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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

Solana stablecoin payments deal as KG Inicis targets KRW 25T merchant network

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KG Inicis (South Korea’s largest payments platform) has signed an MOU with the Solana Foundation to bring Solana stablecoin payments to its merchant network. The partnership follows proof-of-concept tests completed earlier this year. KG Inicis processes more than KRW 25 trillion (about $18B) in annual payments and connects to roughly 220,000 merchants via its payment gateway. That scale is expected to move Solana stablecoin payment trials toward broader commercial rollout, including payment and settlement systems for merchant transactions. Under the agreement, KG Financial and the Solana Foundation will build Solana stablecoin payment infrastructure and explore settlement tooling. They will also test digital payment services tied to Solana, building on earlier PoC work covering stablecoin issuance and real-world payment flows. KG Financial says the tests confirmed both commercial and technical feasibility, and the company is reviewing ways to expand digital-asset payments across the merchant network. The plan also contemplates linkage with existing regulated payment channels already used in Korea, such as payment gateway services and prepaid card platforms. This adds to Solana’s payment momentum in Asia as stablecoins continue to draw attention from mainstream payment providers.
Bullish
SolanaStablecoin PaymentsMerchant AdoptionKorea FintechOnchain Settlement

Bitcoin 66,000 Breakout Hopes Hit as Strategy STRC Weakens BTC Buying

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Analysts say a Bitcoin 66,000 breakout is not yet a confirmed move. Crypto market focus is on whether BTC can reclaim and hold above $66,000, with sentiment still tied to Strategy’s STRC preferred shares. Michael van de Poppe noted that Bitcoin’s consolidation has not become a “real breakout.” He added that it is too early to call sustained upside while Bitcoin trades below $66,000. A risk-managed scenario is: if BTC sweeps new lows and then quickly reclaims the $66,000 level, it could signal a potential long setup. Van de Poppe also highlighted Strategy’s STRC as a key linkage for broader market confidence, especially amid weakness in traditional stock markets. He said this week’s primary objective for Bitcoin is to hold the 200-week moving average, viewed as a prior-cycle bottom. A second analyst (WilcosX) argued that STRC falling below $100 is more than a preferred-share decline—it can impair Strategy’s “Bitcoin accumulation machine.” The prior model depended on issuing STRC near $100, paying high dividends, and using the proceeds to buy BTC. If STRC is issued below par, Strategy raises less funding while still paying dividends based on the full $100 stated value, potentially slowing BTC purchases. Some effects are already visible: Strategy suspended new STRC issuance via its at-the-market program and, for the first time, sold part of its BTC holdings to fund dividends. WilcosX did not call it a total collapse yet, but warned the flywheel is more fragile when funding costs exceed ~13%. Traders should watch Bitcoin around the $66,000 level and the 200-week moving average, while monitoring STRC for signs of whether the BTC-buying engine can stabilize.
Bearish
BitcoinStrategySTRCBTC AccumulationMarket Sentiment

Robinhood Lists Worldcoin (WLD) as Sam Altman Scrutiny Weighs on Price

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Robinhood has added Worldcoin (WLD) to its crypto trading platform, following a June 23 X announcement. The listing gives WLD greater retail access even as the token remains under pressure. Worldcoin is trading around $0.53, down nearly 12% (about -15% in 24 hours), and still below its June peak near $0.70. The move arrives while allegations tied to Worldcoin co-founder Sam Altman and the Orb ecosystem continue to affect sentiment. A highlighted report said internal Orb investigations examined payments allegedly approved by company leadership to a foreign entity, reportedly intended to influence WLD market performance. Worldcoin has also faced criticism around its biometric identity verification approach and token distribution. Traders are also watching upcoming tokenomics. Worldcoin plans to reduce its token unlock rate starting July 24, 2026, which typically slows new circulating supply and can lessen sell pressure. However, near-term price action suggests investors are more focused on the controversy than on the scheduled unlock changes. Market structure is cautious. Technicals cited in the report show WLD slipping to the 61.8% Fibonacci level near $0.53 after failing to hold above $0.60. The MACD is bearish, and RSI has fallen sharply from recent highs. A sustained break below $0.53 could open deeper downside toward $0.48 and $0.42, while a recovery above $0.62 would ease immediate pressure.
Bearish
WorldcoinRobinhood listingAltman allegationsToken unlocksCrypto technicals

Meta Arena prediction market app: points forecasts, possible real-money later

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Meta is developing “Arena,” a prediction market app that lets users forecast outcomes across politics, sports, entertainment, and world affairs, according to the New York Times. Unlike major rivals such as Polymarket and Kalshi, Arena is expected to use a video-game-like points system rather than cash wagers. However, Meta has not ruled out allowing real-money betting later. The project is described as experimental but also a top priority internally. The move arrives as prediction markets surge after Polymarket’s breakout during the 2024 U.S. election, when crypto traders helped drive billions in event-contract trading volume and mainstream attention. Meta previously launched “Forecast” in 2020, but it was taken down in 2022. Regulatory pressure is also increasing. Critics argue that election- and geopolitics-linked contracts can look like gambling rather than legitimate financial instruments. Regulators have raised concerns about market manipulation, insider information, and consumer protection. In the U.S., the CFTC has debated whether certain event contracts are legitimate hedges or prohibited gaming. For traders, Arena reinforces that big tech is still circling prediction-market mechanics; even if the initial design is points-based, any future shift toward real-money exposure could affect sentiment in the broader event-contract and crypto-derivatives ecosystem.
Neutral
MetaPrediction MarketsCrypto ExchangesRegulationEvent Contracts

DEXE Jumps 50% as Rally Faces Overbought Pullback Risk

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DEXE is defying a broader crypto pullback. While Bitcoin briefly slipped below $62,000 and many altcoins turned red, DeXe (DEXE) surged about 50% in the last 24 hours. The token is around $23 and has pushed market cap above $1 billion, placing it among the top assets (65th by market value). Bullish drivers cited include MEXC adding DEXE to its futures listings, enabling adjustable leverage up to 50x. Analysts also point to supportive price structure and fast buyer reactions after dips. One analyst highlighted the $24 resistance area as the key level—if bulls flip it to support, they project upside toward $39. Another view suggests DEXE is breaking out of a bullish Cup & Handle setup, with potential near-term moves above $27. However, downside risk is also emphasized. A trader opened a $40,000 short on DEXE, arguing the $22.80–$23.30 zone is crucial. They expect weakening momentum because DEXE is still struggling below resistance and volume is cooling. Technically, the RSI has climbed to ~87, signaling extreme overbought conditions—often a precursor to pullbacks. The same bearish commentary warns that a drop below $22 could extend weakness toward roughly $18. For DEXE traders, this news means momentum is strong, but the risk/reward may be shifting toward consolidation or a tactical retracement.
Neutral
DEXEAltcoin MomentumFutures LeverageOverbought RSIShort Setup

Cardano Wallet Alert: Yoroi & SecondFi Pause After Security Issue

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A Cardano wallet alert has spread after reports that some users’ funds may have been drained. SecondFi said it detected a security issue affecting a small number of Cardano wallets on its platform. The issue has been contained, but SecondFi has entered maintenance mode and paused affected functionality. During maintenance, all front-end interactions are unavailable, and users cannot complete transactions through SecondFi until the platform resumes normal service. Yoroi and SecondFi users are being urged to verify balances using public Cardano explorers rather than interacting with the affected interface. Community posts also warn about impersonators and fake “support” accounts. SecondFi says it will never DM users first and will never request seed phrases or ask for fund transfers; users should rely only on logged tickets via the official SecondFi website. Traders should treat this as a prompt risk event for Cardano wallet UX and operational continuity: addresses may still be safe, but confirmation should be done via explorers while maintenance is active.
Neutral
CardanoWallet SecurityMaintenance ModeScam WarningsYoroi

Bitcoin midweek squeeze: May PCE Thursday and $10B Deribit options expiry decide whether $60K holds

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Bitcoin faces a midweek squeeze as two major catalysts compress into one 24-hour window. May PCE is due Thursday (8:30 a.m. EDT), and more than $10B in Bitcoin options on Deribit expires Friday (08:00 UTC, quarterly close Q2). After a rough June, Bitcoin trades around $62,500 and previously dipped briefly under $60,000, leaving price action range-bound between roughly $62,000 and $67,000. Traders now look for Thursday’s inflation surprise to reset expectations for liquidity: a hot print would keep the Fed restrictive, lift real yields and the dollar, and likely worsen downside pressure into settlement. The options structure is a key amplifier. With most open interest out of the money, market makers’ hedging can pin Bitcoin near crowded strikes or accelerate moves once $60,000 support breaks. The article cites max-pain near $74,000, with $60,000 puts as downside support and $80,000 calls as the upside hurdle; funding on perpetuals is only mildly positive, so leverage is not extremely stretched. After Friday’s expiry, weekend liquidity can further extend any breakout. Adding to the backdrop, spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen continued outflows (record weekly/periodal selling in late May/early June, then ongoing leaks), reducing a steady demand cushion. For traders, this is a classic setup: Bitcoin’s macro impulse comes from PCE, while Bitcoin’s path into Friday is shaped by options hedging dynamics—meaning volatility risk is elevated around both events.
Neutral
Bitcoin options expiryMay PCE inflationDeribit derivativesSpot Bitcoin ETF outflowsFed policy expectations

ToqanClaw vs OpenClaw: Prosus launches privacy-first AI agent platform for GDPR

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Prosus has launched ToqanClaw, a no-code AI platform positioned as a European alternative to OpenClaw-style AI agents. The pitch centers on privacy and governance: Prosus says ToqanClaw is built in-house, runs on Prosus’ AI infrastructure, and keeps data under local control—claiming it will not be used to train third-party models. ToqanClaw is presented as “OpenClaw features in a secure environment,” with an emphasis on GDPR compliance and reduced reliance on external, uncontrolled tools that many agent systems use. Prosus also says it is rolling ToqanClaw out across a network of more than five million restaurants, merchants, and entrepreneurs. Early user results cited by Prosus include faster operations and commercial gains: one Dutch café chain reportedly reduced financial reporting from weeks to 30 minutes and grew revenue by 40% year-on-year; another partner increased deliveries by 25% while cutting overtime by 60%. The company also highlights training of its Large Commerce Model on data from over one billion customers and hundreds of millions of daily interactions, aiming to move beyond basic task execution into anticipatory automations. Alongside ToqanClaw, Prosus is introducing a consumer assistant called Zapia. Regulatory context matters: the article notes that European scrutiny of AI agents is rising, and earlier actions in Germany have targeted biometric practices—raising broader security and data-handling concerns.
Neutral
AI agentsprivacy & GDPRno-code automationenterprise softwareregulation

BitVertex Capital launches new 2026 Web3 & DeFi investment phase

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BitVertex Capital says it has entered a new 2026 active investment phase focused on early-stage startups across Web3, blockchain infrastructure, DeFi, RWA, Layer 2, AI-powered platforms, digital payments and crypto-native applications. The venture firm (founded in 2018) claims it has invested $700M+ in blockchain/Web3, including DeFi, RWA and Layer 2. BitVertex Capital emphasizes long-term conviction, licensed-venture structure, research-driven selection, and strategic partnerships—reporting 250+ partnerships since 2018. It highlights exposure to projects such as EpicChain (EPIC), Chromia (CHR), Ponke (PONKE), Venus Protocol, SushiSwap and Ronin Network, and also mentions Naoris Protocol. The firm claims documented performance where 90% of its investments delivered 500%+ annual ROI, supported by early market timing and ecosystem backing. For traders, this is a “pipeline expansion” signal rather than a direct protocol or token upgrade. Near-term impact is likely limited, but sustained funding interest in DeFi/RWA/AI infrastructure could support sentiment around high-utility sectors over the longer run. Note: the post is a paid PR and not independent news.
Neutral
BitVertex CapitalWeb3投融资DeFiRWA代币化Layer 2与AI

Dow Rebounds, but Bitcoin Stays Pressured as Tech Slumps

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average erased early losses and turned positive on Tuesday as gains in blue-chip names (including IBM, Microsoft and Sherwin-Williams) offset weakness in tech and semiconductors. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq, however, stayed under pressure, creating a “split tape” rather than a broad risk-on rebound. For crypto traders, the key takeaway is that liquidity/“risk appetite” signals from equities were mixed. Bitcoin remained pressured during the equity divergence, trading near $62,600 after a drop of more than 3% over 24 hours. CoinGecko data cited a roughly $62,000–$64,684 24-hour range, with BTC sitting toward the lower end of its intraday band. Traders are likely to watch whether the Dow’s strength confirms into a broader tech-led and crypto-led move. A stronger close across Nasdaq/S&P alongside Bitcoin would improve the odds of a more durable relief rally; otherwise, the current setup suggests selective rotation and continued downside sensitivity for high-beta crypto assets.
Neutral
Bitcoin priceUS equities divergenceDow JonesTech and semiconductorsRisk sentiment

EU digital euro advances: privacy tech, holding caps, 2029 readiness target

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The EU Parliament’s Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee approved the digital euro framework package in a 43-14 vote, moving the CBDC legal basis closer to EU member-state negotiations. The proposal keeps “cash-like” intent: the digital euro is designed to complement physical cash, with citizens free to choose payment methods. It supports online, account-based payments via authorized providers, and offline payments using value stored locally on a device. Privacy is a core pillar. The digital euro plan uses privacy-by-design and zero-knowledge proofs to validate transactions without exposing unnecessary personal data, with the ECB stated as not accessing users’ personal identification data. Financial-stability safeguards are included. Individual digital euro holding limits would be set by the European Commission after consulting the ECB, with periodic reviews. Businesses would generally face restrictions on holding digital euros beyond a short receipt window (often capped at 24 hours). Balances would not earn interest, and basic services are expected to remain free, while extra services may carry regulated fees. Before launch, the ECB must finalize technical standards, run pilots, and complete infrastructure testing, with a 2029 technical readiness target subject to the legislative process. Crypto market angle: the move signals tighter EU CBDC governance and privacy tech direction, while stablecoin policy debates continue in parallel (ECB warning on large stablecoin size and Qivalis’ euro-denominated MiCA-regulated stablecoin plans).
Neutral
digital euroEU CBDC regulationprivacy techfinancial stability capsECB rollout 2029

CBOE Considers Converting BTC/ETH Continuous Futures to Perpetual Futures

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The Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) is exploring a conversion of its continuous Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) futures into perpetual futures, aiming to compete in a fast-growing crypto derivatives market. The move comes after the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) approved cryptocurrency perpetual futures for prediction market Kalshi and laid out a regulatory pathway for other registered exchanges. CBOE’s global head of derivatives, Rob Hocking, told the Wall Street Journal the exchange is “exploring” the change, but offered no timeline and did not specify benefits. CBOE launched continuous BTC and ETH futures last December with expirations extending up to a decade. Perpetual futures (perps) have no expiration and rely on funding payments to keep prices aligned with spot. Demand has accelerated after the CFTC decision: Kalshi’s crypto perpetual futures reportedly generated over $8.5 billion in trading volume within weeks of launching. The approval has also drawn legal pushback—CME sued the CFTC, arguing the new products violate federal law and harm incumbents. Beyond CBOE, crypto derivatives expansion is broadening. Coinbase launched perpetual futures tied to stock indexes for eligible US traders, and DeFi perpetual volumes remain heavy, led by Hyperliquid, with DeFiLlama citing $22.5B volume in the past 24 hours and about $663B over 30 days. For traders, CBOE’s potential perpetual futures upgrade could increase venue competition, tighten basis/liquidity dynamics, and keep perps sentiment elevated—while regulatory and legal headlines may drive short-term volatility.
Neutral
CBOECFTCperpetual futurescrypto derivativesKalshi

Elizabeth Warren backs a bill blocking Fed retail CBDC until 2031

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Elizabeth Warren, once a vocal supporter of central bank digital currency (CBDC) “great promise,” has helped block a US retail CBDC via legislation. The Senate passed the “21st Century ROAD to Housing Act” by an 85-5 vote, and the bill includes a clause barring the Federal Reserve from issuing a retail digital dollar through at least 2030. After the freeze, the Fed still needs explicit, affirmative authorization from Congress to move forward with a substantially similar CBDC. The restriction turns an executive-level posture into statutory law, making it harder for a future administration to restart a retail CBDC without congressional action. The article notes that the US is already not close to launching a retail CBDC: the Fed has stayed exploratory, and in Jan 2025 President Trump signed an executive order directing agencies to stop developing or promoting a CBDC. Globally, the US stands out as other jurisdictions accelerate CBDC work, including wholesale systems and cross-border experiments. Still, the pathway to a consumer-facing CBDC in the US is temporarily shut—at least through 2030—despite Warren’s earlier pro-CBDC rhetoric. For crypto traders, this is more of a policy-risk update for “digital dollar” narratives than an immediate market catalyst.
Neutral
CBDCUS Federal ReserveElizabeth WarrenCrypto regulationUS Senate bill

Digital euro advances in Europe as U.S. blocks Fed CBDC until 2030

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The European Parliament’s Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee has backed the EU’s digital euro legislation, moving the project closer to a potential 2029 launch. The ECB says the digital euro would complement cash and reduce reliance on foreign payment networks, citing that Visa and Mastercard handle 61% of euro-area card payments. In the EU design, the ECB would run core infrastructure while banks and payment providers manage customer-facing services. The framework supports online and offline payments and includes privacy safeguards. Wallet holding limits are not final. Meanwhile, the U.S. Senate approved the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act with a provision blocking the Federal Reserve from issuing a CBDC (or similar asset) until the end of 2030. The Senate position aligns with President Trump’s preference for privately issued stablecoins over a Fed-backed digital dollar. Lawmakers also continue work on the CLARITY Act to create a clearer regulatory framework for digital assets. For traders, the digital euro push is a long-horizon development but reinforces the theme of institutional adoption of digital payments. The U.S. CBDC delay may limit near-term policy-driven catalysts for a “public coin” narrative, while stablecoin-favorable sentiment could support related market activity.
Neutral
Digital EuroECBCBDC RegulationU.S. SenateStablecoins

Bitcoin Liquidity Sweep Fails, Bears Target $60K

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Bitcoin (BTC) fell after sweeping liquidity around the $65,000 level, with sellers maintaining short-term control. The move followed a failed push into the $65,000–$66,000 resistance zone, where traders expected strong selling. After rejection, BTC slipped back into the middle of its recent range, leaving no clear upside breakout. Traders now focus on key downside support at $60,000–$60,500. If price continues to sell off there, BTC could retest recent lows. Some market participants said they may only consider long setups after a strong reaction at the support zone, though they may treat any rebound as a relief bounce unless BTC reclaims the $65,000–$66,000 area and confirms a structure shift. Near-term resistance is also watched around $64,300 to $65,600, where a further rejection could trigger another downswing. Broader commentary linked the correction to macro/flow pressure: Iran-related tensions, miner selling, and recent ETF outflows. Traders suggest that easing Iran pressure could help stabilization, but BTC has not yet confirmed a full recovery. Overall, the setup remains bearish while rallies fail and $60K support becomes the next battleground.
Bearish
BitcoinLiquidity SweepSupport & ResistanceETF OutflowsMarket Structure

Securitize vs tZERO Patent Fight Over Tokenized Securities

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Tokenized securities is entering a new legal phase. According to PACER Monitor, Securitize, Inc. v. tZERO Group, Inc. et al is listed as Case No. 1:26-cv-00712 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware. The dispute centers on tokenized securities infrastructure and related patent claims. The report frames this as a sign that tokenized securities are shifting from early experimentation toward a core institutional theme, where IP, compliance systems, and transfer restrictions can affect who captures value. For traders, the near-term question is whether this development changes demand or uncertainty in the broader crypto market-structure and regulation narrative. The article argues that crypto’s institutionalization and dependence on regulated access points means legal outcomes can alter expectations even if immediate price reactions are limited. Overall, the update provides a concrete, court-linked reference point while BTC and ETH continue to trade around key technical levels. The case is unlikely to directly move spot flows overnight, but it may influence longer-horizon sentiment around tokenized securities infrastructure risk. In short: tokenized securities now face not only regulatory and liquidity questions, but also enforceable patent and infrastructure ownership risks—an additional variable for institutional positioning.
Neutral
Tokenized SecuritiesPatent LitigationCrypto RegulationMarket StructureInstitutional Adoption

SpaceX valuation risk: Susquehanna sets $170 target but flags aggressive growth reliance

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Susquehanna initiated coverage on SpaceX (SPCX) with a neutral rating and a $170 price target, while warning that SpaceX valuation risk hinges on aggressive revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth forecasts. The brokerage forecast 2025–2028 revenue growth at an 81% CAGR and adjusted EBITDA growth at a 76% CAGR. Even so, it said current market pricing may already reflect optimistic outcomes, with “premium multiples” needed and multiple scenarios possible. Analysts also pointed to long-term bull cases: SpaceX’s leadership in rocket launches, Starlink as a growth engine, early AI initiatives and the ability to build large-scale AI infrastructure, and CEO Elon Musk’s track record. However, Susquehanna preferred to wait for a more attractive entry point. Separately, economist Peter Schiff warned about a potential surge in share supply. He claimed the public float could expand from about 640 million shares to as high as 7.5 billion shares by Dec. 8—creating a supply overhang for a stock priced for “perfection.” Despite the concerns, ARK Invest reportedly bought more than 210,000 SpaceX shares worth about $32.5 million after the recent decline. At the time of writing, shares traded around $158.40, still down more than 17% over the past five sessions. Overall, the SpaceX valuation risk narrative is likely to keep traders focused on downside scenarios (multiples, growth delivery, and future float) rather than near-term business headlines.
Neutral
SpaceXValuation RiskPublic Float/SupplyPrivate-to-Retail AccessARK Invest

Ethereum Foundation Job Cuts: 54 Layoffs and Five-Cluster Restructure

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Ethereum Foundation job cuts: the non-profit will cut 54 jobs (about 20% of staff) as it restructures into a “leaner and more focused” organization. The changes follow a months-long overhaul tied to its March “Mandate” document and a new treasury policy. Work will be organized into five core clusters: protocol layer, access layer, user layer, community layer, and institutional layer, plus two clusters for operations and management. The Foundation says the new setup will help deliver “critical tasks ahead,” including Ethereum scaling and mainnet hardening. Ethereum Foundation job cuts come after leadership exits. Co-executive director Hsiao-Wei Wang left last week, following earlier departures such as co-executive director Tomasz Stańczak in February. Vitalik Buterin said the ecosystem and the Ethereum Foundation will adapt, while acknowledging “some value was lost.” For crypto traders, this is a governance and development-process signal rather than a direct protocol change. Near-term, repeated leadership turnover can weigh on sentiment, while the five-cluster model may stabilize execution unless more staff moves follow.
Neutral
Ethereumjob cutsrestructuringgovernancedeveloper roadmap

Bitcoin drops to $62K as hawkish Fed talk hits tech risk, dragging crypto

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Bitcoin tested a two-week low near $62,000 on Tuesday, falling about 4% in 24 hours and down sharply versus recent highs. The move tracked weakness in U.S. tech stocks: the Nasdaq was pressured by chipmakers such as Micron and SanDisk, while investors digested hawkish signals around future rate hikes. Key drivers cited by analysts included a “sell-off in AI,” shifting sentiment to risk-off, and Fed communication from (new chair) Kevin Warsh that emphasized inflation-fighting over forward guidance. Traders now expect the benchmark policy rate to rise toward 3.75%–4% in July, with Bank of America projecting multiple hikes (rates to roughly 4.25%–4.5% by year-end). Higher yields typically reduce demand for risk assets, putting downward pressure on Bitcoin and broader crypto. On positioning, Glassnode (via Hyperliquid data) said Bitcoin bets have become progressively more bullish despite tepid spot performance. Still, Hashdex’s Gerry O’Shea said Bitcoin could likely stay in a $60,000–$70,000 range near term if the environment turns more hawkish. Crypto catalysts mentioned for potential improvement this year include U.S.-Iran de-escalation and the proposed Clarity Act, though timing risk remains if the bill slips beyond August.
Bearish
BitcoinHawkish FedTech sector sell-offRisk-off sentimentClarity Act

Bridge DeFi Insurance Gap: No Quick Cover, Panic Risk

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Bridge users still lack reliable DeFi insurance cover, because most policies exclude bridges or trigger too narrowly, and payouts are slow—if they pay at all. The article argues traders should assume they are self-insured and prepare a first-hour bridge incident response plan. It cites heavy exploit impact in 2026. In Q2 2026, about 70 exploits drained roughly $746m, with many smaller incidents rather than a single mega-heist. Bridge-related losses are material: an April wallet compromise linked to Kelp DAO accounted for about $291.3m of roughly $328m bridge-related losses reported for 2026. Even in May, only around $9.4m of ~$68.3m total exploit thefts were recovered, and bridges were the largest target at about 42% of that month’s total. Mechanically, bridge exploits force teams to pause contracts, halt relays, blacklist attackers, and coordinate with exchanges. Users on the source chain may see withdrawals frozen, while destination-chain holders can face de-pegs as liquidity fragments and bridged assets lose backing. Governance crises can also delay fixes, while recovery depends on negotiation rather than guaranteed clawbacks. Why insurance fails: bridge failures are correlated systemic risks, not independent events. On-chain mutuals/parametric covers often exclude bridges, cap capacity, or rely on governance/oracle-driven triggers. Centralized “custodian” insurance typically doesn’t cover smart-contract or governance failures. Time kills value during cascades and de-pegs, so quick liquidity and clear instructions matter more than future reimbursement. Key takeaway for traders: verify that any “bridge insurance” explicitly names your bridge contract addresses and qualifying exploit conditions; otherwise, treat the risk as uncovered and cap exposure per bridge.
Bearish
DeFiBridge RiskInsurance GapExploitsOn-chain Security

Ethereum Price Slides as Ethereum Foundation Cuts 20% Staff

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Ethereum price is sliding again as ETH trades near $1,660, down more than 5% in 24 hours. The move comes during a broader crypto market selloff, with Bitcoin (BTC), Solana (SOL), XRP, BNB and Dogecoin (DOGE) also lower. A key extra pressure point is news that the Ethereum Foundation has cut about 20% of its staff as part of internal restructuring. The foundation reportedly reduced 54 staff members and reorganised into five clusters: protocol layer, access layer, user layer, community layer and institutional layer. The stated aim is to become leaner and better aligned with Ethereum’s long-term development priorities. For traders, the market is asking whether this affects the Ethereum price beyond general risk-off. Even though the Ethereum network is not dependent on a single company, the Ethereum Foundation plays a major role in research, protocol development and ecosystem coordination. In weak conditions, uncertainty around leadership and staffing can turn into additional selling pressure. Key technical levels highlighted for Ethereum price action: support around $1,600. Holding above it could bring a push toward $1,700, then $1,750. Losing $1,600 may open downside toward $1,550 and potentially $1,500, especially if Bitcoin stays weak. Overall, Ethereum price appears sensitive to both macro sentiment and confidence in Ethereum’s roadmap execution following the restructuring.
Bearish
EthereumETH pricejob cutsmarket selloffsupport levels

Bitcoin teases $62K breakdown as Micron earnings boosts volatility

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Bitcoin is trading with indecision near $62,500 as bulls try to hold local support while US stocks remain volatile. After an Asia tech sell-off, markets saw two intraday dips below $62,000, with S&P 500 down ~1% and Nasdaq down ~1.3% at the Wall Street open. A key driver is expectations around Micron Technologies’ Q3 earnings guidance, due Wednesday. The Kobeissi Letter noted Micron’s earnings speculation is a sentiment catalyst for broader momentum-linked risk assets. It also pointed to market-specific amplification factors in Korea, including legal concerns tied to unrealized gains and higher trader leverage, contributing to volatility in both directions. On the crypto side, liquidation activity surged. CoinGlass data put 24-hour crypto liquidations near $700 million, with the rolling total passing $1 billion. Traders said BTC could not sustain the $65K area and instead tapped liquidity below $62K, creating a liquidation “squeeze” where both long and short positions are punished. Key level: $62,500 (and $62,000). With Bitcoin trapped in a narrow range, the next move may be driven by how stocks react to Micron and whether liquidation pressure continues to unwind.
Neutral
BitcoinMicron earningscrypto liquidationsUS tech stocksmarket volatility

XRP Open Interest Drops 70% as Negative Funding Tests $1.40 Bottom

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XRP open interest has fallen 70%, dropping from about $660M to $203M, signaling a major leverage reset in XRP futures. The decline coincided with XRP price moving lower, which traders typically read as leveraged positions being liquidated rather than broad spot selling. Funding rates turned deeply negative near the recent low around $1.40, indicating strong short-side demand and a futures market tilted toward lower prices. However, negative funding alone does not confirm a durable bottom. Traders now want evidence from price reaction and market structure. Technical focus is on whether XRP forms a “double bottom.” The current zone is being treated as a critical test: XRP must hold support and then reclaim resistance for a recovery narrative to strengthen. If it fails to bounce, weakness could extend. Separately, open interest is starting to rebuild while XRP price remains mostly stable, suggesting some leverage is returning after the liquidation shock. Analysts reference prior similar conditions during April 2025, but they caution that history does not guarantee the same outcome this time. Key market takeaway for traders: XRP futures positioning has reset sharply (open interest -70%) while funding is still bearish (negative near $1.40). That combination increases the odds of volatility—either a rebound if the double-bottom confirms, or a continuation lower if support breaks.
Neutral
XRPFutures OIFunding RatesLiquidationsDouble Bottom

Crypto off-ramp strategies: how to pick compliant platforms for fiat withdrawals

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In 2026, crypto off-ramp remains more complex than on-ramp. Traders should focus on compliance, liquidity, and withdrawal speed when choosing a crypto-to-fiat off-ramp provider—not just the headline exchange rate. The article highlights why off-ramp lags: AML/KYC checks for outbound fiat, fragile correspondent banking relationships, opaque spread structures (fees embedded in pricing), and regional fragmentation that can worsen spreads and stablecoin availability. It also explains the role of stablecoins in modern off-ramp flows. Routing via USDT/USDC first can reduce volatility slippage when converting BTC or ETH, then executing the fiat leg during higher-liquidity windows. Regional aggregators increasingly track stablecoin-to-local-currency rates (e.g., UAH/PLN/HUF/RON) and platform health to make due diligence faster. For P2P off-ramp, the trade-off is flexibility versus verification risk: scams (fake payment confirmations/impersonation), liquidity gaps in volatile periods, and limited dispute recourse. To evaluate an exchanger for a crypto off-ramp, the framework includes: reserve transparency, calculating effective rates vs mid-market (not “zero fees” claims), checking real withdrawal reliability, confirming regulatory standing (e.g., EU VASP registration), and reviewing consistency across multiple sources. A resilient approach is to layer channels: a primary regulated exchange for larger withdrawals, a secondary regional provider for smaller/local conversions, and an aggregator for continuous monitoring.
Neutral
crypto off-rampfiat conversionstablecoins (USDT/USDC)exchange complianceP2P trading risk

Bitcoin slips below $60,000 as Fed hawkishness, ETF outflows surge

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Bitcoin fell below $60,000 on June 5, the lowest since late 2024, and then rebounded to roughly $62,000–$63,000. Deutsche Bank says the move reflects a mix of macro and structural pressures. Bitcoin’s sell-off was linked to a hawkish shift in Federal Reserve expectations, renewed confidence concerns after Strategy (MSTR) sold its first BTC since 2022, and sustained outflows from U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs. Deutsche Bank cited six consecutive weeks of net ETF outflows totaling about $6 billion, warning that ETF flow reversals are increasingly amplifying downside because they now play a major role in Bitcoin price formation. The bank also highlights a capital rotation into AI as an additional headwind. With U.S. tech firms expected to spend over $700 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026, investors are increasingly weighing Bitcoin against AI-related equities and infrastructure. Deutsche Bank frames Bitcoin as maturing into an institutional risk asset, where marginal demand comes more from ETF allocators and corporate treasuries than from retail speculation. At publication, Bitcoin was about 3.5% lower over 24 hours near $62,600.
Bearish
BitcoinFed policySpot Bitcoin ETF flowsAI rotationInstitutional adoption

Ethereum Foundation budget cuts 40%: Vitalik flags leaner endowment model

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Vitalik Buterin says the Ethereum Foundation (EF) will cut its budget by about 40% this year as it shifts to a leaner, endowment-style operating model. The announcement arrives alongside two major staffing moves. The EF confirmed a 20% headcount reduction on Tuesday, and co-Executive Director Hsiao-Wei Wang resigned the same day. That brings the total number of senior EF departures since January to nine, highlighting internal leadership turmoil. Buterin’s spending plan targets a reduction in annual spend from roughly 15% of remaining treasury assets (before 2026) to around 5% per year after 2030. He said the cuts involve “difficult decisions” and risk losing experienced engineers. To protect Ethereum’s roadmap funding—described as the protocol’s “third iteration” after the Merge—the EF plans to reduce costs elsewhere, including a wind-down of the Privacy and Scaling Explorations (PSE) unit, smaller Devcon events, a narrower institutional strategy, and a move toward more specialized client teams supported by AI-assisted formal verification. Buterin also reiterated a “lean-and-done” approach after the current roadmap, focusing on security fixes and limited, high-impact upgrades rather than continuous new features. Overall, the changes reflect both competitive pressure from rival chains and the EF’s effort to redefine its role during leadership turnover.
Neutral
EthereumEthereum Foundationbudget cutsheadcount reductionprotocol roadmap

BTC Slips With SpaceX Rout as $60K Support at Risk

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Bitcoin (BTC) is weakening as a SpaceX-led tech sell-off hits risk appetite, pulling BTC back toward the $60,000 support zone. After falling more than 8% from a June high near $67,255, BTC is testing the $60K level again, and a breakdown could accelerate selling toward $56,000 and possibly lower. The trigger is a sharp drawdown in tech markets following SpaceX’s record IPO. The Elon Musk-led company priced its IPO at $135 per share, raising about $75 billion at an implied valuation near $1.77T. SpaceX shares peaked around $211.39 on June 16, but have since slid roughly 27%, with the broader Nasdaq 100 down over 3% in session trading—alongside steep declines in chip stocks such as Intel, AMD, Micron, and SanDisk. Analysts connect the move to BTC’s historical tendency to trade like a liquidity-sensitive risk asset during stress. One analyst flagged that if BTC breaks below $62,200, there is a high probability it could move under $60,000. A technical setup also adds downside risk: a potential head-and-shoulders pattern on the 4-hour chart places the neckline around $61,000–$62,000. A decisive 4-hour close below that range could confirm the bearish structure, with a measured downside target near $55,000–$56,000. Bullish invalidation is relatively clear for traders: BTC’s bullish structure is described as active only while it holds above $60,000. Upside levels mentioned include a potential return above $65.7K for bullish breakout confirmation and a larger recovery toward $81,000 over coming months.
Bearish
Bitcoin BTCSpaceX IPOTech sector sell-offBTC support $60KHead-and-shoulders

Vitalik: EF budget cut 40%, moves to long-term funding

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Vitalik disclosed that the Ethereum Foundation (EF) plans to cut its budget by about 40% this year. The EF is shifting from an annual spending model that used to cover roughly the remaining 15% of funds, to a long-term approach targeting about 5% spending per year after 2030. To support this EF budget change, EF will adjust its multi-client strategy. It plans to rely more on AI-assisted formal verification, and the PSE (privacy and scalability) exploration team will move from broad “exploration” work toward focused builds around zero-knowledge proofs. Devcon will be scaled down, with efforts to reduce losses. Large projects beyond Ethereum itself will also be reduced, while EF institutional work will concentrate on smaller, more repeatable CROPS-friendly deployment case studies. For traders, this is an ecosystem-operations and fiscal impact signal more than a token-specific catalyst, but it may shape expectations around Ethereum R&D intensity and execution risk over time.
Neutral
EthereumEthereum FoundationBudget cutZero-knowledge proofsResearch reallocation