Crypto World
Trump’s World Liberty Financial sues its advisor Justin Sun
Donald Trump’s cryptocurrency project World Liberty Financial has sued Justin Sun for defamation.
World Liberty accused Sun of launching a “coordinated media smear campaign.” Sun responded, calling the lawsuit a “meritless PR stunt.”
World Liberty said Monday that it filed in the Eleventh Judicial Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Florida. It asserted claims for defamation and defamation by implication. It wants damages and a court-ordered retraction, according to the company’s own announcement.
Sun has been upset at World Liberty ever since the project froze the vast majority of his WLFI tokens on September 1, 2025.
World Liberty’s lawsuit today follows Sun’s April 21 complaint in the Northern District of California. In his earlier case, Sun and his companies Blue Anthem Limited and Black Anthem Limited sued World Liberty Financial, noting that Sun’s companies paid $45 million for 4 billion WLFI tokens, including advisory tokens, which have declined in value due to World Liberty’s alleged breaches of contract.
His complaint accuses World Liberty of using undisclosed blacklisting powers over the WLFI smart contract to freeze his tokens. In doing so, he also alleged, World Liberty disabled his governance rights, leaving him unable to vote on proposals that affected token holders.
Sun asked the court to order a financial remedy for “World Liberty’s egregious misconduct, including their breaches of contract, fraud, and conversion.”
Read more: Justin Sun goes to war with World Liberty Financial
World Liberty Financial v. Justin Sun
World Liberty’s de facto countersuit is simple enough.
It claims Sun’s entities broke transfer rules, improperly bought tokens for undisclosed third parties in straw purchases, and eventually bet against the price of WLFI.
Furthermore, it says Sun tried to publicly trash WLFI in public after World Liberty froze his tokens. The company also says its right to freeze Sun’s tokens appeared in sale documents, Sun’s unlock contract, as well as on-chain code.
Read more: Justin Sun wants World Liberty Financial to unmask its X admin
Sun, still nominally an advisor to World Liberty Financial, has engaged very publicly in back-and-forth posts with the World Liberty Team on X almost continuously for the last several months while his tokens have been restricted.
Several sections of the suit remain redacted.
As Protos reported in April, Sun’s blacklisted WLFI tokens have declined by tens of millions of dollars in value since the September freeze.
Sun, in his lawsuit against the World Liberty Financial team, has also threatened to bring a defamation suit.
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Crypto World
Hut 8 cuts bitcoin credit costs with FalconX refinancing, freeing 3,300 BTC from collateral
Hut 8 (HUT), a bitcoin miner turned energy and AI compute company, has refinanced its bitcoin-backed credit facility, replacing its existing Coinbase Credit arrangement with a new $200 million facility with FalconX.
With the new deal, Hut 8 cut its fixed interest rate to 7% from 9%, a 200-basis-point improvement, according to a press release. The move is part of the firm’s focus on lowering its cost of debt on bitcoin-backed credit and broader cost of capital, the company said. The deal also frees up approximately 3,300 bitcoin that were previously pledged as collateral, worth roughly $260 million as of May 1, giving Hut 8 greater flexibility to deploy that capital.
“This refinancing strengthens our balance sheet by decreasing our cost of debt while simultaneously increasing Bitcoin held outside collateral covenants, resulting in additional liquidity to deploy into the growth of our business,” said Sean Glennan, CFO of Hut 8.
“It advances our broader objective of optimizing the role of bitcoin on our balance sheet and lowering our cost of capital,” he added.
The trend of refinancing for better terms continues among mining firms, as they seek to improve their credit terms and free up more capital for their pivot to AI and move away from volatile bitcoin revenues in favor of long-term leases.
Last week, Hut 8 priced $3.25 billion of senior secured notes to fund construction of a 245-megawatt data center at its River Bend campus in St. Francisville, Louisiana, according to an April 28 SEC filing. The project, first announced in December, has a 15-year, $7 billion lease with AI infrastructure firm Fluidstack, backed by Google, with a total potential value of up to $17.7 billion if all renewal options are exercised.
Another miner, Riot, also recently secured improved terms on its $200 million bitcoin-backed credit facility with Coinbase, lowering the rate to a fixed 6.15% from 8.3% and releasing 1,544 of pledged collateral bitcoin, signaling growing lender confidence in its expanding data center business.
Hut 8 shares rose about 1.5% on Monday as bitcoin rallied above $80,000.
Read More: Riot extends $200 million Coinbase credit facility, and bitcoin weakness could mean more sales
Crypto World
US Bond Markets Sell Off As Iranian Drones Hit UAE Fujairah Hub
Brent crude jumped more than 5% on Monday to above $120 a barrel, but US bonds rose sharply as Iranian drones struck the Fujairah Oil Industry Zone, the UAE’s main oil export outlet outside the Strait of Hormuz.
The UAE Ministry of Defence intercepted three of four Iranian cruise missiles, while a fourth fell into the sea. Two passenger flights to Dubai were diverted as alerts spread across the Emirates.
US Bond Market Sends Warning
The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield climbed to 4.46%, a nine-month high as traders price in inflation pressure from rising energy costs.
In bond market language, a sell off means investors are selling bonds, which pushes prices down and yields up. So a bond sell off signals rising yields. They’re the same event described from two angles:
- Price view: bonds sold off (prices fell)
- Yield view: yields surged
Fed funds futures now imply no Federal Reserve rate cuts until December 2027. Traders see a 38% probability of a rate hike by March 2027.
Bonds typically rally on geopolitical risk. Monday’s move suggests markets view sustained inflation as the bigger threat.
“It appears that $5/gallon gas prices and 7%+ mortgages are on the way. The bond market needs help,” wrote analysts at The Kobeissi Letter.
Strike Hits Hormuz Bypass Hub
The UAE ministry of defense indicated detecting four munitions coming from Iran. Reportedly, three missiles were successfully intercepted over the country’s territorial waters, and the last one fell into the sea.
“The Ministry of Defence confirmed that the sounds heard in scattered areas of the country are the result of the successful interception of the aerial threats,” they wrote in a post.
Three Indian workers were moderately injured at Fujairah. A tanker was struck north of the port over the weekend.
Loading operations at the Hormuz bypass hub have been partly suspended after three drone strikes in four days. The attacks broke a fragile US-Iran ceasefire that took effect on April 8.
“Tonight, perhaps, a new chapter of power will unfold, one the adversaries have never witnessed before,” Iranian Brigadier General Ibrahim al-Fiqari warned of further escalation in a post on X.
The Fujairah hub is the UAE’s only major oil export outlet outside the Strait of Hormuz. A pipeline built specifically to bypass the chokepoint feeds it.
The post US Bond Markets Sell Off As Iranian Drones Hit UAE Fujairah Hub appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Bernstein Sees Prediction Markets Go Institutional After First Block Trade
Prediction markets are evolving from retail speculation platforms into institutional-grade financial instruments, driven by demand for precise macro hedging and clearly defined binary outcomes, according to a May 4 report by Bernstein.
The report highlights why institutional investors may find these markets attractive — namely, they allow users to hedge specific event risks, such as tariffs, elections and geopolitical developments, using contracts that resolve to simple yes-or-no outcomes.
Bernstein pointed to the first bespoke institutional block trade executed on Kalshi last week as a key milestone. A block trade refers to a privately negotiated, large transaction typically arranged between institutional counterparties.
The deal was brokered by Greenlight Commodities and involved a Houston, Texas-based environmental hedge fund and Jump Trading as the liquidity provider. The custom contract was tied to the clearing price of California’s May carbon allowance auction, illustrating how prediction markets can be tailored to specific client needs.
“We believe the introduction of block trading and bespoke contracts could expand participation from institutional investors seeking targeted exposure to event risks,” wrote the Bernstein analysts.
Separately, Bernstein said Clear Street’s partnership with Kalshi gives institutional investors a regulated way to access prediction markets, allowing them to trade these contracts alongside traditional assets like stocks and futures.

Listing of Kalshi’s largest active event contracts by volume. Source: Bernstein
Related: US Senate bans itself from betting on prediction markets
Retail leads prediction markets as institutional interest grows
The shift toward institutional adoption is notable given that prediction markets are still largely driven by retail activity. A recent report by Bitget Wallet and Polymarket found that retail users accounted for more than 80% of the $25.7 billion in prediction market volumes recorded in March.
Greater institutional participation could accelerate the market’s growth, with Berinstein projecting that prediction markets could evolve into a trillion-dollar industry by the end of the decade.

Prediction market trading volumes topped $25 billion in March. Source: Bitget Wallet
Regulatory momentum in the United States is also shaping the sector’s trajectory, though the landscape remains uneven.
Kalshi operates as a federally regulated exchange under the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, while Polymarket received conditional approval in late 2025 to offer event contracts in the US through regulated channels.
Magazine: How to fix suspected insider trading on Polymarket and Kalshi
Crypto World
Bitcoin Price Flips Volatile on Iran Events as $80,000 Battle Heats Up
Bitcoin (BTC) saw volatility at Monday’s Wall Street open as fresh US-Iran war events sparked instability.
Key points:
- Bitcoin wobbles around the $80,000 mark as Iran tensions steer risk-asset markets.
- The overhead CME futures gap becomes the new target for traders wanting proof of BTC price strength.
- Short-term holders approach breakeven on their unrealized losses.
Iran injects fresh BTC price volatility with $80,000 at stake
Data from TradingView showed whipsaw BTC price action as $80,000 became a central focus for both bulls and bears.

BTC/USD one-hour chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView
News that Iran had struck a petroleum facility in the United Arab Emirates sent oil prices surging on the day, with US stocks under pressure.
WTI crude added over 5% to return past $105 per barrel, while Brent hit $119 per barrel — within striking distance of its highest levels in nearly three years.

CFDs on Brent crude oil one-day chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView
Earlier, trading company QCP Capital described the Iran situation as “fluid.”
“For now, markets appear to be pricing in de-escalation. That calculus could change quickly,” it wrote in its latest Market Color analysis.
For Bitcoin itself, QCP argued that the semi-filled gap in CME Group’s futures market formed the key resistance hurdle for buyers to overcome.
“Opened up with a new small CME gap. It is also well on its way to close the previous large gap from $84K,” trader Daan Crypto Trades continued on the topic in a post on X.
“Good to mark these levels on your chart as they could act as a ‘magnet’ and local reversal zones if price trades close/into them.”

CME Bitcoin futures 15-minute chart. Source: Daan Crypto Trades/X
Bitcoin speculators almost wipe out unrealized losses
Onchain analytics platform CryptoQuant added another important level in the form of the aggregate cost basis of Bitcoin’s short-term holders, or speculative investors holding for up to six months.
Related: BTC price can ‘easily’ hit $95K: Five things to know in Bitcoin this week
“The more probable scenario is a cautious recovery attempt toward STH realized price,” contributor Crazzyblockk wrote in a QuickTake blog post.
“A confirmed daily close above $81,500 flips that level from resistance to support, opening the path toward $87–92K. Failure sends price back to test new money realized price near $76,500.”

Bitcoin aggregate cost basis (realized price) by UTXO age (screenshot). Source: CryptoQuant
Crazzyblockk added that Bitcoin’s long-term holders were “unbothered” about their average 27% unrealized losses.
Crypto World
Bitcoin drops to $79,000, ETH, SOL, DOGE sharply lower on renewed U.S.-Iran war tensions
Bitcoin dropped to $79,074 in late Asian hours Monday, reversing nearly $1,500 from a $80,594 intraday high that had marked the highest print since January 31.
The pullback came as Iran’s Fars news agency claimed two missiles hit a U.S. patrol boat near Jask Island after the vessel allegedly ignored Iranian warnings to leave its territorial waters. Brent crude jumped more than 5% to trade above $113 a barrel before paring the gain.
The U.S. denied the report shortly after and said no American ship had been struck. Oil and equity futures pared their initial moves on the denial, but bitcoin held its decline as traders priced in the fragility of the ceasefire that has held since early April.
Other majors followed bitcoin lower from intraday highs but stayed positive on the day.
Ether traded at $2,341, up 1.2% over 24 hours after touching $2,368 earlier. Solana sat at $84.08, up just 0.2% on the day after starting Monday at $85.14. XRP slipped to $1.40 and BNB to $623. Dogecoin held its gains better than most, up 2.3% on the day to $0.1102 with the weekly print still at 12.1%.
The escalation arrived hours after President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that the U.S. would begin escorting ships stranded in the Persian Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz starting Monday, an operation dubbed Project Freedom that involves guided-missile destroyers, aircraft, and drones.
Iran responded by announcing it had “redefined the control zone” in Hormuz, extending its claimed maritime borders to Fujairah and signaling that Tehran would regulate shipping traffic in the area regardless of U.S. operations.
Bitcoin had broken $80,000 for the first time since January, with $301 million in shorts liquidated as the move unfolded earlier Monday. The Senate’s Clarity Act compromise on stablecoin yield, released Friday, had been adding to the risk-on tone heading into the week.
Whether the U.S. denial holds or fresh confirmations emerge from either side will likely set the tape for the rest of the U.S. session.
Crypto World
Circle (CRCL), Coinbase (COIN) lead crypto stocks rally amid Clarity Act progress
Crypto-related stocks rallied Monday, led by Circle (CRCL) and Coinbase (COIN), as progress on U.S. digital asset legislation and bitcoin breaking above $80,000 lifted sentiment across the sector.
Circle, issuer of the USDC stablecoin, surged 18%, extending recent gains, while U.S.-focused crypto exchange Coinbase rose about 7%. BitGo (BTGO), a digital asset infrastructure firm offering custody and stablecoin services, climbed roughly 10%.
Strategy (MSTR), the largest corporate bitcoin holder, crypto-friendly digital broker Robinhood (HOOD) and Ethereum (ETH) treasury firm Bitmine (BMNR) were also up 3%-4%, underscoring the broad-market advance.
The move came as bitcoin pushed above $80,000 during the session, reaching its strongest level since late January and providing a tailwind for the broader crypto sector. BTC advanced nearly 2% over the past 24 hours, leading the broader crypto benchmark CoinDesk 20 Index’s 1.2% gain.
Further boosting investor optimism were signs that the long-debated Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, a key piece of U.S. legislation to regulate crypto markets, is moving closer to passage.
A newly released compromise would prohibit stablecoin issuers from offering yield on idle balances, while still allowing rewards tied to usage and transaction activity, according to a Friday text. The approach addresses one of the most contentious aspects of the bill and aligns with earlier discussions in Washington.
Clarity Act progress
That clarification appears to be a pivotal moment that brings the bill closer to passage, according to Markus Thielen, founder of 10x Research.
“The latest compromise removes one of the final obstacles for the legislation,” said Thielen in a Telegram message. With the stablecoin yield issue addressed, lawmakers are expected to move toward a formal markup, potentially as soon as this week, he added.
Odds of passage on the prediction platform Polymarket have risen to 64%, reflecting growing confidence that the bill will advance.

With that, “equity markets are beginning to price in potential winners,” Thielen said.
Circle, as a regulated stablecoin issuer, is widely seen as a potential beneficiary of clearer rules, particularly if stablecoins are formally positioned as payment tools rather than yield-bearing assets, he said.
The firm’s upcoming earnings, due next week, adds another layer of momentum for the stock, Thielen noted.
After releasing last quarter’s report in February, Circle’s shares surged around 100% in the following weeks, and investors may have started to position for further gains ahead of earnings.
Crypto World
Glamsterdam Upgrade Set To Triple Ethereum's Execution Capacity

ePBS, Block-Level Access Lists, and EIP-8037 repricings combine to unlock a 200M gas limit floor, a throughput jump that could keep network fees pinned for years.
Crypto World
China’s Alibaba AI Predicts the Price of XRP, Bitcoin, Ethereum by the End of May 2026
We prompted China’s Alibaba Qwen AI to predict near-term price predictions for XRP, Bitcoin, and Ethereum, and the result is a tightly structured outlook.
It leans on macro easing, ETF momentum, and asset-specific catalysts to justify another leg higher.
As per Qwen AI, Bitcoin is expected to push toward $95,000–$100,000 on sustained ETF inflows, potential Fed rate cuts, and continued institutional accumulation.
Which is interesting because Bitcoin just reclaimed $80,000 making the prediction realistic and possible.

Alibaba AI frame Ethereum for a move into the $3,000–$4,000 range, driven by staking ETF approval narratives, Layer-2 expansion, and deflationary supply mechanics.
XRP, meanwhile, is positioned around a technical breakout scenario, with a cup-and-handle structure and regulatory clarity acting as the core drivers behind a move toward $1.70.
What makes this set of predictions stand out is the balance between catalysts and structure. Qwen is not just projecting targets, it is tying each move to a specific trigger.
Bitcoin depends on liquidity and macro conditions. Ethereum relies on institutional product expansion and on-chain growth. XRP is driven by technical breakout confirmation and sentiment shifts tied to regulation and ETF speculation.
The question now is whether price action is actually confirming those triggers, or if the market is still lagging behind the narrative.
Price Prediction: Can Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP Validate These Alibaba Qwen AI Breakout Predicts?
Bitcoin is now trading around $78,996, still holding comfortably above the $75K pivot that Qwen’s entire bullish case depends on.
As long as this level holds, the structure supports continuation toward $95K–$100K, driven by ETF inflows and improving macro conditions.
The key shift here is stability. BTC is not just hovering at support anymore, it is maintaining strength above it.
That said, momentum is still not fully expanding. If the price slips back below $75K, the market is likely to rotate into the more conservative $75K–$85K range, delaying the breakout scenario.
Ethereum price is sitting near $2,339, still below the critical reclaim zone. The $2,400–$2,600 range remains the barrier that must be overcome for the $3,000–$4,000 projection to align with reality.
Right now, ETH is close, but not there yet. Holding above $2,300 keeps the structure intact, but without a push higher, it remains in a reactive phase.
Lose this level, and the downside toward $2,100–$2,200 comes back into focus. The narrative is strong, but price still needs to confirm it.
XRP is trading around $1.39, just below the key $1.50 resistance that defines the breakout scenario.
This keeps the setup very tight. If XRP can push through $1.50 and hold above it, the move toward $1.70 becomes a direct continuation play, aligning with the cup-and-handle breakout thesis.
Momentum can build quickly from there, especially with regulatory clarity and ETF speculation still in the background.
On the downside, rejection at $1.50 keeps XRP within its current range and brings the $1.17–$1.30 support zone back into play. That range now acts as the key defense level. Losing it would weaken the structure and shift the tone back toward consolidation rather than expansion.
Across all three, the structure remains intact and slightly stronger than before, but the breakout is still not confirmed.
Prices are holding in the right zones, but the market still needs that next push to turn positioning into momentum.
Discover: The best crypto to diversify your portfolio with
AI Predicts That Bitcoin Hyper Could Outperform Them All
Early-stage infrastructure plays offer a different risk/reward profile entirely, and some traders rotating between cycles are already looking there.
Bitcoin Hyper is positioning itself as infrastructure for the next leg: the first Bitcoin Layer 2 with Solana Virtual Machine (SVM) integration, claiming sub-Solana latency while inheriting Bitcoin’s security layer.
The project has raised $32M in its presale at a current token price of $0.013679, with staking available at high APY for early participants.
The core thesis, bringing fast, low-cost smart contracts to Bitcoin without abandoning its trust model, targets a gap that neither Ethereum nor Solana fills directly.
The post China’s Alibaba AI Predicts the Price of XRP, Bitcoin, Ethereum by the End of May 2026 appeared first on Cryptonews.
Crypto World
Pavel Durov Just Took Over TONCoin as Its Largest Validator and Cut Fees to Near Zero: Is This the Catalyst TON Has Been Waiting For?
In a bold move that sent ripples through the crypto world, Telegram founder Pavel Durov announced today that fees on The Open Network (TONCoin) have already dropped 6x, plummeting to nearly zero.
But that’s just the beginning. Telegram is stepping up to replace the TON Foundation as the primary driving force behind the blockchain, becoming its largest validator.
This shift marks a major turning point for TON. After delivering a 10x speed upgrade in April (Step 1 of the “Make TON Great Again” plan), the network is now accelerating its transformation with Telegram’s direct involvement.

The focus is shifting squarely to technological superiority, backed by a refreshed ton.org website, new developer tools, and significant performance upgrades, all expected to roll out in the next 2–3 weeks.
Discover: The best crypto to diversify your portfolio with
Why This Matters For Telegram And Toncoin Foundation
Durov is making a direct bet on scale.
Telegram’s nearly 1 billion users combined with TONCoin ultra-low-cost infrastructure is the thesis. Near-zero fees and sub-second transactions open the door for seamless in-app payments, mini-apps, DeFi, and mass adoption at a scale most blockchains cannot touch.
Many transactions could soon become completely feeless.
For developers it means easier building and faster iteration. For the broader ecosystem it signals Telegram’s full commitment to turning TON into a high-performance backbone for real-world applications, not just another speculative asset.
Speculation is not the endgame here. Everyday utility is. With Telegram firmly in the driver’s seat, the Make TON Great Again roadmap is just getting started.
Discover: The best pre-launch token sales
The post Pavel Durov Just Took Over TONCoin as Its Largest Validator and Cut Fees to Near Zero: Is This the Catalyst TON Has Been Waiting For? appeared first on Cryptonews.
Crypto World
OpenAI seals $10B private equity joint venture for enterprise AI
OpenAI has sealed a $10B joint venture dubbed DeployCo with major private equity firms, giving it capital, governance access, and a captive pipeline to roll AI across thousands of portfolio companies.
Summary
- OpenAI has finalized a $10 billion joint venture with a consortium of major private equity firms to accelerate deployment of its enterprise AI tools across portfolio companies.
- The vehicle, known internally as DeployCo, will see PE investors commit around $4 billion, while OpenAI is expected to contribute up to $1.5 billion and retain super‑voting control.
- The agreement underscores how AI labs and buyout firms are aligning to use foundation models to overhaul operations in thousands of traditional businesses.
Market reports indicate that OpenAI has now closed a $10 billion joint venture with a group of private equity backers, an entity that previous filings and leaks identified as “DeployCo,” formed in Delaware as a limited liability company.
DeployCo structure and capital commitments
According to details first outlined by the Financial Times and relayed by outlets such as Bloomberg, the structure assigns a pre‑money valuation of roughly $10 billion to the new venture and is designed to act as a dedicated distribution vehicle for OpenAI’s workplace and enterprise products.
The private equity syndicate is led by TPG, with Bain Capital, Advent International, Brookfield Asset Management, and Goanna Capital also named in reports as core investors, collectively expected to invest about $4 billion for equity stakes, board seats, and influence over deployment priorities.
OpenAI, for its part, is set to provide an initial equity commitment of around $500 million, with the option to increase that to as much as $1.5 billion over time, while maintaining super‑voting rights that give it effective control over the venture’s strategic direction.
In one LinkedIn summary of the term sheet, the company is described as offering investors a 17.5% annual return floor over a five‑year period, a structure one source quoted by the FT said was “a floor… but we expect it to be much higher.”
A distribution play for enterprise AI
The goal of DeployCo is not to build consumer apps but to “deploy OpenAI’s software across the portfolio companies” of the participating private equity firms, using capital and governance rights to push AI integration into manufacturing, retail, healthcare, finance, and other sectors those funds own.
Coverage from Reuters and Yahoo Finance frames the venture as a way for OpenAI to secure a pipeline of thousands of business customers in one stroke, while PE managers see it as a tool to cut costs, grow revenue, and defend legacy holdings from AI‑driven disruption.
Analysts quoted in market commentary argue the initiative marks a shift from AI labs selling generic API access toward tightly integrated, outcomes‑linked deployments, with OpenAI effectively tying its fortunes to the performance of buyout firms’ portfolios.
In a recent crypto.news analysis, the deal was described as “a whole new AI distribution war,” positioning OpenAI’s DeployCo against rival structures from Anthropic and other labs that are courting private equity and infrastructure investors with similar joint‑venture models.
Another crypto.news overview emphasized that the $10 billion vehicle could become a template for how foundation‑model companies raise capital and secure enterprise reach without going public.
A separate crypto.news briefing stressed that by committing its own capital and guaranteeing returns, OpenAI is blurring the line between software vendor and financial sponsor, taking on more balance‑sheet risk in exchange for deeper operational control.
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