The ETH price has rebounded from June lows and reclaimed the $1.8K support area, while testing a higher-timeframe descending trendline. On the daily chart, ETH is nearing the upper boundary of a broad descending channel and the 100-day moving average around the $2K zone. This confluence has already triggered sell pressure, keeping the market cautious ahead of the next ETH price decision point.
Resistance is clustered between $2,000 and $2,200, where the 200-day moving average also converges. A confirmed breakout from the channel and a sustained move above $2.2K would signal a structural shift and could extend the recovery. On the downside, losing $1.8K would weaken the short-term structure and could expose a pullback toward roughly $1.72K, and potentially an order block near $1.62K–$1.64K.
On the 4-hour chart, the ETH price action remains bullish inside an ascending channel after a double bottom near $1.5K, with higher highs and higher lows. However, sellers defended the area near $1.95K, suggesting the current dip may be profit-taking as long as $1.8K holds.
On-chain, exchange reserves have fallen to about 15.3M ETH, the lowest level in years. That typically implies coins are moving to self-custody rather than hitting the sell side immediately—supportive for longer-term sentiment, but not a guarantee of immediate upside.
Traders should watch the ETH price reaction around $2K–$2.2K for breakout confirmation versus rejection.
Neutral
ETH price actionKey support resistanceMoving averagesExchange reservesTechnical breakout
The US crypto market structure bill tied to the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act is nearing a Senate floor vote, but progress hinges on “ethics” language. Blockchain Association CEO Summer Mersinger says only minor fixes remain and an agreement could be reached as soon as next week, helped by a parallel push for developer protections via the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act (BRCA) section.
However, three Senate Democrats say they will oppose the CLARITY Act unless explicit ethics provisions are included. They cite Trump’s June disclosures of about $1.4B in digital-asset-related ventures (including his memecoin and World Liberty Financial) and argue the risk of corruption could rise if senior officials hold financial ties to the crypto sector.
With Republicans holding a narrow majority, passage likely requires at least some Democratic support. Markets have responded: on Kalshi, the probability of a CLARITY vote before the August break rose to 75.1% (from 47% on July 10), suggesting procedural momentum despite the ongoing ethics fight.
For crypto traders, the key near-term signal is whether CLARITY Act negotiations can produce workable ethics language quickly enough to clear the Senate calendar before the August break. Expect headline-driven volatility in crypto market-structure risk if talks stall again.
Morgan Stanley’s E*TRADE has launched spot crypto trading through crypto infrastructure provider Zero Hash. Eligible retail clients can now buy, sell and hold Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH) and Solana (SOL) inside the E*TRADE platform, alongside traditional assets. The rollout followed a May pilot with a limited user group, and asset transfer functionality for moving digital assets on and off the platform is expected later this year.
Pricing and custody details matter for traders: transactions carry a 50-basis-point fee, while custody and transaction services run through separate Zero Hash accounts that are not covered by FDIC or SIPC protections. Morgan Stanley said it plans to transition the digital asset services to Morgan Stanley Digital Trust.
The move adds another channel for spot crypto trading exposure at scale. E*TRADE serves 8.6 million households and held about $1.56 trillion in client assets as of March 31. Morgan Stanley also expanded its broader crypto strategy this year, including a stablecoin reserve service for token issuers and spot crypto ETFs. The bank’s spot Bitcoin ETF launched earlier with a 0.14% management fee, and it has since amended filings for spot Ether and Solana ETFs to also target 0.14% fees.
Overall, this is a direct step toward mainstream spot crypto trading access, with potential near-term flow support for BTC/ETH/SOL as availability broadens.
Ault Blockchain, developed by Ault Capital (a subsidiary of Hyperscale Data), is building a Cosmos-based Layer-1 tokenized asset network to support onchain settlement after banking disruptions. The company says banking failures and “debanking” incidents left businesses unable to access funds, motivating a system designed to keep operating even if a bank relationship ends.
Key details: the network will be compatible with Ethereum smart contracts via an EVM environment inside the Cosmos architecture, enabling tokenized real-world assets and institutional onchain trading/settlement. A public testnet for the tokenized asset network launched in February, opening the Cosmos system for institutional workflows.
Governance and compliance: participants will follow a Wyoming DAO LLC model and must complete identity checks. Token access is not tied to a public token sale; instead, Ault plans extended token distribution linked to mining-node participation and measurable network activity, aiming to serve identified regulated participants.
Policy backdrop: the launch comes as US lawmakers debate banking access for crypto-related and other “lawful” businesses. If the tokenized asset network gains traction, it could strengthen the narrative of compliant RWA infrastructure and reduce operational dependency on traditional banking—an area traders may watch for incremental demand in the RWA/infra segment.
Kalshi filed with the U.S. CFTC to launch a regulated “Kalshi flight-cancellation hedge” tied to the percentage of flights canceled at specific airports over defined time windows. The market uses Yes/No binary contracts with threshold language (above/below/between/exactly/at least). Kalshi plans to settle using FlightAware as the primary data source, with the U.S. DOT Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) as a backup, aiming to reduce cancellation-definition disputes and single-source data failure.
The market is not live yet. Kalshi says it is being evaluated for real hedging value, not just prediction-market interest. Key risks remain: settlement ambiguity if cancellation definitions or data revisions differ, potential liquidity gaps that could widen spreads, and “basis risk” if an airport-level threshold doesn’t match a trader’s route- or airline-specific exposure.
Regulatory context also matters. The CFTC recently stayed an emergency rule change and required completion of pending KalshiEX trades in Michigan, signaling active intervention when event-market rules appear to cross regulatory lines. Traders should monitor how the Kalshi flight-cancellation hedge is scoped and whether data integrity and liquidity are sufficient for practical use.
XRP whales accumulated 70 million XRP in a week as the price recovered above $1.11. Santiment data (via Ali Martinez) shows wallets holding 1M–10M XRP increased their combined balance to about 3.83 billion XRP, even amid volatility tied to the US–Iran conflict.
At the same time, Binance XRP reserves fell to a five-month low of about 2.61 billion XRP (CryptoQuant). Lower exchange balances can indicate tokens moving off exchanges, which may reduce near-term sell pressure if demand holds.
Binance also announced an $800,000 XRP airdrop for users holding Ripple USD (RLUSD), running July 17 to Aug. 14, with weekly XRP distribution to eligible users across Binance Earn, Margin and Futures—aimed at boosting RLUSD adoption.
Technically, XRP is testing resistance inside a tightening symmetrical triangle around $1.12–$1.13 after rebounding from near $1.05. 4-hour Chaikin Money Flow is positive (0.26), while Aroon readings are mixed. Daily momentum looks improved but not a full reversal (RSI ~49; MACD histogram positive).
Derivatives data adds context: XRP futures open interest is near $2.5B, and liquidation clusters concentrate around $1.117–$1.13 and $1.09–$1.10. A sustained break above $1.13 could clear nearby short-side liquidity; failure to hold $1.09–$1.10 risks a move back toward the triangle’s support near $1.06.
For traders, the XRP whale accumulation + falling exchange reserves are supportive, but triangle levels and liquidation liquidity make the next breakout or rejection especially tradeable.
The next “S&P 500 retail sales” release is framed as the key checkpoint for whether the S&P 500 can justify record-level prices.
As of Jul 15, the S&P 500 is near all-time highs (~7,572.40). Valuations are not cheap: the forward 12-month P/E is 20.1, above the 5-year average (19.9) and 10-year average (19.0), per FactSet.
Market support currently relies on earnings. FactSet estimates Q2 2026 S&P 500 earnings growth at about +23.1% YoY, which is doing “a lot of work” to sustain a forward P/E near 20. A weaker consumer would risk profit revisions and trigger multiple compression.
Consumer signals are mixed ahead of the print:
- Consumer Confidence (Conference Board) rose to 91.2 in June 2026, still below “comfort” long-term levels.
- Retail sales (NRF/CNBC Retail Monitor): excluding autos and gas, up +0.33% MoM (seasonally adjusted) and +9.41% YoY (unadjusted).
The article’s trading takeaway is scenario-based:
- A beat led by discretionary (and not heavy discounting) should keep valuations defensible.
- A miss in discretionary raises recession/earnings-risk and increases the chance of P/E downside.
- Revisions matter: headline strength with weaker prior-month revisions can be a trap.
For crypto traders, the link is mostly macro: stronger S&P 500 retail sales can lift yields and tighten financial conditions (often bearish for high-beta assets), while soft data may help rates but only if it does not threaten earnings and risk sentiment. Net effect depends on whether the print shifts rates upward or downward without worsening growth expectations.
Binance says its July EU shutdown coincided with a sharp swing toward self-custody. Using unaudited figures, the exchange reported that about 70% of EU withdrawals moved into personal self-custody wallets, while roughly 30% went to other (rival) venues. The data suggests traders did not simply re-register and relocate balances to another CEX as regulators had expected under MiCA wind-down rules.
For traders, the key market question is liquidity and execution quality. If more volume leaves MiCA-compliant trading platforms, order books could thin, spreads may widen, and stablecoin access may feel tighter in the short term. The broader takeaway is that the “must use an exchange” logic is weakening: self-custody wallets (e.g., MetaMask) and hardware storage reduce friction, while non-custodial routing and tools like THORChain can facilitate trades without centralized custody.
The trade-off is operational risk for users: self-custody increases responsibility around seed phrases and reduces account-level intervention if funds are off-exchange. Overall, Binance’s numbers point to a custody-pattern shift rather than a full elimination of risk, and the lack of audited methodology leaves near-term conclusions uncertain.
SBI Group has partnered with Ondo Finance to tokenize Japanese stocks and settle transactions using the yen-backed JPYSC stablecoin. Under the deal, Ondo Global Markets (BVI) will issue tokenized financial products linked to Japan, while SBI will distribute them across its financial platforms and customer base.
Key points for traders and market watchers: JPYSC will be used for settlement and may also serve as collateral within Ondo’s tokenized product ecosystem. The companies did not disclose a launch date, the first tokenized assets, or the regulatory structure governing investor access.
The announcement follows SBI Global Asset Management’s launch of the tokenized Japanese equity fund on Solana (JX token). Together, these moves show SBI testing multiple routes to bring Japanese securities on-chain, while pairing yen-denominated settlement via JPYSC.
Notable figures include Ondo CEO Ian De Bode and SBI Chairman/CEO Yoshitaka Kitao, both framing Japan as a major capital markets hub and Ondo as a strategic long-term partner.
The Clarity Act is entering a tighter schedule as President Donald Trump plans to meet senators at the White House today to push the bill before the August recess and prepare for a possible U.S. Senate floor vote. Lawmakers are still negotiating the ethics language covering senior government officials and crypto businesses. Democrats say that ethics provisions must be settled before the Senate can clear the 60-vote procedural threshold.
Key figures include Sen. Bernie Moreno (briefing Trump on the full measure) and Sen. Cynthia Lummis (a main architect). Senate leaders John Thune and Thom Tillis are pressing for action during the current work period. Thune indicated a vote could move forward even without a fully bipartisan deal, while Tillis said negotiators aim to reach agreement by the end of the week. Separately, Senate timing remains uncertain and Polymarket shows declining odds, with the 2026 passage probability reported at 38%.
Substance-wise, the Clarity Act would split digital-asset oversight between the SEC and the CFTC, set disclosure rules for digital asset issuers, and preserve federal anti-fraud authority. The biggest unresolved hurdle remains the ethics provision restricting officials with financial ties to the crypto industry. Negotiators are considering whether to publish a revised draft with bracketed placeholder language or delay publication until final wording is approved.
Trading context: a near-term Senate vote timeline for the Clarity Act can move sentiment around U.S. regulatory risk for exchanges, stablecoin/payment rails, and market structure—especially for XRP, USDC, and UNI tied to regulated market activity.
Neutral
Clarity ActSEC vs CFTCEthics provisionUS Senate voteDigital asset regulation
Bitcoin (BTC) surged after June US CPI data, reaching a three-week peak near $65,500. However, the move failed quickly: BTC gave back roughly $1,500 after adding about $4,000 in a day, triggering a sharp rejection at the $65.5K level.
Crypto Rover said the sell-off is consistent with bear-market relief rallies. He noted BTC often rallies toward the Short-Term Holder Realized Price, then stalls as recent buyers near break-even and sell to exit. He cited similar patterns after the October crash (rally capped near $115,000), and then again during January’s push toward $95,000 and mid-May strength toward $83,000.
Merlijn The Trader warned the $65,500 rally could be a bull trap. He pointed to likely downside and highlighted a potential “flush” toward the $58.5K–$60K order block. He also flagged $63,000 as a key support: holding it could allow another attempt higher, but losing $63,000 likely opens the door to another move below $60,000.
In contrast, analyst Jelle said the latest action is a “big win for the bulls” because BTC reclaimed prior range lows. Still, he cautioned that summer trading is often slow, and more sustained upside requires breaking multiple additional levels. He described the move as a “good start,” but not a full market change.
Keywords in focus: BTC, CPI, $65,500 rejection, $63,000 support, $58.5K–$60K order block.
Polygon Labs is cutting jobs as it completes the Coinme integration and prepares to merge Coinme operations into Polygon Labs. CEO Marc Boiron said the layoffs are difficult but necessary, aiming for profitability by 2027 as Polygon shifts from blockchain infrastructure toward a blockchain-enabled payments business.
The restructuring follows Polygon’s earlier moves: it spent about $250m in January to acquire crypto exchange Coinme and wallet infrastructure provider Sequence, positioning them as core building blocks of its “Polygon Open Money Stack.” Boiron said the Coinme integration will increase overall headcount even as roles are eliminated during the transition.
This is part of a multi-year cost effort. Polygon previously reduced roughly 20% of staff in 2023, cut additional positions in 2024, and trimmed another 60 employees earlier this year—widely linked to preparing for the Coinme and Sequence deals.
Polygon said the restructuring is separate from the Polygon Foundation, which continues to oversee the network and protocol upgrades. The company also cited stablecoin supply of $3.37b and record June on-chain payment volume of $9.12b.
For traders, this Coinme integration-driven pivot signals management focus on payments and efficiency rather than pure chain-building, with near-term sentiment likely tied to “cost-cutting” headlines rather than immediate token demand.
The US Senate approved S. Res. 772 by unanimous consent, effectively rejecting a presidential pardon or commutation for Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), the former FTX founder. The resolution is nonbinding and cannot block the president’s constitutional power, but it further limits any path to early release from his 25-year federal sentence.
Senators Cynthia Lummis and Ruben Gallego led the move. Lummis said SBF already received a fair trial, while Gallego urged he remain in prison. The latest development follows earlier comments from President Donald Trump saying in January he would not pardon SBF, even though he later granted clemency to other crypto-linked figures such as Changpeng Zhao and Ross Ulbricht.
SBF was convicted in the FTX collapse case on seven fraud-related counts and prosecutors said customers lost more than $8 billion. With resistance now coming from the Senate, courts, and the White House, traders may see continued “legal overhang” tied to major exchange failures, even if the decision is not directly token-specific. The “Sam Bankman-Fried pardon” outcome mainly matters for risk sentiment and near-term volatility around exchange-collapse headlines.
Polymarket odds had previously suggested a very low chance of clemency, reinforcing that markets were already pricing limited near-term upside for SBF-related developments.
Neutral
Sam Bankman-Fried pardonUS SenateFTX legal riskCrypto regulationMarket sentiment
The 2026 FIFA World Cup Final will be held on 19 July 2026 at MetLife Stadium, with the tournament expanded to 48 teams and more knockout scenarios. For crypto traders, this means a peak liquidity window, tighter odds, and hundreds of markets—so sportsbook execution details matter.
This crypto betting guide compares World Cup 2026 Final sportsbooks, including Bet365, DraftKings, BetMGM (traditional/regulated) and crypto-first options like Dexsport and Stake. Key differences are market depth, live betting speed, settlement rules, payment rails, and Cash Out availability.
A crucial trading risk is settlement timing: Match Result (1X2) generally settles after 90 minutes plus stoppage time, while trophy/knockout-related markets require extra time and penalties. Misreading these settlement rules can lead to “late” outcomes in the knockout phase.
For crypto betting, Dexsport is positioned as wallet-based and generally no-KYC for standard play, with multi-crypto deposits and on-chain transparency. Stake is also described as crypto-friendly with broad football market coverage. The traditional operators are described as requiring identity verification and not supporting crypto deposits.
Traders are advised to prioritize crypto betting sportsbook selection based on withdrawal reliability, live betting tools, and odds quality (small gaps can compound over many bets), rather than chasing minor price differences.
Disclaimer: for information only; gambling involves risk and rules vary by country.
Neutral
crypto bettingWorld Cup 2026sportsbookslive bettingCash Out
ARK Invest research director Lorenzo Valente challenged a16z Crypto’s “TradFi doesn’t want DeFi” thesis, arguing that TradFi vs DeFi is not a permissioned-only story. a16z says banks and asset managers will use blockchains for lower costs and better settlement while keeping compliance, governance, and operations centralized.
Valente counters that institutional activity is already expanding on public blockchains. He points to rising tokenized finance, with total tokenized real-world assets reported above $29B by April 2026 and tokenized US Treasuries around $13.4B, including deployment on Ethereum.
Standard Chartered projects stablecoins and tokenized assets could reach $4T by end-2028, with mature DeFi protocols likely capturing much of the activity. The article highlights potential DeFi beneficiaries such as Aave, Compound, and Morpho, and notes BlackRock’s BUIDL fund using on-chain markets for collateral.
Still, the TradFi vs DeFi split may be hybrid: institutions can use public chains while restricting wallets, custody, and transfers. Permissioned and semi-controlled alternatives (e.g., Canton Network) also compete.
For traders, this is a narrative on infrastructure rails rather than an immediate protocol change. Near-term price impact is likely limited unless follow-through shows up in stablecoin issuance, tokenized-asset flows, and DeFi liquidity.
Neutral
TradFi vs DeFiPublic BlockchainsTokenizationStablecoinsDeFi Liquidity
Ethereum (ETH) surged with the sub-CPI crypto rally, topping a six-week high near $1,950 and gaining about 30% from its multi-year peak around $1,510. But the move stalled below $1,900, where ETH has started to slip again.
Crypto Rover points to a repeating 1,369-day market pattern that has previously triggered two “devastating sell-offs” after similar ~30% rallies. In that scenario, ETH could fall to $1,500 or even break below that level, potentially printing a new multi-year low. Rover also frames a longer-term upside case, suggesting a post-capitulation run toward targets near $10,000.
However, Michaël van de Poppe is less alarmed. He calls the ETH bounce above $1,900 “phenomenal” and argues on-chain signals point to a “buy-the-dip” environment rather than “a lot more new lows.” His chart implies upside toward roughly $2,500–$2,700 by early Q4.
Traders are left with two competing ETH narratives: a technical, time-cycled crash risk versus a short-term dip-buy setup supported by on-chain data.
Users spent a record $324 million on onchain gacha in June 2026, according to Blockworks Research, even as broader crypto markets deteriorated. The same month saw Bitcoin (BTC) fall more than 20% to a 21-month low, while spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a record $4.5 billion in outflows.
The article frames onchain gacha as a tokenized, randomized “booster pack” model for trading-card collectibles (notably tokenized Pokémon cards). Buyers pay for random rewards, then can list, hold, or redeem tokens tied to specific physical cards stored in vaults. Key risks remain custodial and authentication-related: the value depends on vault integrity and grading accuracy, as grading companies report rising counterfeit activity.
Why now: tokenization plugs into a booming physical TCG market and a surge in grading demand. PSA reportedly suspended submissions across service levels in June due to a backlog of nearly 10 million cards. Institutional and mainstream visibility also helped, with high-profile collectors like Logan Paul putting Pokémon cards back in the spotlight.
A key mechanic driving engagement is the “instant buyback” loop (often around an 85% resale value), which accelerates the flip-or-try-again behavior typical of gambling-style gacha. The sector includes platforms such as Collector Crypt and Courtyard. Collector Crypt says it tokenized about $40 million of cards/comics and buys around $2 million of inventory weekly; it also reports that about 30% of users redeem cards.
Overall, onchain gacha demand appears resilient during a bearish crypto tape, but sustainability depends on pricing, liquidity, and regulatory scrutiny as the fast trading loop can reverse quickly.
Bitmine Immersion Technologies (NYSE: BMNR) released its July Chairman’s Message titled “ETH is the cure for the ‘Uncanny Valley of Wealth.’” The company argues that Ethereum (ETH) is a critical interface to mitigate the downstream social and economic effects of agentic-AI and increasing machine-to-machine power.
Key firm stats and positioning: Bitmine says it owns 4.8% of the total ETH supply of 120.7 million and is “96% of the way” to its “Alchemy of 5%” goal, targeting acquiring 5% of ETH sometime in 2026. The company also highlights business milestones: added to the Russell 1000 Large-cap index on June 26, 2026, and its Series A Preferred Stock trading on the NYSE under symbol BMNP.
On strategy, Bitmine frames 2026 crypto headwinds (macro, regulatory delays like the Clarity Act) as potentially turning into tailwinds, citing progress such as bank tokenization efforts and new Ethereum Layer 2 launches (e.g., Robinhood Chain). Bitmine says it is positioning for the next crypto upcycle by strengthening the Ethereum ecosystem and supporting infrastructure partners, while running ETH-focused treasury operations via staking and DeFi mechanisms. The company launched MAVAN, a made-in-America validator network, in 2026.
Overall, this is a promotional/PR update anchored to ETH accumulation, staking infrastructure, and an ETH-centric macro/AI narrative rather than a new protocol or regulation event.
South Korea’s central bank raised interest rates to 2.75% (up 25 bps) on July 16, the first tightening move since January 2023. The Bank of Korea cited firmer exports, persistent inflation pressure (June CPI 3.2%), and financial-stability risks. All seven board members backed the decision, and the guidance leaves room for more hikes.
For crypto traders, the key channel is funding conditions. A higher South Korea rate can redirect household money toward bank deposits and bonds, reducing the won liquidity that typically fuels retail flows into major KRW pairs on Upbit and Bithumb. Importantly, demand was already soft ahead of the decision: crypto holdings by local investors reportedly fell from about $83.3B (Jan 2025) to $41.4B (Feb 2026). Daily trading volume on five domestic exchanges dropped from roughly $11.6B (Dec 2024) to about $3B (Feb 2026). Won exchange deposits also declined from 10.7T won to 7.8T won.
New in the later article: regulators are tightening market access for certain leveraged ETF products linked to large tech firms, pausing new listings and increasing the minimum cash balance requirement (30M won from 10M won) from Aug 5. In the won-denominated market, XRP, BTC and ETH remain active, and Upbit added DRV to KRW/BTC/USDT on July 14—signalling ongoing token competition for domestic flows.
Overall, this South Korea rate hike and the ETF controls point to a more restrictive liquidity backdrop. Unless global liquidity or institutional inflows offset the local funding drag, speculative demand is likely to stay under pressure in the short term and could remain cautious longer-term.
Bearish
South Korea Rate HikeCrypto LiquidityKRW Trading PairsETF RegulationUpbit/Bithumb
Warren Buffett said Alphabet stock (GOOGL) could outperform 90%–95% of Wall Street analysts’ commonly recommended picks. Speaking on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” he noted Berkshire Hathaway’s Alphabet stake has grown to more than $31 billion, after Alphabet shares rose about 3.65% to roughly $370.82.
Buffett confirmed he personally initiated the Alphabet investment, while Greg Abel now has the final say on major investment decisions. Berkshire reportedly built the position starting Q3 2025 and added into early 2026, including a reported $10 billion private deal in June tied to Alphabet’s ~$80 billion AI fundraising.
Price details from Alphabet’s SEC filing showed Berkshire paid $351.81 for Class A shares and $348.20 for Class C shares. Buffett also said he underestimated Google for years and regretted not buying earlier.
On AI spending, Buffett called Alphabet’s capex “real money,” with plans for about $180B–$190B in capital expenditures this year. Financial results were cited as supportive: Q1 revenue rose 22% to $110B, Google Cloud revenue jumped 63%, and operating cash flow was about $174B over the past 12 months.
While bullish on Alphabet stock, Buffett also warned against Wall Street’s short-term focus on quarterly results versus long-term earning power.
MoonPay has acquired Glide to expand cross-chain crypto deposit infrastructure. In a joint announcement with Cointelegraph, MoonPay said it will integrate Glide’s deposit and routing technology into MoonPay Deposits, a product used by apps including Wallet in Telegram, Moonshot and Paysafe.
Glide, founded in 2023 by former Robinhood Wallet engineers Tushar Soni and Qinyu Tong, supports 100+ tokens across 30 blockchain networks. Its focus is reducing friction in funding wallets, targeting a recurring issue where users send funds to the wrong chain or token and then need bridges, swaps and manual drop-offs.
MoonPay frames the deal as part of building a broader digital asset infrastructure stack beyond fiat-to-crypto payments, following acquisitions tied to security, trading and accounting capabilities. CEO Ivan Soto-Wright said Glide helps make transfer complexities “invisible” to users and can reduce fund-loss risk from incorrect token/chain selection.
Financial terms were not disclosed. The acquisition is MoonPay’s sixth announced deal of 2026, as it continues to add layers to crypto deposit infrastructure and related tooling.
Crypto markets weakened in Q2 2026, but prediction markets outperformed. CoinGecko reported that spot trading across the top 10 centralized exchanges (CEXs) fell to $1.95T (down 27.9% QoQ), while CEX perpetual futures volume dropped 10% to $12.7T and stablecoin market cap slipped 1.6% to $305.1B. Total crypto market cap also declined 12.6% to $2.1T.
Against this backdrop, prediction markets recorded their strongest quarter on record, reaching $113.8B in notional volume. The biggest drivers were sports and politics. Polymarket’s World Cup winner market drew over $3.3B in trading volume, and contracts tied to the 2028 US presidential election ranked among the largest, per Polymarketscan data.
Platform share also shifted: Kalshi led with a 58.9% market share in Q2 (up relative dominance), while Polymarket’s share fell from 35.8% to 30.2%. Activity peaked in June during the FIFA World Cup, with monthly notional volume hitting an all-time high of $50.7B (+91.9% vs the prior five-month average).
Regulatory scrutiny is increasing. In the US, disputes continue over whether prediction markets are financial markets or gambling, with lawsuits involving platforms like Kalshi escalating in 2026. The article also notes a record month for DeFi hacks in April, underlining ongoing security risks in broader crypto markets.
Overall, prediction markets delivered a clear pocket of demand while the rest of the crypto complex saw volume contraction.
Elliptic (16 July 2026) published a preview of its cryptoasset risk management framework, saying cryptoasset risk has become an explicit supervisory expectation for financial institutions (FIs). Supervisors worldwide expect firms to identify and manage cryptoasset-related risk across AML/CFT, sanctions compliance, and governance—without defaulting to either “over-engineering” or disengagement.
The framework maps cryptoasset risk onto categories FIs already use, aligned with FFIEC BSA/AML Manual, Wolfsberg, FATF, and UK JMLSG guidance. It keeps three familiar dimensions—customer and counterparty risk, geographic risk, and product risk—then adds a crypto-specific dimension: on-chain behavioral risk.
Key point for trading-relevant compliance: because blockchain transactions are public, institutions can assess direct and indirect exposure to illicit entities, exposure percentages, anonymizing techniques (mixers, privacy coins, smart-contract mixers), and cross-chain activity. The report emphasizes that tracing must follow funds through every hop; stopping at a fixed depth can create a structural compliance gap, including for OFAC obligations.
Elliptic positions blockchain analytics as the practical way to operationalize cryptoasset risk management, via wallet and transaction screening, entity/issuer due diligence, and monitoring controls. The full report reportedly includes enforcement case studies, red-flag indicators, enhanced due-diligence triggers, and control checklists designed for supervisor-ready implementation.
Bitunix launched the Bitunix Card, a USDT-focused Visa debit card designed for everyday spending with instant settlement at 130M+ Visa merchants. The Bitunix Card supports USDT payments and travel use, and it can be managed via a unified dashboard.
For traders, the key mechanism is “spend + earn” on USDT held on the card. Eligible purchases can earn up to 8% cashback, capped at 1,000 USDT per month. The Bitunix Card is compatible with Apple Pay, Google Pay, PayPal, and regional payment rails.
The card also enables automated yield on eligible balances, with annual returns up to 11.6% depending on the asset and conditions. Fees are simple: no issuance fee and no monthly maintenance fee. To activate, users must transfer at least 100 USDT to the card account, then complete identity verification; availability depends on supported regions.
While this is a product launch rather than a token issuance, it may strengthen real-world USDT usage and support the broader “utility beyond trading” narrative. However, it is unlikely to materially shift spot liquidity or overall market structure by itself.
Tokenized funds for pension portfolios may deliver more practical value from collateral mobility than from 24/7 trading. The article argues that pensions mainly need predictable cash flows and, crucially, the ability to move collateral precisely when margin and funding windows open.
Key points on tokenized funds and collateral mobility:
- Why it matters: Faster collateral movement between venues and custodians can reduce idle capital and improve margining efficiency.
- Capital efficiency estimate: An industry analysis cited with GDF/ISDA suggests up to ~200 bps of capital could be unlocked via faster settlement and always-on collateral flows.
- Market plumbing proof: Broadridge’s DLR platform reportedly processed $7.5T in June repo volumes, showing large-scale institutional use of distributed-ledger financing.
- Growth in on-chain cash sleeve: Tokenized money market funds topped ~$15B AUM, and broader RWA (excluding stablecoins) is around ~$31B.
What pensions must implement (not just trade):
- Prefer the correct legal wrapper and transfer-agent model; the token is a share representation rather than a new asset class.
- Confirm settlement finality, cutoffs, NAV/oracle reliability, and conservative haircuts.
- Run an operational pilot with whitelisting, rehearsals for failed transfers/oracle outages, and fallback to legacy rails.
Regulatory backdrop: The CFTC is considering 24/7 futures/perpetuals, but the article says pensions should focus on operational certainty and collateral portability first. Overall, tokenized funds are framed as an operational upgrade to a collateral conveyor belt—where tokenized funds help the collateral arrive on time, not trade at midnight.
A stablecoin depeg happens when the token’s market price meaningfully diverges from its $1 target and does not promptly return. The article stresses that “stablecoin depeg” is not one event: traders must distinguish between liquidity depegs and reserve depegs.
A liquidity depeg occurs when redemptions still work, but one exchange (thin order books or pool imbalances) cannot absorb sell pressure. In this case, arbitrage can restore the peg once redemption access is used. The article cites USDC in March 2023: it traded down to about $0.87, but later fully recovered after Circle confirmed reserves were sound (some funds trapped at Silicon Valley Bank were covered).
A reserve depeg is more dangerous: backing is impaired or unreachable, so arbitrage cannot close the gap. The clearest example is TerraUSD (UST) in May 2022, which collapsed as an algorithmic “mint/burn” mechanism depended on LUNA’s value. UST’s fall erased roughly $60B, and LUNA’s supply expanded from ~342M to ~6.5T.
The piece also highlights how depegs spread: collateral chains (DAI following USDC), oracle-driven liquidations (mispriced stablecoin feeds can trigger a liquidation “death spiral” even if the stablecoin is solvent), and panic reflexes.
Regulation-wise, the GENIUS Act (signed July 2025, referenced as impacting US payment stablecoins) requires full reserves in liquid assets and monthly disclosures, aiming to reduce reserve-failure risk but not liquidity depegs.
Trading takeaway: don’t just trade the exchange price. Check whether the issuer’s mint/redeem works and whether discounts are venue-specific (liquidity) or across venues with redemption frozen (reserve).
Solana (SOL) is trading around the key $84–$86 area after rebounding from the $69.86 (0.618 Fibonacci) support. Traders are watching for a clean break of SOL above $84–$86, followed by a retest that flips the zone into support. If SOL confirms that move, the next upside targets highlighted are about $126.10 (next major Fibonacci area) and then the larger resistance region near $180.74.
The latest structure also emphasizes a broader recovery path: reclaiming $100 and turning it into support is seen as the key step to improve the higher-timeframe outlook. Major hurdles remain at roughly $150, $200, and prior highs near $250, where “price discovery” would likely require breaking the former high. A longer-term cycle projection mentions $1,000 as conditional rather than an immediate setup.
Risk stays defined: if SOL loses the $69.86 support level, the bullish thesis weakens and downside could re-open toward the mid-$60s. Near-term trading focus is straightforward—monitor SOL’s reaction at $84–$86 and whether it can sustain above the breakout zone; repeated rejection would keep SOL range-bound.
Neutral
Solana (SOL)Technical AnalysisFibonacci LevelsResistance BreakoutCrypto Market Outlook
Dogecoin (DOGE) is retesting long-term support near $0.061 as traders decide whether the recovery can stay alive. The article highlights a bearish broader structure, with DOGE still trading below the former support area near $0.08.
On the upside, reclaiming and holding above $0.08 could keep the bullish path intact, opening targets toward $0.098–$0.122 resistance and potentially a longer-term minimum near $1.42. The key idea is that DOGE must confirm demand returning—evidenced by strength above nearby resistance and higher monthly lows.
On the downside, a sustained breakdown below roughly $0.061 would invalidate the long-term setup. The analysis warns that losing this confluence zone could expose $0.0306, and a deeper bearish cycle may bring the $0.0142 region back into focus.
Technically, the piece frames the move through an Elliott Wave lens: DOGE may have completed a fourth-wave correction after the 2021 advance, with wave five potentially targeting ~$1.42. However, the signal is conditional and requires DOGE to hold the rising monthly trendline from since 2017.
Overall, this DOGE price prediction centers on a make-or-break level: defend $0.061 for a recovery attempt, or risk trend damage if buyers fail to hold.
Tokenized stocks market cap has reached a record $2.3B as renewed demand pulls investors toward blockchain-based equities. Token Terminal data shows Ethereum leads with 34% share, followed by BNB Chain (30%) and Solana (23%). The biggest jump came from Kraken’s xStocks at about $507M, alongside Binance bStocks at roughly $334M. Ondo Finance remains the top issuer with ~$955M in onchain equities.
Adoption is widening across major venues. Binance opened zero-commission trading for eligible users in 7,000+ U.S. tokenized stocks from June 1. Coinbase added commission-free U.S. stock and ETF trading with 24/5 availability in Dec 2025. Earlier rollouts include Kraken via xStocks for ~11,000 U.S.-listed stocks/ETFs (Apr 2025), plus other proxy/onboarding expansions mentioned by regional exchanges.
Traders should note context: the broader tokenized real-world assets (RWA) market rose 589% from early 2025 to Jun 2026, but tokenized stocks still represent only ~5.5% of the ~$34B RWA total. Still, the tokenized stocks record suggests liquidity improvement and stronger crypto–traditional equities integration, which may support positive sentiment in the space even as regulatory scrutiny increases.