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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

KuCoin to Stream Tomorrowland 2026 Live in Crypto Push Into Entertainment

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KuCoin says it will stream the official Tomorrowland Belgium 2026 broadcast directly inside the KuCoin app. The coverage will include both the Mainstage and Freedom Stage across two weekends, running July 17–19 and July 24–26. Users can access the stream via a dedicated Tomorrowland section, with daily broadcasts of about 11 hours starting at 14:00 UTC. KuCoin’s rights are tied to its existing status as Tomorrowland’s official exclusive crypto exchange and crypto payments partner. The festival’s lineup featured in the article includes David Guetta, Martin Garrix, Calvin Harris, Hardwell, Armin van Buuren, Alok, Sebastian Ingrosso, The Chainsmokers, and others. The report notes that KuCoin is building more than a one-off livestream. The partnership also includes a newly unveiled stage called Celestia, the return of branded “KuCoin Guardians” characters roaming the festival grounds, and anniversary-themed activations timed to KuCoin’s 9th birthday during the second weekend. CEO BC Wong frames the livestream as an extension of Tomorrowland’s “connection” ethos to KuCoin’s global user base—not just a technical add-on. However, the article cautions that brand goodwill does not always translate into new users or deposits, leaving the direct market impact uncertain. The broader takeaway: crypto firms are increasingly spending to embed in mainstream culture, betting recognition from entertainment may outperform routine trading-fee promotions.
Neutral
KuCoinTomorrowlandCrypto SponsorshipLive EntertainmentWeb3 Marketing

Bybit Wins Peru Blockchain Conference Awards and Promotes Web3 Payments

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Bybit, a top crypto exchange by trading volume, won two awards at Peru Blockchain Conference 2026: “Excellence in Innovation for Trading & Web3 Ecosystems” and “Best Strategic Leadership for Latin America.” The recognition highlights Bybit’s focus on product innovation, user experience, and expanding digital-asset adoption in Latin America. Patricio Mesri, Country Manager for Spanish-speaking Latin America at Bybit, participated in a panel on Peru’s crypto ecosystem and the outlook for regional adoption. He argued that long-term growth will rely on practical financial utility, not only investment returns, and stressed that education and trust are key. Bybit also showcased how its integrated platform links crypto to everyday finance, including international payments, spending via the Bybit Card, multiple payment methods, and earning on digital assets. The Bybit Card promotion includes 100% cashback on eligible subscription services such as Netflix and Spotify, plus 10% cashback on eligible purchases during the first month after activation. The news is framed as a sponsored press release, with Bybit positioning its approach around Web3 ecosystem development and financial inclusion across Latin America.
Neutral
Bybitcrypto exchangeWeb3 ecosystemsLatin America adoptionBybit Card cashback

Bitcoin Slides Back to $64K as Ethereum Pulls Under $1,900

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Bitcoin rose to a multi-week high above $65,500 after softer-than-expected US CPI data, but the rally faded and BTC slipped back to around $64,000. After peaking near $65,600, Bitcoin retraced roughly $1,500 and is now about $64K, with market cap around $1.285T and BTC dominance near 56.7%. Ethereum surged to nearly $1,950 for the first time in six weeks, then reversed and fell back below $1,900. The broader market was mixed: BNB edged higher near $580, while XRP struggled around $1.10. Several large names including SOL and ADA were red, while BCH and DEXE dropped the most among major coins. Sector-wise, ONDO stood out as the top performer, up about 17% to ~$0.37. Meanwhile, Pi Network (PI) declined again. Total crypto market cap fell by roughly $40B in a day, ending around $2.270T. Key drivers cited include renewed US–Iran strike tensions and Strategy’s latest BTC sale, both contributing to choppy price action after earlier CPI-led upside. Traders may expect volatility to persist as the market reassesses macro headlines and geopolitical risk.
Bearish
BitcoinEthereumUS CPIGeopolitical RiskMarket Volatility

Bitcoin Rejected at $65,600: Falling Wedge Signals Downside

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Bitcoin price stalled after rejecting the $65,600 horizontal resistance, threatening the continuation of the recent rally. Bulls now face a key test: shorter-term momentum is turning down, and without a sudden breakout, the “path of least resistance” appears bearish. Technically, the article highlights a falling wedge structure. The first major support is the top of the falling wedge—an area bulls must defend. A confirmed drop back into the wedge would imply Tuesday’s upside move was likely a fakeout. Below that, support levels are cited at around $63,000, followed by the bull-market trendline. The daily chart also notes firm support near the wedge top, supported by a horizontal level and the 50-day SMA, so a bounce is still possible. However, even if Bitcoin rebounds quickly, resistance around $66,000 may keep price range-bound, potentially extending into late August or beyond. The longer-duration scenario suggests a prior bear-market pattern could take until Q4 to end, with October flagged as the probable turning point. Overall, traders are watching whether Bitcoin can reclaim resistance or whether a wedge breakdown triggers further downside.
Bearish
BitcoinTechnical AnalysisFalling WedgeSupport/ResistanceBTC Price Outlook

South Korea Rate Hike Hits Crypto Risk Appetite as Liquidity Tightens

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South Korea has raised interest rates for the first time since January 2023, tightening monetary policy in a key retail-crypto market. The Bank of Korea increased its benchmark by 25 bps to 2.75% (from 2.50%) on July 16, citing stronger exports, persistent inflation and financial-stability risks. All seven members backed the move, and further hikes remain possible depending on inflation and growth. For traders, the direct setup is a potential decline in speculative demand. A South Korea rate hike typically lifts borrowing costs and can reduce the amount of won available for trading. This matters because South Korea’s crypto activity is driven heavily by retail flows into won-denominated altcoin pairs on major venues such as Upbit and Bithumb. Crypto demand had already weakened ahead of the policy change: holdings for local investors fell from about $83.3B in January 2025 to $41.4B by February 2026, while daily trading volume across five domestic exchanges dropped from roughly $11.6B (Dec 2024) to about $3B (Feb 2026). Exchange won deposits also declined (10.7T won to 7.8T won), suggesting reduced cash demand. A South Korea rate hike could add another layer of liquidity pressure if households rotate toward deposits or other yield-bearing assets. The Reuters poll expectation and central bank guidance also leave room for at least one more increase this year, potentially toward 3.00%, keeping market risk appetite sensitive to global liquidity and institutional flows. Notable market context from the article: recent Korean exchange listings included DRV (Derive) on Upbit (KRW/BTC/USDT) and a won trading pair addition on Bithumb.
Bearish
South Korea rate hikecrypto liquidityretail tradingBank of Koreawon-denominated markets

Tether’s $20M investment in Ualá expands USDT-backed fintech reach in Latin America

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Tether has reportedly invested $20 million in Argentine digital bank Ualá via its $197 million equity funding round announced in March, according to Bloomberg. Tether’s participation was disclosed by Ualá, but the exact amount was not previously stated; Bloomberg put it at $20M. The deal adds to Tether’s broader Latin America strategy. Earlier this month, Tether reportedly invested $20 million in Brazil’s Mercado Bitcoin to support blockchain infrastructure, tokenized assets, lending, and on-chain capital markets. It also led a $14 million Series A round for Argentina’s crypto payments platform Belo, aiming to expand crypto payment products and financial services. Beyond funding, Tether continues to push USDT for real-world payment use cases across the region. The article also notes a Bolivia proposal to recognize USDT alongside the boliviano and the US dollar in the payment system. Additionally, Tether is increasing enterprise focus: it led a $7 million round for Pact Labs to integrate its USAT stablecoin into U.S. payroll systems, and it references a cross-border treasury pilot by Hyundai Motor using USDT on Avalanche. Context for traders: USDT remains the largest stablecoin by market value, with the article citing a reported market capitalization of about $184.4 billion. Overall, the news reinforces Tether’s role in expanding stablecoin rails for payments and treasury workflows—likely supportive for demand sentiment around USDT, but not a direct token-specific catalyst.
Neutral
TetherUSDTStablecoinsLatin America fintechEnterprise payments

British Steel public ownership after nationalisation to protect jobs

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The UK government has completed the nationalisation of British Steel, bringing the company into public ownership. The move follows new legislation allowing ministers to take over steelmakers “in the public interest”. The government says the priority is to protect UK steel production, preserve skilled employment and secure the long-term future of the Scunthorpe steelworks. Scunthorpe employs about 2,700 people and supports wider supply-chain businesses in north Lincolnshire. Operational control was taken last year, but ownership remained with China’s Jingye Group. Jingye had warned the business was losing around £700,000 per day and is seeking compensation after the nationalisation. The UK government indicated it could limit or refuse compensation payments. Business Secretary Peter Kyle said British Steel now “belongs to the British people” and that the goal is to stabilise the firm and help build a more competitive, environmentally sustainable steel industry. The National Audit Office previously estimated keeping the Scunthorpe site operating cost the government about £1.3 million per day. Overall, this British Steel public ownership decision is framed as a jobs and strategic-industry intervention, with costs and compensation risk sitting with the state in the near term.
Neutral
UK governmentsteel nationalisationpublic ownershipjob protectionindustrial policy

SBF Clemency Rejected by US Senate as Trump Pardon Odds Fall

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The US Senate unanimously adopted a nonbinding resolution opposing SBF clemency for convicted former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. The measure (S. Res. 772) says Bankman-Fried should not receive executive clemency and frames it as a defense of the rule of law and the integrity of the US financial system after his FTX-linked fraud and conspiracy convictions. While a Senate simple resolution cannot block a presidential pardon, it signals strong legislative opposition to any SBF clemency request. Senators cited the continued political headwinds even after Bankman-Fried’s legal setbacks, and the latest push adds another layer of pressure for the clemency path. Bankman-Fried is serving a 25-year federal sentence for convictions tied to the 2022 FTX collapse (sentenced March 2024). After he applied for SBF clemency to President Donald Trump in June 2026, reports said the DOJ listed the request as pending. Market pricing remains skeptical: Polymarket shows Trump pardon odds below 1% as of late July, despite trading volume above $734,000—so attention is present, but expectations are muted. For crypto traders, this is mainly a governance/regulatory signal. The Senate’s stance may reduce uncertainty around the political odds for SBF clemency, but the impact on the broader market is likely limited because the resolution is nonbinding and the probability of a pardon is already priced very low.
Neutral
SBF clemencyUS SenateTrump pardon oddsFTX fraud casePolymarket

XRP Ledger Hits 8M Accounts as Whales Buy 70M XRP

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The XRP Ledger (XRPL) has surpassed 8 million activated accounts, a milestone highlighted by the XRP Ledger Foundation. Activated accounts hold the network’s minimum reserve, meaning users can send, receive, and use assets on-chain. The XRP Ledger’s growth signals broader real-world adoption beyond speculative use. On the utility side, the XRP Ledger is positioned as a fast, low-fee settlement layer now extending into tokenization, DeFi, stablecoins, and AI-powered finance. Tokenization is described as one of the fastest-growing XRPL use cases, with institutions issuing digital versions of real-world assets (e.g., bonds, private credit, real estate, and treasury products) to improve liquidity and settlement speed. The payments stack is also expanding via Ripple’s enterprise payment solutions and growing adoption of RLUSD, Ripple’s USD-backed stablecoin. Separately, on-chain analyst Ali Martinez reports whale wallets accumulated 70 million XRP over the past week, suggesting continued buy pressure during market consolidation. Traders also note XRP is trading within a falling wedge pattern; a decisive breakout above the wedge’s upper resistance could trigger renewed upside momentum. Overall, the XRP Ledger’s adoption metrics plus whale accumulation and a constructive technical setup may increase trader attention to XRP and XRPL-linked narratives (tokenization, stablecoins, and AI payments).
Bullish
XRP LedgerXRPWhale AccumulationTokenizationRLUSD

Japan to buy 27,500 Nvidia Rubin GPUs for Sovereign AI and robots

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Bloomberg reports a research estimate that Japan plans to purchase about 27,500 Nvidia Rubin GPUs to train domestic robot and “physical AI” foundational models. The move is positioned as a step toward Sovereign AI—reducing reliance on overseas cloud and AI technology by building local compute, data, and talent. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang visited Tokyo to discuss how Nvidia will support Japan’s Sovereign AI agenda. Huang said the Vera Rubin platform is already in production and that large-scale capacity is coming, addressing questions about rollout timing. Technically, Rubin is Nvidia’s next-generation AI platform, pairing Rubin GPUs with Vera CPUs, and includes a security architecture aimed at robotic deployments. On the policy side, Japan’s 5-year national AI plan—led by the Noetra alliance with companies including SoftBank, Sony, NEC, and Honda—has up to 1 trillion yen in backing and targets widespread robotic adoption by 2040 (aiming for 10 million AI robots). Overall, this is a state-level push for Sovereign AI infrastructure, with major near-term demand signals for advanced AI chips tied to robotics and on-prem/controlled compute.
Neutral
Sovereign AINvidia RubinJapan AI policyPhysical AI robotsAI chips demand

Bitcoin Bottom: Analysts Flag $38K–$39K Low Window

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Analysts say investors shouldn’t obsess over the exact Bitcoin bottom. While BTC has rebounded about 3% this week and is trading slightly below $65,000, historical drawdown patterns suggest the next leg could still push lower. BTC is down nearly 50% from its Oct. 6, 2025 all-time high of $126,000 and hit a cycle low of $57,700 on July 1 during a quarter-end period. The selloff lasted more than 268 days, but the recovery so far looks mild. NYDIG highlighted a four-year cycle framework, comparing the current downturn’s length and depth with past reset years. In prior major drawdowns, BTC took 363 and 376 days to bottom, with peak-to-trough declines of 84.3% and 77.6%. Using that same duration and a progressively “shallower” decline, NYDIG’s scenario points to a potential Bitcoin bottom around $38,000–$39,000 in early October (not a base case). Another analyst, Ali Martinez, urged traders not to obsess over timing. He noted that when BTC trades near its 200-week moving average, it has historically become a strong long-term buy zone, even if few investors catch the absolute bottom. Martinez also argues that as Bitcoin matures and returns diminish, investors may need more capital for similar gains, but the current area remains attractive for long-term accumulation. Overall, the debate continues on where the Bitcoin bottom will ultimately form, with some forecasts placing it closer to $40,000–$48,000 in Sep–Oct 2026.
Neutral
BitcoinBitcoin BottomFour-Year Cycle200-Week Moving AverageLong-Term Accumulation

Prediction Markets vs Options: Why “Identical” Contracts Price Differ

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Prediction Markets vs Options can refer to the same yes/no event and the same $1 threshold payoff, yet prices often diverge. The article explains why the wedge is structural rather than a rounding error. Key drivers include: (1) not-quite-identical contract terms—resolution timestamp, tie-breakers, “over vs over-or-equal,” and early close/auto-resolution rules can change realized payoffs; (2) risk-neutral vs real-world pricing—binary options embed discounting and risk premia, while prediction markets are closer to traders’ beliefs and may not apply the same carry math; (3) funding, collateral, and fees—stablecoin yields, margin haircuts, borrow/shorting constraints, and maker/taker schedules move the fair value, especially for longer-dated events; (4) microstructure and bots—order flow concentration can pin prices away from textbook probabilities; and (5) regulation and venue risk—KYC/venue walls and policy/legal overhangs add resolution risk premia that limit arbitrage. Bitcoin threshold evidence cited in the piece shows persistent gaps even after benchmark “mapping”: - ~5.6 percentage points mean difference (Sep 2023 threshold over 214 hourly observations) - ~6.3 points when pooling Binance-compatible markets - ~11 points in a Deribit extension Practical trading takeaway: before attempting to trade the spread in Prediction Markets vs Options, match exact contract text (time, index/source, tie-breakers/appeals), adjust for discounting/carry and fees, verify you can hedge both legs, and monitor last-hour microstructure near 50/50. Named figures and references: author Idris Calloway; studies linked via arXiv; venue/policy context including Kalshi and CFTC/Court-related headlines.
Neutral
Prediction MarketsBinary OptionsArbitrage FrictionsMicrostructure & BotsCrypto Derivatives

TSMC stock surges on Q2 profit jump and AI demand

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TSMC stock rose about 1.2% after the Taiwan-based chipmaker reported record Q2 results that beat analyst expectations, supported by strong AI demand. Revenue reached NT$1.27 trillion (about $39.45B), slightly above the LSEG SmartEstimates forecast of NT$1.264T. Net income climbed 77.4% year over year to NT$706.56B, and profit was also up 23.4% from the prior quarter—extending TSMC’s streak of record quarterly earnings to five consecutive quarters. Management said demand tied to artificial intelligence remains “extremely robust,” with major customers seeking additional advanced manufacturing capacity. For the quarter’s outlook, TSMC forecast Q3 revenue of $44.6B–$45.8B and an operating margin of 56%–58%. TSMC also announced an additional $100B investment in Arizona, bringing total planned investment in the state to $265B. The expansion is aimed at building more fabs for 2-nanometer mass production and advanced packaging facilities for leading US customers. On the technology mix, advanced nodes drove results: 7-nanometer and smaller processes accounted for 77% of wafer revenue. 5-nanometer chips contributed 33% of Q2 revenue, while 3-nanometer accounted for another 30%, according to CFO Wendell Huang.
Neutral
TSMCAI demandsemiconductorsearningsArizona investment

BitMEX Lowers Initial and Maintenance Margin for XAG, BRENT, MSTR, QQQ

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BitMEX announced that on 16 July 2026 at 06:00 UTC it will reduce the base Initial Margin and Base Maintenance Margin requirements for XAGUSDT, BRENTUSDT, MSTRUSDT and QQQUSDT. The change applies to new positions and new orders, and to any leverage or Risk Limit adjustments on existing positions/orders. Under all Risk Limits, Base Maintenance Margin will fall to 0.5% and Base Initial Margin will fall to 1.00% for the affected contracts. BitMEX said the practical effects are: - Lower initial margin: bankruptcy price moves closer to average entry price, and maximum leverage available increases. - Lower maintenance margin: liquidation price moves closer to bankruptcy price, and the maintenance margin lost at liquidation decreases. - The gap between initial margin and maintenance margin shrinks, which should tighten liquidation dynamics around entry levels. This is a derivatives listing/product update rather than a spot or protocol change. Traders focused on BitMEX perpetuals and leveraged futures may find it easier to open larger size or manage risk with improved margin efficiency, depending on their leverage and risk limits.
Bullish
BitMEXInitial MarginMaintenance MarginPerpetuals & LeverageRisk Management

ZachXBT Calls Hardware Wallets “Garbage,” Targets Ledger Over Frequent Updates

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On-chain investigator ZachXBT said current hardware wallets are unsuitable for “critical” crypto use, calling them “complete garbage” in a Telegram post. He argued users should not rely on hardware wallets for important transaction signing or to store large balances. Instead, ZachXBT suggested an operational setup using a dedicated iPhone used only for crypto. ZachXBT’s strongest criticism was aimed at Ledger, naming the company “the worst.” He claimed frequent updates to Ledger Live can “break simple actions,” citing issues with UI/app updates. The post does not present evidence of a new breach or compromise of private-key protections. Ledger responded by rebranding Ledger Live as “Ledger Wallet.” Ledger said Ledger Wallet v4.8.0 (June 11) included security improvements, interface changes and bug fixes, and it continues to promote hardware-based signing to keep private keys isolated from internet-connected devices. ZachXBT’s warning aligns with ongoing scam trends: attackers have repeatedly targeted hardware wallet owners via social engineering and fake applications rather than by breaking wallet cryptography. The article references: - A January hardware wallet social-engineering incident where a victim lost $282M in BTC and LTC after attackers moved funds quickly and converted part into XMR. - An April fake “Ledger Live” app on the Apple App Store that stole at least $9.5M from 50+ victims after users entered recovery phrases; Apple later removed the app. Overall, the debate is about “hardware wallets” vs tighter device separation (a dedicated crypto-only phone). Either approach still leaves users exposed to phishing, fake apps, and recovery-phrase theft.
Neutral
hardware walletsLedgercrypto scamssocial engineeringself-custody security

Trump to Meet Senators on the CLARITY Act Before August Recess

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US President Donald Trump will meet several senators at the White House to brief on progress toward the CLARITY Act, a US crypto market structure bill, ahead of the August recess. Senator Bernie Moreno said senators will update Trump on the bill and its “path to success”, with Senator Cynthia Lummis also expected to attend. Lawmakers are trying to secure a revised draft quickly and push the CLARITY Act to a Senate floor vote next week, aiming to clear the Senate before the recess. Negotiators are targeting agreement by the end of the week. This push is also seen as the last realistic window before the midterm election cycle. Market pricing is moving, but confidence remains uneven. Kalshi traders raised the probability of a Senate vote before the August recess to 79% (from 68.8%), but set the chance of the CLARITY Act becoming law at 36% for 2026 and 62% before end-2027. Polymarket estimates a 39% chance of the bill being signed into law this year. For crypto traders, the near-term catalyst is the approach toward a potential Senate vote on the CLARITY Act. However, political and ethics-related friction still increases headline-driven volatility risk.
Neutral
CLARITY ActUS crypto regulationSenate vote timingMarket structurePrediction markets

Hyperion DeFi to Deploy 500K HYPE for Hyperliquid HIP-3 Markets

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Nasdaq-listed Hyperion DeFi says it has agreed with Skew Technologies to deploy 500,000 HYPE tokens to support institutional perpetual futures markets on Hyperliquid’s HIP-3 permissionless listings. Under the deal, Hyperion receives an equity stake in Skew and a share of listing-service revenue generated through the platform. The service is aimed at letting institutional clients launch custom perpetual futures markets using Hyperliquid infrastructure. Hyperion CEO Hyunsu Jung said demand continued as teams globally looked to launch and distribute new markets via HIP-3. The Hyperliquid HIP-3 framework enables developers to create custom perpetual markets by posting HYPE as bonded capital—expanding token utility beyond staking. For traders, the key development is the renewed demand channel for HYPE: 500K HYPE is being positioned as bonded capital to power institutional perp market creation on Hyperliquid. If more teams adopt HIP-3, HYPE’s ecosystem usage could increase alongside activity in perpetual futures markets.
Bullish
HYPEHyperliquidHIP-3Perpetual FuturesDeFi Partnerships

ROLL Token Unlock to Hit July 16: Micro-Cap Float Shock at 27.8%

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Trackers say the ROLL token unlock is scheduled for July 16, 2026, with reported sizes ranging from ~33.33M to ~43.06M ROLL. KuCoin Insight links the event to about 27.8% of circulating supply, while other trackers cite a smaller range. CoinGecko shows ROLL trading near $0.055 with a circulating supply around 155M and a market cap near $8.5M, and daily volume is very thin (roughly $100k–$120k). For traders, the key issue is whether the ROLL token unlock can be absorbed by a micro-cap order book. If recipients sell into thin liquidity, slippage risk is high and volatility can spike—wide spreads and sharp downside moves are possible even without a guaranteed “dump.” The article highlights typical signals to monitor: exchange inflows from vesting addresses, order-book depth on main venues, and any team messaging about selling constraints or OTC arrangements. Because the unlock size estimates differ (contract/accounting differences and “circulating” definitions), the practical trading approach is to plan for the upper bound, reduce size versus normal, and use limit orders/laddered execution instead of market sells. Watch perps/funding and basis if leverage exists, since leverage-driven liquidations can amplify moves. Bottom line: this is a high-beta event. In past micro-cap unlocks, thin liquidity often turns “supply timing” into the dominant price driver until absorption (via OTC, market makers, or lockups) is confirmed.
Bearish
Token UnlockMicro-Cap LiquidityVesting SupplyOrder Book VolatilityOTC/Exchange Inflows

CLARITY Act Advances: Stablecoin “Rails” and Easier DeFi Yield

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The article argues that the CLARITY Act is a key step toward a more “legible” crypto market structure. It notes the House passed H.R. 3633 on July 17, 2025 (294–134), the Senate Banking Committee advanced its version on May 14, 2026 (15–9), and the process was still active as of July 6, 2026. For trading and DeFi adoption, the core claim is that clearer rules under the CLARITY Act can increase institutional comfort—especially around stablecoins—shifting them from “just trading instruments” toward regulated financial infrastructure. As an example, on June 30, 2026, Open Standard launched Open USD, citing 140+ signed businesses across payments, banking, technology, and crypto, including Visa, Stripe, Mastercard, American Express, BlackRock, BNY, Google, Shopify, Coinbase, Base, Aave, and others. The article further links CLARITY Act–driven stability to a user-facing trend: DeFi yield packaged in simpler vault experiences. It highlights Coinbase’s June 11, 2026 update on Base, adding two USDC vault options powered by Morpho and curated by Steakhouse: a Core USDC Vault with “blue-chip” collateral (BTC/ETH), and a High Yield USDC Vault using broader dynamic collateral, including Ethena-powered assets. Takeaway for traders: if the CLARITY Act helps unlock institutional rails and makes yield entry/exit information clearer, flows may concentrate into yield products built around USDC and major collateral—though the article also stresses that APY alone can hide risk, so transparency in exit liquidity and underlying collateral remains crucial.
Bullish
CLARITY ActStablecoinsDeFi YieldUSDC VaultsRegulation

Cryptocurrency Money Laundering Charges Target Calif. Drug Ring

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US prosecutors say a California duo, Nicholas Aguilar and Jessica Marcolina, ran a darknet drug operation allegedly using cryptocurrency money laundering to profit from fentanyl and meth sales. The indictment claims they operated vendor accounts under “HotGirlzClub” across darknet marketplaces and shipped more than 500 drug parcels nationwide over a seven-month period in 2025. Authorities allege the cryptocurrency money laundering involved transactions designed to obscure the origin of drug proceeds before law enforcement identified the operation. Searches reportedly found drug packaging materials, suspected narcotics residue in a food processor, and firearms. Prosecutors also accused the pair of running an illegal firearms manufacturing setup, producing ghost guns, suppressors, and firearm receivers. If convicted, each defendant faces up to life in prison on drug trafficking conspiracy charges and up to 20 years for conspiracy to commit money laundering. The case is part of broader US and international actions targeting crypto-linked narcotics and money laundering. Recent examples cited include Treasury OFAC sanctions tied to converting fentanyl cash into crypto for the Sinaloa Cartel, indictments involving fentanyl precursor chemicals and crypto laundering, and overseas blockchain forensics used to trace Bitcoin-linked drug proceeds. In Ireland, authorities recovered and seized a wallet holding 500 Bitcoin tied to a convicted drug dealer after years of inaccessibility.
Bearish
cryptocurrency money launderingdarknet marketsUS DOJ enforcementfentanyl and methblockchain forensics

IRGC claims destruction of US assets at Bahrain’s Sheikh Isa airbase

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The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) says it destroyed key US military assets at Bahrain’s Sheikh Isa Airbase under “Operation True Promise 4.” The IRGC claims destruction of the air detection and control radar and the fuel tank pumping station used by US fighter jets. The group frames the strike as retaliation for US and Israeli actions on Iranian soil and warns it aims to disrupt US air operations in the Gulf. The IRGC claims destruction of US military assets, but neither the US nor Bahrain has confirmed the extent of the damage, and independent verification is still pending. Market-related takeaways in the report suggest pricing may reflect a higher probability of further Iranian actions against Gulf states, which could raise regional instability risk. What to watch includes official responses from the US and Bahrain, potential diplomatic mediation efforts by regional actors such as Qatar or Oman, and any follow-on actions such as Iran’s possible airspace closure. Until confirmation arrives, traders may treat this as a headline-driven, uncertainty-heavy escalation risk rather than confirmed damage.
Neutral
IRGCBahrain airbaseGulf escalation riskUS-Iran tensionsGeopolitical headlines

US-Iran deal risk rises as Iran threatens regional strikes

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Iran’s Brigadier General Ebrahim Zolfaghari, spokesman for the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, warned that Iran will retaliate by targeting regional infrastructure if the US attacks Iran’s infrastructure. The warning comes amid a US-Iran conflict that has intensified after the collapse of a ceasefire earlier this year. Zolfaghari’s comments suggest Iran may shift toward striking targets that could include civilian infrastructure in response to future US actions. Both sides have conducted military strikes, raising the risk of further regional destabilization. For traders watching macro and risk sentiment, the key market takeaway is how this could affect the probability of a US-Iran deal in 2026. Prediction market pricing indicates a 10% expected decline in the likelihood of a US-Iran deal that includes Iran Reconstruction Funding. Recent activity shows a steady 26% YES probability for the US-Iran deal in 2026, although odds have fluctuated during the past week. What to watch next: further US-Iran military developments and additional Iranian official statements. Any renewed diplomatic efforts or mediation involving Qatar and Pakistan, as well as US and Iranian negotiators, could change the perceived probability of a US-Iran deal. Keyword focus: US-Iran deal and US-Iran conflict remain tightly linked to market sentiment, with escalation risk currently weighing on expectations.
Bearish
US-Iran dealIran-US conflictgeopolitical riskprediction marketsdiplomacy

Hyperliquid and USDC: on-platform reserve income share reshapes DeFi stablecoin economics

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Hyperliquid has switched from its own USDH unit to USDC and, in a new arrangement, is reportedly capturing most of the reserve income generated by USDC balances routed through its trading venue. JPMorgan analysts (via CoinDesk) estimated Hyperliquid holds about $6B USDC (~8% of total USDC float). Under the setup, Coinbase treats USDC on Hyperliquid as “on-platform,” collects the reserve yield, and pays roughly 90% of that income to Hyperliquid—shifting stablecoin seigniorage from issuers toward venues that aggregate users and trading flows. This change is tied to Hyperliquid’s operational sunset of USDH on June 20, 2026, with Across Protocol enabling fee-free 1:1 USDH→USDC conversions on HyperEVM for remaining balances. The article also cites Dune research: about $5.4B USDC on HyperEVM by end-June 2026, with ~88% concentrated in a single reserve/deployer address that supplies Hyperliquid’s trading flow. Regulatory attention is highlighted: the SEC Crypto Task Force met with Hyperliquid-linked representatives on July 14, 2026, focusing on on-chain derivatives and market structure—underscoring scrutiny over how reserve income is classified and how platform risk maps to customer protections. For traders, the immediate market relevance is whether USDC liquidity routing tightens spreads and improves perps depth on Hyperliquid, versus whether single-venue concentration and potential regulatory reinterpretation raise tail risks. Key watch items include USDC balances/concentration on HyperEVM, perp spreads and funding, and any issuer/venue “copycat” reserve-income deals.
Neutral
USDCHyperliquidStablecoin economicsOn-platform reserve yieldSEC regulation

Iran Issues ’Red Line’ Warning to U.S. Over Strait of Hormuz Blockade

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Iran’s military command warned the U.S. that any interference in the Strait of Hormuz is a “red line” for Tehran, escalating tensions in a US-Iran conflict that began earlier this year after US-Israeli airstrikes. The standoff has already included a U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports and Iran’s closure of the Strait, a key shipping chokepoint. Iran signaled it may take direct action against U.S. naval forces if they attempt to breach the blockade or escort vessels through the strait. Market expectations for ending the Iranian blockade have weakened. The probability priced by markets for a resolution by July 24 is 10.5%, while the chance for an end by August 31 rises to 43%, suggesting growing uncertainty and a lower likelihood of a near-term U.S. announcement ending the blockade. Key names to watch include President Trump and U.S. Central Command, along with any further statements from Iranian officials. Traders may react to new military developments or diplomatic signals that could shift expectations on the blockade timeline. For crypto traders, the main link is macro risk: higher geopolitical escalation typically drives volatility, risk-off positioning, and sensitivity to liquidity and energy-shipping headlines—often affecting majors and broader market breadth.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzU.S.-Iran tensionsnaval blockadegeopolitical riskcrypto macro volatility

US sanctions IRGC-linked network amid Strait of Hormuz tensions

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The US has imposed sanctions on an IRGC-connected network accused of procuring weapons and drone components via entities in Iran, Italy, and Russia. The announcement comes as Strait of Hormuz tensions rise and Iran’s actions disrupt maritime traffic. The market reaction suggests US sanctions are worsening the outlook for a US-Iran nuclear agreement by the key dates cited in the article. The implied probability for a deal has fallen versus the previous weeks, reflecting growing skepticism among traders about a near-term diplomatic breakthrough. The sanctions add to an escalation involving the US, Israel and Iran, including a reinstated US naval blockade earlier this year. Traders should watch for statements from Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and US President Donald J. Trump, since renewed negotiation signals could quickly shift pricing. Near-term price action may remain sensitive to developments in the Strait of Hormuz, where geopolitical shocks can affect expectations for diplomacy and broader risk sentiment. This is the clearest direct takeaway for traders monitoring macro risk premia alongside geopolitical headlines.
Bearish
US sanctionsIRGCStrait of HormuzUS-Iran nuclear dealgeopolitical risk

ZachXBT slams hardware wallets; BTC holds near $65,000

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Blockchain investigator ZachXBT criticized hardware wallets on Thursday, calling them unreliable for signing transactions and for storing meaningful funds. He said today’s hardware wallet solutions fall short on both security and usability for “high-stakes” use. ZachXBT’s alternative proposal is to use a dedicated iPhone only as a signing device, stripped down for wallet-related functions. He argued this setup can improve control and reduce vulnerabilities, though he framed it with a joking caveat. He also singled out Ledger as a “worst offender,” citing frequent Ledger Live updates that change the UI and apps, sometimes breaking basic functions. Market check: BTC traded steadily near $65,000 following South Korea’s rate hike. No major immediate market move was attributed in the article to the hardware wallet comments, but the controversy is likely to influence trader sentiment around self-custody practices.
Neutral
ZachXBThardware walletsself-custody securityLedger LiveBitcoin price

Arthur Hayes Buys ETH Above $1,900 After Selling at $1,700

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Ethereum (ETH) surged above $1,900, hitting a multi-week peak, as on-chain data pointed to renewed whale accumulation. Arthur Hayes (BitMEX co-founder) spent about $2.5M to buy 1,293 ETH at prices above $1,900, after previously selling his ETH stash when ETH fell below $1,700. In mid-June, Hayes accumulated 5,900 ETH for about $10.58M, then disposed of the entire position (and more) for around $10M roughly a day later, booking a loss of over $600k—raising concerns that he is effectively buying higher and selling lower. Broader whale flows also supported the ETH bid. Lookonchain reported that three newly created wallets withdrew nearly $58M worth of ETH from Coinbase Prime. Separately, wallets linked to Abraxas Capital rotated capital by withdrawing 8,153 ETH (about $15.3M) from Binance and Bybit and depositing 618 BTC (about $40M) into Kraken, then using part of that capital to add more ETH. Overall, ETH remains the central theme of the rally, reinforced by large transfers from exchanges and big buys from high-profile and newly active participants.
Bullish
EthereumArthur HayesETH whale accumulationOn-chain dataBitMEX

Iran military strikes hit Khandab city and Semnan airport

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Iran has reported new Iran military strikes targeting Khandab city and Semnan airport, with no confirmed casualties, according to Middle East Eye. The locations are linked to Iran’s nuclear and missile programmes, raising the risk of further escalation in the US–Israel conflict with Iran after a brief June ceasefire collapsed. The article frames the strikes as part of strategic attacks on key Iranian infrastructure aimed at weakening Tehran’s military capabilities. It also points to market signals that investors are shifting toward concerns about regime stability: the probability of the Iranian regime falling before 2027 is priced at 8.5% (YES). In airspace closure markets, traders appear to price continued tension, with a 34% (YES) probability for full airspace closure by July 31. What to watch next includes any additional Iran military strikes, coalition shifts against Iranian infrastructure, and signs of political unrest or defections within Iran’s military ranks. It also highlights that statements from US or Iranian officials on ceasefire talks or military strategy could rapidly change expectations and repricing in prediction-style markets.
Bearish
Iran military strikesUS-Israel conflictGeopolitical riskPrediction marketsAviation disruption

South China Sea Code of Conduct talks progress as ASEAN targets 2026 deal

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The Philippines’ Foreign Ministry says momentum is building in South China Sea Code of Conduct (COC) talks with China. As ASEAN chair, Manila aims to finalize the South China Sea Code of Conduct by the end of 2026. The negotiations involve ASEAN members and China, addressing territorial disputes tied to the Paracel Islands and Second Thomas Shoal. The talks follow a year-long freeze and focus on de-escalation. Officials are also discussing joint oil and gas development and better coast guard communication. Market pricing signals easing risk: the probability of a China–Philippines military clash fell from 12% to 10.5% over the past 24 hours. What to watch: any legal text or agreements, especially on geographic scope and how rights for non-ASEAN parties are handled. Observers will track actions by President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. and China’s Xi Jinping, plus any increase in joint activities or diplomatic engagement that could shift market perceptions. For traders, the key takeaway is that progress on the South China Sea Code of Conduct points to lower near-term conflict risk, which typically reduces geopolitical shock premiums across risk assets.
Neutral
South China Sea COCPhilippines-China de-escalationASEAN negotiationsmilitary clash oddsjoint oil and gas talks