Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said the US and Iran have reached a finalized text for a US-Iran peace deal, with signing expected within 24 hours. Risk-on sentiment followed: Bitcoin rose to around $77,500, and traders also watched prediction markets such as Polymarket for signs of improved odds.
Key points: Sharif said the “final, agreed upon text” is ready and that “peace has never been this close.” Pakistan has acted as mediator since at least April 2026, when it brokered a two-week ceasefire that held and helped pave the way for renewed talks. US President Donald Trump also signaled optimism for a comprehensive agreement.
However, the timeline may be overstated. Iranian officials indicated the US-Iran peace deal is not fully finalized, and US officials sounded more cautious than Sharif’s 24-hour window. The article highlights the implementation risk given the 2015 JCPOA, which took years and was abandoned by the US in 2018.
Trading implication: the market reaction appears driven by reduced geopolitical risk pricing, but if the 24-hour deadline passes without signatures, downside volatility could hit positions taken on the US-Iran peace deal certainty.
Bullish
US-Iran peace dealBitcoin rallyGeopolitical riskPrediction marketsMiddle East diplomacy
In a Pomp Podcast discussion, veteran macro investor Jordi Visser argues that SpaceX valuation should be judged on both current execution and future potential—similar to how markets treat AI and Bitcoin.
Key thesis: SpaceX valuation depends on Musk’s ability to build data centers faster and more efficiently, letting the company capture a premium by solving “data center bottlenecks.” Visser highlights Musk’s track record and suggests that belief in Musk’s entrepreneurial execution is central to the valuation debate.
Cost mechanics and margins are a major driver. Visser contrasts terrestrial vs space-based facilities, claiming land-based data centers face more constraints (cooling, land access, and power sourcing). He cites a dramatic example: a 1 gigawatt data center costing roughly $60B on land versus an estimate of about $5B for a space-station-scale approach. This cost gap, he says, could materially lift compute profit margins.
Visser also emphasizes that future power demand may require energy storage innovation. He argues off-grid energy storage and faster battery technology are crucial to support large-scale operations when grid capacity is limited.
Finally, Visser links valuation changes to earnings and operational efficiency. He suggests that even small beat/raise scenarios could trigger re-pricing of SpaceX valuation, reflecting how markets respond to execution metrics.
For traders, the takeaway is indirect but relevant: the narrative connects AI compute infrastructure, energy/backup capacity, and space logistics to how markets may price future “digital asset infrastructure” growth.
Ripple has launched the XRPL AI Starter Kit to help developers build AI-agent payments on the XRP Ledger using XRP and Ripple USD (RLUSD). The kit targets x402 machine-to-machine payments, where USDC currently dominates.
The toolkit includes XRPL documentation access via an MCP server and Claude-compatible skills to create agent wallets, check balances, and send transactions. Ripple says XRPL can support rapid settlement (around 3–5 seconds), predictable fees, escrow/multisig, and a native DEX—aimed at reducing the need for human approval in frequent small transactions, making payments work more like API calls.
A key new detail is the operational risk of x402: web-to-blockchain synchronization and authorization alignment. Services must stay consistent on who paid, what the payment covered, and whether payment proofs remain valid.
Market context adds scale: public tracking shows 120M+ cumulative x402 transactions across 14 chains, with USDC at roughly $41M settled and average payment size near $0.05. Base and Solana lead activity.
Traders takeaway: this is an early developer push. Near-term price implications for XRP depend on adoption speed and RLUSD liquidity, beyond demos.
A follow-up Zcash audit using Anthropic’s Mythos review found no additional critical vulnerabilities in the Zcash protocol after the Orchard shielded pool issue. Shielded Labs requested the review, and founder Zooko Wilcox said no other network-level bugs were identified.
This comes after emergency Zcash upgrades to address Orchard’s theoretical supply-integrity risk, where the bug affected the Orchard zero-knowledge circuit and could have enabled creating unlimited counterfeit ZEC in local testing. Developers temporarily disabled Orchard via a soft fork, then deployed the NU6.2 hard fork on June 3 to remove the vulnerability and re-enable Orchard.
Wilcox also reiterated the planned Ironwood upgrade, aiming to let users independently verify circulating supply by aggregating balances across active pools, alongside added security and further audits. Traders should note: the Zcash audit does not prove the system is bug-free, but it may help market confidence after the Orchard disclosure-driven sell-off.
Market context: ZEC fell over 50% from June 4 to June 5 before rebounding. As of June 13, resistance sits around $465–$470, support near ~$355 (23.6% Fibonacci). Momentum looks weaker if buyers fail to reclaim the resistance band.
Kraken’s newly launched “IPO Access” product used xStocks (a tokenized-equity platform) to provide trading exposure to SpaceX’s IPO. On SpaceX IPO day, demand greatly exceeded the shares xStocks could source from underwriters, leading to partial fills and refunds.
The key issue was structural: the US listing flow (via Payward Securities) worked, but the non-US offering token, SPCXx, relied on the same physical-share sourcing pipeline used by other exchanges (Binance, Bybit, Bitget, and MEXC). When SpaceX’s retail demand was multiple times higher than the available allocation, Kraken and xStocks could not fully fulfill customer orders.
An xStocks spokesperson said requests were not fully fulfilled due to “overwhelming demand,” and client funds tied to unfilled orders were returned. The token still listed—SPCXx was live and tradable through the first weekend—however Kraken customers received only a fraction of the allocations they requested.
The article frames this as a stress test for tokenized IPO access: issuing tokens is “easy,” but securing real underlying inventory is the hard part. Disclosures/“fine print” mattered—xStocks’ own disclaimers indicate IPO tokens do not guarantee an allocation and provide price exposure rather than direct ownership.
Takeaway for traders: tokenized IPO exposure can start trading on schedule, but allocation guarantees can fail when underwriter supply is constrained. xStocks’ SpaceX campaign delivers a reminder that liquidity and settlement outcomes depend on real-asset inventory, not just on-chain tokenization.
ABTC shares have collapsed more than 90% since American Bitcoin Corp.’s Nasdaq debut, wiping out over $200 million in value for outside investors. The decline comes as the company continues share dilution to fund its Bitcoin accumulation strategy.
Key figures: ABTC traded near post-IPO highs around $14.50, but now is far below that level. Eric Trump’s restricted stake (about 7.5%–9% of the company) is still valued around $70 million, highlighting the founders’ advantage versus retail investors who bought at higher prices.
Fundamentals are under pressure. American Bitcoin reported a Q1 2026 net loss of $82 million on $62 million revenue, plus a $117 million impairment charge tied to digital-asset valuation rules. As of March 31, 2026, the firm held roughly 7,021 BTC (about +30% from end-2025).
Market catalysts and mechanics: Hut 8 Mining owns 80% of the firm, while the Trump family controls the remaining 20%. Retail holders have limited control. In December 2025, ABTC fell 51% in a day after lockup expirations increased newly tradable shares—an event risk that can repeat as insider/restricted shares become eligible to trade.
For traders, this is a cautionary tale on ABTC shares: even if BTC rises, dilution can pressure per-share upside. Expect continued volatility around issuance, lockup schedules, and impairment/accounting-driven sentiment.
Celtic right-back Alistair Johnston has become the first player from Scotland’s SPFL Premiership to feature at the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Canada’s manager named Alistair Johnston in the starting XI for the opening match against Bosnia-Herzegovina on June 12, and he played the full 90 minutes.
The 27-year-old picked up a yellow card in the 10th minute but avoided a second booking, meaning there was no immediate suspension risk for the remainder of the opener. Johnston’s World Cup experience is not new: he also played in all three of Canada’s group-stage matches at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.
Johnston’s inclusion had been confirmed when Canada released its 26-man squad in May, but his status as an SPFL trailblazer became clear once he started the opener. The 2026 tournament will expand to 48 teams and is co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, giving SPFL exposure from day one.
Key trading-relevant takeaway: while this is a sports milestone rather than a crypto policy or macro event, it offers a clean example of how major international tournaments can drive short-lived attention cycles. For now, the most actionable point for traders is to watch for any broader sentiment spillovers rather than expect direct market fundamentals tied to Alistair Johnston.
Neutral
SPFL2026 World CupCelticAlistair JohnstonSports milestone
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on June 12 that the US and Iran have agreed on a peace deal framework after 100+ days of conflict. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said peace is “closer than ever”, with full details expected soon.
The wider crisis began Feb 28, escalating with US and Israel actions. A key shock was the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which carries about a fifth of global oil flows. Negotiation momentum included a Pakistan-brokered two-week ceasefire on April 8, followed by reports in May of a tentative 60-day memorandum covering ceasefire extensions and Iran’s nuclear file.
Crypto market reaction: prediction markets such as Polymarket saw higher activity as traders priced in the likelihood of success. Bitcoin traded in line with broader “risk-on/risk-off” patterns during the war. No specific crypto was directly tied to the diplomacy.
If the peace deal framework becomes a binding agreement, reopening the Strait of Hormuz could ease energy prices and reduce inflation pressures—typically supportive for risk assets, including Bitcoin. However, this is not yet a signed treaty; implementation, verification, and domestic political buy-in remain key risks. Traders may see volatility until terms are finalized and credible enforcement mechanisms are confirmed.
Keywords: US-Iran peace deal framework, Strait of Hormuz, prediction markets, Bitcoin, geopolitics, inflation expectations, risk-on/risk-off.
Neutral
US-Iran Peace TalksStrait of HormuzBitcoinGeopolitical RiskPrediction Markets
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have extended a major red streak, posting outflows for the fifth consecutive week. Although the latest numbers are far smaller than the prior week’s heavy withdrawals, investor sentiment remains cautious.
Data cited from SoSoValue shows BTC ETF net flows were negative on four of five business days:
- Monday: -$91.37M
- Tuesday: -$77.44M
- Wednesday: -$213.85M
- Thursday: -$19.03M
- Friday turned positive: +$85.85M
Still, the week finished with total net outflows of nearly $316M. Since the week ending May 15, cumulative net outflows have exceeded $5.7B, while cumulative net inflows slid from $59.34B (May 8) to $53.62B (June 12).
Spot Ethereum ETFs followed a similar pattern. They were also in the red for five straight weeks, but with less severe outflows than the prior week. SoSoValue data shows:
- Monday: +$82.37M (one strong inflow day)
- Tuesday: -$40.85M
- Wednesday: -$35.59M
- Thursday: -$15.89M
- Friday: -$4.95M
As a result, the week ended with just under $15M in net outflows, compared with $173M withdrawn the week before. Cumulative net inflows for ETH ETFs dropped to under $11.20B on Friday after peaking at $12.09B on May 8.
Keywords: Bitcoin ETF, Ethereum ETF, spot ETFs, net outflows, SoSoValue.
The UAE government has denied reports that it agreed to release up to $20 billion in frozen Iranian assets to Iran. On June 13, the UAE Foreign Ministry said the allegations are “entirely false and unfounded.”
The denial followed a Reuters report on June 12 claiming the UAE approved the release of $10–$20 billion in frozen Iranian assets, with some sources alleging that more than $3 billion had already been transferred. The UAE says no frozen Iranian assets have been released or transferred via the UAE—“not $20 billion, not $3 billion, not a single dollar.”
Reuters described the alleged arrangement as being linked to security guarantees, including Iran’s commitment to halt attacks on UAE territory amid broader regional tensions. No independent verification has surfaced as of June 13.
For markets, the episode matters because the UAE positions itself as a sanctions-compliant financial and digital-asset hub (Dubai and Abu Dhabi). If traders and regulators believe the UAE could be used as a conduit for frozen Iranian assets, it could create compliance risk for fintech and crypto firms and weigh on sentiment toward regional digital-asset infrastructure.
Ryan Christie has signed a three-year Ryan Christie contract extension with AFC Bournemouth, keeping him at the Vitality Stadium until June 2029. The midfielder joined from Celtic in August 2021 and previously agreed a four-year deal in November 2023 that was due to run until summer 2027; this new Ryan Christie contract extension adds two more years.
Bournemouth view Christie as a key, consistent midfield figure. He won supporter awards in May 2025 for his 2024/25 performances, reinforcing his value to the squad.
Aston Villa reportedly expressed interest in April 2026, but Bournemouth’s decision to extend the contract reduces the likelihood of a near-term transfer. The article notes Christie’s prior annual salary was listed by Spotrac at $2.6M, while the terms of the new deal have not been publicly disclosed.
For Bournemouth’s trajectory, the extension may limit clubs’ bargaining power tied to an expiring contract, since any buyer will likely need to pay a premium set by the club rather than by a short remaining deal. Overall, this is a continuity move rather than a sale ahead of a contract deadline.
Neutral
AFC BournemouthRyan ChristiePremier Leaguecontract extensionAston Villa interest
VfL Wolfsburg, currently 17th in the Bundesliga and one place from automatic relegation, is reportedly targeting Hertha BSC captain Fabian Reese.
Wolfsburg and Fabian Reese have already agreed on personal terms. The only remaining sticking point is the transfer fee. The clubs are said to be negotiating a price in the €8 million to €10 million range. This would be above Reese’s listed Transfermarkt market value of €5 million, but below Hertha’s earlier asking price of €10 million to €13 million.
Reese, 28, joined Hertha from Holstein Kiel on a free transfer in January 2023. Over three seasons, he has made 82 appearances and scored 30 goals—an output that averaged about a goal every 2.7 games in the second division.
Hertha signed Fabian Reese to a contract extension in May 2025, keeping him until June 30, 2030. That longer deal gives Hertha leverage to demand a meaningful fee rather than losing their captain cheaply.
If Wolfsburg complete the move, it would be a relatively high valuation for a player acquired on a free transfer—while also addressing Wolfsburg’s immediate need for goals as the relegation battle tightens. Negotiations reportedly began weeks ago and are believed to be entering a final stage.
Zimbabwe has placed cryptocurrency firms under Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) oversight via Statutory Instrument 99 of 2026, tightening AML compliance in the market.
Under the new AML rules, crypto businesses that buy, sell, transfer, or store digital assets must register as Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) before offering services locally. The RBZ unit responsible for financial crime controls will oversee registered entities.
The framework introduces banking-style obligations. Firms may need a legally registered domestic subsidiary, pay an annual VASP registration fee of about $500, and pass director background checks before approval. It also requires the “travel rule”, meaning qualifying transfers trigger transaction data collection and sharing between institutions.
The rules specifically target operational control rather than labels. Organizations that can alter smart contracts, route funds, or set transaction fees fall within scope, potentially pulling some DeFi structures into regulation.
Zimbabwe’s government moved to formalize a previously unclear regime. In 2018, the central bank told banks to stop processing crypto-related transactions. The new process creates a direct registration pathway, but also makes clear the regime is about AML and financial surveillance—not sovereign endorsement of cryptocurrencies.
For traders, this is primarily a regulatory and compliance signal. Expect costs and friction for service providers, possible impacts on local on/off-ramp availability, and shifts in which platforms can legally operate—while broader global market effects are likely limited unless compliance triggers wider regional liquidity changes.
Solana’s stablecoin base hit about $16.4B at a May 2026 peak, driven by rising USDC issuance and deeper on-chain liquidity. In June, Circle minted $500M USDC on Solana in two tranches, pushing Solana’s share of global USDC supply to roughly 10.3% and improving checkout routing, lowering slippage, and tightening perpetuals books.
The article argues that the Solana stablecoin base matters because stablecoins power payments settlement, margin for perps, and demand for tokenized real-world assets (RWAs). It cites May 2026 milestones including ~$2.8B of RWA issuance on Solana and monthly records in derivatives activity, suggesting a mix of “patient” payments liquidity and “hot” speculative liquidity.
However, the author stresses that a larger Solana stablecoin base does not automatically guarantee a SOL rally. Traders should watch whether liquidity converts into sustained spot buying rather than evaporating in thin markets.
Key signals to monitor include net USDC mints/burns and post-mint share on Solana, stablecoin velocity across major DEXs/payment flows, SOL perps funding/basis, and ongoing RWA issuance/redemptions. Risks highlighted include stablecoin issuer or policy changes, depegs/liquidity fragmentation, exchange/bridge incidents, and perps-driven liquidation cascades.
Overall, the update is constructive for market structure and execution quality, but it’s too early to treat it as a direct price catalyst for SOL.
Bittensor’s subnet registration cost has risen from 230 TAO to 1,500 TAO (around May 12), a 6.5x move that prices a single Bittensor subnet slot at roughly $470K. This “Bittensor subnet registration cost” increase is driven by a dynamic pricing model: the fee doubles with each successful registration, then decays slowly if demand cools.
The network caps active subnets at 128, while demand to secure capacity is outpacing openings. Locked TAO is not burned, but it is effectively removed from circulating supply while the subnet remains active, because recovery requires deregistration.
Tokenomics tightens the squeeze. About 73% of TAO is currently staked, reducing liquid supply on exchanges. The spike arrives about five months after the December 2025 halving, when daily TAO emissions fell to 3,600 per day (about half pre-halving issuance). Subnet-specific “alpha” tokens have reached roughly $1.5B cumulative market cap (early 2026), and some subnets reportedly generate tens of thousands of dollars daily from AI inference and compute services.
Bittensor plans to expand active subnets from 128 to 256, which could relieve the bottleneck over time. Still, the current Bittensor subnet registration cost jump concentrates participation among well-capitalized operators, and for TAO holders it reinforces a more constrained supply profile via reduced emissions plus higher effective locking.
Standard Chartered’s digital-assets head Geoffrey Kendrick says the current Bitcoin selloff likely marked the cycle bottom, keeping the bank’s year-end targets at $100,000 for Bitcoin and $4,000 for Ethereum. After BTC slid toward the $59,000 area and rebounded to around $63,500, Kendrick described the drop as the “likely low” rather than the start of a new breakdown.
In his note, Kendrick linked the Bitcoin selloff to forced selling, weak Bitcoin ETF flows, and liquidity stress—factors that he argues caused the deepest damage during the drawdown. The $100K BTC target now depends on confirmation from improving ETF inflows and renewed institutional demand. He pointed to heavy U.S. fund outflows during the selloff as a key reason the institutional bid weakened.
Ethereum remains a secondary but important part of the thesis. Kendrick kept the $4,000 ETH target and expects ETH to outperform BTC if the ETH/BTC ratio rebounds. He tied Ethereum demand to stablecoins, tokenized assets, and on-chain settlement, and said ETH price weakness has kept the ratio under pressure.
Additional near-term signals Kendrick highlighted include: Bitcoin holding around $59,000, ETF inflows returning, “Strategy” demand stabilizing, and relative strength for ETH. He also referenced liquidity dynamics around major listings (including the SpaceX IPO window) and ongoing corporate-style absorption of BTC supply (via Michael Saylor’s company).
Bullish
Bitcoin ETF flowsStandard CharteredGeoffrey KendrickEthereum price outlookETH/BTC ratio
SpaceX IPO showed strong first-day pricing for SPCX. Shares opened near $150, peaked at $176.52, and closed around $160.95—about +19% vs the $135 offer. The offering raised roughly $75B on 555M+ shares, valuing SpaceX near $2.1T.
For crypto traders, the key update is not just the equity price—it’s tokenized stocks execution risk tied to SPCX. Token launches that used real underlying shares reportedly worked, but campaigns that relied on an intermediary’s late sourcing failed. Binance, Bybit, Bitget, and MEXC canceled tokenized SpaceX allocation rounds and refunded users after xStocks couldn’t source the underlying shares. Binance reportedly collected $557M+ USDC before cancellation. This is a direct warning for SPCX-linked products and any next mega-IPO tokenization.
Market read-through: the brief “capital overhang” from the SPCX pricing window appears to have lifted alongside strength in majors. BTC held near $63,262 (+0.4%) and ETH stayed around $1,653 flat. XRP rose about +2.39% amid improved legal clarity/institutional demand, while SOL gained about +2.84% on the tokenized SPCX share launch.
Trading focus: watch whether SPCX can hold gains after first-day momentum, and monitor whether issuers tighten share-sourcing terms to reduce delivery/settlement failure risk for tokenized stocks.
Several crypto platforms canceled SpaceX pre-IPO tokenized equities subscriptions after the underlying share allocation failed to reach distributors. Distributors including Binance Wallet, Bybit, and Bitget refunded users when xStocks (Kraken’s tokenized equities provider) could not secure and deliver the required shares.
The issue was supply and custody, not blockchain rails. While SpaceX targeted a $75B raise and demand reportedly exceeded $100B, underwriters reduced the retail allocation, leaving some platforms with zero shares to pass through. Bybit’s reported statement said no allocations were received because xStocks could not deliver the real assets.
The article also stresses the difference between “tokenized exposure” and owning secured private equity. Even if token contracts work, tokens can’t create real shares without allocation, legal structuring, and regulatory custody readiness. Still, Kraken’s SPCXx product reportedly launched with about $24M circulating on-chain, but the broader cancellation wave highlights reputational risk for tokenized private-market offerings when the real-asset chain breaks.
For crypto traders, this is a reminder that tokenized equities narratives depend on traditional issuance mechanics as much as on smart contracts.
The article weighs a “tech correction” in the S&P 500 against a possible risk-on rebound, with focus on how equity flows may cushion (or fail to cushion) the index as leadership shifts.
Key developments: The S&P 500 tech sector is down about 11% from its June 2 peak. Semiconductors moved first, with the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index falling about 3.6% on June 10, contributing to a roughly 1.6% drop in the S&P 500 that day. Despite this, Vanguard’s S&P 500 ETF (VOO) reportedly crossed $1 trillion in assets on June 2–3, highlighting strong passive demand.
Flow “paradox”: Bank of America flow data (week ended June 5) showed record single-stock selling of $14.2B (led by institutional accounts) while equity ETFs saw net inflows for an 11th straight week (+$0.3B). The article argues this divergence can keep index levels supported longer than sentiment, but only until breadth improves or tech weakness stops.
What to watch next: earnings and guidance quality outside tech, hyperscaler/corporate capex cadence, semiconductor stabilization, changes in dealer positioning/volatility term structure, and macro policy signals about rates and inflation.
Two scenarios: A risk-on rebound would require semiconductor stabilization, improving non-tech earnings revisions, continued ETF inflows, and contained volatility. A deeper drawdown is possible if semis/megacaps keep sliding, ETF inflows stall, guidance softens broadly, and volatility rises—turning under-the-surface pressure into headline weakness.
Crypto relevance: the piece links equity de-risking to digital-asset risk appetite, noting crypto often tracks liquidity and cross-asset beta during stressful equity periods. In a “tech correction,” liquidity conditions matter—supportive ETF plumbing can help, but a breakdown in equity leadership can spill over negatively.
Solana’s tokenized stock market hit a real-world bottleneck after a rush for SpaceX exposure via xStocks’ SPCXx tokens outpaced the provider’s ability to source underlying shares. During the subscription window, Binance Wallet attracted about $557M USDC from ~27,689 addresses, signaling extreme demand for this tokenized stock offer.
The failure came from the off-chain procurement layer. When xStocks and its sourcing partners could not acquire sufficient SpaceX shares to match subscriptions, Bybit, Binance Wallet, and Bitget Wallet cancelled allocations and issued refunds. The episode highlights that blockchain throughput is not the limiting factor; verified custody, SPV/share availability, and legally binding redemption pathways are.
Solana remains dominant for tokenized equities: in May 2026 it handled 97% of cumulative on-chain tokenized equities spot volume, reaching $2.8B+ in RWA and 200k+ tokenized stock holders (Solana Foundation). But the SpaceX incident shows how “soft” subscription demand can translate into “hard” allocation shortfalls when capacity is constrained.
For traders, the key implication is risk management around tokenized stock subscriptions: treat pre-IPO tokenized stock deals as capacity-limited, and prioritize offerings with hard inventory-linked caps, frequent proof-of-assets attestations, clear redemption terms, and transparent refund/dispute processes.
Marc Casadó transfer talks are accelerating as AS Monaco reportedly moves ahead of rivals. The 22-year-old Barcelona defensive midfielder, a Spain international, has fallen to fifth choice under manager Hansi Flick and wants more playing time.
Monaco is in advanced negotiations for the Marc Casadó transfer, with a reported offer of about €18 million plus up to €5 million in performance add-ons, potentially reaching roughly €25 million—figures that match what Barcelona is seeking.
Barcelona wants to complete a departure to help balance its finances ahead of next season. The club reportedly has two offers on the table for the Marc Casadó transfer: one from a European club and another from a Saudi Arabian side. As of mid-June 2026, neither bid has been formally accepted, leaving the race open.
Manchester United has held discussions with Casadó’s representatives, but is described as “monitoring” while Monaco is closer to closing. Chelsea and other Premier League clubs have also expressed interest, meaning United could face competition if Monaco’s deal stalls. Saudi interest could further reshuffle the bids, but at age 22 Casadó is likely prioritizing competitive football, keeping attention focused on European options. No formal agreement is confirmed as of mid-June.
Neutral
Marc CasadóManchester UnitedAS Monacofootball transfersBarcelona finances
Bitcoin ETFs showed a renewed lift in U.S. spot demand across two sessions: on May 28, the 11-fund group recorded $428.6M net inflows after the prior day’s $733.4M outflow. On June 12, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs logged $85.85M in daily net inflows, bringing total net assets (AUM) to $79.65B, or 6.26% of Bitcoin’s market cap.
BlackRock’s IBIT led June 12 with $57.69M net inflow and +906.37 BTC. Fidelity’s FBTC added $18.00M. Ark 21Shares’ ARKB added $3.17M, and VanEck’s HODL added $1.80M. Grayscale’s GBTC (and its other BTC product) posted zero daily net inflow, keeping dispersion high.
For traders, these Bitcoin ETFs inflow prints are a near-term sentiment tailwind for BTC, but the continued lack of inflows into GBTC suggests the rebound may be concentrated in specific funds rather than broadly shared.
Bitcoin spot ETFs posted net inflows of $85.85M on June 12 (12 funds, no net outflows). BlackRock’s IBIT led with $57.69M inflow, while Fidelity’s FBTC added $18.00M. This comes as analysts argue the crypto market may have already bottomed, with Barclays/industry commentary pointing to a potential upside later this year.
At the same time, SpaceX (SPCX) began trading on Nasdaq and jumped 19% on its first day, reaching a $2T+ valuation. Several crypto venues processed SpaceX IPO subscriptions with different refund/compensation outcomes (e.g., Kraken refunds/compensation; Binance canceled an IPO-related event and later offered SPCXB compensation). Some tokenized or equity-linked products also show discount dynamics tied to lock-up constraints.
Macro/geo headlines add uncertainty for risk assets: Iran’s foreign minister said a US-Iran memorandum may be signed soon, while the US plans to invest $2B+ in quantum computing infrastructure aimed at breaking crypto systems like Bitcoin. Separately, Zimbabwe proposed stronger crypto business registration/fees, and China’s PBoC floated rules lowering personal CD subscription minimums.
For traders, the key signal is that Bitcoin spot ETFs remain bid (Bitcoin spot ETFs inflow), while the SpaceX IPO-related flows and “risk rotation” could affect short-term liquidity. In the near term, watch continued ETF net flows to confirm whether the market’s claimed bottom holds and whether any IPO-driven sell-pressure fades (Bitcoin spot ETFs inflow trend vs. outflow reversal).
ETH price prediction focus: Ethereum is testing a major support zone and traders are watching whether ETH can rebound.
Technicals cited by analysts Donald Dean and Don Wedge suggest ETH is near long-term support around $1,600–$2,000, overlapping a rising trendline that held since the 2022 bear-market lows. Dean notes the psychological $2,000 area has turned from support/resistance dynamics, and ETH is now trying to hold a cluster of lower support levels. Volume profile shows “volume shelves” around current prices that could attract buyers if defended.
Wedge’s long-term bullish structure (an ascending channel since 2017) projects a potential upside toward ~$35,350, with timing around April 2027—only if ETH maintains support inside the channel and reclaims higher resistance.
Key trading takeaway: this is a decision point. Holding the trendline and volume shelves supports a recovery thesis; a breakdown below them increases the risk of deeper downside. ETH price prediction therefore hinges on whether buyers defend the $1,600–$2,000 base and regain strength toward prior highs.
Neutral
ETH price predictionEthereum technical analysisSupport and resistanceCrypto market outlookLong-term bullish structure
A crypto observer says discussions around a Ripple-linked banking ecosystem and Bank of America are reviving the “hybrid payments” thesis for cross-border payments. The core idea is coexistence: SWIFT continues to handle secure messaging and compliance coordination, while blockchain rails are explored for faster settlement and optional on-demand liquidity (ODL).
In this model, Ripple technology could fit into existing banking workflows rather than replace SWIFT. ODL is designed to reduce the need for banks to pre-fund foreign accounts by using digital assets as a bridge between currencies. XRP can facilitate this in supported corridors, but the article stresses there is no publicly verified proof that XRP is embedded in Bank of America’s core payment rails.
The piece also notes SWIFT modernization via ISO 20022 messaging and moves toward interoperability. Ripple-linked infrastructure providers, such as GTreasury, appear in SWIFT’s certified partner ecosystem, suggesting operational overlap rather than a merger.
For traders, this is a narrative catalyst: it reinforces institutional experimentation around Ripple and blockchain-enabled settlement, yet it lacks confirmed scale deployment. Watch for concrete announcements tied to ODL corridors, regulatory approvals, and SWIFT integration milestones—these would be the strongest signals for XRP trading momentum.
World Cup 2026 crypto partnerships are taking center stage as FIFA builds a digital-asset layer around the tournament’s expanded 48-team format. On June 9, FIFA named Kraken as the Official Crypto Exchange Supporter, just before the group stage began. Its branding will appear across the event.
For on-chain betting infrastructure, FIFA’s first official prediction-market partner is ADI PredictStreet. It will cover all 104 matches using Chainlink oracle infrastructure. Chainlink price feeds are described as the data backbone that powers the settlement of bets and predictions across the whole tournament.
Scotland’s $SFA Fan Token is another focal point for crypto traders. Launched on Socios.com in May 2026 with a starting price of $1 and a total supply of 20 million tokens, $SFA gives holders engagement perks such as voting rights and exclusive content access. The article notes Haiti has no equivalent fan token or crypto sponsorship.
In Group C, Brazil, Morocco, Haiti, and Scotland compete, with the top two advancing. Because Scotland has an active fan token trading on a major platform, match outcomes—goals, scorers, and even red cards—could quickly move $SFA sentiment. With a relatively small fully diluted market cap of about $20 million, retail-driven volume spikes may have an outsized effect.
Overall, the World Cup 2026 crypto partnerships signal deeper mainstream alignment between exchanges, prediction markets, and fan-token ecosystems. Traders should watch short-term token volatility (especially $SFA) alongside oracle-related demand narratives for Chainlink, as tournament activity can generate continuous on-chain events throughout matchdays.
Neutral
World Cup 2026KrakenChainlinkFan tokensPrediction markets
Manchester United are reportedly chasing Newcastle left-back Lewis Hall, valuing him at £50M–£60M. The deal could also deliver a major windfall for Chelsea via a sell-on clause.
Hall was sold by Chelsea to Newcastle for £28M plus £7M in add-ons (total £35M). Newcastle then made the move permanent in July 2024. Hall is under contract until 2029, giving Newcastle strong leverage if offers come in during the summer.
United see Lewis Hall as a long-term solution at left-back and a potential successor to Luke Shaw. At 21, he has played 22 Premier League matches in 2025-26 for Newcastle, with 1 goal and 1 assist. Reports say Hall is open to the move, including because he has been excluded from the England national team.
The article notes rumours of tension between Hall and Eddie Howe, but sources deny a break-down and Hall has not submitted a transfer request. Newcastle also face missing European competition next season, which may reduce their ability to retain top young talent.
For Chelsea, the sell-on clause percentage is not confirmed publicly. However, if a fee reaches the upper end of the £60M valuation, Chelsea’s payoff could be substantial—effectively letting them earn again on a player developed in their academy.
Overall, the key trading-relevant takeaway is the potential for a large, deal-driven cash flow tied to Lewis Hall, with bargaining power concentrated with Newcastle until a price gap is closed.
Neutral
Football TransfersPremier LeagueLewis HallSell-on ClauseManchester United
Galaxy Research warns the Bitcoin price may not have finished its cycle bottom. Using market and on-chain metrics, the firm’s base-case floor for the Bitcoin price is $40,000–$46,000 by late 2026. Polymarket assigns a 32% chance of BTC falling to $40,000, versus a 30% chance of reaching $90,000. The firm notes only 4 of 13 historical bottom indicators are currently triggered, so confirmation is incomplete.
On-chain context supports a “still oversold” setup rather than a clear trend reversal. BTC is down about 51% from its October 2025 peak and remains roughly 14% above its cost basis, with MVRV near 1.14. Galaxy cites lower risk of deeper capitulation than prior cycles, but also notes that aSOPR is near the 0.96 support area; a stronger bottom would require aSOPR to reclaim and hold above 1.0 and for short-term holder MVRV to move back through 1.0.
Galaxy also highlights a key risk: the cost basis can fall during sell-offs. If panic leads to a ~10%–30% drop in realized cost basis, the potential floor could shift lower toward roughly $36,000, $32,000, or $28,000. Spot Bitcoin ETF flows and corporate treasury demand may support the floor, but they may not cushion sharp stress if outflows or “buy strength” behavior emerges.
Overall, this frames the Bitcoin price outlook as fragile into late 2026 unless additional on-chain confirmation appears.
Natus Vincere (NaVi) will face The MongolZ in a best-of-three at the IEM Cologne Major on June 13, 2026. The Stage 3 round-robin is crucial for bracket positioning.
NaVi enters the IEM Cologne Major with a 1-1 record, while The MongolZ are 2-1. A NaVi loss could push them toward 1-2, increasing pressure in their remaining matches. For The MongolZ, a win would strengthen an already strong Major showing and serve as a statement result.
The match features coaches Andrii “B1ad3” Horodenskyi (NaVi) and maaRaa (The MongolZ). Kickoff is expected at 05:00 or 11:00 CEST.
Recent history favors NaVi: at the 2025 IEM Cologne quarterfinals, NaVi beat The MongolZ 2-0. NaVi won Inferno in overtime (22-18) and then took Ancient 13-6.
Overall, every map can materially affect both teams’ path into the later elimination rounds.
Neutral
IEM Cologne MajorCounter-Strike 2NaVi vs The MongolZCS esportsBo3 bracket implications