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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

Qalibaf: US-Iran peace deal odds collapse to 2%, oil ATH risk

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Iran’s parliament speaker Bagher Qalibaf says the US has “run out” of oil-related options, signaling a hardline posture and sharply lowering US-Iran peace deal prospects. In the prediction market, the probability of a deal by April 30 fell to 2% (from 10% the day before). Longer-dated odds also slid: the May 31 contract is ~30% (down from 38%), and the June 30 contract is ~50%. The largest repricing was in the April 30 contract, dropping from 61% a week ago to 2% now. Traders appear to price little chance of a near-term breakthrough. The crude oil leg of the same betting market is similarly cautious: the chance crude reaches an all-time high by April 30 is just 1% YES. Market depth remains meaningful. Total volume in the US-Iran peace deal market reached $854,588 in USDC over 24 hours, and it takes about $27,667 to move the April 30 contract by 5 percentage points. The article also notes that a 2¢ “YES” share would pay $1 if a deal happens (a headline ~50x payoff), implying the market now requires a rapid diplomatic shift within days. Traders are likely to reprice quickly if Iran’s leadership tone changes or if new US military moves emerge over the weekend.
Bearish
US-Iran peace deal oddsGeopolitical riskPrediction marketsCrude oil outlookBitcoin

Israel tightens security amid rising Hezbollah tensions; Polymarket ceasefire odds at 100%

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Israel tightens security in northern Israel as Home Front Command issues new security guidelines, signaling rising Hezbollah tensions. The article highlights that Polymarket’s ceasefire-by-June-30 contract is priced at 100% YES, but the move toward tighter security suggests a potential shift (“repricing”) in market odds. Both June 30 and April 30 ceasefire contracts are also shown at 100% YES. However, the April 30 market has only six days left and appears particularly fragile: 24h volume is essentially zero, implying inactivity rather than confidence. With liquidity near zero, even a single sizable order could trigger sharp volatility. The diplomatic-related market—“Israel x Lebanon Diplomatic Meeting”—is likewise at 100% YES, and the tightened security backdrop is framed as bearish for the likelihood of successful talks. No major figures are quoted directly, but the article says traders should watch for announcements from Netanyahu and the IDF. Any confirmation of continued military operations or new Hezbollah attacks would likely act as the catalyst for price movement in these ceasefire-related contracts. For traders, the key takeaway is that these prediction markets are currently “flat” at 100% YES, yet illiquidity makes the setup prone to abrupt repricing if events worsen. Israel tightens security in the north, but the market is not actively trading—so risk is concentrated in the timing of any escalation signals.
Bearish
Israel-Hezbollah tensionsCeasefire prediction marketsPolymarketNetanyahu & IDF updatesLiquidity/volatility risk

AI crypto scams: deepfake fraud hits Cardano founder

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AI crypto scams are escalating as scammers use real-time deepfake impersonation. A Cardano (ADA) project founder reportedly lost control of his laptop after a video call impersonating a Cardano Foundation official. The attacker used cloned face and AI voice to keep the conversation credible, then pushed a “Microsoft Teams update” prompt inside the call. After the founder clicked the prompt, the device was immediately compromised, turning the call into an executable infection chain. Security context from earlier reporting links this pattern to broader Microsoft-style social engineering malware lures and macOS-style “ClickFix” credential-targeting prompts. Both stories also tie the incident to the wider AI scams trend: generative tools and scraped media make impersonation harder to detect, and the irreversibility of crypto transfers increases potential damage. For crypto traders, this is an operational risk alert for holders, teams, and institutions: when AI crypto scams target identity and workplace tooling, it can quickly cascade into wallet or custody exposure. Expect additional headline-driven volatility around major platforms whenever new impersonation incidents surface. Defensive takeaways: verify identities via a back-call to known numbers, use pre-agreed code words for sensitive requests, block software installs from call links, and require hardware security keys (e.g., YubiKeys) for critical accounts.
Neutral
AI crypto scamsDeepfake fraudCardano securityIdentity verificationSocial engineering malware

Trump cancels Pakistan travel; Witkoff/Kushner halt Iran talks

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Trump cancels Pakistan travel, derailing a planned backchannel to mediate US–Iran peace talks. The White House cancelled travel by senior advisers Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, who were expected to use Pakistan as a neutral venue for discussions in Washington–Tehran negotiations. Trump cancels Pakistan travel with no detailed explanation, leaving the Iran talks stalled and increasing uncertainty in regional diplomacy. Analysts say the abrupt reversal could signal a harder US stance and embolden hardliners in both the US and Iran. Tehran has criticized the move as US bad faith, while European allies urged restraint. Pakistan has not issued an official response, though sources indicate disappointment because Islamabad had invested diplomatic capital as a mediator. The cancellation also raises the risk of miscalculation and possible escalation of regional tensions. China has reportedly offered to step in as mediator, adding a potential alternative channel if talks are revived. Key individuals: Steve Witkoff (diplomat role) and Jared Kushner (senior adviser). Key reported timeline: early 2025 backchannel reports via Pakistan; late Feb trip announced; March 3, 2025 travel cancelled.
Neutral
US-Iran diplomacyTrumpPakistan mediationGeopolitical riskIran nuclear talks

Oil Futures Jump 2% as US-Iran Talks Stall, Strait of Hormuz Supply Risk Mounts

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Oil futures rose more than 2% in early trading after US-Iran peace talks stalled, raising fears over crude supply through the Strait of Hormuz. The latest round of negotiations collapsed on April 26, with both sides failing to agree on sanctions relief and nuclear inspection terms. With about 20% of the world’s oil transiting the chokepoint, traders reassessed disruption risk. President Donald Trump said Iran faces growing domestic pressure if it cannot export oil, adding political uncertainty. Goldman Sachs pushed back its expected normalization window for Strait of Hormuz exports from mid-May to late June, and lifted its WTI forecast to $83 (from $75). Brent crude also moved above $87. The supply tension could spill into gasoline, diesel, and heating oil markets, pressuring refineries in Asia and Europe that rely on Middle Eastern crude. Importers such as India, Japan, and South Korea are reportedly tapping strategic petroleum reserves, though these are limited. Key watchpoints for traders: further US/Iran statements, any military escalation near the Strait of Hormuz, and potential diplomatic breakthroughs that could quickly reverse the oil futures rally. In similar past supply shocks, prices have often stayed volatile for weeks to months before normalizing.
Bearish
oil futuresUS-Iran talksStrait of HormuzWTI and Brentenergy supply risk

Strait of Hormuz Security: Iran Makes Cooperation Top Priority

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Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Strait of Hormuz security is Tehran’s top priority after concluding a major visit to Oman. Speaking on social media, he framed safe passage through the chokepoint as essential for regional and international stability. Araghchi said Iran and Oman are the only two countries adjacent to the Strait of Hormuz. The talks focused on bilateral issues and broader regional affairs, including efforts to ensure “safe passage” for vessels and improve cooperation on shared neighbor-related concerns. Why it matters for markets: roughly 20% of the world’s oil (about 17 million barrels per day) transits the Strait of Hormuz, which is only ~21 miles wide at its narrowest point. Any military tension or blockade risk historically pushes oil prices higher, including after past tanker attacks (e.g., 2019) and major US-Iran escalation fears (e.g., 2020). Traders will watch whether the diplomatic tone holds. The article notes cautious regional reactions, with Saudi Arabia and the UAE not issuing official statements, while the US has long maintained maritime security through its Fifth Fleet. Overall, the renewed emphasis on Strait of Hormuz security suggests de-escalation rather than confrontation, which can reduce near-term geopolitical supply shock risk. Key figures: Abbas Araghchi (Iran). Mediator role highlighted: Oman (with Sultan Haitham bin Tariq referenced).
Neutral
Strait of Hormuz securityIran-Oman diplomacyOil market riskGeopolitical de-escalationMaritime chokepoint

Litecoin Zero-Day Bug Patched After 13-Block Reorg

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Litecoin’s network recovered after a zero-day bug triggered a critical 13-block reorganization on April 25. The flaw allowed a denial-of-service (DoS) attack against major mining pools by causing some nodes to incorrectly accept certain MWEB (MimbleWimble Extension Block) transactions. Litecoin’s team confirmed the issue on X and deployed a patch. After the upgrade, invalid MWEB transactions were excluded from the main chain. The article says no funds were lost, and the network resumed normal operation. Key details for traders: reorg depth was 13 blocks; the incident temporarily disrupted mining pool transaction finality and may have caused brief hashrate drop due to pools running unpatched nodes. The episode highlights operational risk for mining infrastructure and reinforces the importance of fast node updates and monitoring. Price impact risk appears limited in the article, but short-term volatility could occur around security headlines until market confidence returns. Longer term, the incident is a reminder that MWEB-related upgrades can introduce new code paths, so continuous security audits and post-mortem analysis will matter for sentiment around LTC network robustness. Keywords: Litecoin network, zero-day bug, block reorganization, MWEB, mining pools, patch status, DoS attack.
Neutral
Litecoin securityZero-day bugBlock reorganizationMWEBMining pools

DeFi Resilience: Kelp DAO Hack Cuts $13B TVL via Leveraged Liquidations

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DeFi resilience is back in focus after the Kelp DAO hack caused about $292M in losses and a roughly $13B drop in total value locked (TVL), per CoinDesk. While the headline figures look severe, the article argues most of the TVL decline reflected the unwinding of leveraged positions rather than true capital destruction. The incident (March 15, 2025) exploited a smart-contract vulnerability to drain assets. Within 48 hours, Aave saw an $8.45B outflow and DeFi TVL returned to levels last seen a year earlier. The key mechanism: users had repeatedly collateralized and re-collateralized to create stacked exposure. When risk was repriced after the hack, liquidations accelerated, collapsing these layered positions. The piece cites supporting metrics for DeFi resilience: non-leveraged pool TVL (e.g., Uniswap V3, Curve) fell by under 5%; daily active wallets dropped about 2%; Aave core lending pools kept collateralization above 150%; and stablecoin supplies (USDC, DAI) stayed flat—signs of limited panic. It also highlights that major protocols (Aave, Uniswap, Compound) remain intact and frames the event as less systemically damaging than past shocks like Terra/LUNA (2022) and the 2022 FTX collapse. The article notes an industry shift toward tighter risk management—real-time monitoring, dynamic liquidation thresholds, and insurance funds—while regulators (SEC/CFTC) watch for targeted improvements.
Neutral
DeFi resilienceKelp DAO hackTVL declineAave liquidationSmart contract security

US-Iran peace deal market plunges as envoy talks are cancelled

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The US-Iran peace deal market is repricing sharply after Washington cancelled envoy trips to Iran and no talks were scheduled. The April 30 “US-Iran Permanent Peace Deal” contract fell to YES 2% (from around 10% the previous day), implying a much lower chance of a resolution. Traders also lifted the odds of no progress: “no US-Iran diplomatic meeting by June 30” rose to 14.5% (from 9%). Near-term expectations weakened further, with YES shares dropping to 30.5% for May 31 and 50.5% for June 30. The biggest move was the April 30 contract, which has only six days left to resolve. Liquidity is thin. While total reported USDC trading across related markets is about $889.7K, very small flows can swing prices: roughly $141 moved the diplomatic meeting market by 5 points. The article links the sell-off to “gridlock” signaled by repeated cancellations and unchanged demands. For crypto traders, a lower US-Iran peace deal market probability can quickly dampen risk sentiment. Watch for any White House or Iranian Foreign Ministry announcements—fresh envoy trips or concessions are the main catalysts that could reverse the repricing.
Bearish
US-Iran diplomacypeace deal prediction marketsUSDC liquidityrisk sentimentenvoy cancellations

DOJ Probe Ending Clears Way for Fed Chair Nominee Kevin Warsh

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U.S. Senator Thom Tillis said he will vote to confirm Kevin Warsh, ending a Senate blockade tied to the Justice Department’s (DOJ) probe into Fed chair Jerome Powell. Tillis had demanded assurances that the DOJ would not use a criminal probe to threaten Federal Reserve independence. According to Tillis, DOJ provided the assurances he sought over the weekend and confirmed that the current investigation is “completely and fully ended.” DOJ had announced Friday it was dropping the DOJ probe into Powell, while Federal Reserve Inspector General Michael Horowitz continues reviewing alleged Fed building/renovation cost overruns. Warsh’s confirmation path is expected to move quickly. Tillis said this could allow Warsh to reach the floor before Powell’s chair term ends on May 15. The Senate Banking Committee is expected to advance Warsh’s nomination to the full Senate on Tuesday. Powell’s situation remains unusual. Even if he steps down as chair, he could potentially stay on the Fed Board as a regular governor. Powell’s lawyers argued in a March filing that he could not resign while the criminal investigation was pending—suggesting legal and procedural complexity if the matter were reopened. Separately, the Fed is set for its next two-day rate meeting, with expectations that rates may be left unchanged as policymakers assess the economic impact of the Iran war and higher energy prices. For crypto traders, the key takeaway is that the DOJ probe is no longer a near-term constraint on Fed leadership, which may reduce one source of policy headline risk while keeping focus on interest-rate expectations from the upcoming meeting.
Neutral
Fed leadershipDOJ proberates & inflationTreasury/US politicscrypto market risk

Ethereum Foundation ETH Unstaking: $48.9M Sell Risk vs Strong Demand

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Ethereum Foundation ETH Unstaking has started for $48.9M, renewing worries about sell pressure after prior treasury activity. Earlier, it reportedly sold 10,000 ETH (~$23.8M) via OTC on April 24, then shifted by unstaking staked holdings. Arkham data shows the Foundation deposited wstETH into Lido’s unstETH contract to receive unstaked ETH. This is the first unstaking since it staked 22,517 ETH (~$46M) in early March, suggesting tactical reallocation rather than routine operations. Traders should weigh the potential supply overhang against supportive market conditions. CryptoQuant reports the exchange supply ratio (ESR) fell to 0.122, the lowest since 2016, implying exchanges are absorbing supply and immediate sell impact may be limited. Dune data also shows staking remains steady: 39.2M ETH (~31.5% of supply) staked, with ~23% via Lido. Technicals are mixed but buyers look present: ETH RSI is ~55 and a “Momentum Shift” indicator stayed positive through April, even after the AAVE-related staking depositor crisis. A historical reference notes ETH dropped from ~$2.3K to ~$2.1K around April 11 after Foundation sales. Key watch for ETH Unstaking follow-through: monitor Ethereum Foundation and staked-wallet flows, ESR/exchange supply, and RSI/momentum for trend confirmation. Net impact on ETH hinges on whether this turns into continued selling or fades as treasury management.
Neutral
ETH UnstakingEthereum FoundationLido wstETHExchange Supply RatioAAVE Staking Crisis

Keir Starmer prediction market: Mandelson scandal pressure lifts odds of exit

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Keir Starmer has vowed to lead the Labour Party into the next UK general election. At the same time, a political prediction market is pricing a higher chance he could leave office before June 30, 2026. The “June 30, 2026” contract is trading at about 42.5% (YES). The market is up from roughly 41% a day earlier, despite Starmer’s public commitment. Meanwhile, the “December 31, 2026” contract is around 68.5% (YES), up from about 66% the previous day. The large gap between the June and December contracts suggests traders see the main resignation risk clustering in the second half of 2026. Liquidity dynamics also matter for traders: the June contract has thinner USDC volume (about $15,446/day), so only around $998 is needed to move odds by 5 points. The December contract is thicker (about $14,116/day traded) and requires roughly $5,843 for a similar 5-point move. A brief 3-point spike points to a single sizable order impacting a relatively thin order book. Why it matters: the statement is framed as a response to pressure from the Mandelson scandal and weaker Labour polling. Starmer’s vow may reduce near-term odds of a voluntary resignation, but the market upward drift implies traders still doubt his pledge. What to watch next are May 2026 local election results and intervening public opinion polls, which could quickly shift both prediction contracts toward NO if Labour performs well.
Neutral
UK PoliticsPrediction MarketsKeir StarmerUSDCMandelson scandal

Bitcoin Jumps $1K on Binance on US–Iran Tensions, Market Bets Split

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Bitcoin jumps $1K on Binance within about a minute amid rising US–Iran conflict tensions. The move is reflected in April Bitcoin prediction-market activity, highlighting short-term volatility rather than a sustained trend. The Bitcoin all-time high contract for June 30 is at 3.1% “YES,” showing traders are skeptical about a near-term new high. For December 31, odds are higher at 17.5% “YES,” but still indicate uncertainty. The article notes that the odds are sensitive to price swings—around $959 could move the June 30 “YES” line by roughly 5 percentage points—so large bets may distort pricing. Bitcoin jumps $1K on Binance is framed as reactive news-driven trading sensitivity, not a classic safe-haven behavior. Traders are encouraged to watch for further catalysts, including public comments from Michael Saylor or Changpeng Zhao, and any escalation or de-escalation in US–Iran developments. Related market context mentioned in the feed includes recent ETF inflow headlines, but this specific report centers on how geopolitical headlines are rapidly moving Bitcoin short-horizon sentiment and prediction-market pricing.
Neutral
BitcoinGeopolitical RiskBinancePrediction MarketsVolatility

China-backed ceasefire lowers odds of Iran regime change by June 30

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Iran regime change speculation cools as a China-backed ceasefire stabilizes Iran, with U.S. and Tehran trying to keep a fragile truce in place. In the associated prediction market, the “Will the Iranian regime fall by June 30” contract is at 8.5% (up from 8% yesterday). That implies the market is still not pricing a sudden Iran regime change, even though odds have crept up from 6% a week ago. The June 30 timeframe is 67 days away. China’s diplomacy also impacts the Israel-Iran permanent peace deal market. The April 30 contract is 0.8% (near-zero odds for a deal within a week). The June 30 contract is 9.5%, showing continued skepticism. Market liquidity and activity suggest traders are waiting for catalysts: the regime-fall market trades about $35,587/day in real USDC, and $16,830 would be needed to move the price by 5 percentage points. Over the last 24 hours, the largest move was only a 1-point shift, consistent with a cautious stance until new signals emerge. Key takeaway for Iran regime change traders: China’s involvement looks stabilizing but not decisive. Without a meaningful policy shift from the U.S. or Iran, the ceasefire could break. Monitor Iran’s internal dynamics and any changes in Chinese or Pakistani diplomatic engagement for clearer direction.
Neutral
Iran regime changeChina diplomacyCeasefirePrediction marketsIsrael-Iran peace deal

Strait of Hormuz Safe Passage Talks: Iran, Oman Seek Gulf De-escalation

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Iran’s foreign minister confirmed that the Strait of Hormuz safe passage talks were a central focus in recent meetings in Oman. The discussions centered on maintaining freedom of navigation through the Strait, a chokepoint moving roughly 20% of the world’s oil transit, meaning any disruption can quickly lift crude prices and shipping costs. Oman, historically a mediator between Iran and Western countries, hosted the dialogue with an emphasis on de-escalation and clearer maritime communication. The article says both sides discussed options such as direct naval communication channels, coordinated patrol practices to reduce incidents, safe transit protocols for commercial vessels, and tension-reduction near the Strait’s narrowest section. Oil markets reacted cautiously: Brent crude futures stayed broadly stable, suggesting traders are waiting for concrete, verifiable outcomes rather than announcements alone. Analysts note that any formal agreement could lower the geopolitical risk premium, potentially reducing shipping insurance costs and supporting more predictable tanker schedules. Key challenge remains implementation. The parties would need enforceable protocols, inspection/verification steps, and dispute-resolution mechanisms. Broader Iran–West tensions (sanctions and nuclear concerns) could also limit progress. Overall, the safe passage talks signal a diplomatic channel is open, but traders may treat the impact as incremental until details are confirmed.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzIran-Oman diplomacyMaritime securityOil market riskGeopolitical de-escalation

Analyst: Bitcoin’s historical average could form a $57K bottom

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An analyst says Bitcoin could test a potential bottom near $57,000 if price behavior aligns with its historical average. The view frames $57K as a key support zone that traders may watch for signs of stabilization or renewed demand. Bitcoin’s ability to hold that level would likely influence risk sentiment across the broader crypto market. If BTC rebounds from the $57K area, traders may interpret it as a corrective phase ending and look for follow-through buying. Conversely, failure to defend the zone could reinforce bearish positioning and prolong drawdowns. For traders, the headline primarily matters as a technical reference point: $57K is positioned as a “line in the sand” derived from historical average dynamics, which can affect trade timing, stop placement, and portfolio hedging decisions in both the short and medium term.
Neutral
BitcoinMarket analysisTechnical supportHistorical averageBTC price outlook

Strait of Hormuz Disruption Risk Rises as Trump Cancels Iran Talks Trip

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Trump has canceled an envoys’ planned trip for Iran talks, escalating fears of prolonged Strait of Hormuz disruption. In oil-linked prediction markets, the “Crude Oil All Time High by April 30” contract is priced around 1% YES, with limited near-term activity. Traders show skepticism on a fast jump: WTI hitting $160 in April is priced at 0% YES, while longer-horizon risk is reflected in the June crude-oil prediction market. Why this matters for markets: liquidity appears thin in the WTI prediction market—one $1,632 order could move price by about 5 percentage points—so even modest buying/selling could cause sharp swings. The article also notes USDC volume in the WTI crude-oil market is about $2,023 over 24 hours, implying cautious positioning. The key catalysts to watch are OPEC+ production-cut announcements and any signals from US or Iranian leadership about the standoff’s direction. If Strait of Hormuz disruption turns into imminent, significant supply problems, odds for all-time-high outcomes could reprice upward quickly.
Bearish
Strait of Hormuz disruptionWTI crude oilTrump-Iran diplomacyOPEC+ production cutsPrediction markets

Iran-US Peace Talks Collapse: WTI Crude Oil Market Stays Steady

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Iran-US peace talks in Islamabad have collapsed, refocusing attention on crude oil supply risk tied to the Strait of Hormuz. In prediction markets, the Polymarket WTI Crude Oil contract targeting $160 in April is trading around 0.5% YES, unchanged versus a week ago—showing the crude oil market is steady despite the diplomatic setback. This “stillness” suggests traders are not yet repricing the probability of a supply disruption. Key risk remains the Strait of Hormuz, described as a recurring point of contention. However, the article highlights extremely thin liquidity in the market. Reported face value volume is about $54,256/day, while actual USDC volume is roughly $506/day. It would take only about $1,632 to move the price by 5 points, meaning any sudden escalation could trigger outsized moves with limited capital. At the current 0.5% YES price, a YES share pays $1 if WTI hits $160—implying a potential ~200x return for rapid escalation within days. What traders should watch next: changes in rhetoric from either side (Iranian or US), OPEC+ announcements, either resumption or formal collapse of talks, and any military incidents near the Strait of Hormuz.
Neutral
Iran-US tensionsWTI crude oilprediction marketsStrait of HormuzOPEC+

Litecoin 13-Block Reorg: MWEB Zero-Day Patched, Litecoin X Fires Back

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Litecoin suffered a 13-block reorg on April 25, 2026, covering about 32 minutes of chain history. Litecoin says a “zero-day” bug in its MWEB privacy layer enabled a denial-of-service attack on major mining pools and allowed invalid MWEB transactions to be accepted by non-updated nodes. Attackers allegedly used those invalid transactions to “peg out” coins to third-party DEX platforms, while mining pools later coordinated a defensive reorg over roughly three hours to reverse the invalid transactions. Litecoin claims no valid transactions were permanently lost, and the network returned to normal once miners adopted a patched client. A key controversy followed the incident: Coindesk reviewed Litecoin’s GitHub and found core developers reportedly patched the MWEB consensus vulnerability privately between March 19 and March 26—around 37 to 40+ days before the April 25 exploit—yet the broader miner/node base was not forced to update in time. This has raised fresh questions about responsible disclosure and coordination. Separately, the project’s @litecoin X account responded aggressively to critics, posting that people should “stay on the shallow end” and mocking knowledge gaps about Proof-of-Work and reorgs. The tone sparked hostile replies, and Solana’s official account also joined with a sarcastic jab. For traders, Litecoin’s immediate technical impact appears contained (reorg rolled back invalid activity), but the disclosure/timing debate may add headline risk around LTC security confidence.
Neutral
LitecoinMWEBBlockchain ReorgZero-Day BugMining Pools

Peru presidential election: Sánchez leads by 24,000 votes

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Peru presidential election results show Roberto Sánchez leading Rafael López Aliaga by over 24,000 votes with 95.8% of ballots counted. With 3,800 actas still to be processed, López Aliaga’s YES odds for a comeback have fallen to about 2.1%, down from 4% the previous day. Market reaction in the Peru presidential election prediction contract has declined steadily. The market for López Aliaga winning has edged down from roughly 8% a week ago to current levels, while the market for advancing to the runoff remains inactive. Trading activity is thin: about $21,560 in actual USDC, with the price typically requiring around $4,598 to move by 5 points; the largest observed move was a 1-point spike. Why it matters: Sánchez’s margin with only 3,800 actas left leaves López Aliaga with almost no mathematical path forward. Even with fraud allegations, the market is pricing near-certainty against a dramatic shift. Traders are watching for announcements from Peru’s National Jury of Elections and ONPE on the remaining actas; confirmation of Sánchez’s lead would push López Aliaga’s odds closer to zero.
Neutral
Peru electionprediction marketONPEUSDCrunoff odds

Trump Public Insult Prediction Market Hits 100% as Tucker Carlson Apologizes

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Tucker Carlson publicly apologized for backing Donald Trump, saying he opposed Trump’s move to initiate war with Iran. The news is feeding a “Trump public insult” prediction market that already prices in retaliation. As of the contract window, traders show unanimous sentiment: the “Will Trump Publicly Insult Someone On Contract Odds” is at 100% with 6 days left to resolve. The page reports a flat term structure and near-zero volume, suggesting traders see no need to hedge because they treat a Trump public insult as a certainty. The article also notes that Carlson’s break from Trump signals wider dissatisfaction among conservative figures who previously supported Trump’s agenda. It frames the only possible deviation from the Trump public insult outcome as an unlikely scenario where Trump does not follow his usual pattern of attacking public critics. For trading relevance, the “Trump public insult” prediction market behaves like a sentiment gauge. If Trump’s next social media post or speech contradicts the expectation (e.g., no derogatory mention of Carlson or a clear statement otherwise), the contract could reprice quickly. Conversely, additional comments from other prominent conservative voices could shift related prediction markets tied to expected public insults. Keywords in focus: Trump public insult, prediction market, contract odds, sentiment.
Neutral
prediction marketsUS politicsTrump public insult oddsgeopolitical risksentiment gauge

Fed rate decision pre-leadership: BTC volatility watch

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This week is packed for crypto as the Fed prepares to deliver its last rate decision before a leadership change, a key driver for BTC sentiment alongside the ECB. The article highlights that the Fed rate decision occurs just days before the May 15 deadline, and officials say it will “set the tone for market expectations.” Traders should treat the Fed rate decision as the main macro catalyst, with ECB outcomes also emphasized as BTC reaction triggers. A busy macro calendar runs through the week: US earnings (UPS, GM; plus major tech reports including Amazon, META, Google, Qualcomm, Microsoft, Ford, eBay), durable goods (Wed), and the ECB rate decision plus US inflation gauges (PCE Price Index and Core PCE) and preliminary GDP (Thu). The Fed rate decision is expected to be unchanged, but the accompanying Powell speech and subsequent data can still swing expectations. On the crypto-native side, several token and network events are flagged: token unlocks for SUI (0.91% of supply) and Ethena (0.5% of supply) on Saturday, plus multiple project catalysts such as Chiliz FanTokens V2.0 (CHZ), a Sign token unlock, Solana SIMD-266 upgrade (SOL), Synthetix multi-collateral trading (SNX), Injective buyback (INJ), Babylon Aave V4 deployment (AAVE/BABL), and Starknet STRKBTC staking vote (STRK). Net effect for traders: expect higher volatility and fast sentiment pivots as the Fed rate decision, central-bank messaging, and supply/demand changes (unlocks + upgrades) converge.
Neutral
Fed rate decisionBTC volatilitytoken unlocksECB outlookDeFi upgrades

Scallop on Sui hit by flash loan + oracle manipulation, $142K drained

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Scallop Protocol on Sui was exploited in a flash loan attack that reportedly cost around $142,000 (150,000 SUI). The attacker combined flash-loan borrowing with an oracle price manipulation to depress SUI/USDC rates, borrow at distorted prices, and repay within the same transaction—keeping the price difference. Key detail: the exploit did not break the protocol’s core contracts. Instead, it targeted a deprecated side contract tied to the sSUI rewards pool. Analysts point to an uninitialized variable (“last_index”) in the older V2 contract (left callable on-chain). When a new account was created, the attacker could claim rewards as if they had been staking since the pool’s start. With the spool index growing to ~1.19B over ~20 months, the attacker’s credits mapped 1:1 to available rewards—draining the pool’s ~150K SUI. On-chain traces indicate the stolen funds were quickly routed through a mixing service similar to Tornado Cash on Sui, complicating recovery. Scallop temporarily paused operations, then unfroze core contracts and resumed deposits/withdrawals, stating user deposits remain safe and the incident is contained to the isolated deprecated rewards contract. Market reaction: the article notes SUI price was not significantly impacted at the time of reporting (up ~2% on the day), with SUI trading around $0.94.
Neutral
SuiScallop ProtocolFlash LoanOracle ManipulationDeFi Security

XRP trading volume hits $77M as price stalls near $1.43

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XRP trading volume jumped to about $77M across major exchanges (Coinbase ~$28M, Binance ~$26M, Upbit ~23M), while XRP price stayed flat near $1.43. Analysts, including “DavidTheBuilder”, say the key signal is that XRP trading volume is leading price action—consistent with a compression/accumulation setup. Technically, XRP has repeatedly met resistance in the $1.50–$1.55 zone. If XRP trading volume remains elevated and the price breaks above and holds $1.55, traders are watching for a stronger upside push toward $1.90. If resistance continues to cap rallies and volume support fades, the accumulated liquidity could unwind, raising the risk of a sharp downside move after consolidation. For traders, the decision point is clear: whether XRP can reclaim $1.55 on sustained volume (bullish continuation) or whether the divergence turns into breakdown risk.
Neutral
XRP trading volumeResistance breakoutAccumulationVolatility setupMarket divergence

Litecoin DoS Attack Hits MWEB Privacy Layer; Foundation Patches, Reorg Mitigates

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Litecoin saw a denial-of-service (DoS) attack after a zero-day network bug was reported to affect its MimbleWimble Extension Block (MWEB) privacy layer. The Litecoin Foundation said the vulnerability has been patched and the network is fully operational. On April 25, the attacker reportedly used non-updated mining nodes to submit invalid MWEB transactions. This disruption targeted cross-chain swap protocols by attempting double-spends and pegging out coins to third-party decentralized exchanges. The Foundation mitigated the incident with a 13-block reorganization (reorg), reversing invalid transactions. It also stated that all valid transactions during that period were unaffected, while it did not disclose which pools were impacted or the value of the invalid transactions. An industry figure, Aurora Labs CEO Alex Shevchenko, suggested the exploit may not be a true “zero-day,” arguing the attacker appeared to have prior knowledge from how the swap plan was set up (e.g., moving LTC into ETH from a funded address). Market snapshot in the article: LTC was around $55.92, down about 1.2% on the day, with no major price move despite the incident. The event adds to ongoing blockchain security concerns for traders watching network integrity and miner/node behavior.
Neutral
LitecoinDenial-of-Service (DoS)MWEB privacy layerCross-chain swapsBlockchain security

Iran accuses US of ceasefire breach; BOJ rate-cut bets slip amid Middle East tensions

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Iran’s parliament speaker Ghalibaf accused the US of breaching a ceasefire agreement, pointing to Israeli actions in Lebanon. The escalation risk is feeding into global markets and lowering confidence in a Bank of Japan rate cut. In a rate-decision prediction market tied to the Bank of Japan’s April 2026 meeting, the “YES” position is priced at about 0.2% and has stayed steady recently. Traders appear skeptical that BOJ will cut rates despite potential economic disruption from the Middle East. Liquidity is very low, so large orders could swing prices quickly. The conflict’s impact is also more direct in commodities. The article highlights expectations for gold to reach $8,000 by June and silver to hit $200 by June. If the ceasefire breach worsens or escalation accelerates, traders may rotate toward safe-haven assets as oil volatility continues. Key watch items are statements from BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda and ongoing Middle East negotiations. The core takeaway is that the “ceasefire breach” narrative is increasingly shaping rate-cut expectations, yen sensitivity, and risk positioning across risk assets.
Neutral
Middle East tensionsBank of Japanyen rate-cut expectationsgold and silvergeopolitical risk

Ukraine settlement talks: Lavrov signals US talks, no new concessions

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Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Moscow is open to Ukraine settlement talks with the US, but made clear there are no new concessions. In a prediction market, the “Russia-Ukraine ceasefire by May 31, 2026” odds remain at 4.0% (unchanged from the prior day), reflecting trader skepticism that progress will arrive before the May 31 deadline. Lavrov’s message did not change Russia’s stated conditions on territory and NATO; the market’s “2026” ceasefire contract is steady at 4% with 37 days left. The longer “2027” timeline contract is not yet showing odds. Liquidity is thin: the 2026 “YES” contract trades about $5,779 in actual USDC daily, and moving the odds by 5 points would require roughly $2,249. The largest single 24-hour move was negligible, suggesting most participants are waiting for concrete signals such as a framework announcement from the US State Department or developments from trilateral talks. Crypto-trading relevance is indirect: the story is primarily a sentiment read-through for risk appetite tied to geopolitical resolution odds rather than an asset-specific catalyst.
Neutral
Ukraine settlement talksCeasefire prediction marketLavrovGeopolitical riskUSDC liquidity

Iran exports 4.6M barrels oil, sidestepping US sanctions

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Iran exports at least 4.6M barrels of crude oil from export terminals, suggesting it is still bypassing US sanctions efforts. A Polymarket contract tied to crude reaching an all-time high by April 30 fell, with the “YES” price dropping to about 0.9% (from ~2% earlier), implying traders see lower odds of a near-term supply shock. The article frames this as supply resilience: steady Iranian shipments reduce the probability that a sudden shortage forces prices above record levels. It also highlights liquidity risk—although the market’s daily face value is about $100,828, reported USDC trading volume is only about $2,513, meaning a single large order could swing the market quickly. The “Trump Iran Demands” market shows no reported trades. Traders are told to watch OPEC+ production announcements, further US sanctions targeting Iranian exports, and any signals of direct US–Iran negotiations. If crude does not break above a threshold (implied by the contract logic), the bullish payout case lacks an obvious catalyst right now, despite geopolitical uncertainty.
Neutral
Iran oil exportsUS sanctionscrude oil supply outlookPolymarketOPEC+

CFTC staff cuts 24% as insider-trading risk rises in crypto

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The U.S. CFTC has cut staff by 24%, leaving fewer enforcement resources as insider-trading concerns grow across crypto, oil futures, and prediction markets. The agency is now at its lowest staffing level in 15 years after layoffs and attrition since Donald Trump returned to office. CFTC chair Michael Selig argues the smaller team can still meet its mission by using technology and AI tools (including Microsoft Copilot) to review prediction-market rules and streamline internal workloads. A CFTC report cited record-high applications for new prediction-market exchange approvals. Lawmakers say the cuts may impair oversight. Rep. Nikki Budzinski criticized the “efficiency” rationale and introduced a bipartisan bill to block government-connected people (and their families) from betting on government actions through prediction sites. The push follows heightened scrutiny of crypto-adjacent prediction platforms. Several platform and political links are highlighted: Trump Media is planning a prediction platform; Trump Jr. is an adviser to Kalshi and an investor in Polymarket. Polymarket was cleared to serve U.S. customers last year (its U.S. site still not fully running), while Kalshi faces refunds and lawsuits tied to a disputed market involving Iran’s leadership. Even if Congress funds an expanded CFTC enforcement workforce, officials warn the agency would still be smaller than during most of Trump’s first term. A former senior CFTC official said CFTC teams would likely “triage” cases—meaning some matters may go unaddressed—raising the risk that market abuse could spread faster than regulators can respond.
Bearish
CFTCstaff cutsinsider tradingprediction marketscrypto regulation