A Cointelegraph opinion argues that CBDCs (central bank digital currencies) are crucial for closing the “cash-digital divide.” The piece cites World Bank data showing 1.3 billion adults are unbanked and rely on cash, which limits access to formal banking, credit, and insurance.
The author says governments should actively promote CBDCs as trusted, low-cost, and risk-free alternatives to physical cash. Key barriers for the unbanked include lack of affordable digital payments, missing transaction records, and the high cost of cash-handling infrastructure in remote areas. The article also notes that cash transactions don’t create digital history, which leaves financial providers viewing users as higher risk.
On implementation, it highlights a two-tier distribution model where commercial banks and non-banking intermediaries can reach underserved populations. It also emphasizes offline capabilities for users without reliable internet or mobile connectivity, referencing designs that use short-range communication to keep payments resilient in remote areas.
Privacy-preserving data sharing is presented as another benefit: CBDCs could enable voluntary transaction-data exchange to help build credit scores. The author connects this to improved access to savings, credit, and insurance.
Adoption readiness is framed with World Bank Global Findex 2025 data: 86% of adults own a mobile phone, 79% have a bank account, and 61% use digital payments in low- and middle-income economies—yet 1.3 billion people still lack financial accounts. Overall, the article concludes CBDCs can provide safe, affordable, convenient entry points into the formal economy.
Neutral
CBDCFinancial InclusionOffline PaymentsCentral Bank PolicyWorld Bank Findex
Bitmine Immersion Technologies (BMNR) has launched MAVAN (Made in America VAlidator Network), its institutional-grade platform for ETH staking. MAVAN is built around U.S.-based validator infrastructure for domestic compliance needs, while maintaining a globally distributed architecture for institutions worldwide.
Key updates for ETH staking: Bitmine says it has 3,142,643 ETH staked (about $6.8B), and expects annual staking rewards to approach nearly $300M after MAVAN fully stakes its remaining unstaked ETH in the coming weeks. The company’s estimate is based on a stated 2.83% 7-day BMNR yield. In the past week, it moved 101,776 ETH (about $219M) into MAVAN and plans further scaling.
The launch also highlights institutional backing, naming ARK’s Cathie Wood, Pantera, Kraken, DCG, Galaxy Digital, and Founders Fund. The announcement does not introduce a new token, keeping the focus on ETH staking infrastructure and validator operations.
Trading relevance: This is primarily an infrastructure/flows story for ETH staking—potentially supportive for institutional demand and sentiment, but unlikely to be immediately price-determinative unless Bitmine scales rapidly and terms materially change net staking economics.
Neutral
ETH stakinginstitutional validator infrastructureBitmineU.S.-based compliancePoS infrastructure
City Week 2026 will return to London on 18–19 May at the Royal Garden Hotel, with in-person attendance and virtual access. The event is organized by UK government and major industry bodies and is described as the leading forum for the international financial services community.
The programme is split into four half-day summits. On 19 May, City Week’s “Future of Tokenisation and Digital Assets” summit will feature regulators and market leaders including the US CFTC, the Bank of England, the UK FCA, the SEC commissioner Hester Peirce, and executives from Robinhood UK, Citi, Brevan Howard Digital, Abu Dhabi Global Market, and ESMA.
Also on 19 May, the “AI in Financial Services” summit will cover AI policy and adoption, with participation from UK government and financial institutions including Lloyds Banking Group, the Bank of England, the Financial Stability Board, and senior leaders from IBM UK and Microsoft.
The 18 May sessions cover the Global Financial Centre and the Future of UK Capital Markets, with keynote and panel participation from institutions such as the World Bank, Nasdaq, Euronext, and major banks.
City Week 2026 is invitation-only and targets CEOs and senior board directors from banks, asset managers, and insurers, alongside regulators and policy makers. A full speaker list is available at cityweekuk.com.
Neutral
City Week 2026TokenisationDigital AssetsAI in FinanceUK Regulation
Cipher Digital (CIFR) rose about 9% in pre-market after the company, formerly a bitcoin miner, announced a major pivot to AI infrastructure.
Cipher Digital said it signed a 15-year lease with an investment-grade hyperscale tenant for its third high-performance computing data center campus. The new facility will be built on an existing site, aiming to strengthen partnerships with large technology firms serving AI and cloud workloads.
Separately, Cipher Digital secured a revolving credit facility of up to $200 million, plus an additional $50 million “accordion” option. The funding is described as non-dilutive and backed by a syndicate of global banks, intended to support expansion, improve liquidity, and fund future growth initiatives.
The announcement follows Cipher Digital’s February rebrand from Cipher Mining, aligning the company away from bitcoin production toward industrial-scale data centers for artificial intelligence.
For crypto traders, the key takeaway is that CIFR’s market narrative is shifting from mining economics to data-center demand. While this does not directly change BTC spot supply, it can influence broader sentiment around AI-driven crypto-adjacent equities and corporate capital rotation into AI infrastructure.
Bullish
Cipher DigitalAI data centersHyperscale leaseRevolving credit facilityCrypto-adjacent equities
Bitcoin ETFs recorded nearly $2.5B in net inflows over the past month, sharply reducing earlier year-to-date outflows despite Bitcoin still down about 40% from its October 2025 peak ($126,080). SoSoValue data in the article highlights unusually strong March flow days: nine sessions above $150M, a $458.19M inflow on March 2, and back-to-back ~$200M days on March 16–17.
Analysts described the move as a shift back toward a “structural bid.” Bloomberg Intelligence’s Eric Balchunas called the pattern “incredible fortitude,” while the article also notes Bitcoin’s relative strength during macro uncertainty. It further links the rebound to institutional behavior: ETFs now account for 37% of US stock market volume (The Kobeissi Letter), implying regulated ETF vehicles are increasingly used for hedging and exposure management rather than direct selling.
For traders, persistent Bitcoin ETF inflows can tighten BTC supply/demand and act as a liquidity stabilizer—supportive for near-term risk sentiment and the recovery narrative if the flow trend continues.
ECB President Christine Lagarde says modern economies may adjust faster to inflation spikes than traditional models suggested. She argued that digitalization, supply-chain restructuring, and labor-market shifts have shortened the transmission time of inflation shocks. The article contrasts a historical 6–8 quarters pass-through with a newer estimate of 4–5 quarters.
Lagarde’s framework highlights faster adjustment channels: real-time analytics, more flexible production, and faster price transmission via digital payments and e-commerce. She implies the ECB may need to reassess how quickly it tightens or eases, balancing responsiveness against risks of overly aggressive policy that could harm growth. Markets reacted cautiously: modest bond-yield increases, sector-mixed equities (tech firms generally stronger), and limited euro strength.
The piece also references IMF modeling, estimating adjustment speeds rising ~30% versus pre-pandemic levels, especially in services and digital economies. Overall takeaway for traders: faster inflation spikes raise the chance of quicker policy recalibration cycles, which can shift rates expectations and liquidity conditions. Watch for changes in ECB forward guidance and bond yield trends as evidence accumulates.
Neutral
European Central BankInflation spikesMonetary policyBond yieldsCrypto macro risk
Bitcoin (BTC) traders are bracing for higher downside risk as geopolitical tensions escalate. Iran says negotiations and agreements are impossible under current U.S.-related circumstances, despite U.S. outreach. Hopes for a breakthrough may fade unless a formal meeting is announced soon.
On the market side, crypto forecaster “Roman Trading” (widely followed after past accurate calls) expects a major Bitcoin bottom between September and November, with a potential low cited as $50,000 and even down to ~$31,000 based on a recurring 2022 bear-cycle pattern. He argues the weekly BTC chart resembles the 2022 downturn, though BTC has spent little time below $60,000 recently.
Other analysts are less pessimistic. Ran Neuner highlights BTC strength and points to resistance-free momentum, targeting $77,000. Separately, analyst Nic notes that over $14B in BTC options expire this Friday, with the “maximum pain” level around $75,000—an area that often attracts price into expiration.
Net message for traders: BTC could see volatility into the September–November window, but near-term price behavior may be shaped by options-driven flows around the $75,000–$77,000 region. Investors should treat these forecasts as directional, not guarantees, given the high volatility of crypto markets.
Neutral
BitcoinBTC OptionsGeopolitical RiskTechnical AnalysisSeptember-November Outlook
Bitcoin (BTC) is struggling to hold key levels near $71,890, while weekly performance is about -1.5%. Against weak near-term risk appetite, major finance institutions issued highly divergent BTC price forecasts for end-2026, spanning roughly $50,000 to $266,000.
Standard Chartered cut its BTC target to $100,000 and warned BTC could drop to $50,000 before any recovery, citing fading hopes for immediate Fed rate cuts and slower corporate treasury adoption.
Bernstein kept a $150,000 target, arguing the 2025 late-to-early-2026 sell-off is the weakest bear case in BTC history and driven more by sentiment than fundamentals. It pointed to resilient spot ETF demand and ongoing institutional participation.
JPMorgan was constructive for 2026, framing BTC as a lower-volatility hedge versus gold. Its volatility-adjusted scenario could reach $266,000 if BTC captures a share of private-sector safe-haven flows.
CoinShares projected a $120,000–$170,000 range and expected better momentum in the second half. Citi offered a scenario ladder largely tied to ETF inflows and U.S. regulatory clarity: base ~$143,000, bull ~$189,000, bear ~$78,500.
Fidelity sees 2026 as a consolidation year after BTC’s 2025 peak near ~$126,000, forecasting a narrower $65,000–$75,000 range. Carol Alexander (studying high volatility) suggested $75,000–$150,000, while Peter Brandt warned of a worst-case technical breakdown toward $25,000 if key support fails.
For traders, the key trading variable remains BTC ETF flows plus U.S. regulatory progress. The dispersion of forecasts implies a high-variance market: upside opens if ETF demand re-accelerates, but downside risk rises if liquidity conditions or risk appetite deteriorate.
The EUR/GBP currency pair slipped to around 0.8550 (-0.3%), as investors weighed rising Eurozone inflation fears against mixed UK economic signals. The market focus is on divergent monetary policy expectations between the ECB and the Bank of England, with traders preparing for potential EUR/GBP volatility from inflation surprises.
Eurozone inflation accelerated: headline CPI hit 2.8% YoY (above the ECB 2% target for the eighth straight month). Core inflation stayed at 2.5%, while services inflation remained sticky at 3.1%. These readings are pushing expectations toward a more restrictive ECB stance for longer, with markets pricing roughly a 40% chance of additional rate hikes before year-end.
In the UK, the data mix reduced conviction. Retail sales surprised to +0.8% MoM, beating forecasts, while manufacturing production fell -0.5%. Services PMI stayed expansionary at 52.4, but construction contracted for a third month. Wage growth moderated to 5.7% and unemployment held at 4.2%. Bank of England rate-cut timing is still seen as “early 2026” and remains highly data-dependent.
Technically, EUR/GBP is testing support near 0.8540 and has shown three weeks of marginal declines, with average daily volatility around 0.4%. The 50-day and 200-day moving averages sit at 0.8575 and 0.8520, keeping price action range-bound between these levels.
Overall, EUR/GBP remains sensitive to inflation differentials, and traders should monitor services inflation, wage data, and central-bank communication as the next volatility catalysts.
Neutral
EUR/GBPEurozone InflationECB vs BoEFX VolatilityServices Inflation
Ethereum (ETH) is trading near $2,180 after modest gains, but remains down about 6.3% on the week. Analysts say ETH is stuck around the realized price “break-even” zone, where many holders may opt to exit near cost. On-chain/realized-price analysis places ETH near its average realized price (~$2,300) with resistance implied around the upper realized band (modeled upper bound ~$5,300) and a lower band near ~$1,150.
Support and momentum signals are mixed. One dataset highlights $2,027 as a key support level and notes ETH broke above prior resistance near $2,148, which could revive upside if it holds. Another analyst flags a broader accumulation range between $2,000 and $1,800, with MVRV falling below 0.8—historically associated with undervaluation and prior bottoms. A weekly ascending triangle and a bullish Supertrend flip are cited as early reversal clues after consolidation.
Separately, staking activity is a major tailwind. Everstake reports total staked ETH has reached a record ~38 million ETH, reducing liquid supply available for trading. If demand remains steady, this shift could support a stronger price environment even while ETH faces break-even resistance in the short term.
PayPal Holdings (NASDAQ: PYPL) announced that Alyssa Henry, former CEO of Block’s Square business, has joined the PayPal board of directors. The company also said Gail J. McGovern, a board member since 2015, will not seek re-election at PayPal’s annual meeting in May.
Henry brings more than three decades of experience scaling global commerce, payments, and technology platforms. Her most recent role was CEO of Square at Block, and she previously led the Square Seller business unit. She also held senior leadership positions at Amazon Web Services, helping scale AWS into a global cloud infrastructure leader.
PayPal said Henry’s background is expected to strengthen its strategy as a payments partner for merchants and consumers, citing her experience in payments ecosystems, software-driven merchant solutions, omnichannel payments, and global platform expansion. PayPal’s board will be 12 directors after the change, with 11 independent.
Independent director Ann Sarnoff will succeed McGovern as chair of the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee after the upcoming annual meeting.
For crypto traders, this is a corporate-governance update rather than a direct product or regulatory move. It may modestly affect sentiment around payments adoption, but it is not expected to change PayPal’s cryptocurrency-linked activity immediately.
Neutral
PayPalBoard of DirectorsDigital PaymentsCorporate GovernanceBlock Square
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) says market tokenization could add AU$24 billion in yearly efficiency gains to Australia’s economy and is moving toward practical rollout. Assistant Governor Brad Jones calls tokenization a “how” question, not an “if” question, citing findings from Project Acacia.
Project Acacia tested 20 use cases for tokenized assets across wholesale finance, including government bonds, corporate bonds, repos, and investment funds. It also trialed four settlement “money” options: wholesale CBDC, exchange settlement account balances, stablecoins, and bank deposit tokens.
RBA’s takeaway: stablecoins may fit smaller or newer tokenized markets, while bank deposit tokens may better support larger, more regulated activity because banks already follow prudential rules and can access central bank liquidity. The RBA also noted that a wholesale CBDC is “potentially helpful, but far from essential,” pointing to US tokenized repo activity nearing US$400 billion daily without needing a wholesale CBDC.
Next steps include a digital financial market infrastructure sandbox for gate-tested implementation, updates to exchange settlement account access rules after payment licensing reforms, and new industry coordination. The bank will also expand a Deposit Token Working Group focused on interoperability between deposit tokens issued by different banks.
For crypto traders, this strengthens the regulatory-and-infrastructure narrative for tokenization (especially stablecoins and deposit-token rails) in a major developed market, a trend often linked to real-world asset (RWA) growth.
Banks still struggle to support crypto customers, and bank account freezes remain a key friction point. New reports describe blocked or delayed bank transfers to crypto exchanges, followed by customer complaints that accounts can be frozen after crypto activity.
A case highlighted by Anodos Labs CEO Panos Mekras shows a transfer attempt from an exchange to Revolut that resulted in a three-week freeze, leaving him unable to access funds. The UK Cryptoasset Business Council says about 40% of bank transfers to crypto exchanges face restrictions, while 80% of exchanges report increased friction over the past year. It warns against blanket bans and trading limits that ignore exchanges’ legal status.
Revolut, which supports crypto transfers and debit cards, says freezes are a last resort under AML/KYC. It claims that since Oct 1, only 0.7% of accounts that deposited crypto were restricted after investigation, typically tied to abnormal behavior or links to platforms alleged to involve criminal activity or sanctioned actors.
In the US, the OCC’s latest work on “Chokepoint 2.0” reinforces that de-risking continues, but banks may assist crypto trading in a broker-like role. For traders, the market impact is mainly operational: bank account freezes can raise short-term deposit/withdrawal uncertainty and liquidity timing risk at fiat on/off-ramps, even as longer-term regulatory clarity improves.
Neutral
Bank Account FreezesAML/KYC ComplianceCrypto Exchange BankingRevolut TransfersOCC Chokepoint 2.0
Monument Bank plans to tokenize UK retail deposits of up to £250 million on the Midnight network. The bank says the tokenized deposits will remain interest-bearing, stay fully backed by the bank, and be withdrawable 1:1 in GBP, while continuing to be protected by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme.
This is presented as a first for UK banks using a public-blockchain approach for retail “tokenized deposits,” targeting customers with £50,000–£5 million in investable assets. The launch phase focuses on tracking savings balances, with later phases planned to add tokenized investment products (including private market and commodity funds) and support lending against those holdings inside the Monument app.
Midnight Foundation—developed by Shielded Technologies—is described as the underlying infrastructure, and Monument claims transaction data visibility will be limited to the bank and its customers under UK regulatory and banking compliance rules.
For crypto traders, this is an adoption milestone for regulated RWA rails, but it is unlikely to drive immediate flows into major tokens. The near-term market impact is likely neutral, with the main signal being future demand for tokenized deposits and related financial products.
Nordea analysis says Sweden’s Riksbank can stay patient because domestic price pressures remain muted, keeping inflation close to its 2% CPIF target.
Key drivers highlighted:
- CPIF inflation around 1.9%, stable near target, reducing urgency for rapid rate hikes.
- Core CPIF (excluding energy) near 2.1% and on a gradual decline.
- Unemployment at about 7.5% and slowly rising, limiting demand-side pressure.
- A moderately weak but range-bound SEK trade-weighted index, offering a mild inflation buffer.
Nordea attributes the subdued inflation environment to: easing imported costs from supply-chain normalization, lower energy prices improving household budgets, and a cooling housing market tempering domestic demand.
Policy implications: Sweden’s central bank is inflation-targeting and data-dependent. Nordea notes the Riksbank is unlikely to tighten aggressively unless inflation expectations start to drift up, or the krona weakens enough to pull import inflation higher. Communication may gradually prepare markets for eventual policy normalization, but any adjustment is expected to be cautious and likely small.
International backdrop: With a global shift toward slower tightening, the Riksbank has additional room to wait. However, a significantly weaker SEK remains a key risk.
For traders, the near-term focus is on whether SEK inflation metrics stay anchored. If they do, rate-hike expectations may cool further; if not, renewed hawkish repricing could pressure SEK and volatility across FX risk assets.
Neutral
RiksbankSEKInflation (CPIF)Monetary policyFX outlook
XRP has fallen about 70% from its July 2025 all-time high near $3.65 to around $1.41, based on the article’s figures. A crypto creator, Rob Art (@SirRobArtII1), argues this drawdown may be transitioning into an XRP accumulation phase rather than a continued sell-off.
The piece cites a rebound from roughly $1.13 in early February, after broader market pressure triggered a temporary crash. It claims XRP has since stabilized above about $1.10, which could form a base for renewed upside momentum.
Some observers link the current action to a consolidation cycle lasting over 400 days since early 2025. If that pattern holds, they expect the market groundwork for a larger rally and potentially higher targets than the prior all-time high. In this framing, the XRP accumulation phase reflects gradual buying by long-term holders while price churns in a range.
However, sentiment remains mixed. A portion of the crypto community is skeptical and suggests further downside (including comments forecasting deeper drops). Even so, the article frames the short-term stabilization as the key signal traders are watching.
Overall, the news highlights a possible shift into an XRP accumulation phase, with traders balancing confirmation of support (around $1.10) against the risk of another leg lower.
Neutral
XRPXRP accumulation phasecrypto consolidationRippleprice support
Dogecoin (DOGE) is attracting fresh attention as Qubic confirms a live mainnet upgrade ahead of its April 1 mining launch.
Qubic says its processing speed has tripled, with tick intervals falling from 2 seconds to 0.6 seconds after core optimization. The update is designed to improve mining throughput: each share is validated via Qubic Oracle Machines within a single tick. Faster ticks should speed confirmations and help the network handle higher load once mining begins.
Price action is still under pressure, but analysts point to a potential floor. Cryptoinsightuk notes DOGE’s weekly Relative Strength Index is in compressed territory, often signaling weakening downside momentum. The coin is revisiting a prior accumulation zone—plus it sits at the lower boundary of a bullish pennant pattern. Volume is also supportive, with DOGE trading in its highest historical volume range, which can act as strong support where selling is absorbed.
If DOGE rotates from the current support zone toward the range’s upper boundary, projections suggest upside of up to 300%. A full pennant breakout could extend gains further.
On shorter timeframes, TOPDOGE highlights early signs of a trend shift: a green candle forming at the base of a rising channel, a level historically linked to reliable bottoms. If buyers defend this zone, it could mark the start of a recovery rather than a temporary bounce.
At publication, DOGE trades near $0.09690 (+2.87% over 24h).
Bullish
DogecoinQubic NetworkMining UpgradeTechnical AnalysisVolume Support
XRP network activity has risen to a “critical” level on the XRP Ledger (XRPL), nearing the ~200 average transactions per ledger last seen in past bull markets.
According to Vet (an XRPL validator using the network’s default dUNL), the average transactions per ledger was approaching 200 on March 24. The article notes this zone historically aligned with major XRP rallies, including the 2020 bull market and again in Q4 2024.
The increase has been building over months after a late-2025 low, suggesting momentum is returning to prior cycle highs. Traders may view this as a network-demand confirmation rather than a standalone price catalyst.
On-chain adoption indicators also strengthened: XRPL addresses reached about 8,170,693 as of March 24, 2026, up from 4,866,823 on March 25, 2023 (CryptoQuant). Payment usage remains dominant, with over 50% of transactions reported as payments, potentially involving XRP and Ripple USD (RLUSD).
In addition, XRPL activity tied to DeFi usage accounts for 34.2% of over 1 million sampled transactions, reinforcing XRPL as both a payments rail and an on-chain ecosystem.
Ripple Labs is cited as a key driver via partnerships and product efforts, including a February 2026 partnership with Zand (UAE) to support digital payment infrastructure.
Overall, the XRP network activity uptick—near historically rally-linked levels—points to growing real usage that can support a more constructive trading backdrop.
Key keyword: XRP network activity appears to be back near cycle-relevant thresholds.
Circle’s stock sank about 20% (its worst day since IPO) after a draft “Clarity Act” added language that could treat stablecoin yield “directly or indirectly” as interest-like, potentially constraining USDC revenue tied to reserve income. Coinbase, which shares part of USDC reserve income, fell ~10%, amplifying concerns that USDC yield could be limited.
Counterpoint: analysts say the proposal may be narrower than feared and could still allow rewards linked to user activity (loyalty, promotions, subscriptions), while the “USDC yield” narrative shifts from investment-style returns to core payments/settlement and collateral utility.
Separately, Tether announced its first full independent “Big Four” audit of USDT reserves and said it holds about $192B (mostly U.S. Treasuries), positioning for the GENIUS Act. The CFTC also launched an Innovation Task Force covering crypto, AI and prediction markets.
Trading takeaway: the immediate risk for USDC-linked businesses is regulatory wording around USDC yield, even as broader crypto prices stay firm.
Meta is launching “Meta Small Business,” a company-wide initiative aimed at accelerating AI adoption for small businesses across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. Led by Dina Powell McCormick (president and vice chairman) and Naomi Gleit (product development head), the program will build enhanced AI tools to help SMBs grow and scale more easily in the AI era. Zuckerberg said, in an internal post shared with employees, that it should be easier than ever “to build new businesses” using the services Meta plans to enable.
The announcement follows Meta’s retreat from earlier metaverse ambitions. Last week, Meta said it would retire Horizon Worlds on Quest VR headsets, with VR access ending on June 15. After creator backlash, Meta clarified that some VR social hubs and internal studios will be phased out, while existing VR worlds will remain accessible. Meta’s main growth focus is shifting to its mobile and web apps, amid Reality Labs layoffs and ongoing financial losses.
For crypto traders, the key takeaway is not direct token exposure, but how Meta’s pivot toward AI services and away from metaverse spending could influence broader tech-sector sentiment and risk appetite.
A public debate has emerged over how effectively the Solana Foundation supports builders. Vibhu Norby (Chief Product Officer) defended the Foundation against “glaring inaccuracies,” citing measurable funding and visibility efforts.
The Solana Foundation says Colosseum accelerator alumni have raised over $650M in venture capital. It also highlights large prize hackathons and non-equity grants, including Superteam awards up to $10,000, up to $50,000 for early founders on major accelerator tracks (e.g., Y Combinator), and a $2M prediction markets fund with Kalshi. For open-source and “public good” work, it cites average grant checks around $40,000. Norby also claims tens of millions of dollars per year are distributed by the Foundation and affiliates (Monke Foundry, Metaplex, Wormhole, Bonk), without taking equity.
On visibility, Norby says 300+ ecosystem companies have been spotlighted since Jan 1, alongside videos, 10 podcasts per year, and a network of 50+ “Luminaries.” A Demo Day livestream at mtndao reportedly drove thousands of new downloads for the Tapestry team after Solana Foundation channel exposure.
Market snapshot for SOL: around $92.60, slightly up day-over-day but mixed over the week. Traders note potential near-term upside paths (wave C) with cited targets near $92.7–$94.8, while key support is cited around $88.5 and $86.5.
For traders, the core signal is that “builder support” is being positioned as quantifiable (VC + grants + promotion). That can support Solana sentiment, but near-term price still depends on broader risk appetite.
The ECB expects to publish digital euro standards by this summer, so payment firms can start integrating requirements into terminals and payment apps before any final decision. Piero Cipollone told EU lawmakers that banks, merchants, and licensed providers should begin technical preparation early.
The ECB targets EU legislation in 2026. A 12-month digital euro pilot is planned for the second half of 2027, covering person-to-person payments and offline POS use in a controlled environment. If the legal framework is approved, the ECB aims to be technically ready for a possible first issuance around 2029.
Cipollone stressed the digital euro would complement cash and bank deposits, not replace them. He also framed it as public payment infrastructure used by private intermediaries to offer wallets and services. The ECB reiterated earlier fiscal impact estimates of €4–6 billion in costs for EU banks over four years (about 3% of annual IT maintenance budgets), to be weighed against longer-term benefits such as keeping more merchant fees within Europe.
Accessibility features are planned from the start (e.g., voice commands and large-font displays). The ECB linked the initiative to central-bank-money tokenization work (Pontes, Appia), including settlement potential for stablecoins and tokenized deposits—raising relevance for crypto rails, compliance tooling, and tokenized settlement use cases.
For traders: the news is a concrete policy-and-tech roadmap for a CBDC-adjacent payments layer. It is not a direct token listing catalyst, but it can influence sentiment around stablecoins, tokenization narratives, and institutional-grade settlement infrastructure.
Bhutan continued its March de-risking by moving about 519.7 BTC from government-linked wallets, according to on-chain data. Arkham estimates the transfer is worth roughly $36.7M. Onchain Lens links one receiving wallet to trading firm QCP Capital.
This is the third large BTC outflow from the same tagged sovereign wallet in March. After today’s move, Bhutan still holds about 4,453 BTC (around $315M). The article also recalls earlier March transfers: about $72M across six transactions in the 24 hours before March 18, and $11.8M on March 9.
As of March 12, on-chain rankings placed Bhutan among the top sovereign BTC holders globally, behind the US, the UK, El Salvador and the UAE royal group. The piece reiterates Bhutan’s mining-and-reserve strategy, including hydropower-based mining, a reported $500M Bitdeer deal via Druk Holding & Investments, and plans for a Gelephu Mindfulness City crypto reserve concept involving BTC, ETH and BNB.
For crypto traders, repeated large BTC transfers from a sovereign wallet can reinforce short-term supply expectations, potentially affecting BTC spot/perps positioning and near-term volatility.
Lido has reported weaker finances despite strong overall ETH staking demand. In its 2025 annual report, Lido revenue fell 23% year-on-year to $40.5M (from $52.4M in 2024), with the foundation citing a challenging macro environment and intensifying competition.
The key issue behind Lido revenue down is “rewards compression,” driven by staking outflows and a network-wide decline in staking APR. Lido said outflows were amplified by a structural shift toward exchange and institutional staking, reducing the segment where Lido has category leadership. Even as broader staking demand rose, Lido’s share was pressured: March outflows were led by Lido, with nearly 310K ETH leaving the protocol.
On the demand side, ETH staking reached record levels—about 30.7% of total ETH supply (38.2M staked ETH). The increase was attributed to Spot ETH ETFs and treasury firms enabling yield features for investors. However, Lido’s outflows did not ease in 2026.
Still, Lido maintained a dominant market share of 24% (8.8M staked ETH). For 2026, it plans to diversify, including expanding institutional distribution for low-risk staking segments (e.g., WisdomTree Physical Lido Staked Ether), scaling “Lido Earn,” and growing its validator marketplace.
Lido also outlined “stronger economic alignment” between protocol performance and LDO. A proposal would fund automated LDO buybacks via a treasury surplus fund, with a $10M annual budget floated last November. A formal plan is expected in Q2 2026, though LDO’s market reaction remains uncertain.
Overall: Lido revenue down 40% signals margin pressure, even as ETH staking demand hits new highs.
Deutsche Bank says Germany’s economic recovery will be significantly delayed, with meaningful growth acceleration not expected until at least the second half of 2025. The bank cut its outlook for 2025 growth to about 0.3%, citing weak manufacturing output, subdued export demand, and only modest improvement in domestic consumption.
The revision is tied to structural constraints: demographic headwinds that can tighten labour supply, high energy transition costs weighing on industrial competitiveness, and digital infrastructure gaps limiting productivity in parts of the tech and service sector. Deutsche Bank also highlights insufficient investment, slow bureaucratic approvals that hinder innovation, and skilled labour shortages.
Germany underperforms peers in the bank’s comparative outlook. France is forecast around 0.8% (mid-2025), Italy about 0.7% (mid-2025), Spain roughly 1.2% (early 2025), while the EU average is near 0.9% (mid-2025). For Germany, the timeline points to a late 2025 recovery rather than an early 2025 turnaround.
Beyond 2025, Deutsche Bank assumes gradual improvement if structural reforms progress and export markets stabilize: growth could rise to about 1.2% in 2026 and 1.5% by 2027. It points to potential upside areas such as renewable energy technology manufacturing, pharma/biotech innovation, and specialized machinery exports.
For crypto traders, a prolonged Germany slowdown can translate into risk sentiment shifts via global trade demand, EUR rates expectations, and broader EU growth narratives—likely influencing short-term volatility around macro headlines. Keywords: Deutsche Bank, Germany economic forecast, late-2025 recovery, 0.3% growth, energy transition costs, skilled labour shortages, EU underperformance, fiscal impact.
Neutral
Deutsche Bank forecastGermany recovery delaysEU growth outlookenergy transition costsindustrial weakness
A viral X post by “Maxi” asked XRP holders what they would do if XRP suddenly reached $2,150. The prompt sparked wide reactions from the XRP community, blending emotion and utility-based thinking.
Some responses were cautious and milestone-driven, arguing XRP would need to reclaim its all-time high before $2,150 becomes plausible. Others leaned into personal narratives, saying they would “cry with happiness” or treat a breakthrough as life-changing. Several traders echoed a long-term “utility” thesis: $2,150 would imply XRP plays a key role as a bridge asset in a more interoperable digital payments and stablecoin/tokenized finance ecosystem—though they noted this still depends on real-world adoption and regulatory clarity.
At the time of reporting, XRP was around $1.42—far below the $2,150 scenario—meaning such a move would require major capital inflows and structural shifts well beyond sentiment. Overall, the article frames the discussion as a test of conviction: XRP holders remain ambitious while still watching current market levels.
Disclaimer: Not financial advice.
Bitcoin (BTC) has accelerated upward and broken above the $72,000 area on March 15, 2025, trading around $72,019 on Binance after consolidation. The move turns the prior $70,000–$72,000 zone into a key technical and psychological battleground for traders.
The report points to sustained spot Bitcoin ETF net inflows as a core driver, alongside continued institutional buying and improving regulatory clarity. Macro uncertainty—especially lingering inflation concerns—also reinforces the “digital gold/hedge” narrative.
On-chain, the outlook is supportive: whale-related activity is reportedly rising, and exchange BTC reserves appear slightly lower, implying less immediate sell pressure and potential accumulation.
Technically, holding strength above $70,000 has triggered additional momentum and algorithmic buy orders. Sentiment shifts from neutral toward “greedy,” but not to extreme levels. The article also notes that altcoins often lag or react after BTC moves, while Bitcoin dominance remains firm.
For positioning, the market’s next test is whether BTC can consolidate $72,000 as support or whether the round-number breakout triggers a volatility-driven pullback—similar to past episodes. Longer-term, the cycle is framed as more “mature,” with regulated products and broader corporate participation, ahead of the next halving expected in 2028.
A new Ethereum rich list ranks wallet wealth using **Aggregated USD Holdings** (ETH + ERC-20 tokens + stablecoins in USD), excluding the Beacon deposit contract and token contracts. The headline change is large: the same top-10,000 addresses show **$342B vs $116.5B** when tokens and stablecoins are included.
Key findings for traders: **stablecoins are ~26%** of major balances and account for most “missing” value in the ETH-only view. In the ETH-based ranking, up to **60–70%** of value appears overlooked because liquidity is concentrated in stablecoins and DeFi-related tokens rather than pure ETH. The top-holder set also looks younger: only **~17%** of top holders are older than five years in the Aggregated view, versus about **one-third** in the ETH-only list.
Notable example: **Binance Vault** is ranked #1 in the Ethereum rich list by Aggregated USD, holding about **$0.68B in ETH** but **over $23B** in stablecoins/ERC-20s; token value outweighs ETH by roughly **34:1**. The Beacon deposit contract (81.2M ETH) is excluded because it is a staking deposit log, not withdrawable custody.
Overall, this Ethereum rich list methodology highlights a different “map” of on-chain power—more working-capital-style liquidity and less single-asset ETH concentration—before follow-up analysis on how capital moves.
Neutral
Ethereum rich listAggregated USD holdingsStablecoinsOn-chain analyticsWhale distribution
Deribit will settle about $14.16B in Bitcoin options on Friday, with expiry at 08:00 UTC (15:30–16:00 local via Deribit Index 30-minute TWAP). The focus is the estimated “Max Pain Price” around $75,000, a level often viewed as a “magnetic price” where options hedging can mechanically drive BTC toward key strikes as settlement approaches.
BTC is around $71,617, leaving roughly $3,400 to the $75,000 area. This expiry is highlighted as one of the month’s biggest risk events, with the expiring contracts representing nearly 40% of Deribit open interest. “Max Pain” refers to the strike where option buyers are most disadvantaged (or sellers least disadvantaged) at settlement, and Deribit stresses the settlement uses a time-weighted index window rather than a single tick.
Sentiment looks mixed. Downside protection demand remains elevated even with BTC above $70K, implying traders may expect churn and range behavior rather than a clean breakout. Volatility has reportedly compressed (DVOL down for BTC/ETH), suggesting calmer conditions into expiry, while market commentary frames this period as “price compression but stabilization,” potentially setting up the next move after Friday.
Key trader watchpoints: whether hedging flows pull spot toward $75,000 into the TWAP window, and whether implied volatility stays contained instead of spiking.