Prediction market platform Kalshi is preparing to enter crypto trading in the United States by launching crypto perpetual futures. The Information reports the rollout is planned with bitcoin-linked contracts first.
Crypto perpetual futures let traders speculate on an asset’s price without owning it and without a fixed expiration date. Positions are kept aligned to spot via funding payments between longs and shorts. Kalshi’s plan would bring it into closer competition with Coinbase and other major exchanges that have been expanding derivatives and prediction-market offerings.
Kalshi already holds multiple Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) licenses. It recently received approval to offer margin trading, which helps support a regulated U.S. derivatives launch. The company is expected to start with token-linked perpetuals (including BTC) and could expand to other asset classes later.
The move reflects a broader convergence between prediction markets and crypto exchanges. As crypto trading volumes softened after a downturn, prediction markets saw user and investor activity rise. Platforms including Coinbase, Crypto.com, and Gemini have introduced prediction-market products, pushing companies like Kalshi to broaden their product suites.
For traders, the key takeaway is an incremental expansion of regulated venues for crypto perpetual futures, which may improve product choice and liquidity over time while increasing competition among major U.S.-accessible platforms.
Revolut, Europe’s largest crypto-friendly fintech, told investors it is targeting a valuation of up to $200 billion for a future Revolut IPO, the Financial Times reported.
The firm was valued at $75 billion in its 2025 share sale. Revolut is reportedly discussing an IPO valuation range of $150 billion to $200 billion and is also preparing a secondary share sale in 2H 2026, which could lift its value to around $100 billion.
Revolut previously said it would not seek a listing before 2028. Co-founder Nik Storonsky said in December that his stake could be worth about $80 billion if the company reaches a $200 billion valuation.
On licensing, Revolut received a full U.K. banking license in March and has applied to the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) for a banking license. In 2025, its pre-tax profit rose 57% to £1.7 billion, supporting its broader push to operate more like a traditional bank.
While the Revolut IPO target is widely cited, the FT source said no formal valuation has been finalized and Revolut did not immediately confirm details.
Neutral
RevolutIPOFintechBanking licenseSecondary share sale
Digital Ascension Group chairman Jake Claver said XRP growth is not dependent on the proposed U.S. CLARITY Act. He warned that expectations for the law are likely overblown, noting XRP’s momentum is already driven by real-world demand, utility, liquidity demand, and cross-border payments adoption.
The article also highlights continued delays in Washington. Senator Thom Tillis reportedly pushed the CLARITY Act markup to May, after renewed disagreement over stablecoin-related incentives—especially whether yield-bearing features should be allowed inside regulated frameworks. This stall is tied to a broader crypto market structure bill, leaving policy uncertainty in place.
For traders, the key takeaway is that XRP and other projects may keep advancing within existing rules even as legislation drags. Supporters argue clearer U.S. standards could improve institutional confidence, but Claver’s stance suggests the near-term price narrative for XRP may rely more on adoption and liquidity flows than on regulatory timelines.
A U.S. Congressman has proposed the PACE Act to modernize the U.S. payments system by allowing qualified non-bank payment firms to connect directly to Federal Reserve rails. The bill targets faster settlement and lower transaction costs by enabling regulated providers to access systems such as Fedwire, FedACH, and FedNow.
Industry groups, including fintech and crypto stakeholders, have reacted positively, arguing that direct Fed access could improve speed and competitiveness versus fragmented private-sector alternatives. A draft framework described via LinkedIn says the PACE Act would create a new federal category, “Registered Covered Provider,” overseen by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). Eligible firms would be able to apply for Fed payment accounts without a full bank charter.
To qualify, companies would typically need either more than 40 state money transmitter licenses or a state depository charter. The bill’s framework also resembles the recently enacted GENIUS Act on stablecoin and reserve rules, including 1:1 backing using cash, Federal Reserve deposits, U.S. Treasury bills, or tokenized equivalents. Supporters frame the change as consumer-focused—reducing burdens from bank fees—rather than a giveaway.
Traders should note that if passed, the PACE Act would sit alongside GENIUS and broader U.S. digital-asset regulatory actions, potentially making it easier for large crypto and payments firms to move dollars via Fed rails instead of relying solely on correspondent banking. The PACE Act is the central catalyst, but the practical market impact will depend on final legislative details and implementation timelines.
Bullish
PACE ActFederal Reserve railsFintech regulationStablecoin reservesCrypto market plumbing
Amazon plans a $25B investment in Anthropic, making Anthropic a cloud customer through 2036. The move is expected to strengthen Anthropic’s resources for training and evaluating large AI models, directly improving its competitive position in public AI benchmarks.
Traders are re-assessing Anthropic’s odds in prediction markets tied to “third best AI model by April 2026” and related April end contracts. With April 30 contracts having only about 10 days left, the news is likely to increase sensitivity to new information. The article suggests the capital injection could shift market “odds” by as much as ~15% and attract fresh liquidity as traders reprice Anthropic’s chances.
Who’s involved: Amazon, Anthropic, and its Claude model line. It also references the broader competitive landscape versus OpenAI and Google DeepMind.
What to watch: any further performance updates from Anthropic—especially ahead of month-end—plus statements involving Dario Amodei or related benchmark outcomes. For market participants, buying “YES” in the April 2026 market at current odds could become more attractive if Claude Mythos performs well.
Crypto relevance: while this is not a direct crypto protocol or token event, large AI-capital commitments can influence risk sentiment across tech-sector narratives and indirectly affect volumes in broader speculative markets.
US and Israeli airstrikes on Iran have intensified over six days, ahead of the Iran–US ceasefire expiration on April 22. As geopolitical risk rises, Bitcoin price has fallen below $72K, with odds for Bitcoin dropping under $64K on April 17 priced at 100% (bearish).
Market sentiment is stressed: the Fear & Greed Index is at 22, in “extreme fear” territory. The article notes thin liquidity and that no significant trades occurred in the last 24 hours tied to the prediction market odds, meaning large orders could trigger sharper price swings.
Traders are effectively pricing in continued hostilities because the ceasefire may not be renewed. The near-term upside catalyst appears limited while strikes continue. The key watch items are any diplomatic steps, ceasefire negotiation/extension announcements before April 22, and statements or actions from US or Iranian officials. Without a diplomatic shift, the bearish pricing is likely to persist.
Primary keywords: Bitcoin, $72K, US-Iran strikes, ceasefire expiry, Fear & Greed. Main trading takeaway: higher volatility risk and a risk-off bias until the ceasefire outcome becomes clearer.
Markets assign a 69% probability to a Fed rate hike in 2027, pricing in continued tightening as inflation persists amid Iran–Middle East geopolitical tensions. In a related Bitcoin price prediction market, traders keep a steady 5.5% YES share for Bitcoin reaching $200,000 by Dec 31, 2026.
The article highlights why the setup is fragile for risk assets like crypto. The Fed’s hawkish bias typically weighs on speculative demand, and geopolitical, conflict-driven inflation could delay rate easing. It also notes limited liquidity: the market trades only about $151 in USDC per day and the order book is thin, so relatively large orders can move prices quickly.
For the near term, expectations for a June 2026 move have cooled. The “Fed decision in June 2026” contract drops to about 4.9% YES from roughly 6% a week earlier, reflecting more skepticism toward a June rate cut after a bearish repricing.
Key watch items for traders are: any progress in Middle East peace talks and future Fed communication—especially comments from Jerome Powell. Overall, this Bitcoin price prediction scenario suggests higher odds of a tightening path, which can cap upside for BTC despite bullish long-horizon narratives.
XRP is trading around $1.43 after failing to hold above $1.45. A symmetrical triangle on the daily chart is keeping the price in a short-term range, while Santiment data shows high-net-worth investors have accumulated over 360 million XRP since last week.
The reclaimed 20-day and 50-day EMAs may support XRP buying pressure, but the daily candle shows rejection near $1.45. The broader market backdrop is pressured by geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, after heightened U.S.–Iran Strait of Hormuz developments. This is also weighing on Bitcoin, with BTC’s selling pressure noted around the $77,000 area.
Analyst Ali Martinez points out whale positioning as the main on-chain catalyst. If XRP breaks above the triangle resistance near $1.48 (also near a 100-day EMA), the article projects a potential upside move toward $1.67 and then $1.80. If sellers force a breakdown below the triangle support, downside risk increases toward $1.15.
Traders should treat this as a volatility setup: XRP breakout odds improve on whale accumulation and EMA support, but near-term direction likely remains sensitive to macro/geopolitical risk and BTC momentum.
Aave users withdrew about $6.6B after a liquidity crisis triggered by a Kelp DAO bridge exploit. On April 18, attackers used fraudulent cross-chain messages to mint unsecured rsETH, then posted it as collateral on Aave to borrow roughly $200M in WETH. The incident was estimated to generate ~$292M in on-chain advantage.
As DeFi users reacted, a “bank run” hit Aave and liquidity rapidly drained. Aave’s major lending markets eventually reached ~100% utilization, effectively stopping withdrawals because the protocol had no clean liquidity to process exits. The largest stablecoin pools were frozen, with about $5B trapped inside Aave—around $3B in USDT and $2B in USDC—leaving withdrawals impossible for those assets.
Analysts note this was not a direct hack of Aave. Instead, it was a cascading systemic risk from a bridge failure that prevented closing unsecured positions and accelerated bad-debt buildup. Researchers also warned that without liquidations functioning, any price volatility could worsen losses.
Community response remained limited, with Aave founder Stani Kulechov providing no concrete comments. Analysts also observed the withdrawals were driven mainly by large investors, including Justin Sun and exchange MEXC, which left smaller users more exposed during the liquidity crunch.
Traders should watch for heightened volatility and potential contagion risk across DeFi lending and stablecoin markets tied to Aave.
Bitcoin (BTC) rebounded above $76,000 on Tuesday, supported by a second straight week of bullish spot-volume trends on Coinbase. Spot cumulative volume delta (CVD) jumped to $517 million, up from $55 million on April 17, while broader spot+futures CVD remains above $8.5 billion.
Buy-side flow stayed elevated and flat over the past 24 hours, with no clear distribution. Bitcoin held firm as spot demand absorbed weekend selling pressure, keeping the upward CVD slope intact. Funding rates were slightly negative at -0.003%, suggesting traders still lean bearish—an environment that can fuel a squeeze higher if demand continues.
Analyst Ardi highlighted that “Coinbase premium” (currently around 0.05) is doing more work than many expect in this trading range. If the premium flattens or flips back to negative territory, it would indicate thinner order books and could slow bullish follow-through.
Technically, Bitcoin printed a bullish engulfing candle Monday and moved back above the 100-day EMA. The market’s key inflection point is $75,000: liquidity is concentrated below, with about $2.8 billion of cumulative leveraged positions between $73,000 and $75,000. Overhead supply near $76,000–$78,000 is around $1.8 billion in short leveraged positions.
Macro/flow perspective from Michaël van de Poppe links the pullback to a typical weekend pattern and cites easing volatility plus roughly $1 billion inflows into ETFs as tailwinds. If resistance holds while momentum persists, a potential path toward the $85,000–$88,000 zone in May is possible.
Note: This is market coverage, not investment advice.
US-based TD Cowen says the STRC dividend switch at Strategy (MSTR) could support both shareholders and Bitcoin treasury exposure. Strategy has proposed changing STRC preferred share dividends from monthly to twice per month, aiming to accelerate capital reinvestment and improve liquidity.
Analysts Lance Vitanza and Jonnathan Navarrete frame STRC as a more price-stable preferred equity vehicle that can help Strategy keep accumulating Bitcoin with less reliance on traditional funding. Voting runs until June 8, with the new STRC dividend payments starting July 15.
TD Cowen also adjusted its MSTR outlook: it lowered the price target to $350 earlier in the month, then revised it up to $385 on Monday. MSTR shares were around $168, down more than 44% over six months. TD Cowen adds that STRC dividend switch amendments may raise the NAV premium as Bitcoin inflows increase and improve capital flexibility for higher Bitcoin returns.
The report notes a “feedback loop” effect: STRC’s launch encouraged further Bitcoin purchases and may increase investor interest for other firms using similar treasury models. Strive (ASST) is cited as running a comparable structure (SATA preferred shares linked to STRC-like acquisitions). TD Cowen reiterated a “buy” stance on ASST with a $26 target.
Keywords used for traders: STRC dividend switch, MSTR price target change, Bitcoin inflows, NAV premium, preferred dividend structure.
Donald Trump said he would be disappointed if Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh, once confirmed, does not deliver Fed rate cuts as soon as May. The central bank has not cut rates in 2026, and Trump framed Warsh’s speed as a key political and market test.
Trump also highlighted scrutiny around Fed chair Jerome Powell. Powell is facing a criminal probe related to Senate testimony about renovation costs for Federal Reserve buildings. Powell called the investigation “unprecedented,” while Trump suggested it began because the Fed resisted repeated White House pressure to cut rates.
On the Iran conflict’s impact, Trump expected a much larger sell-off than what occurred. He cited his belief that the Dow and S&P 500 could have fallen 20% (bear-market level) and that oil might reach $200, but observed oil stayed far lower (around $90 referenced in the interview) as supply routes adjusted.
Separately, U.S. retail sales rose 1.7% in March, but gas prices drove the gain and also pushed inflation back up. Consumer prices rose 3.3% year-on-year in March (from 2.4% in February), and monthly inflation increased 0.9%. Core inflation also rose to 2.6%. Higher fuel costs are expected to keep pressuring prices through energy and transport-linked spending.
For markets, the immediate focus is uncertainty over Fed rate cuts timing versus re-accelerating inflation, alongside geopolitical oil risks.
Bitcoin whales are accelerating accumulation, adding about 45,000 BTC in a week, according to Cex.IO data. Wallets holding 100–10,000 BTC bought the most in over a year, tightening spot liquidity.
As exchange reserves reportedly fell to around 2.21 million BTC (multi-year lows), Bitcoin price hovered near $76,000, up about 2.7% from earlier week lows. Strategy—linked to Michael Saylor—purchased 34,164 BTC from Apr 13–Apr 19 at an average $74,395 (about $2.54B). Morgan Stanley reportedly crossed $100M in Bitcoin holdings, while Bitcoin ETFs saw about $1.29B in net inflows.
On the policy front, key US figures publicly framed crypto as part of financial infrastructure and even national security. Kevin Warsh (Fed Chair nominee) said digital assets are “part of the fabric” of US financial services. Admiral Samuel Paparo described Bitcoin’s cryptographic architecture as a “valuable computer science tool” for cyber offense and defense.
For traders, this combination of Bitcoin whales activity, shrinking exchange supply, strong ETF flows, and higher-level political normalization can support near-term momentum and reduce immediate sell-side liquidity.
MemeCore (M) rallied about 15% in the latest session, trading near $4.14, as on-chain investigator ZachXBT questioned Kraken’s decision to list MemeCore (M) for spot trading (scheduled for July 3, 2025).
According to ZachXBT, approximately $7.9M worth of M tokens were withdrawn from Kraken into 18 newly created addresses holding about 11.7M M tokens (estimated value ~$39.8M). He also alleged a team wallet deposited 5.3M M tokens to Kraken on the listing day, and suggested insiders may have influenced price action to support a ~$6B market-cap claim.
Despite the controversy, MemeCore (M) is up roughly 150% over the past month. Technical conditions described in the article point to an uptrend: higher highs/higher lows after a March hard fork, price rebounding from a $3.23 support area, and momentum staying constructive with RSI(14) around 68 (neutral-to-bullish, not yet clearly overbought). The piece also notes dynamic support near the 10-day EMA (~$3.85) and key resistance around $4.34–$4.50.
Traders are watching a psychological $5 level if MemeCore (M) breaks above the nearer resistance. The surge reportedly triggered short liquidations, adding buy pressure.
Ecosystem-wise, the article says MemeMax (MAX), a perpetual DEX inside the MemeCore ecosystem, recently launched, which may support incremental interest in leveraged memecoin trading.
Marisks says scammers are targeting ship owners near the Strait of Hormuz with fake “transit fee” demands paid in Bitcoin (BTC) or Tether (USDT). The messages impersonate Iranian security services, ask for vessel documents, then demand crypto payment after “verification,” promising “safe passage” at a scheduled time.
The latest reporting ties the scam credibility to earlier claims that Iran might impose a BTC-denominated toll. But Marisks and compliance analysts stress the threat is real even if the payment is coerced: crypto transfers linked to Iranian-controlled waterways could be treated as “material support,” exposing victims to US and international sanctions scrutiny.
Traders should view this as a sanctions-compliance risk event for maritime actors. It is unlikely to change broader BTC fundamentals, but it can raise near-term scrutiny around BTC/USDT flows connected to Iran and constrained shipping corridors.
Apple (AAPL) shares stayed near recent highs after announcing a planned leadership change. Tim Cook will step down as CEO in September and hand the role to hardware chief John Ternus, a 25-year Apple veteran. The stock slipped less than 1% immediately, then recovered part of the move, suggesting investors viewed the AAPL CEO transition as managed rather than disruptive.
Cook’s 15-year tenure ended with Apple reaching roughly a $4T market cap, and the share price rose nearly 2,000%. Cook will shift to executive chairman, focusing on global legislative relations.
For the market, the AAPL CEO transition matters less for near-term earnings and more for whether Apple can accelerate its AI strategy without losing the steady profitability driven by iPhone, services, wearables, and subscriptions. Apple has already reorganized hardware leadership to tighten coordination between chips, devices, and AI features. Analysts say investors are watching how the new structure and execution affect future iPhone demand, services usage, and upgrade cycles.
Market commentary cited in the article includes a JPMorgan positive long-term stance with a $325 price target, alongside other forecast references projecting modest gains over the next couple of weeks. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman also reported Apple picked Ternus partly due to age and an internal belief he could make the product roadmap more decisive as rivals push AI-led device upgrades.
Neutral
AppleAAPL CEO transitionAI strategyTech sector earningsMarket sentiment
U.S. stocks edged higher as traders priced growing odds of an Iran deal before a Wednesday ceasefire deadline. The Dow gained about 250 points (~0.5%), the S&P 500 rose ~0.2%, and the Nasdaq added ~0.3%. The Russell 2000 also hit a fresh all-time high, signaling continued risk appetite.
The catalyst was President Donald Trump’s comments that he expects a “great deal” with Iran before the ceasefire expires. At the same time, he warned military action remains possible if negotiations fail, keeping sentiment cautious rather than fully convinced. Oil markets reflected this balance: West Texas Intermediate slipped ~0.6% to above $87/bbl, while Brent was down ~0.3% to above $95/bbl. The steadier crude backdrop helped equities maintain an upward bias.
Investors are also weighing broader momentum after the S&P 500 recently closed above 7,100 for the first time, with the Iran deal narrative supporting the rally. Key near-term catalysts include upcoming earnings from Tesla, Intel, and United Airlines, plus Senate hearings for Federal Reserve chair nominee Kevin Warsh, which offered limited guidance on rates.
Overall, the Iran deal optimism is supporting equities, but the looming deadline keeps markets focused on headlines and keeps pricing “two-way” risk into the next session.
Amazon announced an expanded partnership with AI startup Anthropic, committing up to $25B more investment. It includes $5B immediately and up to $20B tied to commercial milestones, on top of the prior $8B deal.
Anthropic will spend more than $100B on AWS technologies through 2036 to train and deploy Claude models. The company also secured up to 5 GW of computing capacity, using Amazon’s custom Trainium chips. Additional Trainium2 and Trainium3 capacity could bring roughly 1 GW online by end-2026.
CEO Andy Jassy said the custom AI silicon is lower cost and in “hot demand.” The announcement follows Amazon’s earlier $50B OpenAI funding contribution and signals continued AI infrastructure capex.
For crypto traders, this is a broad tech-sector signal about AI infrastructure demand, not a direct crypto catalyst or on-chain liquidity driver.
Neutral
AI infrastructureAmazon AWSAnthropiccapital expenditurecrypto market sentiment
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino says USDT supply has reached a new all-time high (ATH) of $188 billion, reinforcing USDT’s lead in stablecoin liquidity. The USDT supply jump marks fresh growth from early March (around $184B), even after a brief cooling in February when USDT supply fell about $1.5B amid holder rotation.
The record comes alongside broader market strength: stablecoins hit a combined $315B market cap weeks earlier, while third-party and Tether disclosures suggest Tether held about $187B in assets and reported over $10B profit for 2025. Tether also frames its model as well-cushioned and overcollateralized, citing reserves near $192.9B and net equity of $6.3B.
Ardoino points to usage distribution to counter “whale concentration” concerns, saying the largest sender is under 5% of USDT transfers versus roughly 25% for some competing stablecoins. For traders, this is another signal of steady stablecoin demand—often linked to incoming risk appetite, higher on-chain dollar availability, and improved liquidity for exchanges and DeFi.
USDT remains the third-largest crypto by market cap after BTC and ETH, with its issuance growth previously driving stablecoin market milestones from ~$226.8B (early 2025) to the ~$315B peak.
New York has filed lawsuits against Coinbase Financial Markets and Gemini Titan, alleging breaches of state executive and administrative law. The move adds to a growing list of regulatory actions targeting major U.S. crypto intermediaries.
The complaints come while both firms face overlapping federal and state pressures. Coinbase is already dealing with an SEC case alleging unregistered securities trading. Gemini has also reached a multi-million dollar settlement with New York’s attorney general tied to its Earn product.
Legal analysts say this latest round reflects a broader pattern: New York regulators are increasingly using state-level executive/administrative law to police crypto activity, especially when federal enforcement appears slow or fragmented.
The article notes Coinbase has faced mounting scrutiny across multiple fronts, including prior New York-related AML compliance issues and additional state regulatory actions. For Gemini, New York secured a recovery for Earn customers and restricted crypto lending programs in the state after finding the company misled investors about counterparty risk involving Genesis.
While the new filings focus on state law rather than federal securities rules, the headline implication for traders is higher compliance and litigation risk for two of the largest U.S. exchange platforms. This can increase uncertainty around exchange operations, custody/market access, and cost-of-compliance timelines.
Keywords: New York, Coinbase, Gemini, compliance lawsuit, regulatory enforcement.
Bearish
New York regulationCoinbaseGeminiCompliance enforcementU.S. exchange risk
Crypto traders face an exchange “crowding” problem, so exchange credibility matters. This article argues HTX is still a leading centralized crypto exchange, built on long operating history, large user reach, and multi-product depth.
Key points on HTX (Huobi, launched in 2013):
- Scale & access: 55M+ global users (as of 2025) and 600+ supported coins, including BTC, ETH and stablecoins. Products span spot, futures and perpetuals, plus early token access and OTC-style ecosystem participation.
- Trading & listing approach: HTX emphasizes fast listing of emerging, high-attention tokens and meme coins. The piece notes early-stage tokens can carry higher volatility and changing liquidity.
- Earn/yield tools: Launchpool 2.0 and SmartEarn are highlighted for flexible staking and yield on futures account balances without lock-ups.
- Fees & fund flows: Tiered fee structure; spot maker/taker cited at 0.2% for non-tiered users. Deposit fees are described as zero, while withdrawals depend on asset/network and account verification.
- Security & transparency: Multi-layer risk controls (abnormal login/withdrawal detection, wallet hot/cold separation). It also mentions Fireblocks for custody and regular Merkle Tree proof-of-reserves reports (41+ consecutive monthly reports).
Takeaway for traders: the article is not a market-moving event, but it frames HTX as a “safer rails + diversified products” venue—especially relevant when liquidity, leverage access, and withdrawal security are key considerations.
Neutral
HTXCrypto Exchange SecuritySpot & DerivativesProof of ReservesEarn/Yield Tools
EU Iran sanctions have expanded to target parties accused of blocking the Strait of Hormuz. The EU Iran sanctions move hardens the Western stance and makes a fast US-Iran “sanction relief” path around April outcomes less likely.
For crypto traders watching prediction markets, odds are shifting toward continued geopolitical stress. With about 10 days left, the contract tied to Trump agreeing to Iranian demands is at 25.5% YES (down from 36% a day earlier). For the April 30 Iran uranium enrichment agreement, odds are 24.8% YES, after a brief jump from ~22% to ~29% around 1:10 AM.
Market pricing suggests EU Iran sanctions reduce the chance of two near-term outcomes: (1) oil-related sanction relief by late April and (2) Iran ending uranium enrichment before month-end. Traders are also watching potential catalysts such as US Treasury statements, possible IAEA inspections in Iran, and changes in Iranian leadership rhetoric.
Net takeaway for risk: EU Iran sanctions are pushing up uncertainty and repricing the event risk premium.
Bearish
EU Iran sanctionsStrait of HormuzIran nuclear talksPrediction marketsGeopolitical risk
A DHS plane originally headed for Europe and Pakistan was suddenly diverted to Washington. The disruption is raising questions over the timeline for the next US-Iran diplomatic meeting.
In prediction markets, the probability of a US-Iran diplomatic meeting by June 30, 2026 is 3.4% (a “YES” outcome). Despite the news, overall market pricing stayed largely flat, with only a small intraday move (around a 1-point drop earlier).
Location markets for where the US-Iran diplomatic meeting might occur are also unchanged at about 3.4% YES.
Liquidity looks thin: the market trades roughly $27,200/day in face value, but actual daily USDC volume is about $884. With low liquidity, price can move quickly; the article notes it takes about $481 to shift odds by 5 points on minor developments or speculation.
What to watch next is whether the diverted flight and postponed travel signal delays. Traders are also told to monitor announcements from the White House or Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry. The article frames a “ceasefire clock” risk: further delays would likely reduce the odds of a concrete US-Iran diplomatic meeting by June 30.
For context, the contract pricing implies deep skepticism that a meeting will happen without new developments (a 3.4¢ YES price versus $1 payout).
Reporting says Hezbollah fired on IDF troops in southern Lebanon, raising fresh doubts over the Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire. The IDF called it a “false identification,” but the shooting itself suggests potential ceasefire violations shortly after the truce window opened.
Earlier, traders also flagged fast repricing risk: ceasefire breach allegations moved the market quickly and renewed concerns about durability through April 30. Now, the latest update shows the same issue from a different angle—prices appear fully “set” on paper. The April 30 Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire contract is at 100% YES with ~10 days left, and a related Trump-endorsement themed market is also 100% YES, but combined 24-hour volume is $0, meaning near-zero liquidity.
For crypto traders watching prediction-market-linked risk sentiment, this is a classic asymmetry trade. When the Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire market has no active volume, quotes can become stale. Any verified IDF/Hezbollah statement—or US-brokered mediation update—could trigger a sudden move away from the current 1.00 YES level.
What to watch next: additional verified communications from Hezbollah and the IDF, and any Pentagon/US mediation updates connected to further Israel x Hezbollah ceasefire breaches.
(Trading note: $1.2M USDC was recently added to these markets in the prior window, but the latest snapshot emphasizes that liquidity still appears effectively inactive across the cited contracts.)
Neutral
Israel x Hezbollah ceasefireIDF vs HezbollahPrediction marketsGeopolitical riskUS mediation
The US Senate CLARITY Act faces a slip from late April into May as traditional banks lobby for delaying action in the Senate Banking Committee. Senator Thom Tillis is reportedly pushing to slow the timeline, turning the stablecoin “yield” fight into a high-stakes election-year test.
The dispute is focused: whether crypto platforms can offer consumer rewards that function like interest on stablecoin balances. The House passed its CLARITY Act version in July 2025 (294-134), but Senate progress has stalled over the stablecoin-yield language.
On April 8, the Trump administration’s Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) report argues that removing stablecoin yields would add only about $2.1B to bank lending (~0.02%) and could imply net consumer welfare loss of around $800M—claims banks and trade groups dispute. The American Bankers Association and regional banks are still seeking a broader ban on stablecoin inducements, including via advertising and direct lobbying.
Market watch: Polymarket has cut odds for CLARITY Act passage in 2026 to about 48% (down from 82% in February). Traders should track Senate Banking markup timing, updated bill text, and any renewed negotiation over stablecoin yield rights inside the CLARITY Act.
On-chain data tracked by Lookonchain shows an anonymous “Ethereum whale” withdrew 35,000 ETH from Binance and moved it to BitGo custody.
The transfer was executed over about two hours and is valued at roughly $80.7M at the time. Because the funds went to institutional custody (not another exchange, DeFi protocol, or staking venue), analysts read it as a move away from active trading toward long-term holding.
This type of exchange outflow can reduce “exchange supply,” potentially lowering near-term sell-side liquidity and supporting bullish sentiment. However, traders are cautioned against extrapolating price direction from one transaction alone; broader signals such as total exchange balances, derivatives positioning, and risk-asset macro conditions matter.
BitGo’s role is central to the narrative. The regulated custodian is associated with institutional-grade security (e.g., multi-signature and cold storage) and compliance. The move therefore suggests professional capital prioritizing safety over convenience.
Contextually, Ethereum’s 2025 landscape includes scalability progress under “The Surge” and high staking participation, which also increases ETH illiquidity. In combination, custody withdrawals fit a broader theme of Ethereum becoming “stickier” and less available for trading.
Traders may watch for follow-on large transfers to custody and for changes in exchange balances that confirm whether the outflow develops into a sustained liquidity shift.
KelpDAO said it was hit by a $294M exploit due to LayerZero’s infrastructure, not because Kelp’s own systems were compromised. KelpDAO pointed to two LayerZero-hosted RPC nodes being accessed by attackers and a third RPC node suffering a DDoS attack that distorted node performance.
The liquid staking protocol responded by freezing all related contracts on Arbitrum and Ethereum mainnet. It also blocked wallets linked to the attacker and launched SEAL 911, a 24/7 hotline to connect victims with security experts.
KelpDAO added that a second attempt was made to drain an additional 40,000 rsETH (about $95M) using “illusory tricks,” but the funds were protected after KelpDAO secured the system in time.
KelpDAO’s frustration centres on the security design it relied on since 2024: a 1-of-1 DVN (Decentralized Verifier Network) setup for LayerZero cross-chain message verification. Kelp argued that 1-of-1 configurations create a single point of failure; if compromised, attackers can bypass protections.
In parallel, Arbitrum’s Security Council froze 30,766 ETH (~$71M) tied to the KelpDAO exploit. Aave also froze rsETH/wrsETH markets, constrained WETH activity, and lowered borrowing rates across multiple networks. Aave said its smart contracts were not compromised, but the event could still leave bad debt estimated between $177M and $290M. ZRO price reportedly remained unaffected at around $1.63 (+5.57% in 24h).
Federal Reserve Chair nominee Kevin Warsh said tariffs are not the primary cause of persistently high inflation. He argued tariffs may affect specific sectors, but they do not explain the broad, sustained price increases seen across the U.S. economy.
In confirmation hearings, Warsh highlighted that core inflation has stayed elevated even as trade policy changes—implying stronger roles for domestic factors. His framework points to aggregate demand (consumer spending and tight labor markets), fiscal stimulus effects, residual supply chain disruptions, and the history of monetary policy as the main drivers. Studies cited in the article suggest tariffs typically add only modest lifts to overall headline inflation (often a few tenths of a percentage point), with bigger effects concentrated in particular goods.
If Warsh’s view guides future Fed policy, the focus would likely remain on traditional tools: steering the interest-rate trajectory based on employment, wage growth, and core inflation, rather than reacting directly to tariff developments. For markets, this could reduce the probability of tariff-driven hawkish policy expectations.
Keywords: tariffs, inflation, core inflation, monetary policy, labor market, interest rates, fiscal impact.
Coinbase-backed researchers warn the quantum threat to crypto could become significant over time. A new 50-page advisory report says there is no immediate direct risk to Bitcoin (BTC) or Ethereum (ETH), but future fault-tolerant quantum computers could eventually break today’s encryption. The report cites Google research suggesting a quantum computer at the right scale could threaten Bitcoin’s cryptography.
For traders, the key issue is timing and execution. NIST recommends moving to post-quantum cryptography by 2035, but the report argues that schedule may be optimistic. Migration across networks, wallets, and exchanges could take years, with millions of wallets requiring updates. It also flags short-term differences by wallet type: wallets with previously exposed public keys may be more vulnerable.
A major market-relevant metric is performance cost. Adopting quantum-resistant digital signatures could expand blockchain data sizes by up to 38x, raising storage, bandwidth, and processing demands. The report recommends phased “hybrid” migration models that combine current and post-quantum methods during the transition.
Ecosystem actions are already underway. Ethereum teams are exploring quantum-safe signature approaches, while Solana’s teams are developing quantum-resistant wallet protections. Overall, this is a risk-management and infrastructure timeline story—not an immediate catalyst for BTC or ETH price.