alltrending-24htrending-weektrending-monthtrending-year

Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

Aave freezes $292M rsETH across networks after KelpDAO bridge hack

|
Aave has frozen $292M worth of rsETH reserves across Ethereum mainnet, Arbitrum, Base, Mantle and Linea after the April KelpDAO cross-chain bridge exploit. The hack allegedly drained 116,500 rsETH (about $292M), spreading a deficit into rsETH-linked lending markets and other DeFi products. To limit further exposure while recovery runs, Aave said it is proceeding via coordinated governance commitments. Lido proposed a one-time capped contribution of up to 2,500 stETH from its treasury to reduce the rsETH shortfall. EtherFi’s governance vote approved allocating up to 5,000 ETH from its DAO treasury to compensate users and help stabilize debt on Aave and other platforms exposed to the assets. Any unused ETH would be returned to the treasury, with later recoveries handled under the same mechanism. Ethena also pledged support to help restore rsETH credibility and work toward a sustainable resolution. Reportedly, around 1,800 participants backed the $RS-ETH rescue unanimously. A detailed recovery roadmap is expected within 7 days, and Aave plans frequent updates as execution approaches.
Neutral
rsETHAaveKelpDAO hackDeFi governancebridge security

KelpDAO Hack Triggers DeFi Liquidity Crunch on Aave, Rates Jump

|
Cryptoquant says the KelpDAO hack (April 18, 2026) created a DeFi liquidity crunch by siphoning unbacked rsETH into Aave. The stolen rsETH was used to pull liquidity and post collateral weaknesses, exposing Aave to an estimated $124M–$230M in potential bad debt within 72 hours. Aave total value locked (TVL) fell 33% in the same window, while borrowing costs spiked across Aave V3. Cryptoquant data shows USDT and USDC borrow rates on Aave V3 jumped from 3.4% to 14% as traders rushed to borrow stablecoins and exit. ETH borrow rates rose to 8% (the highest since at least Jan 2024), later stabilizing near 5%—still more than double the pre-hack ~2%. Cryptoquant frames this as a system-wide liquidity squeeze: depositors withdrew while borrowers demanded more, leaving available liquidity thinner and forcing rates higher. The KelpDAO hack also pressured USDe, the fourth-largest asset on Aave. USDe supply dropped from $5.8B to $5B in three days (down $800M, -14%). Cryptoquant links the move to both Aave contagion and persistently negative ETH/BTC perpetual futures funding rates, which reduced USDe’s delta-neutral yield and accelerated redemptions. Why it matters for traders: the KelpDAO hack concentrated collateral risk in one protocol (rsETH exposure concentrated in Aave’s aETHrsETH contract at ~83% of circulating rsETH). That concentration helped the shock spread, worsening market stress signals and raising the near-term risk of further stablecoin and lending volatility.
Bearish
KelpDAO HackAave Liquidity CrunchDeFi Borrow RatesUSDe RedemptionsrsETH Depegging Risk

Arbitrum Price Slides 3% as ARB Tests $0.121 Support

|
Arbitrum price fell about 3.26% in 24 hours to around $0.1269, after DeFi turmoil tied to the KelpDAO hack. ARB is now hovering near $0.121 support; a breakdown could open the door to a retest toward $0.09. The Arbitrum Security Council reportedly froze 30,766 ETH tokens linked to the exploit. The incident follows a larger DeFi breach: attackers allegedly linked to the Lazarus Group stole about $293M by targeting a verifier weak point in Arbitrum’s cross-chain messaging system. The shock reportedly triggered rapid withdrawals, with over $13B TVL pulled from the ecosystem within 48 hours. Trading volumes rose roughly 17.48% to $112.82M, while RSI is near 56, suggesting a neutral momentum backdrop rather than an oversold reversal. Technical levels remain pivotal for traders. Resistance is cited around $0.135, where heavy selling previously blocked breakouts. Near-term supply and catalysts also matter. On May 16, about 92.65M ARB tokens (≈$11M) are scheduled for release, which could add downward pressure if demand doesn’t absorb it. Offsetting sentiment: Robinhood plans to build a blockchain using Arbitrum’s stack for tokenized assets, supporting longer-term institutional narrative. Overall, the Arbitrum price setup is dominated by security-driven risk, tight support levels, and the upcoming token release.
Bearish
ArbitrumARB PriceDeFi HacksToken UnlockLayer-2

Polymarket Insider Trading Allegation: US Soldier Charged Over Maduro Operation

|
U.S. prosecutors have charged U.S. Army soldier Gannon Ken Van Dyke (38) with alleged Polymarket insider trading tied to Venezuela’s Maduro removal. Prosecutors say he used nonpublic intelligence about “Operation Absolute Resolve” to place 13 Polymarket bets between Dec. 26, 2025 and Jan. 2, 2026, betting on the timing and outcomes of the operation. The case alleges Van Dyke invested about $33,034 and profited about $409,881 from Venezuela-related outcome markets. After the operation announcement and success was reported, he allegedly contacted Polymarket, requested deletion of his account, and claimed he could no longer access the email linked to it. The DOJ and the CFTC frame this as a test of whether traditional insider trading and fraud laws apply to decentralized prediction markets. Van Dyke faces five federal charges, including Commodity Exchange Act violations, wire fraud, and theft of nonpublic government information. Potential penalties include up to 20 years for wire fraud. For crypto traders, this Polymarket insider trading allegation raises compliance and enforcement risk for prediction-market activity around geopolitical and security-sensitive events. It can increase short-term caution and liquidity fragmentation in such markets, while the direct price effect on stablecoins like USDC is likely limited.
Neutral
PolymarketInsider TradingDOJ/CFTC EnforcementPrediction MarketsVenezuela Politics

Fellowship PAC steps up Texas Senate spending

|
Crypto-aligned Fellowship PAC disclosed fresh political spending in the US Senate race ahead of a May 26 Texas runoff. In an FEC filing, Fellowship PAC reported spending $1.75 million to support Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who will face incumbent Republican Senator John Cornyn for the party’s 2026 Senate nomination. Fellowship PAC also said it spent more than $3 million on advertising across US Senate and House races, with the bulk directed to Texas Republican candidates. Other reported ad allocations included $350,000 each for Georgia Senate candidate Mike Collins and Alabama Senate candidate Barry Moore, plus Louisiana spending of $250,000 for House candidate Blake Miguez and $350,000 for Senate candidate Julia Letlow. All advertising was routed through the Nxum Group, co-founded by Bo Hines, a former White House crypto adviser and Tether US CEO. The PAC, launched in September, claimed to have more than $100 million from undisclosed crypto-aligned investors, and has since reported $11 million in FEC contributions. The broader market backdrop is that pro-crypto PACs such as Fellowship and Fairshake are expected to shape 2026 outcomes through media and advertising spending. Separately, prediction market platform Kalshi announced penalties for candidates found to have traded contracts tied to their own races. In Texas, Ezekiel Enriquez was suspended from direct/indirect Kalshi access for 5 years and fined $784.20 after buying under $100 worth of contracts related to his own candidacy. For traders, Fellowship PAC’s targeted ads underscore ongoing “pro-crypto” political influence, while the Kalshi insider-trading crackdown highlights tighter compliance risk around prediction markets.
Neutral
Fellowship PACTexas Senate runoffpro-crypto politicsTether Bo HinesKalshi insider-trading ban

Kash Patel and NYT clash boosts “Patel out by June 30” odds

|
CryptoBriefing reports that a public clash between FBI Director Kash Patel and The New York Times over an alleged investigation into a reporter has moved a US prediction market tied to Patel’s potential departure. The contract “Kash Patel out by June 30” is trading around 55.5% YES, down from about 61% the day before but up from roughly 30% a week earlier. Market pricing and liquidity: The June 30 outlook has risen sharply over the past week as traders price a higher chance of removal or resignation within 68 days. The December 31 contract is higher at ~78% YES, while the April 30 contract is low at ~13.6% YES, suggesting limited expectation of an immediate exit. Combined 24-hour USDC volume across these markets is about $5,552. Moving the June 30 price by 5 percentage points requires roughly $1,556, indicating moderate liquidity. The largest intraday move noted was about a 2-point drop, hinting at some profit-taking. Why traders care: The NYT dispute adds to existing FBI headwinds mentioned in the article, including cyber breaches and personnel changes. The source is Fox News (tier 2), so the report may need corroboration. Catalyst to watch: Any direct statement from the White House or President Trump supporting or replacing Patel would be the clearest driver for price changes. Trading note: Buying “Kash Patel out by June 30” near 56¢ is framed as offering a potential 1.79x return if Patel exits by June 30, but it hinges on the assumption that the scrutiny leads to resignation or removal.
Neutral
prediction marketsUS politicsFBIUSDC volumerisk sentiment

Iran seizes ships near Strait of Hormuz, crude oil supply fears lift odds to record levels

|
Iran used swarm boats to seize two container ships near the Strait of Hormuz, renewing Strait of Hormuz supply-disruption worries for global crude flows. In crypto-linked trading data from a prediction market, the contract for April 30 crude oil moving to an all-time high is priced around 3.5% (up from about 3% the prior day). Traders appear to be underwriting potential Strait of Hormuz escalation, but they also signal skepticism. Market thinness is a key detail. The article notes very low on-chain/daily USDC volume (about $2,006/day for actual USDC traded daily in that market). With limited liquidity, small order sizes can move prices quickly—face value volume is shown around $72,279/day, yet only roughly $1,020 is needed to shift the price by ~5 percentage points. The market is effectively assigning low-to-moderate probabilities to a move beyond $120 per barrel by April 30, within a 7-day window. What to watch includes any OPEC+ announcements and additional Iranian naval actions in the Strait of Hormuz. Confirmation of a real supply-chain disruption would likely force a repricing higher. Trading reference: at current odds, a YES wager pays $1 on a ~$0.035 stake—meaning the trade thesis requires belief in further escalation or a genuine supply disruption.
Neutral
IranStrait of HormuzCrude oil supply riskPrediction marketsUSDC liquidity

Sierra Acquires YC-Backed AI Startup Fragment to Upgrade Customer Service Agents

|
Sierra, a customer service AI company founded by Bret Taylor, announced the acquisition of Fragment, a Y Combinator-backed French startup focused on integrating AI into business workflows. The deal adds Fragment’s co-founders Olivier Moindrot and Guillaume Genthial to Sierra’s team, strengthening its agent development efforts in France. Financial terms were not disclosed; PitchBook estimates Fragment raised about $2 million in its seed round. The purchase is Sierra’s third public acquisition in 2026, following Opera Tech (Japan-based enterprise AI) and Receptive AI (voice agent company) in late March, and now Fragment (April 23). Sierra’s CEO/leadership stated Fragment’s workflow integration helps companies connect AI models to existing tools and databases, automating repetitive work such as data entry, customer follow-ups, and internal communications. The article also reiterates Sierra’s funding scale: over $630 million raised to date and a claimed $10 billion valuation. The company builds AI agents designed to reduce the need for human customer-support staff and counts customers including Casper, Clear, and Brex. For traders, the news signals continued consolidation in enterprise AI and potential upside to AI-adjacent ecosystems, though it is not a direct crypto protocol change.
Neutral
Sierra acquisitioncustomer service AIY Combinatorenterprise workflow automationAI agents

SHIB Exchange Outflows Near Support as Reserves Drop

|
Shiba Inu (SHIB) saw roughly 86B SHIB leave centralized exchanges in 24 hours, with net exchange flow around -108B SHIB, indicating withdrawals outpacing deposits. The move coincided with SHIB trading in a narrow range just above a key local support level, while selling pressure appeared to ease. On-chain data also points to a slight decline in SHIB exchange reserves, which can reduce immediate sell-side liquidity. However, both inflows and outflows remain active, suggesting ongoing holder reshuffling rather than a clear, broad accumulation wave. SHIB active addresses rose modestly, but the increase looks more like existing investors adjusting positions than a surge in new demand. For traders, the main takeaway is that the SHIB exchange supply drop may limit downside. Still, upside follow-through likely depends on sustained spot buying—e.g., continued reserve outflows and improving spot volume—rather than internal rotation among current holders.
Neutral
SHIBExchange OutflowsOn-chain LiquidityActive AddressesMemecoin Trading

Israel-Lebanon Truce Extension: Trump Adds 3 Weeks for Talks

|
Trump announced an Israel-Lebanon truce extension of exactly 21 days, starting January 16, 2025, to prevent renewed hostilities along the border. The extension covers all military activities, including aerial and naval operations. UNIFIL will monitor compliance, supported by U.S. intelligence. Both sides agreed to resume indirect negotiations within two weeks, targeting core disputes such as border demarcation and disarmament of non-state militias. The Israel-Lebanon truce extension aims to “buy time” for confidence-building, while experts warn the short window may only delay a larger confrontation. Recent context includes renewed clashes after Hezbollah rocket attacks in October 2024, a U.S.-brokered 30-day ceasefire in November that reportedly reduced violence by 70%, stalled talks in December over prisoner exchange and buffer-zone demands, and now the Israel-Lebanon truce extension to revive diplomacy. Humanitarian impact is highlighted: over 50,000 displaced civilians reportedly return home, and access to food and medical supplies improves. Key obstacles to a permanent ceasefire remain Hezbollah’s disarmament, Israel’s demand for a demilitarized zone south of the Litani River, Lebanon’s political instability, and Iran-linked influence. Global reactions include UN and EU support, with some analysts cautioning that a 3-week Israel-Lebanon truce extension may not resolve underlying disputes.
Neutral
Israel-Lebanon TruceTrump DiplomacyMiddle East CeasefireUNIFIL MonitoringRisk Sentiment

Kraken pushes IRS de minimis crypto tax waivers; CLARITY stalled

|
Kraken says the IRS crypto tax reporting regime is too burdensome, because brokers must submit tens of millions of tax forms for routine small transfers. In its April 22 report, the exchange said 75% of the 56 million IRS crypto tax forms relate to transfers under $50, and 28 million are under $10. Kraken argues this differs from payment apps like Venmo, which typically only trigger reporting above $600. To cut compliance friction, Kraken is urging an IRS de minimis crypto tax waivers policy: an inflation-indexed de minimis threshold for small payments, plus anti-abuse guardrails to protect tax integrity. Traders should note a key implementation risk: the near-term push appears focused on payment stablecoins, with lawmakers discussing a $200 exemption for amounts below that level, while broader coverage for assets like BTC may face resistance. The legislative path is the CLARITY Act, but progress has stalled due to markup hurdles. If deadlines slip, the de minimis crypto tax waivers for small transfers could be delayed to 2027. Kalshi data cited in the article shows low odds for faster relief on crypto capital gains taxes this year (~7%), versus higher odds for CLARITY passage (~46%). Overall, the update suggests limited near-term policy catalysts, but potentially less compliance cost over time for small transactions and transfers.
Neutral
crypto taxationIRS reportingde minimis exemptionCLARITY Actstablecoins

DeFi attack wipes $292M as Aave sees $10B exit

|
A major DeFi attack has wiped $292 million and triggered about $10 billion in withdrawals from Aave. The exploit centered on a LayerZero–KelpDAO vulnerability that let an attacker mint 116,500 unbacked rsETH tokens. About 90,000 rsETH were posted on Aave as collateral, enabling borrowing of roughly $190 million in ETH and other assets. As DeFi users rushed to withdraw, market stress spread quickly. Total value locked (TVL) across DeFi fell from nearly $15B to $10B, and Aave reported an rsETH collateral “hole” of over 112,000 tokens. In response, major protocols launched “DeFi United” to stabilize the system and restore confidence in rsETH. Lido Labs proposed 2,500 stETH (about $5.7M) for the recovery fund. EtherFi proposed an additional rescue package of 5,000 ETH, and Aave founder Stani Kulechov pledged 5,000 ETH. On fund recovery, part of the stolen assets was tracked to Arbitrum, where an Arbitrum security council froze 30,766 ETH (~$71M). Other funds were routed via Thorchain to BTC, complicating direct retrieval. Current priorities focus on recapitalizing rsETH rather than immediately chasing all stolen funds. For traders, this DeFi attack raises near-term liquidity and risk-management concerns around lending markets and cross-chain infrastructure, while the multi-protocol rescue may reduce tail risk if execution holds.
Bearish
DeFi securityAaveLayerZerorsETHcross-chain risk

Silver Price Bearish Engulfing Signals Further Losses

|
Silver price has reversed sharply after a failed rally above the $30 resistance zone, printing a bearish-engulfing pattern on the daily chart. The setup is reinforced by overbought RSI readings and higher sell-volume during the bearish candle. Traders are now focused on key support levels: $28.50 (50-day moving average) first, then $27.80 (100-day moving average and prior breakout). A clean break below $28.50 could accelerate downside toward lower targets mentioned by analysts (down to the mid-$26 area in forecasts). Resistance to watch sits at $30.00 and $30.50. Macro factors cited include a strengthening U.S. dollar index, rising real yields, and a hawkish Fed stance—each typically pressures non-yielding assets like silver. Industrial demand concerns also feature, with manufacturing PMI data described as being in contraction. Positioning data adds weight to the bearish view: speculative long positions fell while commercial hedgers increased shorts; options activity shows more put buying. The article notes silver may underperform versus gold (gold-to-silver ratio around 85), with silver lacking some support drivers that central-bank gold purchases provide. Overall, the bearish thesis is “wait for confirmation”: a close below $28.50 on strong volume would validate the breakdown; otherwise the pattern could fail and set up a bounce.
Bearish
Silver PriceBearish EngulfingFed HawkishDollar & YieldsTechnical Support Levels

Hong Kong geopolitics: Standard Chartered flags rising risks for the financial outlook

|
Standard Chartered warns that Hong Kong geopolitics is weighing on the city’s financial outlook. The bank says rising geopolitical tensions increase uncertainty, disrupt capital flows and trade, and weaken investor confidence—creating a muted outlook for Hong Kong’s financial sector. Key signals highlighted include net capital outflows of about $50 billion in 2024 and a year-on-year 8% drop in Hong Kong re-exports. The report also cites talent pressure, with roughly 12,000 financial-services professionals leaving since 2022, plus regulatory divergence from global standards and tighter cross-border banking margins. Standard Chartered frames this as structural erosion rather than a one-off shock. It notes foreign direct investment inflows have been falling and trade flows are shifting as regional rivals like Singapore gain. The bank also points to real-world desk and headquarters moves: major international banks have reduced their regional office presence since 2020, reflecting job cuts and fiscal impact in Hong Kong. For traders, the risk is indirect but relevant: persistent Hong Kong geopolitical risk can worsen regional risk sentiment, tighten financial conditions, and increase volatility tied to USD/CNY, rates, and global equities. The report’s “base case” expects continued friction; upside catalysts include US-China détente, Hong Kong regulatory alignment, talent return policies, and trade-deal progress. Bottom line: Hong Kong geopolitics remains a headwind. Over the short term this can pressure Asia financial sentiment and liquidity; over the long term, persistent uncertainty could shift capital and business activity away from the hub.
Neutral
Hong Kong geopoliticsStandard Charteredcapital outflowsfinancial sector riskjob cuts

Dow Jones Futures Slump as US-Iran Peace Talks Stall, Oil Jumps

|
Dow Jones futures retreated sharply on Tuesday after US-Iran peace efforts stalled, reversing earlier optimism. Dow Jones futures fell more than 300 points in early trading as indirect talks in Vienna failed to deliver a breakthrough. Negotiators pointed to deep disagreements over uranium enrichment and sanctions relief, while investors priced in a higher geopolitical risk premium. The shift quickly spilled into energy and rates expectations. Crude oil jumped over 4% and Brent traded above $85/bbl, raising inflation concerns and complicating Federal Reserve timing. Analysts at Goldman Sachs said the probability of a near-term agreement dropped from 60% to 35%. Market positioning reflected risk-off behavior. The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) rose above 22, and investors rotated from cyclical stocks toward defensives like utilities, healthcare, and consumer staples. Tech also came under pressure, while defense contractors saw relatively stronger interest. Safe havens such as gold and US Treasuries attracted flows. Traders should watch oil supply and any changes in Iranian export levels, since a wider breakdown could trigger new sanctions and supply disruptions—an outcome that historically amplifies volatility similar to the 2019–2020 US-Iran period.
Bearish
Dow Jones futuresUS-Iran talksoil inflation riskVIX volatilitysector rotation

Cardano Leads Crypto Development—ADA in Bear Cycle Signals Watch

|
Everstake says Cardano (ADA) is currently the most actively developed Layer 1 network, based on development metrics rather than price. The data shows Cardano controls over 8.9% of total Layer 1 share and ranks No.1 in all-time code commits, surpassing major chains such as Ethereum (ETH), XRP, and BNB Chain (BNB). Everstake also cites 478,100 ecosystem commits, pointing to sustained protocol upgrades, infrastructure expansion, and long-term scalability work. However, an analyst (TradingShot) argues ADA is still in a multi-year bearish cycle. On the weekly chart, ADA has been in a bear cycle since December 2, 2024, with the second bearish leg of a 5-year channel trending downward. The analyst notes ADA is at a similar position to June 2022, and if that pattern repeats, price could fall sharply toward $0.1000 by year-end. For a potential next bull phase, the $0.10–$0.09 area is described as an ideal long-term buy zone. For traders, the core takeaway is mixed: Cardano developer activity is strengthening, but ADA price action remains dominated by bear-cycle technical structure.
Neutral
CardanoADA price analysisDeveloper activityLayer 1 metricsCrypto market technicals

Trump’s Hormuz blockade claim questioned as Iran naval activity continues

|
Bernie Sanders criticized Trump’s claim of an “airtight” blockade on Iran, citing ongoing Iranian naval operations in the Strait of Hormuz. The market outcome tied to the “Trump’s Hormuz Blockade Announcement” is weakening: the likelihood of lifting the blockade by May 31 has fallen to 64.5% (from 77% the prior day). Traders point to signals that contradict Trump’s timeline, including active MiG-29 patrols and IRGC fast-attack boats. The prediction market is thin: daily trading volume is about $32,536 in USDC, and a move of roughly $7,404 can shift odds by 5 points. A notable datapoint was a 3-point drop at 8:37 PM, moving odds from 77% to 74%. Why it matters for the Trump’s Hormuz blockade call: persistent IRGC/nautical presence suggests the blockade may not be lifted soon, and credibility concerns are growing—especially after prior warnings that mine removal could take months. The current pricing implies limited upside for a near-term diplomatic break within 38 days, where a YES share at about $0.64 suggests roughly a 1.56x return. What to watch next: official statements from the Pentagon and any IRGC operational-language changes or additional naval activity that could push odds further in either direction.
Bearish
Trump’s Hormuz blockadeIran naval activityIRGCPrediction marketsGeopolitical risk

Hezbollah rockets hit Galilee as White House talks near

|
Hezbollah fired rockets into western Galilee shortly before White House discussions, claiming responsibility for six attacks. The article links the event to Israel–Hezbollah ceasefire prediction markets (June 30 and April 30). Despite the escalation, those markets stay pinned at 100% YES, with no meaningful trading activity or repricing. Several related contracts are also unchanged: the “Trump endorsement” market remains flat at 100% YES, and the “Israel–Lebanon diplomatic meeting” contract is likewise unmoved at 100% YES. The coverage notes thin order books and low volume, which can allow sharp moves if new official statements arrive. A confirmed breakdown in talks, or any White House/NBS-style endorsement shift, could force rapid repricing. Traders are effectively waiting for clear catalysts—statements from the White House, or remarks from Netanyahu or Trump—rather than reacting to the Hezbollah rockets claim alone. Because YES is already priced with little payout margin, upside is limited unless diplomacy outcomes change quickly.
Neutral
HezbollahWhite House talksIsrael ceasefireprediction marketsgeopolitical risk

Russia to Supply Indonesia 150M Barrels of Oil

|
Russia to supply Indonesia oil: Russia has agreed to provide Indonesia with up to 150 million barrels of oil as Indonesia diversifies energy supplies amid Middle East disruptions. Traders are treating the Russia to supply Indonesia oil deal as a buffer against potential crude supply shocks. Oil market pricing is described as cautious. By April 30, the “crude oil all-time high” market target is marked around 3.5% with one week left, but participation is thin. The combined 24-hour USDC volume is $2,006, where a single large order (about $1,020) could move prices by roughly five percentage points. This low liquidity limits conviction, so large speculative spikes are viewed as less likely near term. The price impact is positioned as mitigation rather than speculation. Indonesia is also bringing additional supply from Nigeria, India, and the Americas, further easing pressure. Traders are advised to watch developments around the Strait of Hormuz and any OPEC+ production updates, as either could rapidly reprice crude. Overall, this Russia to supply Indonesia oil agreement is expected to soften immediate supply-fear intensity, but not eliminate geopolitical risk that could return quickly.
Neutral
Crude OilRussia-Indonesia EnergyMiddle East GeopoliticsUSDC LiquidityOPEC+ Watch

SHIB holder surge, XRP Ledger nears 1B, BlackRock buys $900M BTC

|
Shiba Inu (SHIB) shows strong retail-to-holder adoption as SHIB holders rose 87.7% in seven days, adding 5,653 net holders. Etherscan data points to wallet addresses moving from 1,562,990 (Apr 15) to 1,568,643 (Apr 21). XRP Ledger activity is rising and the network may soon surpass the one billion threshold. On price action, XRP is recovering from a downtrend and trading around the mid-$1.40 area, with local resistance near $1.50 and support around $1.30. XRP has moved above faster moving averages, but remains below longer-term trend lines, while volume supports the uptick without confirming a major breakout. Bitcoin (BTC) demand is bolstered by institutional buying. Arkham Intelligence data says BlackRock purchased over $900 million worth of BTC in five days, nearly reaching $1 billion for the biggest weekly buy of the year, lifting sentiment around a potential BTC breakout.
Bullish
Shiba Inu (SHIB) adoptionXRP Ledger on-chain metricsBitcoin institutional buyingEtherscan holder dataXRP price recovery

Spot BTC ETF inflows hit $335M as IBIT leads rebound

|
Spot BTC ETF inflows topped $335 million in one day, according to Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas, with tracked inflow metrics turning positive for the first time in months. Across the 12 largest spot BTC funds, net inflow exceeded $335M in 24 hours, while monthly inflows reached $2.1B. Year-to-date and over the past three months, cumulative inflows are about $1.8B, signaling a recovery after early-year outflows. BlackRock’s IBIT was the main driver, attracting $246M of new investments in 24 hours and $1.9B over the past month. In contrast, Grayscale’s Bitcoin Trust saw a $16M outflow in one day, leaving its YTD net outflow at $960M. ETF trading volumes remain subdued versus last year. Total assets under management hover around $125B, below the $162B peak in October 2025, when BTC briefly rose above $120,000. After that decline, BTC consolidated roughly between $85,000 and $95,000 before trending upward again. BNY’s Ben Slavin said major outflows have eased: even during downtrends, investors avoided mass redemptions and often use ETFs as long-term holdings. Traders may view the positive spot BTC ETF inflow trend as improving near-term support, while volumes still suggest caution.
Bullish
Spot BTC ETFBlackRock IBITGrayscale outflowsBTC inflowsETF market stability

Global Crypto Adoption Slumps in Q1 as Macro Pressure Grows; Turkey Bucking Trend

|
Global crypto adoption slumps in Q1 as macro pressures and geopolitical risk weigh on retail demand. TRM Labs’ Q1 Global Crypto Adoption Index shows retail crypto volumes fell 11% year over year to $979 billion, the second straight quarterly contraction and the sharpest pullback since the 2022 bear market. The decline was driven by a stronger US dollar, higher interest rates and a broader risk-off environment, while Bitcoin’s price fell 22% during the quarter. Bitcoin dropped after a late-2025 peak above $126,000, dragging broader digital asset markets. A regional split emerged: advanced economies (US, South Korea, UK, Germany) saw the steepest trading-volume declines, consistent with crypto being treated more as a speculative asset under rising opportunity costs. In contrast, markets where crypto plays a more functional role—payments and savings—proved more resilient. Turkey stood out, with volumes up 7% year over year, while Latin America and South Asia were broadly stable. TRM Labs also flagged Venezuela as a growth market amid ongoing sanctions. Overall, global crypto adoption weakened despite localized resilience, reflecting differences in capital controls and the “shadow dollar”/store-of-value demand for crypto.
Bearish
Global Crypto AdoptionRetail VolumesMacro & RatesBitcoin CorrectionEmerging Markets

Spot ETH ETF inflows keep 10-day streak alive, but ETH’s $3K push hinges on DApp demand

|
Spot ETH ETF inflows extended to a 10-day streak, reaching about $633M in net purchases. That signals traders are slowly rebuilding confidence after ETH’s sharp drop earlier in 2026. On price action, Ether struggled to stay above $2,400 while Bitcoin rebounded toward $79,000, adding renewed attention to whether ETH can attempt a run to $3,000. However, spot ETH ETF inflows alone may not be enough. Ethereum DApp weekly revenue fell to around $13M in April (nearly 50% below six months prior). Broader on-chain weakness also hit rivals such as SOL, BNB Chain, and Hyperliquid, with total weekly DApp revenue down to about $73M from $130M in Oct 2025. On derivatives, ETH leverage demand dropped, and the annualized ETH monthly futures basis slipped to ~1% versus a ~4% neutral threshold—suggesting limited risk-taking. The article also points to wider macro uncertainty that has cooled sentiment across tech. Overall, ETH’s longer-term setup depends on a recovery in decentralized computation and DApp activity, even if spot ETH ETF inflows are currently supportive.
Neutral
Spot ETH ETF inflowsEthereum DApp revenueETH futures basisCrypto market risk sentimentSOL and BNB Chain weakness

Bitcoin Mining Profitability Stays Positive at $0.04/kWh for Top ASICs

|
On April 23, 2026, Bitcoin mining profitability remained positive for all 14 top-ranked ASIC miners tracked by asicminervalue.com, assuming electricity costs of $0.04 per kWh. Hashprice was $36.46 per PH/s (from hashrateindex.com), a key metric for estimated daily revenue per unit of deployed hash power. With network difficulty elevated, the table still shows daily profits ranging from $12.73 to $31.62 after power costs. Best performer: Bitmain’s Antminer S23 Hydro 3U (1.16 PH/s, 11,020W) at an estimated $31.62/day. Next: MicroBT Whatsminer M79S (1.35 PH/s, 20,000W) at $29.91/day. Several leading models are hydro-cooled or immersion-ready—13 of 14 in the list rely on liquid-cooling infrastructure per manufacturer specs. Other notable entries include Bitdeer Sealminer A4 Ultra Hydro (scheduled May 2026) at $24.20/day, Bitmain Antminer S23e Hydro 2U at $23.17/day, and Proto Rig (Block) as the only air-cooled option at $18.28/day. The article argues the current Bitcoin mining profitability window depends on tight inputs: power price, hashprice, machine efficiency (J/TH), and Bitcoin price. A material shift in these variables could quickly reorder the rankings.
Neutral
BitcoinBitcoin MiningASIC MinersMining ProfitabilityElectricity Costs

Solana (SOL) Faces $88 Resistance; $80 Breakdown Risk Seen

|
Solana (SOL) trades around $85.5 after a daily dip of just over 2%, with traders focused on a make-or-break level near $88. A short-term resistance band is identified at $86.82–$88.46, and repeated rejections suggest sellers still control the market. If SOL cannot reclaim and hold above $88.46, analysts point to downside targets near $81.70, then support in the $80–$78.80 area. Conversely, a clean break over $88.46 would improve the odds of a local bottom and could lift price toward higher resistance zones at roughly $90–$96. Broader technical structure remains mixed-to-bearish: SOL has formed lower highs/lower lows since the ~$260 peak and is below a major $95–$100 resistance band (formerly support). Failure to reclaim $95–$100 raises the probability of further selling toward $70–$75. A strong breakout above $100 would invalidate that bearish structure. At the same time, a long-term view argues SOL may be forming a macro bottom after the extended 420-day bottoming phase seen in 2022. If SOL regains the psychological $100 level, a broader recovery could open the door to $120, $160, and even the prior ~$260 highs. For traders, the near-term trigger is clear: SOL needs to break and hold above $88.46; otherwise, watch $80 support for a potential downside test.
Neutral
Solana (SOL)Technical AnalysisResistance & SupportBreakout/BreakdownRisk Management

IRGC ship evades US Navy as Strait of Hormuz odds fall

|
An IRGC-escorted bulk carrier transited the Sea of Oman despite US Navy efforts to seize it, a move that is pressuring prediction markets tied to the Strait of Hormuz. On Polymarket, odds that Strait of Hormuz traffic would “return to normal” by April 30 have dropped to 5% YES. That’s down from 10% yesterday and 20% a week ago, with seven days left until resolution. Trading remains thin: only $3,174 in USDC changed hands over the past 24 hours. The market is also sensitive to order flow—just $940 is enough to move odds by 5 percentage points. The biggest observed move was a 1-point drop, suggesting limited conviction among traders in a rapid de-escalation. While the escort demonstrates Iran’s willingness to directly challenge US naval operations, a single successful passage is not proof of a broader shift. Traders expecting normalization now appear to require concrete diplomatic contact between the US and Iran or a visible drawdown/change in military posture. If official announcements emerge about negotiations or force repositioning, these Strait of Hormuz odds could move quickly. For now, with Strait of Hormuz odds at 5% YES, the base case is continued elevated risk rather than an imminent resolution.
Neutral
GeopoliticsPrediction MarketsPolymarketIran-US Naval TensionsUSDC Liquidity

US-Iran diplomacy odds fall after Trump signals no talks rush

|
US-Iran diplomacy expectations weakened after Donald Trump said the US has no rush to resolve the conflict and that any deal would be on U.S. terms. Ahead of the April 30 diplomatic meeting, market pricing shows only a 2% “YES” chance, down from 6% a week earlier and from 4% the prior day. Traders also cut odds for a US-Iran “permanent peace deal”: 8.5% “YES” for April 30 (down from 20% yesterday). Forward timelines were pushed out further—30.5% “YES” for May 31 (down from 44% over the past day) and about 49.5% for June 30—suggesting players now expect progress later rather than soon. In the event-pricing mechanics, the order book would require about $2,630 to shift odds by 5 points, indicating moderate resistance to further declines. The article highlights what to watch: any signals from the White House or State Department that the approach may change, plus potential moves tied to JD Vance and third-party diplomatic efforts (notably Pakistan). The core takeaway for traders is that the current rhetoric is being treated as a near-term roadblock for US-Iran diplomacy.
Bearish
US-Iran diplomacyTrump administrationgeopolitical riskprediction marketsMiddle East

USDC prices shift as Iran activates air defenses

|
Iran has activated its air defenses amid ongoing conflict, prompting traders to reassess how durable the ceasefire is. A prediction market embedded in the article shows the probability of “Iran military action by April 30” priced at 100% across sub-markets, implying traders treat action within the next week as a near certainty. Meanwhile, the chance of “another country conducting military action against Iran” eased slightly from about 6% to 5.5%. The biggest remaining uncertainty sits in “Iranian regime fall by June 30,” where odds rose to 8.5% (from 8% the previous day and 6% a week earlier). The piece links the probability move to the timing of the air defense activation and broader conflict escalation. USDC market metrics cited in the article highlight how positioning could affect liquidity and volatility: daily USDC volume in the “Iranian regime fall” market is about $30,969, with deeper order-book liquidity (about $26,254 of depth to move price by 5 percentage points). By contrast, the “another country” market is thinner, where only about $764 is needed to move price by 5 percentage points, increasing susceptibility to large single trades. Key items to watch over the next days include confirmed hostile engagements/retaliatory actions, statements from Iran’s military or the US Department of Defense, and moves by regional actors such as Israel or Saudi Arabia. The article frames the air defense activation as a potential ceasefire breach or testing signal—conditions that could quickly reprice risk.
Bearish
Iran conflictCeasefire riskPrediction marketsUSDC liquidityGeopolitical volatility