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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

Kraken & Maple launch onchain warehouse facility for digital asset-backed loans

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Kraken and Maple have closed a landmark onchain warehouse facility for digital asset-backed loans, bringing institutional ABS-style protections onto a fully onchain structure. The facility is USDC-denominated and funds Kraken’s OTC lending program, with Maple providing senior financing through a bankruptcy-remote SPV (special purpose vehicle). Key mechanics: Kraken Financial (a Wyoming-chartered regulated qualified custodian) holds the underlying collateral, while an independent SPV administrator (Zaria) acts as administrative agent. Kraken affiliates serve as originator, seller, and servicer, while retaining a position in the capital structure to align incentives. For borrowers, the onchain warehouse facility is designed to deliver liquidity without forcing clients to sell their crypto holdings. For Maple lenders, the product targets senior, overcollateralized yield backed by BTC and ETH collateral, and loan performance can be verified onchain in real time. Why it matters for traders: this step attempts to formalize secured crypto credit infrastructure—adding clearer legal/structural protections like bankruptcy remoteness and senior subordination—while improving capital efficiency for lending desks. In the short term, it may support sentiment around BTC/ETH-linked credit demand. In the long term, it could expand the toolkit for institutions to access liquidity without liquidating spot positions, potentially reducing sell-pressure during volatility. Overall, this is a notable infrastructure milestone for onchain warehouse financing and digital asset-backed loans—potentially constructive for market confidence, but unlikely to immediately change core spot liquidity on its own.
Neutral
onchain lendingdigital asset-backed loanswarehouse financingBTC collateralOTC credit

AI build-out boosts U.S. inflation via chips & power bills

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The AI build-out is driving a new inflation wave in the U.S. Memory chip prices reportedly doubled in Q1 2026, largely due to surging demand from AI data centers. The cost pressure is spreading beyond servers to consumer products, with forecasts that smartphone, computer, and home appliance prices could rise as much as 20% in 2026. Industry outlooks remain inflationary. More than 80% of National Association for Business Economics (NABE) forecasters expect the AI infrastructure build-out to stay inflationary over the next year. Some estimates also flag potential mid-year chip price spikes of around 50% amid constrained supply. Spending and electricity are key transmission channels. Hyperscalers plan to spend over $600B on infrastructure in 2026 (up 36% YoY), including about $450B specifically for AI. Electricity costs are also climbing: residential electricity prices rose faster than the national average across 8 of 9 major U.S. data-center hubs. UBS estimates AI adoption adds about 0.4 percentage points to core PCE inflation (as of June 2026), a sizable share of the Fed’s 2% inflation target. The article frames a policy dilemma: this is structural, investment-driven inflation, and traditional rate hikes may not reduce demand for GPUs. For traders, the AI build-out inflation narrative can feed into rates expectations and risk sentiment, especially if it reinforces “higher-for-longer” pricing pressure.
Bearish
AI infrastructureSemiconductorsInflationData centersFederal Reserve

3D chip stacking breakthrough: IBM and Illinois hit 98–100% yield at ≤200°C

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IBM and researchers from the University of Illinois, working with industry partners including Intel and TSMC, reported a new way to enable 3D chip stacking by vertically layering transistor sheets using ultrathin silicon nanomembranes. Published in Nature on May 30, 2026, the method achieved device yields of 98–100%, improving the odds of moving from lab results to pilot production. The key technical challenge in 3D chip stacking is heat: earlier approaches often required around 400°C, risking damage to already-formed lower circuitry. The team used junctionless transistors built on ~10nm silicon nanomembranes, allowing fabrication at 200°C or below. They demonstrated three stacked layers, each with 625 transistors, while reporting current densities comparable to conventional bulk-silicon devices. IBM’s involvement builds on its prior semiconductor push. In 2021, IBM unveiled a prototype using 2nm process technology with roughly 50 billion transistors on a chip. For investors, the main watch item is execution speed: a proof-of-concept three-layer stack is encouraging, but real market impact depends on scaling manufacturing throughput and maintaining high yields during process transfer.
Neutral
3D chip stackingSemiconductorsAI hardwareYield improvementIBM

Trump v. Slaughter may expand Trump control over independent regulators

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The US Supreme Court is weighing Trump v. Slaughter, a case that could overturn a 90-year precedent and allow presidents, starting with Trump, to remove officials from independent federal agencies without cause. Emergency orders in early 2025 already cleared Trump to remove commissioners at the National Labor Relations Board and the Merit Systems Protection Board. A final ruling is expected by mid-2026 after oral arguments on Dec. 8, 2025. If the Court overrules Humphrey’s Executor for multimember agencies, the president could gain significantly more leverage over key regulators, including the SEC and CFTC, both of which have fixed-term commissioners under the current structure. Today, SEC commissioners serve staggered five-year terms; a shift to at-will removal under Trump v. Slaughter would materially change the regulatory outlook for US markets. Separately, Trump’s Feb. 18, 2025 executive order requires most independent agencies to submit major regulatory actions for White House review before proceeding (the Federal Reserve is carved out). The article notes earlier court decisions that weakened independence for some single-director agencies (e.g., the CFPB and Federal Housing Finance Agency). For crypto traders, the key catalyst is regulatory control. With SEC and CFTC potentially affected, positioning around Trump v. Slaughter (and the mid-2026 timeline) could increase volatility and accelerate changes in enforcement and rulemaking expectations. Traders may watch this alongside typical signals like ETF flows and on-chain data.
Bearish
US Supreme CourtTrump v. SlaughterSEC & CFTC regulationcrypto market volatilityindependent agency independence

Micron blowout earnings lift AI memory stocks; crypto sees brief boost

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Micron Technology (MU) reported blowout Q3 results and stronger-than-expected guidance, sending AI memory stocks higher and giving crypto a brief sentiment tailwind. MU’s Q3 revenue was $41.5B versus $35.7B estimates. EPS rose to $25.11 versus $20.49 expected. Management said there is “no line of sight” to AI memory supply catching up with demand, with shortages expected to persist beyond 2027. For Q4, Micron guided revenue to about $50B, ahead of Wall Street’s ~$43.2B forecast. The move lifted AI-linked peers tied to HBM (high-bandwidth memory). SanDisk (SNDK) and SK Hynix each rose about 13%. SK Hynix is also reportedly exploring a US listing that could value the company near $30B. Crypto impact: Bitcoin (BTC) reportedly reclaimed $60,000 after the close, while AI-related miners IREN and Cipher Digital (CIFR) rose around 3% in premarket. However, the article cautions that AI momentum may ultimately divert liquidity away from crypto. Overall, AI memory stocks are reaffirming the supply-demand tightness narrative, which is supportive for AI infrastructure equities and can create short-term cross-asset spillover into crypto.
Neutral
Micron earningsAI memory stocksHBM chipsBitcoinAI crypto miners

SBI to Fully Acquire Japan Crypto Exchange Bitbank, Driving Regulated Consolidation

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SBI Holdings has agreed to acquire 100% of the shares of Japan-regulated crypto exchange Bitbank, announced on June 24. The deal includes a basic agreement and a share transfer agreement. Bitbank says the Bitbank acquisition will not disrupt user services: trading, platform use, and custody operations are expected to remain unchanged during the process, with no immediate updates disclosed on branding, fees, or custody. This follows SBI’s broader exchange consolidation in Japan. Earlier in 2026, SBI VC Trade absorbed Bitpoint Japan, reducing overlap and combining exchange resources. SBI’s stated aim is to bring Bitbank fully into the group and leverage internal synergies to strengthen its position in Japan’s regulated crypto market. For traders, the key signal is not short-term token issuance, but deeper corporate consolidation under a major regulated financial group. SBI also appears to be expanding beyond exchange trading into crypto payments and regulated products, including a crypto-linked credit-card model (with settlement/cashback mechanics) and the planned Japan rollout of Ripple’s RLUSD via SBI VC Trade after Japan’s Financial Services Agency approval. Next steps hinge on closing conditions, internal approvals, and required regulatory procedures. Until completion, Bitbank user-facing operations are expected to stay stable.
Neutral
SBI HoldingsBitbank acquisitionJapan crypto regulationexchange consolidationRLUSD

Indonesia crypto influencers must get certified under OJK rules

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Indonesia’s Financial Services Authority (OJK) has issued Financial Services Authority Regulation No. 6 of 2026, tightening crypto influencer compliance for social-media promotions. Under the rule, a crypto influencer must obtain competency certification unless they already hold a separate licence that covers the activity. Key requirements for crypto influencer promotions include: only recommending digital assets listed on authorized exchanges; ensuring any promoted digital asset service provider is licensed; and running marketing campaigns through regulated financial services businesses, which must take responsibility for promotional content and distribute it via official channels. The move follows other jurisdictions ramping up finfluencer oversight, including Australia’s ASIC guidance, the UK’s FCA enforcement and “week of action,” and prior Philippines marketing restrictions. For crypto traders, the near-term effect is likely a reduction in the reach of unlicensed, retail-facing promotions, which can dampen short-term speculative attention flows. Over time, it may shift marketing toward more institutional-grade, compliance-aligned channels.
Neutral
Indonesia regulationFinfluencer complianceCrypto marketingOJKRetail liquidity impact

Bitcoin post-quantum migration timeline accelerates via Trump PQC orders

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The White House issued new post-quantum cryptography (PQC) orders, creating a dated roadmap that may shift how investors think about Bitcoin post-quantum migration. The executive order sets a governmentwide PQC pilot to finish by Dec 31, 2027, and targets key transitions for high-value systems by 2030/2031. Crypto traders should note that Bitcoin is not shown to be broken today. But policy-driven timelines can become “market schedules.” Coinbase’s Quantum Advisory Council estimated about 6.9–7.0 million BTC face quantum-related exposure because on-chain public keys are already visible, including roughly 1.7 million BTC in older legacy P2PK outputs. On the protocol side, developers are testing and debating migration paths aimed at quantum resistance and managing legacy signatures. The article highlights BIP-360 (Pay-to-Merkle-Root) to reduce exposed signature material and BIP-361, which sketches a three-phase “legacy signature sunset” concept—opt-in, activation/economic majority, and eventual legacy unspendability if consensus agrees. For market microstructure, any migration wave could raise fees, stress exchanges’ wallet and deposit infrastructure, and increase phishing/scam risk. Institutions may start planning wallet rekeying and custody “migration playbooks” ahead of the Dec 2027 and 2030/2031 milestones. Overall, Bitcoin post-quantum migration is moving from a pure tech question toward a policy-linked risk-management timeline—watch how liquidity and custody processes price this narrative.
Neutral
post-quantum cryptographyBitcoinBIP-360 & BIP-361custody and wallet migrationquantum security policy

Quantum stock whipsaw as Trump’s 2028 quantum deadline lifts IonQ, Rigetti and D-Wave; PQC migration prompts Web3 security planning

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Trump signed two U.S. executive orders on June 22, 2026: (1) build a “scientifically relevant” quantum computer by 2028 and (2) accelerate federal migration to post‑quantum cryptography (PQC) by roughly 2030–2031. In after-hours trading following the announcement, quantum stock sentiment surged as markets interpreted the deadline as a catalyst for procurement and benchmarks. The article notes trading spikes for quantum operators: Rigetti traded up to about $22.65 and D‑Wave to around $26.30 during the rally window, while Infleqtion was cited up roughly 13% (media tape/after-hours references). For IonQ (trapped-ion), Rigetti (superconducting gate model) and D‑Wave (quantum annealing), the core question is whether hype converts into repeatable performance, third‑party benchmark results, and multi‑year contracts. A key sector milestone came from Quantinuum’s June 2026 IPO, priced at $60 per share, raising about $1.68 billion and expanding the publicly listed peer set—supporting price discovery but also raising disclosure expectations. For crypto traders, the PQC component matters mainly as a Web3 security and migration timeline risk-management theme, not an immediate quantum-hardware revenue driver. The article urges separating narratives: quantum stock momentum should be judged on real computational utility and contract conversion, while PQC is an IT/security standards upgrade path for blockchain infrastructure. Overall: quantum stock volatility is likely to remain headline-driven until verifiable benchmarks and contract durability become clearer.
Neutral
quantum computingquantum stockspost-quantum cryptography (PQC)Web3 securitymarket volatility

Micron profit surge lifts tech stocks as AI-driven memory demand hits record revenue and margins

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Micron’s profit surge fuels a broad rebound across global tech and semiconductor stocks after its fiscal Q3 2026 results. On June 24, Micron reported revenue of $41.46B, far above the $35.8B Wall Street consensus. Earnings per share reached $25.11, also beating expectations, and the Micron profit surge translated into roughly a 15% after-hours stock jump. Key figures point to strong demand for AI infrastructure memory. Revenue was up about 4x year-over-year, while adjusted gross margins exceeded 84%. Micron also guided Q4 revenue to $49B–$51B, topping the market’s ~ $43.2B estimate. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra said the results reflect the “strategic value of memory in the AI era.” The rally spilled into Asia’s memory supply chain. SK Hynix rose 12% and Samsung Electronics climbed 9% following the report. Separately, Micron announced a strategic supply agreement with Anthropic, the company behind Claude, reinforcing the AI-linked demand narrative. For traders, this Micron profit surge supports a near-term risk-on tone for broader equity sentiment tied to semiconductors, while also raising the longer-term watch item: if all major memory makers push capacity to capture the cycle, margins could face future compression.
Neutral
MicronsemiconductorsAI infrastructurememory chipsearnings rebound

Drones strike Ufa: Rosneft refinery damage raises energy disruption fears

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Ukraine drone attacks reportedly hit Ufa, a major Russian oil refining hub about 1,300 km from the front lines, damaging Rosneft-operated facilities. On April 2, one of the main targets was the Bashneft-Novoil refinery, where the AVT-5 crude distillation unit was damaged and caught fire. Russian officials said the damage came from debris of a drone that was shot down, adding that output impacts were limited. However, social media footage showed substantial fire activity, contrasting with official claims. The article also notes previous drone incidents at the Ufa refinery dating back to September 2025, with Russian sources repeatedly downplaying operational effects. Rosneft is Russia’s largest oil company, and Bashneft’s Ufa-area plants represent a meaningful portion of national refining capacity. Historically, strikes on Russian refineries have sometimes caused temporary production disruptions, even if official statements minimize the effect. For traders, the direct link between the drones strike Ufa incident and crypto markets appears tenuous. No specific connection to digital assets was reported, so immediate spillover into BTC or ETH trading is unlikely. Still, energy-security headlines can affect broader risk sentiment, especially if refinery outages widen or persist beyond the initial damage assessment.
Neutral
Ukraine drone attacksRussia oil refineriesRosneftenergy disruptioncrypto market sentiment

Securitize vs tZERO Patent Fight Over Tokenized Securities Compliance Tech

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Securitize vs tZERO is escalating into a patent dispute tied to tokenized securities infrastructure. tZERO alleged in mid-June 2026 that Securitize infringed two U.S. patents (11,216,802 and 11,394,560) and demanded Securitize stop two products—DS Protocol and Vault Registrar—by June 18 or face injunctions and damages. Securitize denied the claims as “meritless” and filed for a declaratory judgment of non-infringement in the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware (No. 1:2026cv00722). Separately, Bloomberg Law reported Liquid Rarity Exchange filed another infringement suit against Securitize, citing U.S. patents 10,825,090 and 8,015,069. The underlying technology focus appears to be tokenized securities compliance modules—identity-gated transfers, controlled registries, rule evaluation, and vault-like custody/workflow sequencing. Traders should treat this as institutional tokenization-infrastructure risk, not a direct catalyst for public-chain crypto prices: if an injunction targets core modules, integrations could face temporary trading disruptions, higher migration/reissuance costs, and stricter vendor due diligence, potentially slowing new tokenized-securities launches until licensing scope is clarified. In parallel, Securitize’s merger workflow continues: its SEC S-4 was declared effective, with a shareholder vote scheduled for June 29 and an expected NYSE listing under ticker SECZ if the deal closes.
Neutral
Tokenized SecuritiesPatent LitigationCompliance TechSecuritizetZERO

Raise US AI jobs initiative: $500M for workforce development

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Raise US announced an AI jobs initiative with bipartisan messaging, planning to spend $500 million over the next 3–4 years to support AI job growth and workforce development nationwide. The group is largely unknown publicly, and the article notes no clear details on its leadership structure, funding sources, or institutional partnerships. It also does not name the specific legislators or political figures backing the program. The AI jobs initiative includes $500M earmarked for AI-related workforce development, but the allocation method is still unclear (grants, direct hiring programs, education partnerships, or a mix). The article places the move in the broader 2025–2026 context, where federal agencies and Congressional committees are analyzing AI’s labor-market effects. It also cites JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, who has described AI’s “dual nature” — potential job displacement alongside the creation of new roles. For investors and stakeholders, the key takeaway is caution: there are no crypto or blockchain components tied to the Raise US AI jobs initiative, and the lack of verified funding and sponsorship details limits immediate economic or market implications. Traders should watch for confirmed funding commitments, named political sponsors, and concrete program details on where the money will go and how results will be measured.
Neutral
AI jobs initiativeworkforce developmentUS bipartisanship policylabor market impactJPMorgan Jamie Dimon

ABTC approves 1-for-15 reverse stock split after shareholder vote

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American Bitcoin Corp (ABTC), a NASDAQ-listed bitcoin miner, has approved a 1-for-15 reverse stock split. The company will consolidate every 15 shares into one share, following shareholder approval at its 2026 annual meeting on June 22. At the meeting, about 93.56% of voting shares were represented. Alongside the reverse stock split, shareholders also elected Asher Genoot as a Class I director and ratified KPMG LLP as auditor for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2026. The charter amendment authorizes the reverse stock split without reducing the total number of authorized shares. That means ABTC can still issue new shares up to the previous authorization ceiling, despite having far fewer shares outstanding after consolidation. ABTC has used a similar playbook before: it executed a 1-for-20 reverse stock split in 2022, then a 5-for-1 reverse stock split accompanied its merger with Historical ABTC on September 3, 2025. Nasdaq also requires listed companies to maintain a minimum $1 bid price per share, which adds context to the timing. The company says implementation is expected as soon as practicable after the meeting decisions, but it did not publish a specific effective date. Some projections flagged a potential near-term share-value decline of roughly 8% tied to the reverse stock split. For traders, this is a corporate-action headline that can affect ABTC liquidity and price perception in the short term, while the preserved authorized-share flexibility may raise expectations of future dilution or capital-raising moves.
Bearish
ABTCReverse stock splitNASDAQ listing rulesBitcoin minersShare dilution risk

Maldives pushes digital ID bill forward as Luxembourg lags in strategy

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Maldives is moving closer to establishing a national digital ID system after parliament held the first hearing of its Digital Identity Bill. The bill aims to give Maldivians seamless access to government services and supports the country’s broader digital transformation. The Maldives government plans to create a Digital Identity Technical Advisory Committee within 90 days after the regulation takes effect. The committee would set technical standards and guidance covering data handling, user authentication, privacy protections, and system interoperability to improve reliability and security. The first Digital Identity Bill reading coincided with approval of a separate Cyber Security Bill. Under the Cyber Security Bill, a National Cyber Security Agency would set uniform cybersecurity standards for public and private institutions, including licensing requirements for companies offering cybersecurity services. Non-compliance could bring penalties of $3,200 to $32,400. In Luxembourg, the OECD flagged concerns over the lack of a clear digital ID strategy. Luxembourg joins a group of countries—Bulgaria, Canada, Peru, Romania, and Türkiye—that have not yet set a national digital ID blueprint. The OECD also cited gaps in government-wide digital skills development and the need for an omnichannel strategy to make public services consistent nationwide. Overall, the Maldives’ digital ID bill progress and the accompanying cybersecurity framework point to faster deployment timelines for digital governance, while Luxembourg’s lag highlights ongoing policy and implementation risks in digital identity.
Neutral
digital identitydigital governancecybersecurity regulationOECDdigital transformation

China issues death sentence over crypto money laundering

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China has sentenced Li Mobo, convicted in a major cross-border drug case, to death after prosecutors said he laundered more than 48 million yuan (about $7.04 million) using crypto. The Supreme People’s Procuratorate said the scheme converted cash and domestic bank transfers into digital assets to move illicit proceeds across borders while avoiding traditional banking oversight and capital controls. The prosecution push is part of a wider crackdown on crypto money laundering. Authorities said investigations between January 2025 and May 2026 led to more than 1,200 charges in drug-related money laundering cases. Prosecutors also intensified probes into both “self money laundering” and “third party money laundering” tied to drug crimes, with a parallel focus on recovering assets linked to narcotics offenses by tracing blockchain activity and freezing illicit holdings. In the Chongqing case, Li Mobo was convicted alongside cross-border drug smuggling, drug trafficking, and drug transportation charges. China’s campaign extends to broader anti-money-laundering enforcement, including telecom fraud, online gambling, underground banking, and other virtual-asset financial crimes, as the People’s Bank of China listed crypto money laundering as a key priority. For traders, the key takeaway is heightened state-level enforcement against crypto money laundering and asset recovery actions, which can increase compliance risk and reduce speculative risk appetite in the short run.
Bearish
crypto money launderingChina enforcementAML crackdownblockchain tracingdrug trafficking

CoinEx Denies Iran Ties After WSJ Sanctions Report, Promises Tighter Screening

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CoinEx has denied claims that it helped Iranian state-linked entities move funds through its crypto exchange, responding to a Wall Street Journal (WSJ) report citing $3.84 billion in Iran-linked transactions since 2019. In its statement, CoinEx said it never had a commercial relationship with Iranian government-related entities, Iranian domestic exchanges, the Revolutionary Guard, or sanctioned parties. The exchange also stated it has no office or operating entity in Iran, and that its official domain was blocked in Iran since 2021 after being blacklisted by Iranian authorities. CoinEx disputed the WSJ’s methodology, arguing that on-chain flows alone cannot prove platform knowledge, active support, or intent to evade sanctions. It also challenged the reported total, saying aggregating two-way fund flows and presenting them as “processed” by CoinEx can be misleading, and that blockchain attribution depends on how analysts interpret wallet links and transaction paths. Addressing a specific reference to the Bybit hack, CoinEx said it helped Bybit by blocking accounts and freezing assets after learning of the incident, and it would conduct an internal review of the transactions mentioned in the WSJ report. For trading relevance, CoinEx said it has expanded Iran-related risk controls, including stronger checks for Iranian users, blocking registrations from Iranian regions, compliance off-boarding for identified accounts, geo-fencing, KYT monitoring, sanctions screening, and transaction freezes for high-risk activity. The backdrop is a wider U.S. sanctions push targeting Iranian crypto routes, adding compliance uncertainty for exchanges and counterparties while CoinEx insists its controls already limit exposure.
Bearish
CoinExIran sanctionscrypto complianceWSJ reportexchange risk control

Kraken EEA futures: 30-day zero trading fees promo

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Kraken says new EEA futures traders get a 30-day fee waiver when enabling futures for the first time. For eligible clients in the European Economic Area, Kraken offers: 0 taker fees on up to $10 million in trading volume, plus 0 maker fees on every order posted during the first 30 days. Other fees may still apply, and standard geographic and eligibility terms are referenced. The promotion is aimed at traders using Kraken’s perpetual futures offering. Kraken highlights 300+ perpetual futures pairs, long and short positioning, and leverage up to 10x, with no expiry (perpetual futures do not settle like dated contracts). Kraken also frames the move around European regulatory readiness, noting it has been operating since 2011 and is MiCA-authorised via the Central Bank of Ireland and MiFID-licensed through Cyprus’s CySEC for derivatives. For traders, the practical takeaway is lower incremental costs to test strategies—such as opening a small position, hedging spot holdings, or taking both long and short views—during the initial 30-day window on Kraken’s EEA futures. This is not presented as investment advice; the article reiterates that derivatives involve significant risk and traders could lose more than their initial investment.
Neutral
KrakenEEA futuresPerpetual contractsTrading fees10x leverage

FunPlus Phoenix signs coconut to take over IGL duties from kovaQ

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FunPlus Phoenix has signed Colin “coconut” Chung from JD Gaming to take over IGL duties, replacing Blendi “kovaQ” Kovaci. The announcement follows JD Gaming’s confirmation on June 26, 2026 that the player left by mutual agreement after discussions with the organization. FPX’s change came quickly. KovaQ joined FPX around March 12, 2026 to anchor its VCT China Stage 1 campaign. That means FPX adjusted the in-game leadership roughly three and a half months later. Coconut (born April 4, 2003) had been competing against JDG through at least mid-2026, and his immediate pickup by FPX suggests a planned acquisition rather than an abrupt decision. For FPX, the move could help because coconut already understands the China VCT meta and opponent tendencies. For JDG, losing an IGL creates a need to find a replacement or restructure the roster around new calls. Overall, the key development is the IGL duties handover at FPX—first for kovaQ, now for coconut.
Neutral
ValorantVCT ChinaIGL dutiesroster changeFunPlus Phoenix

Animoca Brands invests in AllScale for stablecoin payments

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Animoca Brands has made a strategic investment in stablecoin payments firm AllScale, aiming to expand regulated stablecoin payment rails across its Web3 ecosystem. The deal size was not disclosed. The two companies said they will explore global payment infrastructure, settlement, and treasury services, alongside “agentic commerce” where AI agents execute transactions within preset limits. Animoca Brands highlighted the role of regulated stablecoins as the bridge between traditional finance and on-chain activity. AllScale says its infrastructure supports more than 1.5 million registered wallets and enables cross-border payments using a stablecoin payment stack. It covers checkout, payroll, invoicing, and pay-in/pay-out flows, while merchants can settle in their preferred fiat currency. The platform also automates bridging and swapping across blockchains, and includes transaction screening, on-chain privacy features, and self-custodial settlement with low transaction costs. Animoca’s leadership also linked the investment to its broader push in regulated stablecoin infrastructure. In April, Anchorpoint Financial Technology—backed by Standard Chartered Bank Hong Kong, HKT, and Animoca Brands—received a Hong Kong Monetary Authority stablecoin issuer licence to launch the HKDAP Hong Kong dollar-backed stablecoin. For traders, the headline is about stablecoin payments infrastructure (not a token launch): it may improve sentiment around regulated stablecoins and on-chain settlement rails, with second-order effects on payment-related liquidity and institutional participation.
Bullish
stablecoin paymentsregulated stablecoinspayments infrastructureAI agentic commerceAnimoca Brands

EU-US trade deal ratified: 15% tariff cap and July 4 deadline cleared

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The European Union approved an EU-US trade deal after the European Parliament voted 440-151 (50 abstentions) to ratify it, clearing a key step ahead of President Donald Trump’s July 4 deadline. The EU-US trade deal caps US tariffs on EU exports at 15% and removes EU tariffs on most American industrial goods. On the EU side, tariffs are set to be eliminated on a majority of US industrial products, including machinery, car parts, and some agriculture such as lobster. The agreement also includes “noted flexibility,” allowing the US to adjust tariff rates in specific categories while staying within the deal’s framework. In addition, the EU secured protective measures to suspend benefits if the US does not comply. A sunset clause could expire parts of the EU-US trade deal by 2029. Politically, final endorsement by all 27 EU member states is expected around June 26, which is intended to come before July 4. The negotiations were launched nearly a year earlier (announced July 27, 2025) amid US pressure, including threats of 25% tariffs on European autos if the EU did not comply by Independence Day. For markets, the 15% tariff ceiling may reduce worst-case uncertainty for EU exporters and support pricing and margin stability. However, the 2029 sunset clause adds medium-term uncertainty, potentially influenced by US politics around the 2028 election cycle. For traders, this is a macro headline that can affect risk sentiment, FX moves, and sector-level expectations more than it should directly change crypto fundamentals.
Neutral
EU-US trade dealtariff capEuropean Parliamentmacro risk sentiment2029 sunset clause

Fed June Forecast: Inflation Stays, Fed Rate Hikes Likely

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The U.S. Federal Reserve’s June forecast points to persistent inflation and a policy path that leans toward Fed rate hikes by year-end. Core PCE is revised to 3.3% and headline PCE to 3.6%, reinforcing ongoing inflationary pressure. Even after the Fed held interest rates steady in June, officials signaled a “higher-for-longer” stance, citing a robust labor market. Traders and prediction markets appear to interpret this as a lower chance of a sharp inflation drop in May and June, reducing odds that June inflation falls below 3.6%. Market pricing also suggests rising probability of a Fed rate hike by September. The next catalysts include upcoming U.S. inflation releases (notably June CPI data) and further Fed commentary, which could quickly reprice expectations and tighten or loosen financial conditions.
Bearish
Federal ReserveInflationRate HikesCore PCEMacro policy

ETH holds near $1,600 as ETF outflows and bearish tech pressure persist

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Ethereum (ETH) is holding around $1,600 after a selloff kept it below key support. On June 25, ETH traded near $1,655 (down ~0.93% over 24h, ~4.63% over 7d) with heavy volume around $15.42B. The daily range was roughly $1,557–$1,678 and market cap remains about $199.55B. ETF flows are the main headwind. SoSoValue data shows continued spot Ethereum ETF net outflows of about $30.24M on June 24 (fifth straight withdrawal day) and about $82.35M on June 23, signaling regulated demand has not stabilized. On-chain activity is mixed. A newly created wallet withdrew 17,675 ETH (~$28.58M) from Binance, described as “buying the dip.” At the same time, Onchain Lens flagged a dormant whale (0x096) selling 27,585 ETH (~$44.84M) near an average ~$1,625. Leverage risk also resurfaced as a trader (Machi) suffered a full liquidation on a 25x ETH long. Technicals stay cautious. RSI is ~38.34 (below its moving average and under the neutral 50 zone). The Aroon Oscillator is negative (-64.29), keeping the trend structure bearish. Traders are likely watching for a bullish trigger only after a clean recovery above ~$1,800; otherwise, ETH could retest ~$1,580. ETH remains vulnerable until it regains broken structure, while ETF flow pressure can keep rallies capped.
Bearish
ETH price actionSpot ETF flowsWhale activityLiquidationsRSI/Aroon technicals

Ismael Saibari’s World Cup run boosts Chiliz soccer fan token trading volumes

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Ismael Saibari scored in all three of Morocco’s 2026 World Cup group-stage matches, becoming the first Moroccan player to do so. He netted in a 1-1 draw vs Brazil, scored after just 71 seconds vs Scotland (Morocco won 1-0, the fastest Moroccan World Cup goal), and again vs Haiti as Morocco won 4-2. Saibari’s breakthrough follows prior Eredivisie Player of the Season recognition, with reports linking him to a potential Bayern Munich move. The crypto angle centers on Chiliz’s fan token ecosystem, where club and national-team tokens saw a noticeable volume spike during his World Cup run. The article links the rise to heightened fan engagement and speculation tied to athlete performance. It also notes that transfer-related token activity is common in Chiliz markets: if Saibari joins a club with existing fan token infrastructure, traders may see a second wave of demand beyond the tournament window. For traders, the key takeaway is that star-player performance can act as a near-term catalyst for CHZ-linked soccer fan token liquidity and volatility, especially around major match moments and potential transfer headlines.
Bullish
ChilizSoccer Fan TokensWorld Cup 2026Token Trading VolumeSports Player Transfer

Pi Network price weak as Pi2Day nears; Vibe Coder and SLICE testnet launch

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Pi Network price stayed near recent lows as Pi2Day 2026 approached (deadline June 28). The Pi Core Team promoted two ecosystem activities: the Vibe Coder campaign, which asks Pioneers to submit AI-assisted app builder posts and enter a raffle; and the SLICE Launchpad Testnet token, designed to run only on testnet and add no new mainnet PI supply. Pi Network price data showed PI around $0.1267 on Jun 25, down ~1.56% (24h) and ~3.01% (7d), and down ~13.86% over the past month. Market cap was about $1.36B, with fully diluted valuation near $2.10B; PI remained well below its ~$2.99 all-time high. Chart indicators were cautious: RSI near 37.5 (below its ~41.8 average) and MACD slightly improving but still below zero. Traders will likely watch whether Pi2Day activity can lift usage and sentiment enough to counter weak momentum. The immediate implication is limited upside confirmation until PI sees stronger volume and a clearer technical turn.
Bearish
Pi NetworkPi2DayTestnet LaunchpadPI price analysisMarket sentiment

Amazon stake surge as AWS stablecoin payments draw hedge-fund bets

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Hedge-fund managers David Tepper (Appaloosa) and Seth Klarman (Baupost) have increased Amazon stakes, pushing AMZN to become their biggest portfolio holding. Appaloosa nearly doubled its Amazon position in Q1 2026 (+98%), adding about 2.14M shares to reach roughly $900M exposure (about 15% of its ~$5.93B portfolio). Klarman’s Baupost raised its Amazon stake by 47% to ~3.12M shares, valued between $650M–$731M (about 13% of its portfolio). Other funds also added, but moves appeared more measured in public 13F filings. The bullish rationale centers on Amazon Web Services (AWS) and the company’s AI infrastructure buildout, with nearly $200B in capex targeted heavily toward AI. The crypto-relevant point: AWS launched “Bedrock AgentCore Payments” with Coinbase and Stripe in May 2026. The offering enables AI agents to execute real-time stablecoin transactions, using AWS as the infrastructure layer. Coinbase is the largest publicly traded US crypto exchange, while Stripe is a dominant internet payments processor. The collaboration suggests growing institutional demand for crypto-compatible payment infrastructure. For crypto traders, the main takeaway is that Amazon’s push into AWS-based stablecoin payments could support sentiment around on-chain payment rails, payments infrastructure, and institutional crypto integration—while Amazon-related stock flows may indirectly influence broader risk appetite.
Bullish
AmazonAWSstablecoin paymentshedge fundsCoinbase

SK Hynix Nasdaq ADR IPO: $29.6B HBM raise may pressure Micron

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SK Hynix Nasdaq ADR is set to begin trading on July 10, 2026, via an American depositary receipts (ADR) listing after a major capital raise. SK Hynix Nasdaq ADR plans to raise about $29.65B (45.45 trillion won), far above its earlier target of $9.6B–$14.4B, signalling stronger demand expectations. The company controls 57% of the high-bandwidth memory (HBM) market that powers AI accelerators, including data-center GPUs. The timing follows a June 25 jump in SK Hynix shares after Micron reported strong quarterly results, highlighting investor appetite for AI memory exposure. Traders should note the potential “capital flow” effect. Because SK Hynix historically trades at a lower valuation multiple than Micron, analysts worry the new SK Hynix Nasdaq ADR access could divert allocations away from Micron—the primary US-listed pure-play for advanced memory. With SK Hynix directly available on a US exchange, fund managers may rebalance AI-focused portfolios. Net impact: the proceeds will fund South Korea fabrication plant expansion (and possibly other regions). Any shift in investor positioning could move short-term sentiment in memory-related equities, but it is not a direct crypto catalyst. The biggest measurable takeaway for trading desks is the expected re-rating risk for Micron versus SK Hynix once SK Hynix Nasdaq ADR begins trading.
Neutral
SK HynixNasdaq ADRHBM memoryMicronAI chips

Bitcoin Standard Treasury merger vote postponed to July 2 amid private placement concerns

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Bitcoin Standard Treasury merger vote has been delayed from June 26 to July 2, 2026, citing private placement issues. The planned merger is between Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company’s SPAC structure (BSTR Holdings) and Cantor Equity Partners I (ticker: CEPO). The combined company is expected to list on Nasdaq under ticker BSTR. The deal is valued at about $4 billion, including up to $1.5 billion via PIPE financing (Private Investment in Public Equity). Roughly $600 million of the PIPE involves in-kind Bitcoin, totaling 5,021 BTC contributed rather than paid purely in cash. The proposed launch treasury is 30,021 BTC, largely from Adam Back and Blockstream, where Back serves as CEO. Why it matters for traders: the Bitcoin Standard Treasury merger vote is the near-term catalyst. If the vote passes with manageable SPAC redemptions and the PIPE financing terms hold, BSTR can clear a major structural hurdle and move toward a Nasdaq listing. A delay also gives shareholders more time to redeem before the vote closes—an issue that has historically hurt or diluted some SPAC deals. Investors should watch the July 2 vote outcome, the level of redemptions, and whether the in-kind BTC PIPE is executed as planned. The use of in-kind BTC suggests some large investors are willing to place BTC directly into the corporate treasury, not only convert to cash first.
Neutral
Bitcoin treasurySPAC mergerPIPE financingBTC in-kindNasdaq listing