Trump-linked crypto is weakening again as US political scrutiny intensifies ahead of an April 25 “gala for token holders.” The TRUMP token (Official Trump token) fell to around $2.73 in March 2026, about 90% below its January 2025 peak above $73, and later hovered near $2.86 as traders assessed whether momentum could return.
World Liberty Financial’s governance token WLFI also sank to a fresh all-time low near $0.07, down nearly 75% from its September 2025 high around $0.31.
Democratic senators Elizabeth Warren, Richard Blumenthal and Adam Schiff reportedly wrote to Bill Zanker seeking details. They argue the event “dangles access” by requiring attendees to hold TRUMP tokens, which could boost demand for Trump-linked crypto while raising concerns about political access. Commentators also criticize the broader pattern around Trump-linked tokens, citing perceived value extraction and limited consequences.
For traders, the setup is a risk-off signal. TRUMP token price action and broader Trump-linked liquidity may stay thin with volatility elevated into the April 25 date, and any further political or regulatory pressure could prolong the bearish trend.
Bearish
TRUMP tokenWLFIUS political scrutinytoken holder galagovernance token
Solana (SOL) has reportedly fallen 68% from its all-time high, while validator activity is declining at a similar pace. The article highlights that validators are “disappearing” as the network’s participation weakens. For traders, the combination of price drawdown and reduced validator presence can raise concerns about network confidence and ongoing reliability.
Key figures cited include the 68% drop from Solana’s peak and the parallel rate at which validators are leaving. While this does not automatically imply a protocol failure, it can affect sentiment, liquidity, and short-term risk appetite toward SOL.
Solana traders may watch for follow-through: whether validator counts stabilize, whether ecosystem activity returns, and whether SOL’s price action recovers alongside improving network metrics. If validator outflows continue, bearish positioning could persist; if they reverse, the market may interpret it as a stabilization signal. Solana remains a high-beta asset, so market-wide moves could amplify these effects.
Polymarket prediction market links briefly appeared in Google News results for event-driven queries but were later removed. A Google spokesperson told The Verge the site “briefly appeared in Google News in error” and is “no longer surfacing.” Before removal, Polymarket links could show directly beneath established publishers. For example, a search for “will ships transit the strait” (Strait of Hormuz) displayed a Polymarket market alongside Reuters and The Guardian; a later Cointelegraph test found no Polymarket results.
The episode follows earlier media and platform partnerships. Google previously worked with Polymarket (and rival Kalshi) to integrate prediction data into Google Finance. In June, X named Polymarket its official prediction market partner. MetaMask said it would integrate Polymarket in October, and World App (Sam Altman’s World project wallet/identity platform) added the Polymarket app.
Separately, Cointelegraph cited data by analyst Andrey Sergeenkov showing low profitability persistence: about 1% of traders cross $5,000 profit in a month, but only 0.015% sustain it for four consecutive months; just 0.033% of wallets exceed $100,000 total profits. Despite growing hype around prediction markets, most participants struggle to remain consistently profitable.
Main keyword: Polymarket.
Bittensor’s $TAO fell sharply to around $265 after Covenant AI abruptly left three major subnets (3, 39, and 81). The departure created technical and leadership gaps, raising concerns about network stability and decentralization in the decentralized AI sector.
Covenant AI had operated the high-performing subnets that support large-model AI development and serve as protocol benchmarks. Without Covenant AI’s specialized nodes, community miners reorganized quickly to keep the subnets running, but uncertainty increased around Bittensor’s resilience and competitiveness.
A governance dispute also surfaced. Covenant AI alleged centralization risks, including claims tied to emission suspensions and token-sale scheduling that Covenant AI said conflicted with the protocol’s permissionless principles. The volatility showed up in highly visible $TAO price swings, though the token stabilized near $265.
Bittensor co-founder Jacob Steeves issued a personal apology to $TAO holders, acknowledging financial and emotional damage. Steeves rejected centralization accusations and framed the situation as an unavoidable trust risk in permissionless systems after a break with Samuel Dare, a key figure from Covenant AI.
To address the exposed vulnerability, Steeves proposed a “Locked Stake” protocol upgrade. Subnet owners would lock $TAO for a predetermined period to better align accountability with long-term staked commitment. The community plans to discuss the Locked Stake proposal on Bittensor Discord.
For traders, the episode is a reminder that $TAO can react quickly to governance and operator changes, creating short-term downside risk while the market awaits clearer alignment mechanisms.
Justin Sun, founder of TRON and a major private investor in World Liberty Financial (WLFI), says WLFI deployed an undisclosed “hidden token freeze” in its smart contract. He claims a wallet blacklist function locked about $75M worth of WLFI tokens without prior notice or investor recourse.
Sun also alleges WLFI governance was manipulated: key decisions around blacklisting were reportedly tied to community votes where critical data was withheld, leaving the core team in control rather than a transparent consensus. He demands immediate unlocking of his funds and calls for governance reform, including stronger on-chain property protections and clearer disclosure of platform control mechanisms.
As of the report, World Liberty Financial has not responded with any formal clarification regarding the accusations or the alleged hidden blacklist capability.
Keywords: World Liberty Financial (WLFI), hidden token freeze, governance transparency.
Bearish
World Liberty FinancialDeFi GovernanceToken FreezeOn-chain SecurityJustin Sun
A Jordan Harbinger podcast segment with writer Nick Pell argues that online gambling should be legal, but it must be critically examined for ethical and societal harm. Pell highlights how online gambling normalizes participation while benefiting operators.
Key points on online gambling include: (1) a historical shift where sports betting was effectively “taxed into oblivion” until the mid-1970s, then became viable as tax rates fell; (2) sports betting can be “safer” for knowledgeable gamblers because odds reflect peer bets, while casino table games and slots embed a house edge.
Pell explains two core betting concepts used to judge risk: the “vig” (house advantage built into each line) and expected value (EV). Traders seeking positive EV are effectively fighting the embedded margins.
On platform behavior, the segment claims online betting apps use AI to ban users skilled at arbitrage betting, suggesting profit protection over competitive fairness. It also cites market scale and usage: the online gambling market is projected to grow substantially through 2030, and a March 2025 survey cited by Pell found 28% of American adults gamble online daily.
Overall, the discussion frames online gambling’s growth as both an economic trend and a consumer-protection challenge, especially around exploitation of problem gamblers and psychological targeting.
Ether Machine has abandoned its SPAC merger with Dynamix and scrapped plans for a Nasdaq debut, citing unfavorable and volatile market conditions. The Ethereum treasury firm said the termination is mutual and took effect immediately.
The deal would have launched a $1.5 billion yield-bearing ETH fund for institutions. Ether Machine had previously targeted a Nasdaq listing under ticker “ETHM,” with more than 400,000 ETH at launch, and later secured about $654 million in private financing in September.
US SEC filings show a $50 million termination fee is due within 15 days after the agreement becomes effective. Dynamix also has a limited timeline to find another merger, with a Nov. 22, 2026 deadline; otherwise it must liquidate and return trust funds to shareholders.
The unwind highlights continued pressure on Ethereum treasury strategies, alongside examples cited in the report of ETH holdings being reduced or exited by other players.
For traders, this is more a sentiment and positioning signal than a direct protocol change, but it can influence near-term flows around ETH-linked structured yield products.
Neutral
Ethereum treasurySPAC mergeryield-bearing ETH fundNasdaq listingSEC filing
The Ethereum Foundation has completed a planned 5,000 ETH treasury sale cycle using TWAP to spread executions and minimize market disruption. The final tranche sold 1,250 ETH, generating about $11.11M in DAI at an average price of $2,221.
Despite the structured Ethereum Foundation ETH selling, ETH price stalled around $2,200. On-chain activity expanded: Ethereum transfer count rose above 1.3M, approaching historical highs, suggesting increased usage across DeFi, stablecoins, and trading. However, the activity has not yet translated into sustained capital inflows, keeping ETH range-bound.
Market absorption signals are mixed-to-positive. Spot CVD stayed positive, and the taker buy/sell ratio averaged 1.09, with spikes above 1.3 during intraday dips—consistent with buyers stepping in when sell pressure increased. Exchange netflows did not show a sharp deposit surge, while ETH outflows rose in the past week, implying less immediate selling pressure.
Keyword focus: the core takeaway for traders is that Ethereum’s demand may be absorbing parts of the Ethereum Foundation ETH supply, but conviction is not strong enough to push beyond the current range. If demand strengthens, ETH upside continuation is more likely; if not, the controlled sell program could still cap rallies near resistance levels.
Ripple President Monica Long says 2026 will be a major breakthrough year for stablecoin-based payments. In a referenced video post, crypto commentator John Squire points to Ripple’s scale: about $70B in payments facilitated via digital assets across roughly 40M transactions. Long argues that stablecoin payment corridors are beginning to receive real market recognition and that Wall Street is increasingly watching XRP, though “too many people” still are not.
The article frames XRP as a “bridge asset” in Ripple’s payment infrastructure. As stablecoin-based payment routes expand, XRP is positioned to move value within Ripple’s network, with Ripple actively building ahead of broader adoption rather than waiting for it.
It also notes that 2025 marked the start of market recognition for the stablecoin payments thesis, supported by growing institutional interest and improved regulatory clarity in multiple jurisdictions. If that trend continues, the piece implies XRP adoption could strengthen alongside price momentum in 2026, as institutions become more engaged with Ripple’s transaction track record and ecosystem.
Japan’s Cabinet approved a bill on 10 April 2026 to reclassify crypto assets under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act (FIEA). The bill is not law yet and must pass Japan’s Diet. Full implementation is targeted for fiscal year 2027, while the Payment Services Act (PSA) remains the operative framework in the meantime.
Under the FIEA framework, Japan will treat crypto more like an investment market rather than a payment instrument. Crypto exchanges and operators will face tighter oversight, including mandatory annual disclosures, strengthened market conduct rules, and a ban on insider trading (trading based on non-public information). The Financial Services Agency (FSA) will oversee compliance.
For traders, this is a compliance and transparency inflection point for Japan-regulated venues. However, because the switch to FIEA depends on the Diet vote, the near-term impact should be limited until approval, while medium-term effects could include higher operating costs and more formal listing/market-integrity expectations under FIEA.
Neutral
Japan RegulationFIEACrypto ExchangesInsider Trading BanMarket Transparency
Gold-bug and Bitcoin critic Peter Schiff posted on X on April 12 after Bitcoin (BTC) “tanking” during a weekend drop. Market data cited in the article shows BTC/USD on the Bitstamp 1-hour chart consolidated around $73,000–$73,600 most of Saturday, then printed a sharp red candle at about 01:00 on April 12. BTC fell quickly from roughly $73,098 to a wick low near $71,349. Since then, price has stabilized, but bulls failed to reclaim the $75,000 level.
The move triggered a broader liquidation event. Over the past 24 hours, 118,652 traders were liquidated across crypto markets, totaling about $189.85M. The article highlights long liquidations of $132.80M, suggesting leverage was heavy and long positions were caught off guard. A notable single order was a ~$4.00M BTC/USD liquidation on Bybit.
Traders should note that this type of BTC drawdown often comes with cascading liquidations, which can increase short-term volatility and create quick rebounds or continued downside if demand doesn’t step in near key levels like $71.3K and $75K. Meanwhile, Schiff’s public call appears to be more commentary than a catalyst, but it reflects the market’s sensitivity to sharp intraday moves.
Bitcoin traders are getting mixed signals: one analyst warns of a potential $77,000–$78,000 liquidity grab before a drop to $54,000–$56,000, while miner data points to a supply squeeze.
Captain Faibik (bearish since months) says a bearish flag is forming on Bitcoin’s daily chart. He expects Bitcoin to first rally toward $77K–$78K, but frames it as a “liquidity grab,” not a sustained reversal. After that, he targets a sell-off zone near $54K–$56K. He also notes he has not opened trades yet and is waiting for a confirmed setup.
In contrast, Ali Charts (@alicharts) highlights miner behavior. Over the past three weeks, Bitcoin miner reserves increased by 4,487 BTC (about $330 million). Since miners are typically “forced sellers” due to electricity costs and equipment financing, the shift to holding suggests miners expect higher prices. Ali Charts argues that rising institutional demand (e.g., reflected in Coinbase Premium) plus reduced sell pressure could tighten available supply and support upside in the months ahead.
Market context: Bitcoin is trading around $71,640.70. 24-hour volume is over $27.7B. Price is down 1.57% in the last 24 hours, but up 7.09% over seven days.
Both analysts agree a major move may be coming; the dispute is timing and direction. Bitcoin bulls may gain if miner hoarding continues, while Bitcoin downside risk rises if the warned distribution phase toward $78K materializes.
Neutral
Bitcoin price predictionminer reserve squeezebearish flag setupliquidity grab riskinstitutional demand
A paid press release from LiveBitcoinNews promotes the BlockchainFX ($BFX) token presale as an alternative to earlier ICO “winners” like Filecoin (FIL).
BlockchainFX claims it offers an “all-in-one” trading platform covering 500+ assets (including forex, stocks, and crypto) and says it will return up to 70% of trading fees to the community via staking. The post also says participants can earn daily rewards in BFX and USDT.
Key figures cited for BlockchainFX ($BFX) include: total raised $14.21M+ and a stated current presale price of $0.035, with a launch price of $0.05. The presale is framed as accelerating toward a $15M “finish line,” after which the project will launch—positioning the LAUNCH50 code as a time-sensitive incentive for extra tokens. A $500,000 community giveaway is also advertised, with top prizes listed in BFX.
For context, the release references Filecoin (FIL) ICO pricing around $0.75 and claims early buyers later saw very large gains (stated as 300x+), using that as a cautionary tale for missing early entries.
Traders should note this is explicitly labeled a paid post and not trading advice, so any market impact is likely limited and speculative unless broader exchange listings or verified on-chain activity follow.
Keywords: BlockchainFX ($BFX) presale; BFX; revenue-sharing; community staking; LAUNCH50; $15M launch target.
Bitcoin (BTC) stalled after a weekend rise, falling by more than $2,000 as U.S.-Iran peace talks reportedly broke down. BTC briefly climbed from about $68,000 toward nearly $74,000 following a two-week ceasefire, but the failure of talks triggered a rapid sell-off.
Analyst Ted Pillows turned more bearish. He said BTC’s next upside attempt may come if it reclaims the $73,000–$74,000 zone, but only as a potential “last push” before new lows. BTC failed to hold above $74,000 and slipped toward roughly $71,500 within 12 hours. Pillows also highlighted BTC’s “electrical cost” falling further to around $47,000, and argued the market’s lower “bottom floor is going lower.” He added that BTC’s price action resembles software stocks, which could be a warning sign for additional downside.
A second market view came from Crypto Rover, who flagged a weekly MACD bullish crossover for BTC. However, Crypto Rover warned that similar signals during the 2022 crash preceded further heavy drops (about 60% and 40%), so the bear-market bottom may not be in.
Finally, the article emphasized macro/geopolitical drivers: BTC has been trading more on Middle East developments—and potentially on Trump-related comments—than on on-chain fundamentals, at least in the short term.
Crypto markets stayed volatile as US–Iran ceasefire headlines drove risk sentiment. Bitcoin (BTC) gradually rose earlier, then swung sharply when expectations shifted.
BTC climbed from about $67,000 to $70,000 on reports of renewed ceasefire negotiations, briefly dipped below $68,000 after the report was denied, then surged above $72,000 after US President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire. BTC later peaked near $74,000 as commentary suggested Iran would seek BTC-related payments for ships passing the Strait of Hormuz. However, when US VP Vance said both sides failed to reach an agreement, BTC sold off by more than $2,000 in minutes. BTC is around $71,500, down ~1.5% on the day, with market cap about $1.430T and dominance over alts above 57% (CG).
Most large-cap altcoins were weaker: ETH near $2,200 (-1%), XRP around $1.33, BNB losing $600 support, and SOL down over 2%. HYPE, ADA, and BCH each fell more than 3%, while RAIN and DOT saw larger declines.
Against this, RAVE bucked the “altcoin correction” narrative. RAVE added another ~40% today, extending gains to over 1,000% since last Sunday and moving firmly into the top 100 by market cap. RAVE’s strength stood out even as total crypto market cap fell by over $30B to about $2.510T (CG).
Binance Alpha announced it will list Genius Foundation (GENIUS) on April 13. Eligible users can use Binance Alpha points to claim an airdrop from the Binance Alpha activity page after trading opens. The exchange said more details will be released soon.
For traders, this is another Binance Alpha participation event tied to GENIUS. The main focus is whether the airdrop points-claim mechanism attracts incremental spot demand around the listing date. If liquidity and market sentiment hold, GENIUS could see short-term volatility as users rotate into the token ahead of the listing.
Key risk: traders should watch for changing eligibility requirements and any subsequent updates to the GENIUS airdrop terms, since Binance Alpha events can affect positioning quickly and intensify short-term swings.
Overall, Binance Alpha’s GENIUS listing on April 13 may create a tradable catalyst, but confirmation on final rules is important before taking size.
Bitcoin is testing major upside expectations as some analysts say a sustained rally could start after key levels are reclaimed. Jordi Visser argues that if Bitcoin breaks above $76,000, and Ethereum rises above $2,400, it could signal a fresh market direction within the year.
Bitcoin is around $71,646. A move to $76,000 would imply roughly a 6.1% gain. Ethereum is near $2,215, and a push to $2,400 would be about an 8% rise. Visser links the setup to easing recession fears, saying inflation may remain elevated but a sharp slowdown is not expected—conditions that historically support risk assets like cryptocurrencies.
However, broader sentiment remains cautious. Market consensus still expects downward pressure through 2026, even as prediction markets show 2026 recession odds at 24% (down 10 points over a month). Meanwhile, trader Peter Brandt warns Bitcoin may not have bottomed yet, leaving the risk of a drop below $60,000.
Key levels to watch: Bitcoin $76,000 and Ethereum $2,400. Despite bullish framing, downside risks and macro uncertainty could keep volatility high.
Telegram co-founder Pavel Durov warned that “deleted Signal messages” may still persist through push notifications on iPhones. He said operating systems and notification features can keep message-related traces even after users delete chats or the app, and even if they disable preview text.
The remarks followed a report claiming investigators recovered deleted Signal messages from iPhone notification logs in a criminal case. Durov argued that end-to-end encryption protects message content, but notification artifacts can still reveal communication activity via metadata-like information. He also stressed a privacy asymmetry: turning off notification previews on your side may not help if the person you message keeps default settings.
Durov connected the issue to growing demand for decentralized messaging tools as surveillance and censorship pressure rises, citing Bluetooth mesh-style messaging used during network restrictions. For crypto traders, the takeaway is more tech/regulatory risk than a direct token catalyst, though sentiment around privacy infrastructure and encrypted-communications ecosystems could shift during heightened monitoring concerns.
Key term: push notifications.
WLFI CEO Zach Witkoff responded to a satirical post circulating on X from an author who claimed to be a “WLFI Web3 ambassador.” Witkoff said the author is not affiliated with WLFI and that the article conflicts with basic facts.
Key clarifications from the WLFI CEO: (1) the author mixed up “World Liberty” and the “Trump Meme Coin,” saying they are unrelated; (2) “World Liberty” is also stated to have no link to “Fight Fight Fight” or CIC Digital; (3) WLFI early holders reportedly bought at about $0.015 and $0.05, while the current price is cited as $0.08; (4) the team does not charge “trading fees.” Witkoff adds that the main product is a stablecoin that generates yield by holding treasury funds.
The message is aimed at reducing confusion around WLFI’s ecosystem, token references, and revenue model.
Hyperliquid has introduced a new execution-priority fee model tied to its native token, **HYPE**. The change comes after the protocol’s testnet rollout of **priority fees**, shifting trade execution from pure latency advantage toward token-backed bidding.
**HYPE** is trading around **$40.90** at the time of writing, up **~2.5%** on the day. Price action remains relatively contained in the **$40.74–$43.03** range, with **$236M** spot/market volume over 24 hours. Broader performance remains strong: **+13.3%** over 7 days and **+168.6%** over 1 year.
Mechanically, Hyperliquid operates through a shared public API (no private endpoints) with a per-IP request cap. Previously, faster infrastructure could win execution more often. Now, traders can pay **priority fees in HYPE** to gain execution priority, adding a direct token-demand layer.
The article describes two priority paths: **gossip priority** (visibility/balance updates) using HYPE from spot balances, and **order priority** using undelegated staking balances. Gossip priority has limited slots (five, resetting every three minutes). Order-priority fees can reach up to **20 bps** of trade value for immediate execution.
As priority transactions consume **HYPE tokens**, trading activity (including spot and staking usage) should translate into sustained **HYPE** demand. With TVL reported above **$5.4B**, the update could increase competition for fast execution during volatility and reinforce HYPE’s utility inside the Hyperliquid ecosystem—potentially supporting upside momentum for **HYPE** in the near term.
XRP price is trading lower as the market stays cautious and Bitcoin fails to build momentum. Despite institutional demand improving, XRP remains under selling pressure tied to wider risk sentiment.
On April 10, US spot XRP ETFs recorded net inflows of $9.1M, the highest daily figure in two months. CoinGlass data cited in the article suggests this is the strongest single-day inflow since Feb 6, 2026. However, the XRP market reaction has been muted while geopolitical uncertainty around US–Iran tensions weighs on crypto.
Price action reflects BTC-led weakness. Bitcoin is quoted around $71,514, down nearly 2% on the day, after US and Iran talks reportedly failed to reach an agreement despite a long session. As a result, altcoins including XRP follow the same negative tone.
As of press time, XRP is valued at $1.32, down 1.4% over 24 hours. It also shows a weekly gain of about 1.85% but a monthly decline of roughly 6.5%. Traders may look to BTC stabilization for direction: if Bitcoin regains strength, XRP could rebound; if weakness persists, pressure may continue in the near term.
The article also notes XRP’s dip followed earlier optimism from commentary that reduced quantum-computing risk for XRP versus Bitcoin.
XRP saw a sudden sell-off in the later hours, dropping from around $1.36 to below $1.33. The breakdown accelerated after XRP breached $1.35, which then flipped from support to resistance. Sell volume surged during the fall, while buy interest faded.
Bulls failed to reclaim the key level after the dip, suggesting the market structure has turned more bearish. Traders should watch XRP’s $1.35 pivot for stabilization. If XRP cannot hold $1.33, downside risk points to the $1.32–$1.31 demand area.
On the upside, the $1.40–$1.41 zone has repeatedly capped rebounds and remains major resistance. Volatility appears to be easing, but weak momentum raises the odds of another decisive move in the next sessions—either a floor near $1.33 or continued seller control.
An X post by crypto commentator John Squire (@TheCryptoSquire) asked XRP holders to self-identify by their holdings ahead of the proposed U.S. “CLARITY Act.” The post outlined six XRP holder tiers: Big Whales (100,000+ XRP), Whales (50,000+), Sharks (10,000+), Dolphins (5,000+), Fish (1,000+), and Octopuses (500+).
At XRP’s reported price of about $1.36, the tier costs translate into rough dollar levels: ~$680 for an Octopus (500 XRP), ~$1,360 for Fish (1,000 XRP), ~$6,800 for Dolphins (5,000 XRP), ~$13,600 for Sharks (10,000 XRP), ~$68,000 for Whales (50,000 XRP), and ~$136,000 for Big Whales (100,000 XRP). The community response included comments from holders aiming to move up ranks.
The timing matters because the CLARITY Act is intended to create clearer U.S. legal definitions for digital assets, including the long-running question of whether tokens are treated as securities or commodities. XRP holders have heightened attention due to Ripple’s past SEC-related regulatory history. The article suggests clearer rules could improve institutional confidence and potentially support broader capital flows into XRP after the act passes.
With XRP near $1.36, the lower tiers remain reachable for retail participants, while higher tiers require substantially more capital—framing the post as both a community “check-in” and a sentiment signal for XRP traders. XRP remains central to the discussion as holders position themselves around potential regulatory outcomes.
A LegalBison analysis for Bitcoin.com News says the “25-day completeness + 40-working-day assessment” narrative for MiCA CASP authorizations is misleading. Under MiCA, the 40-working-day clock (Article 63(9)) starts only after the National Competent Authority (NCA) confirms the application is complete (after an up-to-25-working-day completeness gate under Article 63(2), and notification under Article 63(4)).
Key delays that push MiCA timelines to a realistic 8–12 months include:
- Completeness gate often runs 45–60 days in current conditions, partly due to regulator inbox capacity and the Article 143(3) grandfathering deadline (1 July 2026).
- RFI cycles: regulators typically issue Requests for Information before declaring the application complete. The formal 40-day assessment cannot be paused, so pre-clock RFIs can add 4–8 weeks per cycle (1–2 cycles are common).
- Fit-and-proper checks: MiCA Article 68 requires good repute and appropriate competence for the management body (and Article 68(2) for qualifying shareholders). Some NCAs now use live interviews, adding 4–6 weeks.
- Calendar friction: August and the Dec–Jan period can add roughly 3–4 weeks each; public-holiday clusters can add 1–2 weeks. Backlogs also worsen near July 2026.
For traders, the practical takeaway is that MiCA CASP approvals may land later than industry estimates of 1–3 months, affecting exchange readiness, listings, and liquidity planning.
SIREN is the top altcoin over the past 90 days, rallying about +1,030% (and +32% in the last 24 hours) as traders eye a potential move toward $1. Spot/derivatives signals, however, look mixed. CoinGlass data shows elevated perpetual open interest: $12.95M added to push total Open Interest to $106.53M, which often reflects speculative leverage rather than durable conviction. At the same time, the Open Interest Weighted Funding Rate remains positive at 0.2979%, suggesting short positions still hold structural control—raising the odds of resistance even with strong price action.
On Binance, sentiment is notably more bullish. The Taker Buy/Sell Ratio is 1.13, and Binance accounts for roughly $246M of SIREN volume with significant open interest ($31.83M). This concentration can amplify volatility if the rally turns out to be a bull trap. Still, there are early signs of a shift: Funding Rate has eased from 0.5717% earlier to 0.2083%, and more shorts than longs reportedly closed over 24 hours.
SIREN is currently about $0.08 below $1. Traders may watch for confirmation via derivatives funding and liquidation activity as this level approaches—because leverage positioning can determine whether the move breaks upward or triggers liquidations.
Arthur Hayes resumed buying HYPE after nearly 3 months of inactivity. Lookonchain reports he purchased 26,022 HYPE worth about $1.1M, bringing his total to 247,334 HYPE. The position is now valued near $10.44M, with unrealized gains above $2.5M.
Hayes’ return is being framed as renewed confidence in HYPE, especially as market attention shifts toward ETF-linked developments. The article notes Bitwise has filed a Hyperliquid ETF under the ticker BHYP, which could improve institutional access and potentially boost liquidity and demand if approved.
Price expectations are also aggressive. Hayes reportedly suggested a bearish-to-bullish outlook, targeting $150 for HYPE in August 2026, implying roughly a 4x move from current levels.
Fundamentally, the piece highlights a buyback and burn model: the project reportedly spends 97%–99% of annual fee income (estimated near $1B) to repurchase and incinerate HYPE. Traders are treating this supply-reduction mechanism as supportive for longer-term upside—though volatility remains high and sentiment can swing quickly.
Overall, fresh Hayes accumulation plus ETF momentum are positioning HYPE as a near-term focus for speculative and growth-oriented traders.
BitMEX’s Q1 2026 derivatives report says demand for tokenised commodities and equities is driving a major expansion in TradFi perpetual swaps (TradFi Perps).
TradFi Perps grew from 0.03% of total crypto derivatives volume in Dec 2025 to 1.72% by end-Q1 2026. Weekly trading volume reached $30.7B. BitMEX CEO Stephan Lutz called this an “inflection point,” arguing that 24/7 access to commodities and equities is reshaping liquidity and price discovery.
Commodities were the key growth driver, with trading volume rising more than 65,000% in the quarter. Precious metals led early momentum: silver and gold. Crude oil accelerated in March amid geopolitical tensions, reaching $6.9B in weekly volume.
Equity perpetuals also jumped by more than 900%, reaching $4.9B in weekly volume, concentrated in crypto-adjacent equities and major tech stocks.
BitMEX highlights structural differences versus CFD-style products: transparent price discovery, peer-to-peer execution, and direct continuous market access. It also cites exchange-level effects, including over 1,300% growth over 90 days and Binance capturing significant new volume after entering the category. Cross-exchange funding rate gaps created arbitrage opportunities, with some spreads implying 100%+ annualised yield under certain conditions.
Looking ahead, BitMEX expects weekly TradFi perpetual volumes could approach $100B as more asset classes list and institutional awareness increases.
XRP is at a critical decision point as traders watch $1.42–$1.45 resistance tied to US policy momentum around the “Clarity Act.” XRP trades near $1.33, down 1.69% in 24 hours, with volume around $1.87B (CoinGecko). Analyst Stephanie Starr says XRP is in multi-timeframe compression: 4H consolidation, a daily descending wedge, and weekly support with a reset RSI—“compression before expansion.” She flags a bullish trigger if XRP breaks and holds above $1.42–$1.45, projecting potential moves toward $1.60 and $2.00. A failure below $1.25–$1.30 could trigger a liquidity sweep toward $0.90–$1.00.
On positioning, trader GeoMetric reports his Remora accumulation signal has flashed again for the first time since 2022. He previously averaged entry around $0.36 in the 2022 bear market, sold early after the 2024 rally, and now sees XRP near the top of its prior base channel. His longer-term “floor” estimate is near $0.077, though he expects less time there.
Separately, regulatory expectations may drive market moves before the Clarity Act is fully passed. With Congress returning Monday and markup debate expected to intensify, Starr argues that a scheduled markup alone could catalyze a sizable XRP repricing ahead of final law passage.
Macro investor Jordi Visser says Bitcoin and Ether could be set for a sustainable 2026 rally if key resistance breaks. He highlights Bitcoin above $76,000 and Ethereum above $2,400 as the start of a “move that will be sustainable this year,” arguing recession risk is lower.
Bitcoin would need about +6.1% from roughly $71,646, while Ether would need roughly +8% from around $2,219. Visser also notes inflation is likely to remain elevated and traders may need yield/returns even if equities (like the S&P 500) move sideways. Market expectations on Kalshi show a 24% chance of recession in 2026.
Fresh data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows CPI rose 3.3% year-over-year in April. This challenges a growing crypto consensus that 2026 has more downside risk, including calls for BTC to revisit below the Feb. 6 low near $60,000. Veteran trader Peter Brandt has separately suggested BTC could retest slightly below the Sep/Oct levels, potentially setting a bear-cycle low.
Overall, the outlook hinges on whether Bitcoin and Ether can reclaim those thresholds amid sticky inflation.