BNB’s retest of the February lows at about $570 has turned bearish, with multiple derivatives and momentum indicators suggesting downside risk.
After BNB tested the $570 swing low, sellers threatened to push prices below it. Coinalyze data aligned with this bearish dominance thesis. Although the funding rate stayed positive, spot CVD fell steadily over the week, implying reduced spot demand.
Open interest rose sharply as price dropped—from roughly $530M to $560M—signaling new speculative positioning in the direction of the move (more shorts entering). The OI growth later slowed after BNB bounced toward the $590 resistance, but the damage to sentiment remained.
BNB relative weakness versus BTC added pressure. While BTC’s February low area held near ~$66k (current ~ $66.6k), BNB specifically retraced its February lows. On the 1-day timeframe, RSI was around 34, pointing to strong bearish momentum. OBV rebounded in March but has drifted lower again.
Key levels for traders are $577 (support) and $604 (near-term resistance). A reclaim above $604 would be a short-term win, but it may not change the broader trend. Losing $577 could open a route toward $530.
A 3-month liquidation heatmap showed concentrated liquidity around ~$565 that could pull price lower. Upside liquidation clusters sit near $650 and $700, which may attract price only if BNB bounces.
Overall, traders should anticipate the BNB retest of February lows developing into further downside, with a potential move toward $530, while rallies toward $600 and $650–$700 may face selling pressure.
Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart says spot BTC ETFs could overtake gold ETFs in total AUM. He argues demand is shifting beyond the “digital gold” narrative because Bitcoin can serve multiple portfolio roles: store of value, diversification, and a higher-volatility growth risk asset—while gold has fewer use cases.
The March ETF flow data matches the rotation story. U.S. gold ETFs saw about $2.92B in net outflows, while spot BTC ETFs recorded about $1.32B in net inflows. GLD logged a roughly $3B outflow on March 4.
For traders, sustained spot BTC ETF inflows could strengthen medium-term momentum and support a potential AUM crossover outlook (possibly accelerating toward 2026). However, BTC price action still appears to track broader risk sentiment, since BTC and gold both declined over the last 30 days even as spot BTC ETF flows stayed positive.
Bullish
Spot BTC ETFsETF flowsBitcoin vs goldAUM crossoverMarket positioning
Ethereum staking saw a fresh tailwind after the Ethereum Foundation deposited 45,034 ETH (about $93M) to the Eth2 Beacon Chain on Friday. Arkham Intelligence data shows the transfer was split into equal 2,047-ETH batches, sent from the Foundation’s treasury multisig wallet to the deposit contract, lifting total staked holdings to roughly 69,500 ETH.
At institutional-grade yield estimates of 2.7%–3.8% APY, the position implies potential annual returns of about $3.9M–$5.4M. The Foundation began its Ethereum staking program in February with 2,016 ETH and had targeted around 70,000 ETH, aligning with its revamped June 2025 treasury strategy to earn yield via Ethereum staking rather than relying mainly on periodic token sales.
For traders, the key follow-through risk is supply: the Foundation still reportedly holds more than 102,000 ETH unstaked as liquid reserves. ETH was around $2,054–$2,059, up roughly 3.5%–3.6% recently, so renewed Ethereum staking demand may support sentiment if additional deposits follow.
Iran regime change odds for June 30 show a bearish drift. The YES probability is now 13.5%, down from 20% a week earlier, according to a crypto prediction market tracking the question “Will the Iranian regime fall by June 30?”.
A former CIA operative, cited by the report, argues Iran’s entrenched system is tougher than Washington expects. The market cites resilience from power structures such as the IRGC and the clerical establishment.
The June 30 contract moved only modestly (about a +1 point spike on the prior day), suggesting no shock repricing. Liquidity is also highlighted: daily trading is about $59,602 in USDC terms, and roughly $195,747 is needed to shift prices by 5 percentage points—reducing the likelihood of large swings from small orders.
For traders, the payoff structure matters. At a YES price around 13.5¢, a correct bet pays $1 by June 30, implying roughly a 7.4x return if the Iran regime change thesis plays out. To justify new longs, traders would likely need credible signs of an internal fracture or sudden upheaval within the next 88 days, such as IRGC leadership shifts, activity from the Assembly of Experts, or changes in US official rhetoric.
EU tariffs on US goods by September 30 are looking more likely as Trump escalates trade tensions. The article says odds for retaliatory EU tariffs are rising, but the EU has not acted yet. Traders are waiting for concrete steps from the EU Commission or the US Trade Representative (USTR), with a looming deadline of September 30.
Trump is described as bypassing multilateral channels and pushing direct negotiations backed by economic threats, including tariffs. The piece flags potential catalysts that could quickly shift the situation: new executive orders from Trump, additional Section 301 investigations, or hawkish signals from USTR. A social media post cited in the article is treated as limited, while Trump’s history of aggressive trade measures raises the probability of escalation.
The core market angle is speculative event pricing in prediction markets—such as a YES bet tied to EU tariffs on US goods by September 30—rather than confirmed policy action. Until policy documents or formal announcements land, the situation remains cautious.
Neutral
EU tariffsUS trade warUSTRSection 301prediction markets
BTC futures liquidation data shows market stress surged on March 25, 2025, with $11.26M in BTC perpetual contract liquidations in 24 hours. Short positions drove most of the damage, accounting for 69.03% of the total, a pattern consistent with a fast upward move that forced shorts to cover.
Ethereum also saw risk unwind: $9.22M in ETH liquidations with a nearly even split between longs and shorts (50.69% short). The EDGE token recorded $3.24M liquidations, and shorts again dominated at 63.69%.
Liquidations happen automatically when leveraged traders’ margin falls below maintenance levels. Exchanges close positions to prevent negative balances, but the forced buying/selling can amplify price swings. In this case, the BTC futures liquidation skew toward shorts points to a short-squeeze dynamic and feedback loop: price up → shorts liquidated → buyback pressure → further volatility.
Traders typically monitor open interest and funding rates to gauge where pressure may build. A large liquidation flush often clears overleveraged exposure and can cool volatility temporarily, though the broader trend frequently reasserts afterward.
Key takeaway for traders: watch BTC futures liquidation metrics alongside funding rates and open interest. If similar skew continues, downside bets may be vulnerable to squeezes, but high leverage also means rebounds can turn sharply and quickly.
The FDIC will hold a pivotal board meeting on April 7 to define how the GENIUS Act will regulate stablecoins in the U.S. The agenda outlines four key areas that could reshape FDIC stablecoin regulation across banks and issuers.
First, the FDIC will consider allowing banks to issue stablecoins through specialized subsidiaries. Second, it will set criteria for which entities can qualify as stablecoin issuers. Third, it proposes a strict 1:1 reserve requirement backed exclusively by cash and U.S. government bonds—aimed at improving reserve transparency and security. Fourth, it plans an ongoing supervision and risk management framework, including regular audits, reporting, and capital adequacy.
The GENIUS Act passed Congress in late 2024 after major disruptions in the stablecoin market, including the 2022 TerraUSD collapse. The law assigns responsibilities to multiple U.S. agencies (including the FDIC, Federal Reserve, and OCC) and is intended to reduce the prior “regulatory gray area,” including conflicts with state rules.
For traders, the practical takeaway is that stablecoin compliance may tighten, especially around reserves, audits, and bank-run operational controls. Existing issuers such as USDC and USDT may face higher costs and could shift to banking partnerships or new licensing pathways. Banks may gain clearer incentives to adopt blockchain-based payment rails once final rules are published, though the April 7 meeting starts rulemaking rather than instant issuance.
Related global context: the U.S. approach emphasizes bank issuance via subsidiaries, while the EU’s MiCA, Japan’s bank licensing, and Singapore’s rules often lean toward non-bank or licensed-bank models with different reserve frameworks.
Whale Alert flagged a USDT whale transfer of 221,514,685 USDT (≈$221M) from an untagged “unknown wallet” to OKX, one of the world’s largest exchanges. The USDT transfer matters because USDT is the dominant stablecoin used for trading pairs and liquidity.
Traders will typically watch whether this USDT transfer is followed by spot or derivatives buying in BTC/USDT and ETH/USDT, which could suggest short-term upside. Other plausible interpretations include treasury/custody management or liquidity provisioning by market makers, which would be more neutral and limit immediate price impact.
Because the sender is untagged, intent is unclear. The near-term edge for traders is to monitor subsequent exchange flows (to/from OKX), changes in order-book liquidity/spreads, and whether any BTC or ETH buying activity follows the USDT transfer.
DOT Technical Analysis (Apr 4, 2026) flags a downtrend with oversold risk. DOT trades around $1.24 and is still below EMA20 (~$1.33). RSI (14) is near oversold at ~34.8/33, suggesting bounce potential, but momentum remains weak and false breakouts are a concern.
Key levels for DOT: resistance at $1.2867 (near pivot), then $1.3387 and $1.3941. Support sits at $1.2684, with a critical “main support” at $1.2295. If $1.2295 breaks, the bearish setup targets deeper downside toward ~$1.10 and a worst-case level near $0.7632.
Risk management guidance: traders are urged to seek a risk/reward ratio of at least 1:2. Suggested stop loss placement is 1–2% below $1.2295 (roughly $1.21–$1.215). For shorts, invalidation is above $1.2428.
DOT vs BTC correlation is high (~0.85). BTC levels are cited around $66.8k: if BTC support breaks near $65k, DOT could fall toward ~$1.10; if BTC breaks above ~$68k, DOT may rebound toward ~$1.45.
Overall takeaway: longs are risky while the downtrend persists, and traders should wait for confirmation (e.g., a breakout closer to $1.2428) or plan strictly around support failure and predefined stop losses. (Not investment advice.)
Bearish
DOT Technical AnalysisRisk ManagementStop Loss LevelsBTC CorrelationOversold RSI
Tokyo-listed investment firm Metaplanet reported a strong 2026 Q1 Bitcoin treasury expansion powered by a Bitcoin options strategy run in a ring-fenced “Bitcoin Income Generation” portfolio.
In Q1 2026, the segment generated nearly $19M in operating revenue, with returns later convertible into direct Bitcoin buys. Based on filings, trailing 12-month revenue for this segment reached about $71.5M, alongside 2025 full-year figures of nearly $54M.
Metaplanet also executed a large Bitcoin spot accumulation: it acquired 5,075 BTC in Q1 at an average price of about $79,898 per coin, spending roughly $405.48M. The firm cited a 2026 year-to-date BTC Yield of 2.8% and reported total BTC holdings of 40,177 BTC as of 03/31/2026.
Average cost basis across holdings was about $104,106 per BTC, while the announced trading price of Bitcoin was around $66.5k-$66.9k, implying a sizable unrealized loss on cost basis.
Market reaction was muted: Metaplanet shares fell about 2% after the release, and its full-year revenue/operating profit guidance for 2026 (ending Dec. 31) reportedly remained unchanged. The article also noted another listed Bitcoin vehicle, Nakamoto, sold 284 BTC for $20M in March and reduced exposure in Q1, highlighting ongoing corporate treasury risk from BTC price volatility.
CC/USDT technical analysis (4 Apr 2026) shows price hovering near the 0.14$ area inside a broader downtrend. Momentum remains fragile: the article cites low volume, failure to hold above EMA20 (~0.15$), and Supertrend pointing to ~0.16$ resistance. RSI(14) is neutral at ~58, while the broader setup warns of downside “liquidity hunt” if supports fail.
Key levels highlighted in the CC/USDT technical analysis:
- Primary support/buyer zone: 0.1331$ (score 78/100). Confluence across 1D/3D and high-volume node (HVN) concentration suggests accumulation. A breakdown would open a deeper liquidity target.
- Secondary support: 0.1393$ (score 65/100), near EMA50 plus supply/demand confluence; rejected twice historically.
- Nearest resistance/seller zone: 0.1449$ (score 71/100) with rejection/“breaker block” behavior on 1D. A clean close above is needed to avoid a fakeout.
- Main pivot/upside resistance: 0.1571$ (score 67/100), aligning with higher-timeframe supply zones and Fibonacci 0.618; next liquidity target cited at 0.1958$.
BTC correlation is a risk factor in the CC/USDT technical analysis: BTC is stable but altcoin weakness is noted via negative divergence (CC -2.20%). The plan described is bearish-leaning unless 0.1393$ holds: short toward 0.1449$ with target near 0.1331$ and a stop around 0.146$. For longs, the article looks for rejection near 0.1331$ with volume confirmation, targeting ~0.1571$.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued an investor alert warning of rising SEC impersonation scams on X (Twitter) and via text messages. Fraudsters may pose as “SEC officials or employees” to solicit victims for fraud, using official branding and credible-sounding details.
According to the SEC, the schemes commonly include stock tips, advance-fee fraud, and offers that falsely promise to help victims get their money back. The SEC also warns that scammers can collect personal information to enable identity theft and may misappropriate financial assets.
The regulator says this risk is persistent, issuing closely aligned SEC impersonation scams alerts in prior campaigns. A September 30 investor alert described attackers creating fake profiles, using real employee names, and linking to official-looking resources to appear legitimate—reportedly including impersonation attempts involving Commissioner Hester Peirce. Related SEC warnings have also covered “pig butchering” relationship investment scams, stock-tip scams in group chats, and an update to the SEC’s Public Alert list for unregistered soliciting entities that falsely claim government affiliation.
For crypto traders, while this is primarily a consumer-protection and social-engineering story, it matters because scam campaigns increasingly target retail investors’ wallets and account access—often leveraging trading signals and “recovery” narratives.
Reports say Iran downed two US jets, but Trump signals US-Iran negotiations will continue. In the US-Iran ceasefire odds prediction market, US-Iran ceasefire odds for April 7 fall to 1.1% (from 12% a week ago), reflecting deep scepticism over near-term diplomacy.
The term structure rises with time: April 15 at 6.5%, April 30 at 17.5%, and May 31 at 36.5%. Longer-dated odds climb further to 51.5% (June 30) and 68.5% (Dec 31). The biggest jump is between April 30 and May 31, suggesting traders expect a potential May catalyst rather than an immediate ceasefire.
Liquidity appears thin and price is highly sensitive. Despite ~$3.7M+ daily notional, only ~$431K in USDC moves over 24 hours; it reportedly takes about $12,352 to move the April 7 price by 5 percentage points, so large orders could reprice outcomes quickly. Traders should watch for credible escalators/de-escalators such as Oman/Qatar mediation, official US signals, and confirmed back-channel talks.
For crypto markets, this backdrop points to elevated geopolitical risk and potential volatility around risk appetite, which can feed through to BTC/ETH sentiment.
JPMorgan estimates crypto inflows slowed sharply in Q1 2026 to about $11B—roughly one-third of the Q1 2025 pace. Annualized flows imply around $44B versus $130B last year, with the key issue shifting from a simple “cool-off” to narrower participation and more concentrated demand.
In JPMorgan’s framework, crypto inflows include purchases of crypto funds, CME futures activity, venture capital, and corporate treasury buying. CME futures positioning suggests institutional demand has turned negative versus the prior two years. Spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs saw persistent outflows, with weakness most evident in January; a modest BTC ETF recovery in March was not enough to reverse the earlier decline.
Corporate demand remained the main support, led by Strategy (Michael Saylor) continuing to accumulate Bitcoin via equity issuance. But the broader picture is mixed: some smaller firms reduced holdings for buybacks and balance-sheet strength, while mining companies increased selling and/or used Bitcoin as loan collateral and redirected capital toward AI infrastructure. Venture capital stayed relatively resilient on an annualized basis, but deal participation narrowed and capital concentrated in larger rounds.
For crypto traders, this setup points to weaker crypto inflows and less diversified demand heading into 2026—conditions that can translate into choppier liquidity and a higher likelihood of consolidation rather than sustained upside momentum. Watch BTC/ETH spot ETF flow persistence and CME futures positioning for near-term confirmation of whether the decline stabilizes or worsens.
Bitcoin is trading in a tight $66.6k–$67.0k range after a small rebound to about $66,850 (+0.34% in 24h). In contrast, gold is near $4,677/oz (+0.04% day), but still down 9.38% on the month. Brent crude is the standout: about $112.42/bbl, up 40.98% on the month, lifted by escalating Middle East conflict risk and shipping disruptions.
Oil strength is tied to fears around regional blockades (e.g., Hormuz-related disruptions) and an “oil war-risk premium.” The article notes higher gasoline and diesel costs feeding through into broader economic costs.
Gold remains structurally supported despite the monthly dip. It has risen about 54% year-over-year to current levels, with HSBC reiterating a 2026 H1 target of $5,000, citing persistent geopolitical risk premia and central-bank buying.
For Bitcoin, the piece highlights a JPMorgan view: during the Iran-war shock, Bitcoin showed “digital gold”-like defensive behavior similar to gold, and held up in the $60k–$70k band rather than collapsing as risk assets whipsawed. Still, macro pressure remains (e.g., a higher US unemployment expectation), and the article flags a key technical support near $64,400, with bullish follow-through potentially if BTC reclaims the 4-hour level around $71,000.
Overall, the three-asset picture is diverging, but Bitcoin’s measured range trade suggests traders are waiting for clearer macro/geopolitical direction.
Iran rejected US ceasefire demands and refused to meet US officials in Islamabad, cutting short-term US-Iran ceasefire odds sharply. In the prediction market, the US-Iran ceasefire odds for April 7 are at 1.1%, down from 12% a week ago and about 2% just 24 hours earlier.
The curve also turned weaker further out: odds are 6.5% for April 15 and 17.5% for April 30 (with April 30 dropping from 24% the prior day). Later contracts remain higher—36.5% by May 31, 51.5% by June 30, and 68.5% by December 31—but traders are clearly discounting a quick breakthrough.
Trading liquidity is thin in the April 7 market. USDC volume is about $22,948, and it takes roughly $12,367 to move the price by 5 points. A brief spike in the April 30 market appears order-driven and faded quickly.
Crypto traders should watch for any shift in rhetoric or unexpected diplomacy via intermediaries such as Oman or Qatar, and for changes from key US or IRGC-related channels. Any narrative change could reprice US-Iran ceasefire odds quickly.
Prediction markets now price an 86% chance that US forces enter Iran by April 30, up from 62% a day earlier, as Iraqi militias and Iran reportedly launched missile and drone attacks on US embassies and bases. The April 30 contract jumped 24 percentage points in 24 hours. A related contract for US forces enter Iran by April 30 by December 31 is also higher at 90.5% YES.
For traders, liquidity looks active. The April 30 market shows about $5.1M daily USDC traded, with a deep order book (around $84,737 to move prices by ~5 points), suggesting institutional participation. Recent flow includes a roughly 4-point spike, likely tied to a sizable buy.
The market narrative is that escalation could move beyond airstrikes toward troop deployment. Traders are watching for confirmation through public statements and any Pentagon announcements on troop movements. Any rhetoric shift or confirmed operations inside Iran would likely push US forces enter Iran by April 30 odds higher—potentially increasing short-term risk volatility across broader markets.
Key contract levels: US forces enter Iran by April 30 ~86.5% YES; December 31 ~90.5% YES.
WLFI price analysis (Apr 4, 2026) shows a bearish, confined range. WLFI trades around $0.0991, just below the EMA20 near $0.10, while Supertrend stays bearish. The 1D structure remains down with the higher-low broken, and weekly conditions are also bearish.
Momentum is mixed: RSI(14) is ~44 (bearish pressure easing) but the MACD histogram turns positive, hinting at a possible short-term bounce. Stochastic is indecisive around ~45, suggesting consolidation.
Key levels for WLFI: support at $0.0972 (strong volume base) and $0.0885 (Fibo 0.618). Resistance is $0.0991–$0.1023 near EMA20; a push higher could target the ~$0.11 Supertrend area. A breakdown below $0.0972 risks a deeper move toward ~$0.0607.
Risk/reward is roughly balanced-to-bearish: downside to ~$0.0607 has clearer follow-through potential than the $0.1248 upside. Volatility is low (~-1.72%/24h), so any breakout likely needs volume confirmation.
BTC correlation is crucial. BTC is up (~+0.68%) but WLFI is down (~-1.72%), showing negative divergence. Traders should watch BTC weakness for a likely retest of $0.0885; BTC strength could improve chances of reclaiming EMA20.
Informational analysis only, not financial advice.
SHIB exchange inflows surged by over +160B SHIB in 24 hours, a pattern the report links to potential sell pressure as tokens move onto exchanges. The earlier update flagged similar distribution risk and still pointed to exchange reserves staying very high, which can cap upside attempts.
On-chain/flow context remains weak. SHIB is still in a broader downtrend with lower highs, and the short-term rising trendline lacks volume confirmation. Rising exchange reserves also suggest more available supply may pressure rallies.
Technically, resistance is seen at $0.0000065–$0.0000067, with a higher barrier near $0.0000075 around a moving-average cluster. Support at $0.0000055–$0.0000057 has been tested repeatedly and looks vulnerable.
For traders, the takeaway is clear: SHIB exchange inflows can keep price capped near resistance or trigger renewed downside/consolidation unless SHIB absorbs incoming supply and reclaims the key levels.
Telegram’s Wallet in Telegram has integrated Lighter, enabling users to trade perpetual (perps) with up to 50x leverage across crypto, stocks, metals, and oil. The Telegram messenger has over 1 billion users and the wallet has 150M registered users (around 25M active), positioning Telegram as a potential high-traffic crypto trading terminal.
For Lighter, this is its largest integration to date. The article notes demand for perps has surged industry-wide: peak perp volume hit about $350B with ~$25B open interest (OI). Even so, Lighter’s own activity deteriorated after LIT’s token debut and the end of the farming period in late December. Weekly perps volumes reportedly fell from a record ~$75B in November to around ~$8B in April (about -89%), while weekly revenue dropped from an average ~$4M to about $325K (about -91%).
Despite the broader softness in Q1–Q2 2026, LIT has gained roughly 30% in early April and recently retested $1 after the Telegram integration. The key market question is whether Telegram-driven routing can reverse Lighter’s revenue decline and sustain buyback support. A failure to hold $1 could see rejection and potential downside toward ~$0.78 or lower.
For traders, monitor Lighter (LIT) volume/fees post-integration, perp OI trends on Lighter, and whether Telegram users meaningfully increase order flow—similar integrations have historically moved fee expectations and token sentiment when routed trading scales quickly.
Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) announced mandatory crypto exchange security upgrades for registered exchanges, following public consultation in Feb–Mar 2025. The policy targets investor protection and shifts regulation toward prevention, not just reacting to breaches.
Key crypto exchange security requirements include: multi-signature cold storage covering 95% of customer assets, regular penetration testing by certified third parties, real-time transaction monitoring with automated anomaly detection, and cybersecurity insurance tied to assets under management. Exchanges must also publish incident response plans, run scenario tests, undergo unannounced audits, and report major issues quickly.
The framework adds a “collective defense” model. Exchanges must participate in a centralized threat-intelligence sharing platform run by the Japan Virtual Currency Exchange Association, supported by security workshops and coordinated incident simulations.
A phased implementation timeline applies to about 30 registered exchanges and applicants. Compliance plans are due within 90 days. Major milestones include cold storage certification (180 days), penetration testing readiness (270 days), real-time monitoring (365 days), and insurance documentation (120 days). Non-compliance can lead to operational limits or license suspension.
For traders, the move may reduce security-tail-risk over time but could raise near-term compliance costs and operational friction for exchanges—potentially affecting liquidity and sentiment around regulated venues.
Neutral
Japan FSACrypto Exchange SecurityInvestor ProtectionCybersecurity InsuranceThreat Intelligence Sharing
CoinMarketCap’s Altcoin Season Index slipped to 37 (from 38). The Altcoin Season Index tracks the 90-day relative performance of the top 100 crypto assets (excluding stablecoins and wrapped tokens) versus Bitcoin (BTC). A reading of 75+ typically signals an “altcoin season,” when most major altcoins beat BTC; at 37, the market looks neutral to Bitcoin-dominant, with limited broad altcoin momentum.
Traders should treat this as a directional but not dramatic change: a one-point dip is small, yet continued weakness would fit a “flight to safety” regime where capital prefers BTC during uncertainty. The article links potential pressure on the Altcoin Season Index to expectations around Bitcoin ETF developments, Bitcoin network upgrades, and regulatory actions targeting specific altcoin sectors, alongside liquidity conditions.
Trading implications: with the Altcoin Season Index at 37, the piece advises caution on high-risk altcoins and a tilt toward BTC. Because this is a 90-day lagging indicator, it works best as confirmation alongside BTC dominance and broader market activity (e.g., total trading volume), rather than as a standalone timing tool.
Neutral
Altcoin Season IndexBitcoin DominanceMarket RotationBitcoin ETFRisk-Off Sentiment
The private market faces a liquidity showdown as the SpaceX IPO approaches and Anthropic demand stays extreme.
Rainmaker Securities president Glen Anderson says Anthropic shares are the hardest private stock to source because “there’s just no sellers.” Bloomberg cited about $2B in ready capital earmarked for Anthropic.
OpenAI shows the opposite: roughly $600M in secondary shares reportedly struggles to attract buyers. Secondary valuation is about $765B versus a $852B primary-round valuation. Anderson notes OpenAI controls secondary trading via authorized banking channels, and fees differ from Anthropic.
SpaceX has been unusually stable through 2022–2024, avoiding the 60%–70% private-market drawdowns seen in other tech. Anderson attributes this to disciplined pricing and restrained management. With a planned public listing after a confidential IPO filing, investors report a “flood” of requests for SpaceX shares. Supply is tight because existing holders expect the liquidity event.
Anderson warns the SpaceX IPO timing could “soak up” institutional liquidity, putting pressure on other AI IPO plans this year (including Anthropic and OpenAI) as investors may have fewer large checks available.
For traders, the key theme is capital rotation: the SpaceX IPO could shift risk appetite and liquidity expectations across late-stage AI private markets.
HBAR Technical Analysis (Apr 4, 2026) flags a bearish risk outlook as HBAR remains trapped in a narrow range near $0.090. Price is around $0.09089 with a daily down move (-1.44% over 24h, +1.91% shown on the page). The article notes low volatility (ATR low) that can precede sharp moves, while RSI sits in the neutral-to-weak zone (about 38–43) and Supertrend stays bearish.
Key levels for HBAR traders: resistance at $0.0913 then around $0.096 and $0.1036; supports at $0.0890 and $0.0855, with the most important support near $0.0871 (and next about $0.0836). If $0.0871 breaks, losses could accelerate toward lower support areas. EMA20 is cited as a nearby bearish reference around $0.09, and failure to hold above it reinforces the short-term down structure.
Risk/Reward and stop guidance: the write-up sees a relatively weak upside case, citing a target around $0.1110 (~23% potential) versus a bearish downside target near $0.0551 (about ~39% risk). It recommends capital protection: place stops below $0.0871 (example $0.0865) or use ATR/structure-based distances, and consider trailing stops if $0.0913 breaks. Position sizing guidance emphasizes limiting risk to ~1–2% per trade and reducing size if volatility rises.
Correlation factor: HBAR is described as highly correlated with BTC. With BTC around $66,792, an assumed BTC pullback toward ~$65K could pressure HBAR toward the $0.08 region; a BTC breakout above ~$70K could create a rotation bounce for HBAR.
Not investment advice; focus on breakout confirmation and strict invalidation of trades.
A PANews CryptoPulse analysis warns that quantum computing could shift Bitcoin from “static” cryptographic security to “dynamic” time-based defense. Using Shor’s algorithm, the time to derive private keys can shrink from centuries to minutes, creating a potential time-window attack after a transaction is broadcast but before confirmation.
The article cites ARK Invest and Unchained research: about 34.6% of BTC may carry quantum attack risk, while 65.4% is considered safer. The risk is tied to whether a public key is exposed on-chain. Higher-risk holdings include early P2PK addresses, repeated address reuse, and UTXOs that have already been spent—because their public keys are already visible. The piece also notes the “store now, decrypt later” dynamic: attackers can collect data today and decrypt later when quantum capability matures.
On mitigation, the author argues Bitcoin can respond through upgrade paths to post-quantum cryptography. Development efforts include BIP-360 (P2MR), aiming first to reduce public-key exposure using Merkle tree design, then gradually replace ECDSA with PQC. The key market takeaway: the critical question becomes whether upgrades can be deployed fast enough as attack capability improves.
Keywords: Bitcoin, BTC, quantum computing, time-window attack, Shor algorithm, post-quantum, BIP-360, P2MR.
Blockchain analytics firm Onchain Lens says a wallet presumed linked to Drift Protocol moved 56.25 million DRIFT tokens (about $2.44M) to centralized exchanges Bybit and Gate.io shortly after a Drift Protocol security breach.
The on-chain transfer is one of the largest single DRIFT movements since launch and immediately sparked “whale wallet” scrutiny. Traders typically watch whether exchange deposits are followed by sell orders, since large liquidity inflows can translate into near-term selling pressure and higher volatility.
The deposit was split between Bybit and Gate.io, giving the tokens a fast on-ramp to stablecoins and other coins. The article notes Drift is an established Solana perpetual futures venue with a meaningful user base and TVL, making market perception around DRIFT especially sensitive during incidents.
Drift’s hack is described as an exploit of smart-contract weaknesses that enabled unauthorized withdrawals. The team acknowledged the breach, paused affected contracts, and is investigating with security auditors and forensic analysts. Moving tokens to exchanges is not confirmed as a selling action, but could also align with treasury operations such as paying recovery costs, audits, or replenishing liquidity/insurance funds.
Following the hack news and the DRIFT exchange deposit, the article reports increased volatility and higher trading volume as holders reassessed positions. Future team communication on the purpose of the DRIFT funds, plus any observable sell activity from the deposit addresses, will likely determine whether sentiment stabilizes or deteriorates.
For DRIFT token traders, the key near-term signal is whether the Bybit/Gate.io addresses convert deposited DRIFT into other assets quickly.
ATOM price may be ending a prolonged bearish phase (since Feb 18, 2025). Over the last 24 hours, ATOM rose 5.25% and volume climbed 13.22%, suggesting stronger participation. On the charts, ATOM broke out of a falling wedge and printed a bullish “engulfing” candle. Traders now need a daily close above $1.77 to confirm the breakout; otherwise, a fakeout risk remains.
If ATOM closes above $1.77, the article targets a move of 15%+ toward resistance at $1.98. A further break above $1.98 could open a larger rally, with upside toward $2.40. However, momentum looks weak: ADX fell to 16.16 (below the 25 level), implying trend strength may not yet be fully established.
On-chain/positioning signals are also turning constructive. Nansen data shows the top 100 addresses increased holdings by 2.96% over recent weeks. Coinglass indicates traders are actively positioning around $1.61 (support) and $1.78 (resistance), with more long leveraged exposure ($927.09K) than short ($274.79K). Open interest rose 3.57% to $124.82M, pointing to rising trader confidence in the ATOM move.
Key levels to watch for ATOM: $1.77 (confirmation) and $1.98 (next resistance).
Coinbase said it is not becoming a bank after receiving a conditional OCC trust charter approval. The OCC trust charter sets up a federal framework for institutional digital-asset custody and settlement, but Coinbase will continue operating as a trust company—not a retail bank.
CEO Brian Armstrong and policy officials said the OCC trust charter is meant for custody and institutional market infrastructure. Coinbase will not accept deposits or run lending. The company will also remain under New York Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) oversight even after the new federal pathway.
The news places Coinbase alongside other firms reported to have conditional OCC trust charter approvals (including Ripple, Circle, Fidelity Digital Assets, Bitgo, and Paxos). For crypto traders, the OCC trust charter is a compliance-positive signal: more standardized federal oversight could support institutional adoption and liquidity over time, while the non-bank model may reduce traditional deposit/lending risk exposures.
Key trading takeaway: the charter is “conditional” and still depends on operational, governance, and capital steps before it becomes fully effective.
HYPE is trading range-bound and testing key support near $35.6. The latest technical read is more bearish: price is below EMA20 (~$36.97), Supertrend remains bearish, and the MACD histogram is still negative, keeping HYPE in a consolidation-to-downside bias until a clear BOS occurs.
Key levels for HYPE traders: resistance at $37.27, then upside targets near $38.65 and $41.89, with higher resistances around $43.77 and $50.10. The immediate trigger is $35.5975. A breakdown below $35.5975 would confirm bearish BOS and raise the odds of a move toward ~$33.94.
Bull case needs structure change: HYPE must hold the swing low at $35.5975, then break above $37.27 to form a higher-high/higher-low (HH/HL). Risk rises if HYPE loses $35.5975, with CHoCH expected after BOS.
BTC correlation remains central (80%+). If BTC falls below the ~$65k area, the probability of HYPE support failure increases. A BTC reclaim above ~$70k would improve odds that HYPE can challenge $37.27.
Traders should watch HYPE around $35.6 and $37.27 for confirmation rather than guessing.