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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

Mehdi Taremi slams FIFA over World Cup visa chaos

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Iran captain Mehdi Taremi criticised FIFA after Iran’s 1-1 draw with Egypt in the 2026 World Cup group stage in Seattle. Taremi called the tournament experience a “disaster,” blaming FIFA for logistical failures that prevented Iran from competing on a level playing field. Key issues cited include repeated visa denials for the Iran support staff in June 2026. Due to tensions between Iran and the United States, the team was forced to operate from Tijuana, Mexico, shuttling between Tijuana and US-based venues. The cross-border travel, layered onto a compressed match schedule, left players with limited recovery time between games. Iran head coach Amir Ghalenoei raised similar concerns earlier in June, highlighting visa complications and travel strain before the group stage ended. The report also notes FIFA president Gianni Infantino reportedly visited Iran’s dressing room during the tournament, but Iran’s logistics team was still dealing with visa problems as the group concluded. Taremi said he was not making a political statement about US-Iran relations. His focus was on FIFA’s responsibility to ensure fair tournament conditions amid geopolitical constraints.
Neutral
FIFAWorld Cup logisticsvisa denialsUS-Iran tensionstournament fairness

Ben Godfrey loan: Rangers target Atalanta defender for summer

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Rangers are reportedly targeting a Ben Godfrey loan from Atalanta as a key summer move under new manager Derek McInnes. The club appointed McInnes on June 17, 2026, on a three-year contract, after Danny Röhl left. Ben Godfrey, 28, is an English center-back who joined Atalanta in June 2024 but has not settled in Serie A. Instead, he has been on multiple loans, including spells at Ipswich Town in 2025, Sheffield United for the 2025-2026 season, and Brøndby from January 20, 2026. For Rangers, the Ben Godfrey loan offers defensive reinforcement with Premier League-level experience, while reducing the financial commitment versus a permanent transfer. McInnes previously built his reputation at Aberdeen, where he consistently challenged Celtic and Rangers despite fewer resources. The three-year Rangers deal suggests a longer-term squad reshaping rather than a quick fix. Overall, the Ben Godfrey loan could be one of McInnes’ early priorities as he reshapes Ibrox’s back line.
Neutral
Ben Godfrey loanRangers transfer newsDerek McInnesAtalanta defenderfootball signings

Tether’s XAUT to enable gold-backed loans with $23B bullion reserve

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Tether says it is expanding its Tether Gold (XAUT) product by bringing it to crypto lender Ledn. Ledn will support borrowing against XAUT, with the service expected later this year. The aim is to provide gold-backed loans without forcing holders to sell their tokenized bullion. Tether claims it holds about $23 billion in physical gold bullion backing XAUT, with each token representing 1 troy ounce of gold stored in Swiss vaults. The structure is designed to mirror Ledn’s existing bitcoin-backed lending: client collateral is kept 1:1 and not rehypothecated or used to generate yield. The announcement is also framed as part of Tether’s push beyond USDT profits. Tether has accumulated roughly 140 metric tons of physical bullion and has invested in precious-metals infrastructure tied to XAUT, including partnerships to expand lending and physical redemption use cases. For traders, this is a new liquidity pathway for tokenized gold collateral—an extension of the gold-backed loans model rather than a direct spot-market catalyst for BTC or USDT.
Neutral
TetherXAUTGold-backed loansTokenized goldCrypto lending

Bank of Thailand Advances Thai Baht Stablecoin Rules for Secure Payments

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The Bank of Thailand is in the final phase of developing Thailand’s Thai Baht stablecoin regulatory framework after completing its last review stage. Officials expect the rules to be finalised between late 2026 and early 2027, following a public consultation and a public hearing with banks, technology providers, and other stakeholders. The Thai Baht stablecoin is designed to function as financial infrastructure rather than a speculative investment product. The framework is expected to include operational standards, reserve requirements, and consumer protection measures. It will prioritise secure digital payments and efficient settlement to support financial stability and Thailand’s broader digital economy strategy. The article also notes an additional use case: enabling carbon credit-related transactions and environmentally focused finance. The stablecoin will reportedly maintain a 1:1 peg to the Thai Baht, with issuers holding matching fiat reserves in segregated accounts. Token holders are expected to have legal redemption rights into Thai Baht. Regulators plan a gradual rollout for commercial banks and licensed financial institutions, aiming to avoid disruption during the transition. This Thai Baht stablecoin framework builds on Thailand’s prior regulatory sandbox work, where digital asset services were tested under controlled conditions.
Neutral
Thai Baht StablecoinBank of Thailand RegulationCrypto StablecoinsDigital PaymentsReserve & Redemption

Ethereum old-wallets sell at $1,500 demand line

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Ethereum’s oldest wallets moved 33,623 ETH (about $52.5M) from an eight-year stash, selling near $1,560 as ETH traded around $1,575. The activity targets the $1,500 demand line, turning the current drawdown into a test of whether fresh spot buyers can absorb long-dormant Ethereum supply. For traders, the key risk is that spot demand must rise fast enough to prevent rebounds from immediately feeding further liquidity for old holders. The absorption challenge is worsened by spot ETH ETF outflows reported from June 22 to June 26, which reduced a clean channel of institutional buying. Meanwhile, Ethereum still benefits from structural depth (DeFi TVL and stablecoin liquidity are cited as leading), but the article stresses that fundamentals may not automatically translate into near-term buying pressure when Ethereum supply is actively being released. Bottom line: Ethereum faces a near-term supply-overhang narrative at the $1,500 zone. If buyers fail to step in, downside could extend; if they absorb the old-wallet selling, it could strengthen the case for a more durable recovery.
Bearish
EthereumETH walletsETF outflowsspot demanddecentralized finance

Jeremy Grantham Calls Bitcoin Useless as Crypto Fades ’With a Whimper’

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Billionaire investor Jeremy Grantham (GMO co-founder) told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” that Bitcoin is a “useless, speculative mechanism” and predicted crypto will dwindle “with a whimper.” He cited Bitcoin’s failure to behave like a reliable store of value. Grantham pointed to Bitcoin’s drawdown: it is down about 52% from its October all-time high near $126,080, despite strong macro conditions. He contrasted this with gold, which rose to a new record above $5,500 per ounce earlier this year before falling more than 25% to around $4,096. On trading implications, the article notes Bitcoin weakening (recently around the $60,000 area). Separately, Strategy’s preferred stock, Stretch (STRC), fell to a new record low after U.S. markets opened—down to about $71.25 before recovering toward $75.30—highlighting stress linked to Bitcoin’s weakness. While Grantham acknowledged blockchain rails could be transformative, his criticism was specifically aimed at Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. The piece also references similar recent skepticism from Mark Cuban about Bitcoin versus gold as a hedge.
Bearish
BitcoinInvestor SkepticismStore of Value DebateStrategy STRCCrypto Market Sentiment

US re-licenses Anthropic Claude Mythos 5 for trusted partners after export-control halt

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US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick confirmed on June 26 that Anthropic’s Claude Mythos 5 can be accessed again by about 100 vetted US companies and federal agencies. The approval ends a roughly two-week standoff after the Commerce Department placed export controls on Mythos 5 shortly after its June 9 launch. The rollout is not public. Access is limited to “certain trusted partners,” while Anthropic’s Fable 5 remains the public-facing variant. Officials cited national-security risks tied to advanced capabilities such as cybersecurity vulnerability discovery and biodefense screening. Mythos 5 includes a 1 million-token context window, enabling large-scale processing in a single pass. Anthropic said it worked with the US government to address risks associated with the “Covered Models,” implying safeguards were accepted. Crypto relevance: faster vulnerability discovery could raise the bar for securing smart contracts, bridges, DeFi infrastructure, and crypto custody systems. The decision also signals that frontier AI tools may be treated as dual-use technologies, which could eventually shape compliance expectations for crypto-adjacent applications. No direct investment angle is tied to Anthropic (private company). However, demand may increase for blockchain security, smart contract auditing, and custody providers as the industry responds to new AI-driven threat models. Mythos 5’s controlled re-licensing also highlights that export-control enforcement has historically been imperfect.
Neutral
AnthropicClaude Mythos 5US export controlsAI cybersecurityDeFi security

Japan 13-5 Mongolia: ENC 2026 Asia Qualifier upper semis

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Japan beat Mongolia 13-5 in the upper bracket quarterfinals of the ENC 2026 Asia Qualifier. The match was played on Valorant map Split, where Japan won with a dominant eight-round margin. Valorant uses alternating attack and defense across two map halves. The 13-5 score shows Japan’s control on both sides, limiting Mongolia’s ability to convert rounds. With this result, Japan advances to the upper semifinals and keeps a cleaner path in the double-elimination bracket. Teams that remain in the upper bracket avoid the higher risk of the lower bracket, where a single loss can eliminate a run. Mongolia’s defeat sends them to the lower bracket, forcing them to win subsequent matches to stay alive in the ENC 2026 Asia Qualifier. The game was tracked on standard esports databases including VLR.gg and Liquipedia.
Neutral
ValorantEsports Nations CupENC 2026 Asia QualifierDouble-elimination bracketVLR.gg/Liquipedia

ECB’s Isabel Schnabel warns US-Iran peace deal won’t cool inflation

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ECB’s Isabel Schnabel warns that the US-Iran peace deal will not automatically cool inflation across the eurozone. On June 25, she said improved oil prices after the Washington–Tehran memorandum do not change the ECB’s need for further rate increases. Her argument: conflict damage to energy infrastructure and supply chains is already embedded, so inflation risks can remain elevated even after the ceasefire. ECB’s Isabel Schnabel also laid out similar reasoning on May 26, linking the June decision to sustained damage affecting energy routes and broader supply conditions. The memorandum, signed around June 15–17, aims to end military operations and reopen the Strait of Hormuz—an important oil shipping chokepoint. A key focus is the risk of “unanchored inflation expectations.” Schnabel warned that if households and firms stop believing inflation will revert to target levels, they may set higher prices and demand wage growth as if high inflation is permanent. For crypto traders, the direct takeaway is the macro transmission channel: a more prolonged ECB tightening cycle implies higher euro-area borrowing costs for banks, corporates, and mortgages. That can pressure liquidity and risk appetite across broader markets, even though Schnabel did not mention digital assets or stablecoins in her remarks.
Bearish
ECBInflationUS-Iran peace dealInterest ratesCrypto market impact

Securitize tokenization de-SPAC: SEC S-4 cleared for NYSE SECZ

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Securitize is advancing its tokenization platform toward its first Wall Street listing through a de-SPAC merger with Cantor Equity Partners II (CEPT). On June 5, the U.S. SEC declared Securitize’s Form S-4 effective, sending the deal to the shareholder-vote stage. CEPT shareholders of record as of May 11 vote on June 29; if approved, the combined company is expected to trade on the NYSE under ticker “SECZ,” with closing targeted for July 1. Financing details matter for traders: Securitize says the transaction could raise about $400 million in gross proceeds (including PIPE, with adjustments for lower-than-expected redemptions). The firm also reported managing more than $4 billion in tokenized real-world assets (RWA) as of April 2026, though liquidity varies by product and venue. Why it matters: this is a market test for compliant tokenization infrastructure rather than a new token launch. Public-market scrutiny will focus on recurring platform fees, servicing margins, issuer onboarding, and secondary-trading throughput. Near-term watch items include redemption levels, PIPE completion, free float, and daily traded value—thin liquidity can amplify volatility. Overall, successful listing could lift sentiment for on-chain RWA “tokenization” rails, but price action may remain headline-driven until fundamentals prove out.
Bullish
tokenizationRWAde-SPACSEC filingsNYSE listing

Agent Economies Drive a New Altcoin Wave: Wallets, Exchange Bots, and Micro-payments

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Agent economies(AI agents)are back on crypto Twitter, shifting from “chatbots” to on-chain software agents that can sign transactions and pay other services while you sleep. The article argues that the market may start rewarding tokens tied to agent-first infrastructure rather than generic “AI” narratives. Key developments cited: - MetaMask launched an early-access Agent Wallet with mandatory simulation, threat scanning, MEV protection, and up to $10,000 coverage. - Coinbase introduced “Coinbase for Agents,” enabling agents to trade and run workflows via users’ Coinbase accounts using MCP + CLI. - Mastercard announced AP4M (Agent Pay for Machines) targeting constant machine microtransactions, including sub-cent payments, with 30+ named partners. A major risk remains cross-chain reliability. Virtuals Protocol is migrating $700M+ of cross-chain infrastructure from LayerZero to Chainlink CCIP after bridge-exploit security concerns, highlighting bridge tail risk for any token model that depends on cross-chain settlement. What traders should track before buying “agent economy” tokens: 1) Agent-native wallet usage (simulation pass/fail, coverage payouts). 2) Exchange-integrated agent workflow volume. 3) Real micropayment throughput and fee economics at sub-cent scale. 4) Bridge/CCIP reliability metrics (failures, settlement times, incidents). 5) Unit economics per task—if the agent’s total cost exceeds savings, usage stalls. Overall, agent economies could become a tradable cycle theme, but only tokens with clear fee capture or compute/data demand tied to real usage are likely to outperform.
Neutral
AI Agent EconomiesAgent-first WalletsCrypto Micro-paymentsCross-chain RiskToken Value Capture

Polymarket hack: $3.1M PUSD stolen, full refunds promised

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Polymarket hack updates show hackers stole about $3.1 million worth of PUSD from 11 wallets. AMLBot said the funds were taken from Polygon and bridged to Ethereum, and monitoring is ongoing. Polymarket said the Polymarket hack was triggered by a compromised third-party vendor that injected a malicious script into its frontend for some users. The platform removed the dependency, contacted affected users, and promised full refunds to PUSD holders. Related reports added that PeckShield and Specter Analyst also flagged phishing targeting Polymarket users, with losses previously estimated near $2.9M and a figure of ~1,893 ETH for the initial theft. The attack follows earlier Polymarket security issues, including a March report of over $520,000 drained from Polygon smart contracts and a December incident tied to an unidentified login provider. Separately, Polymarket is reportedly under federal investigation connected to alleged deceptive social media promotions (per a Wall Street Journal report). For traders, the immediate focus is refund credibility and whether any additional phishing vectors remain active after the Polymarket hack disclosures.
Neutral
Polymarket hackPUSDPhishingRefundsPrediction markets

Spot Bitcoin ETF Outflows Hit $1.79B Weekly as BTC Slips

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Spot Bitcoin ETFs have extended seven straight weeks of net outflows, with investors withdrawing about $1.79B in the latest week—its worst weekly net flow since late February 2025. Daily data show heavy selling pressure, with Thursday the peak outflow day at $696M, followed by $469M on Wednesday and $444.5M on Friday. Analysts link the persistent spot Bitcoin ETF outflows to BTC weakness, with BTC recently sliding to around the multi-year low near $58,000. They suggest flows may need to stabilize before a deeper recovery becomes more likely. Ethereum ETFs are also stuck in a risk-off pattern, posting seven consecutive red weeks. Last week’s net outflow rose to $273.34M, pushing cumulative net inflows down from about $12.09B in mid-May to under $11B by Friday’s close. The largest withdrawals were on Tuesday ($82.35M) and Thursday ($81.87M). Traders should treat continued Bitcoin ETF redemption pressure as a headwind for short-term upside in BTC and ETH.
Bearish
Spot Bitcoin ETFsBTC PriceETF OutflowsEthereum ETFsCrypto Flows

Solana Price Prediction: SOL $75 Breakout or Bull Trap?

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In this Solana price prediction, SOL is testing the $75 resistance area to see if a rebound can extend or fade into another bull trap. The article highlights a key trigger: a move above $74.98 could strengthen the bullish case and open a path toward $80–$86. However, resistance rejection would likely push SOL back toward support. Technically, the piece notes SOL trading around $72.25 near a larger resistance zone (roughly $73.18 to $89.40). It frames the June low rebound as a possible Elliott Wave wave-2 bounce, meaning sellers could regain control if SOL fails at resistance. On the shorter timeframe, SOL is also shown near the next test around $75, after recovering from the early June sell-off. The summary flags deeper downside risk if buyers fail—potentially back toward $62 support, with further risk near $53. Overall, this Solana price prediction emphasizes that SOL must clear and hold above $74.98 to weaken the bearish pullback setup and improve odds of a stronger move higher; otherwise, the rally remains vulnerable to being reversed.
Neutral
SolanaSOL Price PredictionElliott WaveSupport/ResistanceBear Market Rally

Polymarket pUSD Drain: Stolen Funds Shift to 3 New ETH Wallets After Vendor Compromise

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After the Polymarket pUSD drain linked to a vendor compromise, on-chain monitors say the stolen funds have moved again. The attacker reportedly converted the proceeds via Relay, bridged value from Polygon to Ethereum, and consolidated holdings into ETH. Polymarket said the incident stemmed from a compromised third-party dependency that injected malicious code into the platform frontend for some users. The firm removed the affected dependency and stated impacted users would be fully refunded. Security analysts describe the route as a frontend and wallet-signing failure: victims were tricked into signing transactions, rather than a confirmed Polymarket smart-contract exploit. Key update: the Polymarket pUSD drain proceeds appear parked across three newly created ETH wallets totaling about 1,891.9 ETH. The largest wallet holds roughly 1,788.5 ETH, while the two smaller wallets hold about 100 ETH and 3.4 ETH. The consolidation trail previously referenced an Ethereum address identified in the drain path, and the latest movement suggests staging before potential further exchange, mixer, bridge, or wallet-to-wallet hops. The latest movement does not, by itself, indicate a fresh wave of victims. It mainly reflects post-incident fund handling following the original Polymarket pUSD drain and the remediation steps (dependency removal and user refunds).
Neutral
PolymarketpUSDETH WalletsVendor CompromiseOn-chain Security

EU MiCA Licenses Hit ~230, Reshaping Crypto Access and Stablecoin Liquidity

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The EU has issued around 230 MiCA licenses as the Markets in Crypto-Assets regime moves from transition to enforcement, giving authorized firms a passport to serve clients across the 27-country bloc. Germany leads with 56 authorizations, followed by the Netherlands (26) and France (21). The ESMA MiCA register is positioned as the key checkpoint for users, exchanges, wallet providers, and token issuers to verify whether a legal entity is authorized. For traders, the biggest practical change is market structure. ESMA warned that firms without MiCA authorization face enforcement risk or must wind down EU services, and MiCA protections apply only to the authorized entity behind a user’s account/custody/trading access. France is highlighted as a stress test: about 40% of registered providers had not applied for MiCA licenses, with some withdrawing and shifting to partners, acquisitions, or shutdown plans. Stablecoins are also affected. The article argues that while MiCA compliance broadens the legal pathway, liquidity may concentrate in a few issuers. USDC is described as a top-ten MiCA-compliant dollar stablecoin (with EURC also listed), while USDT remains restricted on many EU-regulated platforms because Tether is not following the same MiCA authorization route. The result: trading, collateral, and institutional rails inside the EU may see more USDC-led depth where MiCA coverage is available, but less liquidity diversity versus the pre-MiCA setup. Overall, MiCA licenses are turning into a distribution and access event—benefiting well-capitalized incumbents and licensed infrastructure partners, while squeezing smaller firms that may need regulated custody, white-label platforms, or broker routing to keep serving EU users.
Neutral
EU MiCACrypto RegulationStablecoinsESMA RegisterMarket Access

EU lawmakers push for DeFi, staking and NFT regulation review

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European Parliament’s ECON committee has urged the European Commission to assess whether crypto lending/borrowing, staking, NFTs and decentralized finance (DeFi) should be regulated. The nonbinding own-initiative report—drafted by Belgian MEP Johan Van Overtveldt—will go to a plenary vote expected on July 7. If adopted, it would set the Parliament’s position but would not change or override MiCA, nor create new legal obligations. A key thread is stablecoins. The report warns against EU member states adding national requirements beyond MiCA, which could fragment the market. It also supports euro-denominated stablecoins under MiCA and encourages their development for faster, cheaper cross-border payments and to complement tokenized bank deposits and wholesale CBDCs. The Commission is already reviewing MiCA. In May, it launched a consultation on potentially expanding MiCA to areas including DeFi, staking, lending, NFTs and tokenized financial assets, and on revisiting the ban on interest-bearing stablecoins. MiCA’s transitional period ends July 1, after which crypto asset service providers generally need authorization to operate across the EU. For traders, the immediate takeaway is regulatory direction: clearer EU signaling on DeFi and staking oversight, plus a policymaker-leaning tailwind for regulated euro stablecoins.
Neutral
EU regulationDeFistakingNFTsstablecoins

SecondFi to Restore Stolen ADA After Cardano Wallet Exploit in Two Weeks

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SecondFi (Emurgo) says it has finished forensic investigations and will return assets to users affected by a Tuesday Cardano wallet exploit in about two weeks, after additional solution building, security reviews, and testing. CEO Phillip Pon said the coming week will be used to build the recovery solution, followed by a second week of testing before funds begin to be returned. The breach reportedly affected around 16 million ADA (about $2.4M at the time) across 374 addresses. SecondFi previously attributed the incident to an address-level issue in its Cardano web wallet generation software that exposed users’ private keys. The firm says it secured roughly 129 million ADA via emergency measures and moved those funds to an independent third-party custodian for verification and recovery. SecondFi also warned traders and users about recovery-related scams. It said no user action is required yet and it will never ask for private keys, seed phrases, wallet credentials, or direct wallet access. Any messages urging users to submit wallet information or migrate assets outside SecondFi’s verified channels should be treated as fraudulent. Users needing help should submit a ticket through the official support portal. Key takeaways for market participants: watch ADA liquidity/volatility around the expected return window, and be cautious of scam-driven social-media activity during the recovery process. The lack of a full post-mortem may keep uncertainty elevated until more technical details emerge.
Neutral
CardanoADA recoverywallet exploitDeFi securityscam warning

Bitcoin July Outlook Hinges on Weak Demand and ETF Outflows

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Bitcoin is on track for a weak end to June, with data pointing to an ~18% decline and analysts flagging key risks for July. On-chain signals show accumulation has stalled for seven months. Ali Martinez said Bitcoin apparent demand has stayed negative for 208 straight days, falling to a new low around -273,000 BTC. The metric compares new BTC creation versus movement of existing inventory. Persistent negativity suggests older supply is circulating faster than spot buyers can absorb it—an unfavorable setup for Bitcoin price recovery. A second demand proxy also points to limited real demand, especially from US investors: Coinbase Premium has remained deeply negative since Bitcoin topped above $82,000 in mid-May. On top of demand weakness, spot Bitcoin ETFs have been withdrawing capital for weeks. During a sharp sell-off that pushed Bitcoin toward $58,000 (first time in almost two years), investors reportedly pulled nearly $700 million from ETFs. Bitget Wallet research analyst Lacie Zhang added that July direction may depend less on near-term macro headlines and more on flows and leverage in the 72 hours after the June 26 event. She referenced an $11B end-of-quarter options expiry, warning markets could remain choppy if redemptions continue and positioning stays defensive. Traders should watch: (1) whether Bitcoin demand metrics turn less negative, and (2) whether ETF outflows stabilize after the post-expiry window.
Bearish
BitcoinBitcoin ETFsOn-chain DemandETF OutflowsOptions Expiry

Bitcoin Buy Zone Signals DCA as Analyst Maps $54K–$40K Targets

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Bitcoin (BTC) saw heavy June losses, dipping to multi-year lows near $59,000 and $58,000. Analyst Ali Martinez says BTC is entering a long-term “accumulation zone,” anchored to the 200-week Simple Moving Average (SMA). Martinez notes BTC rarely trades below the 200-week SMA for long. With the 200-week SMA around $63,500 (BTC lost it earlier this week), he argues this area is where traders may want to deploy dollar-cost averaging (DCA). He also warns that falling under the 200-week SMA doesn’t guarantee a bottom. In a market-structure post, Martinez highlights downside scenarios. He outlines potential dip targets at $54,000 and even $40,000. His approach: spread buy orders across roughly the $58,000–$40,000 range to build a position while price remains at a technical discount. Key level: $63,500. Martinez says a “high-timeframe reclaim” of the 200-week SMA could act as macro support and signal early bull-run conditions. Historical examples where BTC tested the 200-week SMA and later surged include: 2015 (+8,500% from bottom to top), 2018 (+267%), 2020 (+1,125%), and 2022 (consolidation below SMA, then a +680% expansion after reclaim). Martinez’s conclusion: the bottom is “almost in,” but further volatility is still possible.
Neutral
Bitcoin200-week SMADCA strategyMarket structureBuy zone

Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC): How It Works, Mint-and-Burn, and Custody Risks in DeFi

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Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC) is an ERC-20 token on Ethereum backed 1:1 by real BTC held in reserve by a custodian. It bridges Bitcoin into Ethereum’s DeFi, because native BTC cannot directly run Ethereum smart contracts. WBTC is minted and burned via a system involving three roles: custodians (e.g., BitGo) that hold BTC, merchants that verify users and distribute WBTC, and users. When users mint WBTC, BTC is transferred to the custodian and an equal amount of WBTC is issued on Ethereum; when users redeem, WBTC is burned and BTC is released. WBTC tracks BTC price closely and enables lending, borrowing, yield farming, and collateral inside Ethereum protocols while keeping BTC exposure without selling native BTC. Governance is handled by the WBTC DAO, which uses multi-signature controls to add or remove custodians/merchants and modify smart contracts. For traders, the key point is that WBTC is not the same as holding native BTC. The biggest risk is custodial centralization: if the custodian fails (hack, insolvency, or lost access), redemption may be impaired. Additional risks include Ethereum smart-contract bugs, bridge/secondary-wrapping issues, governance decisions, and regulatory actions affecting redemptions. The article recommends checking the specific WBTC contract, custody model, and up-to-date proof-of-reserve and redemption path before using any wrapped Bitcoin. Alternatives mentioned include Coinbase’s cbBTC and Threshold Network’s tBTC, which use different custody/trust assumptions.
Neutral
Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC)Ethereum DeFiCustody RiskMint-and-BurnTokenized BTC

CZ: 2026 crypto bear cycle driven by AI, geopolitics, and 4-year trend

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Binance founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao said there is no single cause for the 2026 crypto bear cycle, as BTC continues to slide. In an interview with CoinDesk, CZ pointed to a mix of geopolitical tensions, investors rotating toward AI and other tech “hot money,” and the typical four-year crypto market cycle. Price context: BTC rose to just over $96,000 early in 2026 but is about $60,000 at the time of writing, down roughly 50% from a 2025 all-time high above $126,000. On capital flows, CZ argued that money leaving crypto for AI firms may be a long-term positive, because it can re-route demand toward new financial-technology applications. He also called prediction markets beneficial for price discovery and liquidity, despite their speculative element. Policy: CZ said the US Digital Asset Market Clarity Act (“Clarity Act”) might not be law this year, but this is unlikely to derail US crypto regulation. He expects ongoing rulemaking through other measures, including the stablecoin-focused GENIUS Act, and said other countries may move first if the US delays. For traders, CZ’s message reinforces that the current crypto bear cycle is likely multi-factor and may not reverse on a single headline. However, his long-term stance suggests dips could face eventual support if regulatory clarity and adoption themes progress.
Neutral
crypto bear cycleAI capital rotationBinance/CZUS regulationstablecoins

Hong Kong to Launch Regulated Stablecoins in 2026, Enforcing Virtual-Asset Rules

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Hong Kong’s Treasury Bureau says the first batch of regulated stablecoins will go live in mid-to-late 2026. Financial Secretary Dr. Eddie Hui said the framework is designed to prevent “financial disintermediation” and protect the banking system. For regulated stablecoins, the key rules are tight reserve backing and supervision. Issuers must keep fully backed reserves with eligible high-liquidity assets, and those reserves must be held in Hong Kong banks to support a 1:1 redemption mechanism. The HKMA will provide ongoing monitoring and can add requirements if risks to bank deposits, lending, or financial stability emerge. The government is also stepping up enforcement against unlicensed stablecoin activity. Warning letters have been issued, and serious cases may be escalated to police. Authorities reiterate that only licensed entities may “offer” stablecoins to the public under the Stablecoin rules. Looking ahead, Hui previewed a comprehensive virtual-asset regulatory bill in 2026, covering trading, custody, and advisory/management services—expanding Hong Kong’s oversight beyond the current issuer/exchange licensing. Crypto-trader takeaway: regulated stablecoins should reduce redemption and counterparty risk for compliant products, while demand for unlicensed alternatives may be suppressed. Near-term price impact is likely limited until issuance ramps, but medium-term sentiment may improve as market structure and compliance tighten.
Neutral
Hong Kong regulationRegulated stablecoinsHKMA supervisionSFC virtual-asset billEnforcement on unlicensed issuers

Travel Rule in Crypto: KYC/AML Data Sharing for Transfers Above Thresholds

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The “Travel Rule” is an anti-money-laundering (AML) requirement that makes crypto service providers collect, share, and retain sender and recipient identifying information for qualifying transfers. Originating in traditional banking wire rules under the US Bank Secrecy Act, it was extended to crypto by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in 2019 (Recommendation 16). In practice, when a customer sends assets above the local threshold from one regulated platform (e.g., an exchange) to another, the originator’s provider transmits the sender’s details to the beneficiary’s provider. The transfer itself still happens on-chain, but Travel Rule data is exchanged off-chain via secure messaging and standardized formats. This identity exchange typically happens between regulated intermediaries (exchanges, custodial wallet providers, and related businesses), not direct peer-to-peer transfers between unhosted wallets. Thresholds vary sharply by country. The US has a commonly cited $3,000 threshold. The European Union introduced a zero-threshold approach (effective end-2024), requiring compliance for every transfer between providers regardless of amount. The UK applies rules from 2023 without an amount-based threshold, while Canada uses an estimated 1,000 CAD level. This patchwork can create the so-called “sunrise problem,” where uneven adoption leaves enforcement gaps. For traders, the key takeaway is that moving crypto between regulated venues increasingly comes with identity data sharing attached, raising privacy and compliance costs while improving traceability. The likely market impact is more about behavioral and operational effects than immediate price moves.
Neutral
Travel RuleCrypto KYCAML ComplianceExchange TransfersPrivacy & Data Security

Bitcoin’s weekend test: $58K drop—exhaustion or acceptance

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Bitcoin is entering the weekend near $60,000 after a sharp move down, and CryptoSlate frames the “Bitcoin’s weekend test” as whether the ~$58,000 low is exhaustion (forced selling) or acceptance (a shift to a lower range). Macro and flows set the stage: sticky inflation prints (Core PCE at 3.4% YoY, broadly in line with expectations) weighed on sentiment, while spot Bitcoin ETFs saw more than $1.1B in outflows on June 24–25. ETF trading is paused until June 29, so the next 72 hours rely more on native liquidity (spot buyers, perps, and on-chain holders). The positioning reset is a key catalyst. The June 26 options expiry totaled about $10.6B in BTC options at Deribit, with roughly 80% out of the money. Coinciding with that, nearly $1B in crypto futures liquidations occurred after BTC slipped below $60K, with longs taking the largest share—suggesting excess leverage may already be flushed. Bitcoin dominance is holding around 55% (higher-conviction capital staying in BTC/ETH versus weaker breadth in smaller alts). Level watch for traders: the immediate support band is $58,000–$58,300. A clean break and hold below $58,000 would support the “acceptance” scenario and point to $53,000–$54,000 next. Bullish follow-through would look like holding $58,000, reclaiming $60,600–$61,000, and then confirming strength above $62,000. In short, Bitcoin’s weekend test is whether $58K holds after expiry + liquidation, opening a path toward $62K before ETF flows resume; failure would reframe the move as range reset.
Neutral
BitcoinOptions expiryETF outflowsFutures liquidationsMarket structure

Bitcoin Whale Transactions Surge as BTC Holds $60K

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Bitcoin whale transactions are back in focus after BTC reclaimed $60,000. Santiment data shows 6,920 Bitcoin transfers worth $100,000+ and 1,438 transfers worth $1 million+—the second-largest whale-transaction spike in two months. Bitcoin moved briefly below the key $60K psychological level, then rebounded and returned above it. The whale activity picked up shortly after the dip, indicating heightened movement from large holders. Traders often monitor these Bitcoin whale transactions during sharp price moves, but blockchain data cannot confirm whether it is accumulation or distribution. Analyst Michaël van de Poppe said little changed beyond BTC trading around $60K. However, BTC still sits below the 200-week moving average, a level many long-term traders track for broader market strength. Staying below that benchmark may keep upside resistance in play, even as near-term sentiment improves. Van de Poppe also flagged weakness in related assets, noting that MSTR continued falling and posted its lowest RSI reading since the Luna crash period. That context frames BTC’s hold near $60K as relatively resilient, but it does not guarantee a sustained rebound. Key takeaway for traders: Bitcoin whale transactions rising alongside BTC support can improve short-term bullish odds, yet the 200-week MA and broader liquidity/demand signals remain decisive for follow-through.
Neutral
BitcoinWhale TransactionsOn-Chain Data200-Week MAMarket Sentiment

Bitcoin 200-week SMA Test Signals Long-Term Accumulation Zone Near $63,500

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Bitcoin is testing the 200-week simple moving average (200-week SMA) during the latest selloff, with BTC trading around $60,341 and the 200-week SMA near $63,500 (about a test of the long-term cycle line). Ali Martinez says periods when Bitcoin trades below the 200-week SMA have historically coincided with exceptional long-term accumulation opportunities, making the zone relevant for dollar-cost averaging (DCA). However, he stresses it is not a guaranteed bottom, and BTC can remain below the 200-week SMA for weeks or months before any durable reversal appears. The article links the current weakness to renewed action around $60,000 after large wallets reportedly sold 45,074 BTC over eight days, pushing price back into a “weak zone” seen during most of the current drawdown. Near-term, reclaiming the 200-week SMA around $63,500 is framed as the first recovery signal; failing to do so could keep BTC in a regime associated with deep cycle stress. Key levels cited: intraday range roughly $58,761–$60,469, and the $60,000 area as the immediate battleground as ETF demand and risk appetite remain key drivers.
Neutral
Bitcoin200-Week SMADCAETF FlowsLong-Term Trend

Solana SOL Bulls Eye $600 as Ansem Cites Apps, Perps and User Growth

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Traders are again debating whether Solana (SOL) can reach the $600 level this cycle. The bullish narrative picked up after analyst Ansem highlighted a shift from last cycle’s meme-coin-led rally to a broader mix of growth drivers. In the previous cycle, SOL climbed to around $297, largely supported by meme coin trading, which brought retail attention, new users, and higher volume. Ansem argues this time the “proof of concept” can extend beyond memes, with growth coming from three areas: consumer apps (including CARDS), perpetuals, and wider on-chain activity. Consumer apps are a key focus because they may increase day-to-day usage. Traders are expected to watch for fundamentals such as active wallets, transaction counts, and user retention—signals that demand is driven by real use rather than short-lived speculation. Perpetual futures is the other major test. Ansem frames Solana-based perps as a competitive battleground (notably comparing the market’s direction with Hyperliquid). A credible SOL perps venue would require deep liquidity, reliable order execution, and simple risk controls. Still, the $600 target remains uncertain. Liquidity, network stability, broader crypto sentiment, and sustained app traction will likely determine whether the market sustains bids for SOL or treats the move as a hype cycle.
Bullish
SolanaSOLPerpetualsMeme CoinsOn-chain Apps