Shiba Inu (SHIB) is at risk of falling out of the global crypto top 30 by market cap as the $3.4B support level weakens. CoinMarketCap data shows SHIB’s market cap at about $3.42B (rank 29) in mid-April, but 24-hour trading volume is only $111.7M, pushing it down to around rank 38—signaling fading speculative demand.
The article highlights three pressure factors. First, the “SHIB Army” retail community is reportedly losing confidence after SHIB has fallen more than 51% over the past year, with no major new marketing breakthroughs. Second, Shibarium’s execution/use is questioned: the network has not entered the top 100 blockchains by developer activity, and decentralized application usage remains below 2024–2025 expectations. Third, broader market instability is driving investors out of high-risk assets, with meme coins typically hit first.
Traders are warned that even though it may be premature to write SHIB off, losing the psychological $3B market-cap zone could accelerate a slide and increase the odds of SHIB being replaced in the top 30. Watch SHIB’s market-cap vs. volume divergence and any renewed inflows that could stabilize the $3.4B support area.
A Fake Ledger app distributed via Apple’s Mac App Store reportedly stole 5.92 BTC (about $424,000) from musician G. Love after he installed it while migrating his Ledger wallet to a new Mac. Instead of the legitimate Ledger Live app, the impostor prompted him to type his 24-word recovery phrase. Shortly after entry, his Bitcoin balance was drained.
On-chain investigator ZachXBT traced the flow as the funds moved through multiple deposit addresses allegedly linked to KuCoin, with rapid transfers that can hinder recovery. The report also claims KuCoin lost its MiCA license from European authorities about three months after approval.
Ledger warned users not to download Ledger software from app stores and reiterated that seed phrases must never leave the physical Ledger device. Security guidance from Beau (Pudgy Penguins’ security lead) echoed the same rule: never input a seed phrase into any internet-connected app or site, even if it claims to be a recovery or update.
For crypto traders: this is a high-confidence phishing scenario. While the event is unlikely to change market fundamentals, it reinforces operational risk controls for BTC self-custody and wallet-management workflows—especially on macOS.
Neutral
Fake Ledger appLedger Live scamBitcoin theftSeed phrase securityKuCoin compliance
Bitcoin (BTC) fell again after Donald Trump’s first comments on failed Middle East peace talks. Trump said the talks “went well” and most points were agreed, but nuclear-related issues were not. He also warned the US Navy will begin the process of blockading any ships entering or leaving the Strait of Hormuz, seek and interdict vessels paying Iran “tolls,” and destroy Iranian mines. A separate post blamed Iran for not reopening the Strait.
BTC had already been hit earlier when US Vice President JD Vance said the Saturday talks produced no agreement. After Trump’s posts went viral, BTC dropped to a multi-day low below $71,000, with additional volatility expected as legacy futures markets open later tonight—especially oil-focused contracts.
Trump also warned China and other countries that may support Iran with weapons, saying the US could impose a 50% tariff if such support is proven. The combined escalation risk is adding a macro risk-off pressure that has spilled into BTC price action.
Justin Sun accuses World Liberty Financial (WLFI) of a WLFI token freeze backdoor. He says the WLFI smart contract includes a blacklist function that could let the team freeze, restrict, or effectively confiscate token holders’ assets without notice or clear recourse.
Sun adds that his own wallet was blacklisted in 2025 and criticizes WLFI governance as unfair and non-transparent, alleging key facts were withheld from voters. WLFI did not respond in the provided material.
New scrutiny centers on WLFI’s lending activity backed by self-issued assets. Cited on-chain data claims WLFI borrowed about $11.4m USDC in February using roughly $14m of USD1, with total borrowing later reported above $75m. The report also cites high USD1 pool utilization (around 93%) and large token movements.
Market impact is negative: WLFI is down more than 21% over 30 days and trades below $0.08 as liquidity-use and withdrawal concerns rise. Sun urges WLFI to unlock affected tokens and improve transparency, keeping pressure on the alleged WLFI token freeze backdoor.
Tok-Edge, a London digital asset firm, has exited stealth to launch its Redemption Token alongside a new institutional fund and confirmed a $15M valuation.
The company says it raised ~$1.5M at the $15M valuation pre-launch, with an expected anchor commitment of up to $10M led/anchored by Marcus Meijer and a syndicate of institutional backers.
Key structure: Redemption Token is required for investors to redeem fund shares at NAV. While ownership economics stay tied to the fund shares, the Redemption Token can circulate independently on public blockchains (including Ethereum), enabling secondary-market price discovery and potential DeFi usage for yield/liquidity—while keeping redemption mechanics inside the regulated fund.
Fund terms: launch cap is $21M, priced at 1 token per $1 of launch commitment. Tok-Edge targets a $100M first close later in 2026. The strategy is actively managed across liquid crypto and DeFi, combining directional exposure with staking and liquidity-provision yield.
For traders: the Redemption Token model could support further tokenized-fund adoption, but near-term price effects depend on actual token liquidity, exchange listings, and fund performance rather than a guaranteed immediate demand spike for the underlying crypto.
Crypto oracles connect blockchains to real-world data that smart contracts cannot access directly. The core issue is the “oracle problem”: external price feeds and event data are not inherently trustless or deterministic, so a single centralized source becomes a major attack surface.
The article explains how oracles deliver on-chain inputs such as price feeds (for lending, borrowing and liquidations), weather and environmental data (for parametric insurance), verified outcomes (for prediction markets), verifiable randomness (for NFT/game mechanics), and cross-chain messages (for interoperability).
It also highlights that oracle security often matters as much as smart-contract code. Centralized oracles increase manipulation and downtime risk, while decentralized oracle networks (DONs) aggregate data from multiple independent nodes to reduce the chance of tampering. Chainlink is cited as a widely adopted DON using Offchain Reporting (OCR) plus deviation thresholds and heartbeat updates to push data on-chain.
Notable examples include Aave and Compound relying on Chainlink price feeds for collateral pricing and automated liquidations, Chainlink VRF for provable randomness, and parametric insurance platforms using oracle weather data. The article argues traders should check which oracle solution a DeFi protocol uses, because a manipulated oracle feed can trigger rapid losses via incorrect liquidation pricing.
Key takeaway for traders: oracles are a foundational “data layer” risk factor. Protocol upgrades and governance changes to the oracle layer can shift a token’s DeFi risk profile over both short and long horizons.
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson criticized Cardano’s ecosystem spending and proposed a shift in how ADA treasury funds are used to support ADA’s long-term price narrative. The trigger was a plan to allocate 14 million ADA (about $3.3 million) to host the annual Cardano Summit and attend a conference in Singapore—an expense Hoskinson called inefficient.
In his view, “parties” and large events mainly create short-term marketing impact, while permanent infrastructure hubs and consistent local presence would better signal that Cardano is “alive” and thriving. He suggested the community maintain multiple global offices and weekly local events instead of high-cost gatherings.
Hoskinson also proposed changing treasury mechanics: stop issuing “free grants.” Projects would return up to 30% of their capital to the treasury, which would then buy ADA from the market. This is intended to create recurring “natural buy pressure.”
The proposal is being considered by delegates as they prepare to vote on the 14 million ADA budget. The article notes disagreement: skeptics argue that coworking-style offices may not move price in the short term because investors react more to price action than to facilities. Supporters believe reducing costly conferences is necessary to compete with rivals such as Solana and Ethereum.
For traders, the key market angle is whether treasury policy could translate into sustained ADA accumulation via buy-backs, versus whether the market discounts these changes as non-fundamental.
A validator on the XRP Ledger reports XRP quantum exposure is limited: only ~0.03% of XRP supply is considered quantum-vulnerable. The figure is linked to many XRP accounts never revealing public keys on-chain.
On XRP, around 300,000 accounts holding roughly 2.4 billion XRP have never transacted, so they currently remain shielded under today’s quantum threat models. Separately, just two XRP wallets with about 21 million XRP have been inactive for over five years while still showing public keys on-chain—also keeping the overall vulnerable share very small.
The article contrasts this with Bitcoin. Google-linked analysis estimates ~6.7 million BTC—about 32% of total BTC supply—resides in addresses exposed to potential quantum decryption, because their public keys have appeared on-chain. It also mentions ~1 million BTC attributed to Satoshi Nakamoto, which Charlie Lee warns could be even less protected if quantum advances.
While no current quantum computer can break existing blockchain encryption, the long-term solution is upgrading to quantum-resistant cryptography. The XRP Ledger is also highlighted for allowing signing key rotation without changing the account address, which is designed to reduce exposure.
Key takeaway for traders: today’s quantum narrative favors XRP’s relative risk profile versus Bitcoin (0.03% vs 32%), but market impact will depend on future quantum-resistant adoption and any subsequent security research updates.
Hyperliquid US Oil Perps jumped sharply after US Vice President JD Vance left Islamabad without an Iran nuclear deal. Negotiations lasting 21+ hours ended with no agreement, reigniting Middle East conflict risk and renewed Strait of Hormuz disruption fears.
On Hyperliquid, oil-linked perpetuals were reported to spike above $130 per barrel, lifting traders’ expectations for higher energy volatility. However, researcher Jim Bianco cautioned that widely shared charts referenced the USO exchange-traded fund (USO), not crude futures, and that the reported magnitude may have been overstated.
Even so, Hyperliquid’s oil trading activity during the recent escalation was very elevated (reported up to ~$1.7B/day), and the platform’s leveraged, 24/7 venues can amplify moves versus traditional Brent/WTI benchmarks—especially around weekend liquidity.
Broader markets turned risk-off after the breakdown: S&P 500 futures fell, and Bitcoin dropped nearly 3%, trading below $71,000 (around $71,067 mentioned). Saxo Bank analysts warned a full-blown energy crisis is possible if hostilities resume. Polymarket odds also shifted toward higher oil prices in the coming days.
Vance cited US demands as a “final and best offer,” while Iran reportedly signaled no long-term nuclear restraint. Iranian officials indicated no immediate further talks were scheduled. With ceasefire conditions only partially easing supply risk, traders are likely to remain positioned for further volatility in Hyperliquid US Oil Perps as the next diplomatic or military steps become clear.
The SEC said its prior crypto enforcement strategy “went too far,” and announced an enforcement reset in its FY 2025 review. The SEC criticized past resource allocation that chased “media headlines” and case volume instead of measurable direct investor harm.
In FY 2025, the SEC reported 456 enforcement actions (down more than 20% y/y) and flagged that earlier “monetary impact” framing was inflated by long-running components of litigation.
For SEC crypto enforcement, the key update is that the regulator dismissed seven crypto registration-related cases and grouped them with examples of misallocated resources. The report also points to high-profile retreats: it dropped its Coinbase civil case, voluntarily withdrew the Binance lawsuit, and closed a probe into Robinhood’s crypto arm without action.
Leadership and staffing changes are accompanying the shift, including enforcement leadership churn, reported staff cuts (~18%), and a new crypto-focused task force aimed at clarifying what “registration” requires.
Trading takeaway: SEC crypto enforcement reset headlines may reduce near-term litigation overhang for U.S. venues and higher-quality projects. However, timing and the exact legal definition still matter, so regulatory volatility can persist even if the path becomes more rules-clarified.
The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Cybersecurity and Critical Infrastructure Protection (OCPP) has launched a free “threat intelligence” program for eligible digital asset firms. The U.S. Treasury threat intelligence is designed to deliver bank-grade, actionable cyber data to help companies detect, prevent, and respond to attacks, aligning with recommendations from the President’s Working Group on Digital Asset Markets.
Access is not universal. Firms must meet Treasury’s qualifying requirements, so the program is likely concentrated among major exchanges, custodians, and infrastructure providers rather than all smaller players. Treasury framed the move as operational information-sharing—rather than a new rule—expanding cyber risk visibility across the sector.
The rollout comes as reported crypto incidents worsen. PeckShield said crypto exploits rose 96% in March 2026, with attackers increasingly targeting cloud infrastructure weaknesses and using AI phishing. Chainalysis reported a sharp jump in impersonation scams (+1400%) and rising AI-enabled fraud, while researchers warned of “shadow contagion” spreading risk across DeFi.
For crypto traders, this is a security and policy upgrade more than a direct price catalyst. In the short term, market impact may be limited because eligibility scope is unclear. Over time, improved U.S. Treasury threat intelligence could gradually reduce headline cyber risk for major platforms and tighten compliance and incident-response expectations—supporting more stable risk sentiment.
Neutral
U.S. Treasury threat intelligencecrypto cybersecurityDeFi riskexchange custody securitycrypto compliance
BNB Chain has issued a critical network notice to node operators ahead of the April 28 “Osaka/Mendel” hard fork on BSC mainnet (April 28, 02:30 UTC). BNB Chain says the fork window has effectively started and that operators must upgrade to **BSC v1.7.2** before the deadline.
Key requirements from BNB Chain include:
- **Upgrade to BSC v1.7.2** (binary replacement is sufficient).
- **Clean up old configuration fields**.
- Missing these steps may cause nodes to **fall out of sync**, creating operational risk.
The Osaka/Mendel hard fork was previously activated on the BSC testnet on March 24 (block 88,379,325). On mainnet, the upgrade includes EIP-7825 via **BEP-652**, introducing a **protocol-level transaction gas limit cap** so nodes uniformly reject transactions above the limit—aimed at improving stability versus earlier optional soft caps.
BNB Chain also notes the broader Mendel upgrade includes **nine BEPs**: seven aligned with Ethereum’s Fusaka EIPs (six requiring hard fork changes, one client-side RPC update). Additional BSC-specific items mentioned include **BEP-657** (blob transaction inclusion rules by block number) and **BEP-648** (latency reduction and faster finality).
For traders, this is primarily a validator/infra maintenance event. However, any hard-fork timeline can drive short-term volatility around execution and liquidity as market participants watch for network health.
Neutral
BNB ChainBSC Hard ForkNode UpgradeOsaka/MendelGas Limit EIP-7825
Fidelity macro director Jurrien Timmer says markets may be “pricing in” a near-term resolution to geopolitical tensions tied to Iran. He points to oil backwardation—WTI above $100 but the futures curve still backwardated—as evidence supply disruption looks temporary.
Credit spreads remain contained and the S&P 500’s drawdown has narrowed from ~9% to around 1%, helped by resilient corporate earnings. Timmer also notes unusual correlation between gold and bonds, which he attributes to global capital flows.
Crypto impact: Bitcoin may be forming a base near $65,000, with that level acting as solid support. Timmer argues much of the “paper hands” selling pressure has been absorbed after Bitcoin’s 50–60% decline from its peak. He remains bullish, but says a catalyst is still needed for the next upside leg.
Catalyst backdrop: A US–Iran two-week ceasefire announcement reportedly pushed oil down more than 17% and lifted equities, with WTI bouncing back to about $100.
Risks traders should monitor include energy-infrastructure escalation near the Strait of Hormuz (about 20% of global oil supply passes there) and rising Treasury yields (10-year approaching ~4.5%, risk toward 5%), which could pressure high-multiple equities. Overall, Timmer frames volatility as an opportunity for disciplined investors, not a reason to stay sidelined.
GoDark is launching a Solana DEX in May, aiming to counter the problem of public blockchain transparency that can expose trading strategies. The GoDark DEX uses zero-knowledge proofs to conceal trade details so that competitors—and even node operators running the order book—cannot link counterparties or matching activity to specific users.
The article frames this as a crypto “dark pool” shift. It cites GoQuant co-founder Denis Dariotis, saying market makers on Hyperliquid must refresh tactics roughly every three weeks because rivals can imitate moves quickly using visible on-chain data.
For liquidity, GoDark plans an incentive model similar to Hyperliquid’s HLP vault approach: users deposit funds, market makers trade with that inventory, and depositors earn transaction fees plus earlier liquidation access. The key risk highlighted is that other incentive-driven DEX launches have seen volume drop sharply after rewards end.
Regulatory uncertainty remains. Unlike traditional dark pools that provide post-trade reporting and oversight, it is unclear whether a privacy-focused GoDark DEX will face comparable requirements. The piece also clarifies GoDark is separate from GoQuant’s existing institutional spot DEX, with the May launch targeting retail users.
Neutral
GoDark DEXSolanaZero-Knowledge PrivacyLiquidity IncentivesMarket Making
Trump’s order to impose a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has lifted oil risk and pushed WTI and Brent futures higher on Hyperliquid. WTI rose about 7% to ~$96.40, while Brent climbed around 6% to ~$96. The headline ties to ongoing tensions and Iran’s nuclear posture, raising concerns about shipment risk through a key energy chokepoint.
Energy supply worries are now reinforced by IEA strategic petroleum reserve releases nearing their operational limits. With reserves being used to offset earlier supply shortfalls, analysts warn the global deficit could widen to roughly 10–11 million barrels within weeks if Hormuz flows do not normalize. The article also flags that the April shock could be worse than the market saw in March.
Traders are also leaning on decentralized price discovery while traditional markets react. On Hyperliquid, WTI futures saw about $1.53B in volume.
For crypto traders, the market read-through is macro-driven risk sentiment. BTC was around $71,000, down about 3% intraday, suggesting investors remain sensitive to inflation and growth fears that often spill into risk assets. Expect short-term volatility as oil momentum may revive risk-off positioning, even as activity on decentralized venues increases.
Bitwise has filed a second amended application with the US SEC for its proposed spot Hyperliquid ETF (HYPE spot ETF), updating the set of approved trading counterparties ahead of a potential launch. The Apr 10 amendment names FalconX, Flowdesk, Nonco, and Wintermute.
In the earlier Dec 2025 amendment, Bitwise disclosed the fund ticker BHYP, set an annual management fee of 0.67%, and proposed adding incremental returns via staking part of the HYPE holdings. Bitwise also plans to pass through about 85% of net staking rewards to investors. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas said the latest update suggests the HYPE spot ETF launch could be close.
Competition is building: 21Shares filed its own Hyperliquid ETF in Oct 2025, and Grayscale submitted a similar filing in late Mar 2026. If approved, Bitwise’s product would trade on NYSE Arca and track the spot price of Hyperliquid’s native token, HYPE.
Market context: HYPE has been a top performer, up ~65% YTD and nearly 200% over the past year. It recently reclaimed the $40 area and traded just under $43 at the time of writing, up ~3% on the day.
For traders, a progressing SEC review can add event-driven momentum to HYPE. Watch for SEC feedback and listing timelines, as headline risk can increase volatility around the HYPE spot ETF approval window.
Ethereum (ETH) chart analysis highlights a key inflection area for traders. On the daily view, ETH is trading around $2,234 after a sharp drop. A nearby resistance zone sits around $2,155 (support band), with upside hurdles marked near $2,400 and a higher target near $2,624 if buyers reclaim key levels.
The upside path depends on holding the $2,155 support zone. If ETH regains and holds above $2,400, momentum may extend toward $2,624. If ETH loses the $2,155 support zone, the chart points to a quick slide to roughly $2,015, followed by deeper downside toward $1,775.
On the weekly chart, analysts stress two major downside supports: $1,550 as the first significant floor and $1,070 as the deeper “ultimate” support. This suggests ETH may still have room to fall before reaching longer-term demand.
Overall, the setup is framed as two-sided: holding $2,155 could open a recovery toward $2,400, while a breakdown would likely accelerate selling toward $2,015 and then $1,775. The longer-term map emphasizes $1,550 and $1,070 as the critical levels for trend stabilization.
Neutral
Ethereum (ETH) price analysisETH support and resistanceDaily & weekly chart levelsAltcoin risk managementMarket volatility
Solana price prediction looks split between a near-term recovery target and a longer-term bull case. One weekly chart (with MACD) is argued to keep the upside structure intact as long as SOL does not fully break down, keeping a $1,000 target on the table. However, the momentum indicators still appear weak, implying any move higher may require time.
For the next upside objective, the Solana price prediction points to a well-defined zone between $88.13 and $90.01. The area aligns with Fibonacci levels and projected wave paths, suggesting $88–$90 could be the first major target if the recovery structure keeps building. A separate 1H setup also highlights that this bullish path is conditional: SOL must hold above a broader support band roughly in the $71.92–$77.92 range.
Notable analyst commentary cited in the article includes James Easton, referencing a weekly structure that favors consolidation after a prior advance rather than outright failure. Traders may treat $88–$90 as the immediate resistance/target zone, while $71.9–$77.9 is the key invalidation/hold level for short-term longs, with the $1,000 scenario remaining a longer-horizon possibility.
Europe’s stablecoin adoption is moving from “learning” to execution. Under MiCA, banks and corporates are selecting regulated infrastructure partners and preparing board-approved live launches.
Industry executives say the shift is driven by corporate treasury demand for faster payments, settlement efficiency, and smoother cross-border fund transfers—often outside standard banking hours. MiCA’s single rulebook is reducing fragmented national requirements, speeding time from risk/compliance to go-live.
Key milestones:
- ClearBank Europe became the first Dutch credit institution approved under MiCA to operate as a crypto asset service provider.
- A consortium led by ING, UniCredit, CaixaBank and BBVA is building Qivalis, a MiCA-compliant euro stablecoin project for regulated on-chain payments and settlement.
- Société Générale is positioning stablecoins for cross-border payments, on-chain settlement, FX and cash management.
- Oddo BHF launched a MiCA-compliant euro stablecoin.
- Another consortium (ING, UniCredit, BNP Paribas) is preparing a Swiss-franc stablecoin for H2 2026.
Trading and demand signals:
- Paybis reports EU USDC volume rose ~109% from Oct 2025 to Mar 2026, and USDC’s share of stablecoin activity increased from ~13% to 32%.
- EU buy volume stayed ~5–6x higher than sell volume.
- Average stablecoin trade sizes were ~15%–35% larger than typical BTC/ETH trades, consistent with working-capital and deliberate settlement.
Bottom line for traders: this is a MiCA regulatory-rail and distribution expansion story supporting stablecoin adoption, not a new token launch.
Bitcoin (BTC) is under renewed pressure as Trump said the US will begin the process of BLOCKADING the Strait of Hormuz. The move follows failed US-Iran talks, with Trump claiming Iran is “unyielding” on nuclear weapons development.
For traders, the key details are escalation-focused. Trump said allied nations could join the effort and that ships allegedly paying “illegal tolls” to Iran may be intercepted in international waters. US forces would neutralize suspected mines and respond with “overwhelming force” to attacks on American or civilian vessels. Trump also asserted Iran’s navy, air defenses, and radar systems are largely degraded.
Market reaction confirms a risk-off impulse. BTC extended losses after the announcement, briefly slipping below $71,000 and trading near $71,000 at press time. Ethereum (ETH) fell below $2,200, and total crypto market capitalization dropped nearly 2% to under $2.5 trillion. This is consistent with geopolitics-driven volatility: BTC typically moves first, with leverage and liquidity unwind spilling into ETH and broader altcoins.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzBitcoin sell-offIran nuclear talksGeopolitical riskRisk-off crypto
Bitcoin price slid about 2.5% to around $71,067 on April 12 after U.S.-Iran peace talks in Islamabad ended without an agreement. Vice President J.D. Vance said Iran’s nuclear program and access to the Strait of Hormuz were unresolved.
The U.S. Navy moved destroyers USS Frank Peterson and USS Michael Murphy into the Strait of Hormuz to clear Iranian mines as a freedom-of-navigation operation. The article also cites President Trump’s claim that all 28 Iranian mine-laying boats were destroyed.
Markets reacted as diplomacy failed: Bitcoin sold off soon after the announcements, reversing earlier gains toward ~$74,000 tied to ceasefire optimism. The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 20% of global crude oil supply, and recent tensions have previously pushed oil above $100/bbl—moves Bitcoin has tended to mirror.
Iran’s selective shipping restriction in mid-March reportedly reduced daily vessel traffic from 138 to just 4–5. The International Maritime Organization estimates about 2,000 ships remain stranded in the Persian Gulf.
Key risks for traders: if the mine-clearance operation does not reopen the waterway, oil volatility could extend and keep Bitcoin trading as a risk asset. If access improves, relief rallies may return quickly, as seen when markets recovered on ceasefire news.
Bearish
BitcoinUS-Iran TensionsStrait of HormuzOil Market RiskGeopolitical Risk
Fellowship PAC, a pro-digital-asset super PAC, made its first reported US election spending move ahead of the 2026 midterms. The group paid $300,000 to Nxum Group, which is co-founded by Bo Hines—CEO of Tether US and a former adviser tied to Donald Trump. The payment is disclosed as an independent expenditure and targets Georgia Republican newcomer Clay Fuller, who won a House seat in a special election.
In parallel, Fellowship PAC was reactivated earlier this month and appointed Jesse Spiro, Tether US Vice President for Regulatory Affairs, as chair. The PAC has also publicly backed Republican candidates online, stating it will support politicians who promote digital asset technology and strengthen next-generation US financial infrastructure. Tether’s spokesperson said Tether has no direct affiliation or oversight over Fellowship PAC.
For traders, the Fellowship PAC–Tether linkage is more of a US crypto policy signal than an immediate token catalyst. While the PAC’s scale looks smaller than larger players like Fairshake, its regulatory leadership involvement could keep attention on potential legislative momentum and sentiment around stablecoin and broader crypto rules.
Risk assets rebounded after a US–Iran ceasefire, and crypto followed. During the relief week, Zcash beat Bitcoin by 46.6% (about +59.6% over seven days vs USD), while Dash gained about +47.3%—with the wider privacy coin cohort also outperforming.
Key stats and cross-market read: CoinGecko’s privacy category rose 10.2% over 24 hours, and privacy coins averaged roughly 21.5% gains, outpacing Bitcoin. On a relative basis, Zcash relative performance was strongest (+46.6% vs BTC), while Monero bucked the simplistic “geopolitics → privacy” narrative: XMR/BTC fell about 2.3%.
Why Zcash led: the article argues the move was driven by two forces. First, risk-on rotation tends to favor higher-beta assets. Second, traders favored Zcash because it had a more concrete institutional narrative that predated the ceasefire: (1) Grayscale filed an amended S-3/A on Apr. 2 to list the Grayscale Zcash Trust on NYSE Arca under ticker ZCSH, (2) Foundry outlined an institutional-grade Zcash mining pool for April 2026, and (3) Zcash Open Development Lab reported $25M+ raised plus 400%+ growth in shielded pools and $600M+ in ZEC swaps since Oct. 2025. The Zcash Foundation also said the SEC concluded its review without recommending enforcement action.
Dash as the sympathy trade: Dash’s rally is framed as thinner/less catalyst-driven than Zcash, supported by relative “privacy cluster” positioning and liquidity. Derivatives data showed elevated activity (24h futures volume about $669M vs market cap ~$561M; open interest about 15.15% of market cap), consistent with squeeze dynamics.
What to watch: follow-through depends on whether the institutional access path (Grayscale) and the mining-pool timeline (Foundry) remain on track. If the ceasefire backdrop reverses, smaller privacy names (including Dash) could retrace faster than Zcash.
Bitcoin traders are watching renewed geopolitical jitters, including failed Iran-related peace talks, but analysts say crypto-specific signals still favor a push toward $88,000 and higher.
On the demand side, Strategy (STRC-related activity) bought $330 million of Bitcoin last week, lifting holdings to 766,970 BTC. Spot Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. posted net inflows of $787 million this week, the strongest since early March, with nearly $2 billion in cumulative inflows since then. Coinbase Premium Index also rose to 0.0586%, indicating relatively stronger U.S. buying versus offshore venues. Technical conditions are cited as supportive, with oversold readings (e.g., stochastic oscillators) improving as broader risk appetite rebounds.
For catalysts beyond flows, analysts highlight regulatory clarity: the potential passage of the “Clarity Act” later this quarter, which could reduce SEC/CFTC jurisdiction uncertainty. Traders assign a 65% probability the bill passes this year.
Macro backdrop is mixed but improving: core CPI rose only 0.2% month-on-month (2.6% y/y), easing expectations that would allow the Federal Reserve to stay more flexible—typically a positive setup for risk assets like Bitcoin. Finally, on-chain supply is described as thin between $72,000 and $80,000 (about 1% of circulating BTC), suggesting faster price discovery if Bitcoin breaks higher and the risk regime doesn’t deteriorate.
On-chain analysts report a wave of large ONDO wallet transfers to centralized exchange (CEX) deposit addresses, with Binance, Coinbase, and Gate named as the top recipients.
The activity appears systematic: the same group of wallets reportedly routes substantial ONDO batches repeatedly over multiple sessions, a pattern analysts describe as structured rather than random retail behavior. Dami-Defi highlighted the trend on X, noting wallets consistently sending large ONDO blocks directly to CEX deposit addresses.
This comes as ONDO’s price trades around $0.24 support. Traders are watching for near-term signals that could indicate potential selling, position rebalancing, or coordinated execution. Although exchange inflows to deposit addresses can precede sales, the report notes there has been no official announcement of a mass selloff.
Researchers say they will continue monitoring for further unusual deposits or sudden withdrawals that could clarify whether the inflows are preparation for distribution. For market participants, the key focus is whether continued ONDO exchange inflows translate into increased volatility or a breakdown/hold of the $0.24 level.
Neutral
ONDOCEX inflowsOn-chain analysisReal-world assets (RWA)Price support
StarkWare researcher Avihu Mordechai Levy proposed “Quantum-Safe Bitcoin” (QSB), a transaction design intended to protect Bitcoin’s elliptic-curve signatures from future quantum threats without changing Bitcoin consensus or requiring a soft fork. Quantum-Safe Bitcoin swaps current EC signatures for hash-based cryptography using Lamport signatures, while fitting within Bitcoin’s tight script limits (201 opcodes, 10,000 bytes).
Traders should treat this as a last-resort workaround, not a scalable upgrade. It requires solving a cryptographic puzzle before broadcasting. Levy estimates about 70 trillion attempts, with users doing off-chain computation (potentially GPU-based) costing a few hundred dollars per transaction. A “transaction pinning” mechanism makes modification attempts force the puzzle to be solved again. Security trade-offs remain: Shor’s algorithm resistance is targeted, but Grover’s algorithm could still provide quantum attackers a quadratic speedup.
Levy also stresses the proposal is not complete and calls for continued protocol-level post-quantum work, including references like BIP-360. The quantum risk is still theoretical, but major firms (e.g., Google, Cloudflare) have publicly discussed post-quantum migration timelines around 2029. Overall, Quantum-Safe Bitcoin is an important research signal for Bitcoin security, but it does not directly change live transaction validation today.
A crypto researcher, SMQKE, argues that XRP’s effectiveness in Ripple’s payment system depends on XRP price through network liquidity. Citing historical context from the 2017–early 2018 rally (when XRP briefly broke above $2.50), SMQKE claims that “if XRP has a higher value, it increases the value of the solution” by increasing liquidity on the network. Higher XRP valuation, the post says, also helps XRP convey more value versus other currencies and supports its role as a bridge asset for cross-border payments.
Community reactions were mixed. Toni questioned whether focusing on price appreciation risks prioritizing liquidity depth and speculation over real adoption. LedgerLegend asked whether institutions need XRP’s high price before meaningful usage, or if high price is only a byproduct of adoption. X Finance Bull supported the liquidity thesis, noting that deeper liquidity can reduce transaction friction and is often overlooked.
Key takeaway for traders: the narrative centers on XRP price potentially reinforcing Ripple’s payment liquidity, which could influence sentiment and near-term momentum, though it remains an argument tied to prior documentation rather than a new protocol or earnings catalyst.
Ethereum monthly transfers surge 56.9%, rising from 855,444 to 1.34 million in one month, according to on-chain data. Network activity increased steadily from mid-March, with notable spikes around March 25 and March 30, and daily transfer counts staying roughly between 1.25 million and 1.35 million after April began. The uptrend is linked to higher DeFi activity, more NFT transfers and renewed peer-to-peer usage.
At the same time, ETH briefly fell about 3% after US–Iran talks reportedly stalled. The pullback pushed ETH near the watched $2,200 support zone. Buyers defended just above this level, helping prevent further downside and keeping the higher-timeframe uptrend intact.
Technical focus remains on the $2,150–$2,200 range. Analyst “Ted” suggested that losing this zone could trigger a deeper sell-off, while holding it may allow another upside leg. Price is around $2,285, with near-term upside targets at $2,310, then $2,339 and $2,386 if momentum improves. Traders may also monitor the $2,233–$2,249 area for bullish confirmation; a decisive close below $2,233 could shift the short-term bias bearish, targeting $2,157 and possibly $2,087.
Overall, the Ethereum monthly transfers surge highlights strengthening demand. If support holds, it may support a bullish continuation; if it breaks, volatility risk rises.
Bullish
EthereumOn-chain metricsDeFiTechnical analysisETH support
CryptoPotato reviews a “quantum-resistant” threat ranking for BTC, ETH, and XRP based on ChatGPT’s model and related research.
Quantum computing could eventually undermine today’s public-key cryptography. Shor’s algorithm is cited as a risk to elliptic-curve signatures (ECC/RSA), potentially enabling attackers to derive private keys and steal funds. Grover’s algorithm is also mentioned as a threat vector for mining security.
BTC: “Most exposed, but misunderstood.” The article says Bitcoin’s use of ECDSA makes it structurally vulnerable if signatures are broken, especially for old or dormant coins. However, proof-of-work (PoW) itself is described as not directly breakable; only the signature scheme is at risk. Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao is quoted: crypto would need to upgrade to quantum-resistant algorithms, but dormant BTC (e.g., Satoshi’s estimated ~1 million coins) could be a concern if they move.
ETH: “High exposure, bigger attack surface.” A cited Google report claims quantum could crack the top 1,000 largest Ethereum wallets within days. Ethereum is also described as having more components to attack—smart contracts, validators, bridges, and layer-2s—expanding the overall attack surface.
XRP: “Least exposed (relatively).” Despite also using elliptic-curve cryptography, the article says XRP’s transaction finality reduces the attack window. It relies less on complex smart contracts/DeFi and has a more controlled validator ecosystem. It notes XRP Ledger features like multi-signing and flexible key structures may make coordinated upgrades easier.
Overall, the piece frames quantum-resistant migration as an eventual requirement, with trader focus likely shifting toward which networks can upgrade and how quickly.
Neutral
Quantum-Resistant CryptoBTC vs ETH vs XRPQuantum Computing RiskBlockchain SecurityBinance