Crypto World
XRPL is quietly building institutional DeFi
While the market argues about XRP price levels, the ledger underneath it is assembling something more ambitious: a full stack of compliance-native DeFi rails aimed at banks, funds, and treasury desks. Here is what is already live, what is in validator voting right now, and why the whole bet could still fail.
Summary
- XRP Ledger is expanding its institutional DeFi infrastructure with compliance focused features including a permissioned DEX, native lending, and tokenized asset support.
- XRPL contributors are advancing XLS 65 and XLS 66 through validator voting to introduce fixed term lending designed for regulated financial institutions.
- Ripple’s RLUSD and more than $3 billion in tokenized real world assets are strengthening XRPL’s push to become a compliance ready blockchain for institutional finance.
The XRP Ledger has spent most of its fourteen-year life being described as a payments chain. Fast, cheap, boring. The description was accurate for a long time, and it also missed what has been happening on the ledger over the past eighteen months. Piece by piece, amendment by amendment, XRPL contributors and Ripple have been laying down infrastructure for something the rest of the industry mostly talks about in conference keynotes: DeFi that regulated institutions can actually use.
The phrase itself, institutional DeFi, tends to produce eye rolls among crypto natives. It sounds like a contradiction, a way of saying decentralized finance with the decentralization filed off. But the buildout on XRPL is concrete enough, and far enough along, that it deserves a serious look. As of this week, the two amendments that would bring native fixed-term lending to the ledger, XLS-65 and XLS-66, are in active validator voting following the Rippled v3.1.0 release in late January. Tokenized real-world assets on XRPL have passed $3 billion. Ripple’s stablecoin RLUSD crossed $1 billion in supply and ranks among the fastest-growing stablecoins in the market. A permissioned exchange layer with protocol-level compliance controls has gone live. None of this made much noise. That is partly the point.
The core bet: compliance at the protocol layer
Every major smart contract chain has tried to court institutions, and almost all of them have run into the same wall. Banks and asset managers cannot deploy client capital into open pools where the counterparty might be a sanctioned entity, a mixer, or a teenager with a hardware wallet. The standard industry answer has been to bolt compliance on afterward: whitelisted front ends, wrapped permissioned versions of open protocols, off-chain legal agreements draped over on-chain positions.
XRPL made the opposite bet. Instead of adding compliance on top, its contributors embedded identity and access controls into the protocol itself. Three primitives do most of the work.
Credentials, linked to decentralized identifiers, let trusted issuers attest on-chain that a wallet belongs to a KYC-verified entity, an accredited investor, or a firm with a specific regulatory permission. The attestation lives on the ledger. The underlying documents do not.
Permissioned Domains, which went live under the XLS-80 amendment with 91% validator support, use those credentials to gate access to specific markets. A domain can require that every participant holds a valid credential from an approved issuer. Anyone outside the domain simply cannot trade inside it.
The Permissioned DEX extends the ledger’s native order book exchange, which has existed since 2012, into these controlled environments. Regulated firms can run foreign exchange or tokenized asset markets with full AML and KYC enforcement while settlement still happens on a public blockchain. Activation followed within weeks of validator consensus earlier this year.
Alongside those three sit the supporting pieces: Multi-Purpose Tokens, a standard that embeds metadata and transfer rules at the asset layer so structured financial instruments do not need custom smart contracts; Batch Transactions for atomic delivery-versus-payment, the settlement pattern institutions use for cross-asset swaps; and Token Escrow support extended to IOUs and MPTs.
The design philosophy separates XRPL from nearly everything else in the market. On Ethereum or Solana, an institution wanting a compliant venue has to build one out of general-purpose parts and hope the auditors sign off. On XRPL, the compliance tooling is the venue.
The lending protocol is the real test
Infrastructure is necessary but not sufficient. The feature that will decide whether institutional DeFi on XRPL is a real business or a well-documented ghost town is the lending protocol, defined in the XLS-65 and XLS-66 specifications.
The two amendments work as a pair. XLS-65 introduces Single Asset Vaults, which aggregate liquidity from depositors and issue vault shares that can be transferable or locked depending on configuration. XLS-66 builds the actual credit machinery on top: fixed-term, fixed-rate loans with preset amortization schedules, issued through on-ledger contracts between lenders and borrowers.
The design choices are telling. Where open DeFi lending runs on overcollateralization and instant liquidations, the XRPL protocol supports uncollateralized loans with off-chain underwriting. Borrower evaluation, credit scoring, and risk management stay where institutions already have mature models, while issuance, repayment, and default records live on the ledger. First-loss capital structures add a protection layer familiar to anyone who has looked at securitization. Vault operators can restrict participation to KYC and AML compliant entities at the protocol level, which is precisely the feature that separates this from open DeFi.
Doppler Finance, a tokenized capital markets infrastructure firm, put the honest caveat on record this week: a protocol can define how lending activity is recorded and executed on-chain, but it cannot, by itself, create an institutional credit market. Underwriting, treasury management, portfolio monitoring, and regulatory oversight all need operational layers that no amendment can ship. XLS-66 provides the rails. Someone still has to run trains on them.
There is at least one committed passenger. Evernorth, one of the largest XRP treasury firms, has said it will make the lending protocol a core pillar of its digital asset strategy, describing it as a potential fundamental shift in how institutional liquidity moves on-chain and pointing to what it called a multi-billion-dollar annual yield opportunity for the XRP community. Treasury firms holding large XRP positions have an obvious incentive here: idle tokens earn nothing, and a native, compliance-gated lending market is the most direct way to change that.
The amendments are testable on devnet now, and developers can integrate against the lending stack ahead of mainnet activation. The open question is the validator vote. XRPL amendments require sustained support above the 80% threshold for two weeks before activation, and that process can stretch for months with no guarantee of passage. The framework is credible. The activation path is not automatic.
How amendments actually pass, and why it takes forever
Because so much of the XRPL story now hangs on validator votes, it is worth understanding the machinery, which differs from every other major chain’s governance.
XRPL has no token voting and no foundation decree. Protocol changes ship as amendments inside validator software releases, and each amendment activates only after more than 80% of trusted validators signal support continuously for two full weeks. Dip below the threshold for an hour and the clock resets. The validator set doing the voting is defined by Unique Node Lists, the curated rosters of validators that operators choose to trust, populated by exchanges, universities, infrastructure firms, and long-time community operators across jurisdictions.
The design makes XRPL upgrades slow, conservative, and hard to capture, three adjectives that read as insults on crypto Twitter and as compliments in a bank’s vendor-risk review. It also means every roadmap date in this article carries an implicit asterisk. Permissioned Domains cleared activation with 91% support, a comfortable margin. The lending amendments face a more complicated vote because they change the ledger’s risk surface in ways some conservative operators have historically resisted; earlier programmability proposals spent long stretches stuck below threshold while operators debated attack surface. The voting is live now following the v3.1.0 release, testable code is on devnet, and the realistic activation window stretches from weeks to quarters depending on how fast the holdouts move.
For traders, this creates a strange information asymmetry. Amendment support percentages are public, on-chain, and updated continuously, yet almost nobody prices them. Watching XLS-66 support climb toward 80% is about as close to a scheduled, verifiable catalyst as this market offers, and it sits in plain sight.
The competition is building the same thing with different parts
XRPL is not the only chain that noticed institutions want compliant rails, and an honest assessment has to place the ledger against the two ecosystems actually holding the money.
Ethereum remains the default venue for tokenized institutional product, full stop. BlackRock’s tokenized fund complex, Franklin Templeton’s on-chain money market operation, and the JPMorgan digital asset stack all touched Ethereum first, and the chain holds roughly 68% of global DeFi deposits along with about 70% of stablecoin supply. Its institutional DeFi answer is assembled from general-purpose parts: permissioned pool deployments of Aave, KYC-gated hooks on Uniswap V4, wrapper tokens with transfer restrictions, and off-chain agreements binding it together. The approach works, and its weakness is exactly what XRPL is betting on: every assembled solution is bespoke, every audit is novel, and the compliance burden lands on the builder instead of the protocol.
Solana has moved fastest recently. Token-2022 extensions gave issuers protocol-adjacent controls, transfer hooks, confidential amounts, and interest-bearing logic, and the Solana Developer Platform launched in March with Mastercard, Worldpay, and Western Union attached. Solana’s pitch is throughput plus tooling; its gap is that compliance remains a token-level option instead of a market-level guarantee, and its validator economics and outage history still appear in institutional risk memos even after the Firedancer-era reliability turnaround.
XRPL’s differentiation survives the comparison in one specific sense: it is the only major venue where identity, market access, and settlement controls are native ledger objects that no application can misconfigure. The cost of that purity is a smaller developer surface, a shallower liquidity base, and no general-purpose composability on mainnet. Institutions choosing between the three are effectively choosing which risk they prefer: Ethereum’s complexity, Solana’s history, or XRPL’s emptiness.
Three billion dollars of quiet traction
Skeptics can reasonably ask whether any of this is being used. The answer, increasingly, is yes, though the numbers remain small next to the giants.
Over $3 billion in tokenized real-world assets currently sit on XRPL, which places the ledger inside the top ten chains for RWA value. The most striking single data point came from a pilot earlier this year in which Ripple and JPMorgan processed a tokenized U.S. Treasury redemption in under five seconds, settling on XRPL what normally crawls through legacy market plumbing. The ledger also recorded its first month with more than $1 billion in stablecoin volume, and RLUSD passed the $1 billion supply mark while expanding into consortium settlement arrangements.
On the payments and FX side, XRP itself does structural work that most native assets do not. The ledger routes trades through XRP automatically whenever doing so improves pricing, a mechanism called autobridging. If there is no direct liquidity between two stablecoins or two tokenized currencies, the trade hops through XRP. The mechanism works inside the new permissioned environments as well as on the public DEX, though trades cannot bridge between the two. Every account reserve, every transaction fee, and a growing share of FX routing runs through the native asset, which ties institutional adoption of the ledger back to demand for the token in a way that is mechanical instead of narrative.
That linkage matters for anyone holding XRP, which trades near $1.08 at the time of writing after spending weeks pinned around the psychologically loaded $1.00 level. The token is still down more than 50% over twelve months, and the gap between infrastructure progress and price performance has become one of the more uncomfortable facts in the ecosystem. Readers who want the market-structure side of that story can find it in our coverage of why the broader market has been trading risk-off since the spring.
The gap XRPL still has to close
For all the compliance tooling, XRPL remains a shallow DeFi venue by the numbers that crypto natives actually check. Chain TVL sits far below rivals: Solana holds roughly $9 billion in DeFi deposits and BNB Chain about $6.5 billion, while XRPL’s locked value is a fraction of either. Deep liquidity attracts deep liquidity, and the ledger has not had it.
Part of the problem is technical, and it is being addressed with unusual candor. XRPL’s native automated market maker, live since 2024, launched with only a constant product curve at a time when roughly 60% of AMM volume across major ecosystems runs through concentrated liquidity designs. In late May, a draft amendment titled AMM Swappable Curves was filed on the XRPL standards repository, proposing three pluggable curve types: constant product, concentrated liquidity, and StableSwap, with a fully programmable Smart AMM reserved for a follow-up specification. Existing pools would stay untouched. If it passes, the ledger’s biggest capital-efficiency gap starts to close. If it stalls in the amendment process, XRPL keeps asking institutions to trade on 2024 infrastructure.
The other gap is programmability. XRPL mainnet deliberately avoids general-purpose smart contracts, which keeps the attack surface small and the behavior predictable, qualities institutions like, but it also means builders who need full flexibility have to go elsewhere. The ecosystem’s answer is a dual track: measured programmability on mainnet through Smart Escrows, which let developers write custom release conditions into the existing escrow primitive, and a live EVM sidechain bridged via Axelar for teams that want Solidity and full composability. Whether liquidity follows that split or gets fragmented by it remains an open question.
Privacy is the next frontier, and the strangest one
The roadmap item that best captures XRPL’s institutional positioning is also the one that sounds least like crypto: confidential transfers. Multi-Purpose Tokens are getting zero-knowledge-proof-based encryption of transaction amounts and balances, letting institutions move tokenized assets and manage positions without broadcasting their book to every competitor running a block explorer, while preserving selective disclosure for regulators and auditors.
Full transparency, it turns out, is a bug for professional money, not a feature. No trading desk wants its inventory legible in real time. The XRPL community has moved past exploration into prototyping ZKP integrations with research and compliance teams, with confidential MPT transfers slated as the first milestone. Privacy with accountability is the stated frame: encrypted by default, provable on demand.
Put the pieces in sequence and the shape of the strategy becomes clear. Identity first, through credentials. Access control second, through domains and the permissioned DEX. Assets third, through MPTs and tokenization. Credit fourth, through the lending protocol. Confidentiality fifth, through ZKPs. It reads less like a crypto roadmap and more like someone rebuilding the back office of a mid-sized bank, one amendment at a time.
The sidechain wildcard
One more piece complicates the tidy mainnet story: the XRPL EVM sidechain, live and bridged through Axelar, running on eXRP as gas. Its job is to catch the builders mainnet’s minimalism turns away, Solidity teams who want full composability with a route into XRPL liquidity and identity features. The dual-track design is defensible, mainnet stays lean while experimentation happens next door, but it imports the exact problem Ethereum has spent years managing: liquidity and users split across environments with a bridge in between, and bridges remain the industry’s most reliably exploited component. If institutional flows land on mainnet while DeFi innovation concentrates on the sidechain, XRPL ends up running two half-ecosystems instead of one whole one. The optimists’ version is that the sidechain functions as a proving ground, with successful patterns graduating into mainnet amendments the way ZKP research moved from prototype toward the confidential transfer roadmap alongside partners such as Hidden Road, the prime broker Ripple acquired to give institutional clients a familiar front door. Which version plays out is a 2027 question; the split exists today.
RLUSD is the demand engine hiding in plain sight
If the lending protocol is the supply side of XRPL’s institutional buildout, the stablecoin is the demand side, and it deserves more attention than it usually gets.
RLUSD launched under a New York trust charter, which put it in the small club of stablecoins that compliance departments can approve without a fight, and its growth since has outpaced nearly every peer on a percentage basis: past $1 billion in supply, expanding into multi-issuer consortium arrangements, and increasingly the settlement leg in XRPL’s FX corridors. The strategic logic is circular by design. Stablecoin corridors generate ledger volume, ledger volume generates XRP fee burn and autobridge demand, and a trusted on-ledger dollar makes every other institutional product viable, because tokenized Treasuries need something to trade against and vaults need a funding currency.
The lending protocol makes the loop explicit. The first wave of XLS-66 vaults is widely expected to be RLUSD-funded, with institutional borrowers taking fixed-term dollar credit against off-chain underwriting. If that market reaches even single-digit billions, XRPL hosts a native short-term credit curve denominated in a regulated stablecoin, which is the kind of boring financial primitive that payments desks, market makers, and treasury managers actually budget for. Whether regulated entities deploy capital into RLUSD-funded vaults at scale is, in one sentence, the whole question the next two quarters will answer.
The watchlist for the next two quarters
For readers who want to track the buildout instead of the discourse, the roadmap compresses to a short list of verifiable checkpoints.
• XLS-65 and XLS-66 validator support crossing and holding the 80% threshold, the single highest-signal event on the board.
• Confidential MPT transfers shipping in the stated first-quarter window, XRPL’s first production zero-knowledge feature.
• Permissioned DEX volume and domain creation after activation, the difference between compliance theater and used infrastructure.
• MPT integration with the native DEX, scheduled alongside Smart Escrows, which lets tokenized instruments trade against XRP and IOUs directly.
• The AMM Swappable Curves amendment advancing from draft to vote, closing the concentrated liquidity gap.
• Follow-through from Evernorth and any second public institutional commitment to the lending protocol, because one anchor tenant is a pilot and two is a market.
Each item is public, dated, and falsifiable, which is more than can be said for most crypto roadmaps.
What could still go wrong
The bear case does not require much imagination, because pieces of it are already visible.
• Validator activation risk is real and immediate. XLS-65 and XLS-66 need sustained supermajority support, and amendment votes have stalled before. Every month of delay is a month rival chains spend courting the same institutions.
• Infrastructure is not demand. XRPL has built the rails ahead of proven appetite, and outside Evernorth’s stated intent, no regulated lender has committed capital publicly. The chain could end up with the best-documented empty credit market in crypto.
• The competition is not standing still. Ethereum remains the default for tokenized funds from BlackRock and Franklin Templeton, and Solana launched a developer platform this spring with Mastercard, Worldpay, and Western Union as early adopters. XRPL’s compliance-native design is a differentiator, not a moat.
• Regulatory frameworks cut both ways. The same clarity that lets institutions touch permissioned DeFi also lets them demand terms, and there is no assurance the economics of on-ledger credit will beat what prime brokers already offer off-chain.
There is also a subtler risk: that permissioned DeFi succeeds and simply fails to matter for XRP. If activity concentrates in gated domains trading tokenized Treasuries against RLUSD, the native asset’s role could shrink to fees and reserves, a payments-era footprint under an institutional-era ledger. Autobridging and escrow denominated in XRP push against that outcome, but the tension is real and worth watching in the data rather than the marketing.
A ledger playing a long game
Step back far enough and the XRPL story inverts the usual crypto sequence. Most chains launch permissionless, attract speculation, and then spend years retrofitting the controls institutions require. XRPL is running the film backward: build the controls first, accept years of looking sleepy next to memecoin casinos, and wait for the moment when regulated capital decides it finally wants on-chain settlement, credit, and FX.
That moment may be closer than the price chart suggests. Tokenization has become the fastest-growing corner of the industry, stablecoin legislation has unlocked bank participation across several jurisdictions, and the first generation of tokenized funds is now large enough to need somewhere to borrow, lend, and hedge. The chains that win that flow will be the ones where a compliance officer can sign off without a novel-length risk memo.
Whether XRPL becomes one of them comes down to two things it does not fully control: an 80% validator threshold, and the willingness of institutions to move from pilots to production. The infrastructure argument has been made, and made well. The adoption argument is still being written, one vault and one loan at a time. For a network that has been declared irrelevant more times than any other top-ten asset, quietly shipping the plumbing while nobody watches might be the most on-brand strategy available.
For readers newer to the mechanics referenced here, our explainers on Ripple Prime and institutional brokerage, consortium stablecoins, and the earlier lending and escrow roadmap cover the building blocks in more depth.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Digital asset markets are volatile and you can lose your entire investment. Always do your own research. Information current as of July 3, 2026.
Crypto World
ESMA Warns Prediction Market Event Contracts May Breach EU Retail Ban
Europe’s financial watchdog is warning that many prediction market “event contracts” may already be subject to existing binary options rules, regardless of how they are described or marketed. The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) says companies cannot sidestep retail investor protections simply by rebranding certain derivatives-like payouts as “event contracts.”
At the same time, the United States is witnessing its own escalation: state gaming regulators and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) are fighting over whether prediction markets should be treated as gambling or federally regulated derivatives. Together, the two stories underline a central fault line for the sector—what matters legally is the contract’s structure, not its branding.
Key takeaways
- ESMA says event contracts can fall under binary options restrictions based on their characteristics, especially binary outcomes and fixed payouts.
- Even if retail investors are excluded, ESMA warns that offering qualifying event contracts to professional or institutional clients may still require MiFID II authorization.
- ESMA notes the reminder is not new regulation, but a response to increased offerings as prediction markets grow.
- In the U.S., state actions against platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket continue alongside the CFTC’s position that it has “exclusive jurisdiction” over event contracts.
- Litigation in multiple jurisdictions has intensified speculation that the dispute could eventually reach the U.S. Supreme Court.
ESMA’s reminder: “event contracts” can still be binary options
In a public statement released on Friday, ESMA reminded firms that contracts meeting the definition of financial instruments are already prohibited from being marketed, distributed, or sold to retail investors under national measures implementing ESMA’s 2018 binary options restrictions.
The regulator emphasized that the legal assessment hinges on the contract’s features rather than on marketing language. In particular, ESMA highlighted that event contracts with binary outcomes and fixed payouts are likely to qualify as financial instruments subject to the restrictions.
ESMA also focused on authorization requirements for firms selling into more sophisticated client categories. According to the statement, providing qualifying event contracts to professional or institutional clients still requires authorization under MiFID II, even if retail investors are not directly targeted.
ESMA framed its intervention as enforcement clarity rather than policy change. The regulator said it issued the reminder after observing more event contract offerings and rapid growth in prediction markets, noting that qualifying binary options have been under national restrictions across the EU since 2018.
For readers and market participants, the key implication is that the industry’s current naming conventions may not provide regulatory shelter. ESMA’s approach suggests that product designers and legal teams must evaluate payout mechanics and outcome structures early—before launching—because regulators may treat certain prediction constructs as financial instruments from the outset.
ESMA’s public statement on the application of national binary options measures to event contracts
What ESMA’s approach could mean for European platforms
While ESMA did not claim to introduce new restrictions, the message still carries practical consequences for platforms operating in or distributing into EU markets. ESMA’s insistence on contract-based assessment—binary outcomes and fixed payouts—creates a straightforward but unforgiving compliance test for many prediction-market formats.
In practice, this means firms may face pressure to restructure offerings that resemble fixed-payoff binary options. Alternatively, companies may need to ensure they remain within the boundaries of allowed products and client categories, including meeting MiFID II authorization requirements where applicable.
ESMA also appears to be pushing back against a common industry tactic: presenting payouts as “event-based” rather than as option-like financial instruments. The regulator’s reminder suggests that, from an enforcement standpoint, the distinction may not hold when the economic effect is functionally similar to a prohibited binary option for retail clients.
Builders and investors watching the space should treat ESMA’s statement as a signal about regulatory risk management. In a sector that often iterates quickly, compliance reviews that focus on contract architecture—not UI wording or product naming—may become a gating factor for expansion into regulated markets.
Meanwhile in the U.S., states and the CFTC keep clashing
Across the Atlantic, prediction markets are caught in a jurisdictional fight. The conflict pits state gaming regulators against the CFTC over whether event contracts should be treated as gambling under state law or as federally regulated derivatives under the CFTC’s oversight.
By March, action had already been taken by authorities in 11 states against platforms including Kalshi and Polymarket. Nevada became the first state to temporarily block Kalshi’s operations, while Arizona brought criminal charges alleging the company was running an illegal gambling business.
The following month, the CFTC argued for “exclusive jurisdiction” over prediction markets, saying Congress entrusted the agency with sole authority to regulate commodity derivatives markets, including event contracts. The agency also said it sued several states and filed court briefs supporting platforms such as Kalshi.
The litigation has continued to escalate. On June 30, a Massachusetts judge allowed state authorities to file an amended complaint against Kalshi in an ongoing case alleging the company’s sports-event contracts constitute illegal gambling under state law.
These battles have also driven calls for congressional clarification. Last month, the Indian Gaming Association and the American Gaming Association—joined by tribal and labor groups—urged lawmakers to amend the CLARITY Act to explicitly prohibit sports-related event contracts on prediction market platforms, arguing these products should fall outside the CFTC’s authority and remain governed by state gambling laws.
Legal experts cited in earlier coverage believe the deepening disagreement between federal and state regulators could ultimately be resolved by the U.S. Supreme Court.
CFTC press release asserting its authority over prediction markets
Why both regions are converging on the same legal question
Despite differing regulatory frameworks, the EU and U.S. stories share a similar center of gravity: regulators are focusing on how event contracts work economically, not on the label operators choose. In Europe, ESMA points to binary outcomes and fixed payouts as key triggers for binary options treatment. In the U.S., the dispute turns on whether event contracts are properly categorized as gambling or as derivatives subject to federal oversight.
For operators, the stakes are immediate. In Europe, ESMA’s reminder highlights that retail-facing marketing can quickly trigger product intervention rules, while institutional sales may still require MiFID II authorization depending on contract characteristics. In the U.S., state enforcement and federal claims of exclusive jurisdiction have pushed prediction market firms into a patchwork of legal outcomes.
The practical takeaway for market participants is to treat legal categorization as product design input. The compliance and litigation burden can increase sharply when a platform’s core contract mechanics resemble the category regulators are already prepared to police.
As ESMA’s guidance circulates and U.S. court battles continue—possibly moving toward higher-level review—watch for two things: whether prediction platforms adjust contract structures to better fit regulatory definitions in the EU, and whether the U.S. dispute narrows around a definitive jurisdictional ruling rather than expanding across states and claims.
Crypto World
BlockDAG Disrupts the Market With a 100% World Cup Bonus, While XRP & Ethereum Steady Their Horizons
The crypto market is moving through a pivotal period of evolution. Long-term trends surrounding the XRP price prediction and the Ethereum price forecast 2030 continue to guide investor expectations. These projections rely heavily on Ripple’s utility in cross-border financial networks and Ethereum’s reigning dominance over smart contracts and Web3 systems. While both established assets serve as reliable benchmarks for digital currency growth, market participants are intentionally shifting their focus toward early-stage networks that offer significantly higher upside potential.
BlockDAG (BDAG) is rapidly dominating these discussions. It has solidly positioned itself in the best crypto to buy debate by launching a massive 100% World Cup Bonus. This strategic move allows participants to enter at just $0.00000066 per coin while securing up to 100% in extra tokens to maximize their accumulation power. This market momentum is growing even stronger following the launch of BlockDAG’s AI Large Language Model (LLM), an expansion that marks a giant leap forward for ecosystem intelligence, scalability, and network adoption.
Adoption Trends Drive Long-Term XRP Price Predictions
Ripple’s expanding role in cross-border payments and international financial systems heavily dictates the current XRP price prediction narrative. Engineers designed XRP specifically to settle fast, low-cost international transactions in just a few seconds. This high-speed utility makes it an incredibly relevant asset for global remittance and institutional payment corridors.
Because of these variables, long-term market projections for XRP vary significantly. Conservative analysts suggest that moderate real-world adoption will likely place the asset’s long-term valuation somewhere between $1 and $5.
On the other hand, more optimistic outlooks push the XRP price prediction up to $10 or even higher. Achieving these higher price levels depends heavily on clearer global regulatory frameworks and deeper integration into institutional banking systems. Ultimately, the long-term future of XRP remains tied to liquidity demands and practical banking adoption.
Ethereum Price Forecast 2030 Reflects Network Evolution
The Ethereum price forecast 2030 depends entirely on the network’s established role as the world’s leading smart contract platform. It serves as the primary backbone for decentralized finance (DeFi), NFTs, and decentralized applications (dApps). Because its ecosystem hosts the majority of decentralized protocols, Ethereum benefits from continuous network activity and high developer engagement.
Long-term valuation models show that the Ethereum price forecast 2030 sits comfortably between $8,000 and $20,000. Reaching these targets requires steady institutional participation, rising global adoption, and successful network upgrades.
These ongoing technical upgrades are designed to increase transaction throughput and lower gas fees during peak congestion periods. As blockchain technology integrates into mainstream industries, Ethereum’s capability to maintain a reliable, scalable infrastructure will dictate its long-term financial position.
BlockDAG’s World Cup Bonus Boosts Token Accumulation Power
BlockDAG is capturing widespread attention as it rolls out advanced features and expanding utility. This rapid growth strengthens its reputation as the best crypto to buy for individuals targeting early network momentum. The primary catalyst driving this market interest is the limited-time 100% World Cup Bonus. This promotional structure dramatically boosts coin accumulation by granting buyers an extra 50% to 100% in BDAG tokens, successfully doubling their initial positions at activation.
With a current entry price of $0.00000066 and an anticipated buyback benchmark set at $0.03, BlockDAG presents a wide valuation gap. This difference underscores the substantial upside potential available as the ecosystem matures and market demand scales upward.
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Key Insights
The crypto landscape continues to adjust around the utility-driven XRP price prediction and the institutional Ethereum price forecast 2030. XRP maintains its focus on cross-border payment efficiency, while Ethereum relies on its massive smart contract ecosystem. Both legacy assets move within long-term adoption cycles that depend heavily on regulatory progress and institutional capital.
However, market capital is flowing toward newer ecosystems that offer faster development cycles and powerful near-term catalysts. BlockDAG is leading this shift with its 100% World Cup Bonus, offering an entry reference of $0.00000066 paired with a $0.03 buyback framework. Supported by an expanding AI LLM and rapid ecosystem development, BlockDAG is solidifying its place as the best crypto to buy for those seeking maximum upside.
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Disclaimer: This is a Press Release provided by a third party who is responsible for the content. Please conduct your own research before taking any action based on the content.
Crypto World
Bitcoin Supply Metric Gives First Buy Signal Since Late 2022
Bitcoin has printed another set of on-chain “bear-market bottom” signals this month, with analysts pointing to a metric last seen near the bottom of the previous cycle in November 2022. The update centers on how much of the BTC supply is moving in profit versus loss—an approach often used to gauge whether sellers are being exhausted.
In a Friday analysis, crypto analyst Axel Adler Jr., a contributor to on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant, said the Advanced Net UTXO Supply Ratio has returned to its earlier buy-trigger behavior for the first time in nearly four years. While the model’s signal is bullish in the short-term, Adler emphasized that it does not automatically confirm a macro bottom, and that key “supply in loss” conditions still need to evolve.
Key takeaways
- Advanced Net UTXO Supply Ratio has crossed back above its buy threshold after spending time in deeply negative territory, printing buy signals in late June and early July.
- The model’s last comparable “buy trigger” appeared in November 2022, widely viewed as a bottoming period for the prior bear market.
- Confirmation would require the ratio to hold above zero alongside rising price; a return to negative territory without price support would weaken the case.
- Analysts say seller exhaustion alone isn’t enough—demand must follow to turn bottoming signals into a durable recovery.
A profit-and-loss metric returns to “buy trigger” territory
Adler’s Friday post ties Bitcoin’s current positioning to the Advanced Net UTXO Supply Ratio, which tracks the proportion of Bitcoin held in UTXOs (unspent transaction outputs) that last moved in profit versus loss. According to Adler, the ratio dropped into deeply negative territory and then recovered above the model’s signal level during a rebound, causing the framework to issue buy calls across “several sessions” in late June and early July.
Crucially, Adler framed this as a notable similarity to the end stages of the prior bear cycle, writing that it is the first buy trigger since November 2022, when analysts previously identified a bottom. That makes this more than a random dip-and-rebound—at least within the parameters of the CryptoQuant model—because the prior buy signal occurred near a cyclical low.
Adler also stressed that UTXO-based supply ratio cues are typically observed “near cyclical lows,” not necessarily as proof that a full macro bottom has already been reached. In other words, the signal may indicate conditions approaching a turning point, but it still requires additional confirmation from price behavior and from how much BTC remains locked in loss.
Why the signal isn’t a full “bottom confirmed” yet
The core of Adler’s caution is that the Advanced Net UTXO Supply Ratio is only one leg of the bottoming picture. He pointed to a specific confirmation condition: the ratio should hold above zero while price rises. In contrast, he described a negative scenario where the ratio slips back into negative territory without supportive price action—an outcome that would suggest the market has not yet cleared enough selling pressure.
Adler further argued that one “missing piece” is the degree to which supply is still being held at a loss. He noted that current levels have not yet reached the extremes seen during earlier bear markets, implying that while selling pressure may be easing, it may not have fully run its course.
He also offered a timing-oriented expectation based on another on-chain measure: Adler forecast that the 90-day simple moving average (SMA) of supply in loss should reach the model’s bear-market reversal target within two months. Until that happens, Adler suggested it is more accurate to view capitulation as a process rather than a completed event.
Other analysts flag “exhaustion,” but demand is still required
Adler’s view aligns with a broader theme in on-chain analysis: many metrics can point to seller exhaustion, but recovery usually depends on whether demand renews strongly enough to absorb remaining supply.
Another CryptoQuant contributor, Darkfost, also discussed potential inflection signals this week through the UTXO Supply framework. In a Wednesday Quicktake post, Darkfost noted that because the metric depends on the profit and loss state of UTXOs, it can signal during either rapid sell-offs or rapid price increases. Still, he said that on cyclicality, it would not be inconsistent to think that the end of this bear market could be approaching.
Darkfost’s key message was that the UTXO supply dynamics do not guarantee an immediate reversal. As he put it, the signals “won’t stop BTC from going lower,” but the market now has “several signals pointing to seller exhaustion.” He then identified the next step as a renewal of demand, warning that this phase could take time.
This distinction matters for investors and traders because it helps set expectations: a buy-trigger on a profit-and-loss ratio can indicate improving conditions, but it does not remove volatility risk if price continues to undercut support or if demand fails to materialize.
What to watch as the market tests for a floor
The immediate question for Bitcoin bulls is whether the on-chain signals translate into sustained market support. Adler’s framework makes that practical: readers should watch whether the Advanced Net UTXO Supply Ratio can maintain itself above zero and whether that improvement coincides with rising price, rather than quickly reverting to negative territory.
Equally important is progress on the “supply in loss” condition. Adler’s expectation that the 90-day SMA of supply in loss could reach a reversal target within about two months suggests that the market may need additional time for losses to wash out more completely—meaning this cycle’s bottoming could remain uneven rather than instantaneous.
Finally, while some market narratives anticipate a bear-market bottom forming later in the year, earlier coverage cited in the discussion pointed to expectations that favor a bottom in Q3 or later. With on-chain exhaustion signals emerging now, the next phase hinges on whether demand can catch up—turning a sell-pressure easing into a durable recovery.
For now, the most actionable takeaway is to monitor whether the current “buy trigger” behavior can persist and whether supply held at a loss continues to trend toward reversal conditions—because that combination is what analysts say would strengthen the case that a true cyclical transition is underway.
Crypto World
Bitcoin Rallies to $62.3K as Global Stocks Hit Record High
Bitcoin extended its advance into the US holiday weekend, setting fresh July highs as buyers pressed through a key technical level near the 200-week moving average. The move also played out alongside strength in global equities, as expectations for Federal Reserve action appeared to soften after weaker US jobs data.
On TradingView, BTC/USD reached $62,295 on Bitstamp—its highest level since June 24—highlighting renewed focus on whether the latest breakout can be sustained through the next weekly close.
Key takeaways
- Bitcoin pushed to $62,295 on Bitstamp, marking a fresh July high and the strongest print since June 24.
- Traders are watching the 200-week simple moving average, cited around $62,652, as a pivotal level for weekly structure.
- Price action is approaching a broader “strong resistance area” near $62,000–$62,500.
- Weak US nonfarm payrolls helped lift risk assets, while CME Group’s FedWatch tool pointed to roughly even odds of a September pause versus a hike.
BTC tests a major technical line near the 200-week SMA
The latest rally has brought Bitcoin back to levels closely tracked by chart analysts. According to TradingView data referenced by market observers, BTC/USD hit $62,295 on Bitstamp, extending gains during the Independence Day holiday period when US markets were closed.
For many traders, the near-term question is not simply whether Bitcoin can trade higher, but whether it can hold its momentum around the 200-week moving average. One commonly cited reference point comes from Daan Crypto Trades, who highlighted that the 200-week simple moving average is currently around $62,652, and that it may be important for the weekly candle close.
“It is key for BTC now to hold this breakout and maintain its low timeframe bullish market structure,” Daan Crypto Trades said, calling the current trading zone “important.”
Separately, Exitpump pointed to a zone rather than a single number, warning followers to keep an eye on $62,000–$62,500 as a “strong resistance area.” The implication for traders is that a move into this band could trigger either consolidation or renewed bids—depending on how Bitcoin reacts as the chart approaches the 200-week line.
The current dynamic also fits the way some traders describe order flow during breakouts. Exitpump referenced “controlled slow buying” on exchanges, suggesting demand is present but not necessarily in a single aggressive surge. If that pattern continues, it may support the idea of gradual progress; if it stops, resistance in the same region could slow the move.
Risk-on tone as equities hit new records
Bitcoin’s strength has coincided with a broadly constructive macro backdrop. With US markets closed for the Independence Day holiday, global equities were still moving higher; the Dow Jones closed at record highs the previous day, and a report cited by The Kobeissi Letter described global market capitalization reaching all-time highs as well.
In a post on X, The Kobeissi Letter wrote: “Global equities are in the midst of one of the most powerful rallies in history.” That kind of parallel move matters for crypto traders because it can influence how investors position across risk assets, especially when interest-rate expectations are in flux.
While Bitcoin is not a direct proxy for stocks, the correlation often becomes more visible when markets treat macro news as broadly supportive for risk appetite. In that setting, technical levels can attract attention faster—particularly when liquidity and sentiment align.
Fed rate pressure eases as jobs data cools expectations
Beyond the charts, the macro driver most directly referenced in the coverage is the impact of recent US labor market data. Earlier coverage linked Bitcoin’s rebound to weak nonfarm payrolls figures, and Mosaic Asset Company argued that the “knee-jerk” response from investors was to lift stock index futures—signaling a regime where weaker economic news supports risk assets by easing rate outlook concerns.
For crypto, the direction of Federal Reserve policy expectations remains one of the key variables. Rate hikes can weigh on liquidity and risk appetite, while expectations of a pause—or slower tightening—tend to improve the backdrop for speculative assets.
To quantify that shifting expectation, CME Group’s FedWatch Tool showed roughly equal odds of a pause or hike at the Fed’s September meeting. The tool also indicated that rates are expected to remain at current levels until that point, leaving September as the next major event for traders to anchor their positioning.
Mosaic’s analysis characterized the payrolls release as closer to a “Goldilocks” outcome—neither weak enough to intensify recession fears nor strong enough to accelerate expectations for additional rate hikes. The central takeaway is that the jobs data may not have changed the overall direction of the policy debate, but it has helped reduce the urgency of the most hawkish interpretation.
That balance can be important for Bitcoin because it supports a middle ground: neither a sharp risk-off shock nor a fully risk-on blowout. Instead, it can create the conditions for measured advances toward technical targets—exactly the type of behavior traders described when they discussed gradual buying and respect for nearby resistance.
What to watch next around the resistance band
Bitcoin is currently pressing into a region traders describe as both a resistance zone and a potential pivot tied to the 200-week moving average. The next meaningful signals will likely come from whether BTC can hold above the $62,000–$62,500 area and, crucially, how it behaves as the weekly candle approaches the 200-week SMA near $62,652.
With the FedWatch probabilities pointing to an evenly split September outcome, markets may remain sensitive to fresh US data releases and incremental shifts in rate expectations—so traders should monitor both technical follow-through and any new developments that could tilt the rate outlook back toward hikes or further toward a pause.
Crypto World
Donald Trump Says ‘Nothing Wrong’ with $1.4B Crypto Windfall While in Office
US President Donald Trump has responded to criticism of his 2025 financial disclosures, showing that he earned $1.4 billion in income from crypto-related ventures while in office.
In a Thursday interview with CNBC’s Joe Kernen, Trump said that there was “nothing illegal” and “nothing wrong” with profiting from his crypto investments as president. He claimed that other people were responsible for his investments and he didn’t “even know who they are,” not directly answering questions about perceived conflicts of interest as president.

Donald Trump (left) and Joe Kernen (right). Source: CNBC
Trump’s comments followed the release of his 2025 financial disclosure report by the US Office of Government Ethics, showing that he took in more than $2 billion from his businesses and investments, about $1.4 billion of which was connected to crypto projects like his memecoin and family’s platform World Liberty Financial. Many advocacy organizations have characterized the investments as a “grift” allowing the president to influence related legislation like the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act.
Following his first term as US president, Trump called Bitcoin (BTC) a “scam.” However, in the lead-up to the 2024 election, he began cozying up to many high-profile figures in the crypto industry, including Gemini co-founders Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss and executives at mining companies and exchanges. He has since launched his own memecoin, Official Trump (TRUMP), in addition to his family’s involvement in World Liberty and American Bitcoin.
Related: Donald Trump has 10 days to decide on housing bill with CBDC ban
Of the $1.4 billion tied to crypto, Trump disclosed that his memecoin generated about $636 million, World Liberty sales about $588 million and $197 million from equity in a stablecoin venture.
“Donald is once again pushing the envelope and nobody, nobody is putting the brakes on it,” Mary Trump, the president’s niece, said in a Friday interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper. “At the end of the day, because of his abuse of the presidential pardon power, a lot of people are likely to get away with a lot of financial crimes that have done real harm to people that have invested in Donald’s businesses because they believed in him and what he was selling.”
Crypto industry bets big on 2026 US elections
After digital asset companies spent a reported $170 million toward supporting whom they considered “pro-crypto” candidates to Congress in 2024, political action committees (PACs) and organizations appear to have adopted the same playbook for 2026.
According to the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen, companies and figures tied to the crypto industry had contributed $189 million toward this year’s election cycle as of June. The contributions made up the bulk of the $294 million from the crypto, AI, Big Tech and online betting companies spent so far to support or oppose politicians.
Trump’s term ends in January 2029, but all 435 seats in the US House of Representatives and 35 in the Senate are up for grabs in the 2026 races.
Magazine: Bitcoin slides to $58K, XRP hits $1 but onchain data promising: Market Moves
Crypto World
Spotify demands Kalshi remove its logo after streaming market scandal
Spotify has demanded that Kalshi remove its logo from the prediction market platform after manipulated streams influenced the settlement of a Spotify-based betting market.
Summary
- Spotify has asked Kalshi and Polymarket to remove its logo after a manipulated streaming-based prediction market.
- More than 500,000 fake Spotify streams reportedly influenced a Kalshi market tied to Malcolm Todd’s song.
- The dispute comes as the CFTC investigates Polymarket and seeks new rules for prediction markets.
According to a Bloomberg report, Spotify has asked both Kalshi and Polymarket to remove its branding from their platforms and make clear that neither company has any partnership with the music streaming service. The request follows the discovery of manipulated streaming activity that affected a prediction market tied to Spotify’s monthly U.S. music charts.
Spotify reportedly detected and removed more than 500,000 artificial streams that pushed Malcolm Todd’s song Earrings into the platform’s most-streamed tracks in the United States for the month. Kalshi had already settled a market based on which song would finish as Spotify’s most-streamed U.S. track during that period, making the manipulated streams directly relevant to the outcome.
Regulatory scrutiny has intensified around prediction markets
At the same time, prediction market operators are facing increasing attention from U.S. regulators. As crypto.news reported earlier, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has opened an investigation into Polymarket that extends across several parts of its business, including its social media operations.
The investigation follows a Wall Street Journal report alleging that Polymarket hired dozens of mostly college-aged content creators to publish staged trading videos intended to attract new users. Bloomberg subsequently reported that the CFTC’s inquiry is not limited to those marketing practices and covers additional aspects of the platform’s operations.
Separately, state regulators have continued challenging prediction market platforms, arguing that some contracts function as unlicensed sports betting products. Meanwhile, the CFTC has filed lawsuits against several states while asserting that it has exclusive authority to regulate federally supervised prediction markets.
The regulator is also seeking public feedback on proposed rules for prediction markets that address concerns over insider trading and market manipulation. According to the CFTC, comments on the proposal will be accepted through July 31.
Kalshi settlement has drawn criticism from a top trader
Criticism of Kalshi’s handling of the Spotify market has also come from within its own trading community. Caleb Davies, a trader who estimates he has earned more than $1 million on the platform, accused Kalshi of settling the market despite repeated warnings that Malcolm Todd’s sudden rise in Spotify rankings warranted further investigation.
In a public statement, Davies alleged that Kalshi was aware of suspicious trading conditions while continuing to offer liquidity rewards tied to one of the affected contracts. He questioned whether the platform prioritized collecting trading fees over addressing potential market manipulation.
Spotify’s request also extends to Polymarket because it lists similar prediction markets based on Spotify streaming performance. According to Bloomberg, the company wants both platforms to stop displaying its logo and clarify that they are not affiliated with Spotify, as markets linked to streaming rankings could encourage participants to artificially inflate song plays in an attempt to profit from prediction contracts.
The dispute adds another layer of pressure on prediction market operators as regulators examine how these markets are run and whether incentives tied to real-world events can create opportunities for manipulation.
Crypto World
Bitcoin Maximalism Faces Capital Market Realities, Crypto Biz Notes
Strategy’s corporate approach to Bitcoin is evolving in a way that signals the industry’s broader shift from ideology to balance-sheet realism. This week, the company authorized up to $1.25 billion in Bitcoin sales under a new capital framework—explicitly designed to support dividends, strengthen cash reserves, and fund buybacks while keeping its long-term commitment to Bitcoin.
At the same time, the rest of crypto business news points to a more pragmatic era: stablecoin issuers are racing to capture reserve-driven yield, Fidelity is disputing the idea that Bitcoin’s security will deteriorate as halvings reduce rewards, and political spending by crypto firms is climbing ahead of the 2026 US midterm elections.
Key takeaways
- Strategy authorized up to $1.25 billion in Bitcoin sales to fund shareholder dividends, cash reserves, and buybacks—despite years of “never sell” messaging.
- The company outlined a formal Bitcoin monetization program under its “Digital Credit Capital Framework,” alongside additional capital return measures.
- Open USD (OUSD) is positioning as a yield-enabled dollar stablecoin, backed by payments and crypto firms, in an effort to challenge USDT and USDC.
- Fidelity argues Bitcoin’s security economics extend beyond block subsidies, citing rising miner revenue from fees and market incentives.
- Public Citizen reports $189 million in crypto-related spending for 2026 elections, with major PACs again driving influence.
Strategy’s “never sell” era meets capital allocation reality
Strategy disclosed that it has authorized up to $1.25 billion in Bitcoin sales under a new capital framework called the “Digital Credit Capital Framework.” The stated objective is to preserve Strategy’s long-term Bitcoin exposure while creating a structured path to monetize Bitcoin to support shareholder payments and corporate liquidity.
The framework increases the annual dividend on Strategy’s STRC preferred stock from 11.5% to 12% and sets out additional capital return mechanisms. Strategy also said its dedicated cash reserve has reached $2.55 billion, which management described as sufficient to cover roughly 17 months of preferred dividends and interest obligations.
Just as importantly, the authorization marks a change in how Strategy talks about Bitcoin. According to earlier reporting by Cointelegraph, the company had already disclosed its first-ever Bitcoin sale of 32 BTC in June. With this new framework, monetization is no longer an isolated event—it is now formalized as a program.
Strategy also indicated it did not purchase additional Bitcoin last week, leaving its holdings unchanged at 847,363 BTC. That detail matters because it underscores the logic behind the new approach: the company is trying to balance continued accumulation with practical liquidity management rather than relying solely on uninterrupted buy-and-hold behavior.
A new stablecoin backed by major payments firms targets “reserve yield”
While corporate Bitcoin holders reassess capital flexibility, stablecoin innovation is pushing in the opposite direction—toward feature competition. More than 140 financial and crypto companies have come together to launch a new US dollar-backed stablecoin designed to allow participants to retain yield generated by its reserves.
The project, Open USD (OUSD), is supported by large payments players including Visa and Mastercard, alongside crypto and trading ecosystem firms such as Coinbase, Ripple, OKX, and Bybit. Its positioning is straightforward: unlike many traditional stablecoin models that route reserve earnings to the issuer, OUSD aims to route those reserve earnings to token holders or businesses, according to the project’s supporters.
Open USD’s design also includes operational choices that proponents say could help it compete for market share. The initiative plans to let businesses mint tokens without fees or volume limits while keeping reserve earnings. Backers frame the offer as a direct alternative to incumbents, referencing Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC as competitors.
Timing and regulation are part of the pitch. Cointelegraph reported that the launch comes as US policy has moved toward a more favorable stance after the passage of the GENIUS Act. According to the reporting, Open Standard intends to roll out OUSD later this year, entering a market analysts expect to keep expanding, with the article noting the sector is already worth more than $300 billion.
Fidelity challenges the claim that halvings erode Bitcoin security
One of Bitcoin’s most persistent debates—especially after each halving—is whether lower block subsidies will eventually undermine miners’ incentive to secure the network. Fidelity Digital Assets is pushing back against the notion that Bitcoin’s long-term security is threatened by reward reductions.
In a research report, Fidelity argued that Bitcoin’s economic model extends beyond block subsidies. The central claim is that the network’s security incentives can be maintained through rising transaction fees, broader market incentives, and Bitcoin’s own price appreciation.
Cointelegraph’s summary of Fidelity’s analysis cites research analyst Daniel Gray, who points to miner revenue growth over time. The report’s figures, as quoted in the coverage, show average daily miner revenue increasing from $1.3 million during 2012–2016 to $40.2 million today. The implication is that while subsidies shrink mechanically, the overall economic picture for miners can improve through other revenue streams.
The timing also matters for the real-world mining industry. As halvings reduce block rewards, publicly traded mining firms have faced renewed pressure. Cointelegraph noted that many miners are seeking diversification—such as expanding into AI and high-performance computing—to offset the squeeze. Fidelity’s stance, however, is that those pressures do not automatically translate into a long-run weakening of Bitcoin’s programmed security.
Crypto’s political footprint expands ahead of the 2026 midterms
Beyond market structure, crypto’s business influence is increasingly visible in politics. A report by consumer advocacy group Public Citizen says crypto companies have contributed roughly $189 million to the 2026 US election cycle so far—about 37% of all corporate political spending, according to the figures cited in Cointelegraph’s coverage.
Public Citizen’s findings also suggest that crypto-backed PACs are again the key engine behind political leverage. Cointelegraph reports that Fairshake has spent more than $82 million this cycle, while the pro-Trump MAGA Inc. Super PAC—described as heavily backed by Crypto.com—has spent more than $56 million.
The report frames the strategy as consistent with 2024: supporting candidates from both major parties that align with the industry’s policy agenda. Public Citizen also notes that crypto election spending has already surpassed roughly $170 million deployed during the 2024 election cycle, with more than four months remaining before the November elections, based on the coverage’s description.
For investors and builders, this matters because policy outcomes can shape stablecoin rules, disclosure requirements, and enforcement priorities—areas that directly affect how crypto firms operate and compete.
What to watch next
The key question now is whether Strategy’s monetization framework becomes a template for other major Bitcoin holders—and how quickly stablecoin competitors like OUSD can translate “reserve yield” features into real usage. In parallel, the ongoing debate over Bitcoin security economics and the industry’s political momentum will likely define how both networks and regulations evolve as 2026 approaches.
Crypto World
Trump Says $1.4B Crypto Windfall Raises No Issues for Office
US President Donald Trump has pushed back against criticism of his latest financial disclosures, telling CNBC that there was “nothing illegal” and “nothing wrong” about earning income tied to his crypto investments while in office. The remarks came shortly after the US Office of Government Ethics (OGE) released his 2025 financial disclosure report, which advocacy groups say highlights troubling conflicts of interest.
In a Thursday interview with CNBC’s Joe Kernen, Trump argued that others were responsible for his crypto-related investments and that he did not “even know who they are,” without directly addressing concerns about whether his position could influence policy affecting the digital asset industry. The disclosures reportedly show Trump’s businesses and investments generated more than $2 billion during 2025, with about $1.4 billion linked to crypto ventures.
Key takeaways
- Trump said on CNBC there was “nothing illegal” about profiting from crypto investments while president, following the release of his 2025 OGE financial disclosure.
- The filing reportedly attributes roughly $1.4 billion of Trump’s 2025 income to crypto-related activities, including his memecoin and the family platform World Liberty Financial.
- Trump did not provide specific answers about who managed the investments, saying he did not “even know who they are.”
- Advocacy groups argue the scale of crypto-linked earnings raises conflict-of-interest concerns as Congress considers digital asset legislation.
- Crypto political spending appears to be ramping up ahead of the 2026 elections, according to Public Citizen.
Trump denies wrongdoing after crypto-linked disclosures surface
Trump’s defense centered on the idea that profiting from digital assets while holding the presidency is not inherently improper. Speaking to CNBC’s Joe Kernen, he maintained that his crypto holdings did not involve wrongdoing and suggested he was not directly involved in the investment management decisions.
That response came after reporting on the contents of Trump’s 2025 financial disclosure. According to coverage referencing the OGE filing, Trump reported taking in more than $2 billion from his businesses and investments during 2025. Within that total, roughly $1.4 billion was described as connected to crypto projects, including his memecoin and activities tied to World Liberty Financial, a platform associated with his family.
According to the same reporting, Trump’s disclosed crypto-related earnings included:
- About $636 million from his memecoin
- About $588 million from World Liberty sales
- $197 million from equity in a stablecoin venture
Trump has previously criticized Bitcoin during his first term, calling it a “scam.” However, in the lead-up to the 2024 election he reportedly increased engagement with prominent figures in crypto, including Gemini co-founders Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, as well as executives from mining companies and crypto exchanges. He has also launched an Official Trump memecoin and has remained closely associated with World Liberty and American Bitcoin.
Conflict-of-interest concerns keep pressure on US crypto policy
Trump’s remarks are likely to intensify a dispute that has been playing out across US politics: whether leaders can personally profit from industries while also participating in government actions that shape the regulatory environment for those same industries.
Several advocacy organizations have characterized the disclosed crypto earnings as a “grift,” pointing to the possibility that personal financial ties could affect legislative outcomes. In particular, critics have flagged the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act as an example of the kind of policy initiative they believe could benefit from a more transparent and strictly separated approach.
Trump’s CNBC comments did not directly resolve those concerns. Instead, he emphasized that other parties were responsible for his investments and that he did not know the individuals involved. For critics, that stance may not address the core issue: whether the presidency creates an inherently asymmetric influence over markets and legislation even when day-to-day decisions are delegated.
Beyond Trump himself, his family has also become a focal point for commentary. In a Friday interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Mary Trump—the president’s niece—argued that the political system enables people to “get away with” serious financial wrongdoing, adding that investors may have been harmed by trusting Trump’s businesses. Her comments did not cite new details from the OGE filing, but they align with the broader line of criticism that seeks more accountability and clearer separation between political power and private crypto interests.
What changes: from “scam” rhetoric to industry engagement
One of the more striking dynamics in this story is how sharply Trump’s posture toward crypto appears to have shifted over time. In his first term, he publicly derided Bitcoin. But leading into the 2024 election—and continuing since—he has moved closer to influential crypto personalities and industry players.
The new disclosure-related controversy comes against that backdrop. If 2025 earnings are indeed as large and as closely tied to crypto-specific ventures as the filing descriptions indicate, the question for investors and builders is not only whether regulations will change—but whose incentives are most aligned with those changes.
This matters beyond politics because crypto markets respond quickly to expectations about rules, enforcement posture, and legislative clarity. When a head of state is personally linked to crypto outcomes—whether through tokens, platforms, or stablecoin-related equity—participants may reassess the probability that policy will be aligned with industry interests rather than general consumer protection.
Crypto spending looks set for another election-cycle push
Trump’s crypto-related disclosure debate is unfolding as the industry prepares for more political contests. After digital asset companies reportedly spent $170 million to support candidates they considered “pro-crypto” during the 2024 cycle, political action committees and related organizations appear to be following a similar approach for 2026.
In a report cited by Cointelegraph, Public Citizen said that companies and figures linked to the crypto industry contributed $189 million toward the 2026 election cycle as of June. That figure is presented as the bulk of $294 million in spending so far across crypto, AI, Big Tech, and online betting companies to support or oppose politicians.
With Trump’s term running until January 2029, the timing of 2026 elections is still crucial: all 435 seats in the US House of Representatives and 35 in the Senate will be contested. For digital asset policy, those races could shape committee leadership and the legislative momentum behind bills that attempt to clarify how different parts of the market should be regulated.
For traders and long-term participants, political funding and lobbying activity can act as early signals for where the policy debate is moving—even when the market seems focused on immediate price action. However, disclosures like Trump’s add a separate layer of scrutiny: not just how much money crypto firms spend to influence policy, but whether government officials’ financial incentives complicate the regulatory process.
As these issues move forward, readers should watch for how lawmakers address conflict-of-interest concerns and whether any additional scrutiny from ethics or oversight bodies changes how crypto-linked disclosures are interpreted in practice.
Crypto World
Sec Advances Project Crypto For On-Chain Markets
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is advancing SEC Project Crypto as Chairman Paul Atkins outlines plans for blockchain-based financial markets. The initiative focuses on modernizing securities rules, improving token classification, and supporting market systems that can operate on-chain. Atkins said the agency has spent the past year adjusting its approach after President Donald Trump called for U.S. leadership in cryptocurrency. The SEC expects several rulemaking steps to continue through mid-2026.
Sec Sets Direction For On-Chain Markets
Atkins said SEC Project Crypto marks a broad effort to prepare existing market rules for blockchain infrastructure. He described the agency’s work as “historic steps” toward modernizing regulations for on-chain market activity. The plan aims to help issuers understand whether a token falls under securities laws before they launch a project. That clarity could reduce legal uncertainty for crypto startups, token issuers, and regulated trading platforms.
The SEC chairman said the initiative does not give the digital asset industry special treatment. Instead, he said the agency wants clear regulations that allow markets to operate under known rules. This approach places disclosure, investor protection, and market integrity at the center of the SEC’s digital asset agenda. It also signals that the agency wants blockchain finance to fit within regulated market structures.
Sec And Cftc Work On Joint Framework
The SEC also plans deeper coordination with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Under the current timeline, both agencies expect a Memorandum of Understanding by March 2026. The agreement should help classify digital assets that do not qualify as securities. It also aims to reduce overlap between the two regulators.
Atkins said the goal is to replace a “fragmented regulatory environment” with a more coordinated structure. This matters because many crypto products combine trading, custody, payments, and derivatives features. Clearer coordination could help firms understand which regulator oversees each product. It may also reduce delays for platforms that want to offer compliant digital asset services.
Rule Changes Target Custody And Trading
SEC Project Crypto also includes updates to market structure rules, including Regulation NMS. The SEC wants pathways that allow blockchain-based trading systems to operate alongside traditional exchanges. These changes could affect tokenized securities, settlement systems, and digital asset trading venues. The agency expects key rule updates by mid-2026.
Custody rules remain another major focus for the commission. Updated standards could determine whether banks can hold tokenized securities for clients. The SEC-CFTC framework may also shape crypto derivatives that now operate in a less settled legal environment. As a result, SEC Project Crypto could influence how on-chain markets connect with U.S. financial institutions.
URLS:
https://x.com/SECGov/status/2072745983088160996?s=20
Crypto World
The failures and follies of Trump’s crypto White House
Early in Donald Trump’s term, his then-advisor David Sacks announced the administration’s intention to pass a stablecoin regulatory bill and a cryptocurrency market structure bill.
The White House missed its deadline on both of those bills but did eventually pass a stablecoin regulatory bill in the form of the GENIUS Act.
However, the market structure bill hasn’t yet been signed into law, and tomorrow is the White House’s new July 4 deadline for this legislation.
Read more: Crypto Czar and Republican Congressmen hope for legislation
Patrick Witt, one of Trump’s current advisors, previously stated the White House was targeting July 4 for the signing, saying, “I think that would be a tremendous birthday present for America, celebrating our 250th.”
He further added that should the act fail to reach this deadline, “we are going to be a rule follower, and we’re going to be following somebody else’s rulebook on this. And God forbid it’s China that’s ultimately writing those rules.”
Unfortunately for Witt’s natural paranoia, it seems extraordinarily unlikely that this bill will be passed today and signed tomorrow.
For one thing, the Senate isn’t meeting for floor proceedings today, making it impossible to pass a bill.
This Trumpian crypto failure was easily foreseen; Republicans are unwilling to place in an ethics provision that would limit Trump’s ability to profit from cryptocurrency, and Democrats have no incentive to bend on ethics rules when they can use it to tar Republicans as corrupt.
Moreover, the Senate cannot even pass important bills like the National Defense Authorization Act, which makes it even more hilarious that the White House was willing to publicly deceive the public into believing it was plausible that this bill would pass.
Even the Democrats who voted to move this bill out of the Banking Committee, Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks, have both stated that they have yet to determine their final vote on this act.
Other Trump cryptocurrency failures
This isn’t the only embarrassing miss when it comes to crypto for this administration.
Despite throwing the federal government, in the form of the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, and his social media company/ETF provider, Trump Media and Technology Group, behind BTC, its value has plummeted during Trump’s administration.
Its price has fallen from approximately $106,000 to less than $62,000 now.
During Trump’s campaign he also insisted that all BTC should be “made in the US.”
However, there’s no substantial evidence that large amounts of BTC mining have relocated to the US, and some US-based miners have pivoted to providing infrastructure at their data centers to artificial intelligence.
When Trump created the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, he also promised that it would include “XRP, SOL, and ADA.”
He later added ETH to the list as well.
These assets weren’t included in the strategic reserve, though they may be part of the US Digital Asset Stockpile, which holds the non-BTC digital assets that have ended up in the possession of the US government.
It’s hard to say with a high degree of certainty what assets may be included in there, as there’s very little transparency, and the reports that were demanded within 30 or 60 days have not been made public, so we’re left to speculate.
Had the reserve included these assets, it would have lost money on every single one since the stockpile was announced.
Some, like Cardano, have lost truly incredible amounts of value, plummeting by more than 80%.
Despite these problems, Trump has still been able to personally make billions of dollars from the crypto industry during these plunges.
Read more: ANALYSIS: Eric and Donald Trump Jr. are cashing in on crypto
World Liberty Financial, where he’s co-founder, passed its first governance proposal nearly 600 days ago. Despite that it’s failed to launch the Aave instance promised in that.
Trump Media and Technology Group filed for crypto exchange traded funds and then abandoned the idea.
Even his eponymous memecoin has suffered, dropping by more than 96% from its peak.
However, despite these failures, Trump has grown ever more wealthy; Indeed, his fortune is now many billions larger than it was when he became president.
Everyone else in the crypto ecosystem may be suffering, but perhaps that’s because they have yet to fully embrace the cartoonish corruption.
Sure, the bills aren’t being passed, the reports aren’t being published, and the prices are plummeting, but at least the president is able to get richer.
What could be more appropriate for the first crypto president than someone who’s far better at extracting money than advancing the industry?
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