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Latest Crypto News | Bitcoin, Ethereum and Altcoin Updates

BlackRock IBIT Bitcoin ETF inflows surge to $983M weekly high

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BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) recorded a $983M weekly net inflow—the largest single-week Bitcoin ETF demand in six months—per CryptoQuant’s Ki Young Ju. This follows the earlier 2024 SEC spot Bitcoin ETF approval wave and signals renewed institutional risk appetite. IBIT remains the largest spot Bitcoin ETF by assets and continued to outpace peers. In the cited flow breakdown, IBIT added $983M, while Fidelity’s FBTC gained $312M and ARK 21Shares’ ARKB rose $150M. Bitwise’s BITB added $88M, while Grayscale’s GBTC saw -$45M net outflows, suggesting investors may be rotating from higher-fee structures toward lower-cost ETF exposure. The inflow coincided with a broader rebound: BTC gained about 12% in the same week and reclaimed the ~$70,000 level. CryptoQuant’s on-chain read is that the buying is driven by registered investment advisors and pension funds, with coins moving to cold storage—potentially reducing exchange-available supply. For traders, sustained BlackRock IBIT inflows can act as near-term support if BTC holds key breakout levels. However, earlier estimates also flagged large unrealized losses for ETF holders (paper losses cited at roughly $12B, with an average cost basis near ~$89,000 vs. spot). If ETF inflows slow while BTC stalls, selling pressure could re-emerge.
Bullish
Bitcoin ETFBlackRock IBITInstitutional InflowsSpot BTC MomentumETF Flow Rotation

Asia FX firms: Dollar slips ahead of BOJ and Fed policy signals

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Asia FX firms are seeing broad strength as the US dollar edges lower ahead of two major central bank meetings: the Bank of Japan (BOJ) and the Federal Reserve (Fed). The yen leads gains, supported by expectations that the BOJ could adopt a more hawkish stance, potentially adjusting yield curve control (YCC) and providing clearer guidance toward policy normalization. In contrast, the Fed is widely expected to hold rates steady. Traders are focused on the Fed’s statement and press conference for any hints of a more dovish tone, which could imply later rate cuts and further weigh on the dollar. Market reaction is already visible: early Asian trading shows the dollar down about 0.5% versus the yen, with similar moves versus the won and the Australian dollar, while the Singapore dollar also rises. Options pricing suggests higher volatility and increased hedging as traders position for BOJ policy surprises. Key macro context includes Japan’s core CPI staying above 3%, while US jobless claims are mixed. China’s yuan remains relatively stable within its managed band, limiting regional FX volatility. For traders, the core takeaway is that Asia FX firms momentum is being driven by diverging policy paths: a potentially tighter BOJ versus a possibly easier Fed. However, reversal risk remains if either central bank surprises—hawkish Fed could strengthen the dollar, while dovish BOJ could weaken the yen.
Neutral
Asia FX firmsBOJFederal ReserveUS dollarFX volatility

Ripple CTO Emeritus Defends 2017 XRP “Dirt Cheap” Post

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Ripple CTO Emeritus David Schwartz is pushing back against accusations that he misled the XRP community after an X thread from 2017 resurfaced. Schwartz said his “XRP can’t be dirt cheap” comment was about liquidity and market depth, not a price forecast. He argued that if XRP were priced at $1, the implied supply needed for “massive global transaction volumes” would be enormous—and would still cost a similar total amount of value. He also noted people later interpreted the posts as evidence XRP was designed for a high price. While he continues to stand by the economic reasoning, Schwartz acknowledged he considered deleting the original tweets because of rampant price speculation. He said removing them without context would likely “do more harm than good.” Separately, the article notes Schwartz deleted prior posts related to Arbitrum’s Security Council decision to freeze more than 30,000 ETH linked to the KelpDAO exploit. He initially defended the intervention, even comparing it to a past “value overflow incident,” but later walked back his framing after confusing Arbitrum with a different type of L2. For traders, the key takeaway is that Schwartz is reframing old XRP messaging as liquidity math rather than guidance for future XRP price, while also showing how quickly narratives around crypto governance actions (Arbitrum/ETH freezes) can trigger public debate.
Neutral
RippleXRPMarket LiquidityArbitrumETH Freeze

Sanders warns AI existential risk; data center moratorium

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U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders warned that AI could become uncontrollable and lead to “cataclysmic consequences.” He said most AI scientists and public figures acknowledge the danger, but there is still no pause in development, no international treaty, and no serious congressional action. Sanders pointed to the “Pause Giant AI Experiments: An Open Letter,” signed by over 1,000 experts (including Elon Musk) in 2023, calling for a moratorium on training powerful AI systems due to civilization-level control risks. Sanders said: AI must benefit humanity, not harm it. As follow-up, Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez announced legislation—the “Artificial Intelligence (AI) Data Center Moratorium Act”—proposing a moratorium on AI data centers to protect “the safety of humanity.” Sanders previously argued that AI could replace up to 97 million jobs in 10 years and that companies are already using AI to cut payrolls. For crypto traders, the headline is primarily a U.S. policy and tech-sector governance risk: political momentum around AI regulation could affect sentiment toward AI-adjacent equities and broader risk appetite, but it is not a direct crypto market catalyst.
Neutral
Artificial IntelligenceAI regulationData center moratoriumU.S. CongressCrypto market sentiment

Iran currency subsidies return amid turmoil, BOJ rate-cut odds steady

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Iran reinstated currency subsidies for essential goods, funding the move via its sovereign fund to stabilize the economy amid ongoing war. The article links the decision to a worsening macro picture, including a reported 10% economic contraction driven by infrastructure damage and major financial losses. Traders say the Iran currency subsidies restart could spill over into global oil prices and broader economic conditions, which may influence the Bank of Japan’s policy path. However, the market’s April 2026 BOJ rate-cut odds remain unchanged and very low at 0.1% (flat at 0.1% across sub-markets over the past week), reflecting deep skepticism. Liquidity is thin: about $77 in USDC traded over the last 24 hours, and the order book is shallow (roughly $82 needed to move price by five percentage points). That means even small positioning could swing short-term contract pricing. What to watch next is whether conflict dynamics ease or intensify. The article also highlights potential catalysts from Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda and any new Middle East developments, which could shift expectations and move BOJ-related probability pricing.
Bearish
Iran currency subsidiesBank of Japan (BOJ) rate cut oddsMiddle East geopolitical riskOil price macro impactPrediction market liquidity

Crude oil bets wobble as Iran war strains circuit supply

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Crude oil traders are reassessing positions after the Iran war began disrupting circuit board supply chains, adding to uncertainty around the April 30 crude oil all-time-high target near $120. In the April 30 contract, odds are about 1% (down from roughly 2% a week earlier), showing traders are broadly skeptical of a breakout. The US-Iran nuclear deal is also priced with low certainty (around 2%), with no new negotiation updates. A key market constraint is order-book thinness: only about $695 of additional activity is needed to move crude by five price points, making the market vulnerable to sharp moves. Daily volume is around $2,513 in USDC, suggesting cautious positioning as the conflict continues. Traders say the Strait of Hormuz remains a chokepoint, but supply disruption alone hasn’t yet pushed crude oil toward record territory. What to watch next includes any OPEC+ announcements or US decisions on strategic petroleum reserves, plus signals of prolonged Hormuz disruption or further military escalation. In the prediction setup, a “YES” share at 1¢ would pay out $1 if crude surpasses prior highs by April 30—implying a potential 100x payoff, but current crude oil pricing strongly favors “NO.”
Neutral
crude oilIran warOPEC+Strait of Hormuzprediction markets

US-Iran peace talks stall; deal odds fall to 2%

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US-Iran peace talks have stalled over nuclear issues. Market-implied odds for a permanent US-Iran peace deal by April 30 fell to 2% from 10% the day before, after negotiations failed to deliver progress. The repricing points to a longer timeline. The May 31 and June 30 contracts now sit around 30.5% and 47.5% “YES,” suggesting traders do not expect a short, comprehensive deal. Trading activity remains orderly in the prediction market. USDC volume in the April 30 peace-deal contract reached about $854,588 over 24 hours. A 5-point probability move reportedly required roughly $27,667, with no sign of chaotic liquidity. Energy risk is also creeping in. The crude oil “all-time high by April 30” contract remains near 1.1%, implying limited immediate panic, but volatility risk rises if the standoff hardens. What to watch: any CENTCOM updates and diplomatic moves involving China or Russia. Fresh engagement could lift US-Iran peace talks odds across multiple maturities, while continued stalling may keep risk premiums elevated.
Neutral
US-Iran peace talksNuclear diplomacyPrediction marketsUSDC liquidityCrude oil risk

Western Union USDPT Stablecoin to Launch in May on Solana, With DAN Expansion

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Western Union said its USDPT stablecoin is expected to go live in May, aiming to speed up US-dollar cross-border payments and settlements. On its Q1 earnings call, CEO Devin McGranahan said the project has moved from debating “whether to enter crypto” to focusing on scaling execution. USDPT is in the final readiness stage and will be built on the Solana blockchain, with issuance by Anchorage Digital Bank. The company is also expanding its Digital Asset Network (DAN) to route stablecoins and other crypto through Western Union’s payment rails, enabling conversion into local currency at more than 360,000 collection points worldwide. Exchange partners are expected to handle USDPT access, conversion, and distribution, while banking and financial institution partners in priority regions support direct settlement and treasury operations. Separately, Western Union plans to launch a “Stable Card” later this year, designed to let consumers hold dollar-backed stablecoins and spend across dozens of markets. For traders, the update reinforces a B2B-to-consumer rollout path, with potential near-term momentum for Solana-linked infrastructure and broader stablecoin competition signals, though price impact is likely limited until USDPT scales.
Neutral
USDPTStablecoinsSolanaCross-border PaymentsWestern Union DAN

Polymarket smart money only 3.14% of users, study finds

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A new academic study of Polymarket trading data from 2023–2025 argues that Polymarket’s “smart money” is a small minority. Researchers from London Business School and Yale analyzed about $13.76B in volume across 210,322 markets and 1.72M accounts. They classify only 3.14% of accounts as “skilled winners.” Despite being under 3.5% of users, this group (including market makers) captures over 30% of total gains. The paper also challenges whether profits reflect true skill. In robustness tests that randomly reversed historical buy/sell directions 10,000 times, only 12% of top earners overlapped with the skilled group. Around 60% of “lucky winners” later flipped to losers in an out-of-sample check, while “unskilled/unlucky” accounts absorbed about 67% of losses. On information speed, the study finds only skilled traders adjust order imbalance in line with surprises around major announcements (e.g., FOMC and earnings). Later analysis flags potential insider-like behavior: 1,950 accounts traded around specific events and then went inactive, moving prices 7–12x more per dollar than skilled traders. However, the authors say this appears too event-specific to fully explain Polymarket’s overall price discovery. For traders, the key takeaway is that Polymarket pricing may rely more on a concentrated set of informed participants than broad participation—affecting liquidity expectations and signal reliability, especially during high-attention events.
Neutral
Polymarketprediction marketsmarket microstructureinsider tradingcrypto research

XRP price still follows Wall Street signals, study finds

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A new academic study finds that XRP price still depends heavily on traditional markets rather than acting as a standalone safe haven. Published in the Journal of Risk and Financial Management (April 2026), the paper analyzed daily market data from 2018 to early 2026 and tracked cross-asset information flow between crypto, equities, bonds and risk gauges. Researchers at Yildiz Technical University reviewed seven major market segments, including top cryptocurrencies, G10 stock indices, tech stocks, commodities, government bond yields, and sovereign risk indicators. They found that G10 stocks, 10-year government bond yields, and five-year credit default swaps often send the strongest signals. In normal trading conditions, cryptocurrencies mostly absorb these signals rather than leading them, challenging the idea that XRP and other crypto move independently from stocks and bonds. The study also highlights that leadership can change during crisis periods. When markets enter stress, sovereign risk tools such as credit default swaps can become stronger drivers for both stock and crypto prices. Using Transfer Entropy and Independent Component Analysis to filter noise, the authors conclude that XRP price action remains closely tied to broader financial conditions, even as crypto adoption grows. For traders, the takeaway is a clearer regime focus: XRP price may respond more to rates, credit risk and equity momentum in the short run, and correlation could intensify during risk-off shocks.
Neutral
XRPmacro correlationWall Street signalssovereign riskcredit default swaps

Cryptocurrencies to Watch This Week: H, STABLE, and M Set Up for Volatility

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Bitcoin (BTC) is trading in a choppy consolidation near $77,500, while high-beta “Cryptocurrencies to watch this week” show outsized momentum—raising the odds of sharp rebalancing moves. 1) Humanity Protocol (H): Up over 45% on a surge in whale activity and large-scale on-chain transfers reaching a five-month high. However, a supply overhang is emerging: the Humanity Foundation is forcing vesting decisions tied to April 26—either extend vesting to late 2026 or accept a 70% haircut for immediate liquidity. Key levels: support around $0.12–$0.14; resistance near $0.18. A major token unlock risk is flagged for June 25, with a potential slide toward the $0.11 EMA if $H$ loses $0.14. 2) Stable (STABLE): Gained about 30% to a ~$742M market cap, driven by evolving US regulatory signals (GENIUS Act guidelines) and new institutional reserve portfolio positioning. Traders are warned about possible momentum exhaustion near $0.035 resistance. If it fails to break, profit-taking may push a retracement toward $0.028. Watch for upcoming Treasury Department rules on stablecoin AML frameworks, which could drive either continuation or a “sell the news” reaction. 3) MemeCore (M): Nearly +30% this week, propelled by a hardfork that reportedly cut gas fees by 99% and boosted retail attention. Despite a ~multi-billion market cap, thin DEX liquidity is a key risk: even smaller sell orders could move price sharply. Technical trigger: a potential “double top” near $4.65. If volume stays below its 24-hour average of ~$25M, a correction toward $3.89 is likely. Overall, these Cryptocurrencies to watch this week are primed for fast swings as catalysts collide with tokenomics and liquidity constraints.
Neutral
Cryptocurrency TradingBitcoin ConsolidationToken Unlock RiskStablecoin RegulationDEX Liquidity

Shiba Inu inflows fall 400B SHIB—sell pressure eases as OI rises

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Shiba Inu inflows have fallen by nearly 400B SHIB over two days, dropping exchange deposits to around 100B. This shift suggests reduced near-term sell pressure, after SHIB previously showed weaker price action. The article notes that SHIB is trading back above key EMA support, reinforcing the idea of a market-structure improvement and giving bulls room to push toward the next resistance area. Beyond spot, derivatives data also turns more constructive: Shiba Inu open interest (OI) increased by roughly $0.8M across the network in 24 hours, alongside improving trading activity. The combination points to early repositioning by traders rather than purely reactive buying. For the next actionable level, the focus is near $0.00000725, where liquidity and resistance cluster (with liquidity pools totaling over $1M). If momentum continues, this zone is framed as the clearest short-term test. Traders should watch whether Shiba Inu inflows stay elevated to the downside (continued inflow slowdown) and whether price holds above EMA support. A failure to sustain these conditions could quickly reintroduce sell pressure.
Bullish
Shiba Inuexchange inflowsopen interestmemecoin tradingEMA support & resistance

Guyana digital ID: not for voting, GECOM stays

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Guyana’s Data Protection Commissioner Aneal Giddings has clarified that the country’s national digital ID will not replace voter identification. In interviews reported on April 16, Giddings said citizens cannot use Guyana’s digital ID to vote in any elections, including local and general/regional votes. He urged residents to both register/update with the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) ID card and also obtain the new digital identity card, explaining the two systems serve different purposes and are run by separate agencies. Guyana began rolling out its digital ID after a legal framework was enacted at the end of March. Prime Minister Mark Phillips said the project is designed to simplify access to government services using secure authentication, support identity verification for online platforms, and validate documents with digital signatures. However, opposition and civil society groups have raised concerns that privacy and security risks may remain if broader data protection rules are not fully implemented. The report also notes momentum for election-tech experimentation elsewhere. New York, Malaysia, and Romania have explored blockchain-related approaches to voting integrity—such as eKYC checks in Malaysia’s party elections and a public ledger dashboard in Romania’s 2024 presidential election. Market relevance: while “Guyana digital ID” is primarily a governance and compliance story, it reinforces ongoing global interest in verifiable identity and auditability technologies that can influence how traders view long-term blockchain adoption and regulatory clarity.
Neutral
digital IDvoter verificationGECOMblockchain votingprivacy regulation

Bitcoin Breakout Above $87K Could End Bear Market—Key $77K Support, $84K–$87K Resistance

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Bitcoin breakout above $87K is being watched closely as analysts argue it could mark the end of the current bear market. Traders are focused on whether buyers can defend short-term support and push through the resistance band of $84,000–$87,000. Market analyst Michaël van de Poppe said Bitcoin needs a break above $84,000 to $87,000 to signal the bearish phase is likely over. He noted that such a move would invalidate many bearish retest scenarios and create a new higher high on the chart. However, he emphasized that follow-through is necessary after the breakout. In his most bullish path, Bitcoin could target $100K. On the support side, analyst Ali Charts said Bitcoin is consolidating within a rising channel on the 4-hour chart. The price was rejected near the upper boundary and then returned to test lower support around $77,000. Ali Charts called $77,000 the primary structural barrier for the short-term trend. A hold above $77,000 could enable a rebound, with potential targets near $81,500 (mid-channel) and $84,500 (near the channel top). A clear close below $77,000 would break the short-term structure. Overall, this Bitcoin breakout setup is being compared with past cycle behavior, where markets often reached new highs within about 12 months after sharp declines, while acknowledging exceptions like the late-2022 FTX shock. For now, $77K support and the $84K–$87K resistance zone remain the main decision points.
Bullish
BitcoinBTC Price LevelsResistance BreakoutSupport/Resistance TradingBear Market Signals

GPT-5.5 by April 30: Prediction Markets Set 100% YES

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Crypto prediction markets are pricing in an imminent OpenAI GPT-5.5 release by April 30, after online chatter suggested it’s “ready for everyday tasks.” The April 30 timing contract climbed from 93% YES to 100% YES over the past week. The June 30 contract is also at 100% YES. In the last 24 hours, combined USDC volume was $51,402, with a reported 3-point dip in the April 23 sub-market at 5:37 PM yesterday—more consistent with planned repositioning than a sudden news shock. Key point for traders: OpenAI still has not issued an official GPT-5.5 announcement. Any confirmation—such as a public statement from Sam Altman or updates on OpenAI’s blog/ChatGPT release notes, plus potential changes to API documentation—remains the main swing risk. With GPT-5.5 timing already fully priced at 100¢ on the relevant contracts, upside is limited for new “YES” buys, while holders who entered earlier may have locked in gains. Near term, attention should shift from “release date” to benchmark results and any follow-up deployment/user-feedback updates.
Neutral
OpenAI GPT-5.5Prediction MarketsUSDC VolumeAI Model ReleaseCrypto Derivatives

Lebanon drone incursion: Israel sirens, Polymarket unchanged

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A Lebanon drone incursion triggered sirens in northern Israel, but it did not move closely watched Middle East escalation prediction markets on Polymarket. The market for “Israel announces a suspension of its Lebanon offensive by April 30” remains at 100% YES. Traders also show a 100% YES price for “Iran military action against Israel by April 30,” though it has low trading volume, suggesting stale consensus rather than fresh repositioning. In the article’s assessment, the drone incursion fits a broader pattern of increased unmanned aircraft activity from Lebanon, consistent with Hezbollah-style operations. Even though the events highlight potential gaps in Israel’s air-defense coverage and raise questions about regional escalation— including possible Israeli and US actions related to Iran—traders are treating the drone incursion as “noise.” No contract price shifts were reported. What to watch: any official changes from the IDF, Hezbollah, or Iranian military officials could break the current pricing. A shift in conditions that alters the probability of the April 30 outcomes would be the most likely trigger for volatility. If markets stay at 100% YES, upside/downside remains effectively capped in the near term.
Neutral
Middle East riskDrone incursionPrediction marketsIsrael-Iran tensionsPolymarket

Gaza ceasefire breaches 2,400 times cast doubt on truce

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Israel has breached the Gaza ceasefire more than 2,400 times over six months, raising doubts about truce stability and increasing political risk for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In prediction markets, the “Netanyahu out by June 30” contract ticked up to 6% YES. The “Netanyahu out by April 30” contract stayed at about 0.2%–0% YES. Meanwhile, the “Israel x Iran permanent peace deal by April 30, 2026” market fell to 1% YES from 3% the prior day, with the June 30 peace-deal odds dropping to 10% YES. Why it matters: the scale of Gaza ceasefire violations weakens the probability of a near-term Israel–Iran deal. The rapid drop in the April 30 peace contract suggests traders are repricing political and diplomatic pathways. What to watch next: traders are monitoring coalition defections, new legal proceedings against Netanyahu, and any escalation that could force early elections. The June 30 “Netanyahu out” bet pays 16.67x if triggered within 67 days, but requires a clear political shake-up. For traders, this is a reminder that Gaza ceasefire stability can quickly move geopolitical probability markets, which may spill over into broader risk sentiment—especially when major diplomatic milestones look less attainable.
Bearish
Gaza ceasefireNetanyahuIsrael-Iran peace talksPrediction marketsGeopolitical risk

US 2027 AI drunk-driving detection: 99.9% accuracy rule and privacy data gaps

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The US Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) Section 24220 requires that, from September 2027, all new US passenger cars include “advanced drunk and impaired driving prevention technology.” Execution is handled by NHTSA, but the agency missed the original November 2024 final-rule deadline and the rule remains in review. If no timeline shift occurs, the earliest installation window is late 2026, with full compliance by 2027-09. The core controversy is AI drunk-driving detection accuracy and how it’s enforced. NHTSA is reviewing two technical routes: (1) “breath-style” sensors in the steering column to detect breath-alcohol without driver action, and (2) “touch-style” infrared/skin-optical measurement to estimate BAC when drivers interact with controls. The regulation targets 99.9% accuracy. The article notes that even at 99.9%, real-world false positives could still lock out or stall fully sober drivers at large volumes. Privacy is the second fault line. IIJA Section 24220 does not require OEMs to share biometric data, but it also does not clearly forbid sharing. The US lacks a comprehensive federal framework defining ownership and limits for biometric data collected during vehicle operation (e.g., breath, skin-optical characteristics, and inferred BAC). This creates a “privacy black hole” risk of commercial use or sharing via policies. For crypto traders, the takeaway is indirect: this is a major US AI compliance push with potential reputational and legal tail risk for auto tech vendors, which can influence broader risk appetite—though no direct link to crypto assets is presented. Key remaining variables are NHTSA’s final rule timing, the ability to mass-produce AI drunk-driving detection systems meeting 99.9%, and whether Congress closes biometric protections.
Neutral
US regulationNHTSAAI drunk-driving detectionbiometric privacyauto safety technology

US Dollar Index (DXY) Falls Below 98.50 on Iran’s Hormuz Offer

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The US Dollar Index (DXY) slid below 98.50, down about 0.4% early in trading. The move followed Iran’s unexpected offer to negotiate a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping chokepoint for roughly 20% of the world’s oil. Traders interpreted the proposal as a potential easing of geopolitical risk and reduced safe-haven demand for the US Dollar Index (DXY). In the hours after the announcement, DXY was reported to have fallen from around 98.80 to 98.40. The oil market reacted quickly: crude prices dropped around 2% to about $78/barrel as the risk of supply disruptions eased. Supporting signals included a rise in gold (around +1%) and gains in the euro and yen versus the dollar, while emerging-market currencies strengthened. Analysts flagged the next technical level at 98.00 support. They also noted that Fed policy and interest-rate differentials still matter, meaning any dollar weakness could reverse if negotiations fail. For traders, the key watch items are: progress (or setbacks) in Hormuz talks, further US rates/Fed signals, and confirmation of whether oil’s drop is sustained.
Neutral
DXYUS DollarIranStrait of HormuzOil Prices

Iranian negotiation proposal via Pakistan puts Strait first

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The Iranian negotiation proposal delivered to the US via Pakistan outlines a three-stage framework to de-escalate US–Iran tensions. The Iranian negotiation proposal reportedly prioritizes ending the regional war first, then reopening the Strait of Hormuz, and only afterwards starting nuclear negotiations. Pakistan is acting as the intermediary, aiming to reduce direct confrontation risk while allowing both sides to test positions. Key elements include an immediate ceasefire, reopening the strait to international shipping, and lifting the US blockade on Iranian oil exports before any nuclear talks begin. The article says nuclear discussions would be delayed until security conditions stabilize, shifting away from past approaches that tightly linked sanctions relief and nuclear negotiations. The Strait of Hormuz is a critical global chokepoint, carrying about 20% of world petroleum flows. Any disruption has historically driven fast oil-price jumps. Analysts estimate that a successful breakthrough could reduce crude prices by roughly $5–$10 per barrel by removing the risk premium. Main obstacles remain: verification mechanisms, political opposition in both countries, and regional rivalries involving Saudi Arabia and Israel. European allies show cautious optimism, while Gulf states are closely watching any outcomes that affect strait security. The market relevance is mostly energy/risk-premium driven, since the scenario is still conditional on implementation.
Neutral
Iran-US diplomacyStrait of HormuzOil market risk premiumNuclear talksPakistan mediator

Iran proposes Strait of Hormuz reopening deal with US amid energy crisis

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Iran has offered the US a proposal for the Strait of Hormuz reopening to restore safer, normal shipping through the world’s key oil chokepoint. The strait carries about 20% of global petroleum exports, so any Strait of Hormuz reopening would directly affect energy supply risk and pricing. The reported package includes: (1) safe passage guarantees for commercial vessels, (2) joint monitoring with international bodies, and (3) removal of certain sanctions. The US has not given an official response, though backchannel talks are reportedly underway. Market reaction has been cautious. Brent crude futures reportedly fell about 2% early on, suggesting traders may price in reduced disruption risk. Shipping firms remain guarded and want concrete verification and liability frameworks before resuming full operations. Analysts (citing the need for verification) emphasize that monitoring mechanisms are critical. A phased timeline is mentioned: initial humanitarian/food cargo first, then energy shipments after a 30-day trial period. Historical disruptions and incidents have previously triggered temporary oil spikes, with the current situation described as the longest and most severe. Political and regional obstacles remain. Hardliners in both Iran and the US face domestic pressure, while regional players and alternative pipeline routes do not fully remove reliance on the strait. Environmental and safety requirements are also part of the plan, including remediation monitoring. For traders: a credible Strait of Hormuz reopening could ease broader risk sentiment via lower energy volatility, but uncertainty and verification delays can keep markets choppy.
Neutral
Strait of Hormuz reopeningIran-US diplomacyBrent crudeoil supply riskgeopolitical energy security

Aave urges Arbitrum to release 30,765 ETH from Kelp exploit to “DeFi United”

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Aave Labs has proposed an Arbitrum governance action to unfreeze 30,765 ETH tied to the Kelp DAO exploit and redirect the funds to “DeFi United,” a recovery plan focused on restoring rsETH backing and compensating holders. The proposal follows a prior Arbitrum Security Council freeze of 30,765 ETH connected to the estimated $293 million Kelp attack. Aave said the ETH on Arbitrum is a “material contribution” toward rebuilding rsETH collateral and aims to restore normal conditions for Arbitrum users and the broader DeFi ecosystem. The funds would be sent to a recovery address controlled by Aave, Kelp DAO, and Certora. Aave expects the restoration and compensation process to take about 49 days and would return the funds if the recovery plan fails. “DeFi United” funding is already underway: Dune Analytics shows about $21 million in contributions, while an additional $215 million is pledged by protocols including Arbitrum, Mantle, Ether.fi, and Lido—subject to governance votes. Other supporters have signaled intent to help as well. Traders should note this comes after the Kelp hack battered Aave, driving a sharp rise in bad debt and triggering withdrawals—so execution risk remains until governance approval and the remediation milestones are met. Aave’s move is a step toward stabilization, but near-term sentiment may still track hack-related uncertainty.
Neutral
AaveArbitrum治理Kelp DAO黑客rsETH修复DeFi United

Crypto Law Update: Goldman Bitcoin ETF, Stablecoin Coordination, Prediction Markets Suit

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This week in Crypto Law centers on digital assets moving deeper into mainstream finance while regulators intensify jurisdiction and systemic-risk concerns. 1) Goldman Sachs files for a Bitcoin ETF. The application to the U.S. SEC is a fresh signal that crypto exposure is continuing to be packaged inside regulated investment products. In crypto law terms, this further reinforces securities-law pathways and may lift institutional sentiment toward BTC. 2) Pakistan opens banking rails for licensed crypto firms. Pakistan’s central bank allows licensed virtual-asset service providers to access the banking system under a new licensing regime with verification and anti-money-laundering controls. For traders, this points to improving on/off-ramp liquidity where compliance frameworks are clearer. 3) The BIS calls for global stablecoin coordination. The Bank for International Settlements warns that fragmented stablecoin regulation could fuel instability, regulatory arbitrage, and monetary-policy risk. The BIS push suggests stablecoins may face tighter, more harmonized cross-border oversight—relevant for any tokenized-payment use cases. 4) France advances euro-denominated stablecoins. France is seeking stronger legal support for euro-backed stablecoins, framing it as financial sovereignty amid concerns about USD dominance in payments. This could increase competitive attention toward EUR stablecoin infrastructure. 5) New York sues Coinbase and Gemini over prediction markets. The New York Attorney General alleges event-contract platforms are illegal gambling under state law. Coinbase/Gemini argue for federal derivatives regulation, setting up a potential state-vs-federal jurisdiction fight. This is a near-term legal overhang for crypto-adjacent derivatives products. Overall, these items keep Crypto Law highly trade-relevant: ETF headlines can support risk-on positioning, while stablecoin and prediction-market disputes may add regulatory volatility.
Bullish
Crypto LawBitcoin ETFStablecoin RegulationPrediction MarketsBanking Access

Gold rises on US-Iran peace hopes as easing inflation weakens the USD

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Gold is climbing as US-Iran peace hopes improve risk sentiment and easing inflation concerns weaken the USD. Traders are watching whether gold can move toward $8,000 by June 30, but the article notes there are currently no clear odds or setup signals. Key drivers highlighted for gold: (1) a weaker USD from cooling inflation expectations, (2) improved geopolitical stability after the recent US-Iran ceasefire without major violations, and (3) sensitivity of the June gold market to macro data. With 67 days until the market resolves, price action may hinge on incoming economic indicators and geopolitical headlines. The piece also points to upcoming catalysts that could shift sentiment: statements from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, inflation releases, and any central-bank communication on rate cuts or gold reserves. It mentions combined 24-hour volume showing no activity, suggesting room for early participants positioning for an upward move. For traders, the core question is whether easing inflation plus US-Iran de-escalation can sustain gold momentum into late June.
Neutral
GoldUS-Iran CeasefireUSDInflationMacro & Safe-Haven

Israel–Hezbollah ceasefire market holds at 100% amid strikes

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Israel–Hezbollah ceasefire market pricing remains unchanged at 100% YES for the June 30 contract, despite IDF airstrikes north of the border hitting Hezbollah infrastructure and personnel. The April 30 ceasefire market is also flat at 100% YES, and the Israel suspension of Lebanon offensive market stays at 100% YES. For crypto traders, the key signal is that the prediction markets are not repricing geopolitical/operational risk even as battlefield activity continues. The discrepancy to watch is between ongoing strikes (e.g., rocket-launcher and military infrastructure targets) and markets implying full certainty of de-escalation. Catalysts for a potential repricing are likely policy and negotiation signals—statements from Netanyahu/IDF, progress or breakdown in U.S.-brokered talks, or a measurable change in Hezbollah’s military posture. A clear de-escalation could push odds away from certainty; renewed escalation that shifts the near-term operational outlook could do the opposite.
Neutral
Israel–Hezbollah ceasefire marketIDF strikesprediction oddscrypto macro riskNetanyahu de-escalation

Bitcoin holds above $66K as US-Iran tensions rise

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US-Iran tensions are escalating, but Bitcoin is holding firm above $66,000. The article cites a prediction-market share for “Bitcoin surpassing $66,000 on April 25” at 99.9%, suggesting traders largely expect Bitcoin to remain above that level despite geopolitical risk. At the same time, hedges are priced as low-probability. The “Bitcoin dipping to $60,000 in April” contract is around 0.2%, implying the market assigns a small chance to a near-term >40% selloff driven by heightened global disruption. The reasoning depends on whether energy and macro expectations change: traders are watching oil for spikes and any shifts in inflation expectations. Liquidity is the key caveat. While the nominal value of Bitcoin trades associated with the $60,000 dip contract is about $77,980 per day, the actual USDC traded is only around $953. Thin liquidity means price can move quickly: the article estimates roughly $2,581 of USDC could move the market by 5 percentage points, so a few large orders could swing prices. Overall, the piece frames Bitcoin’s “safe-haven” narrative as being tested by geopolitics, but without major changes in oil prices or inflation expectations, a steep downside appears unlikely in the immediate term. Diplomatic or military developments (including regional mediation efforts) could quickly reprice the odds. Bitcoin remains the central asset to monitor, with USDC liquidity conditions shaping how fast volatility could emerge.
Neutral
BitcoinUS-Iran tensionsGeopolitical riskPrediction marketsUSDC liquidity

AI Hiring Self-Preference Boosts Shortlisting by up to 60%

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A new multi-university study warns that AI hiring tools can show “self-preferencing”: they preferentially shortlist resumes rewritten by the same AI model family. Using 2,245 human-written resumes, researchers had seven major AI models rewrite them (GPT-4o, GPT-4o-mini, GPT-4-turbo; LLaMA 3.3-70B, Mistral-7B, Qwen 2.5-72B, DeepSeek-V3). Results show that AI hiring tools favor AI-written versions of the same type at a rate of 68%–88%, with GPT-4o surpassing 80%. In simulated job applications across 24 roles, matching the candidate’s resume generator to the recruiter’s AI tool increased shortlisting odds by 23%–60%. The paper also notes a deeper effect: LLMs may recognize the “fingerprints” of their own rewrites, even when human evaluators rate other versions as clearer or more persuasive. The key trading-relevant takeaway for the tech sector: AI hiring models can create systematic selection bias and information asymmetry, but it’s not a direct crypto catalyst. Market impact is likely limited to sentiment around AI governance and automation risk in the short term.
Neutral
AI hiringrecruitment biasChatGPTDeepSeektech automation

Hezbollah Drone Strike Tests Israel-Hezbollah Ceasefire as IDF Soldier Killed

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A Hezbollah drone strike killed IDF Sgt. Idan Fuchs and wounded six others in southern Lebanon. The attack used low-cost, precise drones, marking a tactical shift. Crypto-linked prediction markets suggest Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire stability, with Polymarket contracts priced at 100% odds for both April 30 and June 30 outcomes. Despite the active drone campaign, the market implies traders still see the existing ceasefire framework as durable, though further escalation could force repricing. Market activity showed no clear reaction: 24-hour volume appears unchanged, and USDC trading data was unavailable. The “YES” shares at 100¢ leave essentially no upside, so any formal breakdown in the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire terms would likely trigger a sharp move lower. Key watchpoints for traders are public statements from Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, any Hezbollah claims of additional operations, and US diplomatic actions. A second fatal drone strike or Israeli escalation in southern Lebanon would be the most likely catalysts to move prices off the 100% level.
Neutral
Israel-Hezbollah ceasefireHezbollah drone strikePrediction marketsGeopolitical riskUSDC

Western Union to Launch Solana Stablecoin USDPT Next Month

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Western Union plans to launch USDPT, a Solana-based stablecoin, next month. The article highlights prediction-market odds for Solana’s move to $150 between April 13–19, showing 100% “YES” across April 2026 sub-markets. However, trading activity appears extremely light, with zero face value volume recorded. That means the 100% odds likely reflect sentiment more than real capital commitment. With low liquidity, even a few larger trades could swing the market. The move is framed as an institutional bet on Solana, and it also places USDPT directly in the competitive landscape of U.S.-backed stablecoins versus state-led alternatives. For traders, the key near-term focus is whether Solana can hold current levels and break through resistance as the USDPT launch date approaches, without clear macroeconomic catalysts. The piece suggests watching for announcements from the Solana Foundation or new institutional investments in Solana, as either could move SOL ahead of the USDPT release. Overall, USDPT’s launch is a potential catalyst for attention and flows, but current market data (thin volume) suggests limited immediate impact until liquidity and real positioning build.
Neutral
USDPTSolanaStablecoinsWestern UnionInstitutional adoption