South Korea is tightening oversight of cross-border crypto transfers. On May 26, the Ministry of Economy and Finance confirmed a partial amendment to the Foreign Exchange Transactions Act. Businesses must pre-register with the government before sending virtual assets abroad or receiving them into South Korea.
The amended rules create a clearer category for “virtual-asset transfer service” activities and aim to bring cross-border crypto transfers under the existing foreign-exchange framework. The policy is designed to improve transparency, support anti-money laundering (AML) standards, and align with FATF expectations. It mainly affects exchanges, wallet providers, and other virtual asset service providers, which must submit detailed information on operations, transaction volumes, and compliance measures.
For individual users, impacts may be indirect through added verification steps as firms adapt to the new process. Separately, South Korea is moving toward a virtual-asset gains tax starting Jan. 1, 2027, which may further affect trading workflows and timing.
Overall, the new compliance requirements for cross-border crypto transfers are likely to increase operational friction and verification delays, especially around cross-border activity and stablecoin-related flows.
Bearish
South Korea regulationcross-border crypto transfersAML complianceFATF alignmentvirtual asset service providers
On-chain data shows an Ethereum whale, nemorino.eth, quietly bought back 7,908.3 ETH (about $16.74M) at an average price of $2,117 per token. The buy was executed via CowSwap around 13 hours before the report, using the decentralized exchange aggregator’s batch auction flow to limit slippage and MEV risk.
This reverses part of an earlier move. Between February and March, the same ETH wallet sold 15,800 ETH for about $38.1M at an average price of $2,407. By repurchasing at roughly $290 lower per ETH, the whale has lowered its average cost basis, while still ending up with a net ETH position smaller than at the start of the year. The latest buy represents about half the prior sale volume, suggesting a cautious re-entry rather than a full pivot back to maximum size.
Timing matters: Ethereum has been trading below its 2024 highs amid broader pressure from macro uncertainty, regulation headlines, and variable sentiment around spot ETF flows. Whale activity of this scale is watched by traders as a potential sentiment signal, but a single transaction is not confirmation of a sustained trend.
For traders, this ETH whale buy-back could add near-term support sentiment, especially if similar wallets follow. However, the market impact is likely limited until more on-chain accumulation (or additional large buys) appears across the same time window.
US confirmed “self-defense” precision strikes on IRGC facilities in southern Iran after a drone attack on a US naval vessel in the Persian Gulf. The escalation triggered a risk-off move across FX markets. In early Asian trade, the AUD/USD pair fell below 0.6500 and then stabilized near 0.6470 as investors shifted toward safe havens, supporting the US Dollar Index and lifting the yen and Swiss franc.
Geopolitical risk also pushed oil higher by more than 3% on concerns about disruptions near the Strait of Hormuz. That matters for the AUD because Australia is heavily exposed to commodity exports (iron ore, coal, LNG). Higher oil can raise inflation expectations and complicate the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) policy outlook, while potential trade disruptions could weigh on Chinese demand.
Market-watchers are now focused on potential Iranian retaliation. Analysts at Westpac flagged support around 0.6400 for AUD/USD if tensions persist.
Crypto cross-asset impact: as risk appetite waned, gold climbed above $2,400/oz, while Bitcoin retreated—suggesting defensive positioning and heightened volatility. In the near term, traders will likely monitor diplomatic signals and energy prices; a broader escalation could pressure AUD/USD further and keep crypto sentiment soft.
The US Dollar Index (DXY) stayed above 99.00 in early trading Wednesday, supported by renewed safe-haven demand amid ongoing global economic uncertainty. The move suggests investors are rotating back into USD as growth concerns and unresolved trade tensions resurface, pressuring risk assets.
Macro drivers are twofold: Treasury yields edged higher, boosting the dollar’s relative appeal, and traders appear to be repricing Federal Reserve policy toward fewer/harder rate cuts. Even with signs of cooling inflation, the labor market remains resilient, leaving the Fed in a “wait-and-see” stance. Any hawkish Fed comments could further strengthen the US Dollar Index (DXY).
For trading, 99.00 is a key technical level. A sustained break higher could target 100.00 psychological resistance, while failure to hold may signal renewed USD weakness. For broader markets, a stronger US Dollar Index (DXY) typically tightens financial conditions for emerging markets and can weigh on crypto risk appetite through reduced liquidity.
Traders should watch upcoming economic releases and central-bank communication for confirmation of the dollar trend and its spillover into FX, rates, and risk assets.
Note: This is market commentary, not trading advice.
Bearish
US Dollar Index (DXY)Safe-haven demandFed policy expectationsTreasury yieldsFX risk appetite
On-chain tracker Lookonchain says large “whales” are increasing exposure to Chainlink (LINK) and Dogecoin (DOGE) via leveraged long positions, suggesting a near-term bullish directional thesis.
One whale (wallet starting 0x3109) holds 10x leveraged long positions of 27.38M DOGE (~$2.75M) and 162,670 LINK (~$1.53M). It also placed additional limit long orders for 33.46M DOGE (~$3.31M) and 515,120 LINK (~$4.73M), indicating planned accumulation on lower prices.
A second whale (wallet starting 0x5687) opened 3x leveraged long positions of 10.21M DOGE (~$1.03M) and 10x leveraged long positions of 108,430 LINK (~$1.02M), plus pending orders for 14.66M DOGE (~$1.45M) and 336,280 LINK (~$3.09M).
Traders should note the risk: 10x leverage can wipe initial margin quickly if price drops toward liquidation. If these leveraged long positions are closed via liquidations, forced selling could trigger sharp swings. Watch whether the positions are profitably exited or whether volatility increases around key support levels for LINK and DOGE.
Despite a bearish start to 2026, Bitcoin price targets are wide-ranging, from a possible drop to $40,000 to a long-term ceiling near $1.5 million. At Bitcoin Vegas 2026, Arthur Hayes (BitMEX) forecast Bitcoin could reach $125,000 by December 2026, citing returning global liquidity, potential Fed policy shifts, and AI-driven capital dynamics.
Michael Saylor said on CNBC that Bitcoin could rise about 30% annually for the next 20 years, with near-term gains expected before end-2026, reiterating his $1 million per coin view.
On the more bearish side, veteran chartist Peter Brandt argued investors calling for $250,000 in 2026 should rethink timing. He expects a cycle bottom forming around Sep–Oct 2026 in the $40,000–$60,000 range, followed by a major peak between $250,000 and $500,000 in late 2029, assuming four-year halving patterns hold.
Institutional forecasts cluster around $150,000–$200,000 for end-2026 (Bernstein), with other desks extending 2029–2030 targets to ~$400,000–$500,000. Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood outlined a bear/base/bull path up to $1.5 million by 2030, while Adam Back, Tim Draper, and Matthew Sigel also pushed bullish long-range targets.
Meanwhile, traders and models flagged downside risks: several analysts suggested fall 2026 bottoms near the low-$40,000s to $50,000s. Bitcoin has been trading around the high-$70,000s to low-$80,000s after consolidating from its prior all-time high, so the next directional move may depend on whether the market follows the more bullish $125,000 framework or the $40,000–$60,000 reset scenario.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said US-Iran negotiations are ongoing in Qatar despite US military strikes on Iran’s port of Bandar Abbas. Rubio also warned the Strait of Hormuz would “open one way or the other,” signaling that the situation could escalate.
Prediction-market pricing suggests a mixed but risk-tilted outlook. In the market “Iranian Demands Trump Will Agree To,” pricing reflects increased skepticism, with a reduced likelihood that Trump will concede to Iranian demands. By contrast, “Next US x Iran Diplomatic Meeting” shows higher confidence in a near-term diplomatic encounter, consistent with Rubio’s confirmation that talks continue.
For shipping risk, the market “Strait of Hormuz Traffic Normal by July 31” points to significant disruption expectations: YES probability is priced at about 59.5%, implying traffic normalization by the deadline is less likely than before. Overall, traders appear to be weighing continued diplomacy against heightened military and geopolitical tension.
What to watch next includes additional statements from Qatar and Oman on the negotiation track, and any new military actions or sanctions that could directly affect Strait of Hormuz trade flows. The article also flags potential international updates from bodies such as the IMF regarding regional shipping and economic impacts.
For crypto traders, this is a classic geopolitics-to-risk sentiment setup: worsening regional disruption odds can pressure broader risk appetite and volatility, while confirmation of talks can provide intermittent relief rallies.
Bearish
US-Iran negotiationsStrait of HormuzGeopolitical riskPrediction marketsShipping disruption
DEXE is surging: the token rose 22% after reclaiming the $16 resistance level that had capped price action since April 2025. At the time of reporting, DEXE traded around $17.65. Volume also surged 99% to about $42.5M, supporting the breakout thesis.
Chart signals remain constructive. DEXE reclaimed the 200-day EMA and is trading above the long-standing $16 zone. If buyers defend that level, the next upside target cited in the article is roughly $23.90. Trend strength is elevated as ADX rose to 40.32.
However, traders are still cautious due to derivatives positioning. CoinGlass data shows DEXE OI-weighted funding turned negative (about -0.0020%), and Binance’s long/short ratio fell to 0.547—signals that shorts outweigh longs even as spot price rises.
On-chain activity is more supportive. Nansen reports exchange reserves fell 14.81% over the past 30 days, which often indicates tokens moving off exchanges rather than being prepared for sale.
Bottom line for traders: DEXE’s technical breakout is bullish, but persistent negative funding and a low long/short ratio suggest rallies could face pullbacks unless $16 holds and derivatives sentiment improves.
Ondo Finance said its co-founder and CEO Nathan Allman died unexpectedly on May 25, 2026. The DeFi protocol also announced a leadership transition to support continuity.
In a post on X, Ondo Finance said it is “profoundly” saddened and praised Allman’s role in building the organization. The company named Ian De Bode—its longtime President—as the new CEO, saying it will keep advancing the work Allman started.
The news sparked immediate market reaction for ONDO. The article reports ONDO fell about 6.5% to $0.41 after the announcement. Still, ONDO remains up roughly 59% over the last 30 days, indicating the move may be more of an intraday shock than a full trend reversal.
Other crypto leaders commented, including Gracy Chen, CEO of Bitget. Chen highlighted Ondo’s progress since 2023, including ONDO token listings and support for Ondo’s RWA (real-world assets) strategy.
Keywords for traders: ONDO leadership change, CEO death risk, RWA tokenization sentiment, short-term volatility.
Neutral
Ondo FinanceONDODeFiRWA tokenizationLeadership change
Russia warns foreigners to leave Kyiv, saying it plans systematic strikes on defense-industrial facilities and command centers. Moscow’s Foreign Ministry urged diplomats and foreign nationals to evacuate “as soon as possible.” The warning followed one of the heaviest Kyiv bombardments since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.
Russia warns foreigners to leave Kyiv in connection with a reported Ukrainian strike on Starobilsk, a claim Kyiv denied. The article notes similar evacuation warnings were issued to diplomats around May 6–7, suggesting a deliberate escalation rather than a one-off response. Importantly, the strikes are framed as “systematic,” implying sustained pressure on Kyiv’s defense infrastructure over time.
For crypto markets, the reaction was muted. Bitcoin held steady and volumes did not spike. The article argues this may mean geopolitical risk from the conflict is already “baked into” prices, but it also urges caution because past war escalations often coincided with risk-off sentiment and reduced BTC trading activity.
Traders to watch: Russia has historically used crypto channels to mitigate sanctions. Any tightening of enforcement tied to escalation could create localized friction, especially in corners of the market associated with Russian-linked activity—such as privacy coins or decentralized exchanges that previously saw related volume. Russia warns foreigners to leave Kyiv—watch for whether any market plumbing or liquidity changes follow enforcement headlines.
OKX’s Ethereum Layer 2 network X Layer has launched “Exchange OS,” a permissionless infrastructure layer aimed at letting developers and institutions deploy their own trading venues on a single backbone. Exchange OS targets spot markets, perpetual futures, and prediction markets running together, with built-in matching, settlement, and liquidity unification.
OKX says Exchange OS can handle up to 300,000 transactions per second with millisecond-order trade matching, positioning it for institutional trading desks that need low-latency routing. The platform supports both hybrid CeDeFi models (some centralized components) and fully self-custodial setups (users do not hand over keys).
Access is permissionless in application, but partners must stake OKB (OKX’s native token). OKX describes the required stake as “significant,” meaning the onboarding is not a free-for-all. A public demonstration is planned as a simulated 2026 World Cup prediction market, with the simulation scheduled for June 2026.
The release follows prior X Layer upgrades: a December 2025 migration from Polygon-based tech to the OP Stack, and an Aave integration that went live in March 2026. OKX dates the Exchange OS launch to May 26, 2026.
For traders, the key implication is potential liquidity aggregation across multiple market types on the same Exchange OS rails—potentially improving execution quality. However, the OKB staking requirement could create token-driven demand pressure and also concentration risk, which may affect adoption pacing and ecosystem stability over time.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed that the US remains fully ready to carry out additional strikes against Iran even as diplomacy nears a framework deal. The talks focus on reopening the Strait of Hormuz and negotiating a nuclear-related framework.
Militarily, the US launched joint operations with Israel in February 2026 (dubbed “Operation Epic Fury”). Rubio said the campaign ended in early May 2026 after degrading Iran’s naval and missile capabilities, but he stressed “readiness” was not stood down and warned threats could resume if talks stall. An interim agreement in principle exists to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but it is still unsigned; enrichment and processing details remain the main sticking points.
Crypto impact: Bitcoin fell during peak US-Iran tensions into the $71,000–$77,000 range as markets priced oil-supply risk and broader financial instability. Separately, the US froze about $344 million in Iranian digital assets, underscoring enforcement capacity and on-chain surveillance effectiveness. ETF inflows reportedly helped stabilize sentiment, as some traders treated the dip as a buying opportunity.
Trading takeaway: Bitcoin downside may not be fully priced. If negotiations deteriorate, Bitcoin could revisit or break below prior peak-tension levels. Traders may want to monitor both the diplomatic timeline and on-chain flows tied to sanctioned entities.
Bearish
BitcoinUS-Iran tensionsStrait of HormuzSanctions & crypto asset freezesOn-chain surveillance
WTI crude rebounded toward $91 per barrel on Thursday after reports confirmed U.S. strikes in southern Iran. WTI crude rose about 1.8% in afternoon trading, reversing prior losses, while Brent moved above $94. Traders cited escalating geopolitical risk and higher odds of supply disruption through the Strait of Hormuz, a route carrying roughly 20% of global oil.
The strikes were described by regional sources and anonymous U.S. defense officials as targeting sites linked to Iran’s drone and missile programs. The Pentagon reportedly said the operation was limited in scale to reduce Iran’s ability to attack U.S. assets and allies, though no full official statement had been issued.
Oil pricing now embeds a risk premium tied to potential shipping interruptions and possible tanker insurance costs. Analysts (e.g., Goldman Sachs) argued the market is pricing a low-probability, high-impact scenario and warned against panic buying unless escalation turns into a sustained blockade.
Broader context: before the geopolitical shock, oil was weighed by demand concerns in China and expectations for higher U.S. interest rates. The recovery also lifted energy equities, with the S&P 500 energy sector up about 1.2%, despite a smaller-than-expected crude inventory draw reported by the U.S. EIA.
Key watch: official comments from Washington and Tehran in the coming hours will determine whether this WTI crude move fades or extends.
Bearish
WTI crudeUS-Iran strikesStrait of Hormuz riskOil supply disruptionGeopolitical risk premium
South Korea’s Gyeongnam Province collected 62.4 billion won (about $45.7 million) in delinquent local taxes by intensifying crypto asset seizures and tracing hidden wealth.
According to Yonhap News, in Q1 the province investigated delinquent taxpayers’ cryptocurrency holdings at South Korea’s four major exchanges: Upbit, Bithumb, Coinone and Korbit. It identified 976 individuals with taxable crypto assets and seized their holdings. From 887 people, authorities collected 980 million won (about $718,000) in overdue taxes. An additional 61.4 billion won (about $45 million) was recovered through broader enforcement against other hidden assets, including real estate and bank accounts.
The move highlights a wider shift in crypto tax enforcement. South Korea’s Financial Services Commission requires exchanges to implement real-time transaction monitoring and reporting, improving authorities’ access to transaction histories and balances. Gyeongnam’s approach shows how local governments can leverage national reporting systems to enforce regional tax compliance.
For traders, the key takeaway is enforcement risk: crypto asset seizures can increase short-term volatility around compliance-sensitive wallets or exchanges, while the longer-term effect is tighter regulatory infrastructure that may dampen “stealth” accumulation. Overall, this signals higher scrutiny for any undeclared holdings and a continued tightening of on-chain/account-based tax investigations—especially for users relying on exchange-linked anonymity.
Neutral
South KoreaCrypto Asset SeizuresTax EnforcementExchange MonitoringLocal Government Crackdown
Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood says Bitcoin could trade between $750,000 and $1.25 million by 2029. Her base case assumes ongoing mainstream acceptance and clearer regulation, while the bull case depends on Bitcoin capturing a large share of the gold market and becoming a standard institutional portfolio allocation.
Wood frames Bitcoin’s upside around its role as a “digital gold,” a hedge/insurance asset, and growing institutional adoption. The thesis is supported by the expansion of Bitcoin exchange-traded products: major asset managers such as BlackRock and Fidelity have launched spot Bitcoin ETFs/ETP products, lowering access barriers for traditional investors.
The article notes that Bitcoin’s path remains volatile, with short-term drawdowns possible. It also highlights macro drivers—like inflation, monetary policy, and global economic stability—that could affect demand. Key risks include regulatory setbacks, concerns around energy use, and competition from other cryptocurrencies.
For traders, the core takeaway is that bullish long-term narrative catalysts (institutional flows via ETFs, “store of value” positioning) remain intact, but the forecast is not a guarantee. Near-term price action is likely to stay headline- and data-driven, while the market continues to price in regulatory and adoption progress.
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is seeking forfeiture of Bitcoin tied to an alleged synthetic drug trafficking scheme using Binance records and blockchain tracing. Prosecutors say the defendant, Chinese national Wei Gong (also known as David Gong), was arrested in China after investigators linked him to payments and exchange activity connected to shipments routed through Georgia.
DOJ announced criminal charges and an unsealed civil forfeiture case on May 20, 2026. Investigators tied 1.00001188 BTC to a civil forfeiture complaint filed April 15, 2026. The BTC was seized from Binance account number 53514319, which prosecutors say Gong controlled. Federal agents obtained a seizure warrant on Dec. 19, 2023, and Binance transferred the seized funds to the DEA in March and April 2024.
Evidence cited in court filings includes: account identifiers using Gong-linked email, phone, and Chinese ID documents; blockchain flow analysis connecting alleged drug orders to payments across platforms (including Binance, Coinbase, Huobi, OKX, Cash App, and CoinPayments); and undercover DEA Bitcoin purchases. In one operation, an undercover DEA agent sent 0.18092382 BTC (about $4,868) after Gong quoted $1,000 per kilogram for five kilograms of eutylone, with later lab confirmation of controlled-substance quantities. A second undercover purchase used 0.03589067 BTC.
The filing also alleges Gong’s Binance activity logged 666 BTC transactions between Oct. 2020 and July 2023, with listed buys worth about $254,281.85 and sells worth about $2.33 million. DOJ says the case may involve customs and money-laundering violations, and that conviction could carry up to 20 years per count if extradited.
For traders, this Bitcoin seizure reinforces ongoing cross-border enforcement pressure on on-chain payment rails tied to illicit supply chains, which can raise near-term compliance and risk sentiment—especially for exchange and custody counterparties.
Cardano (ADA) is trading under downside pressure, even as a crypto pundit claims the market’s “real action” is happening among top holders. Cheeky Crypto says the top 1% of ADA wallets are front-running uncertainty and aggressively accumulating the liquid supply, while retail traders capitulate on short-term drawdowns.
The article links this whale behavior to on-chain growth. Cardano’s Total Value Locked (TVL) increased by 1.14% in 24 hours, rising from about 382.16M ADA (since Sep 18, 2025) to over 542.71M ADA—up roughly 42%. It also cites a ~39.58% week-over-week jump in Cardano DEX volume to more than $10.26M, alongside transaction activity reaching a new all-time high on mainnet above 121M.
For traders, the core signal is that “top 1% Cardano investors” may be supporting liquidity and usage metrics despite weak price tape. If ADA continues to pair rising TVL, DEX volume, and network transactions with whale accumulation, the market may shift from dip-chasing to renewed risk-on positioning. Conversely, if on-chain strength fails to translate into price follow-through, this could become another case where fundamentals run ahead of sentiment.
Main keyword: top 1% Cardano investors (appears again: top 1% Cardano investors).
Chinese semiconductor stocks rose in Hong Kong and Shanghai after Huawei unveiled chip-design progress framed as a workaround under US export sanctions. At an IEEE symposium in Shanghai on May 25, Huawei semiconductor president He Tingbo introduced “LogicFolding” and the “Tau Scaling Law,” arguing that systemic architecture optimization can boost performance without relying on extreme-UV lithography.
Huawei said it has already mass-produced 381 chips using the Tau Scaling Law over the past six years. It also confirmed that its Kirin mobile chips incorporating LogicFolding are set to launch this fall.
The market reaction was immediate: SMIC, a key manufacturing partner for Huawei, jumped more than 17% in Shanghai on the news. The backdrop remains heavy: US controls target advanced semiconductor tools (including ASML EUV) and high-end AI chips used for training, where Chinese firms such as DeepSeek and ByteDance have faced sourcing challenges.
Huawei’s “1.4nm-equivalent” performance target is set for 2031, and investors will watch the fall Kirin rollout for measurable real-world results. If Huawei can demonstrate consumer-product gains, the narrative could shift from aspiration to evidence, even as SMIC’s leading process still trails TSMC by several generations.
Key takeaway for traders: Huawei chip plans are driving near-term sentiment in China’s tech supply chain, but the longer-term impact hinges on whether LogicFolding delivers repeatable performance against the sanctions-constrained baseline.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio says a new Iran deal framework could arrive “maybe today” or within days, even as US and Israeli forces strike Iranian missile and naval assets. Crypto and risk assets reacted immediately: Bitcoin (BTC) briefly fell below $67,000 and Ether (ETH) dropped more than 4% in a broad risk-off move.
The key angle for traders is that diplomacy is being paired with near-term military pressure—aiming at quick wins on missile controls, Strait of Hormuz shipping security, and limits on Iran’s nuclear program. The Strait of Hormuz matters for markets because about one-fifth of global oil supply passes through it; oil prices slipped toward $100 on optimism that the chokepoint risk could ease. Equities also reportedly moved higher on diplomatic progress.
A second, crypto-specific catalyst is enforcement around stablecoins. US authorities have frozen or seized roughly $344 million to $500 million in Iranian-linked digital assets, with Tether’s USDT making up the bulk. The article argues this shows the on-chain transparency of stablecoins plus Tether’s compliance gives Washington leverage, meaning stablecoins are not “censorship-resistant.”
What to watch next: (1) any concrete announcement of the Iran framework deal, which would likely spark a sharp risk-on rally across crypto; (2) any expansion of military operations, which would likely deepen the risk-off pressure. With Rubio’s short timeline, traders may get clarity quickly.
Neutral
Iran DealUSDTBitcoin VolatilityMiddle East GeopoliticsStablecoin Enforcement
Bitcoin is holding around $77,000 after global stocks rallied and geopolitical risk cooled. The catalyst was falling Brent oil prices following improved US–Iran Strait of Hormuz talks, easing inflation fears and lifting risk assets. In Europe, 5-year Eurozone bond yields fell to about 2.64% (lowest in ~5 weeks), supporting the broader bid.
However, Bitcoin’s upside momentum is tempered by institutional positioning. Glassnode data shows Bitcoin 3-month futures trading at only a ~2% annualized premium to spot (basis rate), below the typical 5–10% range under neutral conditions—signaling limited demand for leveraged long exposure. Spot Bitcoin ETF flows also remain a key drag: US-listed spot ETFs recorded about $2.66B in net outflows since May 7, reducing bullish conviction.
Additional sentiment pressure comes from Strategy (MSTR), which paused further Bitcoin acquisitions to repurchase convertible bonds. While this may lower financial leverage and potential dilution, it could slow reserve growth.
To reach $82,000, Bitcoin likely needs clearer visibility on macro growth and risk appetite. If spot ETF flows stay negative, trader sentiment may remain cautious despite improving equities—keeping the near-term outlook mixed even as the rally thesis strengthens.
Bitcoin (BTC) is facing about 34,000 BTC in net sell pressure this week as ETF outflows rise and exchange inflows increase. Data cited by market analyst Axel Adler Jr. shows centralized exchanges received a net +18,000 BTC, while spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net outflows of roughly -16,000 BTC. The net effect has pressured price action and reflects a risk-off tone, since institutional buyers have not fully absorbed the added supply.
ETF trading activity has also cooled: Glassnode analyst cryptovizart notes daily ETF volume dropped below $20B versus more than $50B at end-2025, suggesting weaker near-term speculative demand. Price briefly slipped under the $75,000 support before rebounding to test $77,800.
Derivatives conditions are mixed. Total BTC open interest fell (268,000 BTC → 250,000 BTC → slight rebound to 254,000 BTC), consistent with “short covering” as shorts close to limit losses. Funding rates also eased during the rally (0.008% → 0.0026%), reducing excessively bullish positioning.
Key takeaway for traders: while sell pressure appears to be easing, a sustainable BTC breakout above $80,000 likely requires stronger spot demand and new inflows—not just improving derivatives positioning or short covering.
The Philippine SEC ordered the crypto platform Riscoin and related entities to immediately cease and desist from soliciting investments and selling unregistered securities in the Philippines. Issued on May 14, 2026 by the SEC Enforcement and Investor Protection Department (EIPD), the order targets Riscoin, Riscoin Exchange, Riscoin Trading, League of Seagull Ltd., and Seagull Alliance.
The regulator cited prima facie evidence that Riscoin runs an unauthorized cryptocurrency copy trading scheme where investors rely on “crypto managers” claiming guaranteed daily returns. The scheme is promoted online via Facebook, Telegram, and Bonchat. The SEC also found that Riscoin is not licensed as a Crypto-Asset Service Provider (CASP) and is not authorized to deal in crypto-assets, with no regulatory sandbox enrollment.
The SEC directed Riscoin to halt the sale and offering of investment contracts and to terminate its internet presence related to the scheme. It also issued asset-protection measures: respondents are prohibited from transacting through their depository bank accounts and from transferring or disposing of assets, aiming to prevent “grave damage” to investors and preserve funds. The group has five days after receiving the directive to file a verified motion to lift the cease-and-desist order.
This crackdown follows prior SEC public advisories in February 2026 warning the public about the platform. Riscoin’s promoters also used foreign business registration claims to market the operation locally, which the SEC said does not authorize offerings to Philippine investors.
For traders, the key takeaway is that the SEC is actively targeting Riscoin’s marketing-driven yield/copy-trading model, increasing near-term scrutiny of similar unlicensed offerings in the Philippines.
Bearish
Philippines SECRiscoinCease and Desist OrderUnregistered SecuritiesCopy Trading Scam
Bitcoin bulls regained momentum over the weekend, pushing BTC to $77,439 before sellers rejected and dragged price back toward $74,500. On Sunday, Bitcoin bulls returned and re-tested the $77,400–$77,430 resistance zone.
The key technical context is a descending channel on the 4-hour chart. Bitcoin bulls are currently holding above the channel’s upper area, with BTC around $77,490 at the time of writing. However, the article stresses that this is not confirmation yet: wicks above $77,400 are not enough. A convincing close above the zone, followed by sustained support, is needed for continuation.
The next upside focus is a CME gap near $79,000, with $79,450 highlighted as the major level inside the gap. The report notes a thick resistance band around $79,450, meaning the gap fill could still face heavy selling. Bitcoin bulls may first aim to fill the gap, but the more important test is whether price can hold that region after it gets there.
A bearish alternative is also outlined: another rejection at $77,400 could push BTC back inside the descending channel and shift attention to the latest CME Friday close. The most recent Friday close cited is $75,535. Below $75,535, key levels mentioned are $75,000 and $73,700, with the loss of $75,000 weakening the recovery attempt.
In short, Bitcoin bulls are back in play, but traders should watch whether BTC can close and hold above $77,400 before chasing the CME gap move toward $79,450.
US and Iran negotiations in Doha could reopen the Strait of Hormuz within 30 days after a finalized peace deal. The framework discussed would require Iran to clear mines and allow unrestricted vessel passage. In the post-agreement period, Iran would not collect transit fees.
Crypto markets moved fast as the deal probability rose. On May 25, 2026, Bitcoin and multiple altcoins rallied, with investors treating the news as a geopolitical de-risking signal. Reported movers included NEAR Protocol (NEAR), Ondo Finance (ONDO), and Hyperliquid (HYPE), moving alongside BTC rather than diverging.
The talks reportedly also cover nuclear concerns, which could make any comprehensive US-Iran agreement broader than the 2015 JCPOA that the US withdrew from in 2018.
A crypto-specific wildcard remains: Iran has previously explored using cryptocurrency for strait-related transit payments, such as insurance and tolls during ceasefires. It is not confirmed whether crypto settlement would be included in the final agreement.
No deal is formally signed yet. US and Iranian officials still need to confirm the framework, so traders may continue to price outcomes and reversals as headlines develop.
Bullish
US-Iran diplomacyStrait of HormuzBitcoinAltcoin rallyGeopolitical risk
The CoinMarketCap Altcoin Season Index rose 3 points to 36, a modest shift in crypto market sentiment. The Altcoin Season Index measures whether the top 100 coins (excluding stablecoins and wrapped tokens) outperform Bitcoin over a 90-day window.
An official altcoin season is typically flagged at 75+, but 36 is still far below that threshold. That implies Bitcoin remains the dominant trade, even as the breadth of outperformance is improving.
For traders, a rising Altcoin Season Index can hint at early rotation from Bitcoin (BTC) into higher-volatility altcoins, which may lift risk appetite. However, this is only an incremental move and is well off historical peak zones (e.g., 2021 often above 80). Treat it as an early cue, not confirmation of a full altcoin cycle.
Watch for follow-through: continued increases in the Altcoin Season Index, wider altcoin participation, and sustained BTC consolidation. Use this signal alongside other drivers such as macro conditions, regulation, and coin-specific fundamentals. This article does not provide investment advice.
Neutral
Altcoin Season IndexBitcoin RotationMarket SentimentAltcoin PerformanceCoinMarketCap
Coinglass data shows Ethereum (ETH) is near a key liquidation cluster on major CEXs including Binance, Bybit and OKX. If ETH breaks below $2,009, about $737 million in long positions could be forcibly liquidated. That forced selling may intensify a downside move as leveraged longs unwind.
The article also highlights an upside trigger: a rally above $2,211 could liquidate roughly $543 million in short positions, which may spark a short squeeze. Overall, the downside risk appears larger than the upside catalyst because the long liquidation notional ($737M) exceeds the short liquidation notional ($543M).
For traders, these liquidation levels are potential zones of higher volatility and possible sudden price spikes or drops when margin calls execute. The levels are dynamic and can shift as leverage and open interest change, so real-time monitoring is emphasized.
Bitcoin buying pressure is weakening as analysts flag a potential sell-off tied to roughly 34,000 BTC. On-chain data points to rising exchange inflows alongside persistent outflows from spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs), a combination that suggests institutional and retail demand may be fading.
Axel Adler Jr. highlights that weekly Bitcoin deposits to exchanges have increased by about 18,000 BTC. Moving coins to exchanges is typically interpreted as preparation to sell, which can add sell-side supply and pressure price if demand does not keep up. At the same time, spot Bitcoin ETFs have logged net outflows of around 16,000 BTC, reducing one of the market’s main institutional bid sources.
The net effect is a potential sell-side volume of approximately 34,000 BTC. Glassnode analyst CryptoVizArt adds confirmation via spot ETF activity: daily spot Bitcoin ETF trading volume has fallen below $20 billion, down sharply from roughly $50 billion late last year. Lower volume often means fewer active buyers and thinner liquidity, increasing the risk of sharper moves.
Overall, Bitcoin buying pressure is softening while supply signals rise, leaving BTC more vulnerable to downside in the near term unless a new demand catalyst emerges.
Whale Alert data shows Circle minted 250 million USDC to the USDC Treasury on Ethereum, increasing circulating supply by a sizable amount. The USDC Treasury smart contract typically creates USDC when equivalent USD deposits are received, so large mints often reflect real demand from institutions, exchanges, or DeFi users.
More USDC in circulation can support liquidity across spot markets, lending, borrowing, and DeFi trading pairs. For traders, the key is follow-through: if newly minted USDC quickly moves to exchanges, it may hint at buy-side activity; if it remains in reserves or is routed into DeFi yield strategies, the impact may be more gradual.
USDC supply is over $28B, making it the second-largest stablecoin by market cap. Overall, this appears to be a routine operational update, but it provides useful visibility into USDC liquidity dynamics that traders monitor for market conditions—especially short-term risk-on positioning—without being a reliable standalone predictor for BTC or ETH price moves.
A New York court will review a lawsuit by an anonymous plaintiff, Noah Dora, claiming ownership of about 3.7 million BTC held in 39,069 dormant wallets. The claim is valued near $290B at current prices and is filed through two Wyoming shell companies.
The plaintiff argues the BTC qualifies as “abandoned property” under New York lost-property law, citing wallets that have gone untouched for over a decade. Key arguments include wallets linked to the Satoshi Nakamoto–associated address (about 1M BTC) and other historically cited holdings.
But experts say the court faces major legal and practical hurdles: whether Bitcoin is treated as “property” under traditional statutes, whether owners are truly “unknown” when public-address links exist, and—critically—what happens if the plaintiff wins, since controlling the assets still requires the private keys. One concern raised earlier is that notice-and-script formats may not match, creating a procedural challenge.
For traders, this is headline risk rather than an immediate sell catalyst. Even a favorable ruling would not automatically move BTC, but any attempt to consolidate large dormant supply could still shift liquidity expectations and sentiment in the short term. Overall, analysts consider the case highly speculative.