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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

Ex-Ripple CTO: XRP Looks Better Than USDT for Banks—Stablecoin Risks Explained

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A debate on Bitcoinist.com focuses on whether global banks may prefer XRP over stablecoins such as USDT. Former Ripple CTO David Schwartz argued that banks would choose XRP for its practical advantages, not because Ripple benefits from XRP monetization. The discussion was sparked by a concern from XRP community member Mason Versluis. He pointed out Ripple controls over 40% of the XRP supply (about 34 billion escrowed tokens) and questioned whether banks like JPMorgan or HSBC would want to help enrich Ripple if XRP adoption drives a price rally. Schwartz dismissed the incentive concern, saying it is irrational to reject useful technology merely because it also benefits the company. He then addressed a broader issue: whether XRP’s utility remains relevant as stablecoins increasingly dominate payments. Schwartz outlined three advantages of cryptocurrencies like XRP over stablecoins: 1) Cross-border transfers: stablecoins are typically pegged to a single currency, which can make multi-country payments harder. 2) Centralization and censorship risk: stablecoin issuers can freeze or seize funds under legal pressure. 3) Economic opportunity: stablecoins like USDT may remain idle and lose purchasing power, while XRP can offer faster cross-border settlement and potential price appreciation. At the time of writing, XRP was quoted around $1.38 on the 1D XRPUSDT chart on TradingView.
Neutral
XRPStablecoinsBank AdoptionCross-border PaymentsRegulatory/Censorship Risk

Bessent Pressures CLARITY Act to Define US Crypto Rules

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US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent urged Congress to urgently pass the CLARITY Act to keep the US setting global crypto regulatory standards. He warned that leadership is “not guaranteed,” citing that global digital-asset market value has fluctuated around $2T–$3T and roughly one-sixth of Americans hold some form of digital assets. Key market point: Polymarket estimates the CLARITY Act has a 70% chance of passing this year, but the Senate faces cross-committee review. If lawmakers fail to move by May, the bill could slip until after the 2026 midterm election. CLARITY Act’s core structure splits oversight: CFTC would gain exclusive jurisdiction over spot “digital commodity” markets, while the SEC would retain authority over investment-contract assets. A referenced milestone is a March 17 SEC–CFTC joint 68-page framework that categorized Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, Solana, Dogecoin, and Cardano (among others) as “digital commodities” rather than securities. Timing: the Senate may begin committee work as early as April 13, aiming for a full-chamber vote before month-end. Main controversy: a draft Senate provision would restrict stablecoin holders from earning interest simply by holding—allowing only “activity-based” rewards. Critics (including Gnosis founder mentions) argue this could reduce user self-custody and shift value toward centralized intermediaries, adding uncertainty for DeFi/stablecoin ecosystems. Traders should watch Senate committee progress and the final wording on stablecoin interest, as CLARITY Act headlines could swing BTC/major altcoin sentiment quickly once political momentum changes.
Neutral
CLARITY ActCFTC vs SECstablecoin regulationUS Congressmarket sentiment

Bitcoin slips under $71K as Iran ceasefire cracks; BTC range turns traders cautious

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Bitcoin is holding above $70,000 but slipping under $71,000 as “ceasefire euphoria” fades within 48 hours of the U.S.-Iran truce. Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said three ceasefire clauses were breached, while Israeli attacks in Lebanon continued. The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed with only limited tanker traffic, despite Iran’s pledge for “coordinated” transit. Risk assets retraced. Brent crude rebounded about 2% after a sharp drop, shifting sentiment from “peace priced” to “uncertainty priced.” In crypto, BTC traded around $70,981 (about -0.5% on the day, +6.1% on the week). ETH fell ~2.6% to ~$2,180, SOL dropped ~3.1% to ~$81.96, XRP slipped ~3% to ~$1.33, and DOGE slid ~3.4% to ~$0.091. BNB stayed near $600. Macro adds pressure: analysts pointed to “uncoordinated tightening” and a higher-for-longer rate setup, keeping equities and Treasuries cautious. For traders, BTC’s $65,000–$73,000 range remains the key zone. With BTC testing the upper half rather than breaking down, market participants may shift from breakout chasing to range trading while waiting to see if the ceasefire can hold through the weekend.
Neutral
Iran-US ceasefireBitcoin rangeRisk-offBrent crudeCentral bank tightening

Visa rolls out Intelligent Commerce Connect for agentic AI payments

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Visa has launched “Intelligent Commerce Connect”, a network/protocol and token-vault-agnostic on-ramp for agentic AI payments. The goal is to let AI agents act for consumers: discover merchant catalogs, choose products, and initiate payment securely. The platform supports both Visa and non-Visa cards and is compatible with major AI agent protocols. Key features include a single integration via the Visa Acceptance Platform for payment initiation, tokenization, spend controls, authentication, and PCI compliance. Visa says the system is currently in pilot with select partners, with broader rollout planned for later in 2026. Separately, AI fintech Nevermined integrated with Visa using Coinbase’s x402 protocol. The setup lets users enroll a Visa card and set spending rules, while AI agents transact within guardrails; merchants receive funds through their existing processor. x402 has reportedly processed $24 million in transactional volume over the past 30 days. For traders, this is a continued push toward real-world payments rails for agentic AI payments, with Ethereum, Tron and Solana referenced as part of the broader crypto/fintech payments race around AI agents.
Neutral
VisaAgentic AI paymentsTokenizationAI commerceEthereum Tron Solana

Australian Dollar Slips as US‑Iran Ceasefire Hopes Fade and Risk-Off Hits

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The Australian Dollar (AUD) is sliding as optimism around a potential US‑Iran ceasefire fades, driving a clear risk-off move across FX. The latest pressure intensified after AUD/USD broke below key technical support, reinforcing a bearish momentum view for the Australian Dollar. Markets are also repricing geopolitical details tied to Middle East diplomacy, including nuclear programme inspections and the timing of sanctions relief. This lifts the geopolitical risk premium and spills into energy prices—an important driver for Australia’s terms of trade. Positioning and volatility signals remain negative. CME data cited higher short positioning in the Australian Dollar and a jump in AUD options implied volatility. RBA meeting minutes did not counter the bearish narrative. Cross-asset flows also matched “flight to safety”: demand rotated toward the US Dollar and Japanese Yen, gold rose, and Treasury yields fell. Commodity-linked updates further support the downtrend thesis, with weekly moves including AUD/USD -1.8% and Brent +3.2%, alongside weaker iron ore and lower Australian 10-year yields. For traders, the near-term focus stays on US‑Iran developments plus upcoming Australian employment and inflation data, which could either stabilize or extend the Australian Dollar sell-off. Primary keyword used: Australian Dollar. Additional mentions: Australian Dollar.
Bearish
Australian DollarUS-Iran GeopoliticsRisk-Off FXOil & EnergyRBA Outlook

WIF surges 12% on leverage build-up; eyes $0.20 breakout

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dogwifhat (WIF) jumped ~12% in the past 24 hours as memecoins rebounded with broader market recovery. Derivatives activity drove the move: Long/Short Ratio stayed above 1 (Binance 1.3359, OKX 1.14) and top-trader exposure rose, suggesting traders added positions rather than de-risked. Open interest and volume both climbed, with OI around $105M and funding slightly positive (OI-weighted funding ~0.0051%), meaning leverage is still “catching up” as buyers take on more risk. On-chain/flow signals are mixed for WIF: CVD flipped red and net token change fell from ~5.63M bought to ~1.17M sold, pointing to early profit-taking even as MFI remains ~61 (inflow bias). Technically, WIF has held its ascending trendline since March 11 but faces resistance near a prior high, around the $0.223 area. Bulls need WIF to hold the ~$0.20 support zone to keep the bullish structure intact; losing $0.20 raises pullback risk toward volatility near resistance. Key levels for traders: hold $0.20 to target $0.223, then the $0.223–$0.230 zone; break below $0.20 increases downside odds.
Bullish
WIFmemecoin reboundcrypto derivativesleverage & fundingtechnical levels

Bitcoin quantum-resistant wallet rescue prototype explained

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Lightning Labs CTO Olaoluwa “Roasbeef” Osuntokun has unveiled a working quantum-resistant wallet rescue tool prototype for Bitcoin. The system targets a key risk in Bitcoin’s long-term “emergency brake” idea: if a future network upgrade disables Taproot keyspend/signatures to stop quantum attacks, many Taproot wallets would have no fallback to prove ownership—potentially freezing user funds. Instead of relying on digital signatures, Osuntokun’s prototype lets a user cryptographically prove they originally generated a vulnerable wallet using its secret seed, without revealing the seed itself. This provides a “second way” to access funds if standard authorization is disabled. The proof generation took about 55 seconds on a consumer MacBook, while verification took under 2 seconds; the proof file was ~1.7 MB. The code is functional but unoptimized. Adoption remains unclear: there is currently no formal Bitcoin proposal, no deployment timeline, and developers are split on how urgent the quantum threat is. Researchers also caution that some quantum “breakthroughs” assume simplified conditions and that real-world attack constraints may be tougher—yet the exposed-wallet scenario is still considered credible. Market context: traders on Polymarket price BIP-360 implementation by 2027 at roughly 28%, reflecting uncertainty rather than consensus. For traders, this reinforces ongoing “quantum risk” narrative around Bitcoin and may support speculative bids tied to BTC resilience tech, but it’s not an immediate protocol change or upgrade trigger. Keywords: quantum-resistant wallet rescue tool, quantum-resistant wallet.
Neutral
BitcoinQuantum resistanceWallet securityTaprootBIP-360

Institutional Ethereum: EEA Leaders Say Enterprise Adoption Hinges on Wallets, Governance

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At the inaugural “Enterprise on Ethereum Live,” leaders from Nethermind, Polygon, and Metasig discussed how institutional Ethereum is evolving for real production use. The key message: institutions no longer doubt Ethereum’s basic functionality; instead, institutional Ethereum adoption is driven by operational fit—governance frameworks, risk controls, audit visibility, and workflow integration. Speakers (Redwan Meslem, Nitin Gaur, Luke Ryan, Maria, and Jamal) emphasized that enterprise requirements must include approval hierarchies and predictable execution, so teams can move from experimentation to production without disrupting core operations. Maria noted the ecosystem remains fragmented, creating operational friction for on-chain capital movement and monetization. On tokenization and interoperability, the panel argued that infrastructure must coordinate across jurisdictions and reporting requirements to support the full lifecycle from issuance to settlement. Luke Ryan highlighted work on a wallet stack designed to be secure, post-quantum, and fast—aiming for deployment “in hours, not weeks.” Overall, the EEA positions itself as a neutral coordination platform to reduce fragmentation through shared standards, enabling consistent enterprise integration for institutional Ethereum use cases. Keywords: institutional Ethereum, enterprise wallet infrastructure, governance, interoperability, tokenization, auditability, post-quantum security.
Bullish
Institutional EthereumEnterprise Wallet InfrastructureGovernance & ComplianceTokenizationInteroperability

DPRK IT jobs used weak passwords to steal $3.5M in crypto

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A leaked dataset reviewed by Cointelegraph alleges a DPRK IT jobs unit operated as developers while also attempting to hack crypto projects. The documents, shared by blockchain sleuth ZachXBT, claim one worker known as “Jerry,” with a 140-person team, generated about $1 million per month and roughly $3.5 million in crypto since late November. The DPRK IT jobs group coordinated payments through a website (“luckyguys.site”) and used the easy password “123456.” ZachXBT says some platform users appeared tied to entities sanctioned by the US Office of Foreign Assets Control, including “Sobaeksu,” “Saenal,” and “Songkwang.” Funds moved from crypto wallets to fiat via online payment platforms such as Payoneer, then to Chinese bank accounts. Wallet tracing also reportedly linked these activities to North Korean wallets blacklisted by Tether in December. Screenshots cited by ZachXBT show “Jerry” used an Astrill VPN to access Gmail and submitted job applications on Indeed for full-stack developer and software engineer roles. Other falsified identification materials are also described, including fake addresses and an Irish passport image. The article frames this as part of a broader pattern: North Korea-linked actors have stolen more than $7 billion since 2009, including the Bybit hack ($1.4B) and the Ronin bridge hack ($625M), plus blame for a Drift Protocol hack ($280M). The report notes these DPRK IT jobs actors may be less efficient than groups like “AppleJeus” and “TraderTraitor,” but still pose ongoing cyber risk to the crypto industry.
Bearish
North KoreaDPRK IT jobscrypto theftwallet tracinghacks and scams

White House Economists: Stablecoin Interest Impacts Bank Lending Only 0.02%, Urge Regulatory Limits

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The White House Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) said the banking industry’s warning is overstated in the GENIUS Act debate over stablecoin interest. Its study estimates that even if stablecoin interest to holders is fully banned, the overall effect on U.S. bank lending would be about $2.1 billion—just 0.02% of the $12 trillion lending market. For community banks, the projected increase is roughly $0.5 billion (0.026%). CEA also argued the policy cost is high: maintaining the ban on stablecoin interest would create an estimated annual net welfare loss of about $800 million, with a cost-benefit ratio of 6.6. The report targets claims of “hundreds of billions” in dislocation, saying such lending effects would require extreme assumptions simultaneously (e.g., a sextuple jump in stablecoin market share, all reserves moving into segregated deposits, and the Fed abandoning its ample-reserves framework). This comes as GENIUS bars stablecoin issuers from paying yield directly to holders, while leaving a pathway for third-party platforms (e.g., exchanges) to offer yield mechanisms. The CEA report is not legislation, but it signals an official stance ahead of the CLARITY Act markup process in the Senate Banking Committee—where the final direction on stablecoin interest could shape market expectations.
Neutral
Stablecoin InterestGENIUS ActU.S. RegulationBank Lending ImpactCLARITY Act

XRP Ledger active wallets drop sharply, XRP sentinment cools

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On-chain data cited by Santiment shows declining usage on the XRP Ledger during recent sessions. The number of active wallet addresses fell sharply, indicating weaker engagement and sentiment. The article notes that average active wallet addresses over the past year have declined by about 41%. It also links the current weakness to a low MVRV (Mean Value to Realized Value) reading for XRP traders, described as the lowest since the FTX collapse in Nov 2022—an event that preceded a prolonged bear phase. For traders, the piece adds that Santiment’s metrics show large negative average returns from actual trader yields, implying less “risk than average” when buying or adding XRP positions—though it frames this as partly a sign that market participants are under stress (the “blood in the streets” concept). Separately, some analysts argue XRP may be entering a bottoming phase. One cited view suggests XRP’s price around ~$1.30 (down from ~$3.50 a year earlier) and an RSI move into extremely oversold territory, alongside falling search interest (e.g., Google Trends and X). The analyst also mentions potential macro catalysts like rate cuts, calmer global tensions, and renewed liquidity into risk assets. Overall, the news centers on the XRP Ledger’s weakening active wallet count, while the trade implication is a possible stabilization/bottom attempt after a heavy drawdown.
Neutral
XRPXRP LedgerOn-chain ActivitySantimentMVRV / RSI

Ceasefire Deal Boosts Risk-On: Bitcoin Jumps While Alt Liquidity Dries Up, Dip Opportunity Ahead

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A reported ceasefire agreement between Washington and Tehran eased macro/geopolitical uncertainty and quickly flipped market sentiment within 48 hours. Bitcoin (BTC) rose from around $69,000 to above $72,000, briefly pushing toward $73,000, showing “real-time price discovery” versus traditional assets. The article argues Bitcoin has a dual role: in the early crisis phase it behaves like a defensive/“digital safe haven,” while during the de-escalation phase it can rotate into risk-on behavior—similar to a high-beta tech stock. Traders are advised not to obsess over a precise top, but to follow price action and market microstructure (order book depth and turnover at key resistance). However, the bigger mismatch is internal to crypto: secondary-market liquidity is described as severely impaired (most altcoins, except a few majors), while primary funding is also weak due to reduced VC confidence and job cuts/team shrinking across Web3. The author frames this as a 2019-style “crypto winter” where bubbles have been flushed and valuation compression creates a potential bottoming opportunity. Overall, the piece suggests Bitcoin could keep benefiting from macro stabilization while dip strategies focus on identifying stronger projects with real fundamentals in a liquidity-poor environment.
Bullish
BitcoinCeasefire & GeopoliticsLiquidity CrisisRisk-On RotationCrypto Winter

FDIC Stablecoin Regulation: 144 Questions, No Holder Deposit Insurance

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The FDIC has issued a proposed stablecoin regulation framework under the GENIUS Act, built around 144 specific questions and a 60-day public comment window. The FDIC stablecoin regulation would set detailed requirements for payment stablecoin issuers, including 1:1 reserves, defined redemption timelines, capital and liquidity standards, risk management, and custody rules for FDIC-supervised banks and savings institutions (over 2,700). A trader-critical point remains unchanged: FDIC deposit insurance would not extend to stablecoin token holders. The FDIC says GENIUS bars payment stablecoins from federal deposit insurance, so only the issuer’s reserve deposits held in insured banks may benefit from standard deposit coverage—while holder-level protection is excluded. The proposal follows FDIC’s earlier GENIUS-related move on an application process for insured depository institutions to issue payment stablecoins via subsidiaries, while the OCC runs a parallel framework for national bank subsidiaries and certain nonbank issuers outside the FDIC’s scope. Implementation is scheduled for January 18, 2027 unless rules take effect earlier. For markets, tighter FDIC stablecoin regulation could reduce issuance and custody tail risks, but the lack of holder-level insurance may limit immediate sentiment support for US dollar stablecoins as traders price in ongoing redemption and reserves execution risk.
Neutral
FDIC stablecoin regulationGENIUS ActReserve & redemptionBanking supervisionDeposit insurance exclusion

Monad (MON) Accumulation Surges as Bulls Test Key Resistance

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Monad (MON) is eyeing a potential all-time high after a 13% gain in the past 24 hours. Price is rising on stronger accumulation signals, with the Accumulation/Distribution indicator trending higher as investors keep buying. Trading volume also improved, exceeding 2.69B. Money Flow Index (MFI) remains slightly above 80 and continues to climb, suggesting capital inflow supports further upside. However, traders face a clear obstacle: MON is trading inside a resistance block that could cap gains. Bollinger Bands show MON has moved into the overbought region, which raises the risk of a pullback toward lower levels, even if a full reversal is not immediate. For an all-time high attempt, the article estimates MON would need roughly a 56% move from current levels (about +$851M market-cap) to reach an estimated $2.37B valuation. That requires sustained spot accumulation, supportive perpetual futures flows, and broader market sentiment turning bullish or stabilizing. Short-term data cited remains constructive: over the last 10 days, MON perpetual flows reached $12.88M, while spot inflows totaled $7.31M over the past five days (CoinGlass data). Traders will likely watch whether MON can break above the resistance zone to sustain momentum or whether overbought conditions trigger consolidation.
Bullish
Monad (MON)AccumulationResistance BreakoutOverbought SignalsPerpetual & Spot Flows

Evernorth SEC filing update ties XRP to SPAC equity valuation

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Evernorth Holdings filed an amended Form S-4 with the SEC on April 7, advancing its SPAC merger plan with Armada Acquisition Corp. II and Pathfinder Digital Assets LLC. The key change is expanded disclosure on how Ripple’s XRP contribution becomes equity in the public-company structure. Evernorth states that Ripple will contribute 126,791,458 XRP under a Contribution Agreement, and that token value is converted into shares using pricing inputs linked to CME CF reference rates. The amendment clarifies the calculation of “Signing XRP Price” and “Closing XRP Price,” plus adjustment-share mechanics across multiple funding agreements. The financing framework remains structured around total upfront funding of $214.05 million, with additional staged capital subject to conditions and investor protections. The filing also provides more precise post-closing ownership and share-class details (Class A, B, C), improving transparency on dilution, governance, and economic rights among public shareholders, institutions, the sponsor, and Ripple. For traders, the update is less about new crypto adoption and more about tighter valuation and issuance mechanics for XRP-linked equity inside a SPAC-to-public-company pathway.
Neutral
XRPSEC filingSPAC mergerEvernorthCME CF pricing

Hormuz Strait Closed Again as Iran Publishes Anti-Mine Safe Passage Route

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Hormuz Strait is closed again after a brief reopening tied to a short-lived U.S.–Iran ceasefire. The trigger was Israel’s large-scale airstrikes on Lebanon, which Iran’s IRGC said broke the ceasefire framework. Within hours, shipping volumes fell sharply again, with vessels turning back as access was paused. The U.S. White House argued Lebanon was not covered by the stopfire terms, while Iran maintained that “intelligent management” of the strait is part of the deal—claims not confirmed by the White House. Iran’s Port and Maritime Organization (PMO) then released a new “safe passage route” for the Hormuz Strait waters. Key elements of the plan include shifting traffic away from the internationally recognized TSS main channel and routing ships through controlled corridors that reduce mine and military-control risk. The route highlights: 1) Northern corridor between Larak Island and Iran’s mainland (near the Port of Abbas). 2) Southern corridor along the Oman coastline, described as a diplomacy-coordinated buffer zone. Iran also described the situation as moving toward a “permit-only” navigation regime, requiring coordination with the IRGC navy and adherence to the designated alternative corridors to avoid mines. For traders, this Hormuz Strait closure and the new safe passage route raise near-term geopolitical and energy-volatility risks, which can spill over into crypto via risk-off sentiment and higher macro uncertainty.
Bearish
Hormuz StraitIran-IRGCShipping disruptionOil & energy riskGeopolitical volatility

Hormuz Strait Ceasefire: Iran caps ship passage at 12/day, still charges high fees

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A report citing the Wall Street Journal says Iran’s Hormuz Strait ceasefire is not restoring normal shipping. Instead, Iran has limited daily passage to about 12 vessels and imposed mandatory fees, turning temporary wartime control into a durable revenue mechanism. On the first day after the two-week ceasefire framework took effect, only 4 ships were approved to cross, and roughly 15 ships cleared in the initial day—far below the pre-war baseline of over 100 ships per day. Iran also warns that any unauthorized transit faces destruction risk, with coordination required directly with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Deal details reportedly include a fee rate of 1 US dollar per barrel of oil, with payments reportedly accepted in crypto. Iran’s port and maritime authorities have also published navigation safety guidance, warning of lingering anti-ship mine threats in key routes. The US, led by Trump, has called for “unrestricted” passage and no charges. However, the report suggests Iran has shown no willingness to loosen control, heightening uncertainty for Gulf oil exporters and European/Asian energy importers. Analysts warn oil prices could spike to a wide range of $120–$200 per barrel if the Hormuz Strait bottleneck persists. For traders, the key risk is that Hormuz Strait disruption pressures oil expectations and risk sentiment—while the reported crypto fee payment angle adds a geopolitical-to-crypto transmission channel.
Bearish
Hormuz StraitIranOil priceCeasefireCrypto payments

Worldcoin price tests $0.24 as descending channel nears all-time low

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Worldcoin price is trading around $0.2602 (down ~3.77% on the day) as the lower boundary of a six-month descending channel converges on the all-time low at $0.2415. Analysts flag that a confirmed daily close below $0.2415 would likely set a new all-time low and open a path toward the $0.20 psychological level, with limited prior support between the levels. Technical signals remain bearish. The daily Supertrend at $0.3088 has acted as recurring resistance, and WLD has not produced a sustained close above it since late 2025. MACD remains below zero (MACD line ~-0.0263; signal ~-0.0375) with only a marginally positive histogram, suggesting downside momentum may be slowing but not reversing. Key levels traders watch: support at $0.2415; next downside target at $0.20. A bullish shift would require a daily close back above the Supertrend resistance near $0.3088. On the fundamental/positioning side, Nansen data shows total WLD balances on centralised exchanges rose more than 25% to about $742M in the week ending Mar 27, after roughly $26M WLD moved to exchange wallets—an incremental near-term selling risk. Separately, Binance delisted COIN-M WLD futures in early April, reducing leveraged derivatives liquidity. Overall, Worldcoin price setups point to elevated breakdown risk if $0.2415 fails, while recovery attempts likely face heavy resistance near $0.3088.
Bearish
WorldcoinPrice AnalysisTechnical IndicatorsExchange BalancesDerivatives Liquidity

Quantum-resistant XRP: whales add 11M daily as AlphaNet tests key rotation

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Quantum-resistant XRP remains the focus as Ripple’s ledger work and whale activity both intensify. A new review claims most XRP holders are insulated from theoretical quantum attacks because many large accounts have never exposed public keys on-chain. Only about 0.03% of the total XRP supply is considered “exposed,” while vulnerable accounts are described as nearly nonexistent (two dormant whale accounts with ~21M XRP). Developers on XRPL’s AlphaNet test post-quantum security, including ML-DSA (NIST-approved). The network is exploring upgrades such as key rotation and quantum-resistant transaction features to avoid disrupting the live ledger. The trade-off highlighted: quantum-resistant signatures are ~40x larger, requiring more storage and slower processing, though engineers expect performance improvements over time. Meanwhile, the whale narrative is bullish for near-term positioning. After the security messaging, large investors are buying more than 11 million XRP per day and moving holdings from exchanges into private wallets as selling pressure reportedly declines. The article cites XRP around $1.37 with market cap near $84B and rising trading volume, suggesting traders are reacting positively to the combination of quantum-resistant XRP fundamentals and accumulation. Overall, this is a security-and-flow story: quantum-resistant XRP design (hidden keys, key rotation support) plus visible whale demand that can support sentiment across both short-term momentum trades and longer-term investment theses.
Bullish
XRPPost-quantum securityWhale accumulationXRPL AlphaNetKey rotation

Prediction Markets Price a Fragile US-Iran Ceasefire Clock, BTC Reacts

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Prediction markets on Polymarket and Kalshi show traders are treating the US-Iran ceasefire as temporary and fragile. After President Donald Trump announced a two-week conditional ceasefire on April 7, Polymarket’s market on when Washington will officially end US military operations (started Feb. 28, 2026) has drawn $16.4M in volume. The highest odds are for April 30 at 42% (about $3.51M wagered), while April 15 sits near 10%, implying limited belief in a quick formal end. A separate Polymarket bet on when the ceasefire itself is officially declared over shows 26% odds for April 21, reinforcing that prediction markets expect de-escalation to last only days, not the full two weeks. Islamabad talks are scheduled for around April 10-11, with US Vice President JD Vance expected to lead. The deal hinges on Iran allowing the “complete, immediate, and safe opening” of the Strait of Hormuz; disruption could unravel the arrangement. Reports of continued missile activity in the Gulf and Israeli strikes in Lebanon add uncertainty, and Iran has warned that Lebanon-related attacks could make talks “unreasonable.” On Kalshi, traders are skeptical about longer-term normalization: the market for reopening the US embassy/consulate by Jan. 1, 2027 shows only 16% odds (“Yes” priced ~17 cents; “No” ~84 cents) on $67K volume. BTC briefly rallied above $70,000 as the ceasefire news supported a relief trade, but prediction markets positioning suggests that any failure to meet conditions in Islamabad could quickly unwind risk sentiment in the short term.
Neutral
Prediction MarketsUS-Iran CeasefirePolymarketKalshiBitcoin (BTC)

Michael Saylor: Bitcoin likely bottomed near $60K; ETFs and credit may drive next rally

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Michael Saylor (Strategy) said Bitcoin may have bottomed in early February around $60,000. He argued the selloff was driven more by seller exhaustion than by valuation signals, with limited ongoing selling pressure. Saylor highlighted spot ETF inflows as a key balancing force, saying ETF demand is absorbing the market’s daily supply. He also noted corporate treasury allocations to Bitcoin can add steady, incremental demand. Looking ahead, he suggested the next Bitcoin bull-market catalyst could come from banks building Bitcoin-based credit and “digital credit” rails. In his view, this would help Bitcoin evolve from a non-yielding asset into a capital-markets engine. On the quantum-computing threat, Saylor dismissed it as overstated and largely theoretical, potentially decades away, with solutions likely by then. Separately, Mizuho reiterated an “outperform” rating on Strategy and set a $320 target versus about $127 at the time, implying substantial upside.
Bullish
BitcoinSpot ETFInstitutional DemandMarket BottomDigital Credit

XRP Price Warning: Analyst Says Rally Is a Trap, Targets Below $1

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XRP has bounced above $1.35, but analyst CasiTrades warns traders not to treat it as a trend reversal. The move is framed as a “trap” inside a larger bearish structure: XRP faces resistance after a completed five-wave push, while RSI shows bearish divergence (momentum rising without a stronger breakout). On the charts, XRP has not made a new high above $1.40, so the analyst argues “nothing has changed” and the current strength may be exhaustion. The downside roadmap is explicit. First target for XRP is $1.13, followed by a deeper push toward the macro 0.786 support near $1.08. The final bearish leg suggests a break below $1 into the 0.854 support area around ~$0.87. CasiTrades links this sequence to the end of a larger corrective impulse wave 2. Bullish invalidation level: traders should watch the 0.618 resistance/flip zone near ~$1.40; reclaiming and holding it would weaken the bearish thesis.
Bearish
XRPRippleTechnical AnalysisBearish SetupSupport/Resistance Levels

Bitcoin rallies on US-Iran ceasefire, but derivatives signal fragile truce

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Bitcoin (BTC) jumped about 6% in under four hours after the US and Iran announced a two-week ceasefire. The move lifted global stocks as well, and forced roughly $280M of liquidations in Bitcoin futures—catching many traders off guard. However, BTC derivatives point to limited follow-through. Futures aggregate open interest rose to about 593,930 BTC (+2.5% vs. Tuesday), but this surge looks more like short-term positioning than fresh bullish demand. The annualized BTC 2-month futures premium was around 3%, below the ~4% “neutral” level that has been absent since late January. Options also suggest caution: put premiums (downside protection) have outpaced calls over the past two weeks, indicating traders still value hedging. A key macro driver is BTC’s high correlation with S&P 500 futures, tied to expectations around the Strait of Hormuz reopening. US President Donald Trump said Iran’s nuclear program would be deactivated in exchange for tariff and sanctions relief. Still, US Vice President JD Vance described the ceasefire as a “fragile truce,” keeping bear-case momentum alive. The article highlights ongoing inflation pressure (Brent around $95/bbl vs. ~$72 in late February) and a Fed that remains reluctant to cut rates. From a trading perspective, a retreat toward $68,000 is still considered possible because this is only a two-week de-escalation, not a long-term resolution. Regulatory overhang also remains: the PARITY Act draft reportedly lacked small-payment tax exemptions and deferred capital gains for mining, and broader scrutiny of crypto conflicts of interest continues.
Neutral
BTCUS-Iran ceasefireBitcoin futuresFed policycrypto regulation

Stellar privacy layer for banks enables on-chain stablecoin transfers

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Stellar is building a privacy layer aimed at banks that need to move large value on-chain using stablecoins. The goal is to keep transaction details confidential while still enabling authorised verification and regulatory/audit checks. The report says public blockchains expose data that banks and large institutions often can’t risk sharing, especially for sensitive trades. Regulators still require monitoring and reporting, so privacy must be paired with compliance. A proposed “Stellar privacy layer” is designed to integrate with Stellar’s existing infrastructure and support high-value transfers without slowing transactions or adding complexity. The article also highlights Stellar’s current support for stablecoins and cross-border payments, suggesting the privacy feature could make the network more attractive to major financial institutions. It further notes complementary infrastructure: Chainlink is mentioned for secure data feeds and verification, which can help systems remain reliable when privacy is added. Overall, the news frames privacy, compliance, and transaction performance as the key priorities for institutional blockchain adoption. Keywords: Stellar privacy layer, banks, on-chain stablecoins, confidential transactions, compliance.
Bullish
StellarInstitutional adoptionPrivacy techStablecoinsOn-chain compliance

Bittensor price slips after double rejection; $297 support in focus with bearish MACD

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Bittensor (TAO) price is trading around $325.1, down ~3% on the day, after a second rejection of a multi-month descending trendline. The sell signal strengthens as the daily MACD flips bearish: the MACD line (19.6) falls below the signal (22.0) and the histogram prints at -2.4. While both lines are still above zero, the crossover shifts the near-term bias toward lower prices. Technically, TAO failed twice in the $355–$371 resistance zone within two weeks, producing a lower high and reinforcing the trendline’s resistance. The first rejection was near $371 (Mar 25) following the halving and reports that Grayscale increased TAO’s weighting (43.06%) in its AI-focused fund. The second rejection topped near $355 (Apr 7), then TAO retraced to ~$325 without reclaiming either prior pivot. Key levels for traders: immediate support is $297.5 (structural floor). A confirmed break below $297.5 would open a path toward the daily Supertrend at $263.7. Conversely, a daily close above $371 would invalidate this bearish setup. On the 4H chart, the Supertrend at ~$313.8 is currently acting as dynamic support; a 4H bearish MACD crossover would add confluence. On positioning, Coinglass shows open interest declining alongside price, suggesting long-side deleveraging rather than aggressive new short buildup—reducing the odds of an immediate squeeze. Separately, Grayscale’s filing to convert a Bittensor Trust into a spot ETF is supportive long-term sentiment, but it does not provide a near-term price floor. Net: Bittensor price is leaning bearish in the short term unless $297.5 holds on a daily close.
Bearish
BittensorTAO price analysisMACD bearish crossoverSupport $297.5Grayscale ETF filing

FOMC Minutes: Iran War Raises Inflation/Jobs Risks, More Officials Signal Possible Rate Hikes

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The latest FOMC minutes (March meeting) show Fed decision-makers reassessing scenarios after the Iran conflict, weighing both cuts and hikes depending on outcomes. Most participants worried war-related shocks could pressure the labor market and therefore argue for lower rates. At the same time, many emphasized upside inflation risk, which could require rate hikes. A notable shift is that more officials want the post-meeting statement to reflect a “two-way” rates path under specific conditions. The minutes quote that some participants see “sufficient reasons” to describe future policy decisions in both directions, including raising the target range if inflation stays above goal. After the March meeting, several policymakers already indicated a preference to keep rates unchanged while evaluating the war’s impact. Overall, the minutes highlight elevated risks on both sides of the Fed’s dual mandate: the minutes say inflation and employment downside risks are both “high,” and that they have risen as Middle East developments progress. The Fed held the policy rate in March at 3.5%–3.75%. For traders, these FOMC minutes imply a potential re-pricing of rate-hike odds rather than a steady glide toward cuts, especially if inflation expectations remain firm.
Bearish
FOMC minutesRate hikesIran conflictInflation riskCrypto macro

Bitcoin Breaks $70K on Liquidations; XRP Looks for Relief, ETH Eyes $2,400

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Bitcoin surged past $70,000 after weeks of compression and failed breakout attempts. The move was driven largely by liquidations that forced short positions to close, creating a “domino effect” and pushing BTC through local resistance. The key risk is sustainability: liquidation-driven rallies can overshoot, so traders may see a brief pullback if spot demand does not follow through. Technically, BTC has reclaimed support above the $70,000 level, but continuation depends on holding that zone and converting resistance into support. XRP is attempting to stabilize after months of downtrend pressure. The chart shows higher lows and an ascending support grind, but XRP is still trading below major moving averages that remain sloped downward. Resistance near the moving-average cluster has been capping rallies, and the article notes that volume confirmation for a breakout is not yet convincing. Traders may treat any push upward as potential exit liquidity until XRP can regain key short-term moving averages and break the descending resistance. Ethereum is “waking up” with price action moving closer to the $2,300–$2,400 area. ETH is forming a short-term recovery structure with higher lows, but it still sits below major moving averages and repeatedly stalls at this resistance band. The $2,400 level is both psychological and technical (moving-average confluence and prior support turned resistance). The article frames the current bounce as a relief rally; a true ETH run is more likely only after a clear breakout and hold above $2,400 with stronger volume and sustained demand.
Bullish
Bitcoin breakoutliquidation-driven rallyXRP technical setupEthereum resistance at $2,400crypto market technicals

YGG Play Casual Degen Hackathon: 90 AI Games Submitted

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Over 90 games have been submitted for the “Casual Degen” track at BuidlHack 2026, hosted by YGG Play and Verse8. As of early April, 30 teams have registered and pushed 90 prototypes, built with generative AI tools to speed up crypto-native gaming development. YGG Play Casual Degen focuses on “lite” snackable, fast-paced games designed for second-screen play while users do other tasks. Organizers cite YGG Play’s LOL Land performance to justify the category: launched May 2025, it reached $8.2M lifetime revenue and peaked at $4,263 ARPPU, far above typical mass-market casual games’ $25–$50 ARPPU. YGG co-founder Gabby Dizon says the best titles use simple, “one-button” mechanics plus economic loops that balance skill and luck. Verse8 CEO Kevin Lee says the platform aims to cut concept-to-playable prototype timelines from months to days by generating and publishing games from natural-language prompts. Featured early submissions include “Steal Food” (RPG puzzle) and a Vampire Survivors-like 2D action game made with fewer than 50 text prompts. Hackathon details: submissions close April 17, 2026 (11:59 PM KST). Final pitch and showcase are April 18. The YGG Play + Verse8 track prize pool offers $5,000 cash, $5,000 in Verse8 credits, and advertising support. Top projects may gain access to Verse8’s investment network and be reviewed for publishing by YGG Play. Traders should note this is primarily a Web3 gaming/AI dev pipeline update, not an immediate token catalyst, but it can reinforce sentiment around gaming infrastructure—YGG Play Casual Degen remains the core theme investors will watch.
Neutral
YGG PlayVerse8Web3 GamingAI HackathonCasual Degen

ICE agents shoot man in California traffic stop; FBI takes over probe

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ICE agents shot a man during a targeted traffic stop in Patterson, California, near Interstate 5, and dashcam footage was published by KCRA Sacramento. Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons identified the suspect as Carlos Ivan Mendoza Hernandez, an undocumented immigrant alleged to be linked to El Salvador questioning over a murder. ICE agents said Hernandez “weaponized his vehicle” in an attempt to run an officer over, prompting agents to fire in self-defense. The video shows at least three law enforcement agents around a black SUV as it reverses, strikes another car, and then moves toward officers. It contains no audio and does not clearly capture the exact moment shots are fired. Hernandez was transported to hospital in critical condition. An attorney for Hernandez said ICE may have targeted “the wrong man.” California Governor Gavin Newsom’s office urged federal agents to collaborate appropriately with state and local law enforcement. The FBI took over as the lead investigator after public scrutiny of prior DHS credibility issues in similar use-of-force cases. FBI Special Agent in Charge Eugene Wu issued a request for additional witness video. No charges were filed, and the investigation is ongoing. For crypto traders, the event adds to US political and enforcement uncertainty, a factor already linked in the article to economic jitters and BTC price consolidation below $73,000 through early 2026.
Neutral
ICEFBI investigationUS immigration enforcementpolitical uncertaintyBitcoin market