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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

STRC hits record low as Bitcoin falls below $60K, triggering liquidations

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Strategy’s Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock (STRC) sank to a record low on Friday during a broad crypto selloff. STRC hit an intraday low of $90.40, then recovered to around $93.40. The move marks the weakest level since its July 2025 debut and adds stress to Strategy’s financing model. The product targets trading near its $100 par amount, with Strategy able to adjust the dividend rate monthly. STRC currently implies an 11.50% annualized dividend on the $100 stated value, but the rate can rise or fall. IBD reported the latest drop could push the dividend rate to at least 11.75%, potentially increasing annual financing costs by roughly $26 million on its $10.5B STRC issuance. Crypto weakness was led by Bitcoin, which briefly fell below $60,000 (lowest since Oct 2024) before rebounding. Bitcoin was around $62,000 at the time of writing, down about 3% over 24 hours. Total crypto market capitalization fell about 3% to roughly $2.2T, the lowest since Oct 2024. Derivatives markets amplified the move: CoinGlass recorded about $1.72B in liquidations over 24 hours, including ~$1.41B long liquidations and ~$305M short liquidations, as leveraged traders were forced out. Strategy shares also slid, hitting about $114 (lowest since Feb 2026) before recovering to around $120. The price weakness follows Strategy’s disclosure earlier this week that it sold 32 BTC between May 26 and May 31 for about $2.5M to fund preferred stock distributions—its first Bitcoin sale in years.
Bearish
STRCBitcoin selloffcrypto liquidationsderivatives riskStrategy financing

Trump’s $700M Coal Investment via Defense Production Act

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US President Donald Trump announced a $700 million coal investment package on June 4, using the Defense Production Act (DPA) to bypass the normal budget process and direct federal support to coal infrastructure. Coal investment details include about $425 million routed through the Defense Production Act to back 13 existing coal plants across states such as West Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arizona, Arkansas, Oklahoma, North Dakota, and Wisconsin. The plan also funds two new coal-fired plants—one in Alaska and one in West Virginia—plus a restart of a shuttered facility in Maryland. In total, the administration says the coal investment will protect 14 coal plants and 42 coal mines. The package also allocates over $75 million for a new export terminal in Oakland, California, aimed at shipping US coal to Asian markets, specifically Japan and South Korea. Policy context: Trump framed the move as part of an energy emergency and echoed “clean, beautiful coal” messaging. The DPA is designed for wartime mobilization, giving the executive branch authority to steer industrial output without waiting for Congress. Market backdrop: the coal industry has faced structural pressure as natural gas became cheaper through fracking and as renewables’ costs fell over the past decade. For traders, the direct impact on crypto is essentially zero because the article describes no tokenized credits, blockchain components, or any digital-asset integration tied to this coal investment.
Neutral
TrumpDefense Production Actcoal investmentenergy policycrypto market impact

Zcash (ZEC) plunges 50% after Orchard bug and Arthur Hayes selloff

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Zcash (ZEC) has crashed nearly 50% from its recent peak after Shielded Labs confirmed a critical Orchard shielded pool vulnerability. The issue raised fears that unlimited counterfeit ZEC could have been created before an emergency fix, reviving supply-integrity uncertainty and driving panic selling. ZEC hit an intraday low of $264.80 on June 5. Arthur Hayes also added to the shock: the BitMEX co-founder said he fully exited his ZEC position on X, arguing privacy “demands perfection.” Market structure looks mixed. On-chain data (Lookonchain) shows a whale withdrew 37,316 ZEC (about $13.1M) from Binance soon after the selloff, suggesting dip-buy interest. But derivatives were hit hard: CoinGlass reported ZEC liquidations around $82M, indicating a sharp leverage unwind. After a rebound toward ~$380, Zcash remains technically bearish. Key levels are ~$356 support, then resistance near ~$420, ~$471, and ~$523. If ZEC fails to hold above ~$356, traders may see renewed weakness toward the $300 zone and potentially the ~$253 low, keeping Orchard-related risk prominent.
Bearish
ZcashOrchard vulnerabilityforced liquidationswhale accumulationArthur Hayes

FairGambling launches provably fair crypto casino analytics & verified reviews

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FairGambling has launched a public platform combining on-chain crypto casino analytics with provably fair verification tools for players. It also publishes independent crypto casino reviews and aggregates live bonus code feeds, plus an extra rewards program. Key features include real-time tracking of deposits and hot-wallet activity across 50+ supported crypto casino operators, and a provably fair verifier that lets users independently check game outcomes. The platform says it now tracks $45B+ in crypto casino deposit flow in real time, out of a market that saw $80B+ in deposits last year. Coverage includes 40+ operators such as Stake, Roobet, Shuffle, BC.Game, Gamdom, Bitcasino, 1win, Winna, Thrill and Duel. For traders, this is an industry transparency/tooling update rather than a direct token or liquidity catalyst. It may slightly improve sentiment around provably fair crypto gambling experiences, but it should not change core token supply, leverage, or broader market fundamentals. FairGambling is live worldwide subject to local laws and eligibility requirements, and it does not accept bets or process gambling transactions.
Neutral
crypto casino analyticsprovably fairrakeback rewardson-chain transparencygambling verification

Gold steady ahead of Nonfarm Payrolls as Fed policy cues loom

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Gold prices held steady in Asian trading as investors paused for Friday’s US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP), seen as the key signal for the Federal Reserve’s next move. Spot gold hovered near $2,020/oz in a tight range after a modest earlier decline. Traders are watching Nonfarm Payrolls for three metrics: headline job growth, average hourly earnings, and the unemployment rate. Consensus calls for about 180,000 new jobs, with wage growth cooling slightly. Any sizable upside or downside vs estimates could trigger sharp price swings, and revisions to prior months’ data will also be scrutinized. The market link is straightforward: gold is a non-yielding asset, and US rate expectations drive real interest rates. A stronger Nonfarm Payrolls print could strengthen a hawkish Fed narrative and push rate-cut expectations further out, raising the opportunity cost of holding gold and weighing on prices. A weaker report could revive hopes for earlier easing, which typically supports gold. Overall, gold’s near-term direction likely hinges on the Nonfarm Payrolls release and the resulting expectations for the Fed’s upcoming meeting. Traders should be prepared for volatility immediately after the data, with either a continuation of the current range or a breakout.
Neutral
Nonfarm PayrollsFederal ReserveGoldUS interest ratesMacro data

New Zealand Dollar Slumps as US NFP Lifts Fed Rate-Hold Bets (NZD/USD)

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The New Zealand Dollar (NZD) hit a two-month low versus the US Dollar after stronger-than-expected US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP). The NZD/USD pair broke below key support at 0.5950, after the US economy added 303,000 jobs in March versus 200,000 expected. The unemployment rate fell to 3.8%, and average hourly earnings rose 0.3% m/m. The stronger US labor market boosted demand for the greenback and pushed the US Dollar Index (DXY) to a five-month high. Traders now expect the Federal Reserve to keep rates higher for longer, tightening interest-rate differentials between the US and New Zealand. For the New Zealand Dollar outlook, the article highlights that NZD remains sensitive to global risk sentiment and commodity prices, and it is also pressured by concerns about China’s recovery (a key demand driver for New Zealand dairy and agricultural exports). If selling continues, traders watch a potential downside path from the NZD/USD break under 0.5950 toward 0.5850, a support area last seen in late 2023. Next week’s US inflation data is the immediate catalyst. Any signs of sticky inflation could reinforce Dollar strength and keep the New Zealand Dollar under pressure. Overall, the repricing of US rate-cut expectations is the main driver for the FX move.
Bearish
New Zealand DollarUS Nonfarm PayrollsFed interest ratesNZD/USDFX risk sentiment

DBS Warns South Korean Won Under Pressure as Semiconductors Pull Back

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DBS Group Research said the South Korean won (KRW) is facing renewed headwinds as the global semiconductor sector cools. A pullback in memory-chip demand is weighing on Korea’s export-driven economy. DBS noted that semiconductors make up about 20% of South Korea’s exports. Softer demand from consumer electronics and data-centre markets reduces foreign currency inflows, which weakens the South Korean won. The KRW has already weakened past 1,330 per US dollar, a level last seen in early November, accelerating after chipmakers issued softer forward guidance. Beyond semiconductors, DBS highlighted two additional pressure points: a narrowing trade balance and reduced capital inflows. While South Korea still runs a surplus, the margin has thinned as energy import costs stay elevated and export growth decelerates. Separately, foreign investors have trimmed exposure to Korean equities in recent weeks, adding to depreciation pressure on the South Korean won. DBS concluded that unless chip demand rebounds quickly, the won may remain under pressure in the near term. The currency move has mixed effects for markets: a weaker South Korean won can help exporters’ competitiveness (e.g., autos and shipbuilding) but raises input costs for importers reliant on energy, raw materials, and food. Traders will likely watch upcoming trade data and central-bank signals for further direction on KRW momentum.
Bearish
South Korean wonDBS Group ResearchSemiconductor sectorFX capital flowsTrade balance

XAG/USD Slumps Toward 200-Day SMA as $61 Support Tests

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Silver prices (XAG/USD) extend their decline, falling toward the 200-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) near $61.00. After breaking below $63.00, sell pressure intensified as stops were triggered and new short positions built. Technically, the 200-day SMA is around $60.80. A decisive break below it could expose deeper downside toward the $58.00 area (100-day SMA). Daily RSI has slipped below 40, suggesting bearish momentum is strengthening but silver is not yet oversold. MACD has turned negative, confirming a bearish medium-term shift. Fundamentals add pressure. The article cites global risk-off sentiment, a stronger U.S. dollar (linked to hawkish Fed signals and resilient data), and weaker industrial demand concerns. China manufacturing data is described as showing slowing activity, raising fears for silver use in electronics and solar. For traders, the $61.00 zone is both psychological and technical: it aligns with the 200-day SMA and the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the Oct 2023 low to May 2024 high. Holding above $61.00 and reclaiming $62.00 would support the idea of trend defense. A daily close below $60.50 would confirm breakdown risk, with volume expected to determine whether any move is a true breakout or a false break. Overall, XAG/USD’s $61 test is framed as a pivotal level likely to set the tone for the coming weeks.
Bearish
XAG/USDSilver Price Forecast200-Day SMAUS Dollar & FedChina Industrial Demand

BTC Faces Capital Rotation to AI and Gold as Recovery Slows

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Bitcoin (BTC) bulls are struggling after BTC slipped below $65k, erasing billions and leaving traders with muted recovery expectations. Analysts point to capital rotation out of risky crypto and into “safer” mainstream exposures—especially AI-linked equities and gold—particularly when macro conditions tighten. Jim Ferraioli of Charles Schwab said Bitcoin is losing its “momentum trade,” citing a stronger correlation with stocks. He also noted market concerns around Michael Saylor’s reported Bitcoin sales, which could weigh on prices and trigger liquidations if declines accelerate. Despite institutional adoption themes earlier in the cycle (spot ETF momentum helped drive BTC above $125k previously), recent price action has diverged from broader risk assets: BTC is down about 16% over the last 30 days while the S&P 500 is up roughly 5% in the same window. The article links the rotation to periods of Fed tightening and geopolitical stress, including Iran–Israel tensions that have pushed up energy costs. Net effect for traders: BTC may continue to underperform until crypto regains momentum and liquidity flows return, while gold/AI proxies may benefit in the near term.
Bearish
Bitcoin (BTC)AI StocksGold RotationInstitutional ETFMarket Momentum

US Banks Plan Tokenized Deposit Network for 24/7 On-Chain Settlement

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US banks, led by The Clearing House, are preparing a tokenized deposit network for first-half 2027. The “bridge” project aims to connect traditional banking payment rails with blockchain infrastructure to enable instant, 24/7 settlement of tokenized deposit network transactions. The core participants include JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo. The system will be built on blockchain infrastructure via a partner vendor that has not been selected yet. Clearing House CEO David Watson said the move signals a “radically different” on-chain payments future, while banks describe tokenized deposits as an extension of their existing capital markets and financing roles. Adoption is expected to be gradual. Bank of America’s Mark Monaco said clients are not “beating down the door” for tokenized deposits, though interest is rising. JPMorgan has tested tokenized deposit rails through JPM Coin for payment settlement and has launched a token on Base for institutional clients. Traders should watch the stablecoin angle. Banks fear that stablecoins could pull deposits away, while regulators are also moving toward rules that could allow users to earn interest on stablecoin holdings. The initiative’s potential use cases include real-time liquidity management, programmable treasury, and improved cross-border payments. Net effect: tokenized deposit network rollout timelines are long (2027), but the direction is relevant for stablecoin demand narratives—especially if regulated, on-chain-like settlement gains momentum.
Bearish
tokenized depositsstablecoin regulationbanking on blockchainThe Clearing HouseJPM Coin

Anthropic AI infrastructure funding: Apollo & Blackstone seal $35B deal

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Apollo Global Management and Blackstone have finalized a $35 billion AI infrastructure funding deal for Anthropic’s expansion. The investment is aimed at scaling computing capacity and building data-centers, positioning Anthropic as a major U.S. strategic AI player as competition with China intensifies. Anthropic frames its infrastructure buildout as important to national interests, and calls for faster development of AI systems. The article links the AI infrastructure funding to a broader shift toward betting on underlying hardware and data-center capacity—not just software—given the rising costs and execution demands of large-scale model training and deployment. From a market-trader perspective, the piece also references prediction-market pricing, suggesting odds that Anthropic’s valuation could improve by the end of 2026. The “What to watch” items include potential Anthropic announcements (new initiatives or partnerships), competitor responses—especially from China—and any U.S. regulatory developments affecting AI infrastructure. Net: this is a major capital-support signal for Anthropic, but it’s not a direct crypto catalyst. Traders should mainly monitor sentiment around AI/tech risk-on flows rather than expect immediate coin-specific repricing.
Neutral
AnthropicAI infrastructure fundingPrivate equityU.S.-China AI competitionPrediction markets

Dan Loeb on Event-driven Investing: Tech Literacy, Moats, and Short-Side Opportunties

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In an All-In Podcast, hedge fund founder Dan Loeb (Third Point) explains how event-driven investing works and why “event-driven investing” can outperform when deals are complex. Loeb says his strategy often focuses less on business quality at first and more on transaction specifics such as takeovers and spin-offs. He highlights that management incentives can heavily influence outcomes in these events. He also argues that a valuation-only approach can be risky and misleading. On the tech sector and AI backdrop, Loeb stresses that technological literacy is becoming essential for informed decisions. He links this to consumer trends and the need to understand the “tech through line” across industries. He adds that modern financial platforms are interconnected, combining credit and equity to build more robust positioning. For long-term investing, Loeb emphasizes company durability and competitive moats. He also looks for adaptable management teams that can respond as conditions change. Finally, he notes there are significant short-selling opportunities in the current market, implying traders may find mispricings where execution risk or incentives are misaligned—especially when investors rely on oversimplified valuation models rather than business durability.
Neutral
Event-driven investingManagement incentivesTechnological literacyCompetitive moatsShort selling

Crypto treasury boom splits: HYPE-linked firms avoid worst paper losses while BTC/ETH/SOL treasuries slide

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A market slump is widening the split in the “crypto treasury” model, with most bitcoin (BTC), ether (ETH), and Solana (SOL) reserve holders facing large unrealized losses, while HYPE-linked treasuries remain comparatively profitable. Artemis data shows Hyperliquid treasury firms are the standout. Hyperliquid Strategies holds about 23.7 million HYPE and still has more than $1.1B in unrealized gains, even after HYPE fell 11.98% during the latest pullback. A second Hyperliquid-focused entity, Hyperion DeFi, disclosed just over 2 million HYPE and is estimated to have about $35M in unrealized gains. By contrast, Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) — a major BTC treasury proxy — has more than $12.8B in unrealized bitcoin losses, with an average acquisition cost around $75,000 per BTC. After Strategy sold 32 BTC for $2.5B, bitcoin dropped toward ~$59,100, leaving Strategy roughly 20% in paper losses. Shares reportedly fell more than 11%. Ethereum treasury firms are also deep in the red. Artemis estimates Bitmine (ETH treasury) has about $10.5B in unrealized losses on over 5.4M ETH, worth ~$8.6B at current prices. Sharplink holds nearly 869,000 ETH and faces an estimated ~$1.8B paper loss. Solana treasury exposure has similarly turned negative. Forward Industries holds more than 6.8M SOL, with Artemis estimating ~$1.2B in unrealized losses. Overall, the HYPE vs BTC/ETH/SOL treasury divergence highlights rising “paper loss” risk across corporate crypto balance sheets, while HYPE-linked players may attract relative flows—at least until the next leg down in HYPE.
Bearish
Crypto treasuryHYPEBitcoin reserve firmsEthereum treasurySolana treasuries

Bitcoin tumbles as Saylor hits back at Jim Cramer over Strategy sale

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Bitcoin is sliding to around the high-$50k/low-$60k range after a weekly drop of more than 20%. On June 5, CNBC host Jim Cramer said “Saylor murdered Bitcoin,” blaming MicroStrategy (Strategy) for the selloff after the company disclosed it sold 32 BTC shortly after market open. Michael Saylor publicly dismissed the accusation on X, saying the decline was “just a flesh wound.” The dispute centers on whether Strategy’s Bitcoin sale caused the move, or whether broader market flows were the real driver. CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju argued the impact is being overstated: he compared Strategy’s 32 BTC to much larger sales by long-term “whale” holders and to spot Bitcoin ETF activity. Citigroup analysts echoed this view, pointing to persistent U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF outflows: $2.43B net outflows in May and another $1.40B leaving in the first three days of June (SoSoValue data). Their conclusion: ETF demand remains a key driver of Bitcoin price. Other analysts shifted focus to Strategy’s funding model. Peter Schiff warned Strategy’s ability to raise capital may weaken if MSTR shares lose their premium. Grayscale Research added that declines in MSTR and STRC shares could make expanding Bitcoin purchases harder, potentially increasing pressure for future BTC sales. Charles Schwab’s Jim Ferraioli said Bitcoin has been in a bear market since Oct 2025 and that the timing makes it difficult to blame the latest BTC weakness solely on Strategy’s transaction. For traders, the key question is whether Bitcoin weakness is primarily flow-driven (ETFs and whales) or narrative-driven (Strategy’s sale).
Bearish
BitcoinSpot Bitcoin ETFsMicroStrategy (Strategy)Whale sellingMarket volatility

Uniswap UNI burn hits record as UNIfication expands

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Uniswap’s UNIfication mechanism recorded a record UNI burn: 134,000 UNI destroyed in 24 hours. The milestone comes as Uniswap founder Hayden Adams reiterated he is “extremely bullish” on DeFi and Ethereum, framing the current mood as similar to the 2018 bear market that preceded Uniswap’s launch. How UNIfication works: after protocol fees are routed into TokenJar, users can claim those fees only by burning an equal UNI value via the Firepit contract. The burned UNI is sent to the 0xdead address, permanently reducing supply. The latest UNI burn follows stronger fee activity in the prior day. Uniswap governance also extended the program via Proposal 96, expanding fee collection and UNI burns from May to BNB Chain, Polygon, and Celo—bringing supported burn chains to 11 across 40+ networks. The article cites TVL of $2.86B (ETH $1.96B, Base $416M, Arbitrum $198M), cumulative fees since launch of $5.59B, and about $14.15M directed to UNI holders through the burn mechanism. UNI is trading near $2.47, still more than 92% below its May 2021 all-time high. For traders, the record UNI burn and continued product rollout (cross-chain swaps, in-app wallets, portfolio tracking) may boost short-term sentiment for UNI, but sustained demand will depend on whether fee generation stays strong enough to support the tokenomics over time.
Bullish
UNI burnUniswap governanceDeFi tokenomicsCross-chain feesHayden Adams

Multicoin Capital ENA Transfer: Support at $0.079 vs $0.132 Recovery

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Ethena’s token ENA slid 14.28% to $0.0907 amid broader weakness, after Multicoin Capital deposited 56.116M ENA (≈$5.28M) via Galaxy Digital and BitGo. The move raises questions about institutional intent, but it did not immediately confirm selling. On-chain spot flow data still matters for traders: ENA recorded net exchange outflows of about $3.52M on June 5, extending a supply-squeeze pattern. When exchange balances drop while price weakens, traders often get a clearer view of potential downside being muted by reduced immediate liquidity. Price action is stuck in a long-running range. ENA retested the lower floor near $0.079 after renewed selling. Resistance remains near $0.132, so sellers have been defending rallies. Momentum is recovering: RSI rose to 41.20 (from near oversold), and its average is around 39.72, suggesting sell pressure has eased. Derivatives positioning adds a bullish counter-signal. Binance top traders show 72.19% long vs 27.81% short, pushing the long/short ratio to 2.60. This indicates many professionals still expect a rebound despite the sell-off, though crowded longs can also amplify volatility if ENA breaks support. Trading takeaway: if ENA keeps defending $0.079 and outflows persist, odds increase of a retest toward the $0.132 resistance. If support fails, the same positioning could accelerate downside. (Keyword focus: ENA appears as both the catalyst and the key technical level.)
Neutral
ENAEthenaExchange outflowsInstitutional transferDerivatives positioning

ADA Hits Multi-Year Lows as Hoskinson Warns of DeFi Failure and Treasury Funding Risk

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Cardano (ADA) is trading near five-year lows, with the token around $0.18 after sharp daily and weekly declines. Charles Hoskinson warned that the sell-off is worsening market sentiment and that ADA’s weakness is increasingly tied to DeFi tool failures, developer sustainability concerns, and potential friction in ecosystem funding. A concrete stress signal followed on June 2: Cardano analytics firm TapTools shut down, citing high costs to maintain building, maintenance, and support. Hoskinson also argued the community needs a clearer strategy and stronger support for decentralized applications, saying the Cardano treasury must play a role to restart ecosystem momentum. Meanwhile, broader risk-off pressure continued: Bitcoin (BTC) saw institutional fund outflows of about $1.4 billion for a third consecutive week, reinforcing caution across majors. For ADA traders, the key risk is that liquidation-driven weakness plus ongoing ecosystem funding uncertainty can keep downside pressure elevated until there are signs of treasury-backed application activity or market stabilization.
Bearish
CardanoADADeFi FailureTreasury FundingLiquidations

Ripple (XRP) links to Tier-1 banks and Thunes US expansion

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A crypto researcher, SMQKE, says Ripple (XRP) has established ties with major banks, citing a document attributed to former Ripple executive Marcus Treacher. The excerpt claims Ripple works with roughly 100 banks, including Tier-1 institutions, and that these links cover over 80% of key global trade corridors. It also says Ripple spent years partnering with banks and corporate groups to test distributed ledger technology before wider commercial rollout. The document’s named participants include Axis Bank, National Bank of Abu Dhabi, SEB, UBS, National Australia Bank, and Mizuho Financial Group, alongside Ripple’s Global Payments Steering Group. SMQKE then connects Ripple’s strategy to a Thunes update: Thunes expanded real-time payments into the United States by directly connecting with a Tier-1 financial institution. Thunes holds money transmitter licenses across all 50 US states. SMQKE argues this regulatory status and Thunes’ 140-country network (90+ currencies; billions of mobile-wallet connections) can strengthen XRP-related payment infrastructure and improve access to US clearing systems. Traders should note this is an institutional-rail narrative rather than a direct tokenomics or price catalyst. The market impact will depend on whether these partnerships translate into measurable payment volume tied to XRP.
Neutral
RippleXRPTier-1 banksReal-time paymentsThunes

Bitcoin short positions hit $2.6B—squeeze risk grows

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Bitcoin short positions have surged to about $2.6B, raising squeeze risk after a rebound in price dynamics. The article notes that a sharp BTC drop to ~$61,100 on Friday triggered ~$335M liquidations of leveraged longs, but new exchange liquidation estimates show downside may be less extreme than before. Key levels traders watch: with Bitcoin short positions built in the $63,000–$66,000 zone, a rally toward ~$66,000 could force liquidations of shorts worth up to ~$2.6B. Conversely, a fall toward ~$57,000 would cap estimated wiped-out leveraged positions at about ~$1.2B. BTC funding is also a tell: the annualized funding rate for BTC perpetuals fell to around -2%, a sign shorts dominate and deleveraging risk may be rising. Macro/flow backdrop: spot Bitcoin ETF outflows have been persistent, including a 13-day streak of heavy withdrawals. A small $3M Thursday inflow did little to offset the broader selling pressure. The piece also links weaker crypto sentiment to tech sector liquidity concerns, citing Nasdaq 100 relative underperformance and selloffs in AI-related stocks (e.g., Broadcom, Micron, Arm). For traders, Bitcoin short positions at $2.6B implies headline-driven volatility: a quick bounce can trigger a forced buy cascade, while continued ETF outflows and risk-off in tech could keep downside bidders cautious. Manage leverage accordingly, because the magnitude of the squeeze depends not only on position size but also on how aggressively traders are levered.
Neutral
BitcoinPerpetual Funding RateETF OutflowsShort SqueezeTech Sector Liquidity

CME CEO Slams Crypto Perpetual Futures: 50-to-1 Leverage, Fast CFTC Approval

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CME Group CEO Terry Duffy called the newly approved US crypto perpetual futures “a disaster waiting to happen,” warning that crypto perpetual futures can amplify leverage risk and hurt market stability. In comments on June 4, 2026, he criticized the CFTC’s “40.3 approval” pathway, which reportedly cleared certain contracts in about 2.5 hours without a full review or public comment period. Duffy focused on crypto perpetual futures launched by Coinbase and Kalshi (started May 29 for Bitcoin, with Ethereum added June 4). These products support around-the-clock trading and up to 50-to-1 leverage, which he says can turn small moves (around 2%) into rapid, near-total liquidations. He also targeted the perpetual futures funding-rate mechanism. Funding rates are meant to balance longs and shorts and keep the perp price anchored to the underlying, but Duffy argued they can “incite bad behavior,” rewarding one-sided speculation over hedging during sentiment extremes. Market reaction mentioned in the report: traditional exchange stocks (including CME, Cboe, and ICE) faced selling pressure after the CFTC approval, reflecting concerns that crypto-native perpetual futures could intensify competition. For traders, the main takeaway is stability risk: if leverage and funding costs lure retail into crowded positioning, liquidation cascades can worsen drawdowns, particularly when sentiment flips quickly.
Bearish
Perpetual FuturesCFTC ApprovalLeverage RiskFunding RatesMarket Structure

SpaceX GPU deal with Google: $920M monthly compute ahead of Nasdaq IPO

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SpaceX has secured a major compute contract with Google ahead of its planned Nasdaq IPO: a $920 million monthly compute deal. Under the agreement, Google will access around 110,000 NVIDIA GPUs plus related equipment (CPUs, memory and more) from October 2026 through June 2029. The monthly fee starts lower as capacity ramps up through September, and then scales to the full amount. Google says demand for Gemini Enterprise and other AI products has exceeded expectations. The company described the arrangement as short-term “bridge capacity” while it works to meet customer needs. In parallel, SpaceX’s filing notes both sides can terminate with 90 days’ notice after December 31, 2026, and there is a GPU delivery condition tied to Google’s access. If SpaceX misses committed GPU capacity by September 30, 2026, Google may end the deal after a one-month grace period or adjust monthly fees. This SpaceX GPU deal with Google comes one week before SpaceX stock is expected to begin trading on Nasdaq. SEC paperwork indicates plans to raise about $75 billion at a valuation near $1.75 trillion. SpaceX also recently agreed a similar compute arrangement with Anthropic, reinforcing its AI infrastructure strategy around major data center capacity. For traders, the headline is primarily corporate AI-capacity news. It may support broader “AI infrastructure” sentiment but is unlikely to directly move crypto fundamentals.
Neutral
SpaceXAI computeGPU contractsNasdaq IPOGoogle Gemini

Zero Trust for Agentic AI: Xage hires Senior Engineer for secure runtime control

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Xage Security is hiring a Senior Software Engineer to build a “Zero Trust for Agentic AI” platform. The role targets the security gap as AI agents move from sandboxed pilots to autonomous systems that can execute real-world actions, invoke APIs, and access sensitive databases across hybrid cloud and OT environments. The engineer will design AI gateways and “sentries” to inspect inputs, outputs, and tool/API calls. They will implement deterministic, identity-based least-privilege access to block prompt injection, rogue agent behavior, data leakage, and privilege escalation. Responsibilities also include using ML-based monitoring to detect anomalous or unsafe agent actions, and creating agent identity management with automated credential rotation to reduce hardcoded-secret and shared service-account risks. A key deliverable is end-to-end, tamper-resistant logging so every prompt, action, tool call, and resource access can be audited, plus a security fabric that scales across multi-cloud, on-premises, and edge/OT deployments. Location is Palo Alto, CA. The salary range listed is $140K–$200K (and the posting also references an additional base salary range of $100K–$120K). Xage cites major momentum, including a $17M U.S. Space Force contract and recognition from Forbes, Gartner, and Forrester. No cryptocurrency products are mentioned.
Neutral
Zero TrustAgentic AI SecurityIdentity & IAMLLM GovernanceCybersecurity Hiring

Nonfarm Payrolls surge 172K in May; Fed cut odds shift

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The U.S. jobs report showed stronger momentum in May. Nonfarm Payrolls rose by 172,000, well above the 85,000 consensus estimate, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The gain also accelerated versus the revised April figure of 165,000. Key labor-market details supported the “resilient economy” narrative. The unemployment rate held steady at 3.9%. Average hourly earnings increased 0.3% month over month (vs 0.2% expected), indicating firm wage growth despite high interest rates and ongoing inflation concerns. Employment gains were broad-based, led by healthcare, leisure and hospitality, and professional services. Manufacturing posted a modest rise, helping ease fears of a wider industrial slowdown. Market reaction was swift. Treasury yields climbed as traders re-priced the timing and size of potential Federal Reserve rate cuts. The U.S. dollar strengthened, while equity futures initially softened on concerns that the Fed may delay easing. For Fed policy expectations, stronger-than-expected Nonfarm Payrolls reduces urgency for an immediate cut. Market pricing now leans toward a hold at the June meeting, while a September cut remains possible but less certain. Crypto-trader relevance: firmer labor data typically supports higher-for-longer rates, which can pressure risk assets in the short run through tighter financial conditions. Over the longer term, the report still supports a “soft landing” view, which can improve sentiment if upcoming inflation data cools.
Bearish
US Jobs ReportNonfarm PayrollsFederal ReserveTreasury YieldsUSD Rate-Cut Expectations

BTC drops below $60,000 as $1.5B liquidated on US jobs shock

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Bitcoin (BTC) slid below $60,000, extending a sharp sell-off that pushed its 10-day loss to nearly $19,000. Volatility spiked as more than $155M in long positions were liquidated within an hour, bringing total liquidations over the last 24 hours to about $1.5B. The trigger was stronger-than-expected US labor data. May non-farm payrolls came in at 172,000 versus 85,000 expected, with unemployment at 4.3%. Downward pressure on rate-cut expectations from the Federal Reserve added to weakness across risk assets, spreading pressure into crypto and tech. Derivatives are now centered on the $60,000 level. Deribit executives said $60,000 is a key options threshold: market makers with short gamma may hedge by selling spot BTC or futures when BTC breaks lower. Open interest is also notable—over $1.2B sits on $60,000 strike put options on Deribit—raising the risk of additional hedging and fresh long liquidations if BTC stays below that strike. Commentary from Peter Schiff pointed to weak support near $61,000 and potential spillover from crypto/tech into other asset classes. On-chain indicators echoed stress: Glassnode data showed US government BTC holdings (mostly seized) fell in value to about $20.8B from a $40.7B peak. MVRV dropped to 1.19, a region often associated with undervaluation. Traders are watching $59,000–$60,000 as the critical test. To stabilize, BTC would likely need to reclaim roughly $65,000 resistance; otherwise, liquidation-driven selling risk remains elevated.
Bearish
Bitcoin(BTC)US jobs dataCrypto liquidationsDerivatives optionsOn-chain stress

US Dollar surges after strong NFP; CPI/PPI and Fed drive next week

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The US Dollar ended the week higher after a stronger-than-expected Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report. The U.S. economy added hundreds of thousands of jobs, the unemployment rate edged lower, and average hourly earnings rose modestly—signals of a still-tight labor market. This reinforced the view that the Federal Reserve is likely to keep its current policy stance, supporting the US Dollar via relatively higher yields. Market reaction was swift. The Dollar Index (DXY) climbed sharply, reversing earlier weekly declines. Major FX pairs such as EUR/USD and GBP/USD weakened as traders repriced expected rate differentials, and U.S. Treasury yields rose alongside the US Dollar move. For the coming week, focus shifts to inflation and central-bank guidance. Traders will watch CPI and PPI prints for evidence of “sticky” inflation. Hotter inflation could strengthen the “higher for longer” narrative and push the US Dollar higher. Cooler inflation could cap gains and revive expectations for later rate cuts. Fed speakers also remain a swing factor; hawkish remarks would likely extend USD strength, while dovish signals could trigger a pullback. Technicals for the DXY: resistance near 105.00 is now reclaimed; upside targets are around 105.50 and 106.00. Support sits at 104.50 and 104.00. A break below 104.00 would suggest the rally is losing steam. (For crypto traders: a stronger US Dollar and higher yields often tighten global financial conditions, which can pressure risk assets.)
Bearish
US DollarNFPFed policyCPI/PPIDXY technicals

Securitize NYSE listing clears SEC hurdle for SECZ

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Securitize NYSE listing cleared a major SEC hurdle after the agency declared effective the S-4 for a SPAC merger with Cantor Equity Partners II (NASDAQ: CEPT). A Cantor shareholder vote is scheduled for June 29, 2026. If approved, the combined company will operate as “Securitize Corp.” and trade on the NYSE under ticker “SECZ.” The latest update also adds financial and regulatory context for traders. Securitize reported Q1 2026 revenue of $19.5M (+39% YoY) and tokenized AUM averaging $3.2B (rising to $3.4B by March 31). Profitability weakened: adjusted EBITDA fell to $0.8M and the company posted a net loss of $7.9M. In terms of adoption, Securitize’s infrastructure supports institutional RWA tokenization, including BlackRock’s BUIDL (about $2.4B cited) and partnerships tied to major asset managers such as Apollo, KKR, Hamilton Lane, and VanEck. Regulators are tightening the rules for tokenized securities. SEC’s Jamie Selway said the SEC will build an “innovation without arbitrage” framework for listing and trading tokenized securities, alongside CFTC work to align jurisdiction and reporting. For crypto traders, the direct price linkage is limited, but Securitize NYSE listing supports sentiment around compliant tokenized securities rails. Watch June 29 for execution risk, especially given that other crypto IPO-related plans (Kraken, Consensys) previously paused amid BTC volatility near $60k. Overall: this is a mainstream-market infrastructure milestone for RWA tokenization rather than a near-term driver of token liquidity.
Bullish
Securitize NYSE listingSEC-SPAC mergerRWA tokenizationTokenized securities regulationBlackRock BUIDL

SHIB Price Prediction 2026–2030: Can SHIB Hit $0.000330?

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The latest SHIB price prediction (2026–2030) revisits whether Shiba Inu (SHIB) can reach $0.000330. The article argues the target is difficult under SHIB’s tokenomics: with an initial supply around 10^15, a sustained rise to $0.000330 would imply an extreme market-cap scale unless burns reduce circulating supply by 99.9%+ or demand becomes globally extraordinary. Traders are pointed to ecosystem catalysts that could support SHIB—Shibarium (L2), ShibaSwap (DEX), and SHIB: The Metaverse—plus ongoing token burns. However, it stresses that burn rates would need to accelerate sharply to offset the supply overhang. Market sensitivity remains the near-term driver. SHIB’s moves are described as heavily tied to crypto risk appetite, sentiment, exchange listings, and the broader BTC-driven cycle, with regulatory headlines in the US, EU, and Japan acting as a key risk factor. Scenario ranges offered in the coverage: 2026 bullish $0.000008–$0.000025 and bearish $0.000003 or lower; 2027 $0.000015–$0.000040; 2030 $0.00005–$0.00010, assuming Shibarium drives real usage and the metaverse narrative attracts users. The takeaway for traders: treat aspirational SHIB targets cautiously and monitor SHIB ecosystem milestones, burn activity, and macro/regulatory developments.
Neutral
SHIB price predictionToken burnsShibariumCrypto regulationBTC market cycle

VVV Plunges 21% as Open Interest Drops and Long Liquidations Hit

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Venice Token (VVV) fell 21.27% in 24 hours as trading volume dropped 27.74% to $96.76M, signaling weaker market participation. The sell-off accelerated after VVV lost its short-term structure. The token broke below an ascending support trendline following rejection near the $20.86 resistance level. Price weakened to about $15.23, while MACD turned bearish as the MACD line crossed below the signal line and the histogram deepened negative. Derivatives data points to fast leveraged de-risking. Open Interest (OI) declined 30.34% to $85.72M, suggesting traders reduced exposure rather than rotating into fresh longs. Long liquidations dominated: about $310.91K longs versus $36.17K shorts, with major contributions reported from Binance, Hyperliquid, and Bybit. This pattern implies an overextended long position was flushed out. Key levels to watch: $12.41 as the next support; if it fails, the next major demand zone is around $8.49. Until OI stabilizes and spot demand returns, traders may remain cautious about aggressive bullish entries. Keywords for traders: VVV, Open Interest, long liquidations, liquidation wave, support break, derivatives risk-off.
Bearish
VVVOpen InterestLong LiquidationsDerivatives Risk-OffSupport Break

Bitcoin Drops to ~$59K as Crypto Market Loses $2T

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Bitcoin sank to around $59,685 on Friday, the lowest level since October 2024, and is now trading far below the roughly $126,000 all-time high. The broader crypto sell-off has wiped out more than $2 trillion of total market value since the October 2025 peak (~$4.2T). Market pressure accelerated as Bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) outflows rose over the past month, while renewed geopolitical tensions hurt investor sentiment. Bitcoin’s fall then dragged majors lower. Ethereum (ETH) dropped as much as 12.8% to about $1,550, its weakest level since April 2025. Other large caps also fell: XRP, Solana (SOL), and Dogecoin (DOGE) each lost more than 5%. Risk appetite deteriorated sharply. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index fell to 16 (“extreme fear”), well below the neutral 50 level—typically a sign traders expect volatility to persist and rallies to face heavy selling. Looking ahead, Kalshi traders are calling for Bitcoin to end the year near $65,000. Even so, that would still leave Bitcoin far below prior highs, suggesting any rebound may not fully reverse the damage already done.
Bearish
BitcoinETF outflowsCrypto fear & greedAltcoin sell-offMarket volatility