SEC Chair Paul Atkins said he is confident the Clarity Act will pass Congress and be signed into law by President Trump in 2026. The bill already passed the House in July 2025 and is now being considered in the Senate. If enacted, the Clarity Act would create a more comprehensive federal regulatory framework for digital commodities and securities, aiming to reduce the SEC vs. CFTC jurisdictional split and shift crypto oversight from case-by-case enforcement to statutory rules.
Prediction markets are reflecting a higher probability of passage: the “Clarity Act Signed into Law in 2026” market is priced at a 59.5% YES outcome, up from 57% the prior day. Over the past week, the YES probability has risen by about 3.5 points, suggesting improving legislative momentum and market sentiment.
Traders should watch for Senate actions, including scheduled votes or statements from key senators such as Tim Scott and Cynthia Lummis, plus any White House or Trump communications that clarify the administration’s stance. Further updates could move prediction-market pricing and influence broader risk sentiment around U.S. crypto regulation.
DeXe (DEXE) surged about 13% in the last 24 hours after breaking above key weekly levels. The move shifted DEXE from consolidation into expansion, suggesting a likely continuation if momentum holds.
At the time of writing, rising volume and strong whale activity across spot and futures supported the breakout. DEXE volume increased roughly 12% to about $33M, indicating the move is backed by real demand rather than a thin, short-lived spike. Whale participation was notably active on both spot and futures, pointing to coordinated positioning.
On top of that, buyers at the prevailing trading price increased, with futures dominated by buy orders. With DEXE trading above its key Exponential Moving Average (EMA), resistance is now focused around the $24 level. The article frames $24 as the next key target if traders maintain buy pressure and participation remains elevated.
Crypto analyst Zach Rector says XRP is positioned for a bounce, citing two trading indicators. First, Coinbase order book data shows buy bids outweigh asks by nearly 7x on larger price bands, implying strong demand below the current market.
Second, Coinglass liquidation data highlights more than $2 billion in notional liquidations clustered between $1.34 and $1.40. Rector notes these are primarily short positions that would be forced to close if XRP moves back into that range. Forced buying from liquidations can add momentum and push price toward the next resistance.
Rector states he opened a personal long trade at $1.33 and emphasized the $1.40 zone as the key target. At the time of the alert, XRP was trading around $1.33–$1.34. A live order book monitoring session is planned to track whether XRP reclaims the range and triggers a potential liquidation cascade.
Keywords used in the setup: XRP price, Coinbase order book, Coinglass liquidation heatmap, and $1.40 target. (Not financial advice.)
Tesla Cybercab has begun production at Giga Texas, targeting record-breaking electric vehicle efficiency. Tesla says the steering wheel- and pedal-free autonomous two-seater is certified at 165 Wh/mi, roughly 6 miles per kWh.
The article notes that Tesla Cybercab’s certified figure is not a lab estimate, and that Tesla VP of Vehicle Engineering Lars Moravy called it “the most efficient EV that has ever been certified and built,” referring to 165 Wh/mi as “the starting point.” Tesla expects further efficiency gains as engineering continues.
Production timing: official ramp started in April 2026, while early units reportedly rolled out as early as February. The vehicle is designed exclusively for unsupervised autonomous operation, with no human takeover controls because there are no driver interfaces.
Manufacturing: Tesla plans an “unboxed” modular process for future high-volume production, assembling modules simultaneously rather than sequentially adding parts.
Market relevance: For ride-hailing, the potential disruption is framed around lower operating costs and fewer energy requirements. The article highlights that prior efficiency leaders (e.g., Lucid Air and Tesla Model 3) consume about 28–40% more energy per mile, though real-world performance will depend on deployment, regulatory approvals, and operating conditions.
Traders’ takeaway: this is a major autonomous EV efficiency milestone, but it has no direct mention of crypto assets; any crypto impact would be indirect via broader tech sentiment rather than token fundamentals. Tesla Cybercab remains the key focus of the news.
Neutral
Tesla Cybercabautonomous drivingEV efficiencyride-hailing disruptionGiga Texas production
Wall Street closed at fresh highs as AI-driven tech sector earnings lifted sentiment and reports of a potential US–Iran deal boosted risk appetite. The S&P 500, Nasdaq, and Dow Jones all hit record closes on May 29, with oil prices slipping after the news—an offsetting tailwind for equities.
In crypto, Bitcoin crossed $75,000, trading alongside traditional assets as a macro “risk-on” signal. A key tech catalyst was Dell’s earnings beat, tied to growing demand for AI servers.
On geopolitics, the reported proposal would extend the US–Iran ceasefire by 60 days and ease shipping restrictions through the Strait of Hormuz, where about 20% of global oil supply passes. Any disruption there typically pushes energy prices higher and pressures risk assets; easing restrictions can do the opposite.
For traders, the main driver is macro, not crypto-specific hype. That makes the move potentially fragile: if negotiations fail or President Trump rejects the agreement, oil could rebound, equities could sell off, and Bitcoin’s move above $75K may unwind. Bitcoin’s correlation with equities can rise during macro-led rallies, but tends to change during crypto-specific events like halvings or major regulation.
Bullish
BitcoinUS-Iran CeasefireTech EarningsRisk-on MacroStrait of Hormuz
Visa has made a strategic investment in Replit to integrate Visa’s commerce and payment infrastructure directly into AI-built applications and software agents. The companies plan to integrate “Visa Intelligent Commerce” into Replit’s platform so developers can initiate secure transactions and accept payments via Visa’s global network without leaving their development workflow.
Visa says more than 1,000 Visa employees already use Replit for internal prototyping and development, highlighting growing enterprise AI adoption. As part of the collaboration, Replit will explore connecting agent-built software into Visa’s Trusted Agent Protocol registry, which is designed to identify “Visa-trusted” agents that can transact across merchant and service endpoints on behalf of consumers.
The partnership also examines machine-to-machine and agent-driven payments for high-frequency, low-value transaction scenarios as software becomes more autonomous.
Key executives: Visa’s Rubail Birwadker (SVP, head of growth products and partnerships) framed the deal as a push to make card payments native, secure, and integrated from day one. Replit CEO Amjad Masad said Visa’s involvement reinforces enterprise-grade security and faster paths from idea to production.
Separately, Replit is expanding enterprise sales with self-serve access for Replit Enterprise contracts up to $200,000, including SSO, SCIM, role-based access controls, audit logs, advanced permissions, SOC 2 compliance, and enterprise connectors.
Sui mainnet suffered two outages within 48 hours after a bug introduced in the v1.72 upgrade disrupted transaction processing and epoch transitions. Sui said the issue was a gas accounting conflict tied to the new “Address Balances” feature, which prevented validators from finalizing transactions during epoch changes.
The first full stall began around 7:15 a.m. PT on May 28, 2026 and lasted 5 hours 55 minutes. After emergency validator coordination, the network resumed, but halted again on May 29 during another epoch transition when validators could not reach a consistent network state. Sui described the May 28 fix as temporary, with the second outage driven by the same underlying Sui mainnet gas logic bug.
User balances were reportedly intact, but new on-chain actions were delayed or blocked, including token transfers, DeFi activity, and NFT/trading transactions. Exchange data showed SUI trading around $0.91–$0.92 on May 29 (about a 7%–8% daily decline), after earlier weakness during the downtime.
Sui confirmed full recovery after emergency fixes on May 30 and will publish a post-incident review. The review will focus on whether Address Balances needs redesign or gas accounting should be decoupled from consensus/epoch transition logic.
For traders, the key risk is Sui mainnet reliability. Expect volatility to react quickly to downtime headlines, while DeFi activity may gradually normalize if validator performance stabilizes.
U.S. SEC chairman Paul Atkins said he expects the Clarity Act to pass Congress and receive President Donald Trump’s sign-off. The SEC chief argues that clearer crypto regulatory clarity will define when digital assets are treated as securities versus commodities. Recent ambiguity has increased compliance costs and pushed crypto software teams and $BTC projects overseas.
The Senate Banking Committee has already approved the bill to move to a full Senate vote, which market observers see as one of the most significant steps for U.S. crypto legislation in years. The Clarity Act aims to reduce overlapping SEC vs. CFTC authority by clarifying jurisdiction and regulatory criteria.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also backed the bill. Supporters say predictable rules could boost investor confidence, encourage homegrown innovation, and improve the U.S. tech sector’s ability to attract startups instead of losing them abroad. Experts caution that amendments may still be required before final passage.
For traders, expectations around the Clarity Act approval and a potential Trump sign-off may increase short-term optimism in risk assets and large-cap crypto, while the remaining legislative amendments keep event-driven volatility elevated.
Security researchers warn that Bitcoin quantum risk is increasing via a “harvest now, decrypt later” strategy: adversaries can collect encrypted blockchain data today and decrypt it after quantum capability improves. A March 2026 Google Quantum AI paper estimates cracking Bitcoin’s secp256k1 signatures could take as few as ~1,200 logical qubits—around 20x fewer resources than earlier estimates. No current quantum computer reaches that level, but Project Eleven expects cryptographically relevant “Q-Day” quantum systems between 2030 and 2033.
The exposure is already measurable. Citi and Project Eleven (May 2026) estimate 6.5–6.9 million BTC have public keys exposed on-chain, worth roughly $450–$500 billion at current prices. Public key exposure typically occurs when an address has spent before (spending reveals the key), while never-spent addresses mainly expose only hashed values. Some holdings may be dormant, potentially including addresses linked to Satoshi Nakamoto.
The article also highlights governance and upgrade friction. A fast, sweeping Bitcoin standard change would require coordinated updates across nodes, miners and wallet providers, plus user migrations to new address formats. Citi argues this is slower and more contentious than post-quantum upgrade paths on proof-of-stake networks like Ethereum.
For traders, this is mainly a long-horizon tail risk for Bitcoin, but it can still move sentiment and drive rotation toward networks seen as faster in post-quantum readiness.
Security experts and a venture capitalist say Bitcoin’s most urgent quantum threat is not wallet keys, but the encrypted authentication data moving between institutions today—part of a “harvest now, decrypt later” strategy.
Andrew Gault (CEO of ZeroTier and partner at 7percent Ventures) argues attackers can collect encrypted interbank messages, payment authentication records, and digital signatures now, without needing to break them immediately. He warns that teams have focused on protecting data at rest, while adversaries build a library of today’s traffic to decrypt once quantum capabilities arrive.
The article cites Google’s security planning as an example of this shift. Google targeted a post-quantum cryptography migration completion for 2029, reprioritizing its threat model toward authentication services and digital signatures used in wire-level signing. Google explicitly noted store-now-decrypt-later risk as “relevant today.”
Citi’s modelling is referenced to show potential financial-system scale: a quantum-enabled attack on Fedwire Funds Service access for a top-five US bank could trigger a $2T–$3.3T cascade, equivalent to a 10%–17% drop in real GDP. The Global Risk Institute estimates 19%–34% odds of a cryptographically relevant quantum computer arriving by 2034.
For crypto trading, the key point is that Bitcoin’s exposed surface is broader than wallet addresses. The same wire-level signing infrastructure, plus bridge proofs, exchange API authentication packets, signed transactions in public mempools, and signing back-channels between cold storage and desks, may face similar “proof-layer” risks.
While Ethereum has started a coordinated post-quantum migration, major crypto exchanges and custodians handling Bitcoin signing traffic have not publicly committed to comparable protections.
Bearish
BitcoinPost-quantum cryptographyCrypto custody & signingHarvest now decrypt laterQuantum risk
Stellar XLM rallied about 50% in just two days after DTCC partnership news. The driver is a plan for DTCC-linked tokenization of U.S. market assets.
In its announcement, Stellar said that in the first half of 2025 it will transfer U.S. stocks from the Russell 1000 index, large-scale ETFs, and U.S. government bonds onto the Stellar blockchain. The market treated this as another real-world asset (RWA) tokenization milestone, boosting near-term demand for Stellar’s token.
While Stellar XLM surged, XRP did not. XRP was down roughly 29.15% year-to-date (as cited in the article). The key reason: Ripple’s DTCC-related integration occurred in March 2024 and was already priced in at the time. In addition, the workflow impact was more indirect for XRP, meaning the token saw less immediate benefit versus a direct tokenization demand impulse.
The article also highlights supply/market-cap dynamics: Stellar’s valuation (~$6.95B) is far smaller than XRP’s (~$80.86B), which can make price moves easier for XLM when new demand appears.
Looking ahead, the next meaningful catalysts for XRP are framed as regulatory and capital-related. Traders are watching potential U.S. “Clarity Act” approval in the Senate in the second half of 2025, and the possibility of a Ripple IPO. Overall, the message is that XRP may require legal clarity and larger new inflows—beyond existing on-chain infrastructure partnerships—to spark a strong rally.
Not investment advice.
Kalshi, the CFTC-regulated prediction market platform, hired former FBI analyst Tyler Neff in May 2026 to join its surveillance team. Neff reports to Robert DeNault, Kalshi’s head of enforcement and legal counsel. His role is to monitor trading activity and help prevent insider trading risk in event-based contracts.
The move comes as U.S. lawmakers intensify scrutiny of how non-public information could be used to profit from event contracts tied to upcoming economic data releases. Kalshi is positioning its compliance and market integrity controls to satisfy regulators and institutions.
Kalshi was founded in 2018 and launched in 2021, offering yes/no contracts on real-world events. In 2020, it became the first designated contract market for CFTC-approved event contracts, placing it under federal oversight rather than operating in offshore regulatory gray areas.
Beyond traditional event outcomes, Kalshi has expanded into active cryptocurrency-related markets for BTC and ETH, and it also explored tokenized event contracts on the Solana blockchain. Overall, Kalshi’s compliance hiring signals a tighter enforcement posture around information risk and market manipulation concerns.
Swan Bitcoin CEO Cory Klippsten said Bitcoin retail sentiment still matters because BTC ownership remains largely in the hands of retail accounts, not Wall Street giants. He noted that even with spot Bitcoin ETFs, buyers typically acquire “real on-chain Bitcoin,” which must be taken into custody and ultimately comes from circulating supply.
Klippsten said some ETF-related flows and derivatives “paper products” (futures and similar instruments) can take time to work through the system, but the unique part of Bitcoin remains access to real on-chain BTC.
Market data cited in the article shows US spot Bitcoin ETFs logged combined $2.90B in net outflows since May 15, while Bitcoin fell about 9.5% over the same period. At publication, BTC traded around $73,630 and was down 2.87% over 30 days.
On price outlook, Klippsten lowered the odds of a new Bitcoin all-time high (ATH) in 2026. He previously estimated a roughly 50% chance earlier in the year (BTC around $95,000), but after a ~23% drop, he now handicaps the probability to about 20%–25%.
Crypto sentiment is described as volatile in 2026, with the Crypto Fear & Greed Index showing “Extreme Fear” (23) on Friday, signaling risk-off positioning among traders.
Bearish
Bitcoin retail sentimentspot Bitcoin ETFsETF flowsBTC price outlook 2026crypto fear and greed
Stellar’s native token XLM jumped about 44% this week after the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC) selected the Stellar network for its tokenization plans. DTCC will tokenize its custodied assets and make them available on Stellar from early 2027. Stellar Development Foundation CEO Denelle Dixon said Stellar’s compliance-focused architecture, open infrastructure and risk management align with market expectations.
Price action shows early momentum for XLM. After the Wednesday update, XLM rose about 11% initially, then extended gains from around $0.15 to above $0.20, leaving weekly performance near +44%. Traders also note the daily chart moved above the 200-day simple moving average, suggesting a potential shift in structure.
Key levels to watch for XLM traders: the latest article highlights $0.21 as the confirmation area. A stronger uptrend is expected only if XLM holds above $0.21 and the weekly close stays near that zone. Upside targets include $0.26 (about +31% from the $0.21 support area).
Risks remain defined. If XLM fails near $0.21 and weekly action falls back below the 200-day SMA, the rally could fade via profit-taking. Consolidation risk is also flagged around $0.20, with liquidity pockets near $0.19 (close to the 200-day SMA) and $0.15 (a breakout trigger). A weekly close below $0.19 could invite renewed short pressure.
Overall, this DTCC-to-Stellar tokenization headline is a catalyst-driven, technically conditioned rally—use the confirmation and invalidation levels to manage entries, stops and profit-taking.
Israeli forces have demolished residential homes in southern Lebanon, signaling an escalation in the Israel–Hezbollah conflict after a US-brokered ceasefire was announced in April 2026 but remained unstable.
The article links the military intensification to weaker prospects for a “permanent peace deal” between Israel and Hezbollah. In the attached prediction markets, the “Israel x Hezbollah permanent peace deal by May 31, 2026” outcome is priced at 2.7% YES (down from 3% 24 hours earlier), implying traders see a near-term agreement as highly unlikely. Separately, the “Israel withdraws from Lebanon by June 30, 2026” market shows 9% YES, and odds have slipped slightly following the news.
Key figures to watch include Benjamin Netanyahu and Hassan Nasrallah, plus any renewed US or UN mediation. Further demolitions or ongoing hostilities could keep the peace deal narrative under pressure and continue to shift market expectations.
For traders, this is a headline risk event: heightened escalation tends to reinforce risk-off sentiment and can lift volatility across liquid assets, including crypto, especially in the short term.
Prediction markets are repricing US-Iran outcomes tied to the Strait of Hormuz after Lt. Col. Anthony Aguilar suggested recent “peace talks” could be a delay tactic, allowing US forces to position for potential moves around the Strait of Hormuz.
In the market “Will Trump agree to withdraw troops from the Iranian region by June 30?”, the current YES price is ~47% (slightly down). Related contracts skew toward escalation: “Will the US blockade of the Strait of Hormuz be lifted by May 31, 2026?” is priced at ~18% YES, signaling low odds of a near-term easing.
Earlier pricing also deteriorated for de-escalation milestones, including thinner odds for diplomatic meetings and for a permanent US-Iran peace deal by mid-to-late April. The articles cite conflicting messaging over whether the Strait of Hormuz is effectively “closed,” plus hardline Iranian posture and US air-defense repositioning.
Crypto-trader takeaway: higher Strait of Hormuz escalation risk is being priced as a geopolitical tail risk. That can increase macro volatility (oil, USD, rates) and spill over into risk assets like crypto. Pay close attention to any official US confirmations/denials and statements from Iranian leaders or mediators, especially around May 31 and June 30.
Bearish
Strait of HormuzUS-Iran TensionsPrediction MarketsGeopolitical RiskOil Supply Risk
SHIB exchange netflow remains negative, but the outflow trend is starting to ease. Over the past 24 hours, roughly 164B SHIB tokens reportedly left centralized exchanges, while exchange reserves also fell another 0.19%, suggesting fewer tokens are poised for immediate selling.
On-chain activity is not collapsing. Active addresses and transfer activity show small upticks, which can help reduce near-term sell-pressure if it holds.
Technically, SHIB is still trading in a broader downtrend since March. The coin has failed to reclaim the 20-day and 50-day moving averages and is currently testing a key support area around $0.0000055. Momentum is edging toward oversold, but traders will likely need sustained buying confirmation rather than a single bounce.
Watch for follow-through: if SHIB exchange netflow stays negative while reserves keep dropping and network activity stabilizes or rises over multiple sessions, the market may be forming an accumulation base. A stronger rebound would typically require a reclaim of nearby resistance levels.
US-Iran ceasefire negotiations are at risk after Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth said the U.S. is ready to resume military strikes on Iran if talks fail. The comments came during a defense summit in Singapore as Washington and Tehran struggle over key issues including uranium enrichment and sanctions.
The statement appears to reduce the likelihood of extending the current US-Iran ceasefire beyond the June 7 deadline. It also corresponds with market pricing that shows:
- US Iran Agreement/Ceasefire Extension: 47.5% YES (up from 36% in 24 hours)
- Iran Airspace Closure: 8.4% YES (down from 14% a day earlier)
- WTI crude oil “$150 in May” odds: still near 0.1% YES
Traders should watch for White House and Iranian updates on negotiations, plus any U.S. or Iranian military maneuvers. If the US-Iran ceasefire is not extended, renewed escalation risk could increase geopolitical volatility and potentially feed into energy-price shocks—an input that historically amplifies risk sentiment across crypto markets.
In short: US-Iran ceasefire talks remain stalled, and the Pentagon warning raises escalation odds heading into June 7, which could keep markets on edge.
Polymarket is pricing deep skepticism that a US AI safety bill will pass before end-2027. The prediction market assigns about a 13% probability (“Yes” at roughly 13 cents) and has logged around $99,000 in cumulative volume since launching on Nov 12, 2025.
This bet is not new. A prior Polymarket version for a 2025 deadline resolved “No,” with prices dropping below 1% shortly before it closed on May 20, 2025.
As federal action stalls, state regulation is advancing. Illinois passed SB 315 on May 29, 2026, requiring AI developers to create risk plans; it is pending governor approval. Meanwhile, on Mar 20, 2026, the Trump administration published a National Policy Framework for Artificial Intelligence, urging federal legislation while warning against excessive state-level regulatory burdens.
Traders are also showing a divergence in related regulation bets: an AI data center moratorium before 2027 is trading near 93%, suggesting Washington may move faster on energy/infrastructure issues than on comprehensive AI safety standards.
For crypto traders, this Polymarket pricing is a real-time sentiment gauge for regulatory timelines around an AI safety bill. It may reinforce expectations of uneven, multi-jurisdiction regulation and keep attention on how prediction markets face compliance scrutiny (including CFTC-style monitoring of trading conduct).
Neutral
AI safety billPolymarketUS regulationIllinois SB 315prediction markets
A long-term Uniswap whale deposited 2.16 million UNI (about $6.61M) to Binance after roughly one year, locking in an estimated ~$6.39M loss. The same holder previously withdrew the position when it was near $13M, suggesting capitulation rather than expecting an immediate recovery.
At the same time, UNI’s exchange activity turned bearish. Spot netflows rose to about $4.65M entering exchanges, which typically increases sell-side supply. UNI is trading around $3.00 (near a key support). A breakdown would likely worsen losses, while sustained defense of $3.00 could allow another attempt higher.
Technically, UNI remains weak. The chart shows repeated rejection near $4.00 and a structure of lower highs. Trend signals align with sellers: -DI (22.90) above +DI (12.01) and ADX at 25.10, indicating the bearish trend is still in control on the daily timeframe. Parabolic SAR is also above price (3.542), keeping downside bias active.
However, trader positioning is not uniformly bearish. Binance top accounts show 60.71% long versus 39.29% short, for a Long/Short Ratio of 1.55. That means some traders still expect a rebound from support, but they may need to absorb the rising UNI exchange supply for a trend reversal to hold.
Bottom line for traders: UNI whale capitulation plus rising exchange inflows increases downside risk around $3.00, even as leverage-style optimism persists.
Bearish
UNIUniswapWhale MovesExchange InflowsMarket Support
Bitcoin price is struggling under $75,000 despite stocks reaching new highs, highlighting a growing risk-asset divergence. The data cited by XWIN Research Japan points to a structural split: equities are being lifted by visible earnings growth and buybacks (including AI and capex themes, e.g., NVIDIA), plus continued equity ETF inflows. Bitcoin has no earnings, so it relies more directly on new liquidity.
For Bitcoin, spot Bitcoin ETFs saw large outflows in the second half of May—removing the institutional demand channel when price needs support most. On-chain indicators reinforce the same theme: CryptoQuant data shows Bitcoin active addresses have trended lower since 2024, with declining transaction activity and network participation.
Price-wise, Bitcoin is around $73,600 after losing momentum from a brief May rally above $82,000. Chart levels highlighted: $72,000–$74,000 is the key support zone (former resistance turned support). Resistance is still near the 200-day moving average around $80,000, and sellers recently regained control in the $80,000–$82,000 area.
Volume remains subdued versus the February capitulation, so there is no clear “panic bottom” yet. A daily close below $72,000 would weaken the structure and could expose demand around $65,000. If support holds, Bitcoin could attempt a rebound toward $77,000 and retest $80,000–$82,000.
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced a $1.5 trillion defense investment plan to counter Iran’s nuclear threat, escalating U.S. strategic planning during a U.S.-Israel conflict against Iran that has included strikes since Feb 2026. The current phase is described as a pause in active hostilities, but disputes over Iran’s nuclear program remain unresolved.
In the associated prediction market on a possible U.S. Invasion of Iran by end-2026, the YES price is 19.5%, down from 20% over the past 24 hours. Crypto traders and macro watchers may read Hegseth’s move as supportive of a U.S. Invasion of Iran outcome over the longer term, but the immediate impact is assessed as moderate: the price change is small, suggesting limited near-term repricing despite the headline-scale defense budget.
What to watch next: additional statements from U.S. defense officials that indicate a shift toward more aggressive posture, updates in diplomatic talks, and any changes in Iran’s nuclear activity. Officials such as President Donald Trump and the Joint Chiefs of Staff could further shape expectations for a U.S. Invasion of Iran scenario.
Bitdeer (NASDAQ: BTDR) says it sold its entire weekly Bitcoin production of 206.2 BTC as of May 29, 2026, leaving it with exactly zero net Bitcoin holdings. The Singapore-based miner has maintained a zero-treasury approach since at least February 2026, when it liquidated over 943 BTC, and it has continued converting mined coins into fiat every week.
Bitdeer frames this as funding its AI pivot and high-performance computing buildout. Data center expansion requires cash, so management prefers immediate monetization of mined Bitcoin rather than holding BTC as a long-term store of value.
Financially, Bitdeer reported Q1 2026 revenue of $188.9 million (up from $70.1 million in the prior-year quarter) but posted a net loss of $159.5 million, highlighting heavy capital burn alongside fast growth. The company also develops SEALMINER hardware and offers AI cloud services across facilities in the US, Norway, Bhutan, Canada, Malaysia, and Ethiopia.
For traders, Bitdeer’s zero net Bitcoin holdings model changes the investment narrative: exposure is more tied to operational mining margins and the AI/data-center business, while consistent BTC selling can add a small, steady supply overhang. Weekly liquidation of 206 BTC is unlikely to move the market alone, but it may matter if similar miners adopt the same “sell to fund AI” playbook.
Spain’s National Police dismantled a violent crypto robbery ring tied to the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. Six suspects were detained after an investigation started in August 2025, including a Madrid house theft.
Authorities say victims were targeted for their valuables—jewels, cash, and cryptocurrency—then tied up and held at gunpoint to force them to hand over funds. In at least one incident, a gunshot was fired when a victim resisted, creating risk to life. The group reportedly selected targets through surveillance before coercing victims to meetings in vacation apartments.
Key figures and statistics include: €1.5 million in jewels and watches and about €1.3 million in cryptocurrency stolen during the Madrid case. Three members have already been ordered to be jailed. Police also charged suspects with membership in a criminal organization, violent robbery, unlawful detention, fraud, and crimes against public health.
Tren de Aragua has been repeatedly linked to crypto-enabled crime. The U.S. Department of State designated it an FTO and SDGT in February 2025, and OFAC sanctioned it in 2024 for laundering funds using cryptocurrency. The operation reinforces that the crypto robbery ring used digital assets as part of its criminal toolkit—both for theft and subsequent laundering.
Neutral
Spain PoliceTren de AraguaCrypto RobberyCrypto LaunderingLaw Enforcement
The European Commission is moving toward tougher EU trade with China measures after the bloc’s goods deficit reached about €360 billion in 2025 and widened further in 2026. Officials say the response is “existential,” targeting Chinese overcapacity.
Plans discussed in Brussels include broader tariffs, import quotas, and safeguard measures across chemicals, metals, and the clean tech sector. The EU also appears ready to shift from product-level disputes to sector-wide protection.
Five EU member states—France, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands, and Lithuania—submitted a joint non-paper calling for faster sector-wide safeguard investigations, higher tariffs, and new defensive tools to counter “unfair trade practices.”
Germany raised concerns about escalation and potential blowback from retaliation by Beijing, noting that the EU’s late-2024 tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles already triggered Chinese probes into European brandy and pork.
The Commission’s approach fits a broader “de-risking” strategy since 2023, aiming to reduce strategic dependencies rather than fully decouple. Further debate is expected ahead of upcoming G7 and EU summits, and the pace of safeguard investigations could determine whether this becomes a gradual policy shift or a sharp market-moving event. EU trade with China remains the key driver of the near-term narrative.
Goldman Sachs Research says “capacitor stocks” could benefit from an unusually long AI data-center build cycle, led by multi-layer ceramic capacitors (MLCCs). The bank revised its 2026 MLCC pricing forecast from flat to a 0–5% increase and now expects the AI-driven upcycle to run to around 2030 (vs. a prior 2028 endpoint).
Goldman met Murata Manufacturing, a major MLCC supplier, and reaffirmed a Buy rating on Murata with a target price of 5,400 yen. It also rated Nantong Jianghai Capacitor Co. (China) as Buy, citing direct exposure to data-center power infrastructure demand.
Fundamental demand backdrop: Goldman projects global power demand could rise 220% by 2030, up from 175%, as AI hyperscalers accelerate capital expenditures. The article notes hundreds of billions of dollars in commitments from Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and Meta, with new data centers requiring large electrical systems that use capacitors.
Investor angle: data-center electrical component stocks have already outperformed hyperscalers by ~85 percentage points since early 2025. Goldman argues upside may still remain because the upcycle is expected to extend several more years.
Key risks: MLCC price gains are modest, so if AI spending slows, the upcycle thesis could weaken quickly. Geopolitical tensions and supply-chain uncertainty add pressure for Chinese component makers via tariffs or export controls.
Overall, Goldman’s call reframes “capacitor stocks” as a longer-duration theme tied to AI infrastructure spending through 2030.
Bullish
AI data centersMLCC capacitorsGoldman SachsSemiconductor componentsChina supply chain
Bitcoin strategic distribution risk is rising as tech IPO expectations intensify and liquidity tilts back toward U.S. equities. The article links the current weakness near the $70K–$75K area to a more structural positioning shift rather than a typical short-term correction.
Equity outperformance is a key backdrop. The S&P 500 is up about 16% versus Bitcoin’s roughly 8% rally in Q2, suggesting capital rotation toward stocks instead of crypto. With mega-IPOs (e.g., Databricks, Klarna) expected to absorb large amounts of investor liquidity, the gap could widen further.
On the crypto side, institutional flows point to “strategic” Bitcoin distribution. Bitcoin ETFs have seen more than $2.3B in outflows in May alone (per SoSoValue), bringing May’s performance to the weakest since a $3.5B outflow in Nov 2025 after the October crash. The author argues this divergence—stocks gaining while Bitcoin struggles—signals reduced institutional appetite and increases the likelihood of another deeper BTC drawdown.
Traders should watch support around $70K–$75K, because the market is increasingly pricing breakdown risk below $75K amid ETF outflows and risk-off positioning tied to the IPO cycle.
Bearish
BitcoinETF outflowsIPO liquidity rotationRisk-off macroTechnical support $70K-$75K
Bitcoin is trading sideways around $73.6k, up slightly (+0.5%/24h) but still down over the week (-2.3%). Ethereum is holding the $2,000 psychological level, rebounding to about $2,017 (+0.9%/24h) after a brief break below $2,000.
Market sentiment remains risk-averse: Fear & Greed index falls to 23 (“extreme fear”). Spot Bitcoin ETF flows continue to drain capital. In the latest session, IBIT saw an estimated outflow of $528M, and May’s cumulative ETF outflows exceed $2B, shrinking 2026 inflows to roughly $536M. Reported Q1 13F filings also indicate de-risking by major quant funds (e.g., Jane Street cutting IBIT and FBTC positions).
Despite the cautious backdrop, Hyperliquid’s native token HYPE is the standout. HYPE reached $67.24, a new all-time high (+7.5%/24h; +18.7%/7d; +62.4%/30d), rising to about $14.5B market cap and ranking around #11.
Key trading levels highlighted: Bitcoin support is $73,000 (then $71.5k–$72k); resistance $74,200 and $76,000. Ethereum short-term support is near $1,980, with $2,040–$2,100 as resistance. HYPE’s near-term resistance centers on the $70 psychological level.
US sanctions on Iran have been announced alongside security talks involving Israel and Lebanon in the United States. The new measures target Iran’s oil and shipping sectors, with the US aiming to pressure Tehran—especially around the Strait of Hormuz—amid escalating regional instability.
Crypto traders tracking policy risk should note the market read-through. In prediction markets, the probability of a “US-Iran diplomatic meeting” by June 30, 2026 fell to 28.9% (from 34% 24 hours earlier). At the same time, the “US Iran Agreement/Ceasefire Extension” market rose to 51.5% for an agreement by June 7 (from 36% a day earlier).
Key figures mentioned include US President Donald Trump, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, and US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff. The article also flags potential diplomatic signals from Oman or Vienna as possible market-moving catalysts.
Overall, US sanctions on Iran are viewed as a “moderate” negative for near-term diplomacy, potentially hardening positions. However, the higher ceasefire-extension odds suggest some optimism for shorter-term negotiations even as tensions remain elevated.
Neutral
US sanctions on IranMiddle East geopoliticsPrediction marketsOil & shipping riskDiplomacy odds