Charles Schwab says it will launch spot crypto trading in 2026, with an initial rollout starting this year focused on BTC and ETH. The move brings spot crypto access to a major US brokerage channel, which could improve liquidity and lower friction for traditional investors.
Traders should watch this as a mainstream adoption signal that may lift sentiment around spot crypto demand. However, near-term impact may be limited because key product terms were not fully disclosed, including custody model, fees, and exact launch timing by asset. The latest guidance also emphasizes that the firm is positioning the service as direct trading rather than trying to match exchange-style features.
Bitmine Immersion Technologies (BMNR) says its ETH holdings have reached 4,803,334 ETH, valued at about $2,123 per token (Coinbase reference). The position is ~3.98% of circulating ETH supply (120.7M), putting it over 79% of its stated 5% total-supply target. The company also reports total crypto/cash/equity of about $11.4B, including 198 BTC and other stakes.
On staking, Bitmine discloses 3,334,637 ETH staked via its MAVAN platform, with a 7-day annualized yield of 2.78% and reported annualized staking revenue of $196M. It also says it bought 71,252 ETH in the prior week—the fastest weekly pace since Dec. 22, 2025—framing this as increased institutional demand for Ethereum.
Separately, BMNR received approval to uplist from NYSE American to the main NYSE. Trading on the regular NYSE is set to begin April 9, 2026 under the same ticker.
For traders, the key signal is continued spot accumulation and heavier staking deployment by a public treasury vehicle tied to ETH, which can support sentiment around ETH flows and derivatives positioning.
The article argues that institutional crypto flows increasingly depend on prime brokerages and off-exchange custody to meet TradFi custody standards. It claims “institutional crypto” will grow because the infrastructure now exists to trade without holding assets directly on an exchange—reducing exchange counterparty risk.
Key examples cited include Ripple’s $1.25B Hidden Road acquisition (Hidden Road is described as a global multi-asset prime broker) and Standard Chartered building a crypto prime brokerage via its venture arm. The author, Dominic Lohberger (Sygnum), frames this as a shift away from the old model where exchanges combined trading, custody, and clearing roles—risks made obvious by events like the FTX collapse and the Bybit hack.
Two main operating models are outlined:
1) Off-exchange custody (tri-party style): institutions keep assets with a third-party custodian, while exchanges receive mirrored balances. When collateral is segregated/off-balance-sheet, exchange default risk is largely eliminated.
2) Prime brokerage: primes provide unified onboarding across venues, cross-venue net settlement, and leverage. Here, counterparty risk moves from the exchange to the prime broker.
A major trading implication is collateral economics. The article says bank-grade custody enables high-yield collateral (notably short-dated US Treasurys/T-bills) that can be pledged at loan-to-value without the assets leaving the custodian, potentially turning de-risking into “yield capture.” It also notes stablecoins and tokenized money market funds as expanding collateral types.
Overall, the piece predicts more global systemically important banks will enter off-exchange custody, widening eligible collateral and strengthening prime-broker custody tooling—until the distinction matters less than the outcome: institutional-grade risk management.
An alleged darknet actor, “Jinkusu”, is selling an AI cybercrime tool that uses deepfakes and real-time voice modulation to bypass KYC identity checks at banks and crypto platforms. Dark Web Informer reported the threat via an X post, while Vecert Analyzer said the kit can perform AI face swaps using InsightFace and evade biometrics with voice manipulation.
Security leaders call it a “wake-up call” for financial verification. Deddy Lavid, CEO of Cyvers, warned that as AI lowers the barrier to synthetic identity fraud, the “front door” remains vulnerable, and urged a layered defense combining identity checks with real-time AI monitoring. Binance’s chief security officer Jimmy Su previously warned (May 2023) that improving deepfake models could eventually defeat KYC with just a single photo.
The AI cybercrime tool also supports non-technical romance scams such as “pig butchering.” Crypto investors lost $5.5 billion to about 200,000 flagged pig-butchering cases in 2024.
Jinkusu is suspected to be the same actor behind the phishing-as-a-service kit “Starkiller” (Feb. 2026). Unlike HTML phishing kits, Starkiller uses a real-time reverse proxy by running a headless Chrome instance in a Docker container and relaying user input (including login credentials) to the attacker, according to Abnormal.ai.
Even as crypto phishing losses fell 83% in 2025, wallet drainer scripts reportedly stayed active and new malware continued to appear, per Scam Sniffer (Jan report).
Bearish
AI cybercrimedeepfakesKYC bypasscrypto scamsphishing-as-a-service
Strategy extends its BTC accumulation streak with a $329.9M purchase of 4,871 BTC. The acquisition price averaged $67,718, below the recent market range (briefly above $71,000).
Key figure: Strategy now holds 766,970 BTC, valued around $58.02B at an average cost of ~$75,644 per BTC (as of 4/5/2026).
Funding mechanism: For this buy, Strategy raised $227.3M through STRC preferred share issuance. STRC shares have traded around $99–$101 since February, giving Strategy additional liquidity without exhausting treasury supply. Strategy also sold about $72M of MSTR common stock, which was around $119.73.
STRC structure and near-term catalyst: STRC’s issuance/credit needs depend on BTC price levels. The article notes Strategy will retain an 11.5% interest in the coming month, with the next STRC ex-dividend date on April 15—potentially supporting further STRC-driven buying demand.
Context and second player: Metaplanet also restarted its credit-backed BTC strategy in 2026, adding 5,000 BTC in Q1 and aiming for 100,000 BTC by year-end.
Market takeaway: While BTC is in a tight range and below Strategy’s average cost, continued balance-sheet purchases supported by STRC (and related credit inflows) may help underpin spot demand during the current bear-to-range regime.
U.S. firm Strategy (Michael Saylor) bought 4,871 BTC over the past week at an average price of $67,718, spending about $329.9 million. Total holdings rise to 766,970 BTC, around 3.8% of circulating supply.
Strategy funded much of this BTC purchase by selling $227.3 million in STRC preferred shares, with the rest raised via $72 million in common stock sales. Based on a BTC price near $69,120, the position shows roughly $5 billion in unrealized losses (~8%), but management continues to frame Bitcoin as a long-term strategic bet.
The latest pace aligns with broader institutional demand: CryptoQuant cited ~44,000 BTC accumulated by Strategy by end-March, near the ~50,000 BTC reportedly added by spot Bitcoin ETFs in the same period. For traders, steady Strategy BTC buying can support sentiment, though the buying pace is described as slower than the prior two weeks.
OFA Group (OFAL) has partnered with MD Queens Development to tokenize a mixed-use real estate project worth about $1B in Long Island City through its Hearth RWA platform. OFA Group expects to earn around $15M by providing blockchain technology for converting a warehouse into a residential and commercial tower.
Per the announcement, the project will be tokenized early. Token holders will receive a stake in the project’s SPV (special purpose vehicle), not direct ownership of the property. This structure is intended to enable participation in real estate cash flows without requiring investors to buy property directly.
From a crypto-trading perspective, OFA Group tokenization of a large, real-world asset (RWA) project reinforces the trend of using blockchain rails for regulated-style investment access. However, the direct effect on liquid crypto markets may be limited unless OFA introduces a tradeable token with clear market demand and liquidity. Still, developments like this can support sentiment around RWA adoption and on-chain asset issuance over the medium to long term.
Bullish
RWA TokenizationReal Estate BlockchainOFA GroupPrivate SPV StructureLong Island City Development
A paid AMBCrypto post reviews 10 “AI crypto trading bots” for 2026 that claim “passive income” through 24/7 automated execution and continuous market analysis, sometimes with backtesting. It frames these “AI crypto trading bots” as tools to reduce manual chart monitoring rather than as market-moving news.
For traders evaluating AI crypto trading bots, the post highlights practical setup checks: choose low-maintenance deployment, match bot aggressiveness to your risk tolerance, diversify across coins and exchanges, and test strategies using historical data before going live. It also warns the piece is not investment advice and provides no performance metrics or regulatory details.
Top picks listed include BitsStrategy (fully managed), Cryptohopper (customizable AI + backtesting + signal marketplace), 3Commas (multi-exchange automation + copy trading), Pionex (arbitrage across exchanges), WunderTrading (social/copy trading), TradeSanta (pre-built hands-off strategies), HaasOnline (advanced customization), Quadency (multi-exchange + portfolio management + multi-strategy bots), Shrimpy (automated rebalancing), and 8BTC (high-frequency scalping).
Trading takeaway: treat this as a shortlist to research execution risk (slippage, fees), API/exchange reliability, and strategy robustness—more like operational due diligence than a direct price catalyst for any specific coin.
Neutral
AI crypto trading botsAutomated tradingCopy/social tradingArbitrage botsBacktesting & risk controls
CryptoSlate’s project report reviews G Coin, the utility token from Playnance, positioning it as the “economic rail” for gasless on-chain entertainment across gaming, trading, betting, and prediction markets. G Coin is described within a three-layer stack: PlayBlock (execution), G Coin (economic layer), and consumer/partner portals (product layer).
The report says the technical architecture looks coherent: an EVM-compatible L3 using Ethereum settlement, Arbitrum Orbit, and Gelato Rollup-as-a-Service. It also cites strengths such as gasless UX, non-custodial wallet abstraction, a public GitHub footprint, and CertiK coverage.
However, diligence is mixed. Key concerns include inconsistent public supply/market-cap reporting across data sources, a very large token-sale/minting allocation (70.1% of max supply) described as ongoing with no predefined end date and immediate presale delivery, and ambiguous sell-pressure controls (burns/locks not clearly aligned). Security coverage is partial (about 27.97% of code audited) with acknowledged findings and no public bug bounty. Legal/issuer transparency is also flagged: the legal entity (Playnance OÜ) and public-facing founder branding show a mismatch, weakening outside confidence.
Net assessment: Playnance appears real, but G Coin is high-risk and “far from institution-grade disclosure,” despite utility framing being clearer than many game tokens.
Bearish
G CoinPlaynanceGameFi/On-chain GamingTokenomics RiskSecurity & Audits
XRP price is trading around $1.339 after rebounding from the $1.28–$1.29 demand zone. Buyers pushed XRP back into a short-term supply area between $1.34 and $1.35, where the chart has capped price repeatedly.
Near-term levels: Resistance sits at $1.34–$1.35. A clean break and close above this zone could open the way toward $1.42, then the next supply cluster near $1.47–$1.50, keeping $1.45 in focus if the sell wall fails. If momentum fades, the first support is $1.31–$1.32, followed by the more important $1.28 level.
Derivatives signals: Open interest rose from $892M to $951M as XRP fell below $1.31, the highest reading in over two weeks. Funding remains negative (around -0.0010), suggesting shorts are paying longs and bearish positioning is building. Liquidation clusters total about $3.055B, including a notable ~$318.57M cluster near $1.356—potentially supporting a short squeeze if XRP rallies into that area.
Broader trend: Despite the bounce, XRP remains inside a falling channel formed after the July 2025 peak near $3.6. Repeated failed breakouts at prior resistance points (e.g., around $3.18, $3.10, $2.41, and $1.6) reinforce that the current test is not yet a confirmed trend reversal.
Shiba Inu (SHIB) has broken above a long-standing descending trendline after multiple failed attempts, signaling renewed bullish momentum.
On the technical side, SHIB formed the descending trendline after an intraday high near $0.00000725 on Feb. 14 acted as resistance. Break attempts on Mar. 16 and Mar. 25 around $0.00000644 and $0.00000628 were rejected. Yesterday, SHIB rebounded from about $0.00000579 to close at $0.00000600—the first daily close above the trendline. The move also pushed SHIB above the 50-day moving average near $0.00000591. Traders now watch the 100-day moving average around $0.00000673 as the next potential upside target.
On-chain, CryptoQuant data shows exchange netflow of -133,335,400,000 SHIB over the past 24 hours, a 9.46% increase. Negative netflow implies more SHIB was withdrawn from exchanges than deposited, reducing immediate sell pressure and pointing to holder accumulation. Trading volume rose 41% over the same period, while taker buy activity slightly exceeded taker sell volume, suggesting growing participation.
At the time of writing, SHIB is trading around $0.000006022, up 3.77% in 24 hours. If the Shiba Inu breakout holds and accumulation persists, bulls may press toward the next moving-average resistance levels, strengthening the short-term uptrend bias.
Bitcoin price today is extending gains after reclaiming $70,000. BTC trades around $69,600, up more than 4% in 24 hours, and briefly hit $70,275. The move lifted total crypto market cap to about $2.46T and pushed Bitcoin’s market cap back above $1.4T.
The catalyst is geopolitical risk sentiment. Reports of a potential 45-day ceasefire in the Middle East boosted demand for risk assets, and traders quickly bid BTC higher.
Liquidations also amplified the breakout. Over $325M in leveraged positions were wiped out, pressuring shorts and creating a feedback loop that can drive price toward nearby resistance.
Oil volatility added context. West Texas Intermediate saw sharp swings during the session (roughly $112 down to ~$115, then back above $110) amid uncertainty around supply and negotiations. Reports of delayed US strikes on Iranian infrastructure helped calm immediate fears, reinforcing the “de-escalation” narrative.
Technically, Bitcoin has broken out of a wedge pattern, supporting continuation. Key level to watch is $70,000: a clean retest could confirm upside. A rejection near current levels may trigger a short-term pullback as the market consolidates.
Elsewhere, ETH rose about 5% to ~$2,165 and altcoins like ADA and LINK gained more than 6%. Overall, the strength across majors suggests broad relief rather than a single-asset move—though volatility remains high.
Bitcoin price action remains supported, but traders should monitor ceasefire headlines and whether BTC can sustain above $70,000.
North Korean DeFi infiltration is again in focus after a major supply-chain-style attack on Drift Protocol. Earlier reporting by security researcher Taylor Monahan claims DPRK-linked IT workers contributed to 40+ DeFi projects over ~seven years via normal hiring channels, using stolen or “synthetic” identities rather than only direct smart-contract hacking.
The latest update centers on the April 1 Drift Protocol incident. Drift said it had medium confidence the attacker was UNC4736 (North Korea–aligned). The protocol described social engineering and booby-trapped developer tooling—malicious tasks embedded in VS Code/Cursor configurations—meant to compromise contributor repositories and then trigger the exploit, resembling a supply-chain compromise.
Broader context cited in the article links DPRK activity to groups including Lazarus/APT38/AppleJeus and highlights enforcement and tracing efforts (OFAC/Chainalysis), with large volumes tied to DPRK-linked crypto activity over recent years.
For traders, North Korean DeFi infiltration narratives typically raise perceived protocol risk, widen risk premia, and pressure DeFi sentiment. In the short term, expect extra volatility around governance, integrations, and any bridge/liquidity flows tied to impacted protocols—especially after headline incidents like Drift.
Bearish
North Korean DeFi InfiltrationDeFi SecuritySupply-Chain AttacksDrift Protocol HackOFAC Sanctions
Rwanda’s National Bank (NBR) has reiterated a crypto ban tied to the Rwandan franc (RWF). It warned that crypto assets involving RWF remain prohibited for payments, FRW↔crypto conversion, and any FRW-linked P2P trading.
The warning follows Bybit’s update enabling RWF-priced crypto trading on its P2P marketplace. NBR also cautioned that users face “serious financial risks” and may have no legal recourse if losses occur.
Rwanda has maintained tight restrictions since 2018 and is drafting a licensing framework for virtual asset service providers. The proposals include bans on crypto mining, mixer services, and tokens pegged to the local currency, alongside a regulatory approval pathway.
For traders, this is a targeted enforcement signal: access to RWF on/off-ramps and FRW-linked liquidity (including the Bybit P2P feature) is likely to be further restricted, reinforcing the broader Rwanda crypto ban theme.
Neutral
Rwanda regulationCentral Bank (NBR)Bybit P2PRWF crypto banCrypto licensing
Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury buys resumed after a brief pause. The firm said it bought 4,871 BTC for about $330 million last week, mainly funded via its variable-rate preferred share program (STRC). This adds to its Bitcoin holdings, bringing the total to nearly 767,000 BTC, worth roughly $53.3 billion at the time of reporting.
The latest Bitcoin purchase was executed around $67,700 per BTC, below the BTC level at the time of reporting, reinforcing that Strategy is still accumulating through a volatile market. In the same period, Strategy issued about $227 million of dividend-paying STRC, compared with roughly $72 million of common share issuance.
Strategy also disclosed a large paper drawdown: the value of its Bitcoin holdings fell by $14.46 billion in Q1 2026 (excluding operating costs). Co-founder Michael Saylor signaled a return to buying with “Back to Work,” while CEO Phong Le noted retail exposure is increasingly shifting toward STRC rather than common stock.
For traders, the key takeaway is fresh corporate Bitcoin demand, but the funding structure tied to STRC also suggests continued pressure from unrealized drawdowns—important for sentiment and potential volatility around any future equity actions.
Strategy (MSTR) buys 4,871 Bitcoin for about $329.9M, according to a Monday filing. The average purchase price is roughly $67,718 per BTC.
Total holdings rise to 766,970 BTC, with an all-in average cost near $75,644. With Bitcoin trading around $69,120, the treasury is about 8% underwater (≈$5B unrealized loss).
Funding came mostly from sales of STRC preferred stock ($227.3M), with the remainder from common stock sales ($72M). CryptoQuant previously estimated MSTR accumulated ~44,000 BTC in the prior 30 days, positioning it as a top corporate buyer alongside spot ETFs (≈50,000 BTC).
For traders, the ongoing corporate Bitcoin bid supports sentiment, but the mark-to-market drawdown highlights treasury-buyer sensitivity to volatility.
Strategy resumed Bitcoin purchases in early April, adding about $330 million by buying 4,871 BTC for ~$329.9 million (~$67,718/BTC). The move restarts acquisitions after a brief pause and brings its total holdings to roughly 767,000 BTC, valued around $53 billion at ~$69,430 per Bitcoin. Strategy’s unrealized loss on digital assets is still substantial, with figures cited near ~$5 billion.
Funding came from Strategy’s ongoing at-the-market (ATM) share program, per an SEC filing. In the final two days of March, the company sold about 2.3 million shares of STRC preferred stock for $227 million and 583,000 MSTR common shares for $72 million, with no Bitcoin buys in that period. From April 1–April 5, it sold 1+ million STRC shares for about $103 million and 593,000 MSTR shares for $72 million. Combined net proceeds across both windows were about $474 million, with $330 million redeployed into Bitcoin.
For Q1, Strategy reported an unrealized loss on digital assets of $14.5 billion, partially offset by a $2.4 billion deferred tax benefit. Digital assets were carried at about $52 billion, with a $1.7 billion deferred tax asset fully reserved.
(Reporter note: the company’s reported position is subject to ongoing filings; this is a developing story.)
Global debt reached $348 trillion by end-2025, with the steepest annual rise since the pandemic, as governments and companies plan heavier borrowing in 2026. Plans to borrow an extra $29 trillion from bond markets next year have raised fiscal sustainability concerns.
Financial commentator Max Keiser argues this macro backdrop is boosting Bitcoin. He links escalating geopolitical tensions and debt to a potential “flight to hard assets,” suggesting investors may prefer Bitcoin over traditional instruments during war or policy instability. Keiser highlights Bitcoin’s fixed 21 million supply and decentralized design, claiming it is harder for governments to debase or confiscate.
The article notes sovereign debt now exceeds $106 trillion and that investors are tracking rate and fiscal-policy sensitivity. It cites the IIF that the debt surge in 2025 was concentrated in the US, China and the euro area (over $10 trillion), while advanced and emerging economies together hold $231.7 trillion and $116.6 trillion in debt, respectively.
Traders should watch for how the “Bitcoin as a hedge” narrative interacts with risk-off flows tied to bond yields, inflation expectations, and geopolitical headlines. If debt fears intensify, Bitcoin could see supportive momentum; if macro data improves or tensions ease, the narrative may cool.
Keywords: Bitcoin, global debt, geopolitics, inflation hedge, macro risk.
Strategy Inc. (MSTR) reported new Form 8-K updates covering its at-the-market (ATM) issuance and Bitcoin treasury activity for early April 2026.
Stock activity (Apr 1–5, 2026): Strategy sold 1,027,255 shares of STRC stock for $102.7M notional, generating about $102.6M net proceeds. It also sold 593,294 shares of MSTR stock for about $72.0M in net proceeds.
Bitcoin activity (Apr 1–5, 2026): Strategy purchased 4,871 Bitcoin for an aggregate $329.9M, at an average price of $67,718 per Bitcoin. As of Apr 5, 2026, it held 766,970 Bitcoin with an aggregate purchase price of $58.02B (average $75,644).
Financial markers: Strategy reported a $14.46B unrealized loss on digital assets for the three months ended Mar 31, 2026, and $2.42B in deferred tax benefits. Digital asset carrying value as of Mar 31, 2026 was $51.65B. The filing also notes remaining ATM capacity for multiple stock tickers, including MSTR and STRC.
Keyword focus: the company’s continued Bitcoin buying (4,871 BTC) was paired with share sales and ongoing ATM availability.
Strategy Inc. (MSTR) bought $330M of bitcoin (BTC-USD) from April 1–April 5, 2026. As of the report’s cutoff, the company recorded a $14.46B unrealized loss on its digital-asset holdings for Q1.
The buy adds to Strategy’s long-term bitcoin treasury strategy, but the large unrealized loss highlights continued downside pressure on the spot BTC price versus the firm’s cost basis. For traders, this is a reminder that even “dip buying” by major holders can coincide with weak market valuation and negative mark-to-market sentiment.
Key figures: $330M bitcoin purchased; $14.46B unrealized loss (Q1). With bitcoin as the primary exposure, any further BTC volatility could quickly widen or narrow paper losses, which in turn may influence retail and institutional sentiment around balance-sheet-driven demand for bitcoin.
Samson Mow says a rushed post-quantum cryptography upgrade for Bitcoin could introduce new vulnerabilities. He pushed back on Coinbase executives’ calls for faster preparation against future quantum computing threats.
Mow argues that post-quantum cryptography may protect Bitcoin from quantum computers, but implementing it too quickly could create compatibility problems and reduce network efficiency due to much larger signature sizes. He warns a “poorly timed transition” could leave Bitcoin weaker against today’s risks before it addresses future ones.
A key concern is performance: post-quantum cryptography signatures could be 10–125x larger than current ones, potentially cutting throughput dramatically. Mow links the likely impact on block size and transaction capacity to a renewed risk of “Blocksize Wars 2.0,” echoing past community splits over scaling and control.
Still, he says preparation work should continue. Mow notes quantum computers may not arrive for another 10–20 years, making “rushing the fix” the worst option. The debate was reignited by new research discussed alongside Google and Caltech’s findings.
Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest bought CoreWeave (CRWV) during the recent AI rally. ARK added 83,764 shares on March 30, March 31 and April 1, worth about $6.9 million at the latest close. The purchase came after CRWV rebounded sharply from its March lows.
Price context was fast-moving: CoreWeave fell to $69.15 on March 30, then jumped to $77.47 on March 31 and $82.24 on April 2. The article frames the stock’s quick recovery as momentum attracting speculative traders, especially after a high-profile buy.
ARK’s thesis is consistent with its earlier technology and crypto-adjacent allocations. The report notes ARK also continued buying other growth and digital-asset-linked names earlier this year, including Robinhood and Coinbase. For traders, the key link is that AI infrastructure spending and risk appetite often move alongside broader tech sentiment.
Technically, the article suggests the chart is more constructive after the rebound, but needs confirmation. Bulls would look for CRWV to hold above the upper-$70s and build support. A slip back below the March rebound zone could quickly fade the momentum.
Bitcoin mining is getting harder for retail investors as ASIC and electricity costs squeeze margins, while difficulty and halving reduce rewards. In response, Bitcoin Everlight claims it is building a mining alternative that does not require mining hardware or power bills.
The project is described as a transaction routing and validation layer running alongside Bitcoin (not a fork, not a competing chain). Users who hold BTCL and activate a shard participate in the infrastructure and receive a share of network fees. The BTCL token is in Presale Phase 4 at $0.0014; the next phase is $0.0016, and the stated launch price is $0.0310. The article says more than $2.5M has been raised, with a minimum entry of $10.
Shard economics are tiered: Jade (about $100) targets 6% APY paid in BTCL during the presale, then rewards switch to BTC sourced from live transaction fees at mainnet. Higher tiers include Azure ($500, 12% APY), Violet ($1,500, 20% APY), and Radiant ($3,000+ with 28% or more). Shards automatically upgrade or step down based on balances to align participants with holding.
Token allocation claims: 45% of the 21B BTCL supply to presale participants, 20% for node/shard rewards, 15% for exchange liquidity, 10% for the team (vesting), and 10% for ecosystem/treasury. The article also highlights pre-presale security reviews and non-custodial operation.
For traders: this is a sponsored promotion, but it is directly framed around “Bitcoin mining” disruption and a new yield narrative tied to BTCL presale pricing and fee-sourced rewards.
Michael Saylor’s NASDAQ-listed company, Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), has resumed its Bitcoin accumulation after a brief weekly pause. Last week it bought 4,871 BTC at an average price of $67,718 per Bitcoin, spending about $330 million.
This increases Strategy’s total holdings to 766,970 BTC, acquired for roughly $58.02 billion at an average cost of $75,644 per Bitcoin. Despite a market bounce toward $70,000, the company remains in a paper loss position, with the current value of its stash estimated around $53.3 billion.
Strategy’s stock ticker (MSTR) rose nearly 4% in pre-market trading, though it is still down from around $160 to about $124.54 year-to-date.
The update also reignited public debate on X between Saylor and long-time Bitcoin critic Peter Schiff. Schiff argued Bitcoin’s 5-year gains are far smaller than traditional assets, while Saylor highlighted higher annualized returns tied to Strategy’s accumulation start around August 2020.
For traders, the key takeaway is that large, recurring Bitcoin spot demand from a major corporate holder continues—supportive for sentiment, even if near-term price action already looks strong.
Crypto commentator Max Keiser warns that rising global debt and escalating geopolitical conflict could push investors toward Bitcoin. His core argument: when governments face overwhelming debt, they may respond through inflation, asset seizures, or war—channels that Bitcoin’s fixed 21M supply is designed to resist.
Keiser points to looming fiscal pressure. The OECD is cited saying governments and corporations plan to borrow $29 trillion from bond markets in 2026. Broader debt context is also provided: global debt reached $348 trillion at end-2025, up nearly $29 trillion year-on-year, the fastest rise since the pandemic (Institute of International Finance). Sovereign debt is described as exceeding $106T globally, with public borrowing remaining the main driver.
Geopolitical risk is treated as an additional catalyst. Keiser argues that traditional financial assets may face higher risk during war-related uncertainty, while Bitcoin cannot be debased or confiscated in the same way—potentially positioning it as a store of value.
For traders, the takeaway is a narrative tailwind: if capital seeks “hard assets” as interest-rate sensitivity and fiscal stress rise, Bitcoin could see renewed demand and volatility. The article frames this as a potential setup for a “parabolic” repricing if debt and conflict pressures persist.
Bitcoin and Ether rebounded after the Easter break as traders priced improved geopolitical odds for a possible U.S.-Iran ceasefire. Reports of talks for a 45-day ceasefire and higher ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz helped ease supply and risk concerns, quickly flipping sentiment.
Bitcoin rose about 3% to $69,120, its highest in over a week, while Ether outperformed, up around 3.7% to $2,130 (best daily move in several sessions). Solana gained to $82 (+2%), XRP to $1.34 (+2.2%), and Dogecoin to $0.093 (+1.7%). Total market cap climbed back above $2.5T.
A key driver was a crowded-positions unwind in derivatives. Liquidations totaled roughly $273.8M across 24 hours involving 81,000+ traders. Short liquidations were $196.7M versus $77.1M long liquidations, including a $10.17M ETH-USDT short forced close on Binance. Bitcoin traded in a $66,634–$69,350 range during the day, reflecting volatility as bearish positioning was cleared.
Market structure signals follow-through but also caution: futures open interest rose ~5% to $107B and trading volume jumped ~64% to $129B. On-chain, accumulation appears to be slowing, with long-term holder net position change down to 87,038 BTC. Supply clusters sit near $69,422, with thinner resistance above ~$70,685. The article frames the move as an upside test of the $65K–$73K conflict-era range, while longer-term valuation models suggest no overheating.
North Korea-linked hackers exploited the Drift Protocol on April 1, stealing about $285M in one of the largest DeFi hacks of 2026. Drift says the attack was a six-month intelligence operation aimed at a governance compromise.
The Drift Protocol exploit used a fake token (CarbonVote/CVT) to manipulate Drift price oracles, making malicious collateral appear legitimate. Attackers then abused Solana durable nonces with pre-signed transactions to automate withdrawals—31 rapid transfers in roughly 12 minutes.
Drift also highlights a social-engineering phase starting around October 2025, when attackers posed as a quantitative trading firm and built relationships with contributors before targeting multisig/admin access. Elliptic and TRM Labs attributed the activity to DPRK.
Market read-through for traders: DRIFT fell more than 40%, and Drift TVL reportedly dropped from ~$550M to under $250M. Some Solana-dependent protocols paused operations. The incident renewed scrutiny of cross-chain controls tied to USDC/Circle’s CCTP, with commentary suggesting faster freezes could have reduced damage.
If you trade DRIFT, expect higher volatility, tighter risk limits on Solana perp/DeFi liquidity, and potential knock-on hedging flows tied to USDC and derivatives.
Bearish
North KoreaDrift Protocol exploitSolanaDeFi governance attackUSDC/CCTP
A sponsored promo on crypto.news claims NOW DeFi quantum cloud mining is turning BTC and XRP holders toward automated “income strategies.” The pitch says “hands-free” allocation of computing power across green-energy data centers (via AI/“quantum algorithm”) can generate daily passive income, reducing chart-watching and spot-volatility risk.
NOW DeFi quantum cloud mining mechanics highlighted in the article include a $22 instant welcome bonus, 100% hands-free daily strategy credits, withdrawals enabled once the balance reaches $100, and “zero hidden fees.” It also lists dual-layer security (McAfee + Cloudflare) and multi-asset support across XRP, BTC, ETH, SOL, DOGE, USDC, USDT, BNB, and BCH. Example ROI tables range from $4/day on a $100 USDC/USDT plan to a high-capital “Quantum Apex Hyd Max” example targeting $12,777/day with a claimed $890,000 requirement.
Key takeaway for traders: treat these figures as marketing claims—NOW DeFi quantum cloud mining is third-party content and explicitly not investment advice. The main market relevance is sentiment impact: retail may rotate from spot to centralized/contract-based yield products rather than direct BTC/XRP spot exposure, which can matter at the margin during consolidation. Consider counterparty and contract risks versus simply holding spot BTC or XRP.
Swiss International Gemlab (SIG) has launched a new AI gemstone grading workflow, aiming to improve accuracy and consistency in colored gemstone testing. Founded by veteran gemologists Willy Bieri, Lawrence Hahn, and Matthias Alessandri, the facility will operate in Lucerne (Switzerland) and Hong Kong.
At the core is “SIG-AI Assistance,” a proprietary system that cross-references analytical results with structured databases to flag inconsistencies and support uniform reporting. SIG says the platform helps shorten interpretation time and provides more transparent, science-led grading.
SIG will offer full-service colored gemstone testing, including identification, origin determination, treatment analysis, and detailed color grading. The standard turnaround time is five business days, with expedited options for urgent submissions. Clients will also receive real-time tracking for report progress.
SIG is set to make its first public appearance at GemGenève in May, offering on-site gemological services and a preview of its workflow.
This launch follows a broader shift toward AI gemstone grading across the gemology sector, where labs increasingly use data-driven tools (including digital platforms and machine-learning analysis of spectroscopic data and high-resolution imagery) to strengthen verification standards and buyer confidence.
For crypto traders, this is not a direct market catalyst for major tokens, but it is consistent with the ongoing adoption of AI-assisted verification tools across traditional industries.
Neutral
AI gemstone gradingGem lab testingQuality verificationGemGenèveData-driven automation