Ripple Prime has received a BBB investment-grade issuer rating from KBRA (Kroll Bond Rating Agency), a key “Ripple Prime BBB rating” milestone for its regulated prime brokerage and clearing infrastructure.
KBRA assigned the BBB rating to Ripple Prime CIV US BD HoldCo LLC, and applied the same “Ripple Prime BBB rating” to its main operating entity, Hidden Road Partners CIV US LLC. Ripple Prime is SEC-registered as a broker-dealer and CFTC-registered as a futures commission merchant, supporting activity in regulated U.S. markets. It also holds relevant industry memberships and has clearing-member status at CME Group.
The rating highlights that Ripple Prime is still in a scaling phase. Its growth is tied to clearing and intermediation via its exchange-traded derivatives platform (launched in 2024) and to fixed-income repo activity, which expanded significantly in 2025.
Financially, Ripple Prime reached profitability in 2025, helped by about $500M in capital injections from Ripple Labs after Ripple acquired Hidden Road late in 2025. KBRA also notes potential parent support if operating dividends are constrained.
For traders, the “Ripple Prime BBB rating” is primarily a credit-and-counterparty-confidence signal for institutional liquidity and market plumbing around regulated crypto-related finance flows.
Neutral
Ripple Prime BBB ratingprime brokerageKBRA creditregulated clearingrepo and derivatives
Circle (USDC, EURC issuer) plans to launch cirBTC, its own wrapped Bitcoin, targeting institutions. cirBTC is expected to list on Ethereum, be backed 1:1 by BTC held on-chain, and be positioned as a “highly secure and neutral” wrapped BTC standard for OTC desks, market makers, and DeFi lending protocols. Circle says cirBTC will also expand beyond Ethereum to its Arc layer-1 and the Circle Mint platform.
The launch puts Circle into direct competition with Coinbase and BitGo wrapped BTC products. Coinbase’s cbBTC (launched Sept 2024) has ~$5.9B market cap and ~88,800 tokens, while BitGo’s WBTC remains the largest (~$8B market cap, ~119,157 tokens) though supply is down versus the 2021 peak. Other smaller exchange-wrapped BTC tokens (KBTC, GTBTC, BBTC, HBTC, XBTC) are also noted. Combined wBTC + cbBTC supply is about 208,000 BTC.
For traders, cirBTC may improve wrapped BTC access and DeFi integration routes, but it does not create new underlying BTC supply. Watch BTC liquidity, wrapped-BTC flows, and DeFi lending rates for follow-through.
Stablecoins flipped the US Automated Clearing House (ACH) in February for the first time, underscoring surging demand for stablecoin payments.
Blockchain analytics firm Artemis reported that stablecoin total 30-day adjusted rolling volume reached $7.2 trillion in February, compared with $6.8 trillion processed by the ACH network. The article notes ACH is the backbone of the US payments system and handles about 93% of salary payments in the US.
Analyst Alex Obchakevich said stablecoins are becoming foundational infrastructure for global payments, citing the “no banks, no weekends, no borders” theme. Artemis data also showed momentum continued into March, with stablecoin volume at $7.5 trillion for the month, matching the ACH over the same 30-day window.
Supply and trading signals reinforced the picture: CEX.IO data puts total stablecoin supply at $315 billion in Q1 2026, up $8 billion year-on-year. Stablecoins also represented 75% of total crypto trading volume in the quarter—the highest on record (per prior reporting).
The catalyst cited is growing institutional adoption amid a warming US regulatory climate. Analysts referenced Standard Chartered’s view that the stablecoin market cap could reach $2 trillion by 2028 (over +530%). The GENIUS Act was highlighted as a key step enabling institutional use.
Overall, stablecoins are gaining real-market share in payments while continuing to expand liquidity—supportive for broader crypto risk appetite.
Ethereum (ETH) is trading under pressure after Trump’s statement that the US-Iran conflict could persist. Market sentiment turned risk-off: ETH is about 4% below the previous day’s high.
Derivatives led the move. Per CryptoQuant data, nearly $1B worth of ETH was sold in perpetual markets within an hour. Binance accounted for roughly $968M of that sell volume, pointing to concentrated risk positioning. Total ETH sell volume reached about $3.42B so far today, suggesting pressure may not be fully priced in yet.
Still, flows are diverging by region. South Korea appears to be buying the dip. The Korean Premium Index (KPI) rose to around 0.6, meaning local exchange prices are trading above global levels—consistent with sustained accumulation.
In the US, demand is more cautious. The Coinbase Premium Index moved back toward neutral (0). Coinbase spot flows reportedly showed a net outflow of about $7.10M on April 1, despite a prior accumulation of roughly $36.13M in ETH exposure between March 31 and April 1. The next close (April 2) is highlighted as a key signal: renewed inflows would support a rebound, while continued outflows would confirm institutional hesitation.
Related context: a similar derivatives-led sell-off in late March coincided with a sharper BTC move lower, underscoring how quickly risk-off can transmit across majors.
Bitcoin is trading around $66,600 ahead of the Good Friday long weekend, with liquidity thinning as CME futures and ETF flows pause. The report highlights a weakening demand backdrop: CryptoQuant estimates 30-day apparent demand at about -63,000 BTC even as ETF and corporate bitcoin purchases rise to multi-month highs.
Institutional buying is not translating into spot support. CryptoQuant notes large holders (wallets holding 1,000–10,000 BTC) have flipped to net distribution, with one-year balance change roughly -188,000 BTC versus +200,000 BTC at the 2024 cycle peak. U.S. spot demand also looks soft, with the Coinbase Premium remaining negative.
A key driver is macro sensitivity. Enflux says the “price floor” is partly underwritten by Federal Reserve rate-cut expectations. That support could be tested by inflation data: the ISM prices-paid index jumped to 78.3 in March (highest since June 2022), and Enflux links it to flow repricing, including about $296 million in net ETF outflows during the week of March 24 and muted early-April inflows.
With CME closed and ETF creation/redemption paused, traders lose an important stabilizer. CryptoQuant warns any relief rally may face resistance around $71,500–$81,200. The next major catalyst is U.S. inflation data on April 9; if March core PCE rises above February’s 3.1%, rate-cut expectations could fade further, strengthening the bearish case for Bitcoin.
Keywords: Bitcoin, ETF, CME, liquidity, demand, Fed rate cuts, core PCE, spot demand.
HTX Earn has expanded its yield lineup with a new VIP Flexible product and limited-time APY boosts. The headline is HTX Earn’s VIP Flexible USDT offering, available to Prime 5+ users, delivering up to 9% APY with no lock-up and hourly compounding.
VIP Flexible USDT APY is tiered by Prime level and capped by subscription quotas: Prime 5–7 get 6% (cap 50,000 USDT), Prime 8–9 get 7% (cap 80,000 USDT), and Prime 10–11 reach the full 9% (cap 100,000 USDT). An “Auto-Subscribe” feature can automatically allocate idle funds into VIP Flexible up to the caps, then route remaining capital to standard Flexible products.
In addition, HTX Earn launched promotional flexible campaigns for LIT and TRUMP. Starting March 24 07:00 (UTC), LIT Flexible’s APY rises from 8% to 12%. TRUMP’s promotion runs from March 17 09:00 (UTC) to April 17 16:00 (UTC), increasing yield from 2% to 8% (a fourfold jump). Redemptions are available anytime, with interest accruing from the next hour and distributed on a compounding basis.
For traders, these HTX Earn incentives may temporarily increase spot demand for USDT, LIT, and TRUMP and improve short-term liquidity conditions, especially among users seeking high-yield, flexible-risk strategies.
BitMEX announced an update to the TradFi Perpetuals index price rollover schedule for crude oil benchmarks. Starting 8 April 2026, BitMEX will update the index price for WTIUSDT and BRENTUSDT and provide a 5-day gradual rollover schedule.
For traders, the key change is the transition method: the index price for WTIUSDT and BRENTUSDT will move gradually over five days rather than switching instantly. This can help reduce sudden basis shifts and abnormal mark-price moves that sometimes occur during contract/index transitions.
The notice is part of BitMEX’s April 2026 TradFi Perpetuals Index Price Rollover Schedule process. Traders planning to hold or open crude oil perpetual positions around 8 April should watch for changes in spread, funding behavior, and liquidation risk as the index rolls. The TradFi Perpetuals index price rollover schedule is therefore an operational market-structure update rather than a fundamental macro catalyst.
Reports say Trump is considering sending US special forces to Iran to seize uranium stockpiles, according to Al Jazeera. Prediction markets tracking “US forces enter Iran” show a rapid rise in probabilities ahead of April 30.
Key figures:
- April 30 sub-market: YES odds up to 66% (from 55% the day before).
- December 31 sub-market: YES odds at 74.5%, suggesting traders price in potentially prolonged involvement.
- March 31 market: ~0%, as the timeframe is too short for ground operations.
Market activity: about $2.3 million in USDC traded on the April 30 market, with substantial order-book liquidity (roughly $186,290 to move price by 5 points). Price response appears fast to new information, though small dips/upticks are absorbed without major destabilization.
What to watch: Pentagon/CENTCOM statements on troop readiness or movements, and any US Congressional War Powers discussions that could affect timing.
Bottom line for traders: rising odds of US special forces action implies higher geopolitical tail risk, which can quickly change risk sentiment and liquidity conditions across crypto derivatives.
US-Iran ceasefire odds have fallen sharply amid continued missile attacks and widening military escalation, according to a FT-linked prediction market.
The probability of a US-Iran ceasefire by April 7 dropped to 1.8% (YES), down from 8% the prior day. By April 15, odds are also low at 8.5% (YES), falling from 18% a day earlier. Looking further out, April 30 shows 23.5% (YES), down from 40% a day earlier, while May 31 rises to 45.5% (YES).
The term structure indicates risk is being repriced toward later dates: the biggest jump occurs between April 30 and May 31 (a 22-point increase), suggesting traders are attaching greater likelihood to negotiations or further developments beyond early April.
A reported US troop buildup is part of the backdrop, including paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division. Market liquidity is limited (total volume across sub-markets: $535,634; April 7: $48,791), and the order-book data implies price can move with relatively modest capital, increasing near-term volatility.
Traders are effectively betting against imminent de-escalation unless credible diplomatic signals emerge. Watch points cited include statements from CENTCOM and possible comments by senior US officials and political leadership that could swing expectations between escalation and talks.
Keywords for traders: US-Iran ceasefire odds, prediction market, short-dated geopolitical risk pricing.
Korea crypto regulation is set to slip further after Korea’s National Policy Committee postponed the “second‑phase” Digital Asset Framework Act debate until after the June 3 local elections. The bill was removed from the March 31 agenda, leaving key rules for Korea’s crypto market in limbo, with only a partial user‑protection amendment advancing.
The delay keeps two flashpoints unresolved. For won-stablecoins, the Bank of Korea backs a bank‑led issuance model requiring banks to hold at least 51% of the issuer. The Financial Services Commission (FSC) pushes back, warning a hard 51% cap could sideline fintechs, tech platforms, and exchange-linked parties—so new and existing issuers remain in a gray zone.
On exchange governance, the FSC is moving toward tighter ownership limits for major shareholders (around a 20% ceiling with exceptions). If implemented, incumbents such as Upbit and Bithumb may need to cut stakes during a transition period, reshaping control and potentially affecting deals and listings.
For traders, the immediate effect is higher uncertainty rather than instant policy clarity. Expect tougher-to-model liquidity and listing plans for Korean venues, wider risk premia around KRW product narratives, and potential repricing after the election—depending on whether policy shifts toward “bank-heavy” issuance and restrictive governance or a more permissive framework.
Neutral
South Korea crypto regulationwon-stablecoinsexchange ownership capselection policy riskKRW market liquidity
Satsuma Technology, an AI infrastructure firm listed on the London Stock Exchange, has purchased an additional 25.65 BTC, bringing its Bitcoin treasury to 645.7 BTC. The disclosure follows periodic buying that began in early 2023, often during market consolidation, consistent with a dollar-cost averaging treasury approach.
Company leadership frames Bitcoin as a non-correlated, long-term reserve asset. It is intended as a hedge against inflation and not for short-term trading. The company also references evolving UK regulatory guidance for listed firms holding crypto-assets.
Market implications: continued corporate Bitcoin accumulation can reduce liquid BTC on exchanges, contributing to an “illiquid supply shock.” According to BitcoinTreasuries, public companies now hold over 1.5% of the total 21 million BTC supply, with that share increasing year over year.
The article also links the decision to AI–blockchain convergence. Experts argue that AI infrastructure needs trustworthy data provenance and secure, tamper-evident ledgers—areas where Bitcoin’s established network security can play a strategic role. Traders may watch Satsuma’s next filings and any market reaction to BTC treasury announcements, as sustained corporate demand can provide structural support.
Bullish
Bitcoin treasuryCorporate crypto adoptionAI and blockchainUK regulationBTC supply shock
As of March 2025, cryptocurrency social media engagement and AI search volume show a two-speed market: broad awareness vs deeper research. Cryptocurrency social media engagement data ranks the top 5 by social dominance: BTC 31.15% (-0.85%), ETH 12.05% (+0.2%), XRP 3.2% (-0.25%), USDT 0.4% (0%), and BNB 0.4% (+0.1%). Bitcoin remains the biggest narrative driver on X/Reddit/Telegram discussions, though its share dipped slightly.
AI search volume flips the leaders. ETH captures 14% of AI-driven search interest, followed by SOL (12%), EdgeX (6%), Base (5%), and Hyperliquid (4%). The gap between cryptocurrency social media engagement (often hype/visibility) and AI search volume (often due-diligence) suggests investors use AI tools to research complex smart-contract ecosystems.
For traders, this implies ETH may attract more “research-led” attention than indicated by general social chatter, while BTC’s dominance still supports liquidity and macro/regulatory headline sensitivity. Watch for follow-through: social dominance spikes can precede volatility, but sustained AI search interest may better signal longer attention and potential rotation into protocol/DeFi narratives.
Neutral
cryptocurrency social dominanceAI search volumeBitcoinEthereummarket sentiment
Bithumb will temporarily suspend INJ deposits and withdrawals starting 10:00 a.m. UTC for an Injective Protocol network upgrade. INJ spot trading continues without interruption, including INJ/KRW and INJ/BTC pairs.
The end time has not been announced. The exchange says services will resume after backend updates, stability and security checks, and successful integration of the upgraded network.
For traders, the main impact is reduced INJ liquidity movement: you cannot withdraw INJ from Bithumb or deposit new INJ during the maintenance window. This may affect arbitrage flows, custody transfers, and time-sensitive transfers.
Action: complete any urgent INJ withdrawals before 10:00 a.m. UTC, and delay new INJ transfers until Bithumb confirms restoration via its official channels.
The Japanese Yen is trading in a tight range despite rising Middle East tensions and broader “risk-off” sentiment. Markets are watching USD/JPY, which remains subdued as traders see fewer traditional safe-haven flows into the Japanese Yen.
Key drivers cited in the report:
- Bank of Japan (BoJ) policy stays ultra-accommodative, keeping a persistent yield differential versus other major central banks.
- Japan’s high energy import dependence makes the Japanese Yen vulnerable to oil-price shocks tied to Middle East routes and chokepoints (e.g., Strait of Hormuz and Eastern Mediterranean-linked traffic).
- Yen futures show unusually low movement: 30-day implied volatility for USD/JPY is at multi-month lows.
- The Ministry of Finance has not recently intervened, suggesting officials are comfortable with current FX levels.
- Portfolio flow data indicates steady overseas purchases by Japanese institutions, offsetting any haven-driven repatriation.
Other currency moves during recent incidents (1-week basis) include Swiss Franc +0.45% (clear haven bid), Euro -0.30% (energy-security pressure), and Canadian Dollar +0.60% (oil-price support).
Analyst Dr. Kenji Tanaka (Daiwa Institute of Research) argues the Yen’s “reaction function” has changed post-pandemic: geopolitical shocks may matter less than domestic monetary expectations. The report notes core inflation above the BoJ’s 2% target, but modest wage growth keeps the BoJ cautious on tightening.
What to watch for traders:
- BoJ signaling toward rate hikes could strengthen the Japanese Yen.
- A sustained oil spike from Middle East escalation could overwhelm haven demand and pressure the Japanese Yen via Japan’s deteriorating trade balance.
- Resolution of tensions could shift markets back toward risk-on, changing FX ranges again.
Neutral
Japanese YenUSD/JPYMiddle East GeopoliticsBank of JapanOil Price Risk
The Australian dollar showed remarkable resilience after China released its March Services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI).
In Asian trading, AUD/USD barely moved, trading in a tight ~20-pip range in Sydney. China’s non-manufacturing/services PMI came in at 53.0, up slightly from 52.5 in February. Despite the improvement, the data did not translate into fresh upside momentum for AUD.
Traders focused on broader drivers rather than one-off China prints. The article highlights three main supports for AUD stability: (1) stable Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) policy, with the cash rate target maintained at 4.35%; (2) resilient labor conditions, with unemployment below 4%; and (3) steady commodity exports (iron ore and copper) that underpin Australia’s trade performance.
Market structure also matters. Analysts cited that China-Australia linkages have become less about immediate PMI shocks as investors increasingly price China’s shift toward domestic consumption and services in a more “context-first” way. Technical levels were described as supportive, with AUD/USD support around 0.6550 and resistance near 0.6650.
Regional FX was similarly calm: the yen held steady versus the dollar and Southeast Asian currencies showed limited movement, suggesting traders had largely priced in China’s gradual recovery.
Looking ahead, the piece argues that upcoming US Federal Reserve decisions may influence AUD more than near-term China PMI releases, while medium-term moves remain tied to commodity trends.
Neutral
AUD/USDChina Services PMIRBA PolicyCommoditiesFed Outlook
In early Asian trading, NZD/USD slid toward the key 0.5700 level after weak Chinese PMI data triggered renewed risk-off sentiment and heavy selling in risk-sensitive “Antipodean” currencies.
The pair dropped about 0.8% in a day, breaking multiple supports including the 50-day moving average near 0.5740. Volume jumped to roughly 150% of the 30-day average, while sell orders clustered around 0.5720. Momentum signals also turned bearish: RSI fell below 30 (oversold) and MACD showed intensifying downside pressure. Options pricing reinforced the move, with demand for NZD/USD downside protection (puts premium vs calls). Traders are watching 0.5680 for the next potential support after 0.5700.
China’s official manufacturing PMI fell to 49.5 (below the 50 expansion/contraction threshold) and marked a third straight month of contraction; non-manufacturing PMI eased to 50.5. Because China is a major driver of New Zealand’s trade (including commodity exports and tourism), the data likely prompted algorithmic NZD/USD selling linked to Chinese growth expectations.
Focus now shifts to the US Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP). Economists expect +180k jobs, with a wide range (140k–220k). Markets also look at unemployment (3.8%) and wage growth (avg hourly earnings +0.3% m/m). Since Fed policy is tied to labor conditions—and wage inflation may keep rates higher—NFP could be the next catalyst for USD direction.
Within New Zealand, the RBNZ kept the OCR at 5.50% but remained hawkish, stressing policy must stay restrictive to return inflation to 1–3% (inflation cited around 4.7%). However, a weaker NZD can feed imported inflation, tightening the policy trade-off.
Overall, this is a near-term bearish setup for NZD/USD. A sustained break below 0.5700 could accelerate stops and momentum selling, while a surprise-soft or weak NFP could offer temporary relief.
China Services PMI fell to 52.1 in March 2025, down from 53.7 in February. The reading missed market expectations and marked the first monthly contraction in services momentum this year, though it remains above the 50-point expansion threshold.
The survey (about 400 private services firms, covering retail, transport, hospitality and professional services) combines five equal-weight sub-indices: new orders, output, employment, supplier delivery times, and purchased inventory. March’s softer growth showed expansion slowing rather than reversing.
Key signals inside the China Services PMI: new orders expanded but at a slower pace; business activity/output growth decelerated; employment improved only marginally with limited hiring. Input prices stayed inflationary, while business expectations remained positive but tempered.
Sector and geography also diverged. Consumer-facing services such as retail and hospitality were more resilient, while business/professional services saw moderation or reduced momentum. Major cities held up better than smaller cities and rural areas.
Policy context: the report lands amid China’s “economic recalibration” toward high-quality growth. Immediate broad stimulus is unlikely, but targeted fiscal support (e.g., tax relief and consumption incentives) and sector-specific measures could follow if weakness persists.
Traders should note this China Services PMI softening could reinforce a cautious risk tone toward China-linked equities/EM FX in the near term, while serving as a monitoring indicator for whether services growth re-accelerates or turns into a sustained slowdown.
Neutral
China Services PMIChina macro dataeconomic recalibrationfiscal supportrisk sentiment
Bitcoin miner Riot Platforms sold 3,778 BTC in Q1 as profitability pressures mounted. Riot reported the sale at an average price of $76,626, generating about $289.5 million, while BTC was around $66,867 as of Friday. The company produced 1,473 BTC during the quarter and still held 15,680 BTC on its books at quarter-end.
Blockchain analytics firm Arkham flagged a separate 500 BTC outflow tied to a wallet it attributed to Riot on Thursday. This follows a broader wave of miner selling: MARA Holdings, Genius Group, and Nakamoto Holdings sold a combined 15,501 BTC over the past week.
Industry commentary points to rising energy costs as the key driver. Developer Kadan Stadelmann said the Middle East-related oil price shock has increased mining costs, pushing less efficient operators offline, which can reduce hashrate and mining difficulty. CoinWarz data cited a mining difficulty drop on March 20 and a declining hash rate since early March.
For traders, the core signal is sustained sell pressure from a major BTC miner, even as Riot still retains a large BTC treasury.
Bitcoin fees have fallen to one of their lowest levels in six years, and BTC is trading near $66,000 after a weekly pullback driven by macro and geopolitical uncertainty. On-chain data points to a potential bottom, but traders should watch whether demand returns.
The article cites CryptoQuant’s Bitcoin Fund Flow Ratio at 0.065 as a historical pivot where price often stabilizes before a rebound. Similar ranges appeared in late 2017/early 2018, 2019, 2020 and 2023. However, the metric can still break down, which would shift the outlook toward continued distribution.
Bitcoin fees are also used as a participation signal: falling USD transaction fees typically mean lower on-chain activity. The article links this to declining speculative trading and suggests BTC holders may already be redistributing across exchanges. For confirmation, spot market activity matters. CoinGlass data shows net inflows of about $71M as of April 1, but since March 30 roughly $108M has been distributed into the market, leaving liquidity tilted toward sellers.
Bottom line: Bitcoin fees dropping supports “cooling” conditions that can precede a rebound, but the weak spot inflow and distribution risk limit upside until capital returns. Key watch: whether Bitcoin fees stay depressed while exchange and spot flows turn supportive.
Blockchain infrastructure firm REAL said it has partnered with Redstone to strengthen data integrity and transparency for tokenized assets across its ecosystem.
Key upgrades include:
- Oracle infrastructure and standardized price feeds from Redstone, aimed at delivering consistent and verifiable market data for tokenized financial products.
- Improved on-chain representation of pricing, proof-related data, and related frameworks, to make asset pricing and verification easier to audit.
- Independent risk intelligence from Credora, added to support standardized risk assessments for issuers and ecosystem participants.
REAL also highlighted that the integration is meant to provide the “continuous, verifiable signal” institutional allocators need across the tokenized asset lifecycle—covering areas such as valuation, reserve integrity, and issuer creditworthiness.
REAL CEO Ivo Grigorov said high-quality data and transparency are critical as the RWA (real-world assets) sector matures. Redstone co-founder and COO Marcin Kazmierczak added that institutional capital requires uninterrupted verifiable signals from valuation through creditworthiness.
The report notes REAL recently raised $29 million to expand its RWA infrastructure, positioning the partnership to better meet institutional standards for data reliability and transparency.
For traders, this is a foundation-building update for the tokenized-asset stack (oracles + risk intelligence), with limited direct linkage to a specific token price, but potential downstream effects on confidence and liquidity in regulated RWA markets.
Iran released a list of Gulf bridge targets after a coalition strike on the B1 Bridge in Karaj. In prediction markets, US-Iran ceasefire odds by April 7 collapsed to about 2% (down sharply from the prior day), a major repricing that signals traders expect much less near-term de-escalation.
The downgrade spread across the curve: US-Iran ceasefire odds by April 15 fell to ~8.5%, April 30 to ~23.5%, and May 31 to ~45.5%. Longer-dated probabilities remain higher, but the shape of the market suggests diplomacy is being priced in more slowly.
Liquidity is still active (around $535k in USDC traded across sub-markets). The article also flags key catalysts that could reprice US-Iran ceasefire odds quickly, including signals from CENTCOM or the UN and possible intermediary activity via Oman or Qatar.
Key levels to watch: Apr 7 (~1.8%–2%), Apr 15 (~8.5%), Apr 30 (~23.5%), May 31 (~45.5%), Jun 30 (~57.5%), and Dec 31 (~70.5%).
Bearish
US-Iran ceasefire oddsprediction marketsgeopolitical riskUSDC liquidityMiddle East tensions
The Bitcoin Policy Institute (BPI) says Taiwan should consider a “Bitcoin reserve” to improve strategic resilience in a China–Taiwan conflict scenario. The report argues that in a blockade, gold is difficult to move and USD-linked foreign reserves could be frozen, while Bitcoin can be accessed without physical transport.
BPI cites Taiwan’s existing exposure: Taiwan’s justice ministry holds 210 BTC seized from criminal cases (about $14 million). Lawmaker Ko Ju-Chun disclosed the figure, and analysts reference BitBo data suggesting Taiwan could rank among the top sovereign BTC holders if counted officially.
The proposal comes after Taiwan’s central bank rejected a Bitcoin reserve plan in December, citing high volatility, custody/storage constraints, and limited liquidity. Officials said they will keep testing digital asset technology via a sandbox using crypto the country already holds.
BPI also highlights Taiwan’s heavy USD dependence, with at least 80% of reserves in USD-denominated assets, and most trade conducted in USD. It frames Bitcoin (potentially alongside gold) as a hedge against risks including rising US debt, Fed expansion, and weaker demand tied to the tech sector and semiconductors.
As of publication, BTC is around $66,310 (BTCUSD). For traders, this is primarily a policy and national-security narrative rather than confirmed buying—potentially supportive for “sanctions-resilient” sentiment, but tempered by liquidity and custody hurdles discussed by Taiwan’s central bank.
Neutral
Bitcoin reserveTaiwan geopolitical riskUSD sanctions hedgeBTC custodyCentral bank policy
On-chain data shows two newly created “virgin” wallets received 1,781 BTC (about $119 million) from institutional custodian BitGo. The transfer was identified by blockchain analytics firm Lookonchain and occurred roughly four hours before it was publicly reported.
Because the source is a regulated custodian rather than an anonymous exchange, the move is likely tied to professional investors. Sending BTC into fresh wallets with no prior transaction history often indicates the setup of secure cold storage or initial funding for a fund/corporate treasury. The lack of immediate, dramatic price reaction suggests the execution may have been OTC or structured to limit market impact.
Traders may interpret the Bitcoin accumulation angle cautiously: moving coins off custodians can reduce readily sellable supply on exchanges, which can support price over the medium term. However, analysts stress that large transfers do not automatically confirm bullish intent; the new wallets could later collateralize loans, fund ventures, or rotate security setups.
For follow-through, market participants will likely watch whether these Bitcoin wallets remain dormant (long-term holding) or start interacting with lending/staking/DeFi infrastructure (active capital management). In the broader context, this comes as investors focus on ETF flows, macro conditions, and the upcoming Bitcoin halving—events that often shape positioning ahead of potential supply shocks.
Japanese Yen outlook improved after Societe Generale highlighted a resilient Tankan business survey from Japan’s Bank of Japan (BoJ). The March 2025 Tankan showed firms holding up despite global headwinds, keeping key diffusion indexes positive.
The report pointed to broad-based stability: large manufacturers’ sentiment fell slightly but stayed strong (Dec 2024: +8 to Mar 2025: +7), while non-manufacturing sentiment also remained elevated ( +27 to +25). Large all-industry capex plans eased marginally but stayed historically supportive (10.2% to 9.8%). Societe Generale argues this durability reduces the risk that policy tightening derails the recovery.
For traders, the key linkage is between the Tankan and BoJ policy expectations. Stronger sentiment supports views that Japan can handle a gradual rise in interest rates, reinforces the path toward sustainable 2% inflation via better cost pass-through, and can encourage steadier foreign investment flows into Yen assets.
In the broader FX cycle, a resilient Japanese Yen story matters because it can narrow Japan’s interest-rate differential versus the Fed/ECB/BoE. That reduces carry-trade appeal (funding in JPY to invest elsewhere) and can trigger Yen appreciation if positions unwind.
Bottom line: the Japanese Yen is getting a fundamental tailwind from Tankan resilience. Traders should watch subsequent Tankan releases and how they shift the timing of BoJ normalization, especially versus global risk sentiment and other central banks’ rate paths.
Bullish
Japanese YenBank of JapanTankan SurveyMonetary Policy NormalizationCarry Trade
Intergaze announced an immediate shutdown of its cross-chain bridge service and told users to act fast. Intergaze will disable deposits immediately, but withdrawals remain available for only 14 days from the announcement date.
For fungible-token holders, the requirement is straightforward: withdraw all assets to external wallets within that 14-day window or risk losing access after withdrawals are disabled.
For NFT holders, the deadline is longer but still time-critical. Users must register a compatible Cosmos wallet by May 1, 2025 to join an automated migration. The migration will move Intergaze NFTs to Stargaze Zone on the Cosmos Hub in the second half of May, mapping Intergaze NFTs to equivalent Cosmos representations while preserving metadata, ownership, and provenance.
Liquidity providers are instructed to remove liquidity from Intergaze pools immediately. Developers should migrate integrations to alternative bridge solutions.
The company did not cite a specific security breach as the cause. Instead, the notice points to strategic realignment and changing market conditions—factors consistent with a broader trend of consolidation in the cross-chain bridge sector.
Potential alternatives highlighted include Wormhole, LayerZero, Axelar, and Chainlink CCIP. Traders should monitor bridge-related liquidity and user fund flows around Intergaze, as similar shutdowns have historically triggered short-term volatility and urgency-driven selling or re-routing of cross-chain positions.
U.S. spot Ethereum ETF flows turned negative again, extending recent weakness. Earlier reports noted Ethereum ETF outflows for a seventh straight day (Mar 26, 2025), while the latest update shows another day of redemptions on Apr 2, 2025, with total net outflows of about $71.17M.
By issuer, BlackRock’s iShares Ethereum Trust (ETHA) led the outflows (-$46.67M). Fidelity’s Ethereum Fund (FETH) was also negative (-$7.7M), and Grayscale’s Ethereum Trust (ETHE) recorded -$16.8M. The broad pullback across major issuers points to a wider sentiment shift rather than an isolated product problem.
Traders should note the earlier article’s key counterpoint: BlackRock’s iShares Ethereum Staking Trust (ETHB) attracted about $97.73M in net inflows, suggesting capital rotation toward staking-enabled exposure that may offer yield beyond pure price tracking.
Potential drivers mentioned include post-rally ETH/BTC price corrections, macro risk rotation linked to interest-rate expectations and equities, and regulatory uncertainty around Ethereum’s classification. The articles also flag alternative demand channels (futures products, DeFi, direct custody) and fee differences that can affect flows.
Near-term impact is likely bearish for ETH sentiment if redemptions persist, because ETF mechanics can translate outflows into selling pressure. However, two days (or a brief extension) is not enough to confirm a long-term trend reversal; traders will need follow-through across multiple market cycles and upcoming macro/network catalysts.
US spot Bitcoin ETF inflows continued to matter for BTC positioning. Earlier, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs logged $180.4M net inflows on Mar 13, with BlackRock’s IBIT leading ($143.6M). After a sizable Mar 6 outflow ($348.9M), flows stayed mostly positive through early March, keeping institutional demand steady.
More recently, on Apr 2, US spot Bitcoin ETF inflows rebounded with a $9.02M net inflow, ending a one-day outflow streak. Fidelity’s FBTC led (+$7.29M) and VanEck’s HODL added (+$4.74M), while BlackRock’s IBIT posted a smaller net outflow (-$3.01M).
For traders, the key link is mechanics: when spot Bitcoin ETF inflows are positive, authorized participants typically buy BTC in the spot market to back new share creation. That can improve BTC liquidity and reduce downside pressure during low-liquidity moments.
Traders also noted technical positioning around support and resistance. Analysts cited BTC support near $65–67K and resistance targets roughly $76.6K–$82K, framing price as trading in a “low-resistance zone.”
What to watch next: daily US spot Bitcoin ETF flow prints alongside CME Bitcoin futures open interest, Grayscale’s GBTC activity, and exchange reserve data. A continued rebound in ETF inflows would strengthen the bull case; fading inflows would weaken it.
Note: Market information only; not trading advice.
Bullish
US spot Bitcoin ETFETF inflowsinstitutional demandBTC liquiditytechnical levels
A prediction market tracked by Crypto Briefing shows US forces entry to Iran at 65.5% (YES) by Apr 30, up from 55% just 24 hours earlier. The Apr 30 contract gained 10.5 percentage points in a day, indicating traders are pricing higher odds of US ground involvement. Longer-dated sentiment also rose: US forces entry to Iran by Dec 31 is 74.5% (YES), while Mar 31 is near zero at 0.1%.
The latest move is linked to increased US and Israeli targeting around Isfahan, plus the USS Gerald R. Ford returning to the Middle East. The article also references April 6 focus on Iranian energy infrastructure as relevant to the Apr 30 timeline.
Liquidity appears strong: the Apr 30 market reportedly trades over $2.3M in USDC daily, and about $186,290 is needed to move the market by 5 points—suggesting institutional positioning. Traders are advised to watch for Pentagon briefings and operational updates that could further shift US forces entry to Iran expectations as the April energy-target deadline approaches.
On-chain data compiled by analyst Axel Adler shows Bitcoin (BTC) pain is intensifying. The 7-day moving average of Net Realized Profit/Loss fell to about -$410 million in early April, down $154 million versus the prior week—suggesting continued loss-selling by holders exiting below cost basis.
A second indicator warns the stress is not over: Short-Term Holder SOPR has remained below 1.0 for nine consecutive days. Since SOPR below 1.0 means short-term holders are selling at a loss, a multi-day run indicates a sustained loss-driven regime rather than a one-off capitulation moment.
Adler notes historical context: cumulative realized losses since Oct 2025 are roughly -$64.2B, about half of the -$125.2B total seen during the 2021–2022 bear market. That implies pressure is real, but not at the most extreme “final capitulation” phase.
Price action aligns with the cautious tone. BTC is near $66,000 after failing to hold above $70,000. The article highlights a range roughly $62,000–$72,000 and chart structure still tilted bearish, with moving averages acting as resistance and demand lacking during consolidation.
Traders looking for confirmation were pointed to a potential relief signal: the 7-day Net Realized P/L recovering above 1.0 with sustained follow-through, alongside SOPR returning above 1.0—otherwise, BTC may continue chopping or retesting lower support.