Cardano (ADA) has experienced a key technical breakdown after losing its rising base and trendline support, prompting analyst GainMuse to warn of a potential "trapdoor" drop. ADA plunged into a lower demand zone, shifting short-term structure in favor of sellers and producing sharp downside momentum. Immediate support is identified at $0.242–$0.246; a decisive break below this zone could accelerate bearish momentum. Near-term resistance sits at $0.255–$0.260, and the current fragile setup means any bounce may be a relief rally unless bulls reclaim the broken base. ADA is trading around $0.26–$0.27 and recently led gains among some large-cap coins following integration with LayerZero, which Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson said enables cross-chain liquidity across 80+ blockchains. Traders should monitor trendline reclaim, the $0.242–$0.246 support band, and short-term volume for confirmation of either a sustainable reversal or continuation lower. Keywords: Cardano, ADA, trendline breakdown, trapdoor drop, support $0.242, resistance $0.260, LayerZero integration.
The U.S. Department of Justice has indicted Paxful co‑founder Ray Youssef for willfully violating the Bank Secrecy Act by failing to maintain an effective anti‑money‑laundering (AML) program, neglecting Know‑Your‑Customer (KYC) procedures, failing to file Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs), and operating without required money‑transmission licenses. Federal prosecutors say Paxful processed transactions tied to a website linked with sex‑trafficking ads, amplifying the seriousness of alleged misconduct. The indictment follows a prior corporate guilty plea by Paxful and a $4 million fine related to Backpage.com. Youssef denies the charges, calling the case an escalation in a perceived “war on crypto.” The action is part of broader regulatory pressure on crypto platforms and could set a precedent for personal liability for executives. Immediate market effects include increased AML/KYC scrutiny across peer‑to‑peer (P2P) platforms, potential user migration to DEXs or offshore services, and more rigorous investor due diligence for P2P ventures. Traders should watch for heightened regulatory announcements, compliance upgrades by exchanges, and potential reputational fallout that may increase volatility in crypto markets, especially in assets associated with P2P trading volumes.
Israeli financial markets hit all-time highs even as Israel launched military strikes on Iran following an attack that killed an Israeli colonel. The Tel Aviv 35 Index and leading Israeli stocks rose, driven by strong corporate earnings, local liquidity, and investor confidence in domestic economic resilience. Defense-related companies saw gains amid heightened geopolitical risk, while broader sectors remained supported by steady macro indicators. Analysts note that short-term volatility may increase, but current market movement reflects a domestic focus and belief that the conflict will not escalate into a prolonged regional war. Key points: military strikes on Iran after the killing of an Israeli officer; record levels for Israeli equity indices; gains concentrated in defense and select blue-chips; market buoyed by earnings and local liquidity; potential for increased short-term volatility tied to geopolitical developments.
Neutral
Israel marketsGeopolitical riskEquitiesDefense stocksMarket volatility
XRP has held above the key support zone around $1.33–$1.35 despite heightened geopolitical tensions between the US, Israel and Iran that have reduced global risk appetite. The token traded between $1.30 and $1.36 after retreating from an early-week high near $1.40–$1.45. Analysts highlight the 61.8%–78.6% Fibonacci retracement cluster and weekly structural support near $1.30 as critical demand areas. On hourly charts, XRP sits at the lower boundary of a falling wedge; a sustained hold could push prices toward $1.50, while daily closes below $1.30 risk a drop to around $1.11. On-chain data shows continued inflows to large wallets, indicating whale accumulation and buyer interest around $1.28–$1.30. Key levels to watch: supports $1.33, $1.30, $1.20–$1.22; resistances $1.36–$1.37, $1.40, $1.45. Traders should monitor whether XRP sustains current support and breaks resistance to confirm a bullish reversal. (Main keyword: XRP; secondary keywords: XRP support, Fibonacci retracement, whale accumulation, geopolitical volatility.)
Tether Holdings obtained a sign-off from Deloitte on the first reserve report for USAT, a dollar-backed stablecoin issued to comply with recent U.S. regulation. Deloitte reviewed the report prepared by Anchorage Digital Bank NA, the issuer of USAT. Anchorage disclosed $17.6 million in reserve assets backing 17.5 million USAT tokens outstanding. The independent review by a Big Four firm marks a notable shift from Tether’s prior stance that major accounting firms would not provide such services. Key actors: Tether Holdings SA, Deloitte, Anchorage Digital Bank NA. Primary keywords: Tether, USAT, reserve report, Deloitte, Anchorage, stablecoin. Secondary/semantic keywords: compliance, US regulation, reserve assets, redeemable tokens. Implications for traders include improved transparency signals for Tether’s US-regulated stablecoin product and potential impacts on market confidence in regulated dollar-backed tokens.
Bitcoin rebounded toward $70,000 after holding above $63,000 despite Middle East conflict, suggesting buyers are absorbing selling pressure. Analysts caution that market bottoms can take months to form and advise patience. Long-term realized BTC price (3–5 years) sits near $34,780, and three-year hold statistics show loss probability ~0.7% for buy-and-hold investors. Macro commentary (Arthur Hayes) noted historical US military actions often coincide with Fed monetary expansion, which could support crypto if geopolitical tensions persist. Technicals for top assets: BTC formed a symmetrical triangle with resistance near $74,508; a decisive break above would indicate a potential bottom at ~$60,000 and a bullish leg higher, while failure could keep BTC range-bound between $60,000–$74,508. ETH trades in a $1,750–$2,111 range; above $2,111 targets $2,427 and $3,045, while below $1,750 risks a drop to $1,537. XRP faces the 20-day EMA (~$1.42) with upside to the 50-day SMA if cleared; downside supports at $1.11 and $1. BNB remains in $570–$670 range; a break above $670 targets $742, failure risks $500. SOL shows demand above the 20-day EMA with resistance at $95 and upside to $117; breakdown below $76 would target $67. DOGE trades between $0.09 and the 20-day EMA (~$0.10); a break below $0.08 risks $0.06. BCH is testing $443 support with bearish bias and potential drop to $377 if $423 breaks. ADA remains inside a descending channel; loss of $0.28 could push to $0.25, while clearing the downtrend line could target $0.43. Overall market shows buying on dips and tests of range highs rather than a broad panic sell-off. This article is for informational purposes and not investment advice.
NZD/USD plunged amid a broad risk-off shift that bolstered the US Dollar. Heavy selling pushed the pair below key technical supports (notably the 0.6100 floor), triggering stop-losses and driving the RSI into oversold territory. A recent 50-/200-day moving-average bearish crossover (death cross) and high trading volumes confirmed conviction behind the move. Traders now eye 0.5950 as immediate support and 0.5850 on further weakness, while former support near 0.6100 and the 50-day MA (~0.6150) act as resistance. Fundamental drivers include renewed geopolitical tensions, stronger-than-expected US economic data (services and labour), and central-bank divergence — the Fed remaining relatively hawkish versus a more dovish RBNZ. Safe-haven flows into US Treasuries and USD money market funds amplified the dollar rally. Commodity-linked currencies like the NZD and AUD are especially vulnerable, with weaker Chinese demand for exports (dairy, timber) cited as a key fundamental strain. Broader regional impacts include AUD weakness and JPY strength as another haven. For New Zealand, a weaker NZD can aid export competitiveness but risks imported inflation and higher costs for USD-denominated debt, complicating RBNZ policy decisions. Traders should monitor global risk sentiment, US data releases, central bank guidance, flows into USD instruments, and the technical zones around 0.5950–0.6150 for trade signals.
Bearish
NZD/USDUS DollarRisk-OffForex TechnicalsCentral Bank Divergence
Pump.fun (PUMP) has seen renewed accumulation and buyback activity that is tightening circulating supply and supporting short-term upside. Over recent sessions a newly created wallet bought ~947.31M PUMP (~$1.86M) and top addresses added ~4.3B PUMP in 24 hours (Nansen). The project team is deploying nearly all daily revenue into buybacks — roughly $1.15–$1.2M on the latest day — removing tokens from circulation (Token Terminal). Exchange balances have fallen materially versus prior months, signaling net outflows and a reduced on‑exchange float. Momentum indicators are mixed across reports: one update showed improving Stochastic Momentum and Relative Vigor Index consistent with bullish momentum, while a later update reported the Stochastic Momentum Index still in negative territory and spot sell volume briefly outpacing buys (e.g., 1.7B sell vs 1.2B buy), producing a short-lived negative buy‑sell delta. Technical levels to watch: immediate resistance sits near $0.0019–$0.003 (depending on timeframe and price series), with upside targets at $0.0022 then higher if accumulation continues; key support ranges are around $0.0016–$0.0028. For traders: the bullish case rests on sustained whale buying, ongoing team buybacks and falling exchange balances (supply squeeze). Risks include intermittent sell pressure, low liquidity at these price levels and potential profit-taking. Manage position sizing, set stops near the cited support levels, and monitor on‑chain flows, exchange outflows and continuing buyback disclosures.
ChatGPT projects XRP could trade between $1.60 and $1.85 by March 31, 2026, assuming technical support holds and no major macro shocks. The model bases the forecast on current technicals: XRP trading in the low $1.30s, below the 50- and 200-day moving averages, and a neutral 14-day RSI. Key resistance is identified at $1.50–$1.60; a breakout above that band could attract technical buyers and push prices toward the upper bound. Critical support lies near $1.30–$1.35, with failure risking further downside. Medium-term drivers include spot ETF flows and regulatory clarity, though these are unlikely to prompt an immediate large move without new inflows. The forecast is framed as a measured, technically grounded scenario and not financial advice.
Bitcoin rose back above $70,000 as global equities tumbled amid escalating conflict in the Middle East. Risk-off sentiment drove investors toward perceived safe-haven and liquid assets, lifting BTC while major stock indices fell. Traders cited heightened geopolitical uncertainty, increased demand for alternative stores of value, and portfolio rebalancing as immediate drivers. Market reaction included higher BTC spot prices and elevated volumes, while volatility spiked across crypto and equities. No specific on-chain fundamentals changed; the move appears driven primarily by macro risk sentiment rather than crypto-native news. Key figures: BTC price regained the $70K level (near-term resistance/support), equity indices recorded broad declines, and trading volumes in crypto markets rose notably. Short-term implications include heightened volatility and possible rapid price swings as traders react to news flow; longer-term effects depend on conflict duration and broader risk-on/risk-off cycles.
Cardano Rosetta Java v2.1.0 is released with full Conway-era governance support across construction and data endpoints. The update—authored by contributors including matiwinnetou, linconvidal and Sotatek-DucPhung—exposes SPO voting, DRep vote delegation, CIP-129 handling, and more directly in the API, removing previous developer workarounds. Key changes: governance operations (VOTE_DREP_DELEGATION, POOL_GOVERNANCE_VOTE) now appear in /block, /block/transaction and /search/transactions; operations sort by ascending index; 29-byte DRep IDs with prefixed headers infer type automatically while raw 28-byte IDs still require explicit type; and HTTP error codes were realigned so non-retriable errors return 400 instead of 500 (a breaking change that requires client error-handling updates). Upgrade notes: v2.1.0 is backward compatible with v2.0.0 (no resync required); upgrading from v1.x.x requires a full yaci-indexer genesis resync. Cardano Node and Yaci indexer versions are bumped (node 10.5.3→10.5.4, yaci 0.10.5→0.10.6), and an experimental indexer admin UI is available. The Cardano Foundation calls this a non-mandatory release, enabling teams to plan upgrades. For builders and exchanges, Rosetta now surfaces on-chain governance needed for Conway/Voltaire-era voting, closing a prior integration blind spot.
Shibarium, the Shiba Inu layer-2 network, issued a connection notice after users reported wallet and explorer display problems. The official Shibarium SHIB.io account said most connectivity issues stem from incorrect or outdated RPC settings in users’ wallets rather than a network outage. Recommended fixes include clearing wallet cache, removing and re-adding the Shibarium network with the correct RPC, and verifying wallet configurations. The notice emphasized that on-chain operations remain stable, balances are accessible via RPC, and no assets were lost. Separately, the Shibarium explorer experienced indexing and display delays—some tokens and NFTs didn’t appear correctly in Shibarium Scan or wallet NFT tabs—attributed to explorer indexing delays and a temporary bridge update following a server migration in February. Shibarium also announced a planned privacy upgrade in Q2 2026. Primary keywords: Shibarium, Shiba Inu, wallet RPC, explorer indexing, layer-2. Secondary/semantic keywords: connection notice, wallet cache, network reconnection, Shibarium Scan, NFT display.
Global gold prices briefly spiked after coordinated US and Israeli strikes on Iranian military and nuclear targets, with spot gold jumping over 2.5% to breach $2,450/oz in volatile overnight trade. The rally faded as markets digested statements from Washington and Tel Aviv describing the strikes as “limited and precise,” tempered Tehran’s measured response, and reacted to a stronger US Dollar Index (up ~0.9%). By European hours, gold had pared gains and moved negative. Analysts cited algorithm-driven buys during the initial shock, modest ETF inflows, stable Shanghai premiums, and the absence of immediate disruptions to key oil routes as reasons for the pullback. Other market moves included a sharp rise in Brent crude (up ~5% to ~$98/bbl), pressure on equities, falls in cryptocurrencies (Bitcoin, Ethereum), and flows into US Treasuries. Traders now watch potential escalation that could disrupt Strait of Hormuz oil flows, upcoming CPI data, and central bank guidance — factors that would influence inflation expectations, real rates, and gold’s trajectory. Primary keywords: gold, US-Israel strikes, Iran, US Dollar, oil. Secondary/semantic keywords included: safe haven, inflation, CPI, ETFs, Strait of Hormuz. (Word count: 163)
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin published a blog post outlining proposals to limit centralization in block building — the infrastructure that decides which transactions are included in blocks. While the upcoming Glamsterdam upgrade formalizes proposer-builder separation (PBS), Buterin warns that a small number of dominant builders could still censor transactions or extract excessive MEV (miner/executor value). Key proposals include FOCIL, an anti-censorship backstop in which small, randomly selected participants nominate transactions that must appear in the next block (rejecting blocks that omit them); encrypting transactions to reduce “toxic MEV” (front-running and sandwich attacks); anonymized routing at the network layer to prevent intermediaries from observing pending transactions; and architectural changes toward more distributed block construction that avoid single global ordering where unnecessary. The post frames decentralization risk shifting from validators to block-building infrastructure as Ethereum scales. Relevant keywords: Ethereum, block builder centralization, MEV, proposer-builder separation, FOCIL, transaction encryption, anonymized routing.
A U.S. court denied the Trump administration’s request to delay a major tariff refund lawsuit challenging Section 301 duties on Chinese imports. The decision accelerates consolidated litigation by importers seeking reimbursement after the Supreme Court’s June 2024 ruling that invalidated certain tariff authorizations on procedural grounds. Plaintiffs—importers, trade groups and manufacturers—argue billions paid in duties should be refunded. Legal commentators say the denial is procedural but significant, signaling judicial impatience with delay tactics and reinforcing limits on executive trade authority. Economists estimate potential refunds between $10–$30 billion, with broad implications for corporate liquidity, supply-chain costs and future tariff implementation. The ruling compels the Department of Justice to proceed on schedule and may influence stricter procedural compliance for future trade actions. Key dates: Section 301 tariffs imposed 2018–2020; Supreme Court invalidation in June 2024; consolidated refund suits filed Q3 2024; administration sought delay January 2025; court denied delay March 2025.
U.S. Congress will resume negotiations in mid‑March 2025 on the CLARITY Act, a comprehensive crypto market-structure bill aiming to clarify regulation for exchanges, custody, market surveillance and asset classification between the SEC and CFTC. Talks come amid growing institutional adoption and a missed March 1 White House deadline for stablecoin rules as banking groups press for limits on interest and rewards for crypto deposits while industry advocates defend staking and rewards. Key provisions under discussion include clearer securities vs. commodity definitions, custody/security standards for exchanges and wallets, and market surveillance measures to prevent manipulation. Legislators are studying international models (MiCA, Singapore, Japan) to balance innovation and consumer protection. Outcomes could reduce regulatory uncertainty, accelerate institutional inflows, create demand for RegTech compliance solutions, or—if overly restrictive—push activity offshore. Traders should watch Senate Banking Committee timelines, stablecoin clause language, and custody/surveillance requirements for impacts on liquidity, institutional participation, and risk premia.
Neutral
CLARITY Actstablecoinscrypto regulationSEC vs CFTCinstitutional adoption
Bitcoin fell below the psychological $69,000 level, trading around $68,995 on Binance USDT as volatility surged. The breach triggered automated selling and an initial ~35% spike in trading volume; aggregate crypto market cap declined roughly $42 billion. Contributing factors cited include institutional rebalancing ahead of quarterly reporting, regulatory uncertainty (notably MiCA timelines and U.S. classification debates), and weakening technical momentum. Bitcoin is about 12% below its all-time high from three weeks earlier. Technical indicators: 50‑day MA ≈ $67,500 (near-term support), 100‑day MA ≈ $66,400, RSI ~32 (approaching oversold). Key intraday levels: immediate support at $68,000; resistance near $70,500; Fibonacci support zone between $67,200–$65,800. Market impacts: mining stocks fell ~8% on average, crypto ETFs saw ~$240m net outflows, and margin-call activity rose on exchanges. Derivatives positioning shifted — funding rates and open interest moved notably — and analysts observed higher correlation with traditional risk assets. On-chain fundamentals remain relatively robust (hash rate near highs, steady transaction and Lightning Network growth), and institutional custody shows no mass withdrawals. Short-term outlook: elevated volatility with potential further downside if $68k and the 50‑day MA fail; exhaustion signals (RSI) and declining exchange reserves could prompt accumulation by long-term holders. For traders: monitor Bitcoin price action around $68k and the 50‑day MA, order-book liquidity clusters, funding rates and open interest, institutional flows, and regulatory developments; use risk management such as hedging, reducing leverage, or dollar‑cost averaging.
Geopolitical tensions arising from the Israel–Hamas war and expanded regional conflict after attacks on Iran-linked sites have reignited a bullish narrative for Bitcoin among some analysts and traders. Inflation hedging, flight-to-safety demand, and expectations of increased institutional flows are cited as drivers pushing Bitcoin price targets higher—some commentators now project levels as high as $500,000. The article highlights statements from market strategists and crypto analysts who link rising geopolitical risk to capital seeking digital scarce assets. It notes higher on-chain activity, inflows into spot Bitcoin products, and heightened volatility but also warns that macroeconomic factors (interest rates, dollar strength) remain influential. Key figures include institutional traders and named strategists quoted in the piece (crypto analysts and market commentators), though the article emphasizes market sentiment over a single data-driven model. Traders are advised to watch liquidity, funding rates, and correlation with risk assets; the outlook mixes short-term price spikes and elevated volatility with long-term bullish narratives tied to adoption and scarcity.
Ripple Prime — Ripple’s rebranded prime brokerage after its $1.25 billion acquisition of Hidden Road — was listed today on the DTCC’s National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) directory. Hidden Road had been clearing roughly $3 trillion annually across markets for more than 300 institutional clients before the acquisition closed in October 2025. The NSCC listing connects Ripple Prime directly to the backbone of U.S. securities clearing and sets the technical and operational groundwork to migrate large institutional post‑trade volume onto the XRP Ledger (XRPL). Ripple has already integrated its RLUSD stablecoin into Ripple Prime’s prime‑brokerage products, using RLUSD as collateral across services. The move signals an effort to bridge traditional finance and DeFi by leveraging the XRPL’s speed and cost advantages for settlement and post‑trade workflows. Key entities: Ripple (Ripple Prime), Hidden Road (now Ripple Prime), DTCC/NSCC. Key figures and stats: $1.25 billion acquisition, ~$3 trillion annual clearing previously handled by Hidden Road, acquisition closed Oct 2025. Primary keywords: Ripple Prime, XRPL, DTCC, NSCC, RLUSD, prime brokerage. This development may materially affect institutional settlement flows and raises questions about regulatory scrutiny, on‑ramp complexity, and liquidity routing as post‑trade activity shifts to an enterprise blockchain.
Turkey’s ruling AKP has proposed a bill to tax income and gains from digital assets by bringing crypto under the country’s spending tax framework. The draft sets a 10% tax on crypto gains and requires platforms subject to capital gains tax to withhold 10% of users’ gains quarterly and report them to tax authorities. Platforms would also pay a 0.03% transaction service tax on trades they facilitate. The bill grants the president authority to set the crypto tax between 0% and 20%. The Finance Ministry/treasury would issue implementing regulations and the law would take effect two months after publication in the Official Gazette if passed. Chainalysis data cited in reporting shows heavy crypto activity in the region — roughly $200 billion in transaction volume from July 2024–June 2025 — and the proposal comes amid a volatile macro backdrop in Turkey, where inflation fell from a peak of 85% (Oct 2022) to about 30% (Jan 2025). The move follows a broader international trend toward tighter crypto taxation and regulation. Traders should note that source withholding changes tax treatment at the exchange/platform level and could affect domestic liquidity, spot–futures flows, demand for crypto as an inflation hedge, and trading strategies for Turkish users and counterparties.
Neutral
Turkey crypto taxwithholding taxcrypto regulationmarket impacttransaction service tax
Gold prices surged sharply toward $5,300/oz after an escalation of military conflict in a major Middle Eastern oil-producing region sent Brent crude above $130/barrel. London Bullion Market Association data showed consecutive daily gains exceeding 4% and record COMEX futures volumes, while physically backed gold ETFs recorded multi‑billion dollar inflows over 72 hours. Key drivers cited: heightened geopolitical risk premium, an oil‑driven inflation impulse, strong official sector purchases and technical momentum after breaching the prior all‑time high near $4,800. Analysts note the rally is occurring even as the US dollar remains relatively strong and futures markets price a greater chance of eventual rate cuts, lowering gold’s opportunity cost. Physical market tightness surfaced in Asian premiums for bars and coins, and mining equities outperformed broader markets. Historical parallels include the 1979 oil crisis and early Gulf War spikes; current initial gold gains (~22% to date) outpace early moves seen in 2022. The sustainability of prices above $5,000 will depend on the conflict’s duration, persistent high oil prices and central bank responses. This development elevates market volatility risks and has implications for equities, bonds, mining capex and national trade balances.
Bug bounty programs are public agreements that define which assets are in scope, what impacts qualify, and the reward ranges for valid reports. In Web3, programs frame impact around loss of funds, loss of control, and permanent disruption. Bounty reports are paid only after triage, validation, impact classification and remediation; proof-of-concept (PoC) requirements favour reproducible, non-destructive demonstrations. Bug bounties excel at finding vulnerabilities in live production surfaces introduced after audits, integration and boundary issues, and exploit chains that combine smaller weaknesses — especially when rewards are tied to impact. Common blind spots include out-of-scope surfaces (front ends, off-chain services, bridges, governance paths), economic-design failures (oracle manipulation, incentive exploits, liquidation cascades), user-side compromise and social engineering (phishing, malicious approvals), and hard-to-reproduce or duplicate reports. Severity and payout differ across programs because of varying scopes, classification systems and reward caps; impact-driven reward structures attract deeper research. Traders should read bounty pages as coverage maps: confirm in-scope contracts and components, check which outcomes count as Critical/High, note out-of-scope exclusions, review platform baseline rules, and assess operational responsiveness. A bounty signals ongoing discovery investment but is not a full security guarantee — it must be combined with audits, disciplined upgrades, key management and runtime monitoring to reduce real-world loss risk.
xAI plans to repay $3 billion of high-yield bonds early, redeeming the notes at roughly 117 cents on the dollar, according to a Bloomberg report. The bonds, issued in June with a 12.5% coupon, were sold at par and have rallied recently to about 117. Early repayment will likely involve make-whole or penalty payments to compensate investors for lost interest. The move appears aimed at slimming the combined balance sheet after Elon Musk folded xAI into SpaceX; the broader business now carries about $18 billion in debt, including obligations from Musk’s buyout of X. Bankers are working on financing strategies to reduce heavy interest costs. The action comes as SpaceX may confidentially file for an IPO as soon as this month with potential valuation reports above $1.75 trillion and a possible June listing. In June, xAI had adjusted terms to attract investors for a $5 billion debt package that included the retiring $3 billion tranche plus two $1 billion loans (one issued at par, the other priced at a 7.25 percentage-point spread and sold at 96 cents). Key points for traders: bond prices jumped to ~117 cents, the bonds carry a 12.5% coupon, and the early redemption signals active debt restructuring ahead of a potential mega IPO for SpaceX — developments that could affect credit spreads, risk-on sentiment, and related equities.
Riot Platforms (RIOT) shares rose about 1.2% to $16.50 as Bitcoin and altcoins climbed ahead of the company’s quarterly earnings release. The stock remains roughly 40% above its February low and has a market cap above $6.14 billion. Wall Street estimates forecast quarterly revenue near $158 million (up ~10% QoQ) and full-year revenue of about $658 million (up ~75% YoY), driven by stronger mining operations and engineering services. Riot is expanding into data colocation — buying 200 acres in Texas and signing a 25 MW data center leasing agreement with AMD — partly responding to pressure from activist investor Starboard Value to accelerate its transition to data-center operations. Technicals show a rebound from a year-to-date low ($11.85) and movement above the 100-day EMA, but the stock has formed a diamond reversal pattern, a technical setup that often precedes bearish breakdowns; key support to watch is the $15 psychological level. Traders should weigh positive revenue momentum and strategic diversification against crypto market weakness (Bitcoin still in a technical bear market) and the short-term technical risk signaled by the diamond pattern.
Crypto-related hacks and phishing attacks stole $112.53 million across January and February 2026, according to PeckShield. January accounted for $86.01 million from 16 incidents — a 1.42% year-on-year decline but a 13.25% month-on-month rise — driven by five major exploits: Step Finance ($28.9M), Truebit ($26.4M), SwapNet ($13.3M), Saga ($7M) and Makina Finance ($4.13M, $2.7M later recovered). February saw a sharp pullback to $26.52 million across 15 hacks (down 69.2% month-on-month and 98.2% year-on-year, the latter skewed by a $1.4B Bybit-related exploit in Feb 2025). February’s top incidents — YieldBlox DAO ($10M), IoTeX bridge ($8.8M), CrossCurve ($4.95M), FOOM Cash ($2.26M) and Moonwell ($1.8M) — made up ~98% of that month’s losses. PeckShield highlights concentration risk: a small number of high-value incidents and persistent vulnerabilities in cross-chain bridges and DeFi protocols. For traders: the data signals continued security risk and episodic volatility in DeFi and bridge-linked assets; monitor exploits, on-chain flows, and bridge activity as potential catalysts for short-term price moves and liquidity disruptions.
US President Donald Trump warned of a potential “major wave” of military escalation with Iran, triggering rapid market moves: spot gold plunged about 2.05% (nearly $100/oz), silver dropped ~7% within hours, erasing hundreds of billions from metals market caps. In contrast, cryptocurrencies saw a swift capital inflow—Bitcoin rallied roughly 5% in under an hour to above $68,000 (adding about $60 billion market value) and Ethereum rose about 5.8% past $2,000 (adding ~$23 billion). High-volume trading liquidated roughly $80 million in short positions and contributed to roughly $100 billion growth in crypto market capitalization in minutes; overall crypto liquidations approached $300 million during the volatility. Derivatives data showed funding rates fell below 6% and open interest declined by about $1 billion, suggesting reduced excessive leverage and relative resilience compared with prior geopolitical shocks. Analysts note this episode may signal a shift in safe-haven flows away from gold toward crypto, but warn that continued military escalation would likely sustain elevated volatility and could reverse flows if traditional havens regain appeal. Headlines: Trump Iran warning, gold & silver plunge, BTC/ETH surge, short liquidations, reduced leverage in futures.
Bitcoin rallied toward $70,000 on Monday after an initial weekend sell-off tied to U.S.-led strikes and bombings in Iran. Price action: BTC fell to about $63,100 on Saturday after the first reports of attacks, then recovered to trade near $68,938 (+4.4% 24h) with some platforms briefly showing a $70,000 print. Other risk assets also rose: ETH ~ $2,032 (+3.2%), SOL ~ $87 (+3.5%) and XRP ~ $1.39 (+1.3%). U.S. equity futures and the Nasdaq reversed early losses alongside crypto as markets digested news that President Trump said “large-scale combat operations” were continuing in Iran and that U.S. forces were targeting Iranian missile capabilities. Market drivers: heightened geopolitical risk produced an initial volatility spike and a flight-to-safety/rapid risk repricing; subsequent recovery appears driven by traders re-assessing the geopolitical outlook, potential energy-market impacts, and whether the conflict will be short-lived or protracted. Analyst comment: 21shares’ macro head Stephen Coltman noted markets are weighing whether Iran’s leadership will seek a deal or whether instability will persist. Implications for traders: expect continued elevated intraday volatility, wider bid-ask spreads and potential liquidity fragmentation across exchanges during news spikes; short-term trading opportunities exist on volatility and risk-asset correlations, while position sizing and stop management are crucial given the uncertain geopolitical trajectory. This story is developing and market conditions may evolve rapidly.
Spot silver (XAG/USD) plunged below the key $90/oz support on March 13, 2025, dropping about 4.2% as the US Dollar Index (DXY) rallied above 108.00. Higher real yields and hawkish Fed commentary — reinforced by stronger-than-expected US retail sales and a jump in 10-year Treasury yields (+12 bps to above 4.50%) — drove the dollar’s advance and reduced demand for dollar-priced silver. COMEX volumes rose during the sell-off, with ETFs like SLV seeing notable outflows and managed-money net-long positions exposed to forced liquidations. Technicals flipped bearish: the 50-day moving average turned into resistance, next support sits near $86.50 (100-day MA/early-Feb low) with a potential downside target near $83.00; reclaiming $90 and then $92.50 would be required to reverse the short-term downtrend. Analysts highlight that while silver’s long-term fundamentals (industrial and green-energy demand) remain intact, near-term price action is dominated by currency and rate dynamics. Traders should monitor upcoming US inflation prints and Fed communications for signs the dollar rally and rate expectations persist.
Bitcoin (BTC) rallied back to roughly $70,000 as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East persisted, while on-chain and derivatives metrics point to reduced near-term sell pressure. Glassnode and CryptoQuant data show short-term holder (STH) realized-loss transfers to exchanges fell to about 3,700 BTC — a two-week low — versus a peak of 89,000 BTC during the Feb 5–6 capitulation. Analysts noted “zero panic” among event-sensitive holders. Binance BTC open interest contracted from ~130,800 BTC to ~97,680 BTC year-to-date (≈25% decline), and the estimated leverage ratio (open interest to exchange reserves) dropped to a ~0.146 weekly average, indicating deleveraging. Technically, BTC is attempting to reclaim the Monthly RVWAP near the high-$68k area; trading above this level tends to shift short-term trader bias to bullish. Spot flow showed positive delta during the breakout (Binance ~$7.79M, Coinbase ~$1.16M, OKX ~$3.7M), suggesting aggressive spot bidding rather than purely derivatives-driven moves. Key liquidity sits between $70k–$71.5k; converting that band into support could open a path toward prior supply around $80k. With lower leverage and reduced loss-driven inflows, short-term upside appears supported, though renewed realized-loss selling or a spike in leverage could reverse momentum. This is not investment advice.