A crypto analyst, Aralez, projects a bearish path for the Bitcoin price through 2026. After a weak start of 2026 with Bitcoin stalled below $100,000, Aralez expects the last stretch of Q2 to bring further downside: the S&P 500 could fall to $7,400, while the Bitcoin price may drop toward $58,000 and Ethereum could move lower as well.
For Q3, the analyst sees a capitulation phase followed by large “whale” accumulation, aided by the Federal Reserve easing interest rates. This setup could help the Bitcoin price bottom in Q3, setting the stage for a stronger finish.
By year-end, Aralez calls for a major Bitcoin move toward $100,000. Catalysts include the AI narrative taking center stage and rising crypto liquidity as more capital returns and traders take more risk. If the thesis plays out, the Bitcoin price could gain at least 30% by the end of 2026.
Shiba Inu (SHIB) is facing renewed sell pressure as exchange and derivatives flows turn negative. Exchange flow data show SHIB recorded about 457B tokens moving out of exchanges versus about 347B tokens entering, creating a negative netflow of roughly -110B SHIB.
While exchange outflows can sometimes be bullish (often linked to self-custody), the article argues the broader tape remains bearish: SHIB is still trading below key moving averages after breaking under a multi-month consolidation range. The RSI has slid toward extreme oversold levels, and SHIB is down more than 8% over the past day.
Derivatives signals are also worsening. Futures flow metrics show net changes falling by more than 140%, with 24-hour net futures outflows around -$2.38M (noted as -144%). Three-day futures flows remain negative, implying leveraged participants are cutting exposure rather than positioning for a rebound.
Spot market activity mirrors this weakness. About $826K left spot markets in the past 24 hours, and more than $2.2M exited over the previous three days, keeping net spot flows negative across multiple timeframes.
Technically, SHIB is printing lower highs and lower lows after losing support near $0.0000050. Sellers are likely to stay in control until price can reclaim major moving averages and stabilize above the prior support level. The article notes that sharp countertrend rallies are possible when pessimism is extreme, so traders should watch for stabilization signs as momentum indicators approach oversold levels.
XRP builder Cauliman dismissed public XRP price forecasts, arguing that “silence” is more meaningful than bold targets. He said his daily work building on the XRP Ledger (XRPL) shows stronger conviction than community guesswork—especially as XRP has been weak while influencers continue posting extreme long-term numbers (including claims of $1,000 XRP).
Cauliman also said he does not publish XRP price predictions, citing his focus on products that help users read and use XRPL data. His ecosystem, House of Cauliman (founded 2023), now includes ~11 XRPL projects across data, wallets, trading tools, education, and collectibles.
Key projects highlighted:
- MONOLITH: an on-chain “Wall of Record” where users spend XRP to claim permanent grid coordinates, minting a Coordinate Deed NFT recorded on XRPL.
- AUGUR: a non-custodial wallet intelligence and chain-oracle tool that summarizes XRPL wallet activity (inflows/outflows, fees, token/NFT activity, AMM transactions, and balance changes).
Market context: XRP remains under pressure amid broader market declines and ETF-related weakness, while XRPL usage indicators continue to rise. Reported data included a 35.3% increase in daily XRPL transactions in Q1 2026 and a 124.1% quarter-over-quarter rise in XRPL RWA market cap to $2.25B.
For traders, this reinforces a split between XRP price sentiment and XRPL activity. The XRP builder’s message may temper hype-driven expectations, but it doesn’t directly change near-term catalysts.
Neutral
XRPXRPLOn-chain analyticsToken price predictionsEcosystem building
Bitcoin slid below $62,000 in early June 2026, reigniting a “Saylor caused it” narrative after Strategy disclosed it sold 32 BTC (about $2.5m) on June 1—its first sale since 2022. But the article argues this blame is a scapegoat.
Jim Ferraioli, Charles Schwab’s director of digital currencies research and strategy, says the multi-day selloff and liquidation cascade cannot be explained by such a small sale versus Bitcoin’s scale and daily spot liquidity. The broader downtrend started in October 2025, months before Strategy’s June sale. Bitcoin peaked near ~$126,000 in October, bottomed in early February, briefly recovered, and then resumed falling.
The core thesis is that Bitcoin has lost its status as the market’s dominant momentum trade. Speculative capital that used to chase crypto is rotating to gold, AI-related stocks, and a record IPO wave (including reported SpaceX IPO plans). For momentum-driven investors, the opportunity cost is simply too high to remain long a chart that has been grinding lower since October.
The article also highlights “momentum leakage” through crypto-native infrastructure: traders are increasingly using platforms such as Hyperliquid to access tokenized/derivative exposure to pre-IPO and stocks, effectively routing flow away from spot BTC.
Despite improving fundamentals in 2026—spot ETFs with tens of billions in assets and more regulatory clarity—Bitcoin price action hasn’t responded, because momentum (short-term attention and flows) is what currently matters. Summer seasonality is framed as an additional headwind.
Bottom line for traders: watch where speculative attention flows next, not Strategy’s next disclosure. Bitcoin can recover if rival narratives cool or BTC regains the “fastest-rising” trade status.
Bitcoin (BTC) rebounded after a sharp selloff, dipping to about $61,300 before trading near $62,500. The move triggered heavy liquidations: roughly $3 billion wiped out over two days, including about $750M in Bitcoin and $390M in Ether.
Derivatives remain firmly bearish. Open interest fell 8.5% to $111.4B, suggesting leverage is being unwound rather than new bullish positions added. Bitcoin open interest dropped back from record highs above 800,000 BTC, consistent with long flush-out but limited new directional buying.
Options positioning also leans downside. Put skews strengthened for both Bitcoin and Ether, and the $60,000 BTC put on Deribit has over $1B in notional open interest. As spot approaches that strike, traders may adjust positions—potentially adding volatility. Implied volatility for Bitcoin and Ether has risen over three sessions, pointing to higher demand for hedging.
A notable exception is Solana (SOL): its open interest hit a record 72.16M tokens even as price fell, typically signaling aggressive short accumulation. Related underperformance in altcoins (eg, NEAR, ZEC, JUP down 13%+) highlights liquidity fragility, so a break of the $60,000 Bitcoin level could extend liquidations and weigh more on weaker pairs.
Bitcoin (BTC) is down sharply, falling ~14% in seven days and threatening the $60,000 area that many analysts treat as a key support. Standard Chartered’s Geoff Kendrick argues the “low is almost in,” based on three “Ifs” for BTC.
First, Strategy (MSTR) is expected to repeat its 2022 playbook: after selling 32 BTC last week, Kendrick suggests it could buy back materially soon, potentially up to 100x the sold amount if confirmed next Monday.
Second, U.S. spot BTC ETFs look sturdier than feared. Over the past three weeks, net outflows totaled about $5 billion, but cumulative holdings since early-2024 remain roughly flat (around $54.2B; share count ~674k vs ~682k earlier this year), implying more structural support.
Third, leverage stress appears largely flushed: exchanges have liquidated about $1.5B in bitcoin futures bets, similar to January. With BTC already underperforming broader equities, fewer leveraged longs may remain to be forced out.
Technically, the weekly chart is trading close to the 200-week SMA—often where prior bear markets ended—suggesting a bottom may be approaching, though it is not guaranteed. Kendrick’s key takeaway for traders: accumulating near this zone may be preferable to waiting for perfect certainty.
On-chain analytics firm Glassnode says the latest Bitcoin crash triggered a $1.35 billion per-day capitulation in “Realized Loss,” a metric tracking losses BTC investors crystallize via transactions.
Glassnode reports a sharp surge in Bitcoin realized losses alongside the price drop, similar to prior high-volatility capitulation episodes (e.g., November and February). This time, the holder breakdown differs: while short-term holders participated, Bitcoin long-term holders were the main driver of selling pressure.
In total, the Realized Loss spike reached ~$1.35B per day, with Bitcoin long-term holders responsible for about $770M of daily loss realization. Glassnode notes this pattern—long-term holders passing supply into new hands at lower prices—can be a recurring cycle-bottom process, but the current pace suggests capitulation may still be incomplete.
The report also highlights large liquidations in BTC futures following the plunge, consistent with derivatives-driven forced selling that historically clears weaker positions at local exhaustion points.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin trades around $65,500 (down ~12% over seven days). For traders, the key takeaway is that capitulation pressure is being borne mainly by long-term holders, which can foreshadow volatility but also set conditions for a later stabilization if selling pressure continues to exhaust.
TSMC Deputy Co-COO Kevin Zhang said the company is not worried about Intel’s advanced packaging push, after Intel’s Embedded Multi-Die Interconnect Bridge (EMIB) showed gains with major customers. Reports say Google has adopted EMIB for at least one project, citing EMIB’s reticle-size advantages. Amazon is also reportedly increasing interest in EMIB.
TSMC’s packaging stack centers on CoWoS (Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate), including CoWoS-S, CoWoS-R and CoWoS-L, which are widely used in high-volume AI chip production, including NVIDIA GPU supply chains. Intel’s counter is EMIB, a 2.5D packaging approach that embeds small silicon bridges into organic substrates, competing directly with CoWoS.
The key strategic signal is TSMC’s roadmap acceleration: Zhang said TSMC is targeting a 14-reticle CoWoS version for release by 2028. If delivered, this would reduce the reticle-size gap that made EMIB attractive to Google in the first place.
For investors, the near-term takeaway is not “TSMC loses the market,” but “packaging competition is intensifying.” One EMIB win does not automatically displace CoWoS as the default industry choice, especially because CoWoS remains deeply integrated into AI production. However, the 2028 timeline gives Intel a window to lock in more hyperscaler relationships and capture additional high-end packaging demand where larger configurations are needed.
TSMC’s CEO C.C. Wei said the foundry will pursue “measured, predictable” wafer pricing instead of aggressive price hikes, despite AI chip demand outstripping supply for years. At the June 4 shareholders’ meeting, TSMC forecast 30%+ sales growth and reported a 66% gross margin—achieved through steady pricing rather than opportunistic spikes.
Wei framed TSMC’s approach as prioritizing long-term customer partnerships over short-term revenue maximization. Earlier reporting (Sept 2025) suggested planned advanced-node price increases of roughly 5%–10% into 2026, with major customers including Nvidia, Apple, and AMD informed of the adjustments. TSMC expects AI supply shortages to persist, while competitors (Samsung Foundry and Intel) remain behind on leading-edge nodes.
Why it matters for the tech sector and investors: TSMC’s price restraint can reduce incentives for big buyers to diversify away from TSMC more aggressively, even amid US tariffs, export controls, and US–China geopolitical uncertainty. With 66% gross margin alongside 30%+ revenue growth, TSMC’s strategy supports high profitability without “squeezing” clients, potentially limiting disruption to downstream tech spending on R&D and product development.
For traders, the headline is clear: TSMC price restraint signals continued AI-driven demand visibility and manufacturing capacity constraints that are likely to persist, which can influence broader risk sentiment toward tech-linked markets and the crypto macro backdrop.
Bankless podcast host Ron Hammond (Wintermute Head of Policy and Advocacy) says crypto “automated trading” is becoming more user-friendly, changing trader behavior and potentially widening participation.
A key focus is the Agent Payments Protocol, described as an open standard enabling AI agents to execute full commercial transactions on-chain. Hammond frames the Agent Payments Protocol as a major step toward more automated and efficient settlement, where AI + blockchain can handle end-to-end transaction flows.
On regulation and politics, Hammond argues crypto’s reputation in Washington, D.C. has matured from FTX-era hype to a more serious, mainstream industry presence. He also notes crypto lawyers are viewed as exceptionally effective due to specialized expertise, and that the crypto lobby is influential because it offers novel engagement opportunities for political staffers.
However, he criticizes the role of Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF): Hammond says SBF’s political access was driven by large donations and persuasive narratives, and that lobbying efforts pushed for regulatory exemptions that, in his view, favored centralized exchanges over DeFi. He adds that the FTX scandal hurt credibility across party lines and that politicians who accepted FTX donations faced increased fundraising burdens to repay creditors.
Takeaway for traders: the Agent Payments Protocol narrative supports longer-term tech optimism (automation, on-chain commerce), but the political section highlights ongoing regulatory headline risk and potential market segmentation between centralized venues and DeFi.
Neutral
crypto regulationAI agentsautomated tradingon-chain paymentsDeFi vs CEX lobbying
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Dogecoin (DOGE) is back below $0.09 after failing to hold the psychological level. Two analysts are driving the narrative.
Long-term outlook: analyst Javon Marks shared a cycle-based chart arguing DOGE has historically outperformed in each major altcoin season. He claims DOGE gained about 100x in 2017 and over 300x in 2021, when it topped near $0.74. If the pattern repeats, DOGE could expand again during the next alt season, potentially pushing above $20. This projection relies on historical price behavior, not fundamentals.
Short-term setup: analyst KrissPax said the $0.09 area acts “like a magnet,” repeatedly pulling price back after volatility. A 30-minute DOGE/USDT Binance chart shows DOGE trading around $0.0899, with heightened volume and multiple tests of support in the upper $0.08 range. Traders are watching whether DOGE can stabilize and form a base at $0.09, or whether repeated breakdowns extend the decline.
Key levels implied by the coverage are $0.09 for near-term direction and a much higher resistance break requirement for any move toward the $20 target.
Sen. Cynthia Lummis says the final Senate vote on the CLARITY Act may take longer than expected. A floor vote could still occur before the July 4 recess, but an August timeline is now more likely.
The bill is on the Senate Legislative Calendar, yet no debate or vote date has been set. Lawmakers must merge multiple drafts and secure procedural support. Lummis stressed that cloture requires 60 votes, increasing pressure to align on the final crypto market structure text.
Key open items include the Senate Banking Committee proposal, the Agriculture Committee’s work, ethics provisions, and changes tied to the GENIUS Act—each shaping how the final CLARITY Act regulates digital assets, platforms, and related services.
The CLARITY Act aims to bring clearer U.S. market-structure rules and reduce uncertainty over whether the SEC or the CFTC oversees particular tokens and exchanges. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent supports passage this summer and linked broader crypto policy to a “Strategic Bitcoin Reserve,” described as growing at a “deliberate speed.”
Still, major disputes remain, including stablecoin rewards, developer protections, and compliance standards. Lummis also pushed back after JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon criticized the bill, arguing it could allow deposit-linked or stablecoin-linked rewards without bank-level protections.
For traders, the main takeaway is not a policy reversal, but timing risk: progress continues, but delays can keep regulatory headlines volatile until the final vote date firms up.
Neutral
CLARITY Actcrypto market structureSEC vs CFTCstablecoin regulationUS Senate timeline
The European Banking Authority (EBA) and New York State’s Department of Financial Services (NYDFS) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on June 2 to strengthen cross-border stablecoin supervision under the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA). The MoU formalises regulator information exchange and coordination for stablecoins issued in both jurisdictions, and it supports mutual assistance during ongoing oversight. It also calls for timely coordination and crisis notifications in emergencies.
MiCA fully took effect in December 2025. The EBA has direct supervision for “significant” asset-referenced tokens (ARTs) and electronic money tokens (EMTs), which are designated based on criteria including EU user scale, issuance size, and market/payment usage. For traders, this EBA–NYDFS stablecoin supervision step is mainly about reducing cross-jurisdiction compliance uncertainty for cross-listed stablecoin issuers. Near-term impact is likely limited to sentiment around regulatory clarity and supervision readiness, while broader market effects should be gradual.
On-chain reports say BTC “most committed” long-term holders (held 155+ days) sold about $2.4B in two days. The selling is linked to rising supply from holders who acquired coins above $90,000, including 26% of all BTC sold in the last 30 days originating from that higher-cost cohort.
The moves come alongside a ~12% week-to-date drop from an October all-time high above $126,000. Spot Bitcoin ETF net assets reportedly fell to $82.83B from $107.8B, indicating large institutional outflows.
Compass Point analyst Ed Engel highlights a behavioral shift: long-term holder inactivity in Feb–Apr turned into net selling as BTC approached local cycle lows. The LTH Spent Output Profit Ratio (LTH-SOPR) has moved below 1.0, suggesting a meaningful share of long-term holders is selling at a loss. Glassnode-derived research estimates 39–43% of BTC supply is underwater, approaching the 50–55% range seen at historical cycle lows (Jan 2015, Dec 2018, Nov 2022).
Engel frames this as “top-buyer capitulation,” implying BTC’s bear market may be late-stage. Still, with whale balances shrinking and profit-taking rising, the near-term risk is continued downside volatility even if a bottom is forming. For traders, the key watch items are BTC ETF flow stabilization and whether LTH-SOPR can hold near-loss territory without accelerating further.
(Keyword focus: BTC, BTC.)
Bearish
Bitcoin (BTC)On-chain LTH capitulationSpot Bitcoin ETF flowsProfit-taking and underwater supplyUS macro jobs data
Ethereum price is testing a critical support zone around $1,750 after sweeping February lows and returning to the bottom of a multi-month range. Analysts say Ethereum must hold the $1,700–$1,800 area; otherwise, a deeper correction could target the weekly order block near $1,600.
Crypto trader Daan Crypto Trades highlights that ETH fell into $1,730–$1,750, briefly moving below prior February lows—described as a liquidity sweep that can trigger stop-losses and liquidations in leveraged positions before a bounce. Volume rose during the sell-off, suggesting active positioning while buyers defend the range low. However, a sustained break below February lows could shift market structure.
On the weekly chart, analyst Team LAMBO notes an initial bearish target near $1,750 has been reached, but the bounce is not strong enough to confirm a trend reversal. The $1,700–$1,800 zone is supported by overlapping levels: the 0.882 Fibonacci retracement (~$1,803) and a weekly fair value gap (around $1,700). Still, Ethereum remains vulnerable while trading below nearby resistance. For confirmation, they watch a weekly reclaim above $1,900 (bullish) versus a breakdown below $1,700 (bearish), which would increase odds of a move toward $1,600.
Bottom line for traders: Ethereum price at $1,750 is pivotal—support defense supports range trade, but failure likely increases downside momentum toward $1,600.
Bearish
Ethereum priceTechnical analysisSupport & resistanceLiquidity sweepWeekly order block
Tether is testing USAT, its U.S.-facing stablecoin, to see if it can attract regulated dollar liquidity in the United States. Early May on-chain and market-maker activity showed spreads tightening and then widening, suggesting liquidity is still thin.
A key catalyst is U.S. policy momentum. On May 14, the Senate Banking Committee advanced the CLARITY Act by a 15–9 vote, a procedural step that could shape stablecoin oversight and how banks and fintechs handle issuance, custody, and redemptions.
In the stablecoin market, incumbents remain dominant: total supply in mid-May 2026 is roughly in the low-$300 billions. USDT is about $189.63B (≈58.8%) and USDC about $78.96B (≈24.5%). USAT’s current scale is far smaller—around 37.75M tokens circulating as of mid-May—with a reported 30-day growth rate near +88.74% from a low base.
For traders, the near-term takeaway is that USAT’s bid for regulated dollar liquidity is still an early “distribution + compliance” story rather than a full liquidity challenger. Adoption will likely depend on listings on major U.S. venues, enterprise integrations (custody/on-off ramps/payment rails), banking relationships for redemptions, and transparent reserve/audit workflows.
Scenarios outlined by the article range from gradual institutional testing (base case) to a liquidity inflection if regulation and flagship integrations land (upside). Delays or fragmented rails could keep USAT as a thinly traded asset, leaving USDC and bank deposits as the default regulated options.
Bitcoin (BTC) has slid below key levels and faces intensifying selling pressure, according to a U.Today price analysis. A popular analyst, Ali Martinez, points to the MVRV Pricing Bands model suggesting BTC may form its next major support around $50,000 if on-chain weakness persists.
The article notes BTC previously lost a critical support area near $72,650 and is trading well below $72,000. After this break, the chart projects demand zones around $54,300 and $51,000. Traders historically stepped in within the $51,000–$54,300 range, implying that $50,000 could become the next accumulation base if selling accelerates.
For traders, the setup is a classic “support break → next demand zone test” scenario. A failure to reclaim ~$72,000 could keep BTC under bearish pressure, while stabilization around $51,000–$54,300 (and then $50,000) would be the key area to watch for potential bounce signals.
Keyword focus: BTC support levels at ~$54.3K, ~$51K, and ~$50K are central to the near-term risk/reward.
Crypto analyst Charles Edwards (Capriole Investments) says Bitcoin faces a record 28% “quantum discount” as markets price in higher quantum risk. His view is that Bitcoin Core developers have been slow to adopt post‑quantum cryptography, leaving today’s ECDSA signatures exposed in a potential “Q‑Day” scenario. He warns the risk could increase sharply after 2027.
Edwards’ model also flags valuation pressure: BTC is down 15.60% to about $62,099 and is trading below the model’s “Discount Factor.” The discount is expected to persist unless there is clear network-upgrade guidance within 12 months.
The article adds cross‑market drivers: rising corporate debt and leveraged Bitcoin exposure linked to Michael Saylor’s MicroStrategy strategy, plus weaker retail inflows after meme-coin “boycott” dynamics from failed launches and rug‑pull crashes.
For traders, the key catalyst is an official announcement that post‑quantum signature code is completed. Edwards suggests that such clarity could trigger a fast repricing and partially close the Bitcoin quantum discount. Watch Bitcoin Core roadmap signals and related technical-update headlines for near-term sentiment swings.
A Seeking Alpha article says Tron Inc. (NASDAQ: TRON) trades at a growing premium versus its underlying crypto holdings, driven by its position as a “treasury company” that holds TRX and sTRX.
Key figures cited: TRON trades at about a 3.3x premium to the value of its TRX and sTRX holdings. The article estimates the company’s asset value at roughly $270 million, while its market capitalization is near $890 million after recent share conversions.
The author argues the premium is inefficient for investors seeking TRX exposure. Staking TRX, according to the article, yields about 5%, which is only marginally above yields on 5Y U.S. Treasury bonds. That makes TRX less attractive to yield-focused buyers, limiting the “income appeal” of the equity vehicle.
Overall stance: the author maintains a Hold rating, suggesting the market’s price for TRON is not well supported by an easily monetizable staking yield. Traders may view this as a disconnect between the equity premium and underlying crypto yield, rather than a direct catalyst for TRX fundamentals.
Main keywords covered: TRON, TRX, staking yield, premium valuation, sTRX, and equity exposure.
Neutral
TRON premiumTRX staking yieldsTRXcrypto equity valuationTreasury yield comparison
Solana (SOL) is testing a key support area after falling to the weekly lower Bollinger Band. Crypto analysts cite selling pressure, but note price may be oversold on the weekly chart.
Cheds Trading says SOL dropped toward ~$68 and is sitting near the lower Bollinger Band around $67, also trading below key moving averages (8-week, 34-week, 50-week). Trading volume rose during the sell-off, making ~$67 a critical level for stabilization.
Jack Adams expects SOL to retest the $58–$67 buy zone before attempting a recovery toward $120–$175 later in 2026. He points to the area lining up with prior monthly wick reactions and highlights $87.70 (14-week EMA) as near-term resistance. A move back inside the Bollinger range could signal weakening downside momentum, while a clean break below $58 would damage the bullish reversal setup.
Traders watching SOL should focus on reactions at $58–$67 for confirmation, and use a reclaim of moving-average resistance as an early signal for a higher-range move toward $120–$175.
Ethereum treasury firm BitMine, chaired by Tom Lee, plans a BitMine preferred stock sale to raise up to $300 million via 3 million Series A preferred shares. The shares carry a $100 stated amount and a 9.50% annual cash dividend, paid weekly, pending board approval and SEC review. BitMine says native ETH staking is its “principal revenue source”, with 4.7 million ETH staked through its MAVAN platform as of May 25, projected to generate about $276 million in annualized staking revenue.
The capital raise is intended to buy more ETH and expand staking and validator infrastructure, following recent aggressive accumulation. BitMine bought 26,497 ETH (about $52 million), lifting holdings to 5,416,901 ETH (roughly 4.48% of Ethereum’s supply) alongside about $446 million in cash. This comes after earlier ETH purchases that pushed holdings past 5 million ETH in April and continued momentum into May.
The article also notes that Strategy (Lee’s Bitcoin-centric vehicle) sold about $2.5 million of BTC to help fund dividends on its preferred stock. Analysts say the core underwriting for the BitMine preferred stock sale is the ability of ETH staking rewards—and potentially MEV optimization—to sustainably cover the dividend, but outcomes still depend on ETH price and timing of reward conversion into dollars.
For traders, this is a direct “demand + yield” narrative around ETH, with near-term sentiment support if markets price in continued buy pressure.
Bullish
ETH treasurypreferred stock financingstaking yieldMEV optimizationTom Lee
Binance says its mistaken crypto transfer recoveries have topped $8.2B since 2021, highlighting how common wrong-chain deposits and memo/tag errors remain as users move assets across networks and exchanges.
The exchange attributes most issues to operational mismatches: a transaction can be valid onchain but still fail to credit inside an exchange account if the asset, address, memo/tag, or supported network does not match Binance’s deposit rules. Common problem cases include wrong-network transfers, missing memos/tags, incorrect payment IDs, and unsupported transfer routes.
Binance also stresses that mistaken crypto transfer recoveries are not a “refund button.” If funds are withdrawn to the wrong external address, Binance cannot reverse the blockchain transaction after submission. Recoverability typically depends on whether the receiving infrastructure is controlled by Binance and whether the asset can be reliably identified.
For traders, the key takeaway is risk management: double-check the network and token, confirm deposit status and minimum deposit rules, and avoid sending funds to non-recoverable or unrelated addresses. While this announcement mainly improves exchange support confidence, the scale of recoveries also underlines the ongoing friction of crypto’s irreversible settlement layer—so user error remains a hidden cost even in normal market conditions.
“Binance mistaken crypto transfer recoveries” have reached $8.2B, but prevention still matters.
Bitcoin slipped below key holder cost-basis levels during the May market correction, according to a Finestel report shared with crypto.news. Bitcoin closed May near $70,600 after falling roughly 8%–10% during a month marked by rising inflation concerns, higher U.S. Treasury yields, and escalating geopolitical uncertainty.
The report says Bitcoin briefly topped nearly $82,839 after breaking above $79,500 resistance, but the macro backdrop worsened after April CPI came in above forecasts (CPI 3.8%, PPI 6.0%). Fed officials were described as hawkish, pushing rate-cut expectations further out under Chair Kevin Warsh. Meanwhile, U.S.-Iran negotiations added uncertainty as Treasury yields rose (10-year to ~4.66%, 30-year above ~5.18%), driving broad de-risking.
On-chain and market structure signals highlighted the risk for Bitcoin bulls: Bitcoin fell below the short-term holder cost basis (around $78,200–$78,300) and beneath a broader market cost basis near $78,277. Finestel flagged a larger group of investors holding at a loss, increasing the chance of selling pressure if price rebounds toward $75,000–$78,000. Support formed between $70,000 and $73,000, a key zone to watch in June. Bitcoin dominance rose above 61% (from ~58%), suggesting capital rotated toward Bitcoin over higher-risk assets.
Across professional asset managers, the response was cautious rather than panicked. Stablecoin allocations increased to 27% (from 23%), while high-conviction altcoin exposure fell to 5.5% (from 9%). Finestel’s suggested positioning: 55%–57% in Bitcoin and Ethereum, 26%–28% in stablecoins, 12%–13% in yield-focused DeFi/real-world asset strategies, and only 5%–7% in high-conviction altcoins.
Ethereum underperformed, dropping about 12%–15% over the same period.
Coinbase Advanced has launched SpaceX-linked pre-IPO perpetual futures for eligible traders, offering up to 5x leverage. The SpaceX contract trades 24/7 and settles in USDC, with no expiry.
A key feature: if SpaceX completes an IPO, open positions automatically convert into standard SpaceX perpetual futures without user action. Coinbase says the product provides price exposure only—no equity ownership, voting rights, or direct claims on shares—while allowing traders to open and close positions anytime.
Coinbase also signaled broader expansion, planning more pre-IPO perpetual futures tied to tech, AI, energy, and space companies. It warned that, versus standard perpetuals, risks include valuation-based index pricing, IPO conversion mechanics, and potentially lower liquidity that could amplify volatility and liquidations.
The launch follows a reported Ventuals SpaceX-linked contract incident where incorrect oracle pricing led to roughly a 45% value drop and liquidations, with compensation afterward. The product is restricted from multiple jurisdictions, including the U.S., UK, Canada, Singapore, India, and Australia.
For traders, this adds a new USDC-settled pre-IPO perpetual futures wrapper—more sensitive to oracle/index assumptions and liquidity conditions than typical majors trading.
Bitmine (via BitMine Immersion Technologies, BMNR) announced a $300 million Bitmine preferred stock offering. The company will issue non-convertible perpetual preferred shares that pay a 9.5% annual dividend, paid in cash weekly, aiming to attract institutional capital.
Bitmine said it has filed to list the equity on the New York Stock Exchange under ticker BMNP, subject to regulatory approval. The structure is designed to avoid common-share conversion and describe the deal as non-dilutive to common equity, while using Wall Street-style funding to expand its digital-asset treasury.
The financing plan mirrors the MicroStrategy/Michael Saylor playbook: using conventional equity instruments to buy spot crypto and improve treasury growth through a steady cash-flow yield. Bitmine’s stated objective is to keep accelerating its Ethereum accumulation.
Crypto headline stats: Bitmine already holds 5.3 million+ ETH (about $10 billion), representing roughly 4.5% of circulating ETH supply. Analysts interpret the Bitmine preferred stock offering as incremental demand that could support ETH liquidity and reinforce large-holder influence over the market.
Overall, traders should watch the BMNR/BMNP regulatory timeline and any disclosure on how quickly the raised capital translates into additional spot ETH purchases.
Glassnode data shows a widely tracked bitcoin metric is flashing again: the supply of BTC priced at an unrealized loss has exceeded supply in profit.
As BTC trades around historically important bear-market levels, more than half of bitcoin in circulation is underwater. At roughly one-hour resolution, “supply in loss” peaked near 10.5 million BTC while “supply in profit” fell to about 9.8 million BTC. Total circulating supply is around 20 million BTC.
This crossover matters because it has historically coincided with major bear-market bottoms. Still, the length of time bitcoin stays in this loss-heavy regime varies across cycles, making it difficult to predict how quickly recovery could start.
Price context: bitcoin also tagged its 200-week moving average near $61,300 on Thursday—an indicator that has acted as major support in every previous bear market. The article notes a psychological $60,000 area and flags the next larger support zone around $54,000, near the realized price (the average on-chain acquisition cost).
If bitcoin drops below $60,000, traders may expect volatility to rise as the market tests the realized-price level. Conversely, the metric’s historical association with capitulation periods could support a “bottoming” narrative, though timing risk remains high.
The UK House of Lords’ Financial Services Regulation Committee urged the Bank of England (BoE) to revise parts of the proposed UK stablecoin rules, warning that overly strict or poorly timed regulation could leave the UK behind the US and EU.
On UK stablecoin regulation, the committee broadly backs BoE ideas such as 1:1 reserve backing and a backstop lending facility. But it questions key details that could raise operational burdens and weaken competitiveness—especially the proposal that systemic stablecoin issuers hold at least 40% of reserves in unremunerated (non-interest) bank deposits.
It also criticised temporary holding limits (initially £10,000–£20,000 per person and £10 million for businesses), arguing they may be difficult to enforce and could slow GBP stablecoin growth. The committee raised additional concerns around redemption requirements, issuer sustainability, and risks from unhosted wallets.
Another uncertainty is the transition from the FCA framework to a joint regime involving the BoE, plus how HM Treasury will decide whether stablecoins are “systemic” and therefore fall into the payments regulatory perimeter. The BoE has signalled the proposals may be “overly conservative” and plans to publish final policy and draft rules later this month.
Neutral
UK stablecoin regulationBank of EnglandFCA transitionGBP stablecoinsReserve & holding limits
A US-mediated Israel–Lebanon ceasefire, reported around June 4, 2026, is conditional on Hezbollah halting all hostilities and withdrawing fighters from south of the Litani River. A partial ceasefire was noted on June 1, but fighting continued in southern Lebanon, raising enforcement risk.
The latest deal builds on earlier frameworks, including a 10-day cessation starting April 16, 2026, and a broader November 27, 2024 ceasefire linked to phased withdrawals and UN Security Council Resolution 1701. However, the prior agreement ultimately failed.
For crypto traders, the key signal is whether this Israel–Lebanon ceasefire becomes verifiable and sustained. After the April cessation announcement, BTC briefly rallied to about $74,650 on stabilization hopes, then retraced when violence continued despite diplomatic messaging. Clear benchmarks—such as observable troop movements south of the Litani River via satellite imagery—could support a BTC risk-on rotation and improve sentiment across correlated assets if withdrawal is confirmed. Traders should also watch whether the “Iran dimension” broadens regional risk, as that can quickly flip positioning back to risk-off.
Neutral
Israel–Lebanon CeasefireHezbollah WithdrawalBTC VolatilityUN Security Council Resolution 1701Risk-on Rotation