XRP ETF inflows reached $119.6 million for the week ending April 11, the strongest weekly total since December. CoinShares data shows XRP led global fund inflows, taking 53% of the $224 million total, with Switzerland contributing $157.5 million versus $27.5 million from the US.
Seven spot XRP ETFs are listed in the US, but US-listed products saw near-zero daily flows, so the XRP ETF inflows largely came from Europe and other international listings. Goldman Sachs is the largest disclosed US institutional holder (about $153.8 million across four funds), though analysts suggest the position may reflect trading-desk facilitation rather than a direct long-term institutional bet.
Despite the XRP ETF inflows, XRP price rose only about 3.8% (from ~$1.30 to ~$1.35) while resistance remains near $1.48. The article attributes the muted move to sell pressure absorbing inflows and early-holder profit-taking after Ripple’s SEC settlement.
Separately, a Coinbase/EY-Parthenon survey found 25% of surveyed institutions plan to add XRP in 2026, with 65% citing regulatory clarity as the main blocker. The Senate Banking Committee markup targeted for late April is flagged as a near-term catalyst for translating intent into capital.
Neutral
XRP ETFCrypto fund flowsUS CLARITY ActRegulatory claritySpot ETF demand
The CLARITY Act has entered a “do-or-die” window after the Senate returned from recess with about 14 working days before midterm politics take over. Senator Bill Hagerty says the bill will reach the Senate Banking Committee this work period, and Senator Cynthia Lummis targets a late-April markup. However, Banking Committee chair Tim Scott has not yet announced a markup date—without it, the CLARITY Act risks being delayed into the summer recess cycle, with a likely vote pushed to 2027 or later.
The best case is a Banking Committee markup this week, a late-April committee vote, and a full Senate floor vote by late May. After that, reconciliation is required between the Senate Banking and Agriculture versions, and then with the House bill before the president’s desk.
Support appears broader than at any prior stage: the White House, SEC, Treasury, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, and Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse are publicly backing the CLARITY Act framework. Garlinghouse expects passage by end of May, while Armstrong reversed earlier opposition tied to stablecoin yield language (the key dispute that stalled the bill since January).
Market signals reflect the uncertainty. JPMorgan analysts see midyear passage as a positive catalyst for digital assets (regulatory clarity, institutional scaling, tokenization growth). Polymarket currently prices passage odds at about 55%. Separately, Senate Democrats still want unresolved ethics language (officials profiting from crypto) and stronger DeFi anti-fraud provisions; the White House opposes language targeting the president personally.
Traders should track the single variable: whether Tim Scott schedules a CLARITY Act Banking Committee markup date.
US Senate lawmakers are reportedly preparing a compromise draft for the CLARITY Act, aimed at resolving the “stablecoin yield” stalemate. The draft is being developed by Sen. Thom Tillis (R) with Sen. Angela Alsobrooks (D). The Senate may release the stablecoin yield text soon, but changes are still possible because banking groups oppose key parts.
The core fight is over whether stablecoin-related platforms (often exchanges) can pay interest-like returns to users. A prior framework, the GENIUS Act, limits issuers from paying interest directly to holders, while allowing third parties to offer yield. Banks argue on-chain stablecoin yield could divert deposits that normally fund lending and investment. Crypto firms counter that yield on parked stablecoins supports platform liquidity and differentiation.
A key emerging policy direction is to restrict “passive” yield on idle balances while allowing “active-use” rewards tied to transfers and payments. Traders should watch how the final CLARITY Act defines prohibited “interest” versus allowed activity-based rewards, because it can reshape stablecoin APY, liquidity strategies, and where capital is parked across platforms. (At publication, BTC was trading above $74k.)
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CLARITY Actstablecoin yieldUS regulationbanking vs cryptostablecoin APY
Real-world asset tokenisation has moved toward institutional mainstream, and the article argues that RWA PR now requires more than standard crypto communications. It cites that tokenised RWAs crossed $25 billion in 2026 and highlights why credibility must be built with both institutional allocators and crypto-native users. Three RWA PR differences are emphasized: institutional media access, securities-grade compliance language (notably referencing Reg D/Reg S and MiCA and stating that issuance format does not change legal status), and technical narrative translation for proof-of-reserves, multi-chain deployment, and custodial arrangements.
The piece ranks five firms for RWA and tokenisation projects in 2026: Outset PR, Wachsman, Serotonin, FINPR, and ReBlonde. Outset PR is positioned as the strongest fit for “dual-audience” outcomes, citing proactive pitching plus expert commentary (including earned mentions across mainstream outlets) and syndication tracking. Wachsman is framed as strong on regulatory messaging across multiple market cycles. Serotonin is described as product-architecture aligned, useful pre-pitch when yield/custody/asset-backing mechanics are still being defined. FINPR focuses on MENA regional reach for token launches and exchange listings. ReBlonde emphasizes high-stakes communications and crisis/reputation risk handling during compressed token-raise windows.
For traders, the main takeaway is that RWA PR quality can affect investor confidence, onboarding momentum, and narrative consistency—factors that may influence liquidity and sentiment around tokenised-asset products. Overall, the news is informational rather than a direct market catalyst, so impact is likely limited.
The ETH/BTC ratio has surged to its highest level since late January as Ethereum (ETH) pushes toward the $2,400 area. Santiment data shows ETH’s price dominance over BTC is at a peak since January, alongside “$ETH greed” style derivatives signals.
Catalysts and metrics: whale accumulation is rising, with wallets holding at least 100,000 ETH increasing from 54 to 57. Spot activity also improved—ETH was near $2,300 and saw about a 9% daily gain, while trading volume jumped more than 120%. Institutional demand stayed positive for a third straight day, with US spot Ethereum ETFs recording roughly $9.44M net inflows on Apr 13.
Derivatives tension: analyst Darkfost notes Binance open interest added around 350,000 ETH since ETH’s February lows, and funding rates on Binance had been negative (implying heavy shorts). However, funding is now turning slightly positive (~+0.01%), which can amplify upside if short positioning unwinds.
Key technical risk: trader Ted Pillows flags $2,400 as a major resistance. A daily close above $2,400 could trigger a bull-trap risk around $2,500–$2,600, while rejection would likely confirm the rally’s end. Overall, the ETH/BTC ratio strength is bullish for relative performance, but sentiment and resistance levels keep near-term outcomes uncertain.
Polygon (MATIC) and Polkadot (DOT) are facing the same problem in mid-April 2026: despite major protocol headlines, both assets remain trapped under multi-month trendlines.
For Polygon, the network has shifted to the POL ticker and highlighted its “Agentic Finance” and AggLayer roadmap. Even after the Lisovo and Giugliano hardfork activations improved smart-contract efficiency for AI-driven bots, price action stays bearish. POL trades below key moving averages (7D ~$0.086, 30D ~$0.092, 200D ~$0.134). The article frames POL scenarios around $0.067–$0.105 (base), a potential push to $0.11–$0.13 (bullish, on confirmed reclaim of the 30D SMA), or a renewed drop to $0.055–$0.060 (bearish if demand fails to match staking inflation).
For Polkadot, March 14, 2026 brought a historic 53.6% supply cut, reducing inflation to 3.11% and adding a 2.1B DOT hard cap. DOT also saw the first US-based DOT ETF in early March, creating a regulated demand channel. However, DOT still sits far below its $2.14 long-term average. Technically, DOT’s MACD histogram is slightly more constructive than POL’s, but the article expects range trading unless price can reclaim the 30-day SMA (around $1.35). A base consolidation is projected at $0.94–$1.52, with bullish re-rating toward $1.50–$1.75 if the “supply squeeze” narrative takes hold.
Bottom line for traders: Polygon (MATIC) and Polkadot (DOT) may be “value” setups, but a durable breakout likely requires reclaiming the 30-day moving averages with expanding volume.
XRP has been consolidating below $1.40 for about 20 days, but Binance flow data suggests the range could break upward. Analyst Amr Taha flagged a shift on Binance: the seven-day average shows XRP withdrawals rising to 53% while deposits fall to 46%, levels last seen in June 2025. That June setup preceded a 65% XRP rally, culminating in an all-time high of $3.65 in July 2025.
The bearish immediate sell pressure looks reduced because fewer coins appear to be moving onto exchanges. CryptoQuant also shows Binance liquidity thinning sharply: the 30-day XRP liquidity index fell to 0.053 (lowest since 2021). At the same time, daily activity is weak, with 30-day trading volume around 3.77B XRP.
On-chain and derivatives data remain mixed but slightly supportive for an upside attempt. Aggregated spot CVD is about -$153M and futures CVD about -$295M, suggesting aggressive selling is cooling rather than accelerating. Funding rates are mildly positive at 0.06% (a small long bias), while open interest has risen to roughly $769M, indicating new positioning. Price is around $1.38 with limited movement.
Technically, a daily close above $1.40 could open a path toward $1.60–$1.67, with $1.40 also aligning near the 50-day moving average. Liquidation risk is meaningful: about $250–$300M in longs/shorts could be exposed within a 10% move, which could amplify volatility if XRP breaks $1.40.
Bullish
XRPBinance FlowsBreakout LevelsLiquidity & Order BookFutures Positioning
The article argues that content syndication in 2026 will increasingly happen through AI summaries and LLM interfaces rather than traditional republishing and referral traffic.
Key changes in content syndication in 2026:
- “Answers replace clicks” in many search paths. AI answer blocks reduce the need to click through, which the piece links to falling referral traffic for publishers.
- Attribution becomes less stable. AI synthesis can misattribute sources, cite secondary material, or omit citations entirely, based on Tow Center-linked testing.
- Permissioning becomes part of distribution. OpenAI’s guidance is cited: blocking OAI-SearchBot can prevent content from appearing in ChatGPT summaries/snippets and reduce clear citation opportunities.
- Monetization gets “re-bundled.” Some AI search players experiment with paying publishers via subscription or revenue-share. Bloomberg is mentioned for reporting Perplexity’s publisher revenue-share tied to subscription tiers.
What PR/editorial teams should do:
- Optimize for “reference value” (high-usefulness evergreen explainers, benchmarks, definitions).
- Build “citation networks,” where authority and outlet referencing matter more than clicks.
- Measure consistency, because fragmented messaging can be blended into low-quality summaries.
How to measure content syndication in the AI era:
- Track AI visibility (whether an AI answer appears and whether brand/URL is shown).
- Audit attribution quality (correct citation vs wrong page vs missing citation).
- Track broader outcomes (branded search lift, newsletter signups, repeat visits, assisted conversions).
The article also highlights Outset Media Index (OMI) and Outset Data Pulse as measurement frameworks (37+ metrics) to model how influence travels beyond traffic, including republication/citation patterns in LLM-driven environments.
Overall, content syndication becomes more algorithmic—shifting success from clicks toward citations, attribution accuracy, and downstream brand demand.
Neutral
AI content distributionPR measurementLLM searchmedia intelligencepublisher revenue-share
U.S. President Donald Trump said Iran-U.S. talks may be held in Pakistan within the next two days, according to a Tuesday interview reported by the New York Post. He added the process is “underway” but moving slowly.
Trump also praised Pakistan’s Army Chief of Staff Asim Munir and suggested follow-up negotiations should remain in Pakistan rather than shifting to other venues such as Geneva. Pakistan has reportedly offered to host the second round before the current ceasefire timeline expires, while Iran is described as willing to continue dialogue.
For markets, the key variable is whether these Iran-U.S. talks produce concrete, verifiable steps. Iran-U.S. talks on a defined timetable can reduce Middle East geopolitical risk, but delays or missing agreements may revive uncertainty and move risk sentiment quickly—often impacting crypto volatility alongside broader macro factors like energy prices and USD liquidity.
Neutral
U.S.-Iran talksPakistan diplomacygeopolitical riskcrypto market sentimentMiddle East ceasefire
Bitcoin jumped above $76,000 on April 14 after US producer price index (PPI) data came in well below Wall Street expectations. The March final-demand PPI rose 0.5% month over month versus a 1.1% forecast, while core PPI increased only 0.1% versus 0.4%. On a yearly basis, headline PPI printed 4.0% (vs 4.6% expected) and core PPI 3.8% (vs 4.1%).
The softer inflation print reversed recent hot wholesale-inflation trends and boosted risk assets, helping Bitcoin break above a key institutional benchmark. Bitcoin’s move took it to an intraday high of $76,038; it was trading around $75,335 at the time of reporting, up nearly 5% over 24 hours.
The rally also benefited MicroStrategy. Bitcoin pushed above MicroStrategy’s average purchase cost (about $75,580), turning the firm’s BTC position profitable for the first time since late March. MicroStrategy shares (MSTR) rose about 7% to $141.58, and the company holds roughly 780,897 BTC, with the BTC reserve now valued above $58.9B.
Traders will likely watch the next US data points—especially retail sales—and upcoming Federal Reserve commentary to see whether easing PPI flow-through continues into CPI and rate-cut expectations. If that macro trend holds, Bitcoin may extend its bid.
Uquid Tickets launched on TRON as a primary ticketing platform, aiming at the $900B+ live events market by 2030. The service lets users pay with TRC-20 USDT and other TRON-based assets, with transactions settling in seconds and verified on-chain. TRON DAO says the integration improves transparency and reduces common ticketing issues such as high fees, slow settlement, and fraud—positioning TRON as real-world payment infrastructure rather than just a marketing channel.
On the corporate side, TRON Inc. bought 155,886 TRX at an average $0.3207, lifting its TRX treasury to 691.4M+ tokens. At publication, TRX trades around $0.3213 with $510.6M 24h volume. Price action shows tight volatility near recent highs.
Technicals lean bullish: CoinCodex reports 26 bullish vs 6 bearish indicators. The 50-day SMA is projected near $0.3277 by May 14, 2026, while the 200-day SMA trends higher near $0.2978. RSI is ~63.25 (neutral-to-positive), suggesting upside room without immediate overbought signals. Overall, the news combines a vertical-market use case (ticketing) with supportive positioning from TRON Inc.’s own TRX accumulation.
Japanese e-commerce group Rakuten Wallet has added XRP as a listed asset and payment option, giving XRP direct access to about 44 million Rakuten Pay users across Japan.
Rakuten says customers can buy XRP, convert Rakuten Points into XRP, and then spend the balance via Rakuten’s existing checkout and QR-code payment rails for both online and in-store purchases. The move turns a closed loyalty-rewards loop into an on-ramp for everyday spending, potentially expanding XRP’s domestic retail distribution.
For traders, the key detail is network expansion: XRP is being wired into one of Japan’s largest consumer commerce networks, not just into niche crypto apps. That can increase token visibility and incremental demand expectations if users regularly convert loyalty points and use XRP for payments.
The article frames this as part of Japan’s broader corporate crypto experimentation, but highlights Rakuten’s scale and convenience-first approach as the differentiator.
XRP remains the primary asset in focus, with the integration expected to influence sentiment around adoption and retail use of the token.
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse says the XRP price has a realistic path to overtake Ethereum’s market capitalization, arguing the case is driven by utility rather than pure speculation. He points to XRP’s cross-border payments design as a scalable foundation for reaching the number-two crypto spot.
At the time of the report, Ethereum leads with a market cap of about $286.58B, while XRP is about $84.16B (in fourth place behind Tether). To match Ethereum at current levels, the XRP price would need roughly a 240% rise (to around $4.60).
Garlinghouse links the “flip” narrative to improving regulatory clarity. Ripple’s SEC case concluded in Aug 2025 with a $125M settlement, and in Mar 2026 the SEC and CFTC jointly classified XRP as a digital commodity. The article also highlights an expected CLARITY Act markup in late April, which traders may see as an institutional adoption catalyst.
Institutional targets are also cited: Standard Chartered projects an XRP price of $8 by end-2026 and $12.50 by 2028, implying eventual market-cap parity with Ethereum if supportive conditions align (regulatory progress, stronger ETF inflows, and macro risk-on).
Despite momentum, the gap remains wide. The article notes retail-heavy ownership in US XRP ETFs and that many institutions cite regulatory uncertainty as the main blocker. XRP traded around $1.33–$1.35 on Tuesday, about 63% below its July 2025 cycle high near $3.65.
Goldman Sachs has filed with the SEC to launch a “Bitcoin Premium Income ETF,” designed to provide Bitcoin exposure while generating recurring income through options trading rather than holding BTC outright.
The fund would allocate at least 80% of assets to Bitcoin-linked products, including shares of existing spot Bitcoin ETFs and options on those ETF holdings. Goldman plans to sell call options against its Bitcoin ETF positions to collect option premiums.
This covered-call structure can cap upside if BTC rallies sharply, while premiums may offer partial cushioning in flatter or mildly rising markets. Key details such as fee structure and launch timing were not disclosed, and the SEC has not approved the proposal.
The filing follows continued Wall Street momentum after Morgan Stanley launched a spot Bitcoin ETF last week. Compared with direct spot exposure, Goldman’s approach emphasizes regulated “Bitcoin yield” via an options overlay, potentially intensifying competition among ETF products targeting income.
Bitcoin traded around the mid-$70,000s at the time of the filing, underscoring how institutional structured-product demand is deepening around BTC as regulated vehicles expand.
The provided article content is not accessible. When loading the page, it shows “Performing security verification” from Cloudflare, indicating the site is using a bot-check to confirm the viewer is human. After “Verification successful,” the page states it is “Waiting for medium.com to respond,” which prevents the actual article text from appearing.
For traders, this is an important data-access issue rather than a market news event. The Cloudflare security verification can delay or block timely coverage of crypto developments, potentially affecting how quickly market participants receive information. In this case, there is no disclosed company, no cited policy change, and no crypto/price-relevant metric available.
Because the Cloudflare security verification blocks the underlying content, no direct implications for token flows, liquidity, or volatility can be derived from the article itself. Traders should treat it as a monitoring/feeds reliability problem, not a fundamental bullish or bearish catalyst. If you rely on Media sources for signals, consider corroborating with alternate outlets or official channels.
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CloudflareBot protectionWebsite access issuesMarket data reliabilityCrypto news monitoring
The crypto industry is racing to pass the CLARITY Act before a two-week window closes, but Senate gridlock and banking-industry pressure threaten to keep the bill stalled until 2030. The bill advanced in the House (July 2025) and is now stuck in the Senate, where Senate Banking has not scheduled a markup vote.
Key driver: a fight over stablecoin “yield” rights. Traditional banks warn that allowing interest on yield-bearing stablecoins could trigger deposit flight and squeeze bank lending. The American Bankers Association (ABA) argues community banks would be forced into costlier funding, raising credit costs for small businesses.
Counterpoint from the White House: a multi-agency effort centered on a Council of Economic Advisers report claims the macroeconomic risks are overstated. It estimates that banning stablecoin interest would shift US bank lending by only ~$2.1B (about 0.02%), while allowing yields could avoid an estimated ~$800M in annual welfare loss.
Notable figures and political timing: Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong reversed course after a US Treasury push, publicly urging lawmakers to pass the CLARITY Act. Still, Senate Banking Chair Tim Scott has not scheduled a markup date. If the committee does not act soon, procedural timelines imply the bill must clear Banking by mid-May to reach a floor vote before Memorial Day; missing summer could push decisive action into a less crypto-friendly post-election environment.
Market watch: Polymarket and Kalshi show odds falling materially for CLARITY Act passage this year, reflecting growing regulatory uncertainty for US crypto markets.
Foundry Digital launched the Foundry Zcash Pool and its ZEC hashrate share quickly climbed to about ~30% of the Zcash (ZEC) network within days, raising a centralization debate. The pool began onboarding customers before the public launch and was initially set in motion on March 11.
Foundry says the U.S.-based service targets regulated institutional and public miners, aiming to reduce compliance and “counterparty risk” with transparent, auditable payouts. Zcash founder Zooko Wilcox backed the move, framing it as credible and long-term.
For traders, the key context is miner economics: reported miner revenue fell from roughly $45M at the start of 2026 to about $28M–$35M at the time of reporting. Meanwhile, ZEC hashrate stayed volatile and near ~1.2B EH/s, signaling tougher competition but weaker earnings for miners.
The update also includes infrastructure: Foundry rolled out Zcashinfo.com, a block explorer for real-time pool rankings, hashrate distribution, and network difficulty.
At publication, ZEC traded around $376, up ~4.4% in 24 hours, still trying to reclaim the $250 resistance area from late February. The main trading question is whether this rapid ZEC hashrate concentration stabilizes or worsens—potentially affecting both decentralization risk and future miner profitability.
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ZEC hashrateMining poolsCentralization riskMining economicsZcashinfo explorer
Ethereum DEX CowSwap was hit by a reported frontend vulnerability, triggering an urgent security warning from blockchain intelligence firm Blockaid. Users are advised not to connect wallets to the CowSwap website and to revoke existing wallet approvals immediately.
Following the news, CowSwap’s native token COW sold off sharply, falling to around $0.2137 (near $0.21). After the initial dump, the price decline paused, but traders are monitoring for further confirmation as investigations continue.
Blockaid flagged a “serious” frontend issue. The article notes that such problems can be validated quickly in DeFi, and that protocol-level threats often lead to rapid losses unless incident response and communication are fast. CowSwap’s intent-based auction model is designed to reduce typical MEV pain (front-running and sandwich attacks) and it helps match opposing trades without direct liquidity-pool interaction.
However, CowSwap’s popularity on Ethereum (reported as among the top 10 most-used DEXs) can also amplify risk during attacks due to a larger user base. The article says authorities have not yet detailed how the hack occurred or the damage scope, and it emphasizes watching official updates for remediation steps.
For traders, this is a near-term risk event for COW liquidity and Ethereum DeFi sentiment, with immediate “wallet-approval” hygiene likely to influence user behavior until patches are deployed.
A crypto news article highlights an “XRP calculator” valuation model by a pseudonymous analyst, XRP Bags, claiming XRP could reach $398.29 if certain transaction conditions are met.
The model assumes $100 billion in daily transaction volume on the XRP Ledger, with a circulating supply near 60 billion tokens. It also uses a 5-day average transaction velocity and macro assumptions including a $30 trillion store-of-value component and a 5% discount rate over a five-year horizon. Under these extreme adoption inputs, the theoretical XRP valuation output is $398.29 per XRP.
The article contrasts this scenario with current reality: XRP is trading around $1.35, while XRP Ledger’s actual daily volume is far below the $100B threshold. It also compares blockchain throughput narratives with legacy payment networks like SWIFT, noting that system finality and liquidity mechanics differ.
Key takeaway for traders: this is not a forecast, but a utility/throughput-based framework. It may influence sentiment if market participants treat real-world payment adoption as a pricing driver rather than only chart-driven speculation. Still, the assumptions (sustained global integration, transaction velocity, regulatory clarity) are the biggest sources of uncertainty.
Disclaimer: The article is for information only and not financial advice.
Neutral
XRPXRP CalculatorPayment ThroughputXRPLToken Valuation Model
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the Fed does not need to rush Fed rate cuts now. Speaking Monday at Semafor World Economy in Washington, DC, he argued the Iran war has increased uncertainty enough to justify a “wait and see” approach.
Bessent pointed to fresh inflation data showing March inflation rose about three times faster than February, largely due to higher oil and gas prices. He stressed the increase looks “transitory,” adding that core inflation excluding food and energy rose less than forecasts, and he does not expect the shock to become embedded in inflation expectations. The message: Fed rate cuts can come later, but timing should depend on how the oil-driven price impulse evolves.
He also defended Trump nominee Kevin Warsh, saying Warsh would take an “open mind” and conduct a serious review of how the regional Federal Reserve banks function. Warsh’s confirmation process may still face Senate scrutiny, including political and filing-related delays involving Sen. Thom Tillis.
For crypto traders, the near-term implication is clear: delayed Fed rate cuts can keep real yields and the US dollar supported, tightening overall liquidity conditions. At the same time, Bessent’s “transitory” framing suggests the inflation shock may fade if oil cools, which could reduce downside risk later rather than lock in a prolonged hawkish path.
In short, Iran-driven uncertainty plus an oil-led inflation spike changes the timing debate around Fed rate cuts—an input that often moves risk assets, including BTC and ETH, through USD and rates expectations.
Bitcoin (BTC) reclaimed the $76,000 level after US March Producer Price Index (PPI) came in softer than expected. Annual PPI rose 4.0% vs 4.7% forecast, and monthly PPI increased 0.5% vs 1.1% expected. Core PPI held at 3.8%. Traders took the “cooling inflation” signal as a boost for crypto risk-on, expecting a less aggressive Federal Reserve path and easier liquidity.
BTC is still trading within an ascending range after rebounding from February’s low. Support is highlighted near the rising trendline around $68,000. Resistance is clustered between $72,000 and $76,000, where prior breakouts have sometimes failed and triggered pullbacks. Many traders are watching for one more push toward roughly $74,000–$76,000 to confirm the next move.
Derivatives data adds context: Binance BTC-USD 30-day open interest reportedly fell from about $1.9B to $1.19B while price moved from roughly $63,000 (Feb 5) to about $73,200 (Feb 14). That divergence suggests the rally leaned more on spot buying and short covering than on fresh leveraged futures demand.
Key trade question: will BTC hold above $76,000, or will rejection send it back toward $68,000 and potentially the $63,000–$66,000 support zone?
Bullish
BTCUS PPIFed rate expectationsDerivatives open interestCrypto risk-on
Russian Urals crude is surging to around $110 per barrel and is at its highest level since 2013. The jump adds an estimated $9B in monthly revenues for Russia, following a broader rally in global oil markets.
The main driver is tightening supply and geopolitics. Disruptions in the Gulf—especially around the Strait of Hormuz—have pushed benchmark oil prices above $100. With traditional routes less reliable, buyers seek alternatives, and Russian Urals has benefited as a key substitute.
Vladimir Putin urged domestic producers to capitalize on the higher prices to boost revenues and export volumes, while warning the rally may not last. This frames the market as both a short-term revenue opportunity and a potential volatility risk if disruptions ease.
On the demand side, a U.S. policy shift is cited as supportive. Donald Trump’s administration expanded a permit that allows certain countries to purchase Russian oil, extending a previously narrower waiver. The article links this to increased purchases by energy-importing nations.
India is singled out as a major buyer. Reports say large refiners, including Indian Oil Corp. and Reliance Industries, secured about 30 million barrels after regulatory approvals earlier in the year, reinforcing the new trade flows.
Bottom line: Russian Urals strength is being sustained by supply shocks plus demand support from U.S. permitting and refiner buying, but the path depends on how Middle East tensions and shipping-risk evolve.
South Korea’s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) fined crypto exchange Coinone about 5.2 billion won (≈$3.49M) for AML and KYC failures. Coinone must also accept a three-month partial business suspension.
The sanction period runs from April 29 to July 28. Coinone is barred from onboarding new customers and from enabling deposits and withdrawals of virtual assets. Existing users are reported to be able to continue trading, while fiat (KRW) deposits and withdrawals remain available during the restriction.
FIU said Coinone failed to properly verify identities in roughly 70,000 cases and handled transactions tied to 16 unregistered overseas virtual asset operators, after earlier official warnings. The CEO, Cha Myung-hoon, received an administrative reprimand, and Coinone has 10 days to respond before the penalty is finalized.
For traders, the impact is mainly on Coinone’s growth/flow via the new-user on-ramp, which can tighten near-term liquidity dynamics on the platform. The broader takeaway is that South Korea’s AML crackdown and scrutiny of unregistered offshore counterparties remain a key regulatory risk factor for exchanges.
Neutral
Coinone fineAML complianceKYC failuresExchange suspensionSouth Korea regulation
A fake “Ledger Live” app appeared on the Apple Mac App Store and stole crypto from 50+ users between April 7 and April 13, per on-chain investigator ZachXBT. The Fake Ledger Live app investigation claims total losses exceed $9.5 million across multiple networks, including BTC, SOL, XRP, and EVM assets.
ZachXBT says stolen funds were laundered through 150+ KuCoin-linked deposit addresses and a centralized mixing service identified as “AudiA6.” Reported incidents include a wallet drained of about 3.27M USDT, plus multiple victims losing roughly $1.95M+ each in BTC and ETH-related holdings (including stETH and ETH). Musician G. Love (Garrett Dutton) also reported losing 5.92 BTC after downloading the malicious Ledger-impersonating app while switching devices.
The fake app was removed on April 13, but ZachXBT says it stayed online for nearly two more days. KuCoin support reportedly froze a suspicious account after being notified, but at publication the findings were not independently confirmed by Apple or KuCoin. For traders, this is primarily a security and scam risk signal rather than a protocol or network catalyst, which may slightly dampen sentiment around seed-phrase and branded wallet app workflows.
Neutral
Fake Ledger Live scamMac App Store malwareKuCoin launderingSeed phrase securityCrypto theft investigation
AI-powered cyber attacks are raising the stakes for critical infrastructure security, especially in Operational Technology (OT) environments where patching is slow due to long asset lifecycles, vendor constraints, and safety/availability risks. The article highlights Anthropic’s Project Glasswing and Claude Mythos Preview, saying Mythos Preview has already identified thousands of high-severity vulnerabilities across major operating systems and web browsers.
Key impact: AI-powered cyber attacks reduce the gap between vulnerability discovery and exploitation, potentially shrinking defenders’ response time from weeks to minutes or seconds. It also warns that post-compromise “contagion” inside networks may become increasingly automated, making manual incident response less effective.
Why patching is harder in OT: NIST guidance (including SP 800-82) emphasizes that changes must preserve safety and operational continuity, often requiring offline testing, planned maintenance windows, vendor review, and compensating controls. CISA similarly notes some OT vulnerabilities may not be remediated immediately without risking availability or safety.
Zero Trust is positioned as the main countermeasure: reduce exposure, eliminate unnecessary trust paths, constrain lateral movement, segment IT/OT boundaries, and govern remote and third-party access with identity-based controls.
Takeaway for security leaders: plan for delayed patching, minimize blast radius, and build resilience so operations stay safe even when vulnerabilities remain open.
Ghost’s April 14, 2026 update introduces new welcome email design settings. Users can now customize the welcome email template with the same controls as newsletters, including colors, typography, buttons, and logos, to keep branding consistent. The welcome email design settings also let users set the sender name and reply-to address separately from newsletters, improving inbox routing and ensuring readers can reply to the intended destination. Once configured, the template applies across all welcome emails. To enable it, go to Settings → Welcome emails → Customize.
Ghost Pro users can access the change immediately, while developers running self-hosted Ghost must update to the latest version. The release is positioned as a step toward a broader automation suite, with product priorities shaped by user feedback.
Bitcoin liquidity map signals a new near-term trading trigger after BTC surged above $75,000. The rally from about $70,000 to $75K+ in hours triggered $594M in liquidations in the past 24 hours, with shorts accounting for roughly $472M—an indication that leverage was aggressively unwound.
The article highlights key liquidity clusters that can act as magnets for price. Upside liquidity is concentrated around $76,500 (and broadly $75,000–$76,500), which could be swept next if buyers keep control. On the downside, the largest liquidity cluster sits between $68,000 and $72,000, marked as the higher-probability target if price falls. Immediate support is identified near $73,500–$74,000, where a pullback could pause before any continuation.
Traders are using the Bitcoin liquidity map/“liquidation heatmap” to anticipate where forced order flows may concentrate. The piece notes these levels are predictive but not guaranteed, so confirmations from broader indicators and risk management are still needed.
Authored by Peter Mwenda (LiveBitcoinNews).
Bullish
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A bipartisan draft of the Digital Asset PARITY Act circulated in Washington would shift U.S. tax treatment of regulated stablecoin payments. Under current IRS guidance, USDC and USDT are treated as “digital assets” (property), so converting stablecoins or using them to buy goods can trigger reportable capital-gains events.
The PARITY Act proposal would create a carve-out for “Regulated Payment Stablecoins,” allowing qualifying everyday payments to recognize no gain or loss. Qualification hinges on the token staying tightly pegged (within roughly a $0.99–$1.01 band) and meeting strict issuance and redemption standards. The draft description also suggests the bill would effectively ignore capital-gains calculations for most small consumer payments by aligning the stablecoin’s basis with $1 per unit, provided the peg stability and regulatory criteria are met.
The same effort would tighten tax rules beyond stablecoins by extending wash-sale style restrictions to actively traded digital assets such as Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, aiming to reduce aggressive tax-loss harvesting.
If enacted, the practical effect is that routine spending with USDC/USDT could become close to “tax-free” for many U.S. users—potentially increasing real-world stablecoin usage. For now, however, IRS treatment remains unchanged and any benefit depends on whether Congress advances the PARITY Act from discussion draft to law. Traders should watch for policy headlines and any resulting stablecoin flow or liquidity shifts, with impact likely limited until legislative approval.
US President Donald Trump’s Fed chair nominee **Kevin Warsh** filed US Office of Government Ethics disclosures ahead of confirmation. The filing flags **crypto-related holdings** alongside investments in AI firms, keeping traders focused on how a potential Fed chair could shape crypto market structure.
Key details: Reuters reported Warsh’s total assets are **over $100 million**, but several crypto and AI positions were filed **without value ranges** (ethics rules only require ranges above $1,000). The largest item cited includes **more than $50 million in the Juggernaut Fund**, plus **over $10 million** in consulting income from **Duquesne Family Office**. Crypto-adjacent mentions in earlier reporting include infrastructure-linked exposure tied to major web3 themes.
Timing and regulation backdrop: Warsh’s nomination is set to be considered by the **Senate Banking Committee**, with reports of a possible vote next week, though no hearing date was announced. Separately, Trump has not signaled additional picks to fill leadership gaps at the **SEC** and **CFTC**—leaving enforcement and policy direction uncertain. The crypto market-structure bill has also been stalled since **July 2025**.
Why it matters for traders: the news is **not an immediate trade catalyst**, but **Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh** scrutiny of crypto holdings can influence risk sentiment around **BTC and ETH** expectations for regulatory tone. The earlier record includes Warsh’s comments likening Bitcoin to “gold” for stores of value, reinforcing why market participants will watch any shift in monetary-policy framing from **Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh**.
Neutral
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