iran launched fresh strikes while ceasefire talks reportedly stalled.
Bitcoin dropped to about $65,385 on Coinbase (early June 3), the lowest level since late March. The move followed the largest daily drop since Feb. 5, when BTC shed more than $4,500 in 24 hours.
Derivatives data highlights forced selling: CoinGlass estimates roughly 277,000 traders were liquidated in the past 24 hours, totaling about $1.83 billion. Over 90% of liquidations were long positions, mainly in Bitcoin and Ether (ETH).
Analyst commentary suggests the trigger is not purely geopolitical. Bitrue Research Institute said the decline is driven more by leveraged liquidations, heavy ETF outflows, and a technical breakdown—while the US-Iran headline flow amplifies “fear.” Near-term support is expected around $64,000–$65,000, and any de-escalation or macro rebound could spark a sharp relief rally.
Macro/geopolitical context: US Central Command said it defeated Iranian ballistic missiles and drones and conducted self-defense strikes on Qeshm Island. Iran’s reported stance also included pausing conversations with the US until Israel stops attacking Lebanon.
For traders, the key takeaway is that Bitcoin is trading under technical pressure with derivative-driven volatility, making risk management and levels at $66K and $64K–$65K especially important.
Bearish
BitcoinUS-Iran geopolitical riskderivatives liquidationETF outflowstechnical support break
New York State Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) and the European Banking Authority (EBA) have signed a memorandum of understanding to police cross-border stablecoins. The agreement—linked to the EU’s MiCA framework—sets rules for sharing information and coordinating supervision on stablecoins, including issued stablecoin amounts, total circulation, number of holders, audits (external/internal), and the regulatory status of specific products and services.
The regulators also plan cooperation during crises or emergencies, with an emphasis on market trends and risks. NYDFS said the deal will enhance oversight of entities involved in stablecoin activities, improve risk identification, and support market integrity. However, it covers only supervised stablecoin-related activities, not every line of business a firm may run.
The article notes that US dollar-denominated stablecoins dominate the sector, led by Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC. It also cites DefiLlama data placing the global stablecoin market at over $319 billion. It further references a view that stablecoin growth has shifted from rapid expansion toward consolidation, as new regulation, liquidity constraints, and higher real-world yields weigh on new issuance.
Altcoins fell broadly, but Humanity Protocol’s H token kept posting higher highs during the June 3, 2026 selloff. The article links the resilience to proof-of-human AI: as bot activity rises with cheaper AI-generated content, “verifiable humans” become a scarce utility for dApps that need anti-sybil controls.
Humanity’s H token data cited includes a June 2 all-time high at $0.8534 and strong momentum—about +164.84% over 30 days (Messari) and +168.72% over 7 days (CoinStats). CoinStats reported roughly $357.38M in 24-hour volume, and CoinMarketCap showed around $1.87B market cap with about $555M daily volume by June 3, suggesting turnover-backed demand rather than thin liquidity.
The piece explains how proof-of-human systems can use tokens for verifier incentives, governance aligned to verified participation, access/rate limits, and security funding (including privacy-preserving credential proofs such as zero-knowledge). It also highlights a “verify once, use everywhere” integration model, where multiple apps can reuse the same credential—potentially creating durable token utility.
For traders, the key is evaluating fundamentals over hype: privacy model, verifier economics, integration depth, token sinks vs emissions/unlocks, liquidity concentration, and regulatory exposure if verification resembles de facto KYC. Potential risks include privacy/security incidents, verifier centralization, unlock/overhang, and regulatory friction.
Gate announced a partnership with Alpaca to expand access to real stock trading for eligible users via a unified multi-asset platform.
The launch enables trading 10,000+ stocks and ETFs across major US venues such as NYSE and Nasdaq. Gate supports fractional shares with a minimum order size of $1. Through its unified account, users can trade stocks and ETFs using USDT, aiming to connect crypto rails with traditional market access in one interface.
Alpaca will supply the regulated brokerage infrastructure, handling execution, clearing, settlement, custody, and dividend payments/corporate actions. The model is API-first and self-clearing.
For crypto traders, this is more of a cross-asset on-ramp and sentiment driver than a direct catalyst. Any incremental impact would likely be indirect (e.g., USDT usage for brokerage activity) rather than a major move in token prices.
Gate positions this as part of a broader multi-asset roadmap, with expansion beyond equities into indices, commodities, metals, and FX—reinforcing the trend toward TradFi access delivered through API-first, crypto-adjacent platforms. Key companies mentioned: Gate (54M+ users) and Alpaca (infrastructure for 10M+ brokerage accounts across 40+ countries).
Neutral
crypto-TradFireal stock tradingUSDT fractional sharesbrokerage infrastructureGate x Alpaca
Bitnob announced a new expansion of its crypto payment and stablecoin infrastructure for global businesses. The company launched Bitnob Enterprise, a non-custodial infrastructure stack for organizations and developers that want greater ownership and control over how financial products are built and operated.
It also introduced the next generation of Bitnob Business, a managed infrastructure platform accessed via APIs and dashboards. The upgrade is designed to support growing treasury workflows and operational needs, while allowing businesses to avoid managing blockchain infrastructure and internal complexity.
Over the past five years, Bitnob infrastructure has powered wallets-as-a-service, payments, treasury operations, stablecoin settlement, swaps, collections, payouts, and virtual card products. The firm said more than $4.5 billion has moved through its infrastructure.
Bitnob Business was first launched in 2022. In this release, Bitnob Enterprise keeps customers in control of their custody architecture while using Bitnob for wallets, payments, treasury operations, market intelligence, and embedded financial services.
The timing aligns with rising stablecoin usage in emerging markets and faster cross-border payments demand. Bitnob cited a 2025 report projecting Africa’s cross-border payments corridor could grow from about $329B annually to nearly $1T by 2035, with stablecoins comprising roughly 43% of digital asset transaction activity across Sub-Saharan Africa.
Bitnob Business and Bitnob Enterprise are available free starting today, with offerings positioned as “programmable, borderless” rails for global firms.
United Overseas Bank (UOB) flags continued downside risks for the Euro versus the US Dollar (EUR/USD). The bank’s FX strategy team says EUR/USD remains trapped under recent resistance, with bearish momentum persisting and no clear near-term catalyst for a reversal.
Fundamental backdrop supports the US Dollar. UOB points to a relatively hawkish Federal Reserve and resilient US economic data. Meanwhile, the Eurozone faces headwinds including sluggish growth, political uncertainty in parts of the region, and a more cautious ECB approach to rate normalization.
Key levels to watch: UOB identifies support at 1.0650–1.0700. A sustained break below that zone could trigger a move toward the 2023 lows near 1.0450. On the upside, resistance sits around 1.0850, with a stronger barrier at 1.0950. Only a move above 1.0950 would suggest a potential shift away from the bearish bias.
Implications for traders: the UOB view argues for caution on Euro longs. Short-term bounces in EUR/USD may be more likely to attract selling than to mark the start of a sustained uptrend.
For FX-exposed businesses and investors: continued EUR weakness could raise costs for USD-priced imports and pressure margins. For investors, a weaker Euro also reflects underlying economic fragility that could weigh on broader risk appetite.
Overall, UOB’s assessment reinforces a market consensus that EUR/USD faces a challenging path unless EUR breaks above key resistance levels.
Bearish
EUR/USDUOB FX StrategyUS DollarECB vs FedFX risk hedging
SBI Holdings CEO Yoshitaka Kitao says crypto’s sluggish price action is driven by a major capital rotation. Institutional “smart money” is liquidating crypto to raise cash for a historic U.S. tech IPO wave, temporarily starving the market of liquidity.
Kitao points to investors preparing to buy shares in SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI. He argues crypto fundamentals remain intact, and a potential U.S. “Clarity Act” could be a broad bullish catalyst. He specifically says Ripple (XRP) would benefit from improved regulatory clarity.
The article cites fundraising expectations that could exceed $200B across the three IPOs, with combined target valuations around $3.6T. SpaceX reportedly targets a $1.75T–$2.0T valuation (up to ~$80B raised) and could list as early as June. OpenAI raised $122B at an $852B post-money valuation and is targeting an IPO range of ~$850B–$1.1T. Anthropic is aiming for about a $900B valuation, with a possible listing window in Q4 2026.
For traders, the key takeaway is a likely short-term liquidity headwind from the tech IPO cycle, balanced by potential regulatory upside for crypto—especially if the U.S. “Clarity Act” progresses.