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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

Bitcoin bid wall $512M near $70K as RSI hits 3-month low; Coldcard MK5 launches

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Bitcoin is testing the lower end of its range near $70,000 as traders spot a “Bitcoin bid wall” worth about $512 million in limit buys between $72,000 and $68,500. Order-book data shows 6,235 BTC queued above $70,000 (heaviest cluster just over the $70K mark), plus 1,012 BTC around $68,505—support that could slow downside if sellers are absorbed. Derivatives positioning adds a squeeze setup: around $2B of long liquidations sit near the $70K zone, while more than $5B in shorts cluster near $78,000. If the Bitcoin bid wall absorbs selling and price breaks upward, that short-liquidity pool could amplify upside. A clean break below $68,500 would remove near-term support and expose a wider “air pocket.” Momentum remains weak. Daily RSI is ~33 (near the weakest since Feb 24), consistent with an oversold tilt. The daily structure has rolled over after losing $74,800, with $74,500–$75,500 acting as resistance overhead. Hardware news: Coinkite launched the Coldcard MK5, a Bitcoin-only cold wallet upgrade to MK4 (2022). It focuses on UX improvements—an enlarged 1.54-inch Gorilla Glass display, redesigned button feel, and refined NFC support for air-gapped transaction signing with existing microSD and QR/PSBT workflows. Key levels cited: support around $72,636 / $71,498 / $70,280; resistance at $73,535 / $75,080 / $76,587. A daily close back above $75,080 would weaken the bearish setup; losing $70,280 undermines the bid-wall thesis.
Neutral
Bitcoin order bookRSI oversoldDerivatives liquidationColdcard MK5Self-custody wallets

CFTC seeks to vacate Gemini’s $5M Bitcoin futures settlement

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The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is back in court, seeking to vacate its January 2025 $5 million settlement with Gemini tied to Bitcoin futures oversight. In an SDNY filing, the CFTC asked the court to undo a consent order over alleged issues including a whistleblower later deemed “not credible,” and claims that prior CFTC leadership concealed evidence. Key allegations focus on whether Gemini overstated Bitcoin futures trading activity and auction volume, and misrepresented user demand during approval-related review (July–December 2017). The motion also cites alleged false statements by Gemini’s former COO during Bitcoin futures “pre-certification” review, and additional context around a separate “rebate fraud” scenario. Former CFTC chair Tim Massad called the reversal “extraordinarily unusual,” suggesting it may reflect staff error more than legal ambiguity. The later reporting adds political context involving former CFTC commissioner Brian Quintenz’s 2025 public texts, alongside claims that some crypto enforcement actions were paused after Donald Trump took office—while Gemini’s case showed no new public docket activity after Jan 6, 2025. Gemini did not immediately comment. For crypto traders, the CFTC Gemini settlement reversal request increases regulatory uncertainty around crypto derivatives reporting, which can spill over to sentiment for BTC-linked products.
Neutral
CFTCGeminiBitcoin futuresCrypto derivatives regulationWhistleblower credibility

Bitcoin $70K Bid Wall: $500M Orders as Retest Looms

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Bitcoin (BTC) dip buyers have stacked about $500M in buy orders near the $70,000 support zone as a BTC retest approaches. CoinGlass order-book data shows 6,235 BTC in bid liquidity between $72,000 and $70,000 (about $443M at current prices). The largest bid cluster sits just above $70,000, potentially absorbing sell pressure and slowing a further drop. Below $70,000, a smaller demand pocket appears around $68,505 with 1,012 BTC (roughly $69M). Heatmap data also shows long liquidations concentrated near $70,000 (around $2B cumulative long positions at risk) versus larger short liquidation zones near $78,000 (over $5B). If BTC taps the $70K bids and demand steps in, traders could see a sharp rebound toward higher liquidation levels. Technicals remain cautious: BTC’s daily trend turned bearish after losing support at $74,800. Price is trading in a descending channel and is testing the lower boundary around $72,000–$73,000. RSI is near 33, lowest since Feb. 24, while momentum stays below the 50 neutral line. Options activity shows traders are positioned for a $70,000 move. Glassnode data indicates nearly $10M in put options with a $70,000 strike during the recent dip—though recent put demand has eased as some hedges profit. Overall, BTC buyers are defending $70K, but broader momentum suggests risk of continued downside before any reversal.
Neutral
BitcoinOrder Book LiquiditySupport/ResistanceDerivativesOptions (Puts)

Ethereum (ETH) drops as spot ETF outflows and low demand bite

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Ethereum (ETH) briefly fell below $2,000 for the first time since late March, wiping out most Q2 gains. At writing, ETH is down ~19% from an April peak near $2.5K, and down about 6% over the week. If ETH breaks the $2,000 Q2 support zone, short sellers could target $1,800, the 2026 range low. Nansen says ETH weakness is not only macro risk, but a “deeper problem.” On-chain and network indicators point to softer demand: gas fees are below 2 gwei near cycle lows, fewer users are transacting and calling contracts, and the ETH burn mechanism has slowed—reducing ETH’s prior “structurally deflationary” narrative. The report also highlights that Layer 2s (L2s) now handle most transactions and capture revenue away from Ethereum mainnet. Institutional demand remains weaker than BTC. The ETH/BTC ratio has compressed to 0.027 (a 1-year low), implying capital has continued flowing toward Bitcoin rather than ETH. Since 11 May, U.S. Spot ETH ETFs have logged consecutive daily outflows, with monthly outflows reaching $522M (highest since last December). What could reverse the trend? The article points to renewed Spot ETH ETF inflows and a pickup in network demand. Nansen also notes whales are accumulating: wallets holding 100K+ ETH control ~22% of supply (~17.4M ETH), a 10-week high. However, whale bids have not offset broader capital outflows, with 2026 realized-cap tracking showing ~$15B in capital outflows and negative aggregate demand. Overall, the piece frames ETH as lacking the catalysts that previously drove rallies, leaving a bearish setup into June unless ETF flows and on-chain activity improve.
Bearish
EthereumSpot ETH ETF outflowsNetwork activityLayer 2 adoptionWhale accumulation

US-Iran nuclear talks stall as Iran demands enrichment rights

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US-Iran nuclear talks have stalled, with Iran insisting on maintaining uranium enrichment rights. Despite earlier U.S. and allied military actions and a resulting tense ceasefire, no new agreement has been reached in the indirect talks mediated internationally. Key market read-through centers on two prediction markets. In the “US announces new Iran agreement/ceasefire extension by June 7” market, YES is priced at 52.5%, up from 36% over 24 hours, suggesting traders still lean toward extension but with reduced expectations as diplomacy fails to produce fresh terms. In the “Iran agrees to end enrichment of uranium by December 31” market, YES sits at 56%, slightly down from 57% yesterday, implying high uncertainty and a possible lower likelihood of a full rollback. US-Iran nuclear talks are now viewed as consistent with scenarios where Washington does not secure a rollback of Iran’s nuclear program. Key figures cited include U.S. President Joe Biden and Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi. Traders may watch for any concessions signals from either side, updates from international mediators, and statements from the IAEA regarding Iran’s nuclear activities. Overall, the data points to “talks without breakthrough,” a setup that can keep geopolitical risk elevated and maintain volatility in macro-linked assets, indirectly affecting crypto sentiment.
Neutral
US-Iran nuclear talksuranium enrichmentIAEAgeopolitical riskprediction markets

Identity Proofing vs Authentication in Digital ID: IAL and AAL Explained

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Digital identity programs must answer two questions: identity proofing and authentication. Identity proofing happens once during enrollment. It verifies that a person is who they claim to be using identity documents, biometric checks, and trusted data sources (for example, DMV-style verification). Authentication happens repeatedly at every interaction, confirming the user presenting the credential today is the same rightful holder. The article stresses that these two layers are independent design choices. Agencies can combine strong proofing with lighter authentication, or lighter proofing with strong authentication—both change program integrity in different ways. The “right balance” should match the program’s risk profile, not apply one blanket standard everywhere. It points to NIST SP 800-63 as the shared framework for specifying assurance levels separately: Identity Assurance Level (IAL) for enrollment/proofing strength and Authenticator Assurance Level (AAL) for authentication strength (ranging from single-factor to hardware-based cryptographic authentication). It recommends writing requirements explicitly by referencing IAL and AAL in legislation and procurement, because vague wording like “strong identity verification” can cause inconsistent interpretations. Overall, the core takeaway for builders of verifiable digital credentials is that trust depends on both the enrollment proofing foundation and the ongoing authentication controls. The article also notes SpruceID’s role in helping governments modernize identity and security systems.
Neutral
digital identityauthenticationidentity proofingNIST SP 800-63verifiable credentials

CFTC BTC perps Approved as Dimon Targets Stablecoin Clarity Act, Iran Crypto Seizure

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The CFTC greenlit “BTC perpetuals” for Kalshi and issued guidance that crypto derivatives can fit regulated 24/7 trading and clearing. The CFTC BTC perps move is notable because it brings a key derivative product closer to mainstream U.S. market structure. Meanwhile, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon escalated a lobbying fight against the U.S. “Clarity Act” by targeting the stablecoin yield debate. Dimon said banks will oppose the bill “until the bitter end,” arguing the stablecoin yield mechanism could pull deposits away from traditional banking. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong was singled out as the main proponent, with Dimon alleging Coinbase spent “hundreds of millions” in Washington. The conflict is tied to a 2025 law (GENIUS Act) that bans stablecoin issuers from paying interest, but allows third-party platforms to offer yield. On the enforcement side, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the U.S. has seized about $1B in cryptocurrency from Iran-linked entities since hostilities began in February, underscoring how state actors may use blockchain rails to evade sanctions. Separately, Celsius founder Alex Mashinsky filed a motion to vacate his 12-year prison sentence, arguing conflicts and alleged market manipulation contributed to Celsius’s collapse. Overall, the CFTC BTC perps approval supports further integration of crypto derivatives into U.S. oversight, while stablecoin policy uncertainty and geopolitical enforcement risks remain catalysts for volatility.
Neutral
CFTCBitcoin PerpetualsStablecoin RegulationUS PolicyIran Crypto Seizure

US imposes new Iran sanctions, clouding US-Iran deal prospects

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The US Treasury has imposed new “counterterrorism” sanctions on Iran amid ongoing US-Iran deal talks. The measures target Iranian-linked proxies and regime actors under the Treasury’s 2026 counterterrorism framework. The move reinforces a hardened US stance, particularly as Donald Trump has previously ruled out sanctions relief. The article links the US imposes new Iran sanctions to higher geopolitical tension risk, including potential disruption to oil transit routes tied to the Strait of Hormuz. Market interpretation in prediction markets also turned cautious: it suggests a NO outcome bias for an agreement timeline, with reduced chances that Trump will meet Iranian demands by June 30. The article cites probability ranges for different “Iranian demands” (from about 7.5% to 51.5% YES across demands) and notes WTI oil market sensitivity to geopolitical stress (a small reported YES probability tied to $150). What to watch next: statements from US and Iranian officials on negotiation status, any further shifts in the Treasury’s approach, and geopolitical developments around the Strait of Hormuz. The role of other actors such as the EU and China is also highlighted as a potential driver of expectations.
Bearish
US-Iran sanctionsUS Treasurycounterterrorism frameworkoil transit riskprediction markets

Trump Iran ceasefire framework lifts Wall Street; Bitcoin steadies

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Markets rallied as President Trump outlined a potential U.S.-Iran deal framework, while equities hit fresh highs. On May 29, the S&P 500 closed at a record ~7,592, extending a winning streak to about nine straight weeks, helped by tech/AI momentum. Key diplomatic terms from Trump’s statement on Truth Social include reopening the Strait of Hormuz without tolls, lifting a naval blockade, destroying enriched nuclear material, and a proposed joint operation involving the U.S., China, Iran, and the IAEA. At the same time, “Main Street” concerns rose: the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index fell to a record low 44.8 (down from 48.2 prelim), with 57% of consumers citing high prices and inflation expectations around 4.8%. Crypto signals were mixed but generally supportive. Bitcoin held near $73,000–$74,000, showing resilience alongside equities; Bitcoin was also reported near ~$73,500. Ethereum traded just above the $2,000 level (~$2,007–$2,025). Total crypto market cap stabilized above ~$2.56T. However, ETF flows remained a headwind, with reported outflows of about $223M. Market structure also improved for institutions: CME launched 24/7 crypto futures trading on Friday. Traders are now focused on whether the Iran framework becomes a formal agreement that reduces energy-market pressure, and how the Federal Reserve’s next rate moves will affect equities, Bitcoin, and metals.
Bullish
Trump Iran ceasefireBitcoin priceCME crypto futuresETF flowsMacro risk sentiment

Bitcoin: BlackRock Clients Sell $177.95M—Deeper Correction Risk?

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BlackRock clients reportedly sold $177.95M in Bitcoin, reigniting concerns about institutional risk reduction. The headline timing matters: BTC was trading near key support after rejecting at ~$82,378, not at cycle highs. However, exchange-flow data showed a different mix. Bitcoin recorded net outflows of about $17.31M, suggesting coins may be moving off exchanges rather than being prepared for immediate distribution. This clashes with an “all-clear distribution” narrative and hints at ongoing accumulation by some participants. Price action is at a technical crossroads. Bitcoin (BTC) is around $73,397 and testing the lower boundary of an ascending channel near the $73.8K support region. Sellers have pushed it lower after the resistance rejection, but no confirmed breakdown is reported. Momentum indicators remain cautious. MACD stays bearish (histogram below zero), implying downside pressure if support fails. If Bitcoin loses the current zone, traders may watch the next support around $65,657. On-chain valuation is comparatively constructive. Bitcoin’s NVT Golden Cross fell sharply to about -0.1688, which typically points to improving network activity relative to valuation and not an “excess speculation” state. Bottom line for traders: Bitcoin faces conflicting signals—reported BlackRock-related selling raises near-term caution, while exchange outflows and NVT data reduce the odds of a fully overheated top. Expect volatility around channel support, with direction likely defined by whether Bitcoin can defend ~$73.8K.
Neutral
BitcoinBlackRockInstitutional FlowsOn-chain MetricsTechnical Analysis

US Bitcoin ETF Flows Show Risk Repricing, Policy Momentum

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US Bitcoin spot ETF flows from May 28 are sending a mixed signal. The article argues that recent outflows—occurring alongside high trading volume—are not a clear “sell-off” or full risk-off retreat. Instead, US Bitcoin ETF flows suggest traders are actively repricing risk rather than exiting the market entirely. Among major products, IBIT (iShares Bitcoin Trust) saw substantial single-day outflows, but retains large cumulative inflows. In contrast, GBTC continues with significant net outflows, pointing to capital rotation across leading Bitcoin ETF vehicles. On the policy front, momentum around the CLARITY Act is described as a key driver of market maturity. Even with controversy and opposition, the push implies crypto’s institutional positioning remains in flux—between Wall Street integration and lingering skepticism from traditional players. For traders, the core takeaway is that US Bitcoin ETF flows are better interpreted as reallocations and changing risk appetite than as a one-direction bearish signal. Continued ETF flow divergence (IBIT vs GBTC) may translate into choppy price action, where downside moves can be countered by rotation-driven demand, but rallies may face selectivity.
Neutral
US Bitcoin ETFETF FlowsRegulatory PolicyRisk RepricingMarket Rotation

Strait of Hormuz Disruption Lifts Oil and Airline Costs

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The Strait of Hormuz has been disrupted by the ongoing Middle East conflict involving Iran, the United States, and Israel, with fighting starting on Feb. 28, 2026. The blockage has reduced global fuel supply and disrupted jet-fuel flows, hitting European airlines. Reported effects include thousands of flight cancellations and higher ticket prices. Traders tracking the Strait of Hormuz disruption are also watching how market pricing is reacting via prediction-style signals: - “Normal traffic” by June 15 is priced at 7.5% YES (down from 8% over 24 hours), implying a higher likelihood of continued disruption. - A “crude oil all-time high” bet for May 31 is priced at 0.1% YES, unchanged, suggesting limited near-term upside expectations. - “WTI hitting $150 in May” is also priced at 0.1% YES, indicating a very low probability. - Despite low May forecasts, pricing implies higher expectations for a crude all-time high by Sep. 30, 2026. Key names to watch include Hossein Salami and Lloyd Austin, alongside potential diplomatic steps or new military actions that could change the status of the Strait of Hormuz. OPEC and the International Maritime Organization (IMO) updates are also highlighted as potential drivers for oil-supply expectations. For crypto traders, this is a classic energy-shock narrative: the Strait of Hormuz disruption can raise macro uncertainty, affect inflation expectations, and contribute to risk-off positioning if tensions persist.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzOil Market VolatilityWTI PricingMiddle East GeopoliticsMacro Risk

CME crypto futures go 24/7 from May 29, ending weekend gaps for BTC/ETH

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CME Group will expand its crypto futures and options trading to 24/7 starting May 29, 2026 (effective from 4:30 p.m. CT). The change removes the prior weekend closures and the limited-hours window that created recurring “CME gaps” at the weekly open. The launch covers nine assets: BTC, ETH, SOL, XRP, ADA, LINK, XLM, AVAX and SUI. CME futures previously traded about 23 hours per day and fully shut on weekends. A weekday maintenance window runs 4:00–4:02 p.m. CT, while Saturday has a longer 2:00–4:00 a.m. CT maintenance period. Trades placed over weekends or holidays receive the next business day’s settlement date. Liquidity and positioning signals look supportive: year-to-date average daily volume is 407,200 contracts (+46% YoY), while open interest at launch is around 335,400 contracts, implying longer holding periods rather than only short-term churn. For crypto traders, the key impact is smoother price discovery around the weekly open. By reducing the artificial discontinuity between CME crypto futures and spot levels, traders may see tighter correlation and fewer forced “snaps” back toward spot—an important shift for ETH and index-style exposure. Watch weekend spreads, margin dynamics and clearing depth, since 24/7 execution does not automatically guarantee weekend liquidity quality.
Neutral
CME crypto futures24/7 tradingCME gapsBTC and ETHMarket microstructure

JPMorgan CEO Pushes Back on Clarity Act, Demands Equal Crypto Banking Rules

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JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said the proposed “Clarity Act” could trigger a major clash between traditional banks and crypto firms. Speaking to Fox Business, he argued banks are not against regulation, but want a truly “fair and equal” playing field under US crypto regulation. Dimon’s key points on the Clarity Act: - If a platform takes deposits or performs core banking functions, it should face rules comparable to banks. - Decentralized platforms should also meet similar reporting, liquidity, and capital requirements. - He warned that weak oversight could enable illegal groups and create national security risks. He criticized the current draft as inadequate for both large and small institutions, saying it may allow deposit-backed stablecoin payments to continue without sufficient guarantees. Ahead of a Senate vote, he indicated JPMorgan and other major institutions will lobby to block the bill in its current form. He also noted US banks are supervised by 84 regulators, while decentralized platforms face far less oversight. For crypto traders, this is a near-term catalyst for regulatory uncertainty. Expect heightened focus on stablecoins, deposit-like services, and compliance costs tied to banking treatment—factors that can move market expectations even before any final bill outcome.
Neutral
JPMorganClarity ActStablecoinsUS crypto regulationBanking compliance

Dimon Slams Coinbase as Clarity Act Stablecoin Yield Fight Heads to Senate Vote

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JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon attacked Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong on Fox Business over the US “Clarity Act,” warning the bill’s current version will be “fought” and that “we lose, we lose.” The dispute is again centered on Clarity Act stablecoin yield rules. Under the GENIUS Act signed in July 2025, stablecoin issuers like Tether and Circle are barred from paying yield directly to clients. Banks want the Clarity Act to close this loophole by limiting or standardizing platform-level reward mechanisms. Coinbase argues for preserving stablecoin yield offered by third parties (including exchanges) to keep crypto competitive with bank savings. Dimon said Armstrong is spending “hundreds of millions” in Washington and accused him of being “full of shit.” He also suggested public pressure will “blow up on its own.” Despite the months-long delay, the Clarity Act advanced after a key Senate Banking Committee vote earlier this month and is now set for the Senate floor. For traders, Polymarket odds place the Clarity Act’s chance at about 59% of being signed by end-2026. That keeps regulatory timing risk elevated—any swing in the final Clarity Act stablecoin yield compromise could quickly reprice crypto sentiment and related equities.
Neutral
US RegulationStablecoin YieldCoinbaseSenate Banking CommitteeJPMorgan

Bitcoin and Ether ETF outflows hit $350M; HYPE and XRP see selective inflows

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Crypto ETF flows stayed defensive on May 28, with Bitcoin ETF and Ether ETF outflows extending consecutive selloffs. Bitcoin ETF outflows totaled $228.9M for a ninth straight day. The largest pressure came from BlackRock’s IBIT (-$177.9M), followed by Grayscale’s GBTC (-$26.2M), Fidelity’s FBTC (-$19.2M), and Valkyrie’s BRRR (-$5.6M). Total BTC ETF trading value was $2.36B, while net assets ended at $94.25B (below $100B). Ether ETF selloffs were heavier at -$121.4M for a 13th consecutive outflow session. BlackRock’s ETHA led (-$80.4M), with Grayscale’s ETHE (-$21.4M) and Fidelity’s FETH (-$15.1M) also falling; Grayscale’s Ether Mini Trust declined (-$7.7M). ETHB was the lone offsetting inflow (+$3.1M). Total ETH ETF trading value was $691.3M and net assets closed at $11.30B. Smaller altcoin ETFs were mixed: HYPE ETFs added +$1.72M, XRP ETFs recorded +$1.77M inflows (via Bitwise’s XRP product), and Solana ETFs gained +$484.4K. Combined, Bitcoin ETF and Ether ETF withdrawals were about -$350.2M, reinforcing a cautious institutional tone even as some capital rotated toward XRP, HYPE, and SOL.
Bearish
Bitcoin ETF flowsEther ETF flowsInstitutional outflowsAltcoin rotationHYPE and XRP inflows

Anthropic’s 80x Q1 Growth Pushes Claude Maker Toward $1T Valuation

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Anthropic’s 80x growth in Q1 signals an aggressive acceleration in the AI tech sector. Bessemer Venture Partners partner Byron Deeter said the result is a “once-in-a-generation” company, after Anthropic outpaced its own internal projection of ~10x growth. In the first quarter of 2026, Anthropic (creator of Claude) grew 80x in annualized revenue and usage. The estimated run-rate revenue reached $47B by mid-May 2026, up from roughly $14B annualized and then $30B in earlier periods. The speed compressed what would normally take years of scaling into months. On May 28, 2026, Anthropic closed a $65B Series H with a post-money valuation of $965B, putting it near the trillion-dollar club. Investors joining included Altimeter, Dragoneer, Greenoaks, Sequoia, and Bessemer. Anthropic now serves over 300,000 business customers. Overall, Anthropic’s 80x growth in Q1 and the mega-round valuation underscore ongoing liquidity and risk appetite in AI-related tech investment, even as regulators and enterprise economics remain key watchpoints.
Bullish
AnthropicAI fundingQ1 growthventure capitaltrillion-dollar valuation

Texas Bitcoin Reserve names advisers and moves IBIT to BTC

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Texas is moving its Texas Bitcoin reserve from planning to implementation. Acting Texas Comptroller Kelly Hancock will chair a five-member advisory committee created under Texas Senate Bill 21 to guide Bitcoin custody, valuation, and management. The panel includes CleanSpark CFO/President Gary A. Vecchiarelli, Cormint Data Systems CEO Jamie McAvity, SMU law professor Carla Reyes, and Laurie Dotter. Alongside the committee, Texas released an RFP to select a crypto custodian. The state’s current exposure is about $10 million through BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT). Under the RFP terms, Texas plans to shift from ETF-based exposure to directly held Bitcoin within 60 days after contract signing, prioritizing secure custody, liquidity services, and financial controls. Federal backdrops remain in motion but with delays. A March 6, 2025 U.S. executive order directed Treasury to build a reserve using forfeiture-linked Bitcoin and bar selling those holdings. Separately, Congress is considering the American Reserves Modernization Act, which—if passed—could allow Treasury to buy up to 200,000 BTC per year for five years, with a long hold period. For traders, the Texas Bitcoin reserve reinforces the “institutional-style state accumulation” narrative. The 60-day custody transition is likely to sharpen attention around custody/ETF flows and BTC market structure, even if near-term spot supply effects are limited.
Bullish
Texas Bitcoin reserveBTC custodyIBIT to BTCstate legislationinstitutional adoption

Strategy moves BTC to Coinbase: sell odds 84% and Bitcoin Constitution inscription

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Strategy moves BTC to Coinbase Prime with ~411.48 BTC (≈$30.3M), split into two tranches, marking its first major direct on-chain exchange transfer in nearly two years. The deposit triggers renewed selling speculation: Polymarket’s implied probability that Strategy sells BTC (before 2026-12-31) jumps to 84%. Traders frame the transfer as liquidity preparation rather than cold-wallet migration, given Strategy’s long-term storage preference. Separately, an anonymous user inscribed the full U.S. Constitution onto Bitcoin using a 44.4KB transaction via OP_RETURN, costing about $83.41. This follows last year’s removal of the OP_RETURN byte cap, reigniting the debate over whether Bitcoin should remain a payments/monetary network or evolve into broader data storage. Market context: BTC trades around $73.7K with a downtrend bias. Technicals read as defensive (RSI ~36, near oversold; bearish MACD), with key support around $72,633 and deeper levels near $70,280 and $66,862. Traders are watching whether Strategy moves BTC to Coinbase signals near-term supply pressure, and whether BTC breaks support or reclaims ~$74,615.
Bearish
BitcoinStrategyCoinbase PrimeOn-chain inscriptionsSell speculation

Coinbase premium drops 1.08% as BTC breaks below $73K

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Coinbase premium drops 1.08% as BTC slips below $73,000, according to CryptoQuant’s on-chain analysis. The Coinbase Premium Index fell 1.083% versus its 3-month average, coinciding with Bitcoin losing key support. The article links the Coinbase move to institutional distribution rather than simple profit-taking. CryptoQuant highlights US-regulated sellers (institutions) and shows supply shifting toward Binance. Over the past seven days, Binance recorded net BTC inflows averaging 1,496 BTC/day, up 528% versus the 3-month average. Despite traders turning bullish on paper, leverage risks escalated. Funding rates on Binance surged to 781% above their 3-month average, while spot demand weakened. As BTC approached the $73,000–$75,000 range, leveraged longs were liquidated quickly, accelerating the sell-off after a “decisive break” below $73,000. CryptoQuant also points to early warning signals: weeks before the drop, on-chain metrics showed weaker spot conditions and a concentration of positions in derivatives—consistent with a distribution phase, not accumulation. Bitcoin ETFs saw net outflows for five straight days, while Coinbase reported a $394 million loss in Q1 2026 tied to lower trading volumes and falling prices. Key question for traders: can BTC stabilize at $73,000, or will it test the next support zone around $70,000–$72,000?
Bearish
BitcoinCoinbase PremiumInstitutional FlowsDerivatives LiquidationsBitcoin ETFs

Bitcoin fear vs greed: on-chain losses and 40x longs raise bull-trap risk

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Bitcoin fear vs greed is flashing a warning as BTC breaks below mid-April support near $73k, with a weekly drop around -4.78% and a wick near $72k. CryptoQuant shows ~42% of Bitcoin’s circulating supply is underwater (over 8 million BTC), suggesting weak demand and a potential “capitulation” mood rather than bargain buying. Bitcoin fear vs greed timing also looks misaligned with institutions: Lookonchain reports BlackRock moving about $157M BTC near a near-5% intraday dip. Meanwhile, derivatives sentiment leans toward “greed.” The article cites a whale opening a roughly $30M long using 40x leverage, with liquidation around $72.4k. With leveraged longs still accumulating in BTC perps while on-chain sentiment weakens, even a small downside move could trigger liquidations and amplify volatility. Longer-term context is mixed. Despite a monthly pullback and BTC showing its weakest monthly ROI since February, BTC is still up nearly +8% this quarter and Q2 could be the strongest since Q2 2025. However, the piece argues that weakened on-chain signals and uncertain macro conditions make repeating a major Q2 rally unlikely. For traders, this setup raises the odds of a liquidation-driven downside move—especially if fear continues to build while leverage remains overheated.
Bearish
Bitcoin fear vs greedBTC liquidation riskPerpetuals leverageOn-chain lossesInstitutional flows

Strive buys 2,624 Bitcoin in record SATA funding week

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Bitcoin treasury firm Strive (NASDAQ: ASST) raised capital via its SATA variable-rate perpetual preferred stock to buy about 2,624 Bitcoin in the week ending May 24, 2026—its fastest accumulation stretch to date. Weekly purchases jumped to roughly 790–794 BTC (with one reported day near ~250 BTC), versus a prior record of 371 BTC, lifting total holdings to around 16,500 BTC (over $1.2B). SATA is structured as a recurring “Bitcoin acquisition machine”: investors receive a variable dividend (up from ~12% to ~13%), while Strive uses proceeds for spot Bitcoin buys. The article also highlights an estimated cost basis of ~$99,000–$102,000 per Bitcoin. For crypto traders, the key near-term watch is whether continued SATA raises remain accretive or become dilutive on a per-share basis, and how sensitive Strive is if Bitcoin trades below its cost basis while the ~13% dividend obligation persists. Overall, the update points to sustained corporate bid support, which could modestly improve short-term Bitcoin supply/demand sentiment.
Bullish
Bitcoin treasurySATA preferred stockCorporate BTC demandDividend rateASST funding

Strait of Hormuz Disruption From Iran Conflict Sparks Energy Crisis

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The Iran conflict involving a US- and Israel-led coalition is driving a major energy crisis and shipping disruption at the Strait of Hormuz. Military escalation is viewed as the key cause, not diplomacy. Strait of Hormuz disruption is impairing global oil and LNG supply, leading to higher energy prices and broader market instability, drawing comparisons to the 1970s energy shocks. Prediction markets also reflect skewed expectations. The “Iran regime fall by June 30” market is priced at 2.4% YES (down from 3% a day earlier). By contrast, “US announces new Iran agreement/ceasefire extension by June 7” is priced at 56.5% YES (up from 36% the previous day), though overall sentiment remains cautious given ongoing hostilities. Key takeaway for traders: Strait of Hormuz risk is a high-impact driver for volatility in energy and risk assets. If disruptions intensify, expect sharper price swings; if de-escalation signals emerge, volatility could ease.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzIran ConflictOil & LNGEnergy ShockPrediction Markets

SPCE Stock Jumps 22% on Virgin Galactic Flights, SpaceX IPO Buzz

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SPCE stock surged more than 22% on May 29, 2026, reaching an all-time high near $5.58, as investors rotated into space stocks. The move was driven by three catalysts: (1) Virgin Galactic resumed VSS Unity glide flight testing after nearly two years, signaling operational readiness ahead of its Q3 2026 Delta-class timeline; (2) renewed SpaceX IPO excitement sparked broader “space sector” trading momentum, with SPCE viewed as a proxy for the IPO narrative; and (3) a preliminary court-approved settlement reduced legal uncertainty tied to 2022 shareholder derivative lawsuits. Investors are also tracking Virgin Galactic’s transition toward the next-generation Delta-class spacecraft and the reopening of ticket sales at $750,000 per seat. Still, traders face a high-risk setup. SPCE stock remains minimally revenue-generating and deeply unprofitable, with negative free cash flow and ongoing operating losses. Near-term bullish continuation depends on hitting the Q3 2026 flight-testing milestones and maintaining funding through late-2026 commercial operations. Any delay or liquidity concern could quickly reverse sentiment in this volatile momentum trade.
Bullish
SPCEVirgin GalacticSpaceX IPOSpace stocksDelta-class timeline

US Treasury Says It Seized About $1B in Crypto From Iran

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U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the United States has “outright grabbed” roughly $1 billion worth of crypto from Iran through government seizures. Speaking at the 2026 Reagan National Economic Forum, Bessent suggested some digital-asset holders may not yet realize their wallets have been taken. The remarks align with the broader U.S. crackdown on Iran-linked military and economic activity. The statement comes amid escalating focus on crypto-linked payments around the Strait of Hormuz. Reporting cited Iran’s promotion of a Bitcoin-settled maritime insurance platform called “Hormuz Safe,” and earlier claims that oil transit fees could be required in Bitcoin. Separate reporting has alleged Iran-linked actors received $1.5 billion in Tether’s USDT stablecoin, and that scammers are impersonating Iranian authorities to demand payments in BTC and USDT. While Bessent did not specify which assets were seized or whether Bitcoin was involved, the message highlights that crypto can be targeted through enforcement actions—even when sanctions make tracing difficult. The immediate market takeaway is increased headline risk around BTC and USDT, rather than direct changes to spot supply.
Neutral
US sanctionsIran-linked cryptoBTC enforcementUSDT stablecoinStrait of Hormuz payments

Kraken to Launch CFTC-Regulated Perpetual Futures for US Traders in 30 Days

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Kraken says it plans to launch the first CFTC-regulated perpetual futures for eligible US traders within the next 30 days. These CFTC-regulated perpetual futures will be available on Kraken Pro, integrated alongside spot, margin and CME-listed futures in a single interface. Perpetuals provide continuous exposure without an expiration date, removing the need to roll positions. Kraken also says the product is widely traded globally, with annual perpetual derivatives volume exceeding $60 trillion in 2025. Per the filing submitted today, the contracts will be listed on Bitnomial, a CFTC-regulated exchange recently acquired by Kraken’s parent company, Payward. The perpetual futures include continuous pricing, no expiration, and an eight-hour funding rate—standard structural features for crypto perps. Kraken will offer these products within the same futures wallet used for its existing CME-listed contracts, enabling traders to manage CME futures and crypto perpetual positions side by side. Initially, eligible clients can trade a suite of major assets: BTC, ETH, SOL, XRP, ADA, LINK, DOGE, LTC and AVAX. Kraken also plans to expand contract options and product functionality over time, including broader collateral choices. John Palmer, Global Head of Derivatives at Kraken, framed the move as bringing a regulated domestic route to a product that defines global crypto derivatives volumes. The announcement follows other US launches from Kraken over the past year, including support for CME-listed crypto futures (July 2025) and CFTC-regulated spot margin trading (earlier this month). Trading is offered via Kraken Derivatives US (a CFTC-registered Futures Commission Merchant), with spot and perpetual futures governed by Bitnomial exchange rules.
Bullish
KrakenCFTC-regulated perpsPerpetual futuresUS crypto derivativesBitnomial

Bitcoin lags as US-Iran deal sparks record S&P 500 and Nasdaq; spot ETF outflows persist

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US stocks jumped to record highs on May 28 as investors priced progress on a potential US-Iran deal. The S&P 500 rose 0.6% to 7,563.33, the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.9% to 26,917.47, and the Dow reached 50,669.77. The reported framework includes a 60-day ceasefire extension and reopening access to the Strait of Hormuz, with oil prices falling on the news. Crypto did not follow the risk-on move. Bitcoin traded below $73,000, while Ethereum and many altcoins stayed flat to lower. The key drag appears to be ongoing spot Bitcoin ETF outflows, even as traditional investors rotated into equities amid easing geopolitical tensions. For traders, the divergence matters: Bitcoin’s failure to rally alongside tech-heavy Nasdaq signals weaker crypto risk appetite. Spot Bitcoin ETFs—viewed as the bridge between traditional finance and crypto—are showing “one-way” capital outflows during an equities up-session. Monitor ETF flow data closely for confirmation of whether this gap can close or whether underperformance persists.
Bearish
BitcoinSpot Bitcoin ETFsUS-Iran ceasefireRisk-on divergenceNasdaq rally

SpaceX wins $4.16B SB-AMTI contract for airborne targeting

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SpaceX has secured a $4.16 billion production contract from the US Space Force for SB-AMTI (Space-Based Airborne Moving Target Indicator). Announced May 29, 2026, it is described as SpaceX’s largest single defense contract to date and a major step toward space-based “targeting,” not just passive surveillance. SB-AMTI is intended to deploy a satellite constellation to identify and track moving airborne threats such as aircraft and cruise missiles. The data would feed into the wider US military kill chain. Earlier in April 2026, the Space Force used a multi-vendor approach, awarding initial capability development work to nine vendors; SpaceX’s win indicates its proposal is seen as the fastest and most viable route to field the system. The contract adds to another major SpaceX award announced May 26: a $2.29 billion Space Data Network Backbone deal focused on communications infrastructure across military domains. Together, the two awards bring roughly $6.45 billion in new government defense work in a week, aligning with the 2026 National Defense Strategy’s push for space-based capabilities. For investors, SpaceX is privately held, so there is no direct equity exposure. Still, the headline is that the US government is increasingly awarding large-scale production contracts to commercial space companies, reinforcing momentum toward sensor-to-shooter defense architectures such as Golden Dome. Key keyword: SB-AMTI.
Neutral
SpaceXUS Space ForceSB-AMTIDefense contractsSatellite surveillance

Direxion files for 92 crypto ETFs in one batch as SEC ETF approvals near October deadlines

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Direxion has filed paperwork for 92 crypto ETFs in a single batch, potentially setting a “world record.” The filing arrives as a large pipeline of crypto ETFs waits for SEC review. Bloomberg Intelligence analyst James Seyffart said that, as of late August 2025, 92 crypto ETFs were still pending SEC approval, up sharply—20 new applications were submitted in just four months. The pending slate is broad. Solana leads with eight pending crypto ETF applications, followed by XRP with seven. Other filings target tokens such as Litecoin, alongside additional products focused directly on Bitcoin and Ethereum. Most of these applications face final SEC action by October 2025, concentrating approval, denial, or delay decisions into a tight window. That concentration could increase volatility around key regulatory dates. Direxion is already active in leveraged crypto exposure. It previously launched the Daily Bitcoin Bull 2X ETF (BTCU) and the Daily Ether Bull 2X ETF (EVMU), designed to amplify returns on BTC and ETH. At the market-structure level, exchanges are responding to the surge. In July 2025, Cboe BZX, Nasdaq, and NYSE Arca proposed standardized listing criteria for digital asset ETFs to make the review process more repeatable and potentially faster. For traders, this matters because clearer listing pathways can affect timing and probability of crypto ETF approvals.
Bullish
crypto ETFsSEC approvalleveraged ETFsSolanaXRP and altcoins