Onchain Lens data shows a whale sold 634 XAUT for about $3.16 million, realizing a profit of $255,411. The same whale had initially purchased 684 XAUT for roughly $3.17 million and completed exits at a total sale value near $3.42 million. The transaction highlights active on-chain flows in XAUT (Tether’s gold-backed token) and indicates profit-taking behavior by large holders. No trading advice is provided.
The Ethereum Foundation completed a 5,000 ETH over‑the‑counter (OTC) sale to BitMine at an average price of $2,042.96 per ETH, totaling about $10.22 million. BitMine, already the largest corporate ETH treasury, now holds roughly 4,539,563 ETH — about 3.78% of total supply — and has staked over 3.04 million ETH with annualized staking revenue near $174 million. The Foundation said proceeds will fund protocol research, ecosystem development and community grants. Ethereum (ETH) traded around $2,095 at publication with limited volatility. Separately, BitMine chairman Tom Lee cited technical-analogue models comparing current ETH trends to historical market patterns and concluded the market is in the late stage of a small bear cycle. Key SEO keywords: Ethereum Foundation, OTC sale, BitMine, ETH sale, staking, protocol funding, market outlook.
A senior crypto executive says the US CLARITY Act — proposed legislation to clarify crypto market structure and regulation — has slim chances of passing in 2026 unless it clears committee by the end of April. Alex Thorn, head of firmwide research at Galaxy Digital, posted that the bill must reach the Senate floor by early May or odds of passage next year become “extremely low.” The timetable pressure follows Senate leadership prioritizing other legislation and comments from Senate Majority Leader John Thune that the chamber may not act on the bill before April. Key sticking points include debate over stablecoin reward yields and their impact on traditional banking; Thorn warned additional issues could follow, such as DeFi, developer protections, and regulatory authority disputes. Senators including Angela Alsobrooks have signalled that compromises between crypto and banking lobbies will be necessary. TD Cowen has previously suggested the legislation could be delayed until 2027–2029 depending on political timing. Market observers, including former President Donald Trump, have urged quick passage of crypto market structure rules. Primary keywords: CLARITY Act, stablecoin rewards, Senate, crypto regulation. Secondary/semantic keywords: DeFi, developer protections, market structure, Senate committee, legislative timeline.
XRPL reached a milestone of about 3 million daily transactions this week, driven in part by Ripple’s partnerships that aim to use the XRP Ledger as a settlement bridge between TradFi and DeFi. Higher on‑chain activity can burn fees and create a supply squeeze, a mechanism traders cite as potentially bullish for XRP. Technical indicators (notably an oversold RSI) are also cited by some analysts as a sign a bottom may be forming — XRP fell roughly 25% year‑to‑date.
However, XRPL’s DeFi ecosystem shows signs of weakness. DeFiLlama data indicates XRPL’s stablecoin market cap declined nearly 12% in one week and accounts for only ~0.116% of the $320 billion global stablecoin market. Because stablecoins provide much of the transaction liquidity on XRPL, weakening stablecoin momentum threatens transaction-driven growth and undermines the supply‑squeeze thesis. Analysts warn that Ripple’s partnerships may be overstated by the market if on‑ledger DeFi and stablecoin usage do not sustain growth. The article concludes the recent transaction boom may not be sufficient to guarantee a 2022‑style bullish reversal for XRP.
Primary keywords: XRPL, XRP, Ripple, stablecoins, DeFi. Secondary/semantic keywords: transaction volume, supply squeeze, fee burn, RSI, on‑chain usage, TradFi bridge. This summary is optimized for traders seeking the trade relevance: short‑term relief from technical oversold signals may occur, but lack of durable DeFi/stablecoin demand makes sustained upside uncertain.
Swiss postal bank PostFinance has expanded its crypto trading service by adding six digital assets—Algorand, Arbitrum, NEAR Protocol, Stellar, USDC and Sui—bringing the total number of supported assets to 22. Since launching crypto trading in 2024, PostFinance reports over 36,000 investment portfolios opened and more than 565,000 trades executed. The expansion aims to broaden customer access to diversified digital-asset exposure, including layer-1 chains, layer-2 scaling solutions and a major stablecoin (USDC). Key keywords: PostFinance, crypto trading, Algorand, Arbitrum, NEAR, Stellar, USDC, Sui, digital assets. This development may increase institutional and retail on‑ramp options in Switzerland and slightly boost liquidity for the newly listed tokens on local trading rails.
Tether (USDT) withdrawals from major centralized exchanges have surged to historic highs, reaching nearly 54,000 daily transactions while deposits fell to about 11,000. Between July 2024 and March 2026 daily exchange deposits typically ranged 10k–45k, but recent data show a sharp drop in inflows and a pronounced outflow imbalance: roughly five USDT withdrawn for every one deposited. Exchange-held USDT reserves declined from about $60 billion early in 2026 to $50.6 billion today — a $9.4 billion reduction. Active Ethereum addresses transacting USDT hit an all-time high near 340,000, indicating funds are being moved off exchanges into private wallets or alternative custody rather than vanishing. Analysts attribute the trend to risk-off behavior amid geopolitical uncertainty and traders sidelining capital until market conditions improve. For traders, lower exchange USDT reserves imply thinner order books and reduced liquidity, increasing the price impact of large buys or sells and potentially amplifying short-term volatility. The move could depress immediate market buying power but also stores dry powder that may rapidly re-enter exchanges and magnify moves if redeployed.
MicroStrategy executive chairman Michael Saylor publicly rejected former UK prime minister Boris Johnson’s description of Bitcoin as a “ponzi” scheme, calling the label inaccurate. The exchange followed media circulation of a story about an individual reporting a £20,000 loss tied to Bitcoin — a narrative Johnson cited when criticizing crypto. Saylor argued that isolated personal losses do not characterize Bitcoin’s fundamentals and highlighted the asset’s long-term store-of-value thesis, enterprise adoption via MicroStrategy’s large BTC holdings, and broader market metrics. The dispute underscores ongoing political scrutiny of cryptocurrencies and the sensitivity of public narratives to media anecdotes. Primary keywords: Bitcoin, Michael Saylor, Boris Johnson, £20,000 loss, MicroStrategy. Secondary keywords and semantic terms included: crypto regulation, market narrative, store of value, institutional adoption. The article is relevant to traders because high-profile rhetoric and human-interest loss stories can increase volatility and shape regulatory sentiment. Traders should monitor social media amplification, political commentary, and MicroStrategy disclosures for short-term price swings, while noting that enterprise accumulation and macro trends remain key drivers over the long term.
Bitcoin (BTC) rallied to $73.9K and extended weekly gains to 12% before pulling back to about $70.6K. Options market data shows heavy call buying clustered at the $75K strike, indicating traders price a possible breakout; dealer hedging on a decisive close above $75K could accelerate a move toward $80K. Puts and hedging activity are concentrated at $60K, suggesting sophisticated players still hedge for downside risk. With roughly two weeks until quarter-end options expiry, BTC may remain range-bound between $60K–$75K unless buyers return aggressively. Swissblock and on-chain metrics point to the need for renewed network growth or fresh bidding to confirm an expansion phase rather than a recovery. Spot BTC ETFs supported the recent rally with $767 million in weekly net inflows. Key takeaways for traders: heavy call open interest at $75K signals a potential squeeze if buying intensifies; $60K remains the primary downside hedge level; ETF inflows are supportive but not sufficient alone to guarantee a breakout — renewed participant growth or strong orderflow at mid-60Ks+ is likely needed to close above $75K and target $80K.
The Ethereum Foundation executed an OTC sale of 5,000 ETH (≈ $10.2M) to publicly traded treasury firm BitMine Immersion Technologies at an average price of $2,042.96 per ETH. Proceeds will fund protocol research, ecosystem development, developer support and community grants. This is the Foundation’s second known direct corporate sale (after 10,000 ETH sold to Sharplink in July 2025). The Foundation still holds a substantial treasury and has begun staking portions of it to generate yield. BitMine now reports one of the largest known corporate ETH treasuries, holding over 4.5 million ETH (≈ $9.4B at recent prices) and has staked a large portion of its holdings, producing significant staking revenue but also sitting on large unrealized losses versus ETH’s August peak near $4,946. ETH has recently recovered above $2,000, gaining roughly +5% weekly and +9% monthly. Traders should watch the concentration of ETH on corporate balance sheets: potential sell-pressure from large treasury sales, liquidity implications, staking-related lockups, and the Foundation’s ongoing treasury management are relevant for short-term price moves and longer-term supply dynamics.
Former UK prime minister Boris Johnson wrote in a March 13 Daily Mail column that Bitcoin is a “giant Ponzi scheme,” arguing the asset lacks intrinsic value, depends on the “greater fool” dynamic, and exposes ordinary investors to fraud. He contrasted Bitcoin unfavourably with traditional stores of value such as gold and even collectibles, and suggested decentralization reduces accountability. Johnson cited an anecdote of a UK resident who lost roughly £20,000 after repeated fees to a promoter promising to double his BTC stake. The column pushed a narrative of eroding public confidence in crypto. Bitcoin advocate and Strategy founder Michael Saylor publicly rebutted Johnson on X, saying Bitcoin is not a Ponzi because it has no central operator, issuer, promoter, or guaranteed returns and instead functions as an open, decentralized monetary network driven by code and market demand. Other industry voices pushed back as well, reframing the criticism as a debate over monetary design versus frauds and failed schemes. At publication Bitcoin traded near $70,590, down about 1.4% over 24 hours. For traders: the column rekindled regulatory and reputational risk headlines that can increase short-term volatility in BTC price, while defenders’ high-profile pushback may temper longer-term reputational damage. Primary keywords: Bitcoin, BTC, Ponzi scheme, Boris Johnson, Michael Saylor. Secondary keywords: decentralization, investor confidence, market reaction, crypto fraud, price impact.
Major Brazilian crypto and fintech associations — including ABcripto, ABFintechs, Abracam, ABToken and Zetta — representing about 850 firms issued a joint statement opposing proposals to extend the Imposto sobre Operações Financeiras (IOF) to stablecoin transactions. The groups argue that Brazil’s Constitution and the 2022 Virtual Assets Law (Law No. 14,478) limit IOF to fiat currency exchange settlements, and that stablecoins are explicitly not fiat, so any tax extension would exceed executive authority and require legislation. They also warned that central bank monitoring rules are not tax mandates and that imposing IOF on stablecoins would damage innovation, liquidity and market clarity in a market where Federal Revenue auditors estimate $6–8 billion in monthly crypto flows with roughly 90% in stablecoins. Associations urged lawmakers and regulators to avoid conflating oversight with tax policy to preserve legal certainty for Brazil’s large stablecoin ecosystem.
Neutral
stablecoinIOF taxBrazil crypto regulationcrypto industry associationsVirtual Assets Law
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has formally dismissed its civil enforcement lawsuit against BitClout and DeSo founder Nader Al‑Naji and six co-defendants, and agreed not to refile the same claims. The original SEC complaint, filed in July 2024, alleged Al‑Naji raised over $257 million by selling the native token BTCLT on the BitClout blockchain platform without registering the offering and misrepresenting how investor funds would be used. The SEC also accused Al‑Naji of spending more than $7 million on personal expenses, including renting a Beverly Hills home and gifting cash to family members. Multiple related individuals and entities, including Al‑Naji’s wife and mother, had been named as co-defendants. The dismissal removes a major regulatory overhang for BitClout/DeSo and BTCLT but leaves open market and reputational uncertainties for the project and token holders.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on March 14 that although Iran has expressed willingness to negotiate a ceasefire, the terms offered so far are “not good enough,” and the U.S. will not agree to end the conflict for now. Trump did not detail the specific conditions but said any deal must be “very solid” and implied Iran would need to abandon its nuclear program. He also asserted that U.S. and Israeli strikes have severely weakened Iran’s military — claiming most of Iran’s missiles, drones and production facilities have been destroyed and that those capabilities could be eliminated within days. Trump confirmed a U.S. strike on the Iranian oil export hub of Kharg (Harak) Island, saying it was “almost completely destroyed” while noting U.S. forces avoided damaging key energy pipelines to prevent long reconstruction timelines. The remarks signal continued military pressure and uncertainty over near‑term diplomatic resolution.
Industry leaders and market observers say institutional bitcoin treasury firms are on track to absorb an amount of BTC equivalent to roughly ten times the daily mined supply. Driven by corporate treasuries, exchange-traded products and long-term holders, this sustained demand could materially reduce circulating daily sell-side supply from miners and short-term holders. Analysts point to growing treasury allocations, recurring purchases by cash-rich firms and inflows into bitcoin-focused funds as primary drivers. Key figures cited include comparisons between daily mined issuance (approximately 900 BTC/day at the time of reporting) and aggregate purchase programs that could absorb multiples of that issuance. The trend underscores a supply-demand imbalance that may support upward price pressure over time, while increasing volatility in the near term as markets price in concentrated buying. Traders should watch corporate treasury announcements, fund inflows, miner selling behavior and on-chain metrics (net flow to exchanges, reserve changes) for signals. Primary keywords: bitcoin treasury, mined supply, institutional demand, BTC buying. Secondary/semantic keywords: corporate treasuries, ETF flows, miner selling, on-chain flows.
The whale ratio for Bitcoin transactions on exchanges has risen to its highest level since 2020, reaching 0.62 versus a 72-period moving average of 0.5648, according to CryptoQuant data. The metric measures the share of exchange volume driven by large holders (whales). Historically, spikes in the whale ratio have coincided with price bottoms and early-stage rallies as large holders accumulate while retail participation falls. Current data shows retail activity at a six-year low, exchange BTC balances at their lowest since November 2017, rising Ethereum accumulation addresses, limited outflows from BlackRock’s Bitcoin fund, and an MVRV Z-Score near historic lows. Together these on-chain signals point to sustained accumulation by long-term holders. CryptoQuant cautions that while whale buying is the strongest in six years, it remains uncertain whether this marks a definitive market bottom or a prolonged accumulation phase. Traders should weigh these indicators as bullish accumulation signals but remain cautious given lingering uncertainty and market volatility.
A U.S. federal appeals panel denied Custodia Bank’s request for an en banc rehearing, upholding a 2025 ruling that the Federal Reserve and its Reserve Banks have discretion to approve or deny master account applications from eligible depository institutions. The 10th Circuit rejected Custodia’s petition by a 7–3 vote. Custodia, a Wyoming-chartered special purpose depository institution founded by Caitlin Long, first applied for a Fed master account in October 2020. The Kansas City Fed initially found no major problems in early 2021 but ultimately denied the application in January 2023, citing concerns about Custodia’s crypto-focused business model. Custodia sued in June 2022, arguing the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act (DIDMCA) entitled qualifying banks to master accounts and that the Fed unreasonably delayed review; lower courts and the appeals panel rejected those claims. The decision arrives as the Kansas City Fed recently granted Kraken a limited crypto master account and the Federal Reserve works on a broader “streamlined” master account framework. For crypto traders, the ruling reinforces the Fed’s gatekeeping role over direct access to Fed payment rails, signaling that crypto-first banks still face substantive regulatory hurdles despite isolated accommodations (e.g., Kraken). Primary keywords: Fed master account, Custodia Bank, Federal Reserve decision, crypto bank master account. Implication: continued regulatory barriers for crypto banks seeking direct Fed access, which may constrain banking-linked liquidity solutions for crypto firms.
PUMP, the Solana-based memecoin launchpad token, has risen ~30% in two weeks but fell 8.05% in the last 24 hours as of reporting, with volume up 13% to $124.03M. On the daily chart PUMP formed a bearish flag-and-pole; a daily close below $0.00196 could trigger a ~15% decline toward $0.00166. The $0.00215 level is the immediate upside hurdle; clearing it would invalidate the bearish thesis. The Average Directional Index (ADX) is 13.59, indicating a weak trend. On-chain data show retail holders reduced PUMP by ~235.46M tokens (−6.11%) over seven days while whales increased holdings by ~14.27B (+18.23%) per Nansen. Derivatives data (Coinglass) show ~$1.39M in longs and ~$4.57M in shorts clustered near $0.00194–$0.00213, signaling stronger short-side leverage. Short-term sentiment appears bearish; higher timeframes still show upside potential. Traders should watch daily close relative to $0.00196, volume/whale flows, and leverage clusters for trade setup and risk management. (SEO keywords: PUMP price, bearish flag, memecoin, Solana, support $0.00196, resistance $0.00215.)
BitMEX co‑founder and Maelstrom CIO Arthur Hayes told the Coin Stories podcast that Bitcoin functions as a “liquidity alarm” and its recent weakness reflects tight US dollar liquidity. He warned that rapid AI-driven white‑collar job losses could trigger a Minsky Moment—a leveraged credit collapse—forcing central banks to resume large‑scale money printing. Hayes’ trade guidance: do not try to time markets now; wait until central banks start printing again to accumulate Bitcoin. He also cautioned against institutionalizing Bitcoin at the expense of its original purpose, highlighted privacy risks from AI de‑anonymization (favoring privacy coins like Zcash), and urged long‑term, non‑levered accumulation rather than short‑term speculation. Hayes noted ongoing mining activity in China but constrained by energy policy. Key themes: Bitcoin as liquidity indicator, AI job disruption, potential systemic credit stress prompting renewed quantitative easing, institutionalization concerns, and privacy threats from AI tools.
Bullish
BitcoinAI job cutsliquiditycentral bank printingprivacy coins
ChowWow, a new meme-token launching on Solana, is trading near $0.01 during its presale after a recent raise from $0.008 (≈25% increase). Developers project a token listing around $0.0288 and some observers speculate upside as high as $5 during the current bull cycle, though such targets are highly uncertain. Key features driving early interest include a staking program offering roughly 8–15% APY to reduce circulating supply and a play-to-earn gaming component that grants token holders in-app benefits. The presale reportedly accepts minimum investments around $25, widening retail access. ChowWow’s Solana-based infrastructure is cited for low fees and high throughput. The article contrasts ChowWow with established meme coins like Pepe (Pepe Coin), noting market sentiment remains mixed and long-term success will depend on adoption, liquidity, and sustained user engagement. Risk factors highlighted include early-stage volatility and speculative price projections. This content is informational and not financial advice.
Coinbase researchers flagged signs of ’peak pessimism’ among investors as Bitcoin outperformed major US equities in recent trading. The report highlights that Bitcoin showed relative strength versus S&P 500 and Nasdaq benchmarks, suggesting improved market sentiment toward crypto despite broader macroeconomic concerns. Coinbase noted inflows into spot Bitcoin products and increasing on-chain activity as supportive signals. The analysis cited reduced fear indicators and rising conviction among traders, though it cautioned that macro headwinds — including interest rate uncertainty and equity volatility — could still influence short-term price dynamics. Key takeaways for traders: Bitcoin’s resilience versus US equities may attract risk-on flows, spot ETF and custody demand remain critical drivers, and volatility is likely to persist, presenting both trading opportunities and risk-management challenges.
APEMARS (APRZ) has progressed through a multi-stage presale to Stage 12 (APETRON BURN), reporting more than $296,000 raised, over 1,388 holders and 12.4+ billion tokens sold. The Stage 12 price is $0.00012506; the project markets a potential listing price of $0.0055, which implies a projected ROI of roughly 4,297% from Stage 12 and reported earlier-stage gains (stage 1 investors cited ~636% to date). Tokenomics emphasize scarcity and user incentives: 63% staking APY, a 9.34% referral reward and a $22 unlock threshold tied to project theming. The article includes a worked example — a $7,000 Stage 12 purchase (≈55.97M APRZ) rising to about $307,846 at a $0.0055 listing — and step-by-step presale participation instructions. The coverage also lists nine other meme projects to watch (PNUT, WIF, APEING, TRUMP, MEW, PEPE, PENGU, SHIB, BRETT), noting community, IP or viral strategies as their drivers. Both pieces were published as sponsored content and include the standard disclaimer that this is not investment advice.
Bitcoin Cash (BCH) has retraced into its long-term demand zone at $440–$470 but shows limited signs of a sustained bullish recovery. On-chain metrics are mixed: retail holders (1–100 BCH) and mid-sized holders (1k–100k BCH) have been selling during 2026, while whales (>100k BCH) and the 100–1,000 BCH cohort added holdings. The 90-day mean coin age has trended up since December, suggesting some short-term accumulation, but the 365-day mean coin age indicates longer-term selling waves and erratic accumulation. The 90-day MVRV is near multi-month lows, easing immediate profit-taking pressure, yet the Chaikin Money Flow (CMF) sits at about -0.25, signaling significant capital outflow. Daily structure and moving averages remain bearish. Traders should be cautious: a break below $440 could accelerate downside, while a recovery above $480 would offer more confidence for a trend reversal. Primary keywords: Bitcoin Cash, BCH, support, demand zone, on-chain metrics. Secondary/semantic keywords: MVRV, mean coin age, CMF, whales, retail holders, bearish momentum.
CryptoQuant warns of a growing “adoption paradox” for Ethereum (ETH): on-chain activity — including record daily active addresses, peak internal smart-contract calls, strong DeFi, stablecoin and Layer-2 usage — has reached or exceeded prior cycle highs, yet price and investor capital inflows have weakened. ETH traded near $2,073–$2,100 in the reports and sits more than 50% below its prior cycle peak. CryptoQuant highlights elevated ETH inflows to exchanges and a negative one‑year change in realized capitalization, signaling net capital outflows and persistent selling pressure. Senior analyst Julio Moreno says that unless capital inflows recover and exchange inflows decline, ETH could drift lower toward roughly $1,500 by late Q3 or early Q4 2026. For traders: strong on‑chain metrics are not currently supporting price; monitor exchange flows, realized cap changes and macro risk. A price reversal would likely require renewed investor inflows and reduced movement of ETH to exchanges.
Bearish
EthereumCryptoQuanton-chain metricsexchange flowsmarket outlook
Crypto sports betting usage in Canada is rising as traders and bettors seek faster deposits, withdrawals and broader access to international markets. Web3 sportsbooks and hybrid platforms now support wallet-based sign-ins, stablecoins and automated on-chain payouts, making them attractive for live (in-play) betting. This guide reviews five leading platforms for Canadian players in 2026: Dexsport (decentralized, multi-chain, on‑chain wager transparency, 40+ cryptos, no mandatory KYC), BetPanda (privacy-focused, 13+ cryptos, quick deposits/withdrawals), Lucky Block (LBLOCK-centered ecosystem, large welcome bonuses, 10+ cryptos), Cloudbet (veteran sportsbook with deep markets, 30+ cryptos, high limits) and BetOnline (long-established offshore sportsbook accepting fiat and crypto). Key advantages across platforms include faster blockchain settlement, broader sports and esports live markets (NHL, NBA, soccer, esports), and features like Cash Out and provably fair systems. Regulatory context: sports betting is legal in Canada but regulated provincially; Ontario has AGCO oversight. Crypto payments themselves lack unified federal regulation, and many users access offshore platforms. For traders, the growth of crypto sportsbooks may increase transactional demand for BTC, ETH, USDT and other betting-support cryptos, while short-term flows could be sensitive to regulatory news and platform reputations. Recommended trader actions: monitor on-chain flows and stablecoin volumes, watch regulatory updates from provincial authorities (e.g., AGCO), and track platform liquidity, withdrawal speeds and promotional campaigns that can drive user inflows.
This week’s crypto developments emphasize structural innovation over price action, focusing on governance reforms, novel token distribution, and technical upgrades. Key items: a community event will allocate participation by wallet-average holdings to reward long-term users; a Token Generation Event (TGE) on 23 March 2026 will release 25% of total supply, mainly to users who earn points via exchange activity and a smaller portion to NFT holders. One project proposes dissolving its DAO and reconstituting as a US C-Corporation, offering token holders either shares in the new firm or a stablecoin exit at a set rate — a hybrid governance model aimed at easing institutional partnerships and increasing transparency. Technological advances include a privacy-centric token standard using zero-knowledge proofs and pooling to hide transaction details while staying DeFi-compatible, and the launch of an over-collateralized stablecoin to bolster price stability and liquidity. Other sector trends this week include rising derivatives volumes, token supply shifts from protocol upgrades, and operational updates from development teams. Overall, the moves reflect a drive to balance decentralization, regulatory clarity and improved infrastructure — developments traders should monitor for token supply changes, liquidity impact, and shifts in investor participation.
Neutral
governancetoken distributionprivacy tokenstablecoinDAO to C-Corp
This combined 2026 guide profiles six leading crypto PR agencies — Outset PR, Coinbound, Clutch, Reblonde, MarketAcross and Melrose PR — and explains which project types and stages each serves best. Newer details emphasize Outset PR’s strengths in data-driven, ROI-focused campaigns, regulatory-sensitive messaging and AI/LLM visibility; Coinbound is identified as the volume player that pairs press distribution with influencer marketing for rapid attention and token visibility; Clutch targets B2B and enterprise projects using research-led narrative design; Reblonde provides high-end creative and governance-focused brand strategy; MarketAcross is positioned for enterprise-scale, global tier-1 coverage on large launches; Melrose PR focuses on long-term thought leadership and founder positioning. The guide contrasts crypto PR with traditional PR — faster narrative cycles, participatory communities, token-linked sentiment and stricter regulatory scrutiny — and includes a selection checklist advising founders to match agency strengths to immediate goals (launch momentum, measurable visibility, sustained storytelling or reputation management). For traders: PR shapes market narrative and attention cycles. Projects that secure sustained, credible PR and enterprise-level coverage tend to maintain steadier perception; by contrast, hype-focused, influencer-driven campaigns can amplify short-term volatility. Key SEO keywords: crypto PR, Web3 PR, influencer marketing, token sentiment, AI/LLM visibility.
AI-focused crypto tokens Bittensor (TAO) and Render (RENDER) outperformed the market, each rising roughly 35–40% over the past week as investor capital rotated into decentralized AI infrastructure projects. Bittensor climbed about 35% to near $246 after the Grayscale Bittensor Trust became an SEC-reporting vehicle on OTC Markets, improving transparency and institutional accessibility. Render rallied nearly 40% as trading volume surged 200% in 24 hours, market cap topped $1 billion, and open interest rose ~33%, signalling growing speculative and derivatives participation. Render is testing a key resistance at $1.88 (daily pivot); a confirmed breakout with sustained volume would indicate stronger momentum. Broader gains were also visible in AI-related tokens such as Fetch.ai (FET). The move reflects a thematic rotation toward blockchain projects tied to AI, driven by infrastructure milestones, institutional listings and measurable network utility rather than pure narrative. For traders: monitor institutional product announcements, on-chain usage metrics, derivatives open interest and volume spikes. Key short-term triggers include Render breaking $1.88 and any further institutional listings for TAO; longer-term upside depends on sustained ecosystem development and real-world utility.
Bullish
AI cryptoBittensor (TAO)Render (RENDER)institutional adoptiontrading volume
TRM Labs analysis finds that illicit crypto activity accounted for under 1% of Australia’s on‑chain transactions between March 2025 and February 2026. Australian crypto entities processed roughly $50 billion in total on‑chain volume during that period, with about $15 billion incoming to centralized exchanges and DeFi platforms. Among 95 countries studied, Australia ranked 20th by crypto value received, placing it in the top quartile globally. Sanctions‑related flows made up ~70% of the identified illicit volume, followed by darknet markets, investment fraud, and illicit goods and services; smaller shares related to ransomware, scams, terrorist financing and other cybercrime. The report notes that while criminal actors have adapted to use crypto across traditional financial crime typologies, exposure remains small relative to total activity. Australia’s regulatory framework — including mandatory exchange registration with AUSTRAC since 2018 and enhanced enforcement such as the 2025 Operation Taipan money‑laundering conviction — is highlighted as part of the context reducing illicit exposure.
Ripple announced a $750 million share buyback that has split the XRP community. Crypto analyst @WhaleFUD highlighted an internal buy-and-sell cycle in which Ripple sells XRP and uses proceeds to fund equity buybacks. Critics say venture capital and institutional investors are buying Ripple shares — not XRP — meaning corporate valuation gains don’t directly benefit XRP holders; retail holders provide liquidity while institutions capture upside. Some community members also point to competing products (eg, the RLUSD stablecoin) and recent acquisitions (GTreasury, Hidden Road) as signs Ripple prioritises equity and institutional backers ahead of retail token holders. Supporters, including blockchain researcher BankXRP, argue the buyback signals corporate strength and confidence in the XRP ecosystem, noting Ripple’s $50B valuation and ongoing strategic deals. The piece notes XRP price context (quoted at $1.38) and places the buyback against broader market uncertainty. Key keywords: Ripple buyback, XRP, share buyback, VC investors, retail liquidity, RLUSD, acquisitions.