Cloudflare says it will make its platform fully post-quantum secure by 2029, with a focus on post-quantum authentication—the part of crypto and internet security that prevents attackers from impersonating servers or tampering with software updates.
In a Tuesday blog post, Sharon Goldberg (Cloudflare) said the authentication migration is more complex than upgrading encryption for TLS. Cloudflare has already deployed post-quantum encryption across most products since 2022, but it plans to roll out post-quantum authentication for origin connections in mid-2026, visitor connections in mid-2027, enterprise networking support by early 2028, and complete deployment across services by 2029.
The company’s accelerated timeline reflects rising concern about “Q-Day,” when practical quantum computers could break today’s cryptography. Experts cited in the article say newer research (including work by IBM and Google) has shifted Q-Day expectations toward around 2032.
For crypto markets, the core risk is that Bitcoin and other public-key systems rely on elliptic-curve signatures; quantum computers running Shor’s algorithm could theoretically derive private keys from public keys. The article also references Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin, Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko, and Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson warning that post-quantum upgrades are needed before Q-Day. Circle’s Arc Network is also mentioned as preparing post-quantum signature support for its USDC-backed ecosystem.
For traders, this is a long-horizon but sentiment-relevant security narrative: near-term market moves may be muted, while long-term positioning could tilt toward “quantum-ready” ecosystems and infrastructure.
Bloomberg reports that Standard Chartered plans to merge parts of Zodia Custody into its digital assets unit. The proposal keeps Zodia Custody as a standalone custody-technology SaaS platform, while moving client-facing custody operations into Standard Chartered’s parent bank.
Zodia Custody was formed in late 2020 by SC Ventures and Northern Trust and is jointly owned by Standard Chartered, Northern Trust, and SBI Holdings, with Standard Chartered as the largest controlling shareholder. Minority stakes are held by banks such as National Australia Bank and Emirates NBD.
For traders, this is another round of institutional crypto custody consolidation. It could improve institutional on/off-ramps and risk controls, but the move is not expected to be a direct catalyst for spot demand in major coins.
The update also adds product and market context: Zodia supports the AUDM stablecoin, launched “Zodia Switch” for in-platform swaps without external pre-funding, and is pursuing token-backed credit facilities. The custody market is projected to grow sharply as regulation improves and competition intensifies (e.g., Coinbase Custody, BitGo, Gemini, Ledger Enterprise, Fireblocks).
South Korea’s regulators, the FSC and FSS, together with the exchange industry group DAXA, have introduced unified crypto withdrawal delay rules to stop voice-phishing groups from exploiting “withdrawal exceptions.”
The “Virtual Asset Withdrawal Delay System” was launched in May 2025, but compliance reviews found that each exchange used different exemption criteria. From June to September 2025, 1,490 of 2,526 fraudulent accounts were granted withdrawal-delay exemptions, driving about $124 million (170.5 billion won) in losses—75.5% of all voice-phishing losses in that period.
Under the new crypto withdrawal delay rules, exchanges must apply a stricter, common standard. They will assess factors such as transaction frequency, account history/age, and cumulative deposit/withdrawal volumes. Regulators also set conditions where an exception cannot be granted regardless of trading history.
FSC simulations suggest the unified rules could cut withdrawal-exception eligibility by more than 99% by end-2025. Exempt users will face tighter monitoring, including mandatory annual verification of fund sources for high-volume traders, plus regular audits and penalties for weak internal controls. The move follows broader enforcement actions after operational-control failures and incidents such as the Bithumb payout error, where the FSC required five-minute reconciliations of internal ledgers versus actual assets.
Neutral
South Korea regulationcrypto withdrawal delay rulesvoice phishing defenseexchange complianceFSC FSS DAXA
Asia crypto regulation is tightening oversight of exchanges and digital asset managers across Hong Kong, Singapore, and South Korea. From 2025, Hong Kong rules will require crypto platform senior management to take clearer responsibility for client asset custody, with stronger internal controls and executive-level supervision. A key uncertainty is whether firms must rely on domestically regulated custodians or can use overseas/unregulated providers, affecting how risk is priced and insured.
Singapore is also raising 2025 licensing expectations, focusing on “fitness and competency” for key individuals. Compliance becomes a top management KPI, increasing directors’ and officers’ personal exposure—driving demand for D&O Liability Insurance.
In South Korea, the proposed Digital Asset Basic Act would expand governance requirements for issuance, trading, and listing/delisting, adding further compliance and potential legal exposure. Overall, Asia crypto regulation is likely to increase costs and scrutiny on custody and platform controls in the near term, while potentially improving institutional confidence over time.
Separate from regulation, the FBI warns that crypto scams are increasingly targeting experienced investors via “pig butchering,” using fake profits and blocking withdrawals with “liquidity” or “tax” narratives—an additional source of short-term sentiment distortion.
Neutral
Asia Crypto RegulationD&O InsuranceExchange GovernanceCustody ControlsCrypto Scams
Bitcoin price action suggests BTC rally is stalling as buyers hit a crowded resistance zone. Technical structure analysis points to BTC testing the top of a larger range and pressing into the final overhead fair value gap (FVG) near the range ceiling. However, BTC rally is stalling again because the upper FVG is still acting as resistance after prior breakout attempts failed (two fakeouts).
On the order book side, CoinGlass whale data shows a clear sell wall above current levels. On a 15-minute snapshot, heavy sell pressure is stacked between $72,400 and $73,600, while the largest visible bid sits near $70,600 (over $40M). BTC is trading around ~$71,700 after a sharp move, and the market has shifted from expansion into consolidation.
Key levels for traders: a clean break above the $72,400–$73,600 sell zone could reopen upside momentum. If BTC rally stalling turns into a rejection, downside liquidity may pull price toward support, with $70,600 highlighted as the bigger liquidity magnet. Smaller nearby bid areas appear around the low $71,000s and near ~$70,400.
Overall, the setup looks range-bound short term: confirmation requires a range-high close above the last overhead FVG, while failure likely keeps BTC trading between support and the thick supply band above.
Bitcoin demand is improving after spot and derivatives data showed buyers returning. BTC rallied above $72,000, supported by stronger order-book activity and reduced sell pressure from short-term holders.
On spot venues, Bitcoin demand strengthened: the 30-day spot net volume delta turned positive on Binance and Coinbase after February’s selling. Binance’s 30-day net volume moving average is $43.2M, while Coinbase shows $13.88M, indicating coordinated accumulation.
Derivatives also confirm the shift. Binance cumulative volume delta (CVD) rose to $5.6B on Wednesday (up $3.3B in April). That uptick aligns with increased taker-buy volume after BTC briefly slipped below $65,000 on March 30. The CVD is at its highest level since early February, suggesting stronger buyer conviction.
Key technical/positioning levels: $72,000 remains a “line in the sand.” Previously, attempts to reclaim it were rejected by short-term holders selling about 26,000 BTC and 31,000 BTC on earlier rallies. Now, short-term holder capitulation is nearer to 3,000 BTC after the breakout, and the 7-day net realized profit/loss moving average is recovering (near -$109M vs. a -$2B low on Feb. 7).
For traders, the outlook depends on whether Bitcoin demand can keep defending the $70,000–$72,000 zone over the next few days; failure would likely revive selling as holders re-test prior distribution behavior.
Bullish
Bitcoin demandBTC price analysisSpot net volume deltaBinance CVDShort-term holders
The US Treasury, through FinCEN and OFAC, is preparing sweeping stablecoin AML and sanctions rules for dollar-pegged stablecoin issuers. The draft would require US-operating issuers to embed technical “kill switches” in tokens and run full Bank Secrecy Act–style compliance systems.
Key requirements include the ability to “block, freeze and reject” transactions, and to escalate oversight with more resources for higher-risk customers and activities. OFAC’s sanctions component would demand risk-based controls across both primary markets (minting/redemption) and secondary markets, with policies aimed at detecting and rejecting transactions that may violate US sanctions.
This follows the GENIUS Act approach that effectively treats payment stablecoin issuers as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act, expanding stablecoin AML obligations. Treasury officials frame the approach as pro-innovation because clear federal standards should support stablecoin integration in the US financial system.
For market structure, the proposal formalizes powers some large issuers already have (freeze/block/burn), but would make these enforcement tools a legal requirement and could increase compliance costs. Legal analysts also warn that monitoring secondary-market activity at scale may necessitate advanced blockchain analytics and raise operational burden—potentially widening the gap between regulated “bank-like” stablecoin entities and more permissionless crypto projects.
Next steps: the rules are expected to go to public comment before being finalized.
Iran says it will impose a $1-per-barrel Bitcoin toll on oil tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz during a two-week ceasefire involving the US. The plan is framed as a “crypto tax” on a chokepoint that handles about 20% of seaborne oil supply.
Under the process, tankers must email cargo manifests to Iranian authorities before entering the strait. After review, ships get only seconds to pay the Bitcoin toll before clearance. An Iranian union spokesperson says the design aims to slow traffic and limit sanctions-evasion, while keeping payments hard to trace or confiscate.
Because typical cargoes range from 500,000 to 2 million barrels, a single transit could require roughly $500,000 to $2,000,000 worth of Bitcoin payments.
The announcement comes alongside a fragile Iran–US truce. Reuters reports Iran could reopen the strait “limited, under Iran’s control” as early as Thursday or Friday ahead of talks in Pakistan. Oil prices reacted sharply (Brent and WTI both fell materially), and Trump also floated a joint-venture model to monetize strait tolls—adding geopolitical uncertainty for markets.
For crypto traders, the headline is directly about Bitcoin toll payments, which may support near-term narratives around BTC-linked sanctions payments, but broader risk sentiment is likely driven by the Iran–US ceasefire outcome.
Neutral
Bitcoin tollsStrait of HormuzSanctions paymentsOil market volatilityIran–US truce
Stablecoins are processing more money than Visa and Mastercard combined, according to Morph’s “State of Stablecoins” report. Stablecoins settled $33 trillion on-chain in 2025, versus $25.5 trillion handled by Visa and Mastercard together.
The data highlights growing institutional use. About 60% of stablecoin flows are now business-to-business, driven by corporates using dollar tokens for cross-border treasury, supplier payments and procurement. Separately, the report says around 90% of financial institutions are already using or piloting stablecoins.
Volume momentum is also accelerating. The report notes several months in 2025 where stablecoins cleared above $1.5 trillion monthly, putting tokenized settlement capacity in the same range as major card networks.
Looking ahead, Morph projects stablecoin settlement could exceed $50 trillion annually as early as 2026. By 2030, it forecasts stablecoins could represent roughly 10% of global cross-border payments, supported by lower fees, instant settlement, and clearer regulation under frameworks such as the EU’s MiCA and new U.S. stablecoin rules.
The report also argues that AI agents may become key transaction initiators, automating high-frequency machine-to-machine payments across supply chains. Under this scenario, stablecoins could support a $1.9 trillion market by 2030.
For traders, the message is that stablecoins are shifting from a speculative theme to core market infrastructure—volume growth and enterprise adoption may reduce liquidity risk while increasing on-chain dollar demand.
Chinese Bitcoin miner Cango said it sold an additional 2,000 BTC in March to cut debt and reduce Bitcoin-collateralized exposure. The company’s March update shows a remaining Bitcoin backed loan balance of $30.6 million as of March 31, alongside treasury holdings of 1,025.69 BTC.
This follows a larger February sale. On Feb. 9, Cango sold 4,451 BTC on the open market for about $305 million in net proceeds, settled in USDT, and used the full amount to partially repay a Bitcoin collateralized loan. Combined, the two disclosures indicate Cango has sold at least 6,451 BTC this year.
Cango links the Bitcoin sales to deleveraging and a business shift beyond mining. It says it plans to use its grid-connected mining infrastructure to build distributed compute capacity for the AI sector, with the first phase targeting modular GPU compute nodes across existing sites.
The move comes as Cango reports pressure from recent financial results. In its FY2025 report, it posted $688.1 million in total revenue but a net loss from continuing operations of $452.8 million, attributed partly to transformation costs and market-driven fair value adjustments. Operationally, Cango reported an average cash cost per Bitcoin mined of $68,215.83 in March, down 19.3% from Q4 2025, and an operational hashrate of 37.01 EH/s as of March 31.
Morpho has launched “Morpho Agents” in beta, adding a machine-readable interface so AI agents can directly interact with DeFi lending. The Morpho Agents system includes a User Agent that can read live lending data, simulate transactions, and prepare write operations on Morpho across Ethereum and Base.
It also introduces a Builder Agent that packages protocol knowledge, code examples, edge cases, and recovery patterns to help developers build Morpho integrations faster.
Morpho said that since January, more than 130,000 AI agents have registered onchain identities. The beta builds on earlier steps, including LLM-friendly documentation endpoints (llms.txt and llms all.txt published March 18) to make protocol data easier for AI systems to parse.
The launch signals a broader shift in crypto infrastructure toward “autonomous finance” tooling, not just human user interfaces. The article also links this trend to other wallet/agent layers: MoonPay’s “MoonPay Agents,” the Open Wallet Standard, and Coinbase’s AgentKit and Agentic Wallets (standalone wallets for agents to hold USDC, send payments, and trade on Base without handling private keys directly).
For traders, the key takeaway is that Morpho Agents could accelerate AI-driven participation in DeFi lending, potentially increasing automation in lending/borrowing workflows—though the near-term price impact on tokens is likely indirect.
Crypto educator Dom Kwok (EasyA) praised XRP holders who did not sell during recent volatility, linking the rebound to improving macro conditions.
At reporting time, XRP traded near $1.38, up 5.83% over 24 hours. The article says the move fits a broader “risk-on” shift across crypto markets, driven by easing geopolitical concerns and more stable energy supply expectations.
Key catalyst cited: improved conditions around the Strait of Hormuz. Because the corridor is crucial for global oil transport, reduced tensions can lower oil-price volatility, ease inflation expectations, and help investors rotate back into higher-risk assets—often lifting liquid coins like XRP quickly.
The piece frames this as a familiar crypto cycle: external shocks trigger fear and sell pressure, then sentiment reverses when macro/geo risks cool. Traders who maintain positions through drawdowns may benefit disproportionately during recoveries, especially when declines appear macro-driven rather than structural.
Keywords: XRP, macro risk sentiment, Strait of Hormuz, energy stability, risk-on flows. (Not financial advice.)
The US Treasury is drafting new stablecoin issuer regulations to curb financial crime, developed with FinCEN and OFAC. The proposal would require stablecoin compliance programs to add technical controls to block, freeze, or reject certain transactions.
Key requirements cover anti–money laundering oversight under the Bank Secrecy Act, enhanced monitoring for suspicious activity, and more resources for high-risk customers and operations. On sanctions, issuers are expected to screen and stop potential violations across both primary and secondary market activity before transactions proceed.
The framework connects to GENIUS (National US Stablecoin Innovation Act), which is set to fully take effect by 2027. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the goal is to protect the US financial system without stopping innovation in the payments stablecoin sector.
The later report also highlights that major issuers and ecosystems such as Tether (USDT), Circle (USDC), and Ripple are expected to tighten internal systems to detect links to FinCEN/OFAC-designated entities. It reiterates prior scrutiny of large exchanges, including Binance.
For crypto traders, tighter stablecoin oversight may raise compliance costs and force operational changes. Expect near-term headline and liquidity sensitivity risk around stablecoin issuers, while clearer rules could reduce long-run regulatory uncertainty.
Neutral
Stablecoin RegulationFinCEN AML ControlsOFAC Sanctions ComplianceGENIUS ActCrypto Market Compliance Risk
Zcash (ZEC) rallied about 21% in 24 hours, breaking above $320 after a two-week pause in US-Iran tensions reduced geopolitical risk. The shift to “risk-on” triggered a rotation into higher-beta crypto, with ZEC leading daily gains.
Trading activity surged. ZEC volume hit a roughly one-month peak near $800M and derivatives open interest (OI) rose around 26%, with a large share concentrated on Binance. Social “mindshare” for ZEC also climbed to 0.5% (+~25% in 24 hours).
Market breadth improved as Bitcoin (BTC) recovered toward the $72,000 area and privacy assets outperformed; Monero (XMR) gained around 3% above $337. On-chain-related signals for Zcash were cited as supportive: shielded supply reportedly reached a record 5.17M ZEC, with no clear signs of unshielding or whale distribution.
Price levels now matter for traders. Resistance is clustered near $330. The article notes about $2.85M in short liquidations over 24 hours and OI around $386M—conditions that could fuel another short-squeeze wave if ZEC breaks $330 on volume, potentially extending toward $400 (helped by an upcoming shielded upgrade). Still, earlier warnings remain relevant: exchange netflows turning inflow-dominant and prior overbought readings (RSI near ~86) can increase odds of profit-taking and a pullback back toward the low-$200s if the move was mainly a squeeze.
Yuga Labs has settled its two-year lawsuit against artists Ryder Ripps and Jeremy Cahen over their RR/BAYC NFT collection, which reused Bored Ape Yacht Club imagery. The agreement avoids a trial and ends the dispute over whether the project was satire or trademark infringement.
Proposed court orders would permanently bar Ripps and Cahen from using Yuga Labs’ trademarks and imagery, according to a filing in California federal court. Financial terms of the settlement were not disclosed.
The case escalated in 2022 when Yuga Labs alleged the defendants sold lookalike NFTs that confused buyers and generated millions. A district judge initially ruled for Yuga Labs, awarding nearly $9 million in damages and fees. However, an appeals court overturned that decision, saying a jury should determine whether buyers were actually misled. The settlement now sidesteps that jury trial.
For crypto traders, the ruling is a reminder that major NFT IP branding disputes can quickly shift from creative/marketing narratives to enforceable trademark outcomes—often impacting liquidity, secondary-market sentiment, and project survivability. Yuga Labs’ settlement reduces headline risk around RR/BAYC, but it also reinforces the legal boundary for derivative NFT collections using established blue-chip IP.
Neutral
Yuga LabsBored Ape Yacht ClubNFT版权与商标RR/BAYCNFT诉讼和解
Bitcoin price reclaimed about $72,000 after reports of a temporary pause in U.S.-Iran military actions eased geopolitical pressure. The headline-driven shift improved risk sentiment and supported a broader crypto market rebound, with BTC returning to levels seen earlier in March.
Traders are still mixed on momentum. Prediction markets show gradual optimism: the probability of Bitcoin reaching $100,000 by year-end rose to 34% from 30% a week earlier, while the $150,000 scenario remains weak at around 9%—suggesting cautious positioning rather than aggressive buying.
Leverage signals on Bitfinex remain elevated, with margin long positions at over 80,000 BTC near multi-year highs. Historically, such peaks often fade as uncertainty clears, so this may indicate traders have not fully de-risked even as Bitcoin bounced.
Technically, BTC faces a resistance band between $75,000 and $80,000, aligning with the 100-day moving average and the upper edge of a longer-term descending channel. Support is highlighted at $70,041; a break above $75K–$80K could open upside follow-through toward prior highs, while rejection could pull price back toward the $60,000 support area.
Institutional demand looks inconsistent. The Coinbase premium index has fluctuated around zero, implying uneven U.S.-based buying, while crypto-related equities rose but at a slower pace than broader markets.
Key takeaway for Bitcoin traders: geopolitics helped BTC reclaim $72K, but technical resistance at $75K–$80K and still-high leveraged longs suggest the market may need confirmation before a sustained trend.
On April 8, 2026, on-chain analytics firm Bubblemaps said a small cluster of Polymarket accounts profited around $611,000 from US–Iran ceasefire prediction contracts, after Trump’s conditional ceasefire announcement.
Bubblemaps identified three Polymarket handles—“djijaij83jdo4jdlwjflsg,” “Elonfax89678,” and “Skoobidoobnj”—as part of a repeat-trading group. The firm said the cluster has been betting on “military markets” since 2024, using multiple accounts, including some created recently.
The accounts reportedly earned even more on related Israeli/U.S. strikes on Iran in late February, with Bubblemaps citing roughly $1.2 million in total profits from those bets.
While the winnings were large and well-timed, Bubblemaps stressed it cannot prove the traders had privileged information. It pointed out the win rate was not perfect and that some ceasefire positions (including a contract tied to dates before March 31) did not play out.
The article places these findings in the wider context of renewed scrutiny of prediction markets and alleged insider trading, including political disputes in the U.S. and platform efforts to add screening and restrictions.
For traders, the key takeaway is that Polymarket remains a high-attention venue for geopolitical-event pricing, but the controversy could increase volatility and regulatory risk around market access and liquidity.
The Ethereum Foundation plans an ETH to stablecoins conversion of 5,000 ETH using CoWSwap TWAP execution. The Treasury says the proceeds will support research, grants, and ecosystem development, while spreading sales over time to reduce slippage and avoid a sharp directional market signal.
At around $2,200 per ETH, the 5,000 ETH allocation is estimated near $11 million (roughly under 5% of the Foundation’s reported ETH holdings). Arkham Intelligence data cited in the report puts the Foundation at about 102,000 ETH plus smaller liquid-staking and stablecoin reserves, suggesting limited short-term impact on ETH market structure.
This comes after a broader treasury shift toward staking yield. In March, the Foundation confirmed plans to stake up to 70,000 ETH. Traders are likely to view the CoWSwap TWAP approach as a controlled liquidity operation rather than a heavy liquidation event, with near-term volatility effects on ETH expected to be muted given ETH trading around the low-$2,200 range at the time of writing. Overall: ETH to stablecoins via CoWSwap TWAP appears incremental and execution-focused.
Neutral
Ethereum FoundationCoWSwap TWAPETH to StablecoinsTreasury ManagementStaking Yield
On-chain data shows SHIB exchange inflows surged by about 157 billion tokens in 24 hours, suggesting distribution rather than accumulation. SHIB’s price is around $0.00000602, up ~3.6% daily, but it remains below key moving averages with no volume recovery. The article frames the current setup as consolidation inside a broader downtrend, meaning any bounce may be fragile without fresh demand.
Exchange reserves have risen alongside the SHIB exchange inflows, which typically precedes selling. Netflow readings are flat to negative over the same period, while trading volume has not meaningfully improved—pointing to weak buying pressure. In short: supply is increasing on exchanges while demand stays muted, a mismatch that often pressures price action.
No major named figure drives the move; the signal is primarily technical + on-chain (inflows, reserves, netflow, and volume).
Bearish
SHIBExchange InflowsOn-chain Sell PressureMoving AveragesToken Distribution
Morgan Stanley launched the spot Bitcoin ETF, the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MSBT), on NYSE Arca. The Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF trades under ticker MSBT and charges a 0.14% expense ratio, positioned as the lowest fee among US spot Bitcoin ETFs.
The low-fee structure is designed to attract adviser-driven demand after US rules allowed Morgan Stanley advisers to recommend third-party spot Bitcoin ETFs since 2024. Morgan Stanley is keeping management fees internally while expanding its crypto ETF presence.
MSBT launched with $1M in seed capital (50,000 shares available for trading). Custody is handled by Coinbase Custody Trust Company and Bank of New York Mellon. The fund tracks the CoinDesk Bitcoin Benchmark using a 4 PM NY settlement.
Market context matters: Bitcoin was still pressured—down over 40% from its October peak—and spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net outflows for four straight months (about $6.3B from Nov 2025–Feb 2026). For traders, the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin ETF could support incremental BTC demand via adviser access, but near-term price direction will remain dominated by broader ETF flow data and BTC volatility.
Neutral
Morgan StanleySpot Bitcoin ETFETF FeesAdviser DemandBTC Flows
South Korea crypto law proposal from the ruling Democratic Party would create a “Digital Asset Basic Act” framework for crypto. It covers issuance, trading, custody, disclosure and supervision, with tighter rules for value-linked tokens, including fiat- or real-asset backed stablecoins. Issuers would need authorization and strict reserve, redemption and refund obligations.
Stablecoin licensing is the key dispute. The Bank of Korea wants only bank-style operators with 51% ownership to be authorized, while the Financial Services Commission warns this could limit innovation. The bill also proposes licensing/registration/reporting for exchanges, brokers, custodians and advisors, plus disclosures, internal controls and bans on market manipulation and misuse of non-public information.
Operationally, regulators ordered all domestic exchanges to adopt a unified, strict withdrawal-delay system aimed at reducing voice-phishing scams. Traders should expect more compliance friction around stablecoin issuance and exchange withdrawal flows, which may affect liquidity, on/off-ramp behavior and volatility around policy deadlines.
South Korea crypto law proposal
Neutral
South Korea crypto regulationstablecoin licensingexchange withdrawal delaysDigital Asset Basic Actmarket conduct rules
Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has proposed tighter crypto rules to improve transparency and curb money laundering and technology-related crimes.
Under the Thailand crypto rules, the SEC will expand oversight beyond direct shareholders. Funding providers that back “major shareholders” (including sources of capital behind them) would be treated as key shareholder-like parties, requiring disclosures and proof that funding is legal.
The SEC would also regulate indirect financial support, such as guarantors, contract-based arrangements, and investments that create control-like influence. Normal financial activities like bank loans and standard margin trading facilities are explicitly excluded.
The proposal builds on SEC revisions from March 2026 aimed at identifying real controlling individuals, and it includes a government-related carve-out: when a major shareholder is a government entity, the SEC would review ownership at the entity level rather than digging into underlying details.
The draft is open for public consultation before final rules are confirmed.
For traders, these Thailand crypto rules could raise compliance costs and encourage exchange and shareholder structure changes. In the short term, regulatory headlines may pressure risk sentiment around regulated platforms, while clearer standards could improve longer-term market integrity.
Bitcoin surged on Wednesday after Iran’s Supreme National Security Council accepted a two-week ceasefire. The move pushed BTC above $72,700 at times, after more than 5% daily gains, before stabilizing around $71,600.
Derivatives sentiment improved sharply. Axel Adler Jr. cited the Bitcoin Futures Advanced Sentiment Index rising from 23.4 to 53.1, showing the market exited a short-term pressure phase and shifted back toward risk appetite. However, the index had previously peaked higher at 65.6 and has since cooled, suggesting the rally’s momentum is not fully fresh.
Price structure also improved more slowly than futures. The Structure Shift Composite Signal rose from -0.58 to -0.03, moving the market from clearly negative toward near-neutral. Yet Bitcoin remains in the lower ~29% of its 21-day trading channel, so it has not confirmed a sustained upside regime.
Traders are watching the next technical zone. After Bitcoin reclaimed the $70,000 resistance level, Ted Pillows highlighted $72,000–$74,000 as a key area. A clean break and hold could reopen a push toward March highs. Rejection could drag Bitcoin back toward $68,000.
The New York Times published an exposé naming Blockstream CEO Adam Back as the strongest suspect behind Satoshi Nakamoto. Back rejected the claim, posting “I am not Satoshi,” and argued the similarities cited are the result of coincidence and shared cypherpunk experience, not proof of identity.
NYT reporter John Carreyrou says his 18-month investigation reviewed up to 620 candidates and leaned heavily on writing-style and language comparisons between Back’s and Satoshi Nakamoto’s posts/emails, citing repeated errors, “writing tics,” and technical jargon. He also alleges Back showed early awareness of Bitcoin’s foundational ideas (including spam-related concerns) and has deep public-key cryptography expertise. Back pushed back on one specific alleged “tell” from an in-person conversation in El Salvador, saying confirmation bias may have influenced how that detail was weighed.
Traders should note there is no protocol change—only renewed Satoshi Nakamoto narrative volatility. Expect short-term sentiment swings driven by headlines and speculation, while Bitcoin fundamentals remain the same unless new verifiable evidence emerges.
An OCCRP/Guardian Australia investigation says a partner of World Liberty Financial (WLFI)—a Trump-backed DeFi project—was involved in a planned “blockchain theme resort” in Timor-Leste with ties to individuals later sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury over alleged scam operations by Cambodia’s Prince Group.
The report focuses on the AB network’s role in the Timor-Leste project. It says the development company behind the resort had a majority shareholder, Yang Jian (a Cyprus-based businessman), who was sanctioned in October for allegedly working with Prince Group CEO Chen Zhi on a separate resort venture described by U.S. authorities as “predatory investment.” The three individuals connected to the Timor-Leste project were reportedly removed shortly after the U.S. sanctions were announced.
World Liberty Financial says it performed due diligence on AB and was not made aware of the resort or any sanctioned individuals. Its lawyers deny any association with the sanctioned figures. The article also notes there is no evidence illicit funds entered the resort development and no direct proof AB is connected to Prince Group.
Separately, the FBI’s 2025 Internet Crime Report is cited: Americans lost nearly $21 billion to online scams in 2025, with cryptocurrency-related fraud accounting for more than $11 billion across 181,565 complaints.
The Prince Group and Chen Zhi have been accused by U.S. authorities of running one of the world’s largest online scam networks, generating tens of billions annually. The U.S. seized about $15 billion worth of Bitcoin from Chen. Cambodian authorities arrested Chen and extradited him to China in January.
Trading focus: World Liberty Financial faces reputational risk from the sanctions-linked reporting, but the investigation’s stated lack of evidence of illicit fund flows suggests limited immediate market fundamentals impact.
Neutral
World Liberty Financialsanctionscrypto fraudstablecoinreputation risk
Swiss Top Banks have launched a live trial for a regulated CHF stablecoin inside a secure sandbox. UBS, PostFinance, Sygnum, Raiffeisen, Zürcher Kantonalbank, and BCV are taking part, working with Swiss Stablecoin AG. The CHF stablecoin sandbox will run until 2026 in a controlled virtual environment.
The trial aims to test real payment use cases safely and to improve settlement speed and efficiency. It also focuses on “programmable money,” with the goal of reducing transaction delays. The system supporting issuance is provided by Swiss Stablecoin AG, and the sandbox is open for other banks and institutions to expand participation and build blockchain payment expertise.
At the same time, Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission is proposing tighter crypto funding rules. The proposal targets concealed financing of crypto businesses and would require funders to be treated as shareholders, subject to regulator approval. The regulator said the changes are intended to increase transparency and curb money laundering and illegal funding. It may also raise compliance standards for exchanges and related companies.
Together, the Swiss CHF stablecoin sandbox and Thailand’s stricter crypto funding oversight highlight a global shift toward safer, more efficient digital finance, with traders likely to watch for near-term sentiment swings around regulation and stablecoin rails.
Neutral
CHF stablecoinSwiss banking sandboxThailand crypto regulationstablecoin paymentscompliance & AML
The New York Times published an 18-month investigation by John Carreyrou claiming British cryptographer Adam Back is the most likely “Satoshi Nakamoto.” Back denied the allegation, saying overlaps reflect confirmation bias and that early cypherpunks often discussed similar technical problems.
The report’s main evidence is stylometric analysis, including 67 shared hyphenation mistakes between Back’s writing and known Satoshi messages, plus circumstantial links. It also points to Back’s early cypherpunk work (Hashcash proof-of-work in 1997) and ideological alignment with decentralization and privacy.
Still, definitive proof requires a cryptographic signature from Satoshi’s private keys. The article notes the coins attributed to Satoshi—about 1.1 million BTC, unchanged since 2010—and Satoshi’s last verified message (April 26, 2011) remain undisclosed, so “Satoshi Nakamoto” is not verified.
Market impact looks limited: BTC fell about 2.4% on the news. For traders, the key risk is narrative-driven repricing—if identity proof or new verifiable evidence emerges, it could raise regulatory scrutiny and renewed concerns over a potential 1.1 million BTC supply overhang. Overall, current flows appear more driven by ETF/liquidity and technical structure than by renewed Satoshi Nakamoto speculation.
Morgan Stanley launched its spot Bitcoin ETF, the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust (MSBT), on April 8. The spot Bitcoin ETF charges a 0.14% annual expense ratio, undercutting BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) at 0.25%.
The article positions this as the first major US commercial bank to enter the spot Bitcoin ETF market. Morgan Stanley’s ETF lead Allyson Wallace said the lower fee is intended to signal commitment, with demand reported as strongest from high-net-worth investors.
For traders, the backdrop remains supportive: spot Bitcoin ETFs saw more than $53B in net inflows in 2025, and by Q3 2025 about 172 public companies held roughly 1M BTC (around 5% of circulating supply). An advisor survey also showed 65% expect Bitcoin to rise over the next 12 months from early 2026.
Beyond pricing, distribution is the key variable. Morgan Stanley’s wealth management business manages about $6.2T in client assets, which could accelerate MSBT adoption via advisors, though the article cautions that liquidity, tracking quality, and redemption mechanics will ultimately decide institutional confidence. Morgan Stanley also filed for ETF products linked to Ethereum and Solana, and is integrating crypto trading through its E*TRADE platform.
What to watch: early MSBT flows and liquidity. If the fee war triggers additional cost compression across spot Bitcoin ETFs, it could reinforce the institutional bid for BTC.
A crypto analyst shared comments attributed to Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson, arguing that Bitcoin’s dominance is fragile if another asset overtakes it on market-cap rankings (e.g., CoinMarketCap). The claim is that Bitcoin’s value is driven more by perception and the size of its holder base than by superior technology, and that a flip could trigger a rapid collapse of dominance.
The post links this to XRP’s 2018 milestone when XRP reportedly flipped Ethereum in market position. It alleges that “attacks on Ripple” began immediately after that shift and were motivated by market competition rather than regulation.
Hoskinson’s broader points, as described in the article, include: Bitcoin benefits from regulatory clarity and institutional/international acceptance, but has structural limits because it cannot evolve quickly; Bitcoin also lacks visible leadership compared with Ethereum; and firms like BlackRock may focus on returns, which could support demand for Bitcoin-linked financial products.
For traders, the headline takeaway is not a new network upgrade, but a narrative about market structure: if major ranking flips become common, capital rotation can accelerate. XRP traders may interpret this as a supportive backdrop, while BTC traders may view it as a risk to dominance momentum.
Disclaimer: This is not financial advice.