Ethereum leads RWA market cap growth across all sectors, backed by strong usage data from Token Terminal and rwa.xyz.
As of Jun. 4, 2026, Ethereum holds $16.6B in distributed real-world asset (RWA) value and commands a 52.85% market share—over half of all tokenized RWAs. The gap versus competitors is wide: BNB Chain has $3.6B and Solana $2.5B, implying Ethereum is about 4.5x larger in distributed RWA value.
On growth, Ethereum-based tokenized RWAs surpassed $17B in early 2026, up 315% from roughly $4.1B a year earlier. The broader RWA market is also expanding rapidly, with total tokenized assets estimated between $24B and $65B+ by mid-2026 (methodology varies). Even conservative estimates imply up to ~380% growth over three years.
Liquidity is a key driver. Stablecoin supply on Ethereum mainnet now exceeds $175B, which supports settlement and on-ramp functions for most RWA activity.
Why this matters for traders: increasing RWA activity can translate into more Ethereum transaction fees (gas demand) and sustained stablecoin flows through Ethereum DeFi. If the tokenization cycle continues, Ethereum’s infrastructure advantage could attract additional institutional deployments—potentially supportive for ETH demand over time, assuming fees remain manageable.
Benchmark (analyst Mark Palmer) initiated coverage of Strive Inc. (NASDAQ: ASST) with a Buy rating and a $32 price target, implying nearly 100% upside from about $16. The thesis is that Strive builds its Bitcoin treasury using perpetual preferred equity (SATA), avoiding the maturity and interest burdens typical of convertible debt.
The call comes as Strive purchased 2,500 BTC for roughly $185M on June 1 (covering May 23–June 1), taking total holdings to 19,000 BTC. The implied average acquisition cost was about $96,000 per coin. Timing also stood out because Bitcoin was under pressure (below $69,000) while a peer, Strategy (MSTR), sold 32 BTC.
Despite a volatile backdrop, Strive’s stock is down about 86% over the past year. Other analysts have maintained or raised targets, but the market question remains whether Strive’s equity will ever trade close to the net asset value of its Bitcoin holdings, or continue at a discount.
For crypto traders, this is a Bitcoin corporate-treasury and capital-structure story: Strive’s financing model may support continued accumulation, while the equity discount versus NAV will likely drive sentiment around ASST and related “BTC treasury” themes.
Ripple’s XRP Ledger Operations says the XRP Ledger 3.2.0 mainnet upgrade is approaching. The node software will be rebranded from “rippled” to “xrpld” to provide a unified reference for infrastructure providers, validators, and node operators.
Ahead of the XRP Ledger 3.2.0 rollout, validators and operators are expected to update their systems. Ripple is also publishing a technical roadmap and playbook to help teams maintain consensus continuity during the transition window.
The upgrade follows XRP Ledger 3.1.3 (May 2026), which improved NFT management, vault systems, permissioned domains, and parts of the lending protocol and reportedly achieved 100% consensus. Validator “Vet” (dUNL) noted the market reaction may be short-lived, while protocol improvements should have longer-term value.
For traders, XRP price pressure remains: XRP slid from about $3.65 (Jul 2025) to around $1.20 (Jun 2026), including an ~11% drop in the week to Jun 4 amid broader crypto weakness. Still, on-chain flows look mixed-to-constructive: 25M+ XRP were withdrawn from exchanges, while wallets holding 10,000+ XRP hit an all-time high of 332,230—signaling potential accumulation even as price struggles.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $396.6M in net outflows on Wednesday, extending a 13-day streak. Since May 14, total withdrawals have reached about $4.4B—the longest uninterrupted run since spot Bitcoin ETFs launched in January 2024.
Bitcoin is down ~21% from its May 15 peak as ETF-driven selling compounds broader weakness. Flows have been consistent across major issuers, with BlackRock’s IBIT taking a large share of daily redemptions and Fidelity/Grayscale also showing steady outflows rather than a one-fund shock. The largest weekly outflow during the streak was $1.42B for the week ending May 29.
Why Bitcoin ETF redemptions may persist: (1) profit-taking after mid-May strength, and (2) ETF mechanics—when shares are redeemed, authorized participants may sell underlying BTC to settle, potentially reinforcing downside flows.
What traders should watch next: some analysts frame the ongoing Bitcoin ETFs outflows as potential “capitulation.” However, if IBIT continues to show larger relative outflows than peers, it may point to an institutional rotation across issuers. Bulls’ key “repair” signal would be a break in the Bitcoin ETFs outflow streak, with improving spot bid volume near support and BTC reclaiming recently lost levels.
Blackstone’s BCRED (Blackstone Private Credit Fund) reported that shareholders submitted buyback requests for about 10% of outstanding shares in Q2 2026, roughly $4.4 billion in redemption demand. This compares with 7.9% in Q1.
The key issue is how the fund handled the buyback requests. In Q1, Blackstone expanded its tender offer to 7% and backstopped it with $400 million from firm and employee capital, fulfilling all redemption requests. In Q2, BCRED instead capped redemptions at its standard 5% quarterly limit and distributed the remainder on a pro-rata basis (about half of requested amounts).
The tender offer window ran from May 1 to May 29, 2026, and redemption requests reportedly slowed toward the end of the period. BCRED is a non-traded private credit vehicle that provides periodic buyback windows, focusing on senior secured loans to large US companies. Assets were $79 billion in the latest reporting, down from a prior peak of $82 billion.
Blackstone said the fund remains well capitalized, with inflows and loan repayments outpacing repurchase requests. For investors, the risk is timing: if buyback requests stay around 10% while the 5% cap remains, exits could take multiple quarters.
Veteran trader Peter Brandt says Bitcoin has reached his initial downside target near the February low, but the correction is not finished.
In a June 3 update, he warned Bitcoin could still weaken further and possibly enter a “terminal wash-out” phase before a more durable base forms. Brandt previously said Bitcoin’s bottom was unconfirmed and highlighted a bear-channel risk from the February low. He pointed to a close below $79,145 as a signal that price could move lower within that channel.
Brandt’s key timing message is that he does not expect a tradable low until October. This aligns with an earlier April 23 cycle forecast for an investable low scheduled for Sep/Oct 2026. That potential low could either hold above or break below the February 2026 low, keeping downside scenarios on the table.
For the broader cycle outlook, Brandt repeated a projection that the next major high could land between $300,000 and $500,000 in Sep/Oct 2029.
For traders, the immediate takeaway is that reaching the February low is not being treated as the end of the decline. Bitcoin risk management may need to account for another wave of selling and/or capitulation before any clearer bottom setup emerges into October.
Ethereum funding rates on Binance surged to the highest level seen in 2026, rising to about 0.00087 (index ~0.0087), according to CryptoQuant. The move signals increased long leverage demand in ETH perpetuals, even as spot price pressure persists.
At the time of writing, ETH traded around $1,787–$1,788 (about -5% over 24h). Traders appear to be positioning for a short-term rebound, with Arab Chain suggesting that higher Ethereum funding rates on Binance often follow rapid risk appetite after a sharp drop.
However, the article flags key risks for ETH markets. Funding spikes during broader weakness can imply long over-crowding; if BTC keeps falling, long position closures and liquidations may accelerate. This could widen the gap between derivatives sentiment and actual price action.
Crypto takeaway: watch Ethereum funding rates on Binance as a short-term sentiment gauge, but treat it as potentially unstable if BTC weakness continues—especially given the elevated liquidation risk implied by high positive funding.
Bernstein started coverage on TeraWulf (WULF) and Cipher Mining (CIFR) with Outperform ratings, using an “AI power lease” thesis: former Bitcoin miners can act as “power landlords” by monetizing large, grid-connected electricity and data-center infrastructure under contract-backed HPC (high-performance computing) demand.
The bank projects total AI-related revenue across its covered universe to rise from about $1.2B (2026) to $10.7B (2030). It forecasts TeraWulf AI revenue at $1.7B and Cipher at $1.2B. For traders, the key is execution risk versus contract visibility, not short-term Bitcoin price action.
New color from the later update: TeraWulf’s transition is already visible. In Q1 2026, revenue was $34M, with 60% coming from HPC leases rather than Bitcoin mining, and the company has amassed over $12B in long-term contracted HPC revenue. Bernstein’s view also notes that the stock reaction was muted because both names had already rallied in 2026 as AI optimism was partially priced in.
Context: Bernstein set price targets at $36 (WULF) and $32 (CIFR). It follows other Wall Street calls—Morgan Stanley (Overweight, ~$37–$38) and Jefferies (Buy, $32 for CIFR and $28 for WULF). For crypto traders, this supports continued “AI + power” capital rotation, but the longer-term upside depends on hyperscaler compute demand staying on track.
Neutral
AI power leaseBitcoin minersHPC data centersWall Street upgradescrypto infrastructure
Moomoo, backed by Futu Holdings, announced a partnership with Kalshi on Jun. 4, 2026, to add CFTC-regulated prediction markets directly inside its app. The first wave of prediction markets lets users trade CFTC-regulated event contracts on outcomes including Federal Reserve interest-rate decisions, elections, and the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Kalshi is a designated contract market registered with the CFTC, so these contracts sit under the same regulatory framework as commodity futures. Moomoo received regulatory approval on May 28, 2026, shortly before the partnership was made public.
This move follows similar deals: Kalshi has already partnered with Robinhood, Webull, and Coinbase, making prediction markets increasingly common among retail trading platforms. Kalshi’s valuation is reported around $11 billion in 2025–2026, and it has expanded into crypto-adjacent offerings such as perpetual futures and crypto-linked event contracts.
Alongside this partnership, Moomoo upgraded its crypto trading services in May 2026, offering support for 50+ digital assets with $0 commissions and a 0.49% transaction fee, plus direct on-chain transfers to external Web3 wallets.
For crypto traders, the key takeaway is that CFTC-regulated event derivatives are moving “into the app” at retail scale—via prediction markets integrations—while Kalshi also continues to develop crypto-adjacent derivatives.
Four major US banks—JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo—are jointly developing a deposit token network for real-time payments. The plan targets a first-half 2027 launch and is expected to be operated by The Clearing House.
A deposit token is a blockchain-recorded, regulated representation of a bank deposit. It remains on the issuing bank’s balance sheet and is FDIC-insured, unlike many stablecoins that are typically issued by non-banks. The deposit token network is positioned as a way to gain on-chain speed and “programmable payment” features while keeping existing regulatory and risk controls.
Why it matters for crypto traders: banks are explicitly treating stablecoins as a competitive threat to their settlement role and fee revenue. The report highlights the scale of USDT (Tether) and USDC (USD Coin), and suggests US banks may issue their own tokens later, but executives are still skeptical that stablecoins offer clear domestic advantages versus deposit token networks.
Near-term impact looks limited because adoption is not until 2027. Still, the move signals mainstream finance pushing toward tokenized rails that resemble public-chain functionality—without stablecoin issuance—so sentiment around stablecoins and tokenization could shift over time.
Neutral
deposit token networkUS banksstablecoinsreal-time paymentsThe Clearing House
Japan’s Vice Finance Minister for International Affairs Atsushi Katayama said authorities are “always ready to react suitably as needed” to excessive or disorderly forex moves. The comment keeps the market focused on Japan forex intervention risk as the yen stays near multi-year lows versus the US dollar.
Katayama did not specify any USD/JPY trigger level, but his wording follows the same pattern often used before action. The yen’s weakness is tied to a widening interest-rate gap: the Bank of Japan remains on ultra-low rates while the US Federal Reserve has kept tightening, supporting USD demand and yen selling.
Japan last intervened directly in October 2022, spending about $42 billion after the yen slid to around 151 per dollar. Since then, officials have repeatedly warned against speculative moves but have mostly avoided direct intervention.
For traders, the key risk is a sudden yen support headline. Any Japan forex intervention announcement could trigger sharp, short-lived USD/JPY reversals and raise near-term volatility across FX-linked positioning. Expect more “rate check” signals and further official language on timing and thresholds, which can quickly change risk sentiment—including in markets that crypto trades alongside.
Neutral
Japan forex interventionUSD/JPY volatilityBOJ vs Fed rate gapFX intervention riskrisk sentiment for crypto
Kraken Co-CEO Arjun Sethi has agreed to acquire Wyoming-based Summit National Bank for $5.5 million, according to a report cited by Bank Reg Blog. The deal is linked to the bank’s parent company, which is currently in bankruptcy proceedings.
Key terms: the acquisition is not final and requires approval from a bankruptcy court. Creditors and other stakeholders could affect the outcome, and the decision timeline is unclear.
Strategic context: the proposed bank purchase would give Kraken a federally regulated banking entity. That could strengthen Kraken’s U.S. payments infrastructure and deposit-taking capabilities, potentially reducing reliance on third-party banking partners.
Separately, Kraken’s parent company Payward is preparing for an IPO. Payward filed a confidential application with the U.S. SEC in November 2024, signaling an intention to list on a public exchange. This matters for traders because improved regulatory standing and financial credibility can influence sentiment around major exchanges like Kraken.
If court approval is granted, Summit National Bank could act as a regulated on-ramp for Kraken’s customers, potentially offering insured deposits and more direct access to traditional payment rails.
South Korean lawmaker Baek Seon-hee (Rebuilding Korea Party) introduced a legislative amendment on June 4 to prevent crypto mispayments after a major Bitcoin transfer was mistakenly sent via a domestic exchange earlier this year.
The bill would amend the Act on the Protection of Virtual Asset Users. It requires virtual asset service providers to run a real-time information processing system that continuously links users’ actual on-platform balances with internal ledgers, enabling instant detection of discrepancies.
Exchanges would also need an automatic safety feature to restrict or halt transactions when anomalies appear, including balance mismatches or unusually large transfers that diverge from normal user behavior.
The core goal is to reduce the risk of human error before funds leave the account. Since blockchain transactions are typically irreversible after confirmation, the bill focuses on pre-trade prevention rather than reversing completed transfers.
If passed, South Korea would strengthen consumer protections and push for higher operational reliability around crypto mispayments, potentially setting a regulatory precedent for other markets facing similar exchange-level error risks.
Key takeaway for traders: the proposal targets exchange controls and compliance, which may influence sentiment around custody/transfer security but is not a direct tax or spot-market rule.
Neutral
South Korea regulationCrypto mispaymentsBitcoinExchange risk controlsConsumer protection
A wallet linked to Multicoin Capital transferred 56.11 million ENA, worth about $5.28 million, to institutional custody and trading platforms Galaxy Digital and BitGo, according to Onchain Lens. The sender address starts with 0xD4d5 and routed ENA to two recipients. The intent is not disclosed, but transfers of this size from venture-linked holdings often point to portfolio rebalancing, custodial changes, or liquidity preparation.
ENA is the governance and utility token of Ethena. Ethena runs the USDe synthetic dollar system, and ENA is used for governance and staking. Because ENA has shown significant volatility since launch, whale-sized movements can affect short-term price dynamics.
For traders, this is a notable on-chain activity involving recognized institutions. While the transfer alone does not confirm an imminent sale or buy, it can influence expectations around custody flows and possible OTC liquidity management. Traders may watch for follow-on transactions from Galaxy Digital/BitGo-controlled wallets and any subsequent transfers that could indicate market positioning.
Multicoin Capital is an early-stage crypto venture firm, and similar portfolio moves by such funds are frequently interpreted as strategic signals by participants. However, without explicit information on destination purpose or trading intent, the immediate impact is likely limited until additional on-chain signals emerge.
Neutral
ENAEthenaOn-chain transfersInstitutional custodyGalaxy Digital & BitGo
The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee, led by Chair Jason Smith, is expected to introduce a package of seven crypto tax bills this week to set a clearer federal tax framework for digital assets. The proposals aim to reduce long-standing ambiguity around how crypto is taxed and to win bipartisan support ahead of a hearing next Tuesday, with the U.S. Treasury involved.
Key elements in the crypto tax bills include: clearer rules on when mining and staking rewards become taxable income; a carve-out that exempts certain stablecoin transactions from capital gains tax; and extending wash-sale rules to digital assets to curb artificial tax-loss claims.
For traders, clearer U.S. tax treatment is typically a sentiment stabilizer. It could improve medium-term confidence in U.S.-linked crypto activity by lowering compliance and legal uncertainty. Near-term price impact is likely to depend on how specific the final bill language is, the level of bipartisan momentum, and what the market already expects going into the hearing.
Neutral
US CongressCrypto Tax BillsMining & StakingStablecoin Capital GainsWash Sale Rules
HYPE spot ETFs saw a combined net inflow of $12.14 million on June 4, according to SoSoValue data. The inflow was led by Bitwise’s BHYP, which attracted $7.45 million (over 60% of the day’s total). 21Shares’ THYP recorded no net flows.
A key catalyst was the trading debut of Grayscale’s HYPE staking ETF, listed under the ticker HYPG. This adds staking exposure to HYPE, expanding the available HYPE spot ETF lineup to three products. With HYPG now live, total cumulative net inflows across all HYPE spot ETFs reached $151.66 million since trading began.
For traders, the continued HYPE spot ETF inflows suggest steady institutional and retail demand for regulated access to HYPE price exposure. The staking-enabled structure could further differentiate flows versus standard spot ETFs, potentially attracting investors seeking yield on top of spot performance. Regulators will likely pay closer attention as staking features add extra considerations around custody and yield disclosure.
US President Donald Trump said he is open to meeting Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei if it could produce a deal to end the ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict. In an interview with CNBC, Trump said he would be “honored” to sit down with Khamenei, but stressed that any meeting must result in a concrete agreement.
The comments arrive amid heightened U.S.-Iran tensions, with the U.S. still pursuing “maximum pressure” via sanctions and military posture. Trump did not name a date or location, and the offer is conditional—designed to trigger negotiations only if a tangible end to hostilities is feasible.
Analysts described the signal as a potential diplomatic opening, but noted skepticism given prior failed talks. The conflict is described as largely indirect, involving proxy clashes, cyber operations, and economic warfare. Iran has not yet officially responded.
For markets, U.S.-Iran dynamics remain closely linked to oil prices and regional security. Traders may watch for any shift that could ease supply concerns—while a lack of progress could keep volatility elevated.
Bottom line: Trump’s willingness to meet Iran’s supreme leader is a notable rhetorical shift, but the impact depends on whether direct talks turn into real negotiations and a verifiable deal.
Neutral
US-Iran diplomacyTrumpSanctionsMiddle East securityOil markets
Euler Finance says users still hold unclaimed ETH from the recovery of its 2023 V1 exploit. Onchain messaging recently notified a wallet about 32.3 ETH (about $73K), with the address inactive since April 2023. The broader recovery distribution remains open: Forgotten ETH data shows around 149.13 ETH unclaimed across 1,636 eligible addresses.
The incident began on March 13, 2023, when Euler Finance’s V1 was exploited for roughly $197M in assets, including DAI, USDC, WBTC, and stETH. The attacker, calling themselves “Jacob,” later returned the stolen funds. By April 4, 2023, Euler reported full recovery of the assets, with an estimated value near $240M after price appreciation during negotiations.
Euler used a Merkle-tree claim mechanism (“EulerClaims”) to let eligible users withdraw their share. The contract was built to support both externally owned wallets and multisignature wallets. EulerClaims appears to remain live with no stated pause or deadline, meaning claimants can act if they verify eligibility. Traders should search for their address and confirm whether they hold any unclaimed ETH before the claim window potentially changes.
Net takeaway: this is not market-moving liquidation news, but it is actionable “find-and-claim” unclaimed ETH, potentially reintroducing funds to exchanges if users claim.
In a Unchained discussion, Jeff Dorman (Arca CIO) argues that MicroStrategy’s balance-sheet strategy—especially its preferred stock financing—has increased financial strain on Bitcoin holders.
Dorman says MicroStrategy’s capital structure has become more complex after adding preferred shares. He estimates preferred issuance has ballooned to about $15B total, with dividend rates around 10–12%, implying roughly $1.7B in annual preferred dividends. He frames this as a multi-stakeholder dilemma: Bitcoin holders, common shareholders, preferred shareholders, and debt holders all require support, but not all can be funded without trade-offs.
Market impact: Dorman highlights that trading value fell as investors questioned whether MicroStrategy could reliably pay preferred dividends. To address these fears, the company raised about $2B through a mix of additional preferred stock and common stock, positioning the funds as a buffer intended for dividend payments “for a year and a half.”
Despite the capital raise, Dorman characterizes the preferred-stock decision as an “unforced error,” warning that sentiment is highly sensitive to MicroStrategy’s corporate actions. He suggests even small BTC selling activity (described as only a few million dollars) can spook markets, pressuring BTC prices.
Overall, Dorman’s core point is that MicroStrategy’s preferred stock obligations can quickly tighten available liquidity, turning corporate-finance choices into a direct risk factor for Bitcoin price dynamics.
On-chain data cited from Glassnode analyst CryptoVizArt shows that Bitcoin long-term holders are enduring their deepest “underwater” pain since major drawdowns. After the latest BTC price crash, the amount of loss-supply held by Bitcoin long-term holders jumped, reaching about 5.3 million BTC underwater—higher than the lows following the FTX crash and other prior bear markets, only exceeded during the COVID-19 crash in March 2020.
The article defines long-term holders (LTHs) as BTC investors holding for more than 155 days. As this cohort’s acquisition period mostly predates much of 2024’s higher prices, a Q4 2025 bearish shift and the February crash pushed more of their supply into unrealized losses. Analysts note that such extreme readings have often aligned with market lows and subsequent reversals, but it’s still unclear whether the current loss level will mark a bottom or extend further.
At the time of writing, BTC trades around $64,000, down over 13% on the week.
The US House passed the War Powers Resolution on June 3, ordering troop withdrawal from hostilities against Iran unless Congress formally declares war or grants specific statutory authorization. The vote was 215-208, with four Republicans (Thomas Massie, Warren Davidson, Brian Fitzpatrick, Barrett) joining Democrats. The measure is expected to face strong resistance in the Senate and is unlikely to override a presidential veto—keeping geopolitical risk elevated.
For crypto traders, the War Powers Resolution outcome quickly moved sentiment. Bitcoin sold off toward ~$65,000 during escalation periods, then rebounded to above $77,300 after the vote (about +19% from the lows). On the sanctions side, the US reportedly froze nearly $500 million in digital assets linked to Iranian entities, while enforcement against Iranian crypto usage remains a focus.
Key watch points for trading: (1) any Senate action or veto dynamics can rapidly swing risk-on/risk-off; (2) continued enforcement against sanctioned wallets may pressure crypto volumes and liquidity; and (3) macro spillovers are possible given the Strait of Hormuz’s share of global oil flow. Overall, the War Powers Resolution headline may drive short-lived relief, but sustained trend depends on clear de-escalation and follow-through in enforcement policy.
Neutral
War Powers ResolutionIran sanctionsBitcoincrypto enforcementgeopolitical risk
JPMorgan and Citi are reportedly preparing a tokenized deposits network that moves customer balances onto a shared blockchain settlement rail. The plan would likely use The Clearing House to route the system, aiming for 24/7 programmable transfers and faster interbank settlement while keeping bank custody and established compliance.
This tokenized deposits approach is positioned as a direct institutional response to stablecoins, which have captured large portions of dollar transaction activity traditionally handled by commercial banks. Observers say the tokens would be bank liabilities (not separately collateralized instruments like most crypto-native stablecoins), potentially offering “programmable money” without abandoning FDIC-style protection frameworks. The move is also framed as aligning with emerging U.S. stablecoin legislation that favors regulated bank issuers.
In parallel, Canada launched its “AI for All” strategy on June 4, targeting up to $200B in additional economic output and 250,000 new jobs over five years. Prime Minister Mark Carney and AI Minister Evan Solomon presented the plan amid concerns that only about 12% of Canadian businesses currently use AI, with a goal of 60% by 2034. The roadmap includes compute infrastructure, talent retention, and public-sector AI workflow integration, plus free AI literacy training for one million post-secondary students.
For traders, the headline is that “tokenized deposits” signals mainstream finance testing blockchain settlement features to compete with stablecoins—potentially tightening the competitive landscape in dollar payments, even if it doesn’t immediately change spot crypto prices.
Neutral
Tokenized depositsJPMorgan & CitiStablecoinsRegulationCanada AI
Audiera [BEAT] has surged 143.3% over a fortnight and gained 11.77% in the last 24 hours, challenging the $1.45 resistance level. Trading activity has strengthened: 24h volume rose 67%, while Open Interest increased by just over 14%. This mix of spot and derivatives momentum suggests short-term strength, but the broader trend remains bearish.
For BEAT, two paths are highlighted. A bullish breakout would require clearing $1.52 (a local high). If achieved, price could target the 50% retracement near $2.31 and potentially extend toward $3.56. The bearish alternative is a failure to hold, with a drop below $1.16 that could send BEAT down toward $0.53.
Traders are urged to respect overhead supply. BEAT formed a $0.96–$1.43 two-week range. The area up to $1.52 is a key supply zone that has repeatedly rejected bulls. Options/derivatives positioning adds fuel: CoinGlass shows a cluster of short liquidations concentrated around $1.35–$1.68 (already partly triggered), meaning a liquidity sweep toward $1.5–$1.6 is possible.
However, because cumulative short-liquidation leverage is higher overhead than below, a push higher may be followed by rejection and a retracement back to the $0.96 range low unless BEAT can close a daily session above $1.6. Overall: the rally is real, but BEAT longs look premature while the range persists.
Microchip (MCHP) received a US export license from the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) to allow its Armenian team to access controlled FPGA and high-performance hardware technology for R&D. This US export license covers two export-control categories: ECCN 3E001 (advanced electronic/FPGA technology) and ECCN 3A001.a.7.b (high-performance hardware), and authorizes selected personnel to work within US rules.
Microchip said the approval (announced June 4, 2026) is validation of its compliance framework and makes it the only multinational chipmaker in Armenia operating under a US site license.
The company’s Armenia operations began after its 2023 acquisition of Instigate Holding. Since then, Microchip expanded its workforce by 43% and now runs four sites in Yerevan, Gyumri, Vanadzor and Ijevan, including a new Yerevan office opened in late 2024 (ceremony on March 6, 2025). The work focuses on FPGA digital design and verification, software development and application engineering.
For crypto traders, the practical relevance is hardware supply-chain improvement: FPGAs sit between GPUs and ASICs for some mining algorithms and are used in hardware security and data-center acceleration—components that support blockchain infrastructure. The additional R&D capacity may improve future FPGA performance and cost efficiency, but it is not an immediate market-moving catalyst for major tokens.
The Japanese yen is failing to sustain gains despite the Bank of Japan (BOJ) raising rates for the first time in 17 years. The USD/JPY pair remains “coiled” near major technical levels, suggesting consolidation and an impending breakout.
BOJ’s March move ended negative rates, taking the policy rate to 0.0%–0.1%. Yet the yen initially weakened and then stabilized, largely because the interest-rate differential still favors the US. The Federal Reserve policy rate remains above 5%, keeping carry-trade demand strong (borrow yen, buy higher-yield assets). Until the Fed signals a clear shift toward rate cuts, USD/JPY pressure is likely to persist.
Technicals: USD/JPY is trading in a narrowing range. Support is near 150.00, while resistance caps moves around 152.00. A break above 152.00 could revive the broader uptrend toward 155.00 and higher. A downside break below 150.00 would be bearish and may open the door to 148.00.
Key catalysts for USD/JPY are upcoming US inflation data and any change in Fed rhetoric. The article also notes BOJ guidance: further hikes depend on inflation staying sustainably above 2%.
For traders, the “coiled” USD/JPY setup raises the odds of a sharp, directionally driven move—important for FX liquidity and risk sentiment that can spill into broader crypto market conditions via cross-asset flows.
Neutral
USD/JPYBank of JapanFederal Reservecarry tradeFX technical breakout
Gold has slipped below the key $4,500/oz level as US-Iran ceasefire talks stall and traders position ahead of the upcoming US Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) report. Reports late Tuesday said indirect negotiations have hit an impasse, with unresolved disagreements over sanctions relief sequencing and nuclear verification steps. This reduced the immediate probability of military escalation, easing gold’s geopolitical safe-haven premium and triggering profit-taking after a sharp rally.
Gold reached an all-time high near $4,680 two weeks earlier amid fears of broader Middle East conflict. The current correction is framed as a recalibration of risk premiums rather than a major change in longer-run demand.
Attention now turns to US jobs data. The September NFP report is expected to show 170,000 new jobs, while the unemployment rate is forecast to stay at 3.8%. However, recent ADP employment and jobless claims readings raise downside risk to the consensus. A weaker-than-expected NFP could lift gold by strengthening expectations for earlier Fed rate cuts (as early as November). A stronger report would support “higher-for-longer” rates, weighing on gold because it offers no yield.
Traders are watching $4,500 as support/resistance. A decisive break below could expose the $4,400 support area. Conversely, a bounce would suggest buyers remain active. In the background, central bank gold purchases remain robust, and broader geopolitical uncertainty continues to support structural safe-haven demand.
For investors, the move in gold below $4,500 appears tactical—driven by stalled diplomacy and pre-NFP positioning. Friday’s NFP is the key catalyst for near-term direction and volatility.
A public rift has emerged between Bankless co-founders Ryan Sean Adams and David Hoffman over whether Ethereum’s success depends on ETH.
Adams argues that “there is no strong Ethereum without ETH,” saying the network needs ETH to become a global store of value and a core economic layer for DeFi. He links ETH to Ethereum’s economic security—serving as a medium of exchange and unit of account—warning that separating the chain from its native asset would undermine Ethereum’s premise.
Hoffman counters that Ethereum’s network and ETH should be evaluated separately, while still insisting ETH must have a clear value-accrual mechanism. He rejects the idea that the two are inseparable, but agrees that ETH must effectively capture value for the system to thrive.
The dispute gained traction after Hoffman announced he sold the remainder of his ETH holdings between mid and late May 2026. Adams has not disclosed similar sells, though he has stepped back from some Bankless roles. Traders may read the exchange as a signal that influential voices are divided on ETH token demand, valuation drivers, and the sustainability of ETH’s “money” narrative in both the short and long run.
Disclaimer: This is not investment advice.
Danske Bank says the current equities rally is narrow and tech-led. Analysts note that a small group of large-cap technology stocks has lifted major indexes, while most other sectors have lagged. This concentration increases the risk that the equities rally may be fragile and could unwind quickly if sentiment toward the tech sector changes.
The note highlights the typical setup for higher volatility: when broad market gains are driven by only a few names, the index becomes more sensitive to company-specific news and sector rotation. Danske Bank did not give price targets, but it argues investors should watch market breadth indicators closely.
For portfolios, the bank stresses diversification and caution for investors heavily weighted toward growth and technology. It links tech outperformance partly to a “flight to liquidity” and perceived defensiveness, rather than broad-based economic strength. It also flags macro drivers—interest rate expectations, inflation data, and geopolitical risks—as ongoing factors that can shift leadership away from technology.
If the equities rally fails to broaden, the risk of a correction rises, with financials, industrials, and consumer goods noted as not participating as strongly. The bank frames the risk as concentration similar to historical episodes such as the dot-com era.
OpenSea, the leading NFT marketplace by trading volume, says it will launch perpetual futures trading directly on its platform. The announcement was confirmed by Zack Brenner (OpenSea head of marketing) on X, where he also opened early access interest.
OpenSea perpetual futures are designed as expiry-free derivative contracts. Price is kept close to the underlying spot via a funding rate mechanism. Instead of building its own derivatives engine, OpenSea plans to integrate with Hyperliquid, a high-throughput decentralized exchange (DEX) built on its own Layer 1 chain—known for low latency and real-time order matching.
For traders, OpenSea perpetual futures could offer synthetic exposure to NFT collections or floor-price-like metrics without transferring the underlying NFTs. That may improve liquidity and price discovery in NFT markets. However, the leverage embedded in perpetual contracts raises risk, so OpenSea is expected to add risk controls and user education. The company has not yet shared specific contract types, margin rules, or which jurisdictions will be supported.
For the market, this is a strategic expansion from NFT spot trading into derivatives. If implemented smoothly, OpenSea perpetual futures could attract more sophisticated traders seeking hedging or leveraged exposure tied to NFTs. It may also push other NFT marketplaces toward becoming broader trading venues, similar to how centralized exchanges evolved from spot-only to multi-product platforms.
Source confirms: early access is being handled first; no exact launch date was provided. OpenSea perpetual futures on Hyperliquid are a development to watch for impact on NFT trading volumes and derivatives sentiment.