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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

Bitcoin network activity hits 8-year low as ETF-led trading replaces retail

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Bitcoin network activity has fallen to an 8-year low, while price has held near $78,000. CryptoQuant says active BTC addresses hit their lowest level since 2016 (Apr 8). Glassnode reports 661,313 active addresses in the latest 24-hour reading, and the gap between quiet on-chain participation and relatively stable price suggests Bitcoin network activity is no longer driving discovery in the same way. The article argues that a “second market structure” has formed off-chain: exposure increasingly flows through ETFs and cash-settled derivatives rather than base-layer transactions. BlackRock’s IBIT provides Bitcoin exposure via exchange-traded shares, and CME Bitcoin futures settle in cash—so long-only fund rotation may not create new on-chain address activity. On-chain participation looks weak. Glassnode’s Accumulation Trend Score sits at 0 (distribution/no accumulation). Illiquid BTC supply is estimated at 13.45M coins, implying fewer coins are willing to move. At the same time, ETF/derivatives signals are supportive but not uniformly bullish: CoinShares reported $1.1B digital asset product inflows for the week (including $871M into Bitcoin), while trading volumes remain below the year-to-date average. ETF flows are mixed in the snapshot (IBIT and MSBT inflows, but FBTC/GBTC outflows), and CME open interest has been rising. Key levels highlighted by Glassnode are $69,000–$71,500 support and a more meaningful upside trigger above $78,100 (True Market Mean) and $81,600 (Short-Term Holder Cost Basis). The market takeaway is that Bitcoin network activity is weakening even as price holds—making the rally more dependent on ETF flows, CME positioning, and selective spot buying (e.g., Binance vs Coinbase).
Neutral
BitcoinETF flowsOn-chain metricsCME futuresMarket structure

Aave TVL plunges $6.6B after Kelp hack; AAVE token drops 16%

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Aave is facing a major credibility test after a Kelp bridge exploit triggered losses on Aave. Aave TVL fell about $6.6B (from ~$26.4B on Apr 18 to nearly $20B), and AAVE dropped 16% as liquidation cascades hit the protocol. Attackers stole 116,500 rsETH (~$292M) from Kelp’s bridge and deposited that rsETH as collateral on Aave V3. They then borrowed wrapped ether (WETH) against the collateral. While Aave’s own contracts were not compromised, trackers estimate Aave-specific bad debt of about $196M (with broader positions reported around $236M across Aave/Compound/Euler). The damage concentrates in Ethereum markets: Ethereum accounts for most of Aave’s borrows, and WETH is the dominant collateral-to-loan pair. Aave said its Umbrella reserve would cover the deficit at first, then shifted to “explore paths to offset the deficit,” raising concern about whether stkAAVE holders could absorb the shortfall. Traders will watch the Aave Umbrella coverage size, the health of the rsETH–WETH collateral pair, and contagion risk to other lending protocols that accepted liquid restaking tokens. This episode underscores how bridge risks and liquid restaking tokens can translate into real borrowing losses on Aave.
Bearish
AaveDeFi lendingKelp hackrsETH collateralBridge security

Sberbank readies crypto exchange trading in Russia

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Russian lender Sberbank is preparing to launch regulated crypto trading once Russia’s exchange-based framework becomes active, according to a statement shared via TASS at a Moscow Exchange forum. Senior Vice President Ruslan Vesterovsky said exchange-style trading could improve liquidity and tighten spreads. Sberbank signalled that its internal systems can support crypto services, including exchange-style crypto trading, custody-related capabilities, margin and advanced investment tools, and algorithm-driven strategies. The bank’s readiness suggests integration with existing banking infrastructure is technically feasible. Regulators are also defining how digital assets can be used. Cryptocurrencies are still treated as high-risk, but the proposed rules allow controlled participation under supervision. Digital currencies and stablecoins would be classed as financial assets: they may be traded, but cannot be used for domestic payments. Eligibility checks and asset restrictions would apply. Retail access would face caps: non-qualified participants could buy up to 300,000 rubles per year through a single intermediary (about $3,934). Only selected high-liquidity digital assets would be available for general users. Overall, the move points to structured integration of crypto trading into Russia’s traditional financial system, with a staged approach that prioritises compliance and controlled retail exposure.
Neutral
Russia crypto regulationSberbankexchange-style crypto tradingcrypto custodyretail purchase caps

Alcoa to sell dormant Massena smelter to NYDIG to expand Bitcoin mining

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Alcoa is in advanced talks to sell its dormant Massena East smelter site in New York to NYDIG. The facility has been idle since 2014 after high energy costs and weaker U.S. production economics. The latest report frames the deal around power access and grid capacity. NYDIG would take ownership and plans to expand Bitcoin mining using industrial infrastructure tied to hydro electricity via the New York Power Authority. The Massena campus already supports Bitcoin mining through NYDIG’s partnership with Coinmint, which operates mining hardware under a long-term lease signed with Alcoa in 2018. No price was disclosed. Alcoa CEO Bill Oplinger said the transaction could close around mid-2026. The move also fits a wider “repurpose heavy industry” trend, with shuttered aluminum smelters being converted for crypto mining and even AI/HPC data-center workloads. Market impact for traders: this is constructive for the Bitcoin supply-chain narrative (cheap, scalable energy and ready grid), but near-term BTC price action is still more likely driven by broader risk sentiment than by this asset-sale headline alone—so expect a limited direct catalyst unless sentiment is already improving.
Neutral
Bitcoin mining expansionNYDIGPower & grid infrastructureIndustrial-to-crypto repurposingHydropower access

Iran nuclear weapons deal: Trump claim cuts April 30 odds on weak verification

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Trump told MSNBC that Iran has committed to avoiding nuclear weapons and suggested an enrichment agreement could be reached by April 30. In crypto-linked prediction markets for the April 30 enrichment end, the “YES” price/implicit probability fell to about 31.9% from ~50% the prior day, after traders reacted to the lack of concrete, corroborated details from Iran or any verification authority. The latest coverage also highlights thin liquidity: the order book implies it may take only ~$74 to move odds by 5 points, raising the risk of abrupt re-pricing. Spot trading appears less synchronized with headlines too—nominal daily trading value was reported higher than actual USDC volume, suggesting more hedging than outright directional bets. For traders monitoring this Iran nuclear weapons deal, key catalysts are new statements from mediators such as Oman, updates from IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi, and whether the US or Iran confirms an agreement before the April 30 deadline. Until verification arrives, pricing remains skeptical and can move quickly on any confirmation (or lack of it).
Bearish
Iran nuclear weapons dealPrediction marketsTrump-Iran diplomacyIAEA verificationUSDC liquidity

US-Iran meeting in Pakistan eyed; uranium deal odds slip

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Prediction markets show traders rising odds for a US-Iran meeting in Pakistan on Tuesday, after Pakistan was confirmed as the diplomatic venue. The market for “no meeting by June 30” fell to 3.7% YES for “no meeting,” down from earlier levels, implying “a meeting” is now seen as near-certain. The largest price move was a 1.7-point jump tied to the venue confirmation. Pakistan is mediating the talks. At the same time, the core negotiation blocker looks unchanged: the probability of an Iran uranium enrichment agreement by April 30 fell to 27.8% YES from 50% the prior day. Traders appear skeptical that enrichment terms will be resolved within the remaining window. The payoff math highlights the risk—at about 27.8¢, a YES contract would pay roughly 3.6x only if a breakthrough comes within 12 days. Volume and “conviction” signals suggest different expectations for each track. The diplomatic meeting market saw about $1,599 in USDC traded, with meaningful order-book depth, while the uranium enrichment market had about $34,430 in USDC with the biggest move being a 4-point decline. What to watch next: statements from Pakistan’s government and the US State Department, and any announcement of a new negotiation round or concrete enrichment progress could move both the US-Iran meeting in Pakistan market and the uranium enrichment probabilities sharply.
Neutral
Prediction MarketsUS-Iran DiplomacyUranium EnrichmentPakistan MediationUSDC

BTC ETF Inflows Surge as Spot Crypto ETFs Hit 3-Month High

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Spot crypto ETFs saw their best week since mid-January as risk sentiment improved after a US–Iran ceasefire announcement. Bitcoin ETF flows led the rebound. Data from SoSoValue shows Friday (Apr 17) was the strongest day for spot Bitcoin ETFs since Jan 14, with $663 million in net inflows. BlackRock’s IBIT took in about $284 million, while Fidelity’s FBTC added $163.4 million. Over the full week, net inflows nearly reached $1 billion, the highest five-day performance since the period ended Jan 16. Only Monday was negative (-$291.11 million); inflows followed on Tuesday ($411.50 million), Wednesday ($186.03 million), and Thursday ($26.05 million). The renewed BTC ETF demand suggests real capital rotation back into major listings. Ethereum ETF momentum also strengthened. Spot ETH ETFs recorded $127.49 million net inflows for the week and extended a 7-day green streak. Inflows for the week reached $275.83 million, the highest since the period ended Jan 16. Fidelity’s FETH led with over $84 million, followed by BlackRock’s ETHA ($30.8 million). Grayscale’s ETH trailed at $5.8 million. XRP ETFs hit a three-month high, adding more than $55 million in the past week. Solana’s SOL ETFs posted a $35.17 million inflow total, a two-month high, but still below the $4.44 million gained in the comparable week before the war intensified (Feb 27). However, the ceasefire is nearing its end and reports show conflicting statements about negotiations and the Strait of Hormuz, raising near-term uncertainty for a typically volatile, risk-on market.
Bullish
Bitcoin ETFEthereum ETFXRP ETFETF FlowsRisk Sentiment

RAVE Token Plunges 90% as Binance & Bitget Probe Rally

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RaveDAO’s RAVE token collapsed about 90% in 24 hours, trading around $1.15 after a peak near $27.33. The selloff wiped out roughly $5.7B–$5.8B in market value. Binance and Bitget opened investigations into the meteoric rally. Bitget CEO Gracy Chen confirmed the probe; Binance co-CEO Richard Teng said the exchange was reviewing whether misconduct occurred. Gate.io was also named in earlier allegations. Onchain investigator ZachXBT alleged a “bait and liquidate” setup: around 90% of RAVE’s 1B supply was concentrated in three team-linked Gnosis Safe multisig wallets, and large transfers to exchanges preceded a 10,800% price surge. That surge reportedly triggered about $44M in liquidations on Friday, with many positions from short sellers. RaveDAO denied responsibility in a multi-post statement, but did not directly address the onchain claims. It said it may sell unlocked tokens to fund operations and is exploring future lockup models (e.g., price- or performance-triggered), without committing to a concrete timeline or specific safeguards. For traders, the RAVE move increases near-term risk around exchange actions, liquidity, and any further volatility tied to scrutiny of potential coordinated trading.
Bearish
RAVEExchange investigationsToken liquidationOn-chain dataMarket manipulation risk

Monero 12th Anniversary: Privacy XMR endures despite delistings

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Monero (XMR) marked its 12-year anniversary since launching in 2014, with the team posting a public message on X. The article highlights that Monero remains a leading privacy-focused cryptocurrency and continues to be actively used despite sustained regulatory pressure. Key points: - Monero’s privacy design hides transaction sender, receiver, and amount on a public blockchain using cryptographic tools such as Ring Confidential Transactions and stealth addresses. - The project reportedly faced more than 70 exchange delistings across jurisdictions, but trading and user participation continue via alternative venues and peer-to-peer markets. - Development is ongoing: the team is working on network upgrades, including a planned FCMP++ update aimed at improving performance and privacy. Market context: - At the time of reporting, Monero traded around $351, with market capitalization near $6.47 billion (CoinGecko data). - The article notes modest short-term gains, with small increases on both daily and weekly timeframes. For traders, the anniversary is primarily a sentiment and narrative catalyst around privacy coins, while the real market variable remains liquidity access amid delistings and any changes to regulatory or exchange listings. Monero’s continued dev progress may support longer-term confidence, but near-term price impact looks limited based on the article’s “modest gains” framing.
Neutral
MoneroPrivacy cryptoRegulationExchange delistingsAltcoin market

US-Iran ceasefire extension odds slip as Trump vows action

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US President vows to use all means to end the Middle East conflict while US-Iran ceasefire talks continue. In prediction markets, the probability of extending the US-Iran ceasefire by April 21 fell to 69.5% from 86% just 24 hours earlier, a 21.5-point overnight drop. Traders responded with mixed signals. The “US-Iran ceasefire extension” market saw the biggest adjustment, suggesting growing skepticism about a diplomatic breakthrough within three days. Total 24-hour trading volume reached $82,767 in actual USDC, and the $9,463 needed to move the market by 5 points implies solid order-book depth. By contrast, markets pricing “military action against Iran” remained at 100% YES across key dates, indicating traders do not expect near-term escalation to resume soon. That alignment with the president’s de-escalation focus suggests expectations of continued negotiations rather than immediate conflict. The April 21 contract pays $1 if the US-Iran ceasefire is extended, with a market price around 64¢, implying potential ~1.56x returns if traders are right about an extension being announced quickly—most likely after updated progress signals from the upcoming Islamabad talks. Watch for a formal extension announcement, which could trigger sharp repricing in the US-Iran ceasefire extension market.
Neutral
US-Iran ceasefire extensionGeopoliticsPrediction marketsUSDC trading volumeEscalation vs diplomacy

Tui Cruises passes Strait of Hormuz as Iran war fears rise in 2026

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Reuters reports that Tui Cruises has two ships transit the Strait of Hormuz amid the 2026 Iran war. Between Apr 13 and Apr 19, the market predicting fewer than 10 ship transits shows only a 0.4% chance, down from 1% yesterday. The move suggests limited permissions or a brief easing, but the “normalization” signal remains unclear. Traders reacted quickly: the odds saw a 2-point jump around 4:25 AM. However, liquidity was thin—only about $14 in USDC traded in the last 24 hours, meaning roughly $12 could shift the price/odds by 5 points. The key watch items are any announcements from Iran’s PMOIRI or CENTCOM, since new Iranian or US military actions could rapidly swing the Strait of Hormuz transit expectations. Overall, this appears to be an event-driven headline with fragile market positioning rather than a durable change in risk.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzIran-US tensionsMaritime shippingCrypto prediction marketsUSDC liquidity

Polymarket WTI crude oil nears $160 on Strait of Hormuz risk

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Polymarket WTI crude oil is trading with extreme sensitivity as Strait of Hormuz disruption risk rises ahead of the April 30 settlement. On Polymarket, the WTI April contract is around 22%. It pays YES if WTI hits $160 anytime during April, so the market is effectively betting that the Strait stays disrupted and supply remains tight. Earlier weekend moves showed sharp whipsaws as liquidity is thin, meaning relatively small trades can swing prices. The latest push is geopolitical and macro. U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright warned high gas prices may persist, citing continued U.S. military presence in the Middle East and Iran’s stance toward a potential Hormuz blockade. With about 12 days left, traders are watching for any diplomatic signal that could reopen the strait and cool crude. Broader energy expectations are also reflected in related Polymarket-style contracts (e.g., a June track of whether prices reach $90). Any OPEC decisions or U.S. EIA data, plus statements from U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and OPEC officials, could quickly shift WTI pricing. For crypto traders, this is a high-volatility macro catalyst: renewed U.S.-Iran escalation risk can trigger energy-price shock and risk-off sentiment, which often pressures overall crypto liquidity and risk appetite.
Bearish
PolymarketWTI crude oilStrait of Hormuz riskU.S.-Iran tensionsOPEC & EIA

Wrench attacks against crypto holders surge in France as security steps ramp up

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France has become the focus of rising “wrench attacks” against crypto holders. Authorities say at least 41 crypto-related kidnappings and home invasions have been reported this year—about once every 2.5 days—prompting officials to prepare new security measures. Wrench attacks use physical coercion to force victims to transfer digital assets. Security researchers and law-enforcement data indicate the threat is becoming more brazen and violent, and is increasingly driven by targeting people rather than exploiting technical weaknesses. Attackers build profiles using social media activity, public appearances, leaked datasets, and daily routines. CertiK and researcher Jameson Lopp report 72 verified physical coercion incidents globally in 2025, a 75% jump year-on-year. Incidents involving physical assault rose by 250% year-over-year. Many cases may go unreported or be logged as ordinary robberies, because victims often do not mention crypto. A widely cited concern is insider leakage: a French tax official allegedly sold sensitive information that helped perpetrators identify victims. The article also cites extreme cases, including the kidnapping of Ledger co-founder David Balland in France in January 2025, and longer, more violent captivity cases reported in other countries. Researchers warn that organized crews are adopting kidnapping-style tactics with pre-planning (surveillance and follow-home steps). After funds are taken, attackers move quickly and often convert assets into stablecoins, routing across multiple chains. Suggested mitigation includes multi-signature controls and withdrawal limits to reduce how much can be accessed under duress. Overall, the rise in wrench attacks underscores growing security risk for self-custody users.
Bearish
Wrench attacksFrance securitycrypto self-custodykidnapping & home invasionmulti-signature wallets

Bitcoin slips as Trump accuses Iran of ceasefire breach

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US President Donald Trump accused Iran of breaching a ceasefire, citing reports of renewed activity in the Strait of Hormuz during the truce period. Trump called it a “serious violation,” warning further steps could follow if negotiations fail, while saying talks are still active and a deal may be reached before an April 22 ceasefire deadline. Iran denied the allegations. Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said US actions breached the ceasefire terms, calling a port blockade “unlawful” under international law and framing the situation as escalation rather than a one-sided breach. Both sides continued trading competing claims, keeping the ceasefire status uncertain. Bitcoin reacted to the growing geopolitical risk. The article reports Bitcoin falling from around $76,300 to near $75,500 as conflicting updates emerged. After earlier news initially pushed Bitcoin above $78,000, the reversal reflected shifting investor sentiment and a more cautious risk posture. Market data cited a daily move around -0.53% and price range roughly $74,988–$76,307. For crypto traders, the key takeaway is that Bitcoin pricing is being driven by headline risk from US–Iran negotiations, with volatility likely to persist until clearer signals emerge around the ceasefire.
Bearish
BitcoinGeopoliticsUS-Iran CeasefireMarket VolatilityRisk Sentiment

KelpDAO rsETH Exploit Drains ~$292M, Triggers Aave Freeze

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KelpDAO disclosed a major cross-chain rsETH exploit after attackers drained about 116,500 rsETH (~$292M). The breach was linked to KelpDAO’s rsETH bridge, triggered via LayerZero EndpointV2’s “Iz Receive”, and funds were sent to an attacker-controlled wallet. Blockchain sleuth ZachXBT initially flagged the incident, estimating losses over $280M across Ethereum and Arbitrum. Investigators also noted Tornado Cash involvement before the exploit, suggesting attempts to obscure the funding trail. KelpDAO moved quickly: it paused rsETH contracts on Ethereum mainnet and multiple L2s, and froze core contracts covering deposits, withdrawals, and oracle functions. An additional attempt to drain ~40,000 rsETH (~$100M) failed after the pause, keeping the total estimated loss around $292M instead of expanding toward ~$391M. KelpDAO said it is working with LayerZero and Unichain on root-cause analysis. DeFi risk moved fast. Aave froze rsETH markets on V3 and V4 as a precaution, saying its own contracts were not exploited but it is reducing potential rsETH-related bad-debt exposure. Traders should monitor rsETH liquidity and bridge/provider risk sentiment, plus lending protocol exposures, as cross-protocol contagion can rapidly drive risk-off positioning.
Bearish
KelpDAOrsETH exploitDeFi securityLayerZeroAave freeze

US-Iran ceasefire odds surge after Trump threatens infrastructure

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US President Trump warned he would strike Iran’s infrastructure if negotiations fail, raising market concern over the US-Iran ceasefire. Prediction-market traders saw the US-Iran ceasefire contract for Apr 21 jump to 99.6% YES, up from 8% a day earlier. The “permanent peace deal” contract for Apr 22 fell to 23.5% YES from around 40%, signaling higher odds of diplomatic failure. The rhetoric also moved the market tied to oil sanction relief lower to 48% YES (a 6-point drop in the later session). With thin liquidity on the US-Iran ceasefire contract (about $498 order-book depth) and modest daily USDC activity (about $3,485), single orders can swing prices quickly. In contrast, the permanent peace deal market is far more liquid (about $610,678 daily USDC traded). Key watch items include further comments from White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt and possible mediation efforts involving Pakistan. A confirmed ceasefire breach, or continued observance, would likely reprice both the US-Iran ceasefire and related diplomacy-linked contracts fast—so traders should monitor official updates closely.
Neutral
US-Iran ceasefireTrump diplomacyprediction marketsUSDC liquidityoil sanctions relief

Strait of Hormuz halt: Iran stops oil flow, disrupting 20% of global supply

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Iran has halted oil flow through the Strait of Hormuz after warnings, with at least 13 tankers reportedly turning back. The stoppage is disrupting around 20% of global oil flow, cutting roughly 15 million barrels per day and tightening the risk of a prolonged blockade. A prediction market tracking Strait of Hormuz traffic normalization has seen odds fall on a quick recovery. The market is pricing in a potential 35% expected move, as traders anticipate limited near-term resolution. The article links the disruption to Iranian retaliations and a US escort posture. It distinguishes “zero transits” from “reduced traffic,” noting that current US escort-related odds (US escorts through Hormuz by April 30) sit at about 19% YES, largely unchanged, because the latest escalation reportedly did not address specific escort plans. Traders are watching for signals from either the IRGC or the US Department of Defense. Any easing of controls or shift in military posture could move both related markets. The next catalysts are expected to be high-level diplomatic engagement or a decisive military action. Strait of Hormuz remains a key node because there is no alternative route able to absorb the displaced volumes at this scale, placing direct pressure on diplomacy.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzOil supply disruptionIran-US tensionsEnergy market riskPrediction markets

Strait of Hormuz closure boosts WTI $160 odds in prediction markets

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Strait of Hormuz closure has rattled oil-linked prediction markets, lifting the odds that WTI Crude Oil reaches $160 in April 2026—but only briefly. In the “WTI Crude Oil in April 2026” contract, the YES price implies roughly a 1.4% chance of WTI hitting $160. After the Strait of Hormuz closure news, odds jumped sharply (about +25 points, briefly from ~1% to ~26% around 8:02 PM) before sliding back. Liquidity appears thin, with reported USDC volume around $704/day. It reportedly takes about $1,655 to move odds by 5 percentage points, so single trades can swing pricing—suggesting traders are waiting for confirmed follow-through rather than fully committing to an immediate oil spike. Key catalysts for the next repricing in WTI Crude Oil odds: (1) resumption of US–Iran talks on Monday and (2) whether OPEC+ calls an emergency meeting to address the supply shock.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzWTI Crude OilPrediction MarketsUS-Iran TalksOPEC+

XRP ETFs post $55M inflows as XRP rebounds

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XRP ETFs recorded $55.39M in net inflows over the past week, the strongest week of 2026, according to SoSoValue data. It was also the first time this year inflows reached this level after several weaker weeks. No daily outflows were reported during the week, suggesting steady demand across trading sessions. Retail and institutional participation increased after XRP rose more than 7% last week, with the lowest daily intake at $1.46M (Apr 13). At the time of reporting, XRP traded near $1.43, with an ~8.15% gain over 7 days and market cap around $88.7B. Trading volume stayed above $2B in the last 24 hours, supporting liquidity and participation. The article also notes XRP is approaching an end to a multi-month stretch of negative returns that started in late 2025. Analyst EGRAG CRYPTO highlighted long-term chart structure, saying the “Bifrost Bridge” remains the guide and framing near-term weakness as a “setup” rather than a confirmed breakdown, with projected levels discussed in the $9–$13 range. Disclosure: Not investment advice.
Bullish
XRPXRP ETFsETF flowscrypto market sentimenttechnical analysis

Product management faces rising stress as AI reshapes product development in 2 years

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In a Lenny’s Podcast interview, product leader Nikhyl Singhal says product management is entering a high-change “renaissance” marked by rising stress and fast skill shifts. He argues that within two years, AI will make many “mechanical” parts of product development obsolete, lowering the cost of testing and changing and increasing the frequency of product updates by 10–100x. Singhal highlights a growing disconnect in product management: leaders carry responsibility without enough authority, driving workplace stress. Even highly engaged top performers feel pressured to “keep up” as the industry changes. Despite this stress, he notes compensation is at an all-time high and product managers have more opportunities than ever, including paths beyond traditional roles (potentially founder/CEO or other C-level functions). On the product management responsibilities side, AI and software are moving to the center. Singaling stresses that product leaders will increasingly be paid to drive judgment—deciding which changes are worth building, releasing, and successfully meeting criteria. He also expresses optimism that AI tooling could improve software quality automatically, producing more consistent and less buggy apps. However, he points to an ongoing quality problem: many applications are built by engineers who do not prioritize software quality, resulting in poorly designed software that AI tools may help address.
Neutral
Product ManagementAI in Software DevelopmentWorkplace StressProduct LeadershipSoftware Quality

Strait of Hormuz Iran strikes tankers; Trump threatens retaliation

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Iran fired on commercial tankers in the Strait of Hormuz. US President Donald Trump threatened retaliation, raising fears of an escalation. Traders are repricing the US-Iran ceasefire prediction market ahead of a key window. The probability of a US-Iran ceasefire announcement by April 21 is now 99.7%, up from 8% yesterday. With three days until resolution, odds suggest diplomacy could collapse rather than stabilize. Market reaction is being driven by Trump’s hardline rhetoric, including threats posted on Truth Social. A widely watched signal is whether Trump’s statements (and White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt’s comments) confirm or deny ceasefire violations. Microstructure matters: daily trading volume in the US-Iran ceasefire market is about $3,485, and only $498 is needed to move the price 5 percentage points. This is a thin market, so moderate size trades can swing probabilities quickly. The biggest move in the past 24 hours was a 3-point jump at 11:12 AM, likely linked to Trump’s “no more Mr. Nice Guy” threat. At 18¢, a YES share pays $1 if the ceasefire is broken by April 21, implying a 5.56x return. That outcome requires markets to bet on an imminent breakdown within three days. What to watch next is any confirmation of ceasefire violations and continued escalation messaging from the White House.
Bearish
US-Iran ceasefire prediction marketStrait of HormuzTrump rhetoricGeopolitical riskPrediction odds

Strait of Hormuz: Iran curbs ships, US escort odds dip in crypto markets

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Crypto prediction markets are pricing a disruption risk in the Strait of Hormuz after Iran reimposed tighter control and IRGC hardline posturing. The latest updates suggest no ships transited in the near term, while “US escorts through Strait of Hormuz” odds edged up only slightly to about 19% (from ~18%). The “UK warships transiting the Strait of Hormuz” contract is lower at 8.5% (down from 12%), implying traders still see low odds of a direct confrontation and a limited chance of an immediate US decision to break any blockade. Liquidity remains thin, but price moves are not purely noise: reported USDC trading is around $8.3k for the US-escort market, and about $260 is needed to move the contract by 5 points. A notable 4-point jump around 1:20 PM (24%→28%) signals some conviction. Key watch items are CENTCOM updates and any US naval movement. The core driver is still Iran’s control of the Strait of Hormuz—any IRGC restraint or diplomatic shift could quickly change odds.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzIran IRGCUS naval escortscrypto prediction marketsUSDC liquidity

Aave Hit by $5.4B ETH Outflows as rsETH Exploit Sparks AAVE Selloff

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Aave is facing a liquidity shock after a reported rsETH exploit linked to Kelp DAO. According to Lookonchain, the attacker used rsETH deposits to drain ETH from Aave, creating “bad debt.” The event triggered more than $5.4B in ETH outflows as large holders moved funds. As withdrawals accelerated, Aave’s ETH utilization reportedly reached 100%, meaning available ETH liquidity was fully deployed. In response, AAVE fell over 18% in one day. The article also highlights whale activity: Justin Sun withdrew 65,584 ETH (about $154M), adding to panic. Traders then increased AAVE selling, driven by fears of further liquidity strain. Reported whale sales included smaugvision selling 20,015 AAVE for about 2.06M USDC, whale 0xFC56 selling 20,000 AAVE for about 2.05M USDC, and 0xA2E4 selling 19,666 AAVE for roughly 505.65 ETH and 10.11 WBTC. At the time of writing, a full damage estimate was not confirmed by all parties. Market attention remains on Aave, rsETH, and any official response from the teams involved.
Bearish
AaversETH漏洞ETH外流DeFi流动性风险AAVE价格下跌

US-Iran ceasefire talks: Trump envoys to Pakistan before April 21 deadline

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US-Iran ceasefire talks are in focus as Trump sends envoys to Pakistan to facilitate Iran-related negotiations ahead of the April 21 ceasefire deadline. In the crypto prediction market, the “US-Iran ceasefire extended” contract fell to 69.5% YES from 86% the day before, while “US-Iran ceasefire end” rose to 15.5% YES from 6%, signaling softer odds for a sustained extension. Traders also show broader diplomacy skepticism. The “diplomatic meetings with Iran” contract slipped to 13% YES (from 22%). Liquidity remains active: the extension market posts roughly $82,767 in daily USDC volume, and about $9,463 is needed to move prices by five points, so probabilities can still shift quickly without a surprise headline. With three days left, the market is watching for post-Pakistan statements from Trump’s team and any announcements from Pakistani intermediaries, and for whether new talks can confirm an extension before the cutoff. Earlier price action around 11:09 AM saw a four-point drop alongside updated diplomatic developments. Trading takeaway: if “US-Iran ceasefire extended” is near 69.5¢, a YES pays $1 upon extension by April 21—offering potentially ~1.44x returns, but only if negotiations deliver before the deadline.
Neutral
US-Iran ceasefireTrump envoysPakistan talksPrediction marketsUSDC liquidity

AAVE TVL plunges $6B after $290M KelpDAO exploit

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AAVE’s total value locked (TVL) fell by $6B after a $290M exploit on KelpDAO. The incident involved minting 116,500 unbacked rsETH tokens and using them as collateral, creating an estimated $177–196M in bad debt for Aave. As whale investors withdrew, AAVE TVL dropped 21.6% from $26.4B to $20.7B. Ethereum DeFi sentiment turned bearish. A Polymarket contract tied to “ETH to reach $10,000 by Dec 31, 2026” stayed at 4% YES, indicating no immediate improvement in odds since last week. Market-implied expectations show downside: forecasts priced in an 8% decline by end-2026 and a 15% drop by Apr 19, reflecting traders factoring in prolonged fallout. The current market is thin, with around $105 daily USDC volume and only $1,323 needed for a 5-percentage-point move, so any new security or regulatory development could shift odds quickly. What to watch next: statements from the Ethereum Foundation, any regulatory response, and security patches from affected protocols. The episode highlights a collateral-minting vulnerability risk in Ethereum-based DeFi, directly undermining confidence in large lending growth assumptions.
Bearish
AAVEKelpDAO exploitEthereum DeFiTVL dropsecurity risk

Strait of Hormuz reopening odds fall as Iran mocks EU amid tensions

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The article reports that Iran mocked EU diplomat Kaja Kallas’ call to reopen the Strait of Hormuz as US-Iran tensions persist. In the Strait of Hormuz prediction market, the May 31 contract eased to about 78% YES (down from roughly 90% the prior day), after Iran signalled defiance and increased naval activity. Trading updates show further deterioration in near-term expectations. The April 19 sub-market dropped to about 5.6% YES, implying traders see little chance of a resolution within 24 hours. A related “UK warship” market is also flat at around 8.5% YES, suggesting minimal pricing for immediate military intervention. Market liquidity matters: the May 31 move occurred on roughly $9.9k of USDC volume, while the April 19 market has limited depth, making it prone to sharp swings on sudden official statements. The piece frames Iran’s posture as a stalemate—potentially prolonging the Strait of Hormuz blockade—rather than a breakthrough. For traders, the key takeaway is that geopolitical headlines are actively driving near-term probability shifts in the Strait of Hormuz contracts. The next catalysts highlighted include potential moves by Trump or changes in EU/NATO posture; any major statement (including social-media posts) could quickly reprice these contracts.
Bearish
Strait of Hormuzgeopolitical riskprediction marketsUS-Iran tensionsUSDC

Nomura: 65% of Institutional Investors See Crypto as Key Diversifier

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Nomura and Laser Digital surveyed 500+ investment professionals in Japan and found improving sentiment toward crypto. The share of institutional investors with a positive outlook for the next year rose to 31% from 25% in 2024, while negative sentiment fell. A majority view crypto as a portfolio diversifier: 65% said they see it that way. Among those considering exposure, 79% plan to invest within three years, typically allocating 2%–5% of portfolios—suggesting adoption is still early but becoming more systematic. Regulatory and product expansion are key drivers. Japan has been refining crypto frameworks (classification, taxation, investor protections). Globally, clearer rules and growth in institutional products—such as ETFs and tokenized assets—reduce uncertainty that previously held institutions back. Interest is expanding beyond spot. More than 60% of respondents showed interest in staking, lending, derivatives, and tokenized assets, reflecting demand for yield and more advanced portfolio construction. Stablecoins also gained traction: 63% identified use cases from treasury management to cross-border payments and tokenized securities. Risks remain. Institutional investors still cite volatility, counterparty risk, and the lack of standardized valuation frameworks. Regulatory uncertainty is improving but not fully resolved. Overall, the survey suggests institutional investors are shifting from “whether” to “how” to allocate to crypto—an incremental but meaningful step toward broader market integration.
Bullish
institutional adoptioncrypto regulationETFsstablecoinsstaking & tokenized assets

XLM Eyes Breakout as $0.179 Resistance Weakens

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Stellar (XLM) is pressing against $0.179 resistance for a fourth retest. After trading inside a defined channel since February—support near $0.147 and resistance near $0.179—price is now around $0.1694. Sellers have repeatedly capped rebounds at $0.179, while buyers have been defending the lower range with higher lows. Traders are watching the daily chart for confirmation. A clean daily close above $0.179 would be the key trigger, potentially opening upside targets around $0.180–$0.185 first, then $0.195–$0.200. If momentum follows through, the article highlights $0.22 as the next upside area (about +20% from the breakout zone). Support levels to monitor sit at $0.167–$0.169 and $0.160–$0.162, with stronger floors near $0.152–$0.155 and the larger base around $0.135–$0.140. Momentum is improving: the Awesome Oscillator has moved from deeply negative to slightly positive (around 0.0020), suggesting downside momentum is fading. However, the signal remains modest, so traders may wait for stronger follow-through—especially a decisive break above XLM’s $0.179 resistance.
Bullish
XLMStellar price analysisBreakout levelsTechnical momentumSupport resistance

US Navy Mine-Clearing in Strait of Hormuz Shifts Odds to 25%

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US Navy deployed uncrewed underwater vehicles to clear mines in the Strait of Hormuz, using MK-18 Mod 2 Kingfish. On a crypto prediction market for “Will ships transit the Strait of Hormuz on any day end of April,” the contract odds for 80 ships transiting by April 30 fell to 25% (from 51% the prior day). This implies traders are still skeptical that a cleared lane will be ready by the deadline. A second contract for “US escorts commercial ship through Hormuz” moved slightly in the opposite direction, rising to 19% (from 18%). The article suggests the mine-clearing deployment could be viewed as a precursor to escort operations, and further IRGC escalations may raise these odds. Market microstructure is thin. Daily volume on the Hormuz transit market is $16,360 in USDC. The order book shows it takes about $797 to move the price 5 points, so moderate trades can swing odds quickly. A 10-point drop occurred at 5:48 PM, highlighting limited liquidity. Traders considering a “YES” position at 25¢ face a leveraged payoff: the article estimates a potential ~4.5x return if 80 ships transit within the next 12 days, but only if mine-clearing progresses and shipping operators believe the route is safe. Key updates to monitor include progress reports from US Central Command and any IRGC statements that could change shipper risk calculations.
Neutral
Strait of HormuzUS Navy mine-clearingCrypto prediction marketsShipping escortsUSDC liquidity