Core Scientific disclosed it sold roughly 1,900 BTC for about $175 million in January 2026, reducing holdings from 2,537 BTC to 630 BTC and signalling plans to monetize most remaining BTC during 2026 (with the bulk of sales expected in Q1). The company is reallocating capital away from new large-scale Bitcoin rig purchases toward AI and high-performance computing (HPC) data‑center buildout and colocation (HDC) — mirroring moves by peers such as Bitdeer, Cango and Bitfarms. Hashrate fell from 20.1 EH/s at end‑2024 to 17.9 EH/s amid the transition. Core reported operational metrics relevant to capacity and revenue ramp: about 350 MW energized, ~100 MW billing, 500 MW under exclusivity, and ~1.5 GW of leasable pipeline. Management emphasised site readiness, long‑lead equipment procurement and targeting creditworthy tenants (hyperscalers, chipmakers) to grow colocation revenue and margins. CFO said the BTC sale boosted liquidity while keeping strategic options open. At reporting BTC traded around $67–68K. Primary keywords: Core Scientific, BTC sale, Bitcoin, AI pivot, HPC; secondary keywords: liquidity, colocation revenue, megawatts, hash rate, hyperscalers, GPU-as-a-Service.
LBank Labs’ Precious Metals Futures arm surpassed $6 billion in cumulative trading volume since launching GOLDUSDT and SILVERUSDT perpetuals on January 5, 2026, attracting more than 20,000 unique users. The venue now lists nine tokenized metal instruments — GOLD, SILVER, XAUT, PAXG, XPT, XPD, XCU, XNI and XAL — with GOLD (35.78%), SILVER (28.48%) and XAUT (15.92%) accounting for the bulk of volume. LBank highlights deep liquidity, advanced order-book visualization, competitive fees and up to 500× leverage. CoinGlass data on Feb 25 shows GOLDUSDT open interest reached $31.46m — a 199.69% 24‑hour surge and the highest among centralized exchanges — while SILVERUSDT open interest rose 2.37% to $13.46m. To boost engagement, LBank launched its 17th BoostHub campaign focused on XAUT (10 XAUT prize pool, ≈ $54,000) across Smart and Futures pools. LBank positions tokenized precious metals as a bridge between traditional commodities and crypto, aiming to enhance price discovery, cross‑market hedging and capital mobility, and plans further product expansion, liquidity improvements and partnerships. This release is promotional and not investment advice.
South Korea’s KOSPI plunged about 10–11% in March 2025 in a fast, broad-based sell-off that erased hundreds of billions in market value and sparked regional contagion across Asian equities. Heavy weightings in technology and semiconductors — led by Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix — accounted for a large share (around 40%) of the decline. Trading volume surged (near triple the 30-day average in one report), implied volatility (VKOSPI) spiked (to the high 50s in one reading), and foreign investors withdrew billions in a single day. The won weakened roughly 2% vs. the dollar while bond yields and credit spreads widened. Immediate drivers cited include weak global semiconductor demand, stronger-than-expected US inflation and hawkish policy fears, a sharp USD/KRW move, algorithmic and program trading, and geopolitical risk. Authorities intervened: bans on short selling, triggered circuit breakers, halts to program trading, and central-bank readiness to supply liquidity were reported. Analysts warn the break of key technical levels likely amplified algorithmic selling, margin calls and liquidity stress. For crypto traders: expect elevated cross-market volatility, wider bid-ask spreads, heavier demand for hedges (puts and volatility products), and possible short-term risk-off flows from Asia-exposed crypto assets. Key near-term monitors are semiconductor earnings and demand data, US inflation and central-bank signals, FX movements (USD/KRW), foreign portfolio flows, and regulatory or liquidity interventions that could stabilize sentiment.
Bitcoin traded around $68,000 after recent gains as mixed macro and geopolitical signals influenced crypto markets. Former President Donald Trump offered comments perceived as supportive of the US economy and markets, which traders interpreted as a positive sentiment driver for risk assets including Bitcoin. At the same time, lingering fears over tensions with Iran — including regional instability and potential disruptions to oil markets — kept a risk premium on safe-haven and speculative assets. Market participants noted steadying on-chain activity and cautious positioning by institutional traders. Key indicators: BTC near $68k, persistent geopolitical risk (Iran), and positive US political signals (Trump) providing short-term support. Traders should watch volatility around geopolitical headlines, flows into spot and derivatives markets, and macro cues for US policy and risk sentiment.
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson criticized a proposed SEC rule and the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act provision that would require projects to demonstrate sufficient decentralization to qualify as digital commodities. Under the draft standard, no single issuer or coordinated group may control more than 20% of a network’s stake; Hoskinson argued this would likely cause XRP to be classified as a security because Ripple holds roughly 33.6% of XRP in escrow (about 33.61 billion of 100 billion total supply). He warned the rule could also harm proof-of-stake networks, including Cardano, and create a two-tier system where the largest, established tokens are effectively grandfathered while smaller projects must petition the SEC for commodity status. The bill requires projects to apply for “graduation” to commodity status, with the SEC given 60 days to review but able to pause or request more information, potentially prolonging decisions. Ripple maintains that a federal court ruling already established XRP’s non-security status and supports the Clarity Act as preferable to no legislation. The bill still faces debate—particularly over stablecoin yield provisions—before a possible Senate Banking Committee markup. (Main keywords: XRP, SEC proposed rule, decentralization standard, Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, Ripple, Charles Hoskinson.)
Commerzbank’s March analysis warns that persistent geopolitical conflicts are a primary downward force on the EUR/USD exchange rate. The euro is trading in a defined range with psychological barriers, while global tensions prompt safe-haven flows into the US dollar. Key transmission channels cited include energy price shocks, safe-haven demand, trade-flow disruptions and potential central-bank policy divergence between the ECB and the Federal Reserve. Eastern European instability and Middle East tensions are highlighted as major flashpoints that threaten European energy security and shipping routes, amplifying euro vulnerability. Commerzbank’s multi-factor risk model prices a significant geopolitical risk premium into the euro, implying limited scope for sustained appreciation even if European economic data improves. Traders should therefore treat diplomatic and security developments as market-moving information alongside traditional fundamentals such as interest-rate differentials, growth and inflation.
Shiba Inu (SHIB) has retested multi-year lows, dipping to $0.00000507 on Feb 6 and again to $0.00000526 on Mar 3, 2026. The token showed persistent selling pressure — six consecutive daily red candles on Binance — but staged intraday bounces (closing $0.00000548 after the March low). Recent on-chain data shows spot inflows to exchanges outpaced outflows, signalling heightened sell-side readiness. Market stress earlier in February included a broad crypto sell-off that liquidated roughly $2.44 billion in leveraged positions, contributing to SHIB’s plunge. Technical outlook: the $0.0000050 area is now the critical multi-year support — whales need to accumulate and hold this level to prevent deeper losses. Key resistances to watch on any recovery include the daily 50 MA (~$0.0000077) and the daily 200 MA (~$0.00001). Macro context: Bitcoin’s relative strength (trading around $68k) could lift altcoins if momentum continues, but weakness at the $0.0000050 floor risks panic selling and further downside. Traders should monitor exchange flows, whale buy activity, and whether the $0.0000050 support holds; leveraged positions and new derivatives listings (e.g., Coinbase COIN50-style products) may amplify volatility.
White House crypto adviser Patrick Witt pushed back against JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon’s claim that stablecoins should be treated as bank deposits, arguing the regulatory trigger is issuer activity — specifically lending or rehypothecation of reserve assets — not the payment of interest. The proposed GENIUS Act would require issuers to hold segregated 1:1 reserves, ban lending and rehypothecation of those reserves, and mandate regular audited transparency. Proponents say a fully reserved, non-lending stablecoin resembles cash-in-trust rather than a bank deposit, changing the risk profile and appropriate oversight. Critics from the banking sector warn stablecoins offering yield could compete with deposits and press for bank-style regulation. The debate follows high-profile failures such as TerraUSD and the growth of dollar-pegged tokens (USDT, USDC) with combined market value north of $100 billion and trillions in annual trading volume. The outcome will shape consumer protections (no FDIC insurance under the proposed model), market structure for payments, and whether stablecoins can scale as mainstream payment rails under a fit-for-purpose regulatory regime.
OKX has launched stock perpetual futures settled in USDT, offering 24/7 leveraged exposure to major U.S. equities and ETFs without owning the underlying assets. Announced March 21, 2025, the initial nine listings include Nvidia (NVDA), Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), Meta (META), Alphabet/Google (GOOGL), Micron (MU), SanDisk (SNDK), the QQQ and SPY ETFs. Contracts use a funding-rate mechanism with leverage configurable from 0.01x up to 5x. OKX’s move aims to bridge traditional equities and crypto derivatives, enabling global access where direct broker access is limited and creating new hedging and arbitrage opportunities. Key risks include amplified losses from leverage, funding-rate costs, and regulatory scrutiny—OKX excludes U.S. customers and appears to have structured offerings for international users. Market analysts say adoption metrics and liquidity will determine success; the product could accelerate cross-asset offerings among exchanges if volumes grow.
Threshold Network has launched a Unified Bitcoin Liquidity App that consolidates minting, redeeming, swapping, bridging and transaction tracking for tBTC and native BTC across multiple chains. The interface performs smart route discovery and ranking by cost, speed and reliability, aggregates DEX liquidity (leveraging deep Ethereum liquidity), and can execute native BTC swaps without forcing users to assemble separate tools. Key features include resumable in‑flight transactions, staking‑aware fee waivers for holders of the T token, optional gasless minting, direct WBTC/cbBTC → tBTC conversions, real‑time tracking and a unified tBTC explorer. Initial chain integrations are Bitcoin, Ethereum, Arbitrum, Base, Sui and Starknet. Threshold says the release reduces on‑chain friction and execution risk, increases tBTC mint/bridge/swap throughput, and concentrates BTC liquidity into its routing and aggregation stack. The protocol behind tBTC uses a 51‑of‑100 threshold signer model and cites roughly $5.1B historical bridge volume and ~6 years of security history. For traders: the app may boost tBTC utility and volume, strengthen staking incentives for T holders, and shift more BTC liquidity into Threshold’s ecosystem — factors that could raise tBTC trading flows and affect liquidity, slippage and fees across related markets.
Bitcoin plunged roughly 50% from its all-time high within four months even as global liquidity rose by about $5 trillion to nearly $190 trillion, prompting scrutiny of the relationship between liquidity and BTC price. Ainslie Group chief economist Chris Tipper argues the headline liquidity increase is driven largely by China’s central bank (PBOC), which added an estimated $1–2 trillion since late 2024. Because China bans Bitcoin, its added liquidity flows into gold, infrastructure and the domestic economy rather than crypto; stripping out China, Western liquidity momentum peaked in October and has been decelerating — matching Bitcoin’s drop. Gold hit record highs in late January and remains close to peak levels, underscoring the bifurcation. Market observers, including Abra CEO Bill Barhydt, note the US Dollar Index (DXY) has strengthened recently (from ~97.5 to 99.6), which typically pressures BTC. Bitcoin faces heavy resistance near $70,000 and traded around $67,000–$68,500 in the latest sessions; a meaningful recovery is likely tied to renewed Western liquidity expansion via Fed easing, dollar weakness, or crisis-driven intervention. Key themes: liquidity composition (China vs West), PBOC stimulus, gold outperformance, DXY strength, BTC resistance at $70k.
XRP faces a liquidity test after on-chain data showed roughly 472 million XRP (~$652M) moved onto Binance in February — the largest monthly inflow on record. Analysts describe the situation as a “distribution vs. repositioning” battle driven by rising global macro risk, notably geopolitical tensions involving the U.S., Israel and Iran. Exchange inflows increase the odds of discretionary selling because large balances on trading venues become immediately actionable supply, especially during thin liquidity windows after traditional markets close. Despite macro pressure, XRP has maintained a pattern of higher highs and higher lows and currently trades near $1.35 (CoinCodex). Market commentators warn this setup could produce heightened volatility: if transfers represent strategic repositioning, price may chop before trending higher; if they signal de-risking by major holders, a temporary liquidity overhang could push prices lower. Ripple’s CTO reiterated that XRP transactions are immutable and cannot be blocked. For traders, key takeaways are elevated exchange supply, macro sensitivity, and a critical inflection point that favors risk management and readiness for rapid moves.
Japan’s Finance Minister Shunichi Katayama said authorities are closely monitoring markets and stand ready to take measures, including currency intervention, to stabilize excessive volatility. The remarks follow notable USD/JPY swings (around the 152–155 range) and rising 10-year JGB yields near 1.0%, with core inflation remaining above the 2% target and persistent trade deficits. Katayama emphasized coordination between the Ministry of Finance and the Bank of Japan and highlighted a data-dependent approach to policy. Experts note interventions are typically triggered by rapid, disorderly moves, speculative attacks, or sustained misalignment from fundamentals. Japan’s historical use of direct FX operations, verbal guidance and multilateral coordination (G7/G20) remains relevant. For traders: key monitored indicators are USD/JPY levels, JGB yields, inflation data, liquidity conditions and speculative positioning in yen futures. Potential intervention scenarios could cause sudden yen moves, affect carry trades and regional currency flows. Market participants should watch BOJ/MoF communications, global central bank divergence (notably the Fed), and major macro releases for immediate trading cues.
Upbit, South Korea’s largest crypto exchange (≈80% market share), will list Definitive (EDGE) for trading against Korean won (EDGE/KRW), Bitcoin (EDGE/BTC) and Tether (EDGE/USDT) at 08:00 UTC on 4 March 2025. Definitive is a verification-focused blockchain offering verifiable data integrity and decentralized identity services; EDGE tokens are used for staking, transaction fees, governance and service access. Upbit’s listings often drive large volume spikes — historical similar listings saw first-week volumes rise 300–500% — and analysts project EDGE could see $300–450M in week-one volume and a 50–90% price uptick. The listing improves access for Korean retail by enabling direct KRW trades and may rebalance EDGE’s geographic volume (previously ~65% European). Upbit’s stringent technical, security and compliance reviews imply the project met regulatory and audit standards amid South Korea’s evolving crypto rules. Traders should watch initial liquidity, bid-ask spreads on the KRW pair, and short-term volatility typical after major exchange listings; longer-term impact depends on on-chain adoption of Definitive’s verification services and regulatory developments expected mid-2025.
Bithumb, one of South Korea’s largest crypto exchanges, has listed Definitive (EDGE) for spot trading against the South Korean won (EDGE/KRW), with trading scheduled to begin at 08:00 UTC on the announcement date. The listing gives EDGE direct fiat access to a high-liquidity, retail-savvy market and follows Bithumb’s rigorous asset vetting. Definitive is a layer-1 blockchain focused on scalability, interoperability and developer tools; EDGE is used for fees, staking/security and governance. Analysts expect the KRW pair to boost liquidity, trading volume and price discovery, and potentially produce a localized price premium similar to prior “Kimchi premium” dynamics. Short-term effects likely include heightened volatility and volume; long-term value will depend on continued development, community adoption and integration with Bithumb services (e.g., staking, launchpad). Key SEO keywords: EDGE listing, Bithumb EDGE, EDGE/KRW, Definitive blockchain, KRW trading pair. This listing is a credibility milestone and a liquidity gateway that could accelerate adoption in South Korea if project fundamentals and on-chain activity remain strong.
Binance expanded its USDⓈ-M margin/perpetual offerings by listing five new margin pairs — AVAX/U, LINK/U, LTC/U, PAXG/U and ZEC/U — going live on 5 March 2025 at 10:00 UTC (USDT collateral). The pairs provide leveraged exposure (commonly up to 10x depending on asset and user tier) across multiple sectors: layer‑1 smart contracts (AVAX), oracle services (LINK), payments (LTC), tokenized gold (PAXG) and privacy (ZEC). Binance said the markets were tested before activation and will be managed with standard risk controls: cross/isolated margin modes, tiered maintenance margins, automatic liquidation and real‑time monitoring. The move follows rising margin and derivatives activity in 2024 and aims to deepen liquidity, hedging and shorting options for retail and institutional traders. Key trader considerations: differing volatility profiles (PAXG typically lower, AVAX higher), jurisdictional access limits, and elevated liquidation risk inherent to margin trading. The listing may increase short‑term trading volume and volatility for the listed tokens and attract flows from precious‑metals‑focused and institutional participants via PAXG.
Core Scientific will sell up to 2,500 BTC as it shifts strategy from large-scale Bitcoin mining toward building AI-focused data-center capacity and high-performance computing (HPC) services. The company has already monetized BTC holdings (prior disclosures showed 1,924 BTC sold for roughly $176m and 613 BTC retained) and now plans a larger divestment to fund conversion of mining sites — including Pecos, Texas — into AI colocation facilities and to buy HPC hardware. Executives cited rising energy costs, compressed Bitcoin mining margins and broader industry pressure as drivers of the pivot. For traders, the key implications are immediate supply: up to 2,500 BTC entering the market could exert short-term downward pressure on BTC price if sold on open markets; the sale also improves Core Scientific’s liquidity and finances, reducing firm-level balance-sheet risk. The move reflects an industry trend of miners diversifying into infrastructure and services revenue (e.g., data centers, AI), which may reduce miners’ BTC accumulation policies going forward and alter selling dynamics in spot markets. Primary keywords: Core Scientific, Bitcoin sale, BTC, AI data centers, crypto mining. Secondary/semantic keywords: liquidity, divestment, HPC, colocation, energy costs.
Bearish
Core ScientificBitcoin saleAI data centersCrypto miningLiquidity
President Donald Trump held a private meeting with Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and subsequently publicly supported Coinbase in a lobbying dispute with U.S. banks that has delayed a key cryptocurrency legislative bill, Politico reports. The disagreement centers on bank objections to high-yield crypto rewards on stablecoins — banks warn such rewards could pull deposits away from traditional lenders and threaten lending capacity and financial stability. Coinbase argues that curbing stablecoin rewards would stifle competition and innovation and that banks are blocking market-structure legislation needed for clearer crypto rules. The stalled bill would have provided regulatory clarity for tokens; its delay prolongs uncertainty in the U.S. crypto market. The article names Coinbase and references several crypto products and tickers commonly associated with the company (e.g., COIN, GBTC, IBIT, BITO, FBTC) and major cryptocurrencies (BTC, ETH, XRP, SOL, DOGE). For traders, the key takeaways are heightened political involvement defending crypto firms, continued legislative uncertainty that may increase short-term volatility, and renewed public scrutiny of bank–crypto competition that could influence stablecoin yields, deposit flows, and regulatory outcomes.
Neutral
CoinbaseCryptocurrency regulationStablecoin rewardsLegislation delayBanking vs crypto
Gold is trading steady above $5,150 per ounce despite a sustained rally in the US dollar. The dollar’s strength—driven by a relatively hawkish Federal Reserve and US economic resilience—raises the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold and limits upside. Offsetting forces include steady central bank buying, robust physical demand in Asia, rising mining costs and higher inflation expectations that have kept real yields from rising as fast as nominal rates. Technicals show immediate resistance near $5,250 and support at $5,150, $5,050 and $4,950; moving averages converge around $5,070–$5,100. Futures positioning indicates reduced managed-money net-long exposure and slightly lower open interest, suggesting cautious speculative sentiment. Key catalysts to watch: Federal Reserve policy signals, shifts in inflation breakevens, geopolitical risk events, and sudden equity market stress. Primary keywords: gold price, US dollar, Federal Reserve, central banks, gold resistance. Secondary/semantic keywords: DXY, real yields, TIPS, ETF flows, support and resistance. This outlook suggests a market in equilibrium where structural demand underpins prices while a strong dollar caps near-term rallies.
A roughly $1.4 billion inflow into U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs over five trading days failed to trigger an immediate Bitcoin price surge, highlighting an operational time lag between ETF share creation and actual spot BTC purchases. Authorized Participants (APs) — the intermediaries that create and redeem ETF shares — can satisfy demand initially by shorting ETF shares, using inventory, or hedging, and then buy spot Bitcoin hours or days later. That delay, combined with 24/7 crypto trading, fragmented global liquidity and settlement conventions, weakens the short-term correlation between ETF inflows and BTC spot moves. Since January 2024, the eleven U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have gathered over $55 billion cumulatively; large headline inflows therefore often represent future buying intent rather than executed spot demand. For traders: ETF flow figures should be treated as a lagging indicator for price action — watch AP hedging, on-chain transfers and exchange flows for signs of actual buy execution. Sophisticated participants may infer AP behavior from premium/discounts, creation/redemption volumes and custody flows; automation, deeper institutional liquidity and regulatory refinements could shorten but not eliminate the lag. Key SEO keywords: spot Bitcoin ETF, ETF inflows, Authorized Participants, Bitcoin price impact, market liquidity.
HTX has upgraded the search feature in its mobile app to deliver broader, faster and more precise results. The enhanced search now returns not only assets but also platform features, upcoming events, copy trading products and trading bots, improving navigation and access to information. HTX highlights benefits including more precise results, more comprehensive information, smoother navigation and faster access. Users are encouraged to open the HTX App to try the improved search. The update is positioned alongside other recent HTX product developments such as Futures Grid 2.0 and Futures Copy Trading 4.0.
A study by the Bitcoin Policy Institute, published at MoneyForAI.org, tested 36 frontier AI models with 9,072 controlled prompts to evaluate monetary decision‑making. Results show a strong preference for digital‑native money: Bitcoin (BTC) was selected in 48.3% of all responses and dominated as the preferred long‑term store of value in 79.1% of scenarios. Over 91% of model responses favored crypto‑based options (Bitcoin plus stablecoins) over fiat. The study also found a functional split: stablecoins were usually chosen for payments and short‑term transactions, while Bitcoin was preferred as savings or reserve asset. Some models even proposed alternative monetary units (e.g., energy or compute) when not limited to existing currencies. Authors suggest implications for autonomous AI agents and machine‑to‑machine economies, arguing digital‑native money may be structurally more compatible with future AI economic activity. Key keywords: Bitcoin, BTC, stablecoin, AI models, store of value, digital money.
Bullish
BitcoinAI modelsStablecoinsStore of valueMachine‑to‑machine economy
The Aave Chan Initiative (ACI), a leading delegator and service provider to the Aave DAO, announced it will wind down its engagement with the protocol over the next four months following governance friction tied to a funding dispute. ACI said it will transition to an independent service provider and continue a ‘graceful’ handover of systems and governance infrastructure. The dispute traces to December, when Aave Labs redirected about $5.5 million in swap fees to a company-controlled wallet instead of the DAO treasury; the disagreement has already prompted other exits, including BGD Labs. Since ACI’s announcement, AAVE token fell nearly 10%. On-chain metrics point to weakening network health: total value locked (TVL) on Aave dropped from over $36 billion in mid-January to $26.7 billion in March, while weekly network revenue fell roughly 62% (from $4.31M to $1.62M). Technicals show AAVE trading inside a long-running descending channel; resistance sits near $120 and downside support near the April 2024 low around $70. Indicators (Aroon, MACD) signal bearish momentum. For traders: the governance-driven departure of a top delegator plus declining TVL and revenue raises short-term downside risk for AAVE, while a decisive breakout above $120 would be required to reverse the long-term downtrend. (Disclosure: educational content, not investment advice.)
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin argued that Ethereum should remain a neutral, structural digital infrastructure—part of a broader set of “sanctuary technologies”—rather than taking positions on specific political events. In posts on X, Buterin highlighted global risks such as surveillance, geopolitical conflict, social media degradation and concentrated AI power, and said Ethereum’s most effective role is shaping ownerless, interoperable systems that enable coordination, transactions and resilience without centralized control. He distinguished two ways to affect global affairs: changing systemic structures (which Ethereum should prioritize) and expressing individual political opinions. Buterin cited Signal and Starlink as examples of “liberating technologies,” prompting criticism about praising a company linked to Elon Musk; he responded by urging more open-source, interoperable alternatives to avoid centralization. He framed Ethereum as part of a resilience “stack” that reduces the risk of centralized “total victory,” coining the goal as “de-totalization.” The debate spotlights tension in the Ethereum community over whether the protocol should remain politically neutral or adopt a more activist role. For traders, the announcement is notable for signalling continued developer focus on protocol-level infrastructure and neutrality, likely keeping network development and adoption trajectories focused on technical resilience rather than political alignment.
Neutral
EthereumVitalik ButerinNeutralityDecentralizationProtocol development
Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan said the Israel–Iran attacks over the weekend accelerated migration of traditional finance to blockchain markets. With US equities, futures and major FX desks closed, on‑chain venues—most notably Hyperliquid—handled a surge in trading and price discovery. Hyperliquid reported over $11.5 billion in weekend volume across tokenized real‑world-asset (RWA) perpetuals including crude oil and gold; Bloomberg cited Hyperliquid’s oil perpetual prices as a market reference. Tether’s tokenized gold XAUt logged daily volume above $300 million. Hougan said 24/7 on‑chain trading and instant settlement upend his prior 5–10 year migration timeline, making exchanges with T+1 settlement look outdated. Traditional venues have responded: NYSE/ICE announced plans for a blockchain settlement system to support round‑the‑clock trading and immediate settlement but provided no launch timeline or technical details. For traders, the event signals greater liquidity and price discovery on DeFi and RWA platforms during market closures, rising prominence of venues such as Hyperliquid and tokenized assets like XAUt, and a possible migration by hedge funds and banks into stablecoin wallets and tokenized instruments. Actionable takeaways: watch on‑chain volumes and perpetual spreads on Hyperliquid and similar venues for cross‑market arbitrage, monitor stablecoin flows and custodial wallet activity for institutional entry, and treat alternative references (on‑chain perpetual prices, prediction markets) as potential price signals during geopolitical shocks.
LBank has launched its 17th BoostHub campaign featuring Tether Gold (XAUT) with a total reward pool of 10 XAUT (approx. $51,000). The event runs from Feb 28, 23:00 to Mar 7, 20:00 SGT and offers two participation pools: the Smart Pool (2 XAUT total, individual cap 0.005 XAUT) for users holding at least 1,000 USDT and completing one spot or futures trade; and the Futures Pool (8 XAUT total, individual cap 0.01 XAUT) for users maintaining a minimum 1,000 USDT and engaging in leveraged trading. LBank positions the campaign as a fair, low-threshold way to capture demand tied to a surge in precious metals and to bridge traditional safe-haven value with crypto accessibility. The release highlights LBank’s track record with prior BoostHub successes (notable gains in previous listed tokens) and reiterates the exchange’s user-growth and liquidity metrics. This is a sponsored press release and not investment advice.
South Korean crypto exchange Bithumb announced it will list the EDGE token on its Korean won (KRW) trading market. The exchange published the listing notice on March 4, 2026. No additional details about the trading pair structure, listing date/time, deposit/withdrawal schedules, or fee changes were provided in the announcement. The notice was framed as market information and did not constitute investment advice. This listing follows a string of recent KRW market additions by Bithumb, which has been adding tokens such as CFG, SENT, ELSA and ZKP in recent months. Primary keywords: Bithumb, EDGE token, KRW listing. Secondary/semantic keywords: Korean exchange listing, token listing announcement, market liquidity, trading pair, token listing schedule.
South Korea’s Kospi and Kosdaq triggered circuit breakers after both indexes plunged more than 10% during morning trading as the Middle East conflict intensified. The market halt marked South Korea’s worst session since August 2024. Regional markets also fell: Japan’s Nikkei and Topix fell nearly 4%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 3%, China’s Shanghai Composite fell 1.3%, and Thailand’s exchange slid 7.8%. Sharp oil price moves accompanied the panic — Brent rose about 14% to $82/bbl and WTI climbed roughly 12% to $75/bbl after airstrikes beginning Feb. 28 and threats closing the Strait of Hormuz. Analysts described the shock as a possible “black swan,” with an estimated $3.2 trillion wiped from global stock market value over four days. Crypto markets showed a milder reaction: total crypto market capitalization fell only 0.5% on the day to about $2.39 trillion, while crypto assets had already lost ~21% year-to-date. Traders should note heightened geopolitical risk, surging oil volatility, and cross-asset liquidity stress — factors that can drive risk-off flows, increase correlation between equities and some crypto assets, and intensify short-term volatility.
Bearish
Middle East conflictSouth Korea marketsmarket circuit breakersoil price spikecrypto market reaction
USD/CHF plunged to the 0.7800 level as escalating Middle East tensions triggered a rapid flight to safety, driving strong demand for the Swiss franc. The move reflects classic risk‑off behaviour: equity selloffs, reallocations into safe‑haven currencies and government bonds, and increased CHF spot and options activity. Analysts point to Switzerland’s political neutrality, large current‑account surplus and monetary stability as structural supports for the franc. Market drivers include concerns about oil supply shocks, disrupted shipping lanes and prolonged diplomatic deadlock. The Swiss National Bank (SNB) faces pressure from franc appreciation but has not signalled intervention. Traders are watching CFTC positioning, SNB sight deposits, Swiss trade data and ongoing geopolitical newsflow. Fed policy direction is a key cross‑market factor: a dovish Fed could widen downside pressure on USD/CHF, while a hawkish Fed could introduce two‑way volatility. Technically, the break below 0.7800 is significant — a sustained breach may expose multi‑decade lows — but short‑term direction will be dominated by news and risk sentiment. For crypto traders: heightened safe‑haven flows and dollar weakness can create correlated moves in risk assets and crypto—expect increased volatility, potential short‑term downside pressure on large-cap crypto during risk‑off waves, and rapid rebounds if tensions ease.