Crypto World
Tether CEO Warns of Four Cracks in Big Tech’s AI Boom
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino has warned that Big Tech’s artificial intelligence spending boom may be built on weak economics, as concerns over an AI market bubble spread across global markets.
In a July 4 post on X, Ardoino said the AI infrastructure race contains four major “structural mismatches”. These are gaps between costs, revenues, investment timelines, and competition.
His warning comes as the world’s largest technology companies pour hundreds of billions of dollars into data centres, chips, and power capacity. The central question for investors is whether AI can generate enough revenue to justify that spending.
Businesses are Paying Too Less for AI
Ardoino argued that companies are charging too little for AI computing compared with the real cost of providing it. In simple terms, some AI services may look cheap because companies are subsidising usage to win customers.
That makes growth look stronger than the underlying business model. If companies later raise prices, users may spend less. If they keep prices low, margins may remain under pressure.
AI Profits Could Take Longer to Realize
Big Tech companies are spending heavily now, while the profits from AI may take much longer to arrive. Data centres, GPUs, and power contracts require huge upfront investment.
This creates a gap between capital spending today and commercial returns in the future. The bigger that gap becomes, the more pressure companies face to prove that AI can become a durable source of revenue.
AI is Outdating Itself Fast
AI chips can become outdated within 3 to 5 years. Yet the debt and equity used to finance AI infrastructure often assume a much longer payback period.
That matters because companies may need to replace expensive hardware before it has fully paid for itself. If demand slows or pricing falls, the economics become harder to defend.
The Industry Faces Intense Competition
Open-source AI models are improving quickly and could weaken the pricing power of commercial AI providers. If cheaper or free alternatives become good enough, customers may resist paying premium prices.
That would make it harder for companies to recover the money they are spending on infrastructure. It could also reduce the revenue expectations that have supported high AI valuations.
Ardoino’s warning is part of a wider debate now moving through markets.
Chinese hedge funds including Wealspring Asset and Shanghai Banxia Investment Management Center have warned that AI stocks may be in bubble territory. Wealspring reportedly called global AI stocks a “super bubble”, while Banxia said a possible trigger for a correction may already have appeared.
The concern is simple. AI has become a major driver of stock market performance, especially for large technology companies. If investors begin to doubt the return on AI spending, the impact could spread beyond the tech sector.
AI Spending Could Hit Trillions
JPMorgan has projected that global AI-related spending could reach $5.5 trillion by 2030. At the same time, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft are expected to spend up to $720 billion this year.
That level of spending gives AI a central role in corporate earnings, energy demand, chip demand, and credit markets.
The Bank of England warned in October 2025 that AI-related valuations had moved close to levels seen during the dot-com bubble. It also said AI infrastructure may require trillions of dollars, with a meaningful share financed by debt.
Some investors take a less negative view. They argue that today’s AI trade differs from the dot-com era because the largest companies funding the boom already have strong earnings and established businesses.
Morgan Stanley has also estimated that nearly $3 trillion in AI infrastructure investment could move through the economy by 2028.
Still, Ardoino’s point is that the risk sits inside the economics of AI infrastructure itself. If pricing, profits, hardware lifespans, and competition do not line up, the market may be underestimating how hard it will be to turn AI demand into lasting returns.
The post Tether CEO Warns of Four Cracks in Big Tech’s AI Boom appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Bitcoin pops to $63,900, then reverses, as week begins
Bitcoin touched $63,882 overnight before retreating to around $62,900, per CoinDesk data. The 24-hour high of $63,900 held briefly before sellers pushed it back down.
Thursday’s U.S. jobs report came in weaker than expected, giving liquidity-sensitive assets a lift heading into the weekend.
A weakening jobs market makes a Fed hike less likely and gradually shifts the backdrop that pushed ETF investors out of bitcoin through June. That process takes time, and one print does not flip the setup. The July 14 CPI release is the next data point that could either extend the relief or further cap an early-July rally.
Crypto World
$6 Million Gone: Summer Finance Hit by Sophisticated Flash Loan Liquidity Manipulation
Summer Finance has become the latest decentralized finance protocol to suffer a major security incident. So far, $6 million has been drained in the ongoing exploit, according to blockchain security firm Blockaid.
However, the project has yet to release an official statement.
Flash Loan Attack
Pseudonymous crypto trader Crypto Jargon said the attacker borrowed the funds through a flash loan, manipulated liquidity across Curve’s DAI/USDC pools and Morpho, extracted about $6 million in profit, and repaid the loan within the same transaction. The trader said that flash loan attacks remain difficult to prevent and explained,
“The attacker doesn’t need to own the money they’re manipulating with; they borrow $65M for a few seconds, temporarily distort a price or liquidity ratio, extract the difference, and return the loan before the transaction even finalizes. If any single step reverts, the whole thing undoes itself, so they only ever risk gas fees.”
Phylax Systems founder Odysseas Lamtzidis also shared a technical analysis, suggesting that the exploit was caused by flaws in Summer Finance’s same-transaction vault accounting and liquidity assumptions, rather than compromised keys or abuse of admin privileges. He added that the attacker used an unverified contract to orchestrate the exploit, while the vulnerable protocol components themselves were verified.
2026 DeFi Losses
The incident comes amid a sharp rise in attacks targeting DeFi protocols this year. According to crypto market tracker CryptoRank, the sector has recorded 121 DeFi hacks in 2026, which resulted in almost $942 million in losses.
Most of this year’s attacks happened in the second quarter, when hackers carried out 85 exploits and stole around $775 million. CryptoRank found that DeFi’s total value locked (TVL) has declined every month this year after falling from about $115 billion in January to $70 billion by late June as investor confidence weakened.
While Q2 recorded the highest number of exploits, the firm said most losses stemmed from two major attacks in April. Drift Protocol and KelpDAO together lost about $590 million, which represented more than half of all DeFi losses this year.
TRM Labs and Chainalysis linked both attacks to North Korea-backed hacking groups. Their investigations found that the attackers used social engineering, compromised infrastructure, and manipulated cross-chain verification systems to carry out the large-scale thefts.
The post $6 Million Gone: Summer Finance Hit by Sophisticated Flash Loan Liquidity Manipulation appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Crypto World
S&P 500: Index Narrows Its Range as the Labour Market Cools
The broad US market index, the S&P 500, has entered July against a backdrop of mixed signals from the labour market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics report released on 2 July showed that just 57,000 jobs were added in June, well below market expectations, while the unemployment rate stood at 4.2%. Following the release, markets scaled back expectations of a Federal Reserve rate hike in September, although the possibility of an October increase remains. At the same time, the current 10% global tariff is due to expire at the end of July, and markets are gradually pricing in uncertainty surrounding future trade policy decisions.
Technical Outlook

On the four-hour chart, the S&P 500 (SPXm on FXOpen) remains in a consolidation phase following the uptrend that began on 31 March. After peaking near 7,600, the index declined to around 7,250 before forming a symmetrical triangle, with the descending upper trendline and the ascending lower trendline gradually converging. Since the beginning of July, the price has remained above the upper boundary of the current market profile at 7,460, repeatedly testing the triangle’s descending trendline but failing to break above it. Resistance is located around 7,580.
The narrowing range has been accompanied by declining volume, with the latest wave of the triangle noticeably quieter than the previous one, a typical feature of a maturing consolidation pattern. The highest concentration of horizontal volume (POC) is located near 7,394, while the lower boundary of the current profile sits around 7,300. Should the index move lower, these areas could provide support before any attempt to break below the ascending side of the triangle and potentially reach the 7,260 support level. The RSI + MAs indicator currently reads 59, 57 and 55. Although all three values remain above the neutral zone, they do not yet indicate a clear directional bias.
Summary
The POC zone remains the key reference point if the rejection from the triangle boundary develops into a broader decline. Meanwhile, the RSI + MAs indicator continues to hold above neutral without showing a strong trend. Looking ahead, tariff-related uncertainty may become the more significant driver for the index over the coming weeks, as the expiry of the current 10% global tariff at the end of July could trigger a shift in market sentiment.
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Crypto World
Coinspect Warns ‘Ill Bloom’ Flaw Could Expose Thousands of Crypto Wallets
Blockchain security firm Coinspect says a class of “recovery phrase” wallets may be vulnerable to draining due to the way some wallets generate their seed—specifically, the use of weaker-than-intended randomness during recovery phrase creation. The issue, which Coinspect calls “Ill Bloom,” has been tied to unauthorized fund movements on multiple networks and has already resulted in at least $5 million in drained cryptocurrency, the firm reported.
Coinspect linked the risk to certain software wallets that generate seed phrases using an insecure pseudorandom number generator. The firm says wallets created as far back as 2018 could be affected, and it has released a wallet-checking tool so users can assess whether their addresses appear potentially exposed.
Key takeaways
- Coinspect reports the “Ill Bloom” risk is tied to weak randomness used when generating recovery phrases in some software wallets.
- The affected wallet address scope spans Bitcoin, Ethereum, Polygon, Rootstock, Tron, and Solana, with unauthorized movement tied to wallets generated as early as 2018.
- Coinspect says at least $5 million has been drained from exposed wallets since May 27, with an additional ~$2 million moved on Sunday (as reported by Coinspect).
- Coinspect states evidence suggests hardware-wallet-generated seeds are not affected, while the strongest candidates are users of lesser-known mobile software wallets.
- Coinspect is not publishing active-exploit details, but has released a tool for users to check whether their address is potentially exposed.
What Coinspect says is going wrong
In a disclosure published Sunday, Coinspect described “Ill Bloom” as an exploit path caused by weak randomness—an insecure pseudorandom number generator—used during recovery phrase generation on certain software wallets. In practical terms, if wallet seed generation doesn’t produce enough entropy as intended, attackers may be able to narrow the space of possible mnemonic phrases and systematically target wallets.
Coinspect said the issue may explain cases where funds were moved without permission. The firm also highlighted that the problem has been observed in wallets generated as early as 2018, and that the issue tends to show up more frequently in less prominent mobile software wallets rather than widely adopted products.
Networks involved and how much was stolen
Coinspect said it identified potentially exposed wallets across several networks: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Polygon, Rootstock, Tron, and Solana. In its reporting, the firm warned that the exploit may not be limited to those chains and addresses it has publicly analyzed.
According to Coinspect, data indicates that an attack starting May 27 compromised 431 wallets out of 2,114 vulnerable wallets. That activity resulted in total drained cryptocurrency of $3.1 million. Coinspect further stated that an additional $2 million was moved on Sunday from exposed wallets. While those numbers reflect the subset of wallets the firm analyzed, Coinspect cautioned that there may have been exploits on other networks and additional addresses—meaning the total number of affected wallets could be higher than its initial scope.
Coinspect also did not provide step-by-step information about the active exploit, stating that it is not publishing those details “at this stage.” Instead, it focused on helping users verify exposure and understand the underlying seed-generation weakness.
Hardware wallets vs. software wallets
One of the more consequential distinctions in Coinspect’s disclosure is who it believes is less likely to be affected. Coinspect said it has evidence suggesting that users who generated their seed with a hardware wallet are not impacted by the “Ill Bloom” risk.
Coinspect also argued that “most current software wallets” are likely not vulnerable. However, the strongest candidates, it said, are users who created seed phrases within less widely used mobile software wallets. That framing matters for day-to-day risk management: it suggests that the threat is not uniform across all software wallets, but rather tied to specific implementation choices around how entropy and pseudorandomness are produced during recovery phrase creation.
SlowMist, another security firm, also publicly acknowledged the alert on X on Monday, saying it was closely monitoring the issue reported by Coinspect.
A recurring vulnerability pattern in wallet security
“Ill Bloom” fits into a broader pattern that has appeared before in crypto wallet security: when the entropy or randomness behind seed generation is flawed, attackers can sometimes reduce the effective search space of possible recovery phrases.
In 2023, Ledger’s security team reported that wallet seeds generated using the Trust Wallet browser extension were vulnerable to brute-force attacks. Ledger said the issue came from limitations in how entropy was generated for new addresses, which reduced the total possible mnemonic combinations to roughly four billion—small enough that an attacker could attempt a search in under a day using only a few GPUs. Ledger also noted Trust Wallet patched the bug before funds were stolen.
The following year, another example highlighted by the wider security community involved Libbitcoin Explorer, where a vulnerability led to approximately $900,000 in crypto being stolen through private-key brute-forcing.
Coinspect’s disclosure underscores that even when theft doesn’t immediately occur, weak randomness in seed generation can create long-tail risk for users who created wallets years earlier, especially if those wallets were generated using the same flawed entropy logic.
What users can do now
Coinspect said it has released a wallet-checking tool so users can determine whether their address may be exposed. The immediate takeaway is that checking exposure may be more urgent than simply assuming a wallet is safe based on general brand reputation, since Coinspect’s analysis points to weaker randomness conditions in specific wallet implementations—particularly certain lesser-known mobile software wallets.
Users who notice unauthorized transactions should treat the situation as potentially related to seed-generation weakness, not just normal compromise or phishing. What remains uncertain is the full scale of exposure across all networks and addresses beyond Coinspect’s initial analysis, but the firm’s public tooling suggests that verification is the next practical step for holders.
Crypto World
Vitalik Buterin calls lean Ethereum its biggest rebuild since the Merge
But Ethereum now treats replacing every quantum-vulnerable part with a quantum-safe alternative as urgent, Buterin said, including a redesign of the cheap data storage that rollups, the layer-2 networks built on top of Ethereum, depend on.
Privacy has been raised to what Buterin called a ‘first-class goal’ rather than an afterthought. The plan calls for designing core network components so that private, intermediary-free transactions can pass through them by default.
The way the network checks itself is also changing. Instead of every node re-running every transaction, Ethereum plans to rely on recursive STARKs. This cryptographic proof method allows a node to verify a compact proof that the work was done correctly, rather than repeating it. That shift is meant to make the network faster and lighter to run.
As such, the change Buterin flagged as most disruptive is to what Ethereum calls state. State is a blockchain’s current memory, the complete snapshot of everything that exists on a network at a specific point in time.
Think of it as the running record of every account balance and all the data those contracts hold (such as who owns which NFT, how much is in a lending pool, every token ledger), as of the latest block.
Crypto World
Fed rate-decision meeting minutes, SpaceX (SPCX) joins Nasdaq 100: Crypto Week Ahead
This week is characterized by macroeconomic reports, which include the minutes from last month’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, as well as economic data that may provide insights into the Federal Reserve’s next moves.
Crypto-linked equities are also in the news, with American Bitcoin (ABTC) dodging a Nasdaq delisting after a reverse split.
SpaceX, Elon Musk’s space transportation and AI company, joins the Nasdaq 100, becoming the fourth member of the tech-heavy index to hold bitcoin . Index membership is likely to boost demand for the shares, partly because tracker funds need exposure to the company and partly because the stock is more likely to meet firms’ investment criteria.
Others include Tesla (TSLA), Strategy (MSTR) and Mercado Libre (MELI). The space exploration firm, which holds 18,712 BTC, is expected to have more weight in the index than the latter two.
Beyond that, geopolitical developments and the further collapse of the yen against the dollar are factors to keep an eye on. Bitcoin’s negative correlation to the yen’s exchange rate against the dollar has been unusually high, with BTC tending to rise when the yen weakens.
What to Watch
(All times ET)
- Crypto
- July 6: American Bitcoin (ABTC) to trade after 1-for-15 reverse stock split reduced total outstanding shares to about 73 million.
- July 7: SpaceX (SPCX) to join the Nasdaq 100 index.
- July 7: Berachain (BERA) to undergo its PoL Next upgrade.
- Macro
- July 06, 09:45 a.m.: U.S. S&P Global Services PMI Final for June est. 51.3 (Prev. 50.7)
- July 06, 10:00 a.m.: U.S. ISM Services PMI for June (Prev. 54.5)
- July 07, 11:00 a.m.: U.S. Consumer Inflation Expectations for June (Prev. 3.5%)
- July 08, 02:00 p.m.: U.S. FOMC Minutes
- July 08, 09:30 p.m.: China Consumer Price Index YoY for June (Prev. 1.2%)
- July 09, 08:30 a.m.: U.S. Initial Jobless Claims for period ending July 04 (Prev. 215K)
- July 09, 09:00 a.m.: U.S. Fed Williams Speech in a keynote discussion on “The Future of Market Liquidity and Functioning”
- July 10, 08:30 a.m.: Canada Unemployment Rate for June (Prev. 6.6%)
- Earnings
Token Events
- Governance Votes & Calls
- ENS DAO is voting on an executable proposal to renew its Security Council for a two-year term, deploy an updated contract with an extension function, and rotate one multisig signer. Voting ends on July 6.
- Frax DAO is voting to allocate 42,000 wFRAX over six months to fund the EchoMarket Creator & Distribution Program. Voting ends on July 6.
- Nexus Mutual DAO is voting on a proposal to approve a 12-month budget of 1,108,875 USDC and 6,930 wNXM for its active DAO teams to fund operations, marketing, product development, and risk management through July 2027. Voting ends on July 9.
- Arbitrum DAO is voting on a proposal to establish the Fast Feed, a paid, low-latency data stream providing early access to sequenced transaction data on Arbitrum One. Voting ends on July 9.
- Unlocks
- Token Launches
Conferences
Crypto World
Crude Oil Tumbles as OPEC+ Boosts Production Amid Weakening Demand
TLDR
- Brent crude decreased more than 1% to reach $71.10 per barrel on Monday
- OPEC+ members decided to increase production by 188,000 barrels daily starting in August
- Strait of Hormuz shipping traffic is normalizing following the interim US-Iran peace agreement
- Analysts project global oil demand will decline by 1.5 million barrels per day in 2026
- Citigroup analysts warn Brent could drop to $60 per barrel before year-end
Crude oil markets experienced downward pressure Monday following OPEC+’s decision to expand production and the continued normalization of tanker traffic through a critical Middle Eastern shipping route.
Brent crude declined $1.02, representing a 1.41% drop, settling at $71.10 per barrel. US West Texas Intermediate fell 80 cents to close at $67.89. Both major benchmarks have faced sustained downward momentum over recent weeks.

The OPEC+ coalition, spearheaded by Saudi Arabia and Russia, reached an agreement Sunday to expand collective production quotas by 188,000 barrels daily beginning in August. This move follows comparable production increases already scheduled for June and July.
The alliance has been systematically unwinding the production cuts implemented in earlier years. Seven prominent member countries supported the most recent output expansion.
Hormuz Shipping Slowly Coming Back Online
The Strait of Hormuz experienced a complete halt in tanker operations during the US-Israeli military conflict with Iran. This disruption effectively limited actual production from critical exporters such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Iraq, rendering significant portions of the OPEC+ production increases theoretical rather than practical.
Petroleum and liquefied natural gas transportation through a US-secured passage in the strategic waterway demonstrated signs of recovery on Sunday. The previous day witnessed several vessels making unexplained course reversals within the corridor before ultimately continuing their intended routes.
Gulf region oil shipments in June surged by more than 3 million barrels compared to May, surpassing 10 million barrels daily. Despite this improvement, current volumes remain 40% beneath pre-conflict levels.
Brent crude experienced a dramatic 30% collapse during the second quarter after Washington and Tehran finalized an interim peace agreement, enabling a phased restoration of Hormuz shipping operations.
Supply Climbing as Demand Falls
ANZ Bank currently forecasts global oil demand will shrink by 1.5 million barrels daily in 2026. Year-over-year decreases could potentially reach 4 million barrels per day during the second quarter according to preliminary figures.
PVM market analysts observed that producers are “selling into a falling market, offering little hope of an imminent price recovery.”
Abu Dhabi National Oil Company has liquidated approximately 16 million barrels of crude through expanded discounts in spot market auctions since June, signaling a substantial increase in available inventory.
Russian western port crude shipments reached unprecedented levels in June and are projected to maintain that pace through July. Ukrainian drone attacks targeting Russian refineries have compelled Moscow to export greater volumes of unprocessed crude rather than refining it domestically.
Market structure indicators are also shifting bearish. Timespreads for both Brent and Dubai have transitioned into contango conditions, where near-term contracts trade at discounts relative to deferred contracts. Numerous physical crude varieties are also selling below benchmark reference prices.
Citigroup has identified the potential for Brent to decline to $60 per barrel by year-end should current supply expansion and demand weakness trends persist.
Crypto World
Hackers Reportedly Drain $6 Million From DeFi Protocol Summer.fi
Summer.fi has reportedly been exploited, with roughly $6 million drained so far. Blockaid flagged the exploit in a post on X on Monday.
The security firm published the attacker’s address, the exploit contract, and the affected Lazy Summer contracts.
DeFi Protocol Summer.fi Reportedly Loses $6 Million in Active Exploit
Blockaid said its detection system surfaced the incident on Monday morning, estimating about $6 million in losses at that stage. The firm highlighted the on-chain addresses associated with the attack.
- Exploiter address: 0x7BF716167B48CF527725722C6d79494b45B3BDCa
- Exploit contract: 0x0514F827C129C16418a0933E03C99A6AF982FC61
- Affected Summer.fi / Lazy Summer contracts:
- 0x98C49e13bf99D7CAd8069faa2A370933EC9EcF17
- 0xA9ca4909700505585B1aD2a1579dA3b670FFA9c4
- 0xE9cDA459bED6dcfb8AC61CD8cE08E2D52370cB06
Security firm PeckShield identified the main affected vault as LazyVault_LowerRisk_USDC (LVUSDC), which Block Analitica risk-manages. The firm said that the vault’s displayed APY briefly spiked to about 2.08 million %.
“The largest current holder is 0x8741e8f…4130, which appears to be associated with Torben Jorgensen (UDHC), and has deposited ~8.6M USDC into this vault,” the post read.
Follow us on X to get the latest news as it happens
Summer.fi, formerly Oasis.app, is the front-end for the Lazy Summer Protocol, an onchain vault system that automatically routes deposits across DeFi yield sources like Aave and Morpho.
The network’s native token SUMR traded near $0.00193, down 5.3% over 24 hours. The move diverged from the broader market, which rose more than 1% on the day.
The incident marked the second crypto exploit recorded in July, according to DeFiLlama. It follows a series of attacks in June, when crypto platforms lost $75.87 million across 40 hacks, with the Humanity Protocol breach accounting for the largest loss.
BeInCrypto has reached out to Summer.fi for comment. This is a developing story.
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The post Hackers Reportedly Drain $6 Million From DeFi Protocol Summer.fi appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Bitcoin ETFs Suffer Historic $5.5 Billion Exodus Over Eight Consecutive Weeks
Key Highlights
- American spot Bitcoin ETFs experienced outflows of $527 million across four trading sessions, continuing an unprecedented eighth consecutive negative week
- A single-day inflow of $221.7 million on Thursday interrupted a 10-day withdrawal pattern but failed to reverse the weekly trend
- BlackRock’s IBIT fund continues its decline for an 11th consecutive trading day, losing approximately $2.2 billion
- Ethereum ETFs similarly recorded negative weekly performance, though showing positive movement during the final two trading days
- Hyperliquid ETFs registered $4.3 million in inflows — maintaining positivity but significantly lower than the previous week’s $111 million milestone
American spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds have established an unprecedented benchmark, documenting eight consecutive weeks of net capital withdrawals — the longest such period since these investment vehicles debuted. Throughout the four trading sessions concluding July 2, these funds experienced approximately $527 million in outflows, based on information from SoSoValue.
Prior to this current downturn beginning in mid-May, these financial products had never experienced more than five consecutive negative weeks.
June emerged as the most challenging month for these investment products since receiving regulatory authorization. During June exclusively, Bitcoin ETFs witnessed over $4 billion in departures. Calculating from the beginning of the year through present, the funds have accumulated a net deficit of $5.53 billion.
Brief Respite on Thursday Ends 10-Day Withdrawal Pattern
The trading week concluded with a momentary improvement. On July 2, Bitcoin ETFs registered $221.7 million in net capital inflows, terminating a 10-session withdrawal pattern that had eliminated nearly $2.7 billion from these investment vehicles.
Fidelity’s Bitcoin product spearheaded the turnaround, attracting $166 million in fresh capital. ARK 21Shares contributed an additional $91.8 million. VanEck secured $4.4 million in inflows.
Despite this positive development, a single favorable day proved insufficient to salvage the overall weekly performance. Substantial outflows during earlier sessions had already guaranteed another negative weekly outcome.
BlackRock’s Flagship Fund Continues Downward Trajectory
BlackRock’s investment product remained the sole fund experiencing withdrawals on Thursday. The fund recorded a $40.4 million outflow that session, extending its consecutive losing period to 11 trading days.
Throughout this duration, the fund has experienced approximately $2.2 billion in withdrawals. Currently, it maintains $44.91 billion in net assets compared to $59.99 billion in total inflows accumulated since its inception.
The typical investor holding shares in this fund faces losses approaching 40%, according to earlier analysis.
Given its position as the largest Bitcoin ETF measured by assets under management and daily trading activity, persistent outflows from this particular fund create downward pressure across the entire sector, even when smaller competitors experience positive flows.
Bitcoin Valuation Shows Recovery
Bitcoin’s price dropped beneath $58,000 during the early portion of the week, reaching a 21-month minimum. The cryptocurrency subsequently rallied to approximately $63,150 by Saturday.
Disappointing U.S. employment statistics contributed to the price recovery. Market participants interpreted the economic data as diminishing the probability of a Federal Reserve interest rate hike.
CryptoQuant research professionals warned that increasing exchange deposits might signal additional price volatility in upcoming sessions.
Ethereum and Hyperliquid Investment Products
Spot Ethereum exchange-traded funds similarly concluded the week with negative results, marking their eighth consecutive weekly outflow. Nevertheless, these products demonstrated positive daily performance on both July 1 and July 2. BlackRock’s Ethereum investment vehicle attracted $29.7 million on July 2.
Hyperliquid ETFs maintained weekly positivity with $4.3 million in net inflows. This figure represented a substantial decline from the preceding week’s exceptional $111 million, suggesting diminishing appetite for alternative cryptocurrency ETF offerings.
Concurrently, major blockchain Bitcoin holders pursued strategies contrary to ETF participants. Substantial Bitcoin wallets accumulated approximately 270,000 BTC throughout June while exchange-traded funds experienced historic withdrawals.
Crypto World
Stablecoin Transfers Reach Record $1.79T in June
Stablecoin usage hit a new milestone in June, with adjusted stablecoin transaction volume reaching $1.79 trillion, according to payments analytics from Visa. The figure represents a sharp step up from May’s $1.1 trillion and breaks the prior record of $1.78 trillion set in February.
The jump, Visa says, comes from its Allium-powered dashboard tracking “adjusted” on-chain activity—designed to better reflect organic value transfer rather than short-term technical noise. For market participants, the broader implication is straightforward: even when crypto markets struggle, stablecoin rails can keep growing as on-chain payments, DeFi liquidity, and cross-border settlement continue to mature.
Key takeaways
- $1.79 trillion in adjusted stablecoin transaction volume was recorded in June, up 63% from May’s $1.1 trillion.
- USDC led by volume: Circle’s USDC accounted for roughly 67% of transactions (about $1.21 trillion), despite Tether’s USDt still being the largest stablecoin by market cap.
- Base and Ethereum dominated networks, together responsible for roughly $1.13 trillion of June stablecoin activity, with Tron third at about $320 billion.
- Visa’s methodology adjustment filters out high-frequency bots and certain repeated contract patterns to approximate more meaningful stablecoin usage.
June’s record and why Visa’s “adjusted” lens matters
Visa reported that June 2026 delivered another record month for stablecoin transaction volume, overtaking the previous high from February. The update comes through Visa’s Allium-powered stablecoin analytics dashboard, which tracks adjusted figures—intended to exclude metrics that can inflate results without representing genuine economic activity.
Visa collaborated with partners including Artemis, Allium Labs, and Castle Island Ventures to build the adjusted transaction methodology. Visa said the approach filters out “distracting metrics” such as high-frequency trading bot activity, exchange treasury rebalancing, and repeated smart contract transactions, all of which can otherwise distort the picture of organic stablecoin use.
That matters for investors and operators because it changes what “volume” is measuring. Instead of treating every on-chain movement as equal, the adjusted view is meant to better approximate how stablecoins are actually being used for transferring value and supporting payment or DeFi flows.
USDC takes most of the transaction share
While Tether’s USDt remains the largest stablecoin by market capitalization, Visa data indicates that the majority of June transaction volume belonged to USDC. According to Visa, USDC accounted for around 67% of adjusted stablecoin transaction volume, totaling approximately $1.21 trillion for the month.
USDT contributed about 32% of June volume, or roughly $576 billion, based on Visa’s figures. Visa also identified PayPal’s PYUSD as the third-largest stablecoin by transaction volume in June, with $2.42 billion.
The gap between market cap leadership and transaction share is an important nuance for readers tracking stablecoin adoption. Market cap can reflect a stablecoin’s overall supply, while transaction volume can reflect which assets are being used most frequently across on-chain rails—especially on networks where specific ecosystems and user behaviors concentrate activity.
Base and Ethereum lead; Tron remains a top alternative
Visa’s network breakdown shows that stablecoin activity in June was heavily concentrated. The most widely used network was Coinbase’s Ethereum layer-2 network Base, which recorded about $565 billion in adjusted stablecoin transaction volume—approximately 31.5% of the total. Ethereum followed closely with about $562 billion.
Tron ranked third with about $320 billion, representing roughly 18% of the adjusted total. Together, these results suggest that June’s growth was not confined to a single ecosystem, but that it remains anchored in the networks where stablecoin liquidity and on-chain usage are already dense.
Visa also highlighted that Base and Ethereum dominated stablecoin volumes in June, aligning with the broader trend that stablecoins often follow where payments and DeFi activity cluster—particularly when users want efficient settlement on widely supported chains.
What the record could signal for stablecoin resilience
Industry analysts framed June’s record as evidence that stablecoins are increasingly behaving like infrastructure, not just a speculative sidecar to wider crypto price cycles. Commenting on the figures, Zach Pandl, head of research at Grayscale, said the month was “another record month for stablecoin transaction volume,” describing it as arriving “just ahead of February 2026.”
Nick Ruck, director of LVRG Research, told Cointelegraph that the record volume demonstrates resilience during a broader crypto bear market. He argued that stablecoins’ rising role reflects persistent demand for value transfer, liquidity provisioning, and decentralized finance activity that continues independently of speculative price movements.
Ruck predicted stablecoins will continue to mature, framing them as a “foundational layer” for the Web3 economy. The key takeaway for readers is that the direction of stablecoin adoption may be less tied to market sentiment than it is to real-world settlement needs—especially as on-chain infrastructure improves and more payment workflows incorporate stablecoin settlement.
Open USD adds competitive pressure in payments
Alongside the volume milestone, the stablecoin market continues to attract new entrants. Open Standard announced Open USD (OUSD), supported by more than 140 payments, banking, technology, and crypto companies, including Visa and Mastercard, according to earlier coverage from Cointelegraph.
Even if OUSD does not yet meaningfully shift transaction shares at the scale Visa is measuring, announcements like this underscore that issuers and payments groups see continued room for growth in stablecoin rails—particularly where interoperability and compliance expectations are evolving.
Going forward, the biggest question for traders, builders, and compliance-minded users is whether record volumes are sustained and broadened across more networks and products—or whether growth remains concentrated in a handful of ecosystems. Visa’s “adjusted” methodology should help clarify that trend, but the market will still need time to confirm whether June’s surge signals durable, economy-wide adoption.
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