Crypto World
CoinShares says quantum threat to Bitcoin is real but still years away
Bitcoin faces a theoretical security risk from future quantum computers, but the threat is manageable and not imminent, according to a new research note from digital asset manager CoinShares.
Summary
- CoinShares says quantum computing poses a real but distant risk to Bitcoin, not an immediate security threat.
- Only a small share of Bitcoin’s supply, mainly in older addresses, is theoretically vulnerable to quantum attacks.
- Bitcoin can adopt quantum-resistant upgrades over time, giving the network ample room to adapt.
The firm said concerns that quantum computing could break Bitcoin’s (BTC) cryptography are often overstated, noting that the technology required to carry out such an attack remains far beyond current capabilities.
Even in the most aggressive scenarios, CoinShares estimates that a practical quantum threat to Bitcoin is likely at least a decade away.
Why quantum threat to Bitcoin matters
Bitcoin’s security relies on cryptographic tools that protect private keys and validate transactions. In theory, powerful quantum computers running algorithms such as Shor’s algorithm could one day derive private keys from public keys, allowing attackers to steal funds from certain types of Bitcoin addresses.
However, CoinShares said only a limited subset of Bitcoin is exposed. Roughly 8% of the total supply sits in older “legacy” addresses where public keys are already visible on the blockchain. Even within that group, far fewer coins would be immediately vulnerable in a way that could destabilize the network.
Bitcoin’s core hashing function, SHA-256, is also considered resilient. Quantum computers could speed up brute-force attacks, but not enough to break Bitcoin’s mining or transaction security under realistic assumptions, the report said.
Why the risk is considered manageable
CoinShares emphasized that Bitcoin is not static and has successfully upgraded its cryptography before. The network could transition to quantum-resistant signature schemes through future software upgrades if the threat becomes more concrete.
In addition, holders of older Bitcoin addresses can already protect themselves by moving funds to newer address formats that do not expose public keys until a transaction is spent.
The firm warned against rushing into drastic changes, such as premature hard forks or untested cryptographic schemes, arguing that unnecessary action could introduce bugs or weaken decentralization.
What it means for investors
For investors, CoinShares’ conclusion is straightforward: quantum computing is a long-term engineering challenge, not an existential crisis for Bitcoin today.
The report suggests the market has ample time to prepare, monitor technological progress, and implement safeguards well before quantum computers pose a realistic threat to Bitcoin’s security.
Crypto World
Ripple Price Analysis: What’s Next for XRP After a Brutal 31% Monthly Drop?
Ripple’s XRP is no longer trading within a corrective or range-bound environment. The recent price action reflects a clear liquidity-driven unwind, where prior reaction zones have failed to hold, and the asset is now probing deeper demand with limited structural support overhead.
Ripple Price Analysis: The Daily Chart
On the daily timeframe, XRP has breached its most recent major swing low of $1.2, confirming a structural breakdown rather than a temporary deviation. The sell-off following this breach has been sharp and impulsive, indicating forced participation rather than controlled distribution.
The price has sliced through multiple previously respected demand areas with minimal response, which signals that resting buy-side liquidity at those levels has already been consumed. The current interaction with the broader demand zone near the channel’s lower boundary of $1.00 is therefore critical. This zone represents one of the last visible higher-timeframe areas where untested demand may still exist.
However, the lack of meaningful absorption so far suggests that sellers remain in control, and any stabilization here would need to be confirmed through time rather than a single reaction.
From a daily perspective, XRP remains vulnerable as long as the price trades below the former reaction zones overhead, which are now structurally acting as supply.
XRP/USDT 4-Hour Chart
Zooming into the 4-hour timeframe, the influx of sellers is more evident, with the price aggressively reaching the $1.00 threshold. Yet, the most recent impulsive leg lower was followed by a corrective bounce, which has pushed the asset toward an internal supply zone around the $1.5 area.
The highlighted supply zones on the chart align with previous consolidation and breakdown areas. These zones now represent regions where any short-term pullback is likely to be met with renewed sell-side interest. As long as the price remains below these levels, upside moves should be treated as corrective rather than the start of a reversal.
Structurally, the market is still prioritizing downside liquidity, and without a clear break in this lower-high sequence, the 4-hour trend remains decisively bearish.
The post Ripple Price Analysis: What’s Next for XRP After a Brutal 31% Monthly Drop? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Crypto World
US Treasury Secretary calls on Senate to advance Warsh nomination amid Powell probe
United States Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent wants the Senate Banking Committee to move ahead with the confirmation hearings for Federal Reserve chair nominee Kevin Warsh, even as a Department of Justice investigation into current Fed chair Jerome Powell remains unresolved.
Summary
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent urged the Senate Banking Committee to proceed with Kevin Warsh’s confirmation hearings.
- Republican Senator Thom Tillis has threatened to block all Federal Reserve nominations until the investigation into Powell’s congressional testimony over a $2.5 billion renovation is resolved.
- Bitcoin has tanked over 20% since Warsh was nominated.
During a Fox News interview, Bessent pushed back on Republican Senator Thom Tillis, who has threatened to delay the confirmation process until the Department of Justice investigation into the current Fed chair is concluded.
“Senator Tillis has come out and said he thinks that Kevin Warsh is an extreme candidate, So I would say, why don’t we get the hearings underway and see where Jeanine Pirro’s investigation goes?” Bessent said.
U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, Jeanine Pirro, opened a probe on Jan. 9 tied to Powell’s congressional testimony, which addressed cost overruns linked to a $2.5 billion renovation of the Fed’s headquarters and nearby buildings. Prosecutors are investigating whether Powell misled lawmakers about the scope and expense of the renovation project.
Powell has denied any wrongdoing and said the investigation is being used as a political pretext following his resistance to Donald Trump’s demands for faster interest rate cuts.
As previously reported by crypto.news, Senator Tillis has said he would block all Fed nominations until the Justice Department concludes its probe into Powell, even though he considers Warsh a “qualified” and “strong” candidate for the position.
“I’d be one of the first people to introduce Mr. Warsh if we’re behind this and support him, but not before this matter is settled,” Tillis said in a recent interview appearance.
Warsh was nominated by Trump on Jan. 30 and now awaits a Senate Banking Committee review hearing, following which the panel will vote on whether to advance his nomination to the full Senate. If the full Senate confirms the nominee, he will be officially appointed as the next Federal Reserve chair.
Warsh’s nomination as the next Fed chair has had an immediate impact on the price of Bitcoin (BTC) and the broader crypto market, as he is viewed as a hawkish policymaker by the vast majority of analysts. Right after his nomination, the price of Bitcoin fell below $82,000 after weeks of trading above that level, while the total crypto market capitalization dropped to $2.8 trillion.
The trading sessions that followed saw more than $2.5 billion in liquidations of leveraged long positions, which subsequently pushed the flagship crypto below several key support levels and intensified downside volatility.
As of press time, Bitcoin has dropped over 20% since Warsh’s nomination.
Crypto World
Bitcoin Price Forecasts Say $50,000 Is on the Way
Bitcoin (BTC) begins its second week of February, licking its wounds as traders remain bearish on BTC.
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Market forecasts agree that Bitcoin price action has not yet put in a reliable long-term bottom.
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CPI week comes as markets lose faith in Fed rate cuts in March.
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US dollar strength begins to fade as analysts eye a potential rerun of 2021 for Bitcoin-dollar correlation.
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Japan’s election turns heads, with analysis seeing a weaker yen and crypto headwinds to come.
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Bitcoin miners send large amounts to exchanges as the dust settles on the snap downside.
BTC price expected to attempt $60,000 retest
Bitcoin continues to trade above $70,000 as the week gets underway, but traders are anything but bullish on the short-term BTC price outlook.
Data from TradingView shows a lack of volatility around the weekly close, with BTC/USD staying around 20% higher versus its 15-month lows from last week.

In an X thread covering lower time frames, trader CrypNuevo warned that the current relief may end up as a manipulative move to liquidate late short positions.
“The intention to push price up first would be to hit the short liquidations that exist between $72k-$77k mainly. But this move is just a guess,” he wrote.
“What we’re really anticipating here is the long wick getting filled at least 50% of it in the next weekly candles.”

CrypNuevo implied that the lows could see at least a partial retest in the short term.
“It could be an immediate wick-fill. But in the case of having a move up first, then it could probably take around 5-8 weekly candles to get filled,” he forecast.
At the weekend, Cointelegraph reported on a broad consensus that price would make new macro lows in the future — and that these could take BTC/USD to $50,000 or lower.
Guys this isn’t the bottom. It’s just a bounce.
Historically $BTC drops 80% during its bear market.
That puts us near 40k
— Roman (@Roman_Trading) February 6, 2026
Trader Daan Crypto Trades meanwhile considered less exciting BTC price action to come next.
“After such a volatile few weeks, price will attempt to start ranging at some point. With this recent spike in volatility and big retrace yesterday, there’s a good chance we are hitting that point about now,” he told X followers Sunday.
“Would expect volatility to slowly come off a bit again, a range to be formed and from there on out we can reassess and look for opportunities.”
CPI due as Fed policy nerves emerge
The macro focus is back on US inflation data this week as wild gyrations in precious metals settle.
The January print of the Consumer Price Index (CPI), due Friday, forms the highlight and will follow various US employment data releases.
“Earnings season is also in full swing and macroeconomic uncertainty is elevated,” trading resource The Kobeissi Letter added on the week’s outlook.
Since announcing the new Chair of the Federal Reserve, President Donald Trump has failed to calm market nerves about future financial policy. His pick, Kevin Warsh, is thought to be notionally opposed to easing financial conditions — something that has already weighed on risk-asset performance.
Markets thus have little faith in interest rates going lower at the Fed’s next meeting in mid-March — even if Warsh is only due to take over in May.
Data from CME Group’s FedWatch Tool currently gives 82% odds of rates staying at current levels.

Commenting, analytics resource Mosaic Asset Company pointed to “stubborn” US inflation statistics as a reason for a more hawkish Fed — and associated market nerves.
“The combination of stronger economic growth and stubbornly high core inflation might starting casting a doubt on the interest rate outlook across the yield curve,” it wrote in the latest edition of its regular newsletter, “The Market Mosaic.”
Mosaic said that difficult conditions for the Fed were a “major catalyst behind the selloff in growth and AI stocks this year.”
“Rising rates makes the present value of future corporate profits worth less in today’s terms, while higher rates presents competition for investor capital as well,” it added.
As the week began, meanwhile, gold returned to the $5,000 mark, while US stocks futures joined Bitcoin in a relief bounce off Friday’s lows.

US dollar at a ten-year crossroads
For both Bitcoin and the broader risk-asset market, US dollar strength is becoming an increasingly important potential volatility catalyst.
The US dollar index (DXY), which enjoyed a relief rally following a trip to multiyear lows near 95.5 in late January, is failing to reclaim levels above 98.

A strong dollar tends to result in pressure for Bitcoin, and while the correlation has undergone many changes in recent years, the long-term trend may provide bulls with a more reliable tailwind.
“Still holding that support. But really critical level for the long-term trend,” analyst Aksel Kibar wrote in recent dollar commentary.
“$DXY can offer a great trade setup soon. Long or short. irrespective of direction.”

Kibar eyed DXY possibly now breaking out of a ten-year trading channel to the downside, but said that more data would be necessary before this was confirmed.
An alternative perspective comes from Henrik Zeberg, chief macro economist at crypto market insight company Swissblock.
In an X post last week, Zeberg likened the current relationship between BTC and DXY to early 2021 — around ten months before BTC/USD saw the blow-off top in its last bull market.
Far from breaking down, DXY could in fact be at the start of its next bull run.
“Strong DXY is BEARISH for BTC – just not in the initial phase of the Bull. Likely because ROTATION into US Assets,” he wrote.
“In 2021 – we had 12 weeks of BTC rally into the new DXY Bull. The rally gained 130% into the TOP for BTC. I see same development again! +100% gain in BTC – into its FINAL TOP.”

An accompanying chart suggested a target for that “final top” at $146,000.
Yen weakness stays on the radar
For the short term, however, Bitcoin faces another macro hurdle: a new fiscal policy era in Japan.
After the reelection of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, Japanese stocks surged to record highs — and analysis now sees negative impacts for US investment vehicles and crypto.
“The landslide victory of Sanae Takaichi marks Japan’s shift toward aggressive fiscal stimulus and tolerance for currency depreciation,” analyst XWIN Research Japan wrote in a blog post published on onchain analytics platform CryptoQuant.
“The ‘Takaichi Trade’ has lifted the Nikkei to record highs while reshaping global capital flows.”

XWIN referenced findings warning of “slowing inflows” into US equity exchange-traded funds (ETFs), thanks to a weaker yen increasing the attractiveness of Japanese bonds.
“Against this backdrop, Bitcoin faces short-term downside risk,” it continued.
“In risk-off phases, BTC tends to correlate with U.S. equities, allowing equity-led de-risking to spill into crypto markets. This pressure does not reflect deterioration in Bitcoin’s on-chain fundamentals, but cross-asset risk management.”
As Cointelegraph reported, crypto markets remain highly sensitive to Japan-related news, with one theory even attributing the yen carry trade to last week’s BTC price crash.
Analyzing the yen situation ahead of the election, Robin Brooks, a senior research fellow at Brookings, described its weakness as a “political liability.”
“With the election out of the way, especially if Takaichi does well, the optics of Yen depreciation won’t matter nearly as much,” he predicted.
“So the election is conceivably a catalyst for the next round of Yen weakening.”

Bitcoin miners see “exceptional” exchange inflows
Bitcoin miners are busy adjusting to current reality after Bitcoin’s 15-month lows — but research warns that a sell-off risk remains.
Related: Bitcoin difficulty plunges, Buterin sells off Ethereum: Hodler’s Digest, Feb. 1 – 7
Miner inflows to exchanges reached their highest levels since 2024 in recent days, with Feb. 5 alone seeing total deposits of 24,000 BTC.
Describing that tally as “exceptional,” CryptoQuant contributor Arab Chain said that the market is undergoing a “redistribution phase.”
“Notably, this rise in miner activity comes within a market environment characterized by clear volatility and reduced risk appetite among segments of traders, which could add an extra layer of short-term selling pressure,” a blog post explained.
“However, these inflows do not necessarily indicate the start of a prolonged downtrend, but rather may represent a natural redistribution phase within the market cycle.”

The classic Hash Ribbons indicator, which measures periods of miner stress, likewise continues its reaction to Bitcoin’s flash crash.
The indicator’s two moving averages of hash rate show no sign of forming a classic bullish cross, firmly invalidating its latest “buy” signal from early January.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision. While we strive to provide accurate and timely information, Cointelegraph does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information in this article. This article may contain forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Cointelegraph will not be liable for any loss or damage arising from your reliance on this information.
Crypto World
Market Analysis: AUD/USD And NZD/USD Build Momentum As Bulls Target Fresh Gains
AUD/USD started a fresh increase above 0.6980 and 0.7000. NZD/USD is also rising and might aim for more gains above 0.6060.
Important Takeaways for AUD USD and NZD USD Analysis Today
· The Aussie Dollar started a decent increase above 0.6950 against the US Dollar.
· There was a break above a key bearish trend line with resistance at 0.7000 on the hourly chart of AUD/USD at FXOpen.
· NZD/USD is consolidating gains above the 0.5995 pivot zone.
· There is a major bearish trend line forming with resistance at 0.6030 on the hourly chart of NZD/USD at FXOpen.
AUD/USD Technical Analysis
On the hourly chart of AUD/USD at FXOpen, the pair started a fresh increase from 0.6900. The Aussie Dollar was able to clear 0.6950 to move into a positive zone against the US Dollar.
There was a close above 0.6980 and the 50-hour simple moving average. Besides, there was a break above a key bearish trend line with resistance at 0.7000. Finally, the pair tested 0.7035. A high was formed near 0.7037 and the pair recently started a consolidation phase.

There was a minor decline below 0.7030. On the downside, initial support is near the 23.6% Fib retracement level of the upward move from the 0.6897 swing low to the 0.7037 high.
The next area of interest could be near 0.6985, the 50% Fib retracement, and the 50-hour simple moving average. If there is a downside break below 0.6985, the pair could extend its decline toward 0.6960. Any more losses might signal a move toward 0.6910.
On the upside, the AUD/USD chart indicates that the pair is now facing resistance near 0.7035. The first major hurdle for the bulls might be 0.7050. An upside break above 0.7050 might send the pair further higher. The next stop is near 0.7090. Any more gains could clear the path for a move toward 0.7120.
NZD/USD Technical Analysis
On the hourly chart of NZD/USD on FXOpen, the pair started a fresh increase from 0.5930. The New Zealand Dollar broke the 0.5950 barrier to start the recent rally against the US Dollar.
The pair settled above 0.6000 and the 50-hour simple moving average. The bulls were able to push the pair above the 61.8% Fib retracement level of the downward move from the 0.6060 swing high to the 0.5928 low.

However, the bears are now protecting the 76.4% Fib retracement at 0.6030. There is also a major bearish trend line forming with resistance at 0.6030. The NZD/USD chart suggests that the RSI is still above 50.
On the downside, immediate support is near the 0.5995 level and the 50-hour simple moving average. The first key zone for the bulls sits at 0.5930.
The next key level is 0.5900. If there is a downside break below 0.5900, the pair might slide toward 0.5865. Any more losses could lead NZD/USD into a bearish zone to 0.5820.
On the upside, the pair might struggle near 0.6030. The next major resistance is near the 0.6060 zone. A clear move above 0.6060 might even push the pair toward 0.6090. Any more gains might clear the path for a move toward the 0.6120 zone in the coming days.
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Crypto World
Story co-founder defends token unlock delay, says project needs ‘more time’
Story Protocol co-founder SY Lee defended the project’s decision to push its first major IP token unlock to August 2026, in a recent interview with CoinDesk, saying the blockchain needs “more time” to build usage and that near-zero on-chain revenue is “the wrong metric” for an intellectual-property and AI data network.
The six-month delay keeps team and investor tokens locked as Story pivots from a general IP registry toward licensing human-generated datasets for artificial-intelligence training.
He pointed to Worldcoin’s 2024 decision to extend investor and team lockups from three to five years, a move that reduced near-term circulating supply and was framed as extending the development runway, with the token posting double-digit gains in the hours after the announcement. Story, Lee said, is following the same logic.
“If we were all mercenary, we would have wanted a shorter lockup,” he said, describing the extension as a signal of long-term commitment rather than distress.
Story’s daily revenue, which peaked at $43,000 in September 2025 and is currently $0 per DeFiLlama, has also been a concern for many investors.
Lee contends that those numbers understate Story’s activity because much of the intended monetization occurs off-chain through licensing agreements rather than in transaction tolls.
In his view, gas revenue is a lagging indicator for a network designed to record rights, provenance, and usage terms before it begins extracting meaningful value from them.
“We intentionally put our chain gas fee pretty low. We’re more of an IP chain,” he said. “You may not see the type of revenue stream that you’re looking for like a DeFi chain.”
Instead, he said Story’s near-term focus is on recording ownership terms and usage rights for datasets and models used to train artificial-intelligence systems — something the project announced last year — with payments and royalty splits embedded in smart contracts.
That shift moves the project away from tokenizing media content or collectibles and toward what Lee described as “unscrapable” human-contributed data, such as multilingual voice samples and first-person video, assets he argues are harder for AI developers to obtain legally at scale through traditional web scraping.
The transition, however, delays the visibility of on-chain income because much of the expected value is tied to enterprise licensing deals rather than retail transaction fees. Lee compared the timeline to his previous Web2-based startup experience — which landed him a $440 million exit in 2021 — noting that it took years for meaningful revenue to materialize.
For token holders, the practical implication is that supply expansion is being slowed while the team attempts to demonstrate traction in AI data partnerships and rights-cleared dataset collection.
Whether that strategy ultimately converts into a sustainable business model is an open question, but Lee maintained that extending vesting schedules is healthier than rushing liquidity into a weak market.
“The best founders, the best teams, the best companies usually do it for a decade plus, we’re in it for the long term and longer innings,” Lee said.
Crypto World
South Korea’s FSS to probe whale manipulation and spoofing in crypto markets
South Korea’s Financial Supervisory Service plans to conduct an investigation into high-risk areas of the virtual asset market, such as whale-driven manipulation and API-based spoofing, according to local media.
Summary
- South Korea’s FSS will investigate whale-driven manipulation, spoofing via APIs, and token price inflation tactics.
- AI tools will be deployed to detect abnormal trading patterns and voice phishing.
- The FSS will also introduce fines for IT-related incidents and tighten on-site inspections.
The FSS is ramping up enforcement efforts as part of its 2026 plan and will utilize advanced tools like artificial intelligence to identify suspicious trading patterns, alongside legislative frameworks like the Digital Asset Basic Act to curb market abuse and enhance oversight in the crypto industry, Yonhap said on Feb. 9.
According to the reports, the FSS will conduct an investigation into practices like whale price manipulation, alongside schemes like the “net cage” method, where withdrawals and deposits have been suspended on specific tokens, and acts like the “horse racing” tactic involving large-scale buying to quickly increase the price of a token at a specific point in time.
Among other areas, the FSS will also scrutinize the use of API orders for market manipulation and investigate cases where social media is used to spread false information and influence token prices.
The FSS plans to use artificial intelligence to detect price manipulation at the second- and minute-level, automatically flag suspicious trading intervals and groups, and conduct text analysis to uncover coordinated manipulation efforts. AI will also be used to prevent voice phishing scams by facilitating real-time information sharing between telecommunications and financial companies and laying the groundwork for a future compensation system for affected victims.
At the same time, it will introduce a dedicated preparatory team to support and ensure the smooth implementation of the second phase of the Digital Asset Basic Act. The team will establish a disclosure system for token issuance and trading support, and develop guidelines for the proper reviewing and licensing of crypto exchanges and stablecoin issuers.
A special judicial police consultative body will be established to strengthen on-site enforcement for financial crimes against consumers, in line with President Lee Jae-myung’s plan to prioritize crackdowns on abusive financial practices.
A separate team will focus on IT risks across the financial sector, and new fines for IT-related incidents will be introduced as a punitive measure. Companies that fail to properly manage IT assets or identify and address security vulnerabilities in their systems would be subject to on-site inspections and audits.
The latest notification comes just days after Bithumb, South Korea’s second-largest crypto exchange, became the center of controversy after an internal error led to the accidental distribution of 2,000 Bitcoin to users. As a result, the price of Bitcoin on the platform briefly fell more than 10% below prices on other major exchanges.
Crypto World
3 Major Things That Could Move Crypto Markets This Week
A busy week lies ahead on the United States economic calendar, with labor market and inflation reports due while macroeconomic uncertainty remains elevated.
Crypto markets flatlined over the weekend, as investors licked their wounds following the massive $700 billion rout last week. The following several days could see more volatility with more government shutdown data on the way and a key inflation report.
US President Trump reiterated his 100,000 target for the Dow Jones as US stock futures rose on Monday morning. Meanwhile, precious metal markets are recovering, with gold reclaiming $5,000 per ounce and silver rising back to $80 per ounce.
Economic Events Feb. 9 to 13
The latest partial US government shutdown has already affected key data releases. The delayed December Retail Sales data is due on Monday, shedding light on the state of consumer spending.
This is followed by labor market data in the form of the January Jobs Report on Wednesday and Initial Jobless Claims data on Thursday.
“The most important thing, believe it or not, is the Labor Department’s nonfarm payroll report on Wednesday,” said CNBC’s Jim Cramer. “If that comes in soft, it means the Fed can keep cutting rates, and that’s great news for the stock market itself.”
Another big hitter, January’s CPI Inflation report, is due on Friday. The Consumer Price Index measures the average change over time in the prices paid by consumers for a basket of goods and services.
Key Events This Week:
1. December Retail Sales data – Monday
2. January Jobs Report – Wednesday
3. Initial Jobless Claims data – Thursday
4. January Existing Home Sales data – Thursday
5. January CPI Inflation data – Friday
6. 5 Fed speaker events this week
More government…
— The Kobeissi Letter (@KobeissiLetter) February 8, 2026
These labor market and inflation reports are critical in helping investors and Washington understand what is happening in the US economy, and are a key influence on the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy.
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“Rate expectations have been remarkably stable over the last couple of weeks,” said Angelo Kourkafas, senior global investment strategist at Edward Jones, as reported by Reuters.
“We’ll see if any either weakness in the labor market data or any surprising cool-down in inflation accelerates a bit the timeline for when the market thinks the next rate cut may be delivered.”
Crypto Market Outlook
Crypto markets barely moved over the weekend, with total capitalization hovering around $2.45 trillion, its lowest level since November 2024. Bitcoin recovered to reclaim $71,000 following its crash to around $60,000 on Friday, but it remains 44% down from its all-time high and in a bear market.
Ether prices reclaimed $2,100 but couldn’t advance any further. The asset remains deep in bear market territory, down 58% from its August all-time high. The alcoins saw a minor bounce, but most of them are still on the floor after being obliterated in last week’s market crash.
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Crypto World
Privacy-by-Design Makes Blockchain Work: The Japan APPI Case
Japan’s blockchain endeavours have taken on a more practical tone over the past couple of years, with major institutions now assessing where the technology genuinely fits into day‑to‑day financial and industrial workflows.
Some of the clearest signals are coming from the banking sector. In late 2025, the Japanese government confirmed its support for a project led by the country’s three largest banks to issue stablecoins for payments and settlement, under the oversight of the Financial Services Agency.
It’s a revealing direction. The work is centred on moving money and settling trades, not chasing volatility. That caution comes from experience.
Large Japanese institutions rarely move until they’ve weighed the operational and reputational implications, and blockchain still raises uncomfortable questions on both sides. It offers traceability and clean audit trails, but it also surfaces information in ways many organisations have never had to manage before.
This lands very differently inside a large organisation. On a public chain, transaction details are visible by default, and impossible to contain once they’re recorded. For teams used to controlling how information moves, and who sees what, that challenges long-standing expectations around confidentiality, trust and responsible data handling.
There’s a reason that kind of exposure makes people uneasy. It changes how risk is assessed and whether projects move forward at all.
The Cost of Transparency
Privacy sits at the centre of Japan’s digital strategy, and it draws a clear line around how far institutions are willing to go with blockchain. That sensitivity becomes hard to ignore once projects move beyond pilots and start brushing up against real operations.
On public blockchains, very little stays isolated. A payment here, a settlement there; before long, patterns begin to emerge. Volumes, timing and counterparties can quickly reveal more than the original transaction was meant to convey.
That way of working feels unfamiliar to many Japanese institutions. Banks are used to drawing clear lines between internal data, counterparty information and regulatory disclosure. Manufacturers and logistics firms draw similar lines around supply chains, pricing and sourcing. Public ledgers have a habit of ignoring those lines.
You see it when teams start digging into the data. Traceability and clean audit trails sound great, until someone realises how much of it is visible and how easily it can be analysed. Information that would normally stay inside a business is suddenly far more exposed. And that discomfort is not just cultural; there are strict compliance reasons behind it.
Why Privacy Carries Real Weight in Japan
Anyone building or operating digital systems quickly runs into the Act on the Protection of Personal Information (APPI), Japan’s data protection regime overseen by the Personal Information Protection Commission. It isn’t treated as a box-ticking exercise. It’s the framework organisations use to decide what data can move, where it can go and who remains accountable once it does.
Act amendments approved in 2020 and fully implemented from 2022, tightened expectations around breach reporting, individual rights and cross-border data handling. Once personal data leaves an internal system, organisations are expected to account for who can see it, how long it remains available and under what conditions it can be shared again.
Those changes pulled Japan much closer to GDPR-style expectations around accountability and data control. That alignment matters for blockchain. Rules designed around deletion rights, correction and purpose limitation sit comfortably with traditional databases, but they sit far less easily alongside immutable records and shared ledgers.
Once data is written on-chain, it is permanently recorded and replicated across multiple participants. That makes limiting access, correcting mistakes or reversing disclosure difficult later on. For teams used to accounting for every hand-off, that takes some getting used to.
The challenge also extends beyond domestic projects. Many blockchain applications operate across Asia-Pacific, where data protection rules vary. For compliance teams, that reality forces architectural decisions much earlier. What goes on-chain, and what stays off it, can determine whether a project ever clears internal review.
Where Builders Get Stuck
If you talk to teams building blockchain systems for institutions, the same issue comes up again and again. Most networks push them toward extremes. Either everything is visible by default, or almost everything is sealed off. There isn’t much middle ground.
That might be workable in early tests but it becomes far harder once regulators, auditors and risk teams get involved. Fully transparent systems expose more than most organisations are comfortable sharing. Fully private systems can make audits and reporting harder to support.
Teams respond by pushing sensitive logic off-chain or into permissioned environments that feel safer. Extra controls get bolted on. Disclosures are handled as one-offs. Compliance is demonstrated manually when someone asks for it. Over time, logic ends up split between public chains, off-chain databases and closed networks, which slows deployment and makes oversight harder.
You can see the effect in adoption. Consumer use moves ahead. Institutional deployments move more cautiously, even where the interest is clearly there. The promise is obvious, but the foundations still feel underprepared for sustained scrutiny.
Designing for Proof, Not Exposure
This is where the conversation needs to change. Institutions are not trying to publish private or sensitive data. They are trying to demonstrate that certain conditions were met: that a rule was followed, that consent was captured, that access made sense at the time. Looked at this way, the challenge becomes operational rather than philosophical.
You don’t need to put the underlying data out in the open to do that. What matters is having a reliable way to prove those conditions hold.
That’s why selective disclosure and zero-knowledge techniques are appearing in architectures aimed at real-world deployment. They make it possible to demonstrate compliance, eligibility or adherence to policy without dragging entire transaction histories or user records into the open. What gets shared is the conclusion, not every step that led to it. New blockchains like Midnight present such solutions to the industry and various sectors exploring blockchain integration.
For teams used to managing risk, that feels like common sense. Disclosure becomes deliberate. Audits stop feeling like a guessing game. The risk of oversharing drops away. Data protection stops being something to fix later and starts shaping decisions much earlier.
If blockchain is going to move beyond pilots and proofs of concept, that change matters. Systems designed this way don’t ask institutions to rethink how accountability works. They fit into existing expectations instead of fighting them.
Why This Matters Beyond Web3
That approach carries particular weight in markets like Japan, where data handling is taken seriously, and regulatory enforcement leaves little room for ambiguity when expectations are missed. Architectures that make disclosure explicit and limited sit far more comfortably alongside APPI’s emphasis on accountability and purpose limitation. They also travel better across borders, where privacy rules may differ but scrutiny rarely eases.
The implications extend well beyond blockchain. AI systems, data-driven platforms and cross-border digital services face the same pressure as they scale. As the volume of data grows, maintaining trust without losing control becomes harder. Ways of proving compliance without oversharing will matter across the digital economy, not just in Web3.
Japan isn’t trying to slow blockchain down. It’s pushing it to grow up.
Privacy-by-design forces harder choices earlier, but it also clears a path through regulation, risk and trust that institutions can actually walk. For institutions, that’s what adoption looks like in practice. And if blockchain is going to move from promise to something organisations rely on in highly regulated markets, this is the direction it needs to travel.
Crypto World
Solana price stalls near $85 after mid-band rejection
Solana price is hovering near $85 as falling volume, shrinking open interest, and a weak chart structure keep downside risk in focus.
Summary
- Solana has lost 35% over the past month and nearly 70% from its all-time high as price struggles below key levels.
- Derivatives activity continues to fade with recent sessions seeing significant long positions flushed out.
- Technical signals are bearish and momentum is showing oversold conditions without a clear reversal.
Solana was trading around $86.02 at press time, down 0.1% over the past 24 hours. The token has struggled to find a footing after a sharp pullback, falling about 13% over the past week and roughly 35% over the last 30 days. From its January 2025 all-time high near $293, SOL is now down close to 70%.
Price action has stayed heavy. While Solana (SOL) briefly pushed higher earlier this month, those gains faded quickly, pushing the token back toward the lower end of its recent seven-day range between $75.76 and $104.98. Buyers have stepped in to provide near support, but follow-through has been limited.
Market activity has continued to slow. Spot trading volume over the past 24 hours fell nearly 36% to $3.72 billion, pointing to fading participation. Futures data shows a similar picture.
According to CoinGlass data, derivatives volume dropped 22.44% to $9.46 billion, while open interest slipped 2.34% to $5.29 billion, suggesting traders are reducing exposure rather than adding new positions.
Risk-off sentiment and leverage unwinds add pressure
Solana’s weakness comes as risk appetite across global markets remains fragile.
Rising geopolitical tensions and a more hawkish approach by U.S. policymakers have put pressure on high-volatility assets. Known for being a high beta, SOL has been hit more severely than many of its peers.
Within crypto markets, leverage has been steadily flushed out. Recent sessions have seen liquidity sweeps wipe out billions in long positions, accelerating declines. While Solana’s open interest has occasionally increased alongside negative funding rates, this has more often been due to aggressive short positioning rather than new bullish bets.
Sentiment has also been impacted by structural issues with the network. The number of validators has fallen by about 70% from its peak to less than 800, which raises concerns about the long-term viability of operations for smaller operators.
Discussions about inflation, value capture, and stake concentration have raised caution, especially as the sector’s memecoin-driven momentum waned.
Solana price technical analysis
On the chart, Solana continues to trade within a clearly defined bearish structure. Price was rejected near the Bollinger mid-band around $108, and the sequence of lower highs remains intact.

SOL is trading below both the 50-day and 100-day moving averages, which continue to slope downward. The $95–$100area has flipped into overhead supply after repeated failures, limiting recovery attempts.
Instead of a steady base, daily candles have remained near the lower Bollinger Band, indicating ongoing selling pressure.
Momentum indicators are still weak. The daily relative strength index is oversold but lacks a bullish divergence, sitting near 30. Prior dips to comparable RSI levels have produced brief recoveries, but buyers have struggled to sustain follow-through.
The $85 region is serving as short-term support and is in line with a previous demand pocket. A daily close below this level would expose the $80–$75 area next.
To ease downside pressure, Solana would need to reclaim the mid-band and hold above $100, supported by stronger volume, something the market has yet to deliver.
Crypto World
Here’s why the quantum threat for bitcoin may be smaller than people fear
A new report from digital asset manager CoinShares is pushing back on the growing narrative that bitcoin faces an imminent quantum computing crisis, arguing that only a small sliver of supply is realistically at risk in a way that could move markets.
CoinShares is fourth-largest manager of digital asset exchange-traded products globally behind BlackRock, Grayscale, and Fidelity and has a self-reported 34% market share of EMEA. It had over $10 billion in assets under management as of September 2025.
The Saturday report challenged widely cited estimates suggesting that as much as 20% to 50% of all bitcoin could eventually be vulnerable to quantum-enabled key extraction. Those figures, CoinShares said, blur the line between theoretical exposure and coins that could actually be compromised at scale.
CoinShares narrowed its focus to legacy Pay-to-Public-Key (P2PK) addresses, where public keys are permanently visible on-chain and therefore easier targets if quantum computers become capable of reversing them.
The firm estimates about 1.6 million BTC — or roughly 8% of total supply — sits in these older address types.
But CoinShares argued the number of coins large enough to create “appreciable market disruption” if stolen is far smaller: about 10,200 BTC. The remainder, it said, is distributed across more than 32,000 UTXOs averaging around 50 BTC each, making them far less attractive and far more time-consuming to crack even under optimistic assumptions.
The key point is that most of the potentially exposed bitcoin isn’t sitting in a handful of giant, juicy targets. It’s scattered across more than 32,000 separate chunks of coins, and each chunk averages about 50 BTC.
A quantum attacker would have to crack those chunks one by one to steal them, instead of breaking into a single address and walking away with a market-moving haul. That makes the job slower, noisier and less profitable, even if one assumes the attacker has unusually strong quantum hardware.
CoinShares said breaking bitcoin’s cryptography would require fault-tolerant quantum systems roughly 100,000 times more powerful than the largest machines today, placing the threat at least a decade away. Ledger CTO Charles Guillemet, quoted in the report, noted that Google’s Willow is a 105-qubit machine, while key-breaking would require millions of qubits.
Instead, the firm endorsed a gradual transition to post-quantum signatures, framing quantum risk not as an emergency, but as a foreseeable engineering problem bitcoin can absorb over time.
Quantum fears aren’t new for bitcoin, but they’ve been creeping back into market conversations as prices wobble and investors look for structural risks to blame.
In December, CoinDesk reported that most bitcoin developers view quantum computing as a distant, non-issue, arguing machines capable of cracking bitcoin’s cryptography are unlikely to exist for decades.
Critics counter that the real problem is not the timeline, but the lack of visible preparation, especially as governments and major tech firms begin rolling out quantum-resistant systems.
Proposals such as BIP-360 aim to introduce new wallet formats that could allow users to migrate gradually, but the debate has highlighted a growing gap between developers and increasingly institutional capital that wants a clearer long-term plan.
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