CME Group’s CME crypto futures 24/7 and options launch began on May 29, moving its regulated crypto derivatives to round-the-clock trading. In the first weekend, CME reported about $50M in notional volume and more than 7,200 crypto futures and options contracts traded.
The change is designed to let traders manage BTC and other crypto exposure during weekends and holidays on a regulated venue, aligning more closely with spot markets that run continuously. CME said the early flow included both institutional and retail participants.
CME crypto futures 24/7 also includes Bitcoin Volatility futures, aimed at trading expected 30-day implied volatility rather than direction. This gives market participants another CME product for risk management.
CME noted operational details: trades executed on weekends/holidays carry the next business day’s trade date, while clearing, settlement, and regulatory reporting are handled later.
Regulatory context matters. The U.S. CFTC has been reviewing risks associated with continuous markets, urging firms to consider surveillance, liquidity, staffing, risk controls, clearing operations, and customer protections. CME’s immediate test is whether volume stays stable after global participants adjust to the new schedule.
Key figure cited: Tim McCourt (CME Global Head of Equities, FX and Alternative Products), who said demand for continuous liquidity and risk access is rising.
Ethereum (ETH) is trading back below the $2,000 level, down about 1.24% in the last 24 hours around $2,007. Traders are watching whether ETH can hold the $2,000-$1,900 support band. If buyers defend this zone, a rebound is possible; if not, a deeper correction may follow.
Technical signals point to a volatility regime change. Weekly Bollinger Bands have tightened to their narrowest spread since August 2024, suggesting volatility could spike soon. Bulls face nearby resistance around $2,073-$2,142 (with $2,170 also cited). Clearing these levels could open a path toward higher targets, including the $2,560-$2,570 area.
On the downside, analysts highlight major supports at $1,900-$1,750, with a long-term channel boundary near ~$1,825. Daily closes below $1,750 are framed as critical for the bearish continuation thesis. Additional scenarios include a bearish slide toward ~$1,831 if current prices fail, and a more constructive reversal if ETH reclaims above ~$2,142, opening targets around $2,203 and $2,327.
Key longer-term upside milestones mentioned include $2,773 first, followed by $3,001, $3,145 and $3,410, but these require confirmation of a trend reversal. Overall, near-term market direction likely hinges on whether ETH holds $2,000-$1,900 and, failing that, whether it stabilizes around $1,825-$1,750.
Bearish
Ethereum price actionBollinger Bands volatilityETH support resistanceTechnical analysisCrypto trading levels
Telegram CEO Pavel Durov says Toncoin (TON) will be rebranded as Gram, while the Open Network will keep the TON branding. Durov said this is a return to the original name from TON’s first white paper and called the change part of “Make TON Great Again.”
The update follows Telegram’s May move to replace the TON Foundation as the primary driver of the network, becoming its largest validator. Telegram also reportedly cut transaction fees and increased the block rate to speed up processing.
Market reaction was immediate: TON price jumped more than 13% in the last day, reaching around $2.12–$2.26. Despite the rally, TON remains down about 74% from its 2024 peak near $8.25, when Telegram-linked crypto gaming projects like Hamster Kombat and Notcoin attracted short-lived momentum.
Traders should watch how the TON-to-Gram rebrand is executed over roughly three weeks and whether activity metrics (fees, throughput, validator changes) continue to improve after the name shift.
Keyrock is set to acquire the crypto trading and lending platform BlockFills out of Chapter 11 bankruptcy for $3.25 million. A June 16, 2026 court hearing is scheduled. The deal is described as covering substantially all BlockFills assets, including customer lists, proprietary technology, and IP. BlockFills (operated by Reliz Ltd.) reported assets of $50M–$100M versus liabilities of $100M–$500M after filing on March 15 in Delaware.
In parallel, Anchorage Digital launched its Coordinated Multiparty Settlement (CMS) settlement network. The CMS settlement network is built to let institutional traders execute across crypto venues while assets remain in custody at Anchorage’s federally chartered bank. It links trading venues, prime brokers, and end clients via a shared settlement layer that verifies funding obligations and reduces the number of asset transfers required per trade. Anchorage’s design targets the operational and counterparty risk from today’s pre-funded exchange accounts by separating custody and settlement roles across regulated intermediaries. The first venue integration is with Spotex, with additional partners planned.
The article also ties these moves to broader tokenization and custody infrastructure. The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTC) is advancing tokenization of U.S. Treasury securities with Digital Asset and the Canton Network. Canton is highlighted for permissioning that preserves on-chain privacy at the transaction level, and Fireblocks has integrated Canton to help banks and asset managers custody and settle tokenized assets.
Finally, Standard Chartered agreed to buy Zodia Custody outright and spin out Zodia Solutions, consolidating custody operations while creating a standalone institutional digital asset platform.
Overall, this week’s developments point to accelerating institutional crypto infrastructure: distressed-firm consolidation, regulated multi-party settlement, and tokenized collateral—supportive for market stability, especially for large players.
Societe Generale says the Indian rupee faces pressure as the RBI balances two conflicting goals: anchoring inflation expectations and stabilizing USD/INR amid global volatility. Persistent price pressures (including food and commodity costs) argue for higher interest rates, but a strong US dollar and capital outflows from emerging markets are pushing the Indian rupee toward depreciation.
The RBI has been selling dollars to slow the slide, but Societe Generale notes FX intervention has limits tied to reserve buffers and the need to preserve them for genuine external shocks. Instead, the report suggests the RBI may rely more on policy-rate signaling and communication to guide market expectations rather than sustained FX operations.
For traders, the key implication is continued USD/INR volatility, driven by the RBI’s stance on depreciation tolerance versus its inflation-fighting commitment. Investors in Indian debt and equity should monitor RBI statements closely, because changes in the Indian rupee outlook can feed into rates, risk sentiment, and inflation-linked market pricing.
Bearish
USD/INRRBI monetary policyFX interventionEmerging market capital outflowsInflation vs growth trade-off
Strive (NASDAQ: ASST) plans to increase its at-the-market (ATM) stock programs by $4.2 billion to fund its bitcoin corporate treasury strategy: $2.1B for Class A common stock and $2.1B for SATA preferred shares. The company cites sustained demand and liquidity, supported by updated SEC filings and an amended prospectus.
In parallel, Strive continued adding Bitcoin. For the week ending May 30 (Memorial Day shortened week), it acquired an estimated 2,649 BTC across four days, including about 1,179 BTC on Friday using roughly $86.65M in net proceeds. This follows earlier momentum in which Strive bought about 2,624 BTC in the week ending May 24—the fastest streak to date—bringing total holdings to around 16,500 BTC.
SATA remains the key funding lever: a perpetual preferred stock with an annualized ~13% dividend, paid out starting June 16 (with daily payments). Traders should watch whether new ATM proceeds are quickly converted into actual Bitcoin purchases, and whether the dividend obligation meaningfully impacts per-share dilution and sensitivity to Bitcoin’s price versus Strive’s estimated ~ $99,000–$102,000 acquisition cost range.
Bitmine (BMNR) bought 26,497 ETH worth about $53.07M in the past week, bringing total Ethereum reserves to 5,416,901 ETH (~4.49% of circulating supply). The firm says it has already staked 4.71M+ ETH via MAVAN, positioning ETH staking as a key part of its yield strategy.
Bitmine’s stated goal is to hold more than 5% of total ETH supply by year-end. Compared with the prior week’s faster purchase pace, the latest reporting frames a more cautious accumulation near the milestone—while ETH spot demand may not be as strong in the immediate term.
For traders, the continued ETH staking and large institutional footprint can support longer-term sentiment, but it may also affect near-term liquidity and order-book depth as large inflow/outflow events cluster. Watch the $53M weekly buy size, the staked ETH level (4.71M+), and progress toward the 5% supply target for shifts in ETH flows and volatility.
Rabobank says EUR/USD is likely to stay range-bound, with euro upside capped against the US dollar. The bank points to persistent central-bank divergence. The Federal Reserve remains relatively hawkish, keeping rates higher for longer, while the ECB faces a more fragile eurozone recovery. This keeps EUR less attractive to yield-seeking investors and limits breakouts.
Rabobank also cites geopolitical and growth headwinds. Ongoing conflict in Ukraine weighs on Europe’s energy security and industrial competitiveness. Uncertainty around global trade flows and China’s growth further clouds the eurozone outlook. Meanwhile, the dollar benefits from safe-haven demand and relative US economic resilience.
For traders, Rabobank’s base case is continued EUR/USD oscillation within a band rather than a sustained trend. The message is to manage risk within the range and avoid chasing euro rallies, since upside appears limited near term. On the other side, sharp dollar rallies could also be capped if positioning is already stretched and markets later price a potential Fed pivot.
Keywords: EUR/USD, Rabobank, central bank divergence, Fed vs ECB, FX range trading, risk management.
Neutral
EUR/USDRabobankFed vs ECBFX Range TradingCentral Bank Divergence
Gold price drops by $39.10 in a day, with XAU/USD trading around $4,501. The move follows a large derivatives event on Hyperliquid, where a trader closed all gold short positions after running hundreds of trades overnight.
Gold price action and trade setup: Analysts say the short-covering looks like profit-taking after the market hit a lower range, not necessarily the start of a new uptrend. A separate position was kept open: a HYPE long established near $45.95 on May 18, now showing about $1.07M in unrealized profit.
Key levels traders are watching: Technical work highlights a decision zone between $4,490 and $4,510. A rebound from this band could lift gold toward $4,546. However, a break below $4,489 would raise the odds of a renewed selloff, targeting $4,456.
Daily indicators still lean bearish: TradingView readings show gold near $4,501.42 (down $39.10 on the day). MACD remains weak and negative, while Chaikin Money Flow is near zero—signaling buyers have not clearly taken control.
Bitcoin volatility is down 56% as realized volatility drops to 17.2% (from 39% this quarter), near multi-month lows. Analysts say this Bitcoin volatility compression has historically preceded double-digit rallies, though it does not signal direction. Multi-time-frame realized volatility is also lower: 3-month realized volatility has fallen to 80% (from 109%), and 6-month to 127% (from 148%).
CryptoQuant analysts highlight that BTC has spent 114 days trading in a broad $60,000–$80,000 range while the volatility index slides toward multi-month lows near 0.90. In similar past setups, once the range breaks, BTC has tended to move about 10% to 20%.
Other indicators remain cautious. Axel Adler Jr. notes the Bitcoin growth rate metric has stayed negative for over six months, suggesting capital is growing more slowly than network realized value. Michael van de Poppe remains bullish and calls the current area a key support zone; if it fails, BTC could revisit around $61,000.
Order-flow data adds a “tug-of-war” picture. Binance 30-day BTC inflows rose about $5.6B since April, driven more by retail (+$3.6B) than whales (+$2B). Meanwhile, wallets holding 1,000–10,000 BTC accumulated 55,450 BTC on May 30, their strongest since February, potentially offsetting near-term selling pressure.
Crypto exploit losses fell sharply to about $68M in May, down from roughly $650M in April, according to CertiK data. Crypto exploit losses were driven mainly by code vulnerabilities, which made up ~66% (about $45M) of the month’s total.
By sector, cross-chain bridges accounted for the largest share: 42%, or $28.6M. The biggest single hit was the May 18 Verus Protocol cross-chain bridge exploit, stealing $11.5M. THORChain followed with about $10.1M after an attack in mid-May that forced the protocol to halt trading.
Wallet and private-key compromises were the next major driver, with $13.7M stolen via that route. CertiK/DeFiLlama flagged nearly 30 incidents in May, including seven tied to private-key exposure. Two later cases on May 30 were the Alephium Bridge (~$815K) and Gravity Bridge (~$5.4M).
Phishing played a smaller role: $2.6M was attributed to phishing, while ~$9.4M was recovered or returned. CertiK also said May was the third straight month in 2026 with total losses under $100M.
Separately, the report highlights a new threat: AI-assisted malware development, where attackers target code repositories and try to manipulate AI coding assistants into taking malicious actions—potentially expanding risks beyond traditional smart-contract exploits.
For traders, the market signal is mixed: crypto exploit losses improved versus April, but bridge risk and key-compromise remain persistent, while AI-enabled tooling could raise tail risk later.
Grayscale is getting closer to launching a Hyperliquid ETF after amending its U.S. filing to add a 0.29% sponsor fee and the HYPG ticker. ETF analyst James Seyffart says the Grayscale Hyperliquid ETF could launch this week, citing the latest S-1 update.
The Grayscale Hyperliquid ETF would become a third U.S.-listed option tied to HYPE-linked exposure, following products from 21Shares and Bitwise. The competitive angle is fees: Grayscale’s proposed 0.29% sponsor fee is below 21Shares’ 0.30% and Bitwise’s structure (0% in the first month, then 0.34%). That pricing gives Grayscale a potential early “price advantage” for attracting assets.
The report notes that 21Shares’ Hyperliquid ETF launched on Nasdaq on May 12 under ticker THYP, with early demand reported at more than $5 million within days. Hyperliquid runs a decentralized derivatives venue where traders use on-chain perpetual futures—contracts that do not expire—to gain price exposure without owning the underlying asset.
As HYPE-linked ETFs draw momentum (the article cites over $132 million in cumulative net inflows by last month), traders may watch for near-term flows and volatility around the Grayscale Hyperliquid ETF launch timing, plus continued fee competition among issuers.
Bitcoin decoupling from U.S. software stocks is deepening. CoinDesk data show Bitcoin fell about 10% while the iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV) rose roughly 12% over the same period.
As a result, the Bitcoin–IGV correlation coefficient has dropped to 0.58, the lowest level seen since late 2023 and mid-2024.
The article links the shift to diverging catalysts. Software stocks have been supported by renewed optimism around AI and enterprise spending, plus a broader risk-on backdrop tied to interest-rate expectations. Bitcoin, meanwhile, faces regulatory uncertainty, profit-taking after its 2024 rally, and changing liquidity conditions in crypto.
Why traders care: if the Bitcoin decoupling persists, BTC may start trading more on its own fundamentals (network adoption, hash rate, institutional custody flows) rather than acting as a high-beta proxy for tech equities. That could improve its diversification value for growth-stock-heavy portfolios.
Historical reference points are highlighted. In both late 2023 and mid-2024, correlation weakness was followed by strong BTC rallies—moving from around $35,000 to over $45,000 in early 2024, and from roughly $55,000 to $70,000 in mid-2024.
Bitcoin decoupling is therefore a key risk indicator. Traders should monitor whether the low correlation holds or quickly reverts, which would signal whether BTC is again trading as a tech-equity beta play.
Bullish
BitcoinMarket correlationTech sector ETFRisk-on vs regulationHistorical rally signals
Anthropic has confidentially filed an IPO draft with the U.S. SEC for its common stock. The company did not disclose a share count or price range. The next steps depend on SEC review and market conditions.
For traders, the key development is that the Anthropic IPO timeline is now part of an “IPO race” versus OpenAI, which is also reportedly preparing a confidential filing. Polymarket’s odds put Anthropic ahead, with a 71% chance of going public before OpenAI. It also shows a 61% probability that Anthropic could reach a $1.8T IPO valuation (not company guidance).
The market narrative is being shaped by Anthropic’s commercial traction and scaling needs. Claude and Claude Code are expanding beyond chat into enterprise work, coding, research, and agent-style workflows. Traders are also watching reports tying the company’s compute infrastructure buildout to major data-center capacity arrangements, with Elon Musk reportedly describing it as a short-term deal.
Crypto relevance: an Anthropic IPO could reinforce “AI + compute” risk appetite, but it is not a direct catalyst for any specific token. Near-term moves are likely sentiment-driven rather than fundamentals-linked to crypto assets.
Virgin Galactic (SPCE) stock jumped 28.56% to $7.95 on Monday, extending a strong rally that pushed shares to a new 52-week high near $8.90. Traders cited three catalysts.
First, a Schedule 13G filing showed Rich Huang and RichRich Capital LLC disclosed a combined stake above 10% via roughly 4.87M shares and 5.58M shares tied to Huang. Such ownership signals often boost confidence as SPCE approaches near-term operational milestones.
Second, SPCE momentum strengthened as flight testing resumed. The company restarted VSS Unity glide flights at Spaceport America and targeted additional glide tests in Q3 2026. It also expects rocket-powered flight testing to begin in Q4 2026, supporting its next-generation Delta-class spacecraft program and eventual commercial expansion (up to two flights per week once the Delta fleet enters service).
Third, a federal court granted preliminary approval to settle two long-running shareholder derivative lawsuits. Insurers would pay about $2.75M, removing a lingering legal overhang since 2022.
Separately, broader “SpaceX IPO” chatter (reports of a valuation near $1.75T) lifted sentiment across space-related equities, adding retail interest to SPCE.
Bottom line for traders: SPCE remains high-risk and milestone-driven. If glide tests finish as expected in Q3 and rocket-powered flights start in Q4, bullish momentum could persist. However, limited current revenue and heavy development spend still keep volatility elevated.
OranjeBTC (B3: OBTC3) added another 20 Bitcoin to its corporate treasury, lifting total holdings to 3,762 BTC. The purchase cost about $1.506 million, or an average $75,346 per Bitcoin.
This was done at a discount versus OranjeBTC’s overall average cost basis of roughly $105,085 per BTC (position accumulated around $395.33 million). Management also repurchased 289,100 of its own shares to increase Bitcoin exposure on a per-share basis.
OranjeBTC reported a 2026 year-to-date Bitcoin yield of 2.20%, tracking growth in its Bitcoin-per-share metric. The company previously entered public markets via a reverse merger in early October 2025 and already held over 3,650 BTC at debut. It also trades as an ADR under ORNJY for US access.
For traders, the key takeaway is that OranjeBTC’s Bitcoin accumulation continues regardless of price level, buying at materially lower prices than its average cost. The gap suggests potential unrealized drawdowns on part of the existing stack, but opportunistic buying during dips can support longer-term sentiment around corporate treasury strategies.
The global smartphone market is set for its worst year in over a decade. Shipments are forecast to drop 13.9% YoY in 2026 to about 1.08–1.09 billion units, Counterpoint Research said—its largest annual contraction since 2013.
The global smartphone market decline is driven by a severe DRAM and NAND memory chip shortage. Chipmakers are reallocating capacity toward high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in AI servers. Nvidia’s demand for HBM is effectively cannibalizing supply for consumer devices.
Additional pressure comes from US–Iran conflict, which raises component costs across the supply chain. Wholesale prices rose 14% in Q1 2026, and those costs are flowing to buyers. The average selling price of a smartphone is expected to reach a record $550 in 2026 (about $100 higher than last year). Manufacturers are cutting lower-end models, where margins are hardest to protect.
Winners and losers are diverging. Apple and Samsung benefit from scale and supplier relationships, while smaller Android brands such as Transsion and Xiaomi face sharper volume declines.
For investors, analysts see another ~1% decline in 2027 before conditions potentially normalize for a rebound in 2028. Memory suppliers including Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron are prioritizing HBM because it is more profitable per wafer than standard mobile memory.
Neutral
smartphonesDRAM/NAND shortageHBM and AI chip supplyApple & Samsung market sharetech sector pricing pressure
Kalshi has filed with the CFTC for crypto perpetual futures, expanding its regulated perps lineup beyond Bitcoin. The CFTC product filings show certification on June 1 under KalshiEX.
The first batch targets XRP, SOL, ETH and DOGE. Additional certified crypto perpetual futures cover XLM, SUI, SHIB, LTC, LINK, HBAR, DOT and BCH. The filings are structured as futures tied to financial instruments.
This follows Kalshi’s recent CFTC approval for Bitcoin perpetual futures and signals faster execution to bring onshore crypto perpetual futures and altcoin exposure to US traders via a regulated venue. The move also increases competitive pressure as other firms, including Coinbase, push toward US regulated perpetual-style products.
Key trading takeaway: crypto perpetual futures could become a new onshore catalyst for major altcoins, but timing and contract-by-contract approval uncertainty remain. Until specific products are launched, flows may be more expectation-driven than immediately tradable.
Popular analyst EGRAG CRYPTO says banks are fighting stablecoins not due to risk, but because they threaten traditional deposit funding. In US banking, deposits are treated as unsecured loans: banks can earn roughly 6%–28% on lending while paying depositors only about 0.1%–0.5%.
EGRAG argues stablecoins break the old banking bundle of custody, settlement, and yield. With Treasury-bill-backed stablecoins, users can hold dollars without a bank account, transfer instantly, and earn around ~5% in a “risk-free” manner. If yields of 4%–6% become widely available, EGRAG expects deposit inflows to weaken, undermining bank profitability.
A Standard Chartered estimate cited in the article projects US banks could lose about $500B in deposits to stablecoins by end-2028, with regional banks most exposed. It also notes Tether (USDT) and Circle (USDC) hold most reserves in US Treasuries rather than bank accounts, limiting capital recycling into the banking system.
The debate is playing out alongside US legislation. During Senate Banking Committee discussions of the CLARITY Act, the American Bankers Association sent 8,000+ letters in a week, targeting rules on stablecoin yields. Senator Bernie Moreno accused banks of trying to “kill stablecoins” that let everyday Americans earn real yield.
Market context: stablecoin supply is about $320B (DefiLlama data), with USDT at ~$188B and USDC at ~$76B. Ripple also reported 74% of finance executives see stablecoins as tools to unlock working capital and improve treasury operations.
For traders, the core theme is stablecoin yield adoption gaining momentum while political/regulatory pressure increases.
Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has urged the government to build a legal framework for crypto ETFs and expand the use of yen-denominated stablecoins.
In a proposal to Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama (overseeing the FSA), the LDP said crypto ETFs would offer investors “easy-to-understand” access and should be positioned as an official investment vehicle in Japan’s financial markets.
While regulators have been cautious, reports indicate the FSA is preparing amendments to the Investment Trust Act enforcement order to include cryptocurrencies as eligible specified assets for crypto ETFs, along with stronger investor protections. If legislation and tax treatment progress, Japan could approve and list an initial batch of crypto ETFs in roughly two years, with some industry voices suggesting faster timing if amendments move smoothly.
Separately, the LDP pushed for broader yen stablecoin adoption for cross-border settlement in Asia. Under the 2022 Payment Services Act framework, only licensed entities can issue yen-denominated tokens, and FSA actions have classified certain trust-type stablecoins under the Payment Services Act starting June 1.
For traders, this is a regulatory-progress catalyst. Renewed momentum around crypto ETFs and clearer yen stablecoin infrastructure could improve sentiment for listed crypto products and reduce uncertainty for institutional-style flows.
Bullish
Japan RegulationCrypto ETFsYen StablecoinsFSA RulesInstitutional Access
Toncoin (TON) jumped nearly 20% on June 1 after Telegram said the TON native token will be rebranded from Toncoin to “GRAM,” with the transition expected to finish in about three weeks. Telegram framed “GRAM” as the original name from TON’s first white paper and bundled it into a “Make TON Great Again” roadmap that includes deeper Telegram operational involvement.
A community vote on whether Telegram aims to become the network’s primary validator is live. If approved, traders may expect changes to TON’s security profile and on-chain activity—turning the rebrand narrative into a potential utility catalyst rather than just branding.
Price action cited in the article: Toncoin momentum remains bullish with weekly RSI around 57 and a still-positive MACD histogram. Levels to watch include support near $2.10 and resistance around $3.00, with upside targets near $3.70 (100SMA). A breakdown below $2.00 would increase odds of a deeper retracement.
For traders, the immediate driver is the Toncoin→GRAM rebrand, but follow-through likely depends on whether the validator plan and Telegram integration with its 950M+ users translate into sustained demand for Toncoin/GRAM.
Dogecoin (DOGE) is moving deeper into regulated crypto infrastructure via a partnership between House of Doge and Paxos.
The deal will integrate DOGE into Paxos’ enterprise brokerage and custody infrastructure. This gives DOGE a potential distribution route through the Paxos client network used by major fintech and trading platforms. The article notes Paxos currently powers crypto services for companies such as PayPal, Venmo, Interactive Brokers, and Mercado Libre.
Key point for traders: this is “access,” not instant enablement. Not every Paxos client will automatically add DOGE. The market focus shifts to client activation—whether large platforms begin enabling DOGE for their users.
The article frames the move as utility-focused for DOGE, helping it move beyond meme-only cycles. However, it also stresses there’s no guarantee of payment volume, and DOGE’s volatility remains.
Dogecoin (DOGE) adoption therefore depends on which regulated platforms turn on DOGE support after integration. In the short term, the news can support speculative interest around headlines; in the long term, sustained inclusion across major fintech rails would be the bigger catalyst.
Pingu Exchange will shut down permanently after its Monad expansion failed to generate enough volume to keep its perpetual DEX running. The wind-down will switch trading to reduce-only on June 3 at 1:00 p.m. UTC, while existing positions should remain manageable until final settlement on July 31.
The exchange says the remaining 64.46 ETH will be distributed equally to eligible 2024 Arbitrum token buyers who still hold their tokens; claims are already open. The article frames this as a product-market-fit issue: Pingu’s Arbitrum phase generated the bulk of activity, while Monad did not replace that demand.
Key figures cited include cumulative perp volume of about $2.9B, with most coming from Arbitrum; Monad accounted for just under $80M in cumulative volume. Fees over the last 30 days were around $2,300, and TVL sat below $70,000, leaving insufficient treasury economics to continue.
For traders, Pingu Exchange’s exit means reduced liquidity and tighter execution risk on its niche perps markets, followed by a defined path to settlement. The clean, timestamped process (reduce-only first, then July settlement, ETH returned to eligible users) may limit sudden chaos, but it still removes an onchain venue for perpetual trading over the long term.
Michael Saylor’s Bitcoin treasury firm Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) said it sold 32 BTC worth about $2.5M between May 26 and May 31. However, a Polymarket prediction market asking whether Strategy would sell Bitcoin by May 31 is disputed, despite the sale occurring within the window.
Traders are contesting the timing of the announcement. The first proposed “No” resolutions were disputed, and the market is now in final review with “No” currently near 99.9%, after over $50M in trading volume. Because resolution hinges on whether “sold within the timeframe” (not confirmation after), Polymarket provided additional context to UMA tokenholders via the market bulletin.
If upheld, the market outcome could influence how traders price Strategy’s future BTC moves and how they interpret “time-window” rules in decentralized prediction markets. Separately, Strategy shares fell sharply on the disclosure, reflecting investor jitters.
The final resolution will be decided by UMA tokenholders; the review process is expected to run over the next two days, while traders wait for the May 31 market to settle.
Stellar’s XLM jumped sharply in May 2026, with the article citing a thesis from X Finance Bull: the rally was driven by multiple institutional-grade integrations rather than “hype.” The piece notes XLM was around $0.2524, up 10.27%, and referenced $1.36B in 24-hour activity.
Key developments highlighted for XLM in May include:
- DTCC partnership (May 27): DTCC Tokenization Service is set to connect with Stellar, with DTC tokenized assets (e.g., Russell 1000 equities, major index ETFs, U.S. Treasuries) expected on Stellar by H1 2027.
- Circle CCTP (May 19): Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol went live on Stellar mainnet, enabling native USDC burn-and-mint transfers between Stellar and other CCTP-supported chains, without wrapped assets or custodial bridges.
- Bermuda on-chain strategy (May 12 and May 29): Stellar Development Foundation and Bermuda announced a national move of payment/financial services on-chain, plus plans for a “Digital Bermuda Dollar” on Stellar with payroll, merchant payments, and government fee settlement.
- Protocol upgrades and regulation: 21X launched on Stellar under the EU DLT Pilot Regime (May 6). Mesh integrated with Stellar (May 7) to support global stablecoin-based payments. Figure launched YLDS on Stellar (May 5) as a regulated yield-bearing dollar product.
The article also cites network/credit metrics from Stellar: Q1 2026 updates include 22.5B total operations, $5.5B quarterly payment volume, 99.99% uptime, and tokenized RWAs up 155% to $2B—reinforcing why XLM in May was positioned as fundamentally supported.
(Informational only; not financial advice.)
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has proposed a new design for liquidation-free synthetic assets, aiming to reduce DeFi’s dependence on centralized stablecoins and forced liquidations.
The proposal follows renewed debate after a confidential USDC contract was reportedly frozen in a “crossfire” tied to another legal case. Privacy advocates and Ethereum researchers discussed whether privacy-preserving protocols can remain censorship resistant while still relying on centrally issued stablecoins.
Buterin’s research paper argues that today’s overcollateralized synthetic/borrowing systems depend too heavily on real-time price feeds, oracle reliability, and liquidation infrastructure during extreme volatility. Instead, the model uses paired options-based positions where two counterparties take opposite sides of future price exposure. Because gains and losses offset directly (P + N = 1), liquidation is avoided—making liquidation-free synthetic assets a core goal of the design.
The paper also aligns with Buterin’s broader critique of crypto shifting toward speculative “corposlop” products. He previously argued that crypto should prioritize hedging, coordination, and long-term utility, potentially reducing reliance on fiat-pegged stablecoins.
Overall, the discussion is framed as a trade-off between regulatory compliance and decentralization: if stablecoin issuers can freeze or restrict assets, traders may seek alternatives. This news is concept-heavy, but it may influence sentiment around censorship resistance, oracle/liquidation risk, and the direction of next-generation DeFi infrastructure built around liquidation-free synthetic assets.
XRP has hit a roughly 15-week low near $1.32, even while XRP ETF inflows and exchange outflows look supportive. Crypto data cited by CryptoSlate shows cumulative spot XRP ETF inflows around $1.4B and late-May exchange withdrawals of about 25.24M XRP, which usually implies less immediate sell-side supply.
But the spot market is still setting the marginal price. The article stresses that XRP ETF inflows are “indirect”: they show capital entering a regulated wrapper, not that aggressive spot buying is absorbing sellers in real time. With XRP trading in the low-$1.30s, the key technical levels discussed are $1.34 (reclaim area) and $1.31 (support/failure trigger). A breakdown below $1.31, despite continued XRP ETF inflows, would reinforce the idea that buyers have not taken control.
Exchange behavior remains mixed. Santiment data referenced shows a 22.80M XRP exchange inflow before reversing into withdrawals, indicating earlier sell-side pressure likely still matters. The article also highlights thin liquidity—Binance’s 30-day XRP liquidity index near 0.043, lowest since Jan 2020—meaning relatively small spot selling bursts can move price sharply, especially with elevated derivatives activity.
Takeaway for traders: watch whether XRP ETF inflows can translate into spot strength. If XRP reclaims $1.34 and holds, the flow narrative gains credibility. If price loses $1.31 while XRP ETF inflows stay constructive, the contradiction favors further downside.
Gold is under renewed pressure as XAU/USD struggles near key support. The US dollar index climbed to a fresh multi-week high, supported by hawkish Fed commentary and resilient US economic data. A stronger dollar typically weighs on gold because gold is priced in USD, making it more expensive for non-US buyers and damping demand.
Geopolitical support also looks limited. US-Iran nuclear negotiations remain deadlocked, keeping uncertainty in the Middle East. However, the market appears to have largely priced in the current level of risk, so the stalled talks have not provided enough upside for XAU/USD.
For traders, the $2,300 per ounce area is highlighted as a critical near-term support zone. A decisive break below could extend losses, while a rebound would likely need a clear catalyst—such as weaker USD momentum or a meaningful geopolitical development. With upcoming Fed policy decisions and officials’ remarks likely to move rate expectations, XAU/USD direction may hinge on currency and macro signals. Overall, XAU/USD remains trapped between a firm USD/interest-rate backdrop and persistent geopolitical uncertainty.
Bearish
XAU/USDUS dollar indexFed policyGeopoliticsGold support
TD Securities says the US dollar is entering a pivotal, data-heavy week that could reshape near-term Fed rate expectations. Traders are focused on multiple US releases, including consumer confidence, durable goods orders, and the latest PCE inflation (personal consumption expenditures) readings.
The key catalyst is the ISM Manufacturing Index, a major gauge of industrial momentum. TD Securities notes a reading above 50 (expansion) would point to resilient manufacturing and could support the US dollar by reducing expectations for aggressive rate cuts. A result below 50 (contraction) would likely reinforce dovish pricing and pressure the US dollar.
TD Securities also highlights that the Fed’s stance appears cautious, balancing inflation concerns against a cooling labor market. If core inflation or consumer spending runs stronger than expected, markets may push back the timing of easing, which would be USD-positive. If the economy slows while inflation cools, the US dollar could face headwinds as rate-cut expectations rise.
With some currency-pair positioning already stretched, the bank warns that any surprise versus consensus could trigger significant FX volatility. Overall, the US dollar setup hinges on whether inflation remains sticky or growth weakens, with ISM seen as the most important near-term turning point for rate expectations.
Neutral
US dollarISM manufacturingFed rate expectationsPCE inflationFX volatility