Staked ETH supply on Ethereum has hit a new record: 33.06% of the total ETH supply is now staked, the first time it has exceeded 33% since the Merge. CryptoQuant data shows long-term participation continues to rise, reducing liquid ETH available in the market.
A separate on-chain signal also drew attention. Lookonchain reported a newly created wallet withdrew 9,876 ETH from Binance (about $15.4M) and staked the full amount immediately—suggesting preference for longer-term network positioning over short-term selling.
Despite these staking records, ETH price remains relatively steady near $1,550–$1,571. Analysts cite $1,550 as key support, while $1,700 is the major resistance level that ETH would likely need to reclaim to ease downside risk. Ethereum’s relative strength versus Bitcoin during the recent decline was also highlighted.
Traders should watch for whether the rising Staked ETH supply translates into higher spot demand, and whether ETH can break above $1,700; otherwise, the market may treat the liquidity lock-up as more of a structural backdrop than an immediate catalyst.
President Donald Trump’s latest financial disclosures indicate his crypto business is becoming a larger revenue driver than traditional ventures. The filings report that family-backed crypto projects generated over $1.4B in income during 2025, with major contributions tied to WLFI and TRUMP.
Key figures: around $600M came from token sales linked to World Liberty Financial (WLFI). Even after Official TRUMP (TRUMP) fell sharply from its peak (reported $74.24) to as low as about $1.67, it still contributed roughly $636M.
The disclosures also suggest crypto revenue is increasingly sourced from licensing deals, token sales, and equity transactions—not just holding crypto assets. That combination can intensify ethics and conflict-of-interest scrutiny, especially as policy references in the article point to clearer digital-asset rules, including stablecoin-focused reforms.
Regulatory backdrop: the article cites Cornerstone Research indicating SEC crypto enforcement dropped about 60% in 2025, while CFTC virtual-currency enforcement neared zero—implying a shift from enforcement toward framework building. Even so, the piece notes that investors still price risk primarily via interest rates, ETF flows, and macro conditions.
Trading takeaway: WLFI and TRUMP disclosures are more likely to drive near-term headline sentiment and oversight chatter than to directly change spot supply or ETF flows. Net impact on prices is expected to be limited unless follow-on regulatory or governance actions materially affect liquidity or market access.
Bitcoin slipped below $58,000 and faces worsening macro pressure, including inflation concerns, a more hawkish Fed, and a stronger U.S. dollar. In the options market, traders are adding bearish bets: analysis by Omkar Godbole shows rising put positioning, with put prices higher than call prices across expiries. Open interest also climbed to about 768,000 BTC.
Paradigm desk data highlights stronger demand for the September $50,000 BTC put option. This setup implies investors are increasingly pricing in the probability of Bitcoin falling below $50,000 by the end of Q3.
On-chain, Glassnode reports long-term investors have started accumulating again, and Binance and Coinbase spot order books are seeing more buy orders—an accumulation shift while BTC trades under $60,000. However, Glassnode warns that sentiment remains fragile: put demand stays elevated and leveraged long positions are rising, which can trigger additional long liquidations and intensify downside before a durable bottom forms.
For traders, the key takeaway is that Bitcoin downside hedging is strengthening even as some long-term accumulation returns. Watch funding rates, open interest, and liquidation flows for confirmation of whether the $50,000 strike becomes a magnet or if buyers can reclaim momentum.
Bearish
Bitcoin OptionsBTC Put DemandOpen InterestLong-Term AccumulationLiquidation Risk
An X (Twitter) debate between XRP analysts centered on whether XRP can realistically reach $1,000. ChartNerd opened by arguing XRP has “no chance” of hitting $1,000, calling such claims “blind hope.”
Remi Relief replied that a $1,000 XRP price is too low, framing it as “only $1” in terms of broader financial-system impact. He suggested a higher floor of $10,000+ and warned that a low XRP price could create large slippage and “cost the system millions of dollars daily,” citing DTCC-scale settlement volumes.
ChartNerd pushed back, saying Remi Relief’s claims lacked supporting data and relied on fading “narratives.” ChartNerd referenced mapping XRP’s earlier decline (from $2 to $1) earlier in the year and questioned whether using AI to project a past 2017 move onto today’s market is logically consistent. He also noted his own 2030 target (around $27) based on historical comparisons, arguing for symmetry in the methodology.
Remi Relief defended his approach as more objective than price prediction, alleging manipulation concerns. He referenced a prior 2017–2018 cycle-derived XRP target range of roughly $1,200–$1,700 and said a 2025 community correction using Grok led him to adjust targets.
The exchange ended without agreement: one side dismisses XRP $1,000 as unsupported “blind hope,” while the other argues XRP needs substantially higher valuations (and even promotes videos suggesting $100,000 or $1,000,000). No new on-chain or regulatory catalyst was introduced—this was primarily a methodological and valuation-target dispute about XRP’s future direction.
Jefferies says investors may be underpricing competition risk for Circle and USDC, even after Circle (CRCL) shares rebounded following a sharp selloff. The brokerage warns that new bank- and fintech-backed stablecoins—especially the Open USD consortium—could pressure USDC supply growth and market share.
Open USD is backed by 140+ firms including Stripe, Coinbase, Visa, Mastercard and BlackRock. Its pitch is to share reserve income with participants, which could make it more attractive to payment providers and fintechs. Jefferies argues this shifts the competitive landscape away from Circle’s early advantage after USDC launched in 2018.
A key concern is Coinbase’s role. Circle reportedly earns about 95% of its revenue from interest on USDC reserves and relies heavily on Coinbase as a major distribution partner. Jefferies notes the commercial agreement is reportedly up for renewal in August. While Coinbase joining Open USD is not viewed as an exit from USDC, Jefferies warns the exchange could promote competing stablecoins over time.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire pushes back, saying stablecoins are network businesses built over years and that USDC’s integrations, liquidity, DeFi presence, and regulatory footprint give it durable advantages. He also disputes Open USD’s “reserve income sharing” as a unique value proposition and questions whether a large consortium can coordinate fast enough under regulatory pressure—an issue echoed by ARK Invest’s Lorenzo Valente, who cites past consortium initiatives as difficult to scale.
US traders should watch for headlines around Coinbase distribution decisions and any early traction from Open USD that could affect USDC liquidity and stablecoin flows.
Bearish
USDCCirclestablecoin competitionOpen USD consortiumCoinbase distribution
Israeli airstrikes in Gaza City have killed at least three people, according to Wafa news agency reports. The incident comes during the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict, which continued after a nominal ceasefire agreed in late 2025.
Israeli airstrikes in Gaza are described as part of an escalation that includes strikes near civilian areas, signalling a sustained high-level confrontation. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz were cited as key figures for potential next steps.
The article also notes that market pricing is watching for a higher probability that Israel could conduct strikes beyond Gaza in 2026, potentially including countries such as Yemen or Iraq. Traders are also expected to react to any announcements of new ceasefire agreements or diplomatic talks, which could quickly change expectations.
Overall, the situation is fluid, and geopolitical risk appears to be influencing how market participants price the likelihood of further military action in the region.
Bearish
Israel-Gaza conflictgeopolitical riskceasefire breakdownMiddle East escalationmarket uncertainty
A new workplace guide urges “respectful AI use” to prevent AI productivity from hurting team performance. It says leaders and team members should not submit AI-generated code or documents without first reading, reviewing, and understanding the output. When people prompt AI and then skip quality control, teammates face extra validation work and lose trust in context.
Key recommendations include: keep AI output shorter; avoid long-winded code and “wall of text” documents; break large code changes into smaller chunks; and provide upfront summaries so reviewers and stakeholders do not have to re-ask the AI. The guide also warns against using AI-assisted text to avoid real conversations and insists AI should not replace human thinking and editing.
The article frames these rules as an “empathy and responsibility” issue—using AI to produce better, clearer, and more reliable results, not to offload effort. It also suggests tying AI-use policies to company values to improve adoption.
SEO keywords: AI, responsible use of AI, team productivity, review process, workplace policy.
Neutral
AI GovernanceTeam ProductivityCode ReviewWorkplace PolicyResponsible AI
Citigroup analyst Peter Christiansen cut his 12-month price target for Strategy Inc. (NASDAQ: MSTR) in half on July 1, 2026. The target fell from $260 to $130, while the analyst kept a “Buy” rating.
Christiansen also lowered his 12-month Bitcoin (BTC) price forecast to $81,800, citing smaller expected gains for Bitcoin.
The note points to Strategy’s stress tied to large unrealized losses and the company’s response: approving Bitcoin sales to strengthen cash holdings. Strategy shares are down sharply, with the stock down more than 77% over the past year and trading around $91.04 at publication time.
Despite the caution, Citi argued Strategy’s updated capital plan improves liquidity and may buy time for the firm to stabilize.
Other Wall Street analysts remain broadly constructive: BTIG, Canaccord Genuity, and TD Cowen reiterated “Buy” ratings while also trimming targets. Average Street targets referenced by the article remain much higher than the current price, supporting an “undervalued” narrative if regulatory clarity in the US improves BTC adoption.
Ethereum news: Former Ethereum Foundation commercial leadership has announced an independent non-profit, “Ethereum Institutional,” positioned as a single front office to integrate Ethereum and its L2 solutions into global enterprise infrastructure. Tom Lee (Fundstrat co-founder) publicly endorsed the plan, arguing large ETH treasuries lacked an authoritative counterparty for Wall Street engagement.
The new team is led by industry veterans David Walsh, Marius Smith, and Matthew Dawson (ex-Ethereum Foundation corporate outreach). Ethereum Institutional claims the Foundation has “officially blessed” the launch and expects a breakthrough in Wall Street work.
Key backers include Bitmine (BMNR) and Sharplink (SBET), described as controlling 6.56 million ETH (about 5.4% of total supply). The article highlights architect Joseph Chalom (Sharplink CEO; prior digital asset strategy at BlackRock) and Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin, framing the initiative as whales using Wall Street relationships to strengthen Ethereum’s role as a base layer for global finance.
Trading takeaway: this is primarily an institutionalization and narrative catalyst around ETH, with potential short-term sentiment support but no direct protocol change stated.
Bullish
Ethereum (ETH) institutionalizationWall Street integrationEthereum Institutional non-profitMajor ETH treasuryL2 enterprise adoption
Arkham Intelligence data says the Winklevoss twins moved about $60 million in BTC to Gemini while Bitcoin struggles to reclaim the $59K area. The twins have not confirmed whether this is a sale or a portfolio reshuffle, but the exchange-deposit pattern matches earlier selling-like activity.
They reportedly still control around $300 million in BTC after the transfer. Arkham also flags an additional $7 million ETH move to Gemini, suggesting broader profit-taking from long-term holdings.
For traders, the key risk is potential near-term supply pressure if the BTC on Gemini turns into liquidation or spot selling. Watch for follow-on on-chain outflows from Gemini and how Bitcoin reacts around $59K to gauge direction.
Evernorth says on-chain data shows RLUSD’s rapid growth on the XRP Ledger is not displacing XRP. Instead, RLUSD is improving liquidity and increasing network usage, which can strengthen XRP utility.
Key updates: RLUSD’s share of XRP Ledger supply rose from 17% in April to over 50% now. Over the past six months, the RLUSD/XRP trading pair generated about $900M in volume. RLUSD transaction share also climbed from under 1% to nearly 12% within roughly 18 months.
Mechanically, RLUSD settles on the XRP Ledger, while network fees are paid in XRP and permanently burned. Higher activity tied to RLUSD adoption can raise demand for XRP to pay fees, and the fee burn may gradually add supply pressure.
For XRP traders, the takeaway is that XRP Ledger’s native USD market growth appears to be reinforcing XRP as the settlement and payments asset, not “eating” XRP.
Bitcoin ETFs extended their selloff at the end of June, with a $223.00 million net outflow on June 30 (a 9-day outflow streak). BlackRock’s IBIT accounted for $212.45 million of the outflows, while Fidelity’s FBTC added about $10.20 million in additional exits. Spot Bitcoin ETF trading value was $2.53 billion and total net assets fell to $70.95 billion.
Ether ETFs also saw sustained weakness, posting $27.60 million in net outflows with all outflows attributed to BlackRock’s ETHA. No Ether ETF recorded inflows on the day. Ether ETF trading value was $379.51 million, and net assets closed at $8.33 billion.
Altcoin ETF flows widened into broad red: HYPE ETFs had a rare $3.01 million outflow (21Shares’ THYP). XRP ETFs saw a $2.83 million net outflow, with Bitwise outflow exceeding Canary’s inflow. Solana ETFs recorded a $2.50 million outflow (Bitwise’s BSOL). With all five major crypto ETF categories closing negative, traders read this as broad risk caution rather than isolated weakness.
For crypto traders, the key signal is persistent Bitcoin ETFs outflow pressure. Until flow momentum stabilizes, it can act as a near-term headwind for spot demand, with macro factors (liquidity, rates, and risk appetite) likely amplifying the move.
The article is largely an opinion on a global political shift, framed as a “renewal” of liberal economics versus rising nationalism and left-wing alternatives. While it discusses the Ukraine war, Europe ties, and broader social-economic dissatisfaction, it ties the argument to crypto specifically.
On Bitcoin, the piece claims the network has “communist” elements because it uses public nodes rather than a private mint, but it is positioned as compatible with liberalism due to its international, open access and neutral design. It also argues that debt-based money creation is still expanding while growth lags, implying a need for renewed public investment—an idea it says could align with a “New Deal” style approach.
Bitcoin is also portrayed as “coming of age” at about 17 years old (summer 2026), suggesting a transition toward a more civic or public-minded stance for crypto.
On Ethereum, the article references Ethereum as part of a broader policy/technology conversation, including claims about a possible digital euro “on Ethereum” and a mention that the SEC chair has said Ethereum is not a security (as cited in the text). It also notes “mainnet” activity via “Scroll” in passing, but provides no concrete trading catalyst.
Overall, there are no specific, date-triggered crypto corporate actions or protocol changes. The main takeaway for traders is that the article’s narrative supports a longer-term, sentiment-driven view around Bitcoin and Ethereum rather than a near-term technical catalyst.
Morpho (MORPHO) surged about 5.5% to trade above $2 on Wednesday, after Standard Chartered initiated coverage with a $60 price target by end-2030. The token also gained around 11% over the past 24 hours, though it remains nearly 50% below its all-time high.
Standard Chartered said Morpho is well positioned to benefit from the growth of tokenized finance. It points to Morpho’s decentralized lending platform and on-chain infrastructure business, and expects Morpho’s assets to rise alongside a broader DeFi market it forecasts will expand 37-fold by the end of the decade.
The bank also highlighted Morpho’s financial strength and scaling ability, including the protocol’s push to deepen ties with traditional finance as the tokenized economy develops. Separately, Morpho Association raised $175 million in a major DeFi funding round, led by Paradigm, a16z crypto, and Ribbit, with additional backing from Apollo Funds, Circle Ventures, VanEck, and Ledger Cathay.
On-chain fundamentals support the narrative: Morpho has more than $6.5 billion in total value locked (TVL) and ranks as the second-largest lending protocol, behind Aave (AAVE), according to DefiLlama.
The note also ties into broader sentiment: Standard Chartered previously started coverage on Aave (AAVE), setting a $3,500 year-end 2030 target, citing DeFi adoption and tokenized real-world assets.
Israel’s government alternative inquiry bill on the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas-led massacre is scheduled for its first reading in the Knesset on Monday, following a statement to the High Court. The Knesset inquiry bill would create a six-member panel requiring the backing of 80 Knesset members (MKs), with equal representation from the governing coalition and the opposition. The bill is intended to satisfy the High Court’s call to set up a framework to investigate events tied to the Gaza conflict.
Observers say the Knesset inquiry bill may be politically controlled rather than fully independent, potentially shaping Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s public standing during ongoing political tensions. Traders appear to treat the development as supportive of Netanyahu’s odds. Market pricing shows a 35.5% probability that Netanyahu remains prime minister after the next election, after a recent two-point rise in confidence.
Key watch items are whether the bill secures the required 80-MK support at the Knesset reading on Monday, and how opposition parties and public opinion react—both of which could affect perceptions of Netanyahu’s political future and, in turn, market sentiment.
Neutral
Knesset inquiry billNetanyahuOct. 7 investigationMiddle East politicsPrediction markets
Bitfinex Change Log v1.134 (1 July 2026) focuses on fiat rails and platform usability rather than new trading assets.
Bitfinex Change Log v1.134 adds an anti-scam warning interstitial for select OpenPayd EUR deposit customers and enables OpenPayd EUR withdrawals for Serbia. On the securities side, it introduces a new sector in securities listings, and adds “favourites” to the capital raise ticker on the securities home page.
UI/UX updates include a language selector for FFT pages, refreshed securities tables, and tweaks to the zero-fees page calculator design. The release also lists multiple bug fixes across verification visibility, deposit/withdrawal form fields and error messaging, API key label display, 2FA refresh behavior, and travel-rule dialog field population.
For crypto traders, the main impact is incremental friction reduction in fiat deposits/withdrawals and margin-related workflows, not a direct effect on token prices or protocol fundamentals.
MicroStrategy stock rose more than 9% in early U.S. trading, reaching about $95.34. The move reflects renewed demand for Bitcoin-related equities and stronger broader crypto sentiment.
The article links the MicroStrategy stock rally to a rise in Bitcoin, since MicroStrategy’s treasury is heavily concentrated in BTC. That correlation often makes MicroStrategy stock act as a leveraged “proxy” for Bitcoin price action—so gains can accelerate during Bitcoin uptrends, while losses can deepen when BTC turns lower.
Key figures mentioned: MicroStrategy, led by Executive Chairman Michael Saylor, holds roughly 214,400 BTC (latest public disclosure). Investors treat this large BTC reserve as the core driver of valuation and momentum.
Context: MSTR had been trading in a $85–$100 range over the past month. The 9.63% early-session gain pushes shares toward the upper end of that band, raising the question of whether a breakout can hold or if profit-taking will follow. Options activity also picked up, including notable interest in $100 call contracts, suggesting some traders are positioning for further upside.
For crypto traders, the takeaway is that MicroStrategy stock can amplify Bitcoin moves in both directions, and monitoring BTC price plus MSTR derivatives flow can help gauge near-term sentiment and volatility.
Bitcoin World Disrupt 2026 has released the Builders Stage agenda, a track aimed at practical startup scaling strategies. The event runs Oct 13–15, 2026 at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, and is expected to bring together 10,000+ founders, investors, and tech leaders.
The Builders Stage is one of six industry-focused tracks for teams that have moved past the idea phase and are now tackling operational scaling. Sessions are built around real case studies and actionable guidance, with speakers spanning venture capital, large tech product leadership, and founders who scaled from zero to significant traction.
Key topics include pre-seed fundraising without a product, scaling product decisions from MVP to mass usage, and acquiring the first 1,000 customers with no marketing budget. Other sessions address how startups compete with AI incumbents (including OpenAI), using M&A early in the lifecycle, and managing the psychological strain of high-growth environments.
Bitcoin World Disrupt 2026 also frames scaling as a tougher test for founders: faster traction expectations, more demanding capital raising, and resilience against disruption from AI-first companies. Organizers highlight practical areas such as hiring, compensation in competitive talent markets, and building repeatable multi-product growth systems.
For traders, this is an industry event rather than a direct token or protocol catalyst, but the emphasis on AI startup traction and fundraising could keep attention on crypto narratives tied to innovation and scaling. Bitcoin World Disrupt 2026 Builders Stage is positioned as tactical learning, not a market signal.
Neutral
Bitcoin World Disrupt 2026startup scalingventure capitalAI startupsfundraising
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey says interest rate cuts are off the table as inflation remains stubborn. Speaking at a monetary policy forum, Bailey noted that the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) cannot yet cut the 5.25% benchmark rate because core and services inflation, along with wage growth, stay above the 2% target.
Although headline inflation has eased from a peak above 11%, the BoE is focused on stickier measures. Bailey called it “premature” to discuss interest rate cuts, pushing back against market pricing that had suggested a summer reduction.
Markets reacted by trimming expectations for near-term interest rate cuts. The pound edged higher, and gilt yields rose. Analysts now expect the first full 25-basis-point cut later in 2025 or early 2026, depending on incoming inflation and labor data.
For traders, this is a hawkish rates signal that can tighten financial conditions and strengthen GBP, which may pressure risk assets and crypto. For households and businesses, borrowing costs are likely to stay elevated: variable-rate mortgage holders face continued high payments, while firms—especially in retail and construction—may see reduced investment appetite. The BoE’s forecast points to modest UK growth in 2025, with downside risks.
Bearish
Bank of EnglandInterest RatesInflationGBP FXMortgage Rates
The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported that US crude stocks fell to 412.1 million barrels, the lowest level since September 2018. US crude stocks dropped by 6.088 million barrels, versus expectations for a 4.5 million-barrel decline.
The drawdown aligns with falling prices: crude is down 26.33% month-on-month to $69.07 per barrel, pointing to tighter supply ahead of peak summer demand. Inventories are also 3% below the five-year average, a historically important buffer level for supply security.
Separately, crude price prediction markets show cooling optimism for an all-time high by September 30. The “YES” price slipped to 4.5% (from 10% 24 hours earlier). The Dec 31 contract also eased to 9.5% (from 16% a week earlier), suggesting traders are reassessing the odds of a sharp upside price surge despite the inventory draw.
What to watch next: OPEC production decisions, geopolitical developments in oil-producing regions, and future EIA inventory/demand reports. Additional demand growth or further US crude stocks declines would support higher-crude scenarios.
Neutral
US crude stocksEIA inventory reportOPEC supplyOil price outlookPrediction markets
The XRP Ledger RWA race is heating up. The latest data shows XRP Ledger tokenized real-world assets (RWA) are around $4B, narrowly behind BNB Chain (also about $4B). Ethereum still leads at about $16.1B.
Traders are reading this as a credibility signal for institutional adoption. Banks and asset managers are increasingly tokenizing regulated assets such as bonds, real estate, private credit, and investment funds—momentum that the article links to infrastructure built for compliance rather than short-term speculation.
A key catalyst is a partnership between the XRP Ledger Foundation and VS1 to develop an open-source reference application for permissioned, compliant lending. The app is designed to help regulated institutions issue and manage blockchain-based loans while meeting identity, security, and regulatory requirements. It will use native XRP Ledger components including Credentials (trusted identity), Permissioned Domains (controlled access), Single Asset Vaults (collateral), and the Lending Protocol (compliant DeFi lending).
Separately, Ripple CTO Emeritus David Schwartz proposed changes aimed at reducing front-running on the XRP Ledger, targeting fairer execution.
Net takeaway for traders: the XRP Ledger RWA milestone plus a clearer “regulated lending” roadmap could strengthen the institutional narrative and support demand for XRP-related exposure if more pilots expand.
Riot Platforms’ 500 BTC sale has become a potential “early warning” for Bitcoin’s Q3, as the company appears to be shifting treasury strategy toward AI infrastructure rather than accumulating more BTC.
On-chain data cited by On-chain Lens shows Riot sold around 500 BTC (about $30 million). The timing matters because Bitcoin had slipped below $57k for the first time since early Q4 2025. While spot BTC weakened, Riot stock actually outperformed, closing Q2 up 120%—a sign of decoupling between miner equities and spot Bitcoin.
The broader pattern is capital allocation. Last quarter, Riot sold 3,778 BTC for about $289.5 million, while mining only 1,473 BTC. This implies net BTC distribution (selling more than it produces), reducing its treasury to roughly 15,680 BTC (down ~18% YoY). The recent 500 BTC sale fits this trend and suggests miners may increasingly treat BTC as a cash reserve to fund data centers and high-performance compute tied to AI.
The article also links this pivot to miner economics. In H1, Bitcoin traded below estimated miner production costs (~$78k vs. spot under ~$58k), pressuring profitability. Although network activity improved—Bitcoin’s hashrate rebounded sharply in June—the cost stress may persist into Q3.
Traders should watch for whether continued BTC selling from miners reinforces downside momentum in Bitcoin during Q3, despite any short-term hashrate strength.
Ripple announced it is a “day-one integration partner” for Open USD (OUSD), a new stablecoin focused on large-scale global payments. Open USD is backed by major institutions and is expected to launch later in 2026.
Ripple previously received Japan’s Financial Services Agency approval to issue its own stablecoin, RLUSD (RULSD). It also said it committed $25M in RLUSD to support underserved U.S. small businesses and programs for military veterans. However, the market momentum for RLUSD has cooled, with market cap around $1.4B (about the 49th-largest crypto).
On the institutional side, XRP spot ETF demand remains constructive. The article cites cumulative net inflows of nearly $1.5B over these products’ lifetimes, while inflows have recently outweighed outflows. Despite this, overall ETF flows were described as weaker for BTC/ETH-linked products in recent months.
Price action: XRP is trading around $1.04, down about 20% on a monthly basis, still fighting to hold the $1 psychological level.
Technical/flow signals are mixed. Analyst Ali Martinez said the Tom DeMark Sequential Indicator flashed a buy signal and noted rising network activity. At the same time, whales reportedly reduced exposure to XRP, which the article flags as potentially bearish.
For traders, the combination of Ripple’s stablecoin expansion and ongoing XRP ETF inflows is supportive, but XRP’s failure to reclaim $1 plus whale trimming suggests caution.
A claim that Japan holds over $60 billion in XRP has been challenged in crypto trading circles. The post was shared by analyst “ARAB,” citing Japan’s strong XRP market presence, supported by SBI Holdings and continued blockchain activity.
Crypto content creator CryptoSensei rejected the figure, arguing it fails basic XRP supply math. At current prices, “over $60B in XRP” would imply Japan controlling roughly 58 billion XRP—yet XRP’s circulating supply is only around 62 billion tokens. CryptoSensei urged users to stop spreading the “fake XRP narratives,” emphasizing that national-holding claims must be verifiable and consistent with public supply data.
Community members echoed the doubt. One user questioned whether wallets listed in XRP rich lists actually belong to individual “whales,” noting some large holdings could be tied to governments or countries—though Japan controlling near the entire supply still seems unlikely.
For traders, the key takeaway is not a change in XRP adoption, but a correction attempt on a widely repeated headline about XRP distribution. Until supply-backed data is produced, attention may shift from narrative-driven price assumptions to measurable on-chain or custody evidence for XRP holdings in Japan.
Bitcoin Core developer and maximalist Jimmy Song says the market’s biggest mistake is treating Bitcoin as only a technology. He argues BTC is primarily “better money,” not “better tech.”
Song is sharply critical of altcoins, calling “all altcoins” scams and citing Ethereum (ETH) and Solana (SOL) as examples. He says investors seem indifferent to cyberattacks affecting major crypto projects, and interprets that as gamblers choosing profits over fundamentals.
Despite Bitcoin’s sharp declines in 2026, Song claims BTC has still outperformed altcoins. He argues Bitcoin’s long-term win will come when it becomes the world’s reserve currency.
He also draws an analogy between today’s AI buildout and Bitcoin’s GPU mining era (2010–2012). Song suggests specialized chips—similar to ASICs—will boost AI efficiency, and that capital currently concentrated in AI may eventually rotate back toward Bitcoin as a “most reliable asset.”
Fed chair Kevin Warsh kept the fed funds rate at 3.50%–3.75% at the June 16–17 FOMC meeting. His “say less” shift was clear: the June statement was only 132 words versus 341 words in April, signaling reduced forward guidance.
The hawkish tone is reinforced by continued balance-sheet reduction near a ~$7 trillion portfolio. Analysts initially expected higher volatility across Treasuries, equities and crypto. That showed up when the 10-year Treasury yield jumped to 4.49% right after the FOMC, before easing.
For crypto traders, Warsh’s more cautious guidance and the higher-yield backdrop translate into tighter financial conditions. The market risk is a “higher for longer” regime that can weigh on BTC through second-round effects, such as higher consumer borrowing costs. Watch for follow-through in Treasury yields, rate expectations and the Fed’s balance-sheet pace, which are likely to drive near-term BTC swings around upcoming inflation and labor data.
Bearish
Federal ReserveKevin WarshCrypto tradingTreasury yieldsHigher-for-longer
Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem warned that hedge funds could destabilize Canadian sovereign debt markets. In a March 2026 speech, Macklem said hedge funds may account for up to 50% of Government of Canada bond purchases at auction—financed largely through short-term repurchase agreements (repos).
The risk is the “repo problem.” Hedge funds typically don’t hold government bonds with balance-sheet funding. Instead, they pledge bonds as collateral and roll repo funding daily or weekly. Macklem warned that, in market stress, these leveraged positions could trigger fast, forced selling—flooding auction and secondary markets with supply at the worst time.
The Bank of Canada’s 2026 Financial Stability Report reinforced the scale of the exposure: hedge funds were responsible for over 40% of government-bond auction purchases, and roughly one-quarter of dealer-to-client trading involved hedge funds.
As a mitigation, the Bank of Canada announced plans to introduce central clearing for its repo operations, targeting rollout in early 2027. Central clearing aims to reduce cascade risk if a counterparty fails.
Macklem reiterated the concern in a June 23, 2026 Paris speech, noting that expanded private credit and stretched valuations across asset classes raise the odds that a disorderly event could transmit through the financial system. Key takeaway for traders: hedge fund leverage concentrated in sovereign debt and repo markets increases tail-risk during volatility spikes.
Bearish
Bank of Canadahedge fundsrepo marketsovereign debtfinancial stability
A Medium.com page is blocked by Cloudflare “Performing security verification” (bot verification). After the challenge shows “Verification successful,” the page remains on “Waiting for medium.com to respond,” so the article text never loads.
For crypto traders, the key issue is information availability. This bot verification blocks confirmation of any headline, statistics, or project updates, leaving no verifiable catalyst for tokens, protocols, liquidity, or volatility.
Traders should treat this as a monitoring/feeds reliability problem. Do not assume market impact until the underlying report is accessible and independently confirmed through other primary sources.
This article contains only a Cloudflare security verification page (bot check and wait state). There is no substantive reporting, no figures, and no mention of any specific crypto assets or projects.
As a result, traders have no actionable information from the crypto market perspective. In the short term, such missing coverage typically reduces conviction and can keep positioning driven by other signals (price/volume, macro headlines, exchange flows). In the long term, the impact is likely limited unless the outage is widespread across a key news source.
Crypto market participants should treat this item as non-informative and rely on verified, accessible sources before adjusting risk or strategy.