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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

GENIUS Act Stablecoin Rules Delayed as Final Deadline Missed

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US agencies missed the deadline for final GENIUS Act stablecoin rules. A year after the GENIUS Act was signed on July 18, 2025, regulators still have not issued final regulations and instead released proposed rules and gathered comments. Treasury, the OCC, the FDIC, and the Federal Reserve published NPRMs on stablecoin oversight, but no final package has been issued. The proposals cover areas including state-to-federal framework “similarity” standards, foreign issuer registration, and AML guidance (Treasury). The OCC outlined rules for nationally chartered payment stablecoin issuers, including approvals and supervisory expectations. The FDIC focused on reserve management and operational supervision. The NCUA proposed a path for federally insured credit unions to participate in issuance, and federal agencies also proposed interagency supervision harmonization. Crypto market angle: Anchorage Digital urged Congress to pass the CLARITY Act to extend crypto market-structure rules beyond stablecoins. For traders, delayed GENIUS Act stablecoin rules may keep liquidity and issuer-risk concerns elevated, with compliance headlines potentially driving short-term volatility—though the lack of final text also means uncertainty persists rather than an immediate rule shock.
Neutral
GENIUS ActStablecoin RegulationUS Banking AgenciesAML ComplianceMarket Uncertainty

Khamenei Condemns US Strikes, Urges Unity as Iran War Continues

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Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei condemned recent US military actions and urged national unity in a message delivered after the funeral of his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The elder Khamenei was killed in US-Israeli strikes earlier this year during the ongoing 2026 Iran war. The conflict’s intensity has risen after a ceasefire collapsed in early July, with continued hostilities between the US and Iran and a heavy US military presence in the region. Market interpretations suggest Khamenei’s strong rhetoric could strengthen regime stability amid external pressure. That view appears reflected in Iran regime-change prediction markets. The probability of a regime fall before 2027 is now priced at 10.5% (YES), down from 11% after Khamenei’s statements. Traders and observers will likely focus on any shifts in loyalty among key Iranian factions such as the IRGC. Further US military actions, signs of civil unrest, or defections inside Iran could quickly change market pricing of regime stability.
Neutral
Iran-US TensionsGeopoliticsPrediction MarketsIRGCRegime Stability

Golden Ball Market: Messi ~90% to Win as Argentina Meets Spain

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Prediction markets price Lionel Messi as the overwhelming favorite to win the 2026 FIFA World Cup Golden Ball. The market implies about a 90% probability for Messi to take the award as Argentina heads into its final versus Spain. Messi’s recent tournament form is driving the pricing: he leads the Golden Boot race with 8 goals and 4 assists. Spain’s Rodri is the clear second option at roughly 5%, reflecting his importance in Spain’s midfield. The final’s result is expected to swing related award markets. If Spain wins and Rodri has a standout performance, Rodri’s Golden Ball chances could improve relative to Messi. Conversely, a decisive Messi contribution could further entrench his Golden Ball frontrunner status and also influence the Silver Ball outlook, where Kylian Mbappé’s odds may be affected by Messi’s performance. Key takeaway for traders following prediction markets: event-driven repricing is likely around the final, especially if the main narrative (Messi’s dominance) is disrupted. Watch for how quickly odds adjust after the final and whether the Silver Ball market responds in tandem with Golden Ball pricing.
Neutral
prediction marketsGolden BallMessiWorld Cup oddssports analytics

USDT faces US GENIUS Act compliance deadline as delisting risk looms

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Tether’s USDT is approaching a critical two-year compliance runway under the U.S. GENIUS Act for stablecoin issuers. The act was signed one year ago, but federal regulators have not finalized the implementing rules, leaving uncertainty over what compliance will require. The main risk: US-based platforms may delist stablecoins whose issuers have not met GENIUS requirements. Sources in the article note GENIUS could start applying from January (law effectiveness), while some lawyers expect the longer compliance window to run until July 18, 2028. The key disagreement is whether foreign issuers must meet parts of the standard immediately—especially obligations to seize and freeze coins tied to illicit actors—or whether they receive the full safe-harbor timeline. Tether has not clearly updated its compliance stance. Its latest disclosures suggest that up to a quarter of USDT reserves are in assets that may not meet GENIUS standards for highly liquid, reliable holdings (e.g., precious metals, lending, and BTC). Tether is also pushing USAT, issued via U.S. banking partner Anchorage Digital, but usage remains limited. Industry expectations are that institutional demand may shift toward compliant, bank-issued dollars ahead of the 2028 safe-harbor expiry. Meanwhile, rivals like Circle are described as having moved closer to pre-compliance. For traders, the near-term takeaway is headline-driven volatility risk for USDT liquidity, with medium-term pressure on stablecoin pair availability on U.S. venues depending on how platforms interpret and enforce GENIUS.
Bearish
USDTstablecoin regulationGENIUS ActTether compliancecrypto delisting risk

Iran’s missile campaign hits Jordan bases; Israel warns spillover risk

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Iran has launched a sustained missile and drone campaign against Jordanian military bases, and Israel has publicly warned the conflict could “spill over” further into the region. The strikes hit sites that host US and coalition forces, and the casualties include two US service members. On the ground, Jordan’s air defenses intercepted multiple waves: July 9 intercepted 8 of 10 projectiles; July 13 brought down 4 missiles; July 16 intercepted another 8. On July 17, a combined ballistic missile and drone attack got through, and two US servicemen were confirmed killed. Iran says the campaign is retaliation for ongoing US and Israeli operations targeting Iranian capabilities. Jordan is viewed as a key battlefield because it is a close US ally with security arrangements and shares borders with Israel, Iraq and Saudi Arabia. The broader Iran’s missile campaign has also reportedly extended to other US-aligned states and areas, including Bahrain, Kuwait and Iraq, suggesting a strategy of distributing pressure rather than focusing on one location. For traders, this matters because escalation in the Israel-Iran-Jordan theater can quickly drive risk-off sentiment, lift geopolitical volatility premiums, and pressure broader liquidity—often spilling over into crypto markets via BTC/ETH correlation with risk assets. Keep an eye on headlines for further base strikes, US/coalition involvement signals, and any confirmation of de-escalation.
Bearish
GeopoliticsIran-US tensionsMissile attacksIsrael-Jordan conflict riskMarket volatility

Iran airstrikes: US hits Iran for 8th night as markets price risk

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The US launched airstrikes against Iran for the eighth consecutive night after two American service members were killed and another went missing at a base in Jordan. The attacks come amid the 2026 Iran–United States conflict, after a fragile interim memorandum of understanding broke down earlier this month. Officials say the Iran airstrikes aim to degrade Iranian military capabilities, especially those that could threaten commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Traders are watching because continued strikes are being read as evidence of escalating tensions. Prediction markets show rising expectations of regime instability. The “Fall of the Iranian Regime” market has increased to a 10.5% implied probability of a regime change by year-end, up from 10% about 24 hours earlier. Separately, the probability of a full Iranian airspace closure by July 31 has risen to 34.5%, reflecting concern over additional escalation in the coming days. Key takeaway: Iran airstrikes are tightening the risk outlook for regional stability, with traders also pricing in potential airspace disruptions that could affect shipping and broader risk assets. The situation remains fluid as both governments’ responses could quickly reprice the scenarios.
Bearish
Iran airstrikesUS-Iran conflictPrediction marketsStrait of HormuzRisk assets

Bitcoin weak demand: sellers tire, risk $52.9k

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Bitcoin is trading near $64,672 as on-chain data shows a two-sided test between $69,000 (Short-Term Holder Cost Basis) and $52,891.91 (Realized Price stress boundary). The key problem is weak spot demand: Bitcoin sellers are tiring, but buyers are not yet stepping in strongly enough. Reclaiming ~$69,000 would strengthen the case for a higher low, turning overhead supply into support. Failure would leave an 18.22% downside gap in play toward the ~$52,900 realized-price boundary, where deeper loss realization could increase selling pressure. On the positive side, long-term-holder loss pressure has begun cooling after the June lows were absorbed. Glassnode’s July data shows long-term holder realized-loss momentum easing, suggesting tentative stabilization rather than a completed bottom. However, institutional confirmation remains incomplete. Spot Bitcoin ETF flows are still inconsistent (recent inflow return has not yet become sustained), and spot activity/volume signals have not fully flipped positive. In short, Bitcoin sellers are tiring, but the market needs confirmed demand to close the recovery gap. Traders to watch: a sustained reclaim above $69,000 for higher-low confirmation; and whether realized-price risk near $52.9k reappears if spot demand stays weak and loss realization accelerates.
Neutral
Bitcoin price watchOn-chain realized priceHolder loss coolingSpot ETF demandSupport resistance $69k

US backs Mediterranean oil pipelines to bypass Strait of Hormuz amid Iran tensions

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US authorities are promoting Mediterranean oil pipeline development as a way to bypass the Strait of Hormuz, which is facing restricted access amid heightened tensions with Iran. The goal is to support Iraqi energy exports and reduce Iranian leverage over global oil flows. However, the alternative routes do not remove risk: they remain exposed to potential Iranian missile and drone attacks. The move is unfolding during an ongoing US–Israel air conflict with Iran and a dual blockade involving US naval activity and Iranian transit restrictions. Markets are pricing in a lower probability of Strait of Hormuz traffic normalization by Aug 31, suggesting traders see the bottleneck staying under pressure for longer. The development of the Kirkuk–Baniyas pipeline is framed as a strategic shift in US energy policy to mitigate reliance on a maritime chokepoint vulnerable to geopolitical disruption. What to watch: communications from Iran and the US about possible peace or escalation, plus indicators such as Iranian leadership statements, US military movements, and updates from bodies like the UN. These signals could swing expectations for whether the Strait can reopen by the end of August.
Neutral
Strait of Hormuzoil pipelinesIran tensionsenergy securitymarket pricing

RWA market cap slips to $38B as derivatives open interest hits records

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RWA (tokenized real-world assets) are flashing mixed signals. Spot market capitalization has pulled back from earlier peaks near $38B, while RWA derivatives open interest (OI) has surged. As of mid-July 2026, RWA.xyz pegs total distributed value of tokenized RWAs at about $34.79B (up 3.53% over 30 days), down from the ~$38B level earlier in the year. However, derivatives activity points the other way. On Hyperliquid, RWA-related perpetual futures OI has climbed to a record range of $3.6B–$4.0B as of July 13, 2026, lifting total platform-wide OI to around $11B. The broader backdrop remains growth: total RWA value has nearly tripled year-over-year to ~$33.5B by July 2026, after Q1 added roughly 30% (to ~$27.5B–$29B). Tokenized US Treasuries remain the largest segment, estimated at ~$12B–$15B across 2026 snapshots. For traders, the key watch is the RWA spot-versus-derivatives OI gap. With RWA OI approaching ~$4B against RWA spot value near $34.79B, leverage is still relatively contained versus major crypto pairs—but the gap is closing. Faster convergence could shift price action from fundamentals toward forced liquidations, increasing volatility risk.
Bearish
RWADerivativesOpen InterestTokenized TreasuriesPerpetual Futures

Visa Stablecoin Platform Adds OUSD for Institutional Clients

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Visa has launched the Visa Stablecoin Platform (VSP), a beta enterprise stack designed to mint, hold, move, and redeem stablecoins with institutional controls. The program starts with Open USD (OUSD), with OUSD’s broader launch expected later in 2026. Visa Stablecoin Platform functionality focuses on lifecycle management rather than trading: it includes Wallet-as-a-Service and secure passkeys, plus operational safeguards such as dual-control approvals for sensitive actions, comprehensive audit logging, and allow-lists to govern transfers. Visa says VSP is being tested with select clients ahead of wider rollout. Visa selected OUSD due to the Open USD / Open Standard consortium positioning. Open Standard previously cited 140+ partners, including major payments and financial firms, and framed OUSD as an industry-backed dollar stablecoin. Visa Stablecoin Platform is expected to help institutions run compliant on-chain settlement workflows, cross-border treasury sweeps, and merchant or partner payouts while reducing key-custody and audit-process friction. Key trading relevance: the announcement signals continued institutionalization of stablecoins—especially permissioned, compliance-oriented rails—rather than a consumer “retail” push. If OUSD liquidity and redemption documentation mature as promised, demand could gradually shift toward stablecoins suited for enterprise settlement; however, near-term market impact is likely limited because VSP is still in beta and OUSD’s full rollout is later in 2026.
Bullish
VisaStablecoinsInstitutional adoptionOUSDEnterprise payments

Brent crude price spike risk resurges as Iran Strait of Hormuz turmoil returns

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Renewed US military strikes in July have reignited concerns over oil market price spike risk tied to the Iran conflict. Analysts warn that Brent crude volatility is back in focus after the collapse of a fragile ceasefire and renewed disruption risk near the Strait of Hormuz, where about a fifth of global oil supply transits daily. On March 4, the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed, driving Brent crude up more than 55% from roughly $72 pre-war levels to peaks near $119–$120. Prices later partially recovered as tanker flows improved, easing toward a $70–$82 range by July. But with renewed military action, analysts project that Brent crude price spike risk could persist. A Reuters poll in March revised 2026 Brent forecasts to an average of $82.85 per barrel, up from a prior $63.85 (nearly a 30% increase). If tanker operations are choked off more aggressively, prices could push well above $100 per barrel for a sustained period, adding pressure via inflation expectations (estimated +0.8% to global inflation). Crypto market implications appear limited. The article notes minimal correlation between oil price spikes and digital asset movements during the crisis period; Bitcoin and other major tokens largely traded on their own dynamics rather than tracking oil swings. That suggests Brent crude price spike risk is more likely to affect macro sentiment and risk appetite than to directly drive crypto price action.
Neutral
Brent crudeIran conflictStrait of Hormuzoil market volatilityBitcoin macro linkage

World Cup bronze and Mbappé record—crypto markets stay quiet

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England won 2026 FIFA World Cup third place after a 10-goal thriller versus France, securing the bronze medal on July 6. Kylian Mbappé made history by scoring his 10th career World Cup goal, becoming the tournament’s all-time leading scorer at age 27. The match mattered for both sides after painful semi-final exits, with a combined 10 goals that underlined how open and entertaining the third-place game was. For France, the collective result left disappointment, but Mbappé’s record provided a lasting individual milestone. Crypto markets angle: the 2026 World Cup reportedly featured no major cryptocurrency tie-ins—no token jersey sponsorships, no exchange branding at pitchside, and no NFT drops timed to Mbappé’s moment. The article links this to cooling crypto-sports marketing after the 2022 downturn and stricter regulation that raises consumer-marketing risk. For traders, the key takeaway is that the event appears to have limited direct headline impact on crypto markets, with no new promotional catalysts highlighted.
Neutral
World CupSports MarketingCrypto SponsorshipsRegulationCrypto Markets

South Korean regulator sanctions process begins vs Upbit operator Dunamu

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South Korea’s Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) has reportedly begun a sanctions process targeting Dunamu, the operator of crypto exchange Upbit, following a reported $36 million hack in November 2025. Yonhap reports the FSS sent an inspection opinion letter to Dunamu, officially starting the regulator’s sanctions procedure. Dunamu is given a chance to respond before the FSS notifies it of proposed penalties. The case highlights a regulatory gap: South Korea’s Virtual Asset User Protection Act lacks explicit sanctions provisions for hacking and computer system incidents, leaving the scope of penalties uncertain. The FSS is reviewing whether Upbit violated the act. Authorities also plan to address this by adding sanctions and compensation provisions for hacking and system failures in the second phase of the Digital Asset Basic Act. Upbit faced criticism for delaying its disclosure of the exploit. The breach reportedly lasted about 54 minutes, starting at 4:42 a.m. KST on Nov. 27, but Upbit only announced the hack at day’s end after a merger-related event involving Naver Financial. In its post-hack statement, Upbit said it froze about 2.3 billion won (~$1.5 million), would fully reimburse affected users from its own balance sheet, and initiated an overhaul of its crypto wallet architecture. It also migrated assets from affected wallets and later developed an automatic onchain tracing service (Onchain AI Tracer System) to track stolen funds. For traders, this South Korean regulator sanctions process can raise compliance and operational-risk concerns for exchange equities-like exposure, even as Upbit’s reimbursement and tracing efforts may limit immediate contagion.
Neutral
South Korea regulationUpbit hackDunamu sanctionsVirtual Asset User Protection ActOnchain tracing

Bitcoin miners pivot to AI data centers, targeting 70% AI revenue by 2026

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Bitcoin miners are pivoting toward AI data centers as compute economics shift. A CoinShares report estimates AI data centers can generate about $25 per kWh versus roughly $1 per kWh for Bitcoin mining, creating a large revenue gap that is reshaping miner strategy. Miners have reportedly chased more than $70B in AI data center contracts. The report projects AI-related revenue could climb from ~30% of total miner revenue earlier this year to as much as ~70% by end-2026. Texas power demand shows the concentration risk: large-load requests surged to 226 GW in 2025, with 73% linked to AI. Deal examples include Core Scientific’s 12-year CoreWeave hosting agreement for ~200 MW (with expansion options), IREN’s $17.3M AI cloud revenue in Q4 2025 and 10,900+ NVIDIA GPUs, and TeraWulf’s reported $12.8B in contracted high-performance computing revenue. The thesis: Bitcoin miners already own power access, land, cooling, and permitting—assets that can take years to assemble. Traders should also note execution risk. Converting mining infrastructure to AI workloads requires GPU-focused cooling, networking, and uptime guarantees, and long-term AI leases can create “stranded asset” exposure if tenants change plans. Watch quarterly revenue splits over the next 18 months, using the AI-to-mining revenue ratio as the key signal for how fast Bitcoin miners’ revenue mix is changing. For BTC itself, the impact is indirect in the short term: miners may diversify revenue, but spot Bitcoin fundamentals are not expected to shift immediately.
Neutral
Bitcoin minersAI data centersRevenue mix shiftPower demandCore Scientific

T1 Peyz pulls off first Sylas bot lane pick at EWC; Sui blockchain sponsorship

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At the Esports World Cup 2026 (July 15–19 in France), T1 bot laner Peyz (Kim Su-hwan) locked in Sylas against Gen.G, marking the first time a Sylas bot lane pick appeared in tier-1 pro League of Legends play. Sylas is a melee champion built around stealing enemy ultimates. The article highlights why a Sylas bot lane pick is strategically unusual: bot lane typically favors ranged marksmen, while Sylas wants close-range fights where opponent ultimates are most valuable. With draft order visible, T1 could plan which ultimate to steal and when. T1 also entered EWC with a Sui blockchain partnership. The coverage frames this as part of esports’ expanding crypto footprint, putting Sui in front of a younger, digitally native audience during high-visibility matches. For crypto traders, this is not a direct protocol or token-catalyst story. Still, the Sui + top-tier esports exposure can support narrative momentum around crypto-branded sponsorships, but any price impact is likely limited and short-lived.
Neutral
T1Sylas bot laneEsports World Cup 2026Sui blockchainCrypto esports sponsorship

Facebook and Instagram outages hit Meta ads as Downdetector logs 300k complaints

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Meta says Facebook and Instagram outages struck across June 11–12, disrupting logins, news feeds, and missing content. Downdetector recorded more than 300,000 user complaints for Facebook at peak disruption, while Instagram drew over 20,000 reports. Meta also acknowledged “high disruptions” in its advertising products, impacting Ads Manager and Instagram Boost. Businesses using Meta’s ad infrastructure faced immediate friction, with reduced campaign delivery and wasted budgets. WhatsApp saw only mixed or partial issues during the same period. Meta has not disclosed an official cause. For crypto traders, the key takeaway is that the Facebook and Instagram outages had no measurable effect on digital asset markets. Community analysis reported no meaningful price moves, no volatility spike, and no panic selling tied to the incident. As with Meta’s October 2021 multi-platform outage (when a router configuration change was later cited), traders did not see a direct disruption to token pricing or trading activity. The article argues crypto price discovery and real-time discussion primarily live elsewhere—on X, Telegram, Discord, and dedicated forums—making Meta app downtime largely peripheral to market stability.
Neutral
Meta outageFacebook Instagram downtimecrypto market impactDowndetector complaintsadvertising disruption

Wall Street private credit exposure rises as BDC losses mount

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Wall Street’s $128B private credit exposure is starting to look harder to contain, raising fresh liquidity concerns for Bitcoin. Reuters analysis found that 28 of 53 business-development companies (BDCs) turned loss-making in Q1 2026, versus 12 a year earlier. Average profit fell to -$7.6M from +$26M, driven largely by loan markdowns and higher borrowing costs. The article argues that private credit stress can feed back into bank funding lines. Banks say exposures are contained, but falling direct-lending volume and redemption pressure suggest risk appetite is tightening. Direct-lending volume in the US dropped about 55% QoQ (from $74.67B to $33.59B), while private debt issuance through May 2026 fell about 24.6% YoY. BDC mechanics also weaken headline “income” comfort. Payment-in-kind (PIK) interest and dividend income averaged 8.1% in 2025, about twice pre-2020 levels—PIK preserves cash today but increases what borrowers must pay later. Off-balance-sheet leverage via joint ventures and special-purpose vehicles rose sharply: off-balance-sheet borrowing increased 80% in 2025 and another 14% in Q1 2026. Banks including JPMorgan, Citigroup, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo hold more than $128B in private credit loans. JPMorgan alone has ~$50B exposure. Wells Fargo reports $36.2B direct private credit exposure (within a larger “financials except banks” portfolio). Crypto relevance: if private credit exposure tightens bank liquidity, it can reduce lending in the real economy and drain dollar liquidity—typically pressuring risk assets. Bitcoin has already traded weaker (down ~38% YoY around mid-July), and traders increasingly watch BDC share prices and bank earnings. Key escalation signals cited include larger bank loss provisions, funds suspending (not capping) redemptions, sharper loan markdown inconsistencies, or bank credit lines being reduced/not renewed.
Bearish
private creditBDCsbank liquidityBitcoinredemptions

Bitcoin holds $64K as Ethereum outperforms; ETF flows and Fed loom

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Crypto prices finished the week in cautious green after a volatile stretch. Bitcoin (BTC) is around $64,300, up about 3.3% on the week but still far below its 2026 start, while Ethereum (ETH) leads with a stronger move to roughly $1,860 (about +40% YTD). BTC’s attempt to rally above $65,000 fizzled as macro and geopolitics turned risk-off. A softer-than-expected inflation print briefly boosted rate-cut hopes, but a sixth day of US airstrikes against Iran and energy pressure pulled crypto lower. On top of that, Bitcoin’s structural demand remains sensitive to spot Bitcoin ETF flows: June saw record $4.5B net outflows, early July partially reversed, and traders are watching for consecutive multi-day inflow streaks. Next week’s main catalyst is the Fed’s July 28–29 FOMC meeting. Markets are pricing a meaningful chance of a rate hike, which would likely keep the dollar firm and pressure Bitcoin; a dovish surprise could relieve risk sentiment. Key technical levels highlighted: Bitcoin support near $58,000 and resistance around $63,800–$65,000. Holding above $61,000 keeps the recovery case alive, while a clear break above the 100-day EMA could open $68,000–$70,000. For Ethereum, breaking above roughly $1,944 would reinforce its leadership narrative.
Neutral
BitcoinEthereumFed & FOMCSpot Bitcoin ETF flowsMacro & geopolitics

England World Cup bronze boosts crypto sportsbooks with record 2026 volumes

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England’s World Cup bronze in 2026 is driving fresh demand for crypto sportsbooks, which reported their biggest summer ever. The third-place finish came with record blockchain betting volumes during the tournament. Jude Bellingham, 23, called the result “higher than expected” after England posted their best World Cup showing in 60 years. England’s run culminated in a playoff win in Miami, following his early impact in the 4-2 victory over Croatia on June 17. The 2026 tournament was the first expanded World Cup with 48 teams across the US, Canada and Mexico. For crypto traders, the key takeaway is activity-led momentum: crypto sportsbooks typically see spikes in derivatives and wager-related flows around major global sports events. The article frames England’s success as a catalyst for increased liquidity and user engagement, supporting a near-term narrative for crypto sportsbook platforms and prediction-market activity. Overall, this is an event-driven boost for crypto sportsbooks, rather than a macro or regulatory shift—likely to matter most in the short term around sports calendars and tournament benchmarks.
Neutral
crypto sportsbooksWorld Cup 2026blockchain bettingsports bettingprediction markets

Moonshot Hong Kong IPO in 6 Months Targets $30B Valuation

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Moonshot AI, the Beijing company behind the Kimi K3 open-weight coding model, plans a Moonshot Hong Kong IPO within six months, aiming for a valuation above $30B. The company launched Kimi K3 on July 17, 2026, calling it a 2.8T-parameter open-weight coding model and saying it outperformed peers like Claude and GPT on key benchmarks. Ahead of the Moonshot Hong Kong IPO, Moonshot accelerated fundraising, reportedly raising about $2B in a recent round and lifting valuation to the $20B–$30B range. Total funding since launch is estimated at roughly $3.9B–$6B, and CEO Yang Zhilin said cash reserves exceed 10B RMB (about $1.4B). For the listing, Moonshot intends to shift from a Cayman “red-chip” structure toward a joint-venture approach to fit stricter Beijing overseas listing rules. The IPO still requires approvals from both China and Hong Kong regulators and depends on market conditions. Why crypto traders should care: the Kimi K3 rollout triggered a fast sell-off across global tech and semiconductors, spilling into broader risk assets and pulling Bitcoin lower. A successful Moonshot Hong Kong IPO at $30B+ could strengthen the “top-tier Chinese AI” narrative, potentially influencing where institutions allocate capital between AI and crypto. But near term, investors’ finite risk budgets may keep sentiment and positioning volatile.
Bearish
Moonshot Hong Kong IPOKimi K3AI FundingRisk-off to BitcoinChina Overseas Listing

Bitcoin quantum-recovery proof speeds up, but can’t help Satoshi BTC

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Bitcoin’s quantum-vulnerable “freeze” plan (BIP-361) has a new recovery angle: Project Eleven says it built a zero-knowledge proof that can let the true owner prove control of wallet keys even after quantum computers can forge elliptic-curve signatures. The core issue is Q-Day: once signatures become forgeable, the blockchain may be unable to distinguish the attacker from the legitimate holder. Project Eleven’s approach leverages the fact that modern wallet address key derivation relies on one-way hashing (not breakable in the same way by quantum attacks), so owners with the seed material can prove they know the derivation path above their address without revealing any key data. Benchmarks (prototype): proof generation takes about 243 ms on an M5 MacBook Air (4 cores) and verification about 40 ms, with ~2 GB RAM and no GPU; no trusted setup is required. The company also claims large speedups versus prior work. However, the scheme is unaudited and incomplete for live deployment. It does not currently recover coins on any live Bitcoin blockchain, and the team notes limitations around address types and how the proof is anchored. Crucially, Project Eleven concedes the method would not recover Satoshi Nakamoto’s ~1.1 million BTC, because early pre-BIP-32 wallets lacked the hierarchical derivation “tree” the proof depends on.
Neutral
BitcoinQuantum securityZero-knowledge proofsBIP-361 freezeProject Eleven

MegaETH shuts Mega Mafia accelerator as MegaETH graduates migrate to Base, Monad and multichain

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MegaETH has ended its flagship startup programme, “Mega Mafia”, after two cohorts. The stated reason is that the accelerator’s best-known graduates moved to other ecosystems, breaking the model’s feedback loop. Around 20 teams raised roughly $80m (pre-seed to Series A) during the programme. MegaETH says it will not run “MegaMafia 3.0” and will instead focus resources on first-party consumer products and “OMEGA apps” that are more natively enabled by MegaETH’s stack. Notable migration outcomes reported include: GTE building its own chain; Noise launching on Base; HelloTrade moving to Monad; and Cap adopting a multichain strategy. The announcement also frames the shift as a move away from subsidising broad third-party experiments toward shipping products MegaETH controls. For 2026 chain selection, the article argues that teams increasingly choose where distribution, liquidity and compounding network effects already exist—typically mainstream L2s with better on-ramps (e.g., Base), performance-focused environments (e.g., Monad), or custom/app chains when control over fees and blockspace is critical. For traders, the practical takeaway is that application-layer liquidity and user flows may fragment across chains, potentially affecting routing, fee dynamics and token/liquidity interactions around migrating apps. Expect short-term volatility around cutover periods, while longer-term impact depends on whether MegaETH first-party/OMEGA products attract durable users.
Neutral
MegaETHAccelerator shutdownChain migrationBaseApp ecosystem

France and Czech Republic Order ISP Blocks on Polymarket Amid EU Binary Options Crackdown

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France’s gambling regulator (ANJ) has ordered internet service providers to block access to Polymarket at the network level. The action targets the website front-end, limiting retail users from visiting the platform to check prices or place event bets. In parallel, the Czech Ministry of Finance added Polymarket to its “List of Unauthorized Internet Games” on July 13, 2026, starting a 15-day deadline for local ISPs to implement domain blocking. The article frames this as coordinated enforcement rather than a one-off measure. At the EU level, ESMA (July 3, 2026) signaled that event contracts with binary-style pay-outs may fall under existing national bans on retail binary options. This provides regulators with a legal bridge to restrict platforms quickly country by country. How this matters for traders: Polymarket users in France and Czechia may face intermittent access first, followed by more persistent geofencing as ISPs update DNS/IP/HTTP filtering. While on-chain contracts may remain live, effective liquidity and participation can drop when the web interface is blocked. Despite the crackdown, reported monthly trading volume across Polymarket, Kalshi, and Polymarket US rose 75% month-over-month to $44.8 billion in June 2026, suggesting demand is still strong—at least outside blocked jurisdictions. Bottom line: Polymarket restrictions are a fast, infrastructure-driven enforcement approach that can reshape regional liquidity and volatility for event-contract markets.
Neutral
PolymarketEU RegulationISP BlockingBinary OptionsEvent Contracts

Electronic Transactions Association Signals More Bitcoin partnerships after BitPay

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The Electronic Transactions Association (ETA), which counts Visa, MasterCard, Amazon, and PayPal among its members, says it expects more Bitcoin partnerships as the payments sector modernises. ETA CEO Jason Oxman said the group does not lobby for Bitcoin and has no official position against other technologies, but it will respond to merchant demand and innovation. A key development is that ETA welcomed BitPay on August 6, branding BitPay as the first virtual-currency firm to become an ETA member. Oxman cited this as proof the ETA “will not turn a blind eye to innovation,” and said Bitcoin partnerships are likely to expand when customers choose Bitcoin for payments. Oxman also pointed to the Bitcoin Foundation’s role in educating ETA members, including an earlier ETA event where Bitcoin Foundation counsel Patrick Murck helped frame Bitcoin’s business relevance. In addition, the article discusses New York’s BitLicense regime: the NYDFS extended the public comment period by 45 days, pushing the deadline to October 21 after industry feedback. Market relevance: broader institutional payment-adoption narratives around Bitcoin partnerships can support sentiment, while BitLicense uncertainty can temper near-term enthusiasm.
Bullish
Bitcoin partnershipsPayment industryBitPayBitLicense regulationInstitutional adoption

Bahrain intercepts Iranian attack on US Navy 5th Fleet HQ

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Bahrain intercepts Iranian attack on the US Navy’s 5th Fleet headquarters, according to Bahrain state television. Air-raid sirens reportedly sounded across the country before Bahrain’s air defenses stopped the strike. The reported target was the US Navy’s 5th Fleet headquarters in Manama, Bahrain. The incident is framed as part of the ongoing 2026 Iran–US war, with escalating military actions across the Gulf region. Bahrain intercepts Iranian attack suggests continued military engagement between Iran and Gulf states that host US military assets. The article also notes that market pricing and prediction markets point to an increased likelihood of additional Iranian military actions against Gulf states. What to watch next: further responses from Bahrain or other Gulf states, potential US actions, and whether Iran launches additional retaliatory strikes or shifts toward diplomacy. Prediction-market odds may move again if new strikes or de-escalation steps are announced.
Bearish
Middle East GeopoliticsIran-US TensionsUS Navy 5th FleetAir DefensePrediction Markets

Bitcoin partnerships prediction failed: payments pivoted to stablecoins

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In 2014, Jason Oxman (then CEO of the Electronic Transactions Association, ETA) predicted a wave of Bitcoin partnerships between legacy payments firms and Bitcoin startups. He cited the Global Payments–BitPay referral agreement as early proof, noting BitPay was the ETA’s only Bitcoin-focused member (1 out of 500+ companies). However, the anticipated Bitcoin partnerships never materialized. After Oxman left the ETA in February 2019, there were still no major ETA partnership announcements with Bitcoin startups through 2025, and the association did not publicly signal a renewed Bitcoin push. Instead, the payments industry pivoted. Rather than integrating Bitcoin into the payments stack, companies moved toward stablecoins and other digital assets to avoid Bitcoin’s volatility while keeping dollar-like behavior. In parallel, crypto rails expanded via in-house capabilities: PayPal launched its own stablecoin, while Visa and Mastercard built infrastructure for stablecoin settlements. For Bitcoin, the outcome diverged from Oxman’s vision. Bitcoin grew mainly as a store of value and investment asset, later becoming the subject of SEC-approved spot ETFs. The article’s core takeaway: Bitcoin partnerships were not the route traditional finance took; stablecoins became the operational bridge.
Neutral
Bitcoin partnershipsStablecoinsPayment railsSpot Bitcoin ETFsDigital finance

Clarity Act: Trump pressures Senate to break crypto SEC/CFTC deadlock

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Trump urged the Senate on July 13, 2026 to pass the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (Clarity Act). The appeal—framed as a tribute to late Sen. Lindsey Graham and a bid to keep the US ahead of China in digital assets and AI—adds political pressure to Democrats who are stalling the bill. The bill already cleared earlier hurdles. The US House passed the Clarity Act on July 17, 2025 by 294-134. It then moved through the Senate Banking Committee on May 14, 2026, winning 15-9 votes with two Democratic crossovers. A full Senate floor vote is now the key obstacle because passage requires 60 votes to overcome a filibuster, meaning Republicans need at least seven Democratic votes. The sticking point is ethics. Senators Chris Murphy and Chris Van Hollen raised concerns that the bill’s provisions do not sufficiently address perceived conflicts involving Trump’s family and their ties to the digital asset sector. The White House plans direct engagement with senators to resolve these objections. Market odds have not fully closed the gap: Polymarket put the probability of Clarity Act enactment in 2026 at about 45% as of mid-July. The Clarity Act is also moving alongside other crypto/regulation bills, including the GENIUS Act (stablecoin rules) and the Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act. With the August 2026 recess approaching, lawmakers face a practical deadline; delays could push the outcome into a more uncertain political window.
Neutral
US Crypto RegulationClarity ActSEC vs CFTCStablecoinsSenate Filibuster

CLARITY Act Odds Fall to ~31% as Senate Push Stalls

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Crypto market-structure momentum for the **CLARITY Act** is weakening after Donald Trump’s latest effort failed to break a Senate deadlock. The bill advanced to the Senate calendar after passing the Senate Banking Committee, but final **CLARITY Act** approval still hinges on securing enough Democratic commitments and reconciling competing committee language. Timeline: The House passed the **CLARITY Act** (294-134). In May, two Democrats joined all Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee, moving the bill to the Senate agenda. Key blockers: Passage needs at least 60 votes, yet many Democrats want tighter conflict-of-interest limits for senior officials profiting from crypto ventures. Bank-focused objections also target stablecoin “interest-like” rewards, arguing they could divert balances from traditional lenders. Why traders should care: Odds were cut on prediction markets (roughly down to ~31% now, from above 70% after the committee vote). This raises near-term regulatory headline risk for spot crypto and stablecoins, which can pressure risk sentiment even if longer-term legislation remains constructive.
Bearish
CLARITY ActUS market structureSenate deadlockStablecoin rulesPrediction markets

Bitcoin Japan’s ¥9.66B Convertible Raise to Fund First BTC Treasury

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Bitcoin Japan approved a financing package that could raise up to ¥9.66B (about $60M) via third-party allotment of convertible bonds with stock-acquisition rights linked to EVO FUND. The company’s first Bitcoin (BTC) treasury allocation is about ¥662M (roughly $4.0–$4.5M). A key timeline detail is that around ¥1.5B cash may arrive initially on the payment date, while the rest depends on when stock-acquisition rights are exercised. That structure can create dilution risk for shareholders. Governance is also a near-term watch item: an independent third-party committee review is scheduled for July 15, 2026 to assess the necessity and appropriateness of the financing. The article frames the BTC purchase as a “starter” allocation (~7% of the potential raise), not a large, market-disrupting buy. For crypto traders, BTC is the only direct beneficiary. The main catalysts are (1) confirmation of funds received and (2) the actual timing and execution of the first BTC treasury purchase after custody and approvals. Sensitivities include BTC price moves around the purchase window (cost-basis optics) and the pace of later exercises (ongoing equity overhang). Medium-term sentiment may hinge on updated use-of-proceeds and subsequent disclosures of Bitcoin holdings.
Neutral
BTC treasuryJapan corporate cryptoConvertible bondsDilution riskBTC price catalysts