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One year ago today, the House passed CLARITY

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CLARITY Act ethics fight blocks 60 Senate votes

In one week of July 2025, the House passed three crypto bills. One is law. One is law by accident and the President will not sign it. The third has not had a Senate vote in 365 days, and it was supposed to be the important one.

Summary

  • On July 17, 2025, the House passed the CLARITY Act 294-134 with more than 70 Democrats crossing over, the strongest congressional endorsement of digital asset legislation in American history. It has not received a Senate floor vote in the year since.
  • It was the middle bill of Crypto Week, when the House passed three digital asset measures in rapid succession. Tracking all three one year later produces a scorecard nobody in the industry wants to read aloud.
  • GENIUS became law on July 18, 2025 and hits its first major rulemaking deadline tomorrow. The Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act cleared the House 219-217, stalled, then reached law by riding inside a housing bill the President is refusing to sign.
  • CLARITY is stuck on ethics. The merged Senate draft released July 14 omits the provision Democrats named as their price, and three senators declared opposition the same day.
  • The pattern across all three is the same: what passed was what could be attached to something else or what nobody had a personal stake in blocking. CLARITY is neither.

Washington called it Crypto Week. In a handful of days in July 2025, the House of Representatives passed three digital asset bills in succession, and the industry treated the sequence as the moment its lobbying decade finally paid. The CLARITY Act cleared 294-134 on July 17. The GENIUS Act cleared 308-122 the same day and was signed into law on July 18. The Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act squeaked through 219-217. Three bills, one week, one chamber, and a widespread assumption that the Senate was a formality. Today is the one-year anniversary of the first of those votes. Exactly one of the three arrived where it was supposed to. Tracking what happened to the other two explains more about how crypto legislation actually works than any amount of vote-counting on the bill still pending.

The bill that made it

GENIUS is the success case, and it is worth being precise about why, because the reason is not that it was the best bill.

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It passed the Senate 68-30 in June 2025, cleared the House 308-122 on July 17, and was signed into law on July 18, creating the first federal framework for payment stablecoins. It reaches its first major rulemaking deadline on July 18, 2026, one year to the day. White House digital assets adviser Patrick Witt has repeatedly pointed to that anniversary as proof that coordinated action produces results, which is true and also somewhat beside the point.

GENIUS passed because almost nobody with power had a reason to stop it. Banks wanted rules for stablecoins because stablecoins were happening regardless and they preferred a framework they could live inside. The industry wanted legitimacy. Regulators wanted reserve requirements. The politics of requiring an issuer to hold full reserves in liquid assets and disclose them monthly are not politics at all; they are housekeeping. There was no ethics dimension, no jurisdictional turf war between agencies, and no obvious way for anyone in office to profit from the outcome in a manner that made colleagues uncomfortable.

That is the template for what Congress can pass on crypto. Narrow scope, clear beneficiary, no personal stakes. Note how little of that describes CLARITY.

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The bill that made it by accident

The Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act is the strangest entry on the scorecard, and its path is worth tracing because it shows what happens when a crypto bill cannot pass on its own.

It cleared the House by two votes, 219-217, which is not a mandate. Then it stalled. A promise to attach it to the defense authorization bill went unkept, which in Washington is a soft burial. It should have died there.

Instead it reached law by an unlikely route: a provision barring the Federal Reserve from issuing a central bank digital currency through 2030 rode inside the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, a bipartisan housing package that passed the Senate 85-5 and the House 358-32. The crypto industry got its anti-CBDC win as a passenger on a bill about construction permitting.

And then the President refused to sign it. Not over the CBDC provision, which he supports, having argued that a central bank digital currency would threaten financial stability, individual privacy, and American sovereignty. He is withholding signature over the SAVE America Act, an unrelated elections bill demanding proof of citizenship and photo identification for federal voting. The housing measure becomes law without his signature once the ten-day window closes, so the maneuver functions as leverage instead of a veto. The CBDC ban arrives regardless, delivered by a President who declined to sign the vehicle carrying it.

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The lesson is not subtle. A crypto priority that could not pass on its own merits became law by attaching itself to something that could, and then survived the President’s own obstruction because the mechanism did not require his cooperation. That is three separate accidents in a row producing the right outcome, and it is not a strategy anyone can repeat on purpose.

The bill that did not

Which brings us to CLARITY, and to the number that should embarrass everyone involved: 365 days on the Senate side with no floor vote.

The bill did not stall for lack of support in the abstract. It passed the House with more than 70 Democrats, which is the strongest bipartisan showing any crypto legislation has ever produced. It cleared the Senate Banking Committee 15-9 on May 14, 2026. On June 1 it was placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders as Calendar No. 423, making it eligible for a floor vote at any moment leadership chooses to schedule one. Nobody has scheduled one.

The arithmetic explains part of it. Cloture requires 60 votes. Republicans hold roughly 53 seats, so the bill needs at least seven Democrats. Only two crossed over in committee, Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks, and both subsequently warned that their committee votes do not guarantee floor support absent further progress. The Republican margin has since narrowed further: Senator Lindsey Graham died on July 11 and Mitch McConnell has been absent, which leaves the conference almost no room for error.

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But the arithmetic is downstream of the actual obstacle, which is ethics. Democrats have conditioned their votes on provisions restricting government officials from profiting from the industry they regulate. The reason such a provision exists is that the President’s most recent financial disclosure showed roughly $1.4 billion in crypto-related income, including about $636 million from the memecoin bearing his name and more than $500 million tied to World Liberty Financial. The merged Senate draft combining the Banking and Agriculture texts was released on July 14 and omits any ethics provision. That same day, Senators Chris Murphy, Chris Van Hollen, and Jeff Merkley held a press conference formally opposing the bill.

The rest of the picture is a machine running out of track. Majority Leader John Thune has pledged a floor vote before the August recess, with the week of July 20 under active discussion. The House leaves July 23; the Senate leaves around August 7. A high-level White House meeting was convened on July 15 to hash out the ethics section, with the President himself in attendance. The White House crypto adviser begins military leave on July 27, inside the closing window. A House field hearing convenes at Federal Hall today. Prediction markets have priced 2026 passage in the mid-20s to upper-30s percent range, down from above 70% earlier in the year, and Galaxy’s research head cut his estimate to roughly 50% from 75% in late May. CFTC Chairman Michael Selig has publicly complained that ethics additions are derailing the bipartisan opportunity, calling it mission creep.

The bull case for the anniversary meaning nothing

The optimistic reading is that a year is not long by legislative standards and the anniversary is a media artifact rather than a signal.

Major financial legislation routinely takes multiple Congresses. Dodd-Frank was a crisis response and still consumed most of a year with a supermajority. The fact that CLARITY sits on the calendar eligible for a vote, with committee work finished in both relevant committees, is genuinely further than any market structure bill has ever reached. House Agriculture’s digital assets subcommittee chair has said the House will move fast on whatever the Senate produces, which removes one procedural obstacle entirely: if the Senate delivers a passable text, the House has committed to compressing its own timeline to nothing.

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The negotiation is also live rather than dead. A White House meeting with the President attending is not what a corpse looks like. Senators from both parties, including Gillibrand, Lummis, Boozman, and Scott, are described by House Financial Services Chair French Hill as working to get to yes. Kristin Smith of the Solana Policy Institute points to returning lawmakers and fresh bill text as evidence momentum is building. Three working weeks is short but it is not zero, and Congress passes things in the final hours as a matter of institutional habit.

And crucially, the absence of CLARITY has not left a vacuum. The SEC and CFTC joint interpretation of March 17, 2026 classified 16 named digital assets, including Bitcoin, Ether, and XRP, as digital commodities under a five-category taxonomy. That framework is binding on both agencies and is already being cited in fund registration statements. The industry has a working rulebook. The bill would improve it; the bill’s absence has not stopped the market from operating.

The bear case for the anniversary meaning everything

The pessimistic reading is that a year of failure on a bill with 70 Democratic House votes tells you the obstacle is structural, and structural obstacles do not resolve because a calendar page turns.

The compliance cost is the part the vote-counting misses. Businesses cannot build durable compliance programs against jurisdictional lines that remain uncertain, which means the gridlock is not a political story but an operating one, and it has now run for a full year. Firms have responded exactly as they have since 2018, by domiciling offshore, which means the activity continues and American oversight does not.

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The taxonomy that makes the bull case is also the bear case. It is administrative action. Any future administration can direct its agencies to reinterpret without a congressional vote. So the industry’s working rulebook is a reversible one, and the entire argument for CLARITY is that a reversible rulebook is not a rulebook. If the bill dies, what protects Bitcoin, Ether, and XRP from a future enforcement posture is one interpretive release from an agency whose position changed once already because its leadership changed.

Then there is the political clock, which does not reset. If CLARITY misses the August recess, it lands in a fall calendar that runs directly into November midterms, when legislative activity slows and the bill’s outlook becomes hostage to a chamber composition nobody can predict. The lame-duck session is the theoretical fallback and it is where well-positioned bills go to be forgotten.

And the ethics impasse has no natural resolution. Democrats argue it is incoherent to build a federal framework for digital assets while the sitting President earns his largest income stream from those assets with no enforceable restriction. The White House position, per Witt, is that it will accept ethics language applying across the board, from the president to the intern, but nothing targeting the President’s holdings specifically. Both positions are internally consistent. Together they are irreconcilable without a concession, and the July 14 draft showed which way the drafting is currently leaning.

The thing a year of delay actually cost

Vote math is the wrong lens for the anniversary, because it measures whether the bill will pass instead of what its absence has already done. A year is long enough for the delay itself to become the story.

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Start with the offshore drift, which is not theoretical. Firms domicile where the rules are legible. For a year, American builders have faced a jurisdictional question with no statutory answer, and the rational response has been to incorporate elsewhere, serve American users through structures designed by lawyers, or simply exclude Americans outright. Robinhood’s Stock Tokens are the clean illustration: tokenized equity products available across more than 120 countries and barred to US persons, built by an American brokerage. That is not a company fleeing regulation. It is a company reading the rules that exist and concluding that the safest jurisdiction for its newest product is anywhere else.

Then the compliance cost, which Forbes framed correctly this week: the gridlock has stopped being a political problem and become an operating one. A firm cannot build a durable compliance program against lines that may move. It cannot hire against them, budget against them, or sign multi-year vendor contracts against them. Every quarter of delay is a quarter in which the responsible actors, the ones who would comply if told how, spend money on legal opinions instead of product, while the irresponsible ones proceed exactly as before. Regulatory uncertainty is a tax that falls hardest on the firms most inclined to follow rules.

Then the institutional opportunity cost, which is the largest and least visible. The March taxonomy unlocked a great deal: fund issuers now cite it in registration statements, and accredited investors can structure compliant holdings without waiting for GENIUS implementation in November. But an interpretive release is not what a pension committee wants underneath a multi-decade allocation. Institutions do not ask whether an asset is currently permitted. They ask whether it will still be permitted after the next election, and the honest answer today is that nobody can promise it. That question has a statutory answer or it has no answer, and for a year it has had no answer.

The rebuttal deserves stating: none of that stopped the market. Spot volumes on centralized exchanges rose for the first time in five months in June, climbing 15.3% to $1.11 trillion, and real-world-asset perpetual volumes hit a record $311 billion. Tokenized Treasury products passed $15 billion. The industry is not waiting politely for permission, and the argument that legislation is existential looks weaker every quarter the sector functions without it.

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Both readings are true, which is the uncomfortable part. The market does not need CLARITY to operate. The market needs CLARITY to stop rebuilding its legal assumptions every time an administration changes. Those are different needs, and only one of them shows up in a volume chart.

What the scorecard actually shows

Line the three bills up and a pattern emerges that is more useful than any individual vote count.

GENIUS passed because it was narrow and nobody with leverage had a personal reason to block it. The anti-CBDC provision passed because it stopped trying to pass and hitched a ride on something that could, then survived presidential obstruction because it did not need his signature. CLARITY has not passed because it is broad, it touches agency turf, and the one person whose endorsement it carries most loudly is also the reason its opponents will not vote for it.

The uncomfortable implication is that the American legislative system handled crypto’s easy questions and has not handled its hard one. Stablecoin reserves are an easy question. Whether the Fed can issue a digital dollar is a question with a clear partisan valence and an available vehicle. Who regulates the entire digital asset market, and whether the officials writing that answer may personally profit from it, is a hard question, and hard questions require someone to give something up.

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A year ago today, the House answered the hard question 294-134 and the industry declared victory. The Senate has spent the twelve months since proving that the House vote was the easy part. Whether the next three weeks change that will come down to a room in the White House and whether anyone in it is willing to trade. If they are not, the anniversary that matters will not be this one. It will be the second one.

Disclaimer: This article is for information and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. It describes pending legislation and the political debate around it, and legislative outcomes are inherently uncertain. Nothing here is a recommendation to buy or sell any asset. Always do your own research. Information is accurate as of July 17, 2026, and this situation is developing quickly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happened one year ago today?

On July 17, 2025, the House of Representatives passed the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act by a vote of 294-134, with more than 70 Democrats joining Republicans. It was the strongest congressional endorsement of digital asset legislation in American history and part of what Washington called Crypto Week, during which the House passed three crypto bills in rapid succession.

What was Crypto Week?

A stretch of July 2025 in which the House passed the CLARITY Act 294-134, the GENIUS Act 308-122, and the Anti-CBDC Surveillance State Act 219-217. GENIUS was signed into law on July 18, 2025. The anti-CBDC measure stalled before reaching law inside a housing bill. CLARITY passed to the Senate and has not received a floor vote since.

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Did the GENIUS Act become law?

Yes. It passed the Senate 68-30 in June 2025 and the House 308-122 on July 17, 2025, and was signed on July 18, 2025, creating the first federal framework for payment stablecoins. It requires US payment stablecoin issuers to hold full reserves in liquid assets and disclose composition monthly, and it reaches its first major rulemaking deadline on July 18, 2026.

What happened to the anti-CBDC bill?

It cleared the House 219-217, then stalled when a promise to attach it to the defense bill went unkept. A provision barring the Federal Reserve from issuing a central bank digital currency through 2030 later rode inside the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act. The President has refused to sign that package over an unrelated elections bill, but it becomes law without his signature once the ten-day window closes.

Why has CLARITY not had a Senate vote?

Primarily ethics. Democrats have conditioned support on provisions restricting officials from profiting from the crypto industry, prompted by the President’s disclosure of roughly $1.4 billion in crypto income. The merged Senate draft released July 14 omitted any ethics provision, and Senators Murphy, Van Hollen, and Merkley announced opposition the same day. Disputes over DeFi developer protections and stablecoin yield also remain live.

What are the odds it passes in 2026?

Traders have grown sharply more pessimistic. Prediction markets priced 2026 passage in roughly the mid-20s to upper-30s percent range in mid-July, down from above 70% earlier in the year. Galaxy’s research head cut his estimate to about 50% from 75% in late May. Those figures move quickly and should be checked against current markets.

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What is the deadline?

The House leaves for recess on July 23 and the Senate around August 7. Majority Leader John Thune has pledged a floor vote before the recess, with the week of July 20 under discussion. After that, the bill lands in a fall calendar running into November midterms, when the outlook becomes considerably harder to predict.

What governs crypto in the meantime?

The SEC and CFTC joint interpretive release of March 17, 2026, which classified 16 named assets including Bitcoin, Ether, and XRP as digital commodities under a five-category taxonomy. It is binding on both agencies and is cited in fund registration statements. But it is administrative action, not statute, so a future administration could direct a reinterpretation without any congressional vote, which is the central argument for passing the bill.

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Analyst Says Long-Term Bullish Setup Could Take Ethereum to $22K

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Ethereum (ETH) could be entering the final stage of a long-term bullish pattern that eventually sees it go as high as $22,000, according to new analysis shared by pseudonymous crypto commentator NoName on July 17.

While the projection is highly speculative, it has added to a growing debate over whether ETH’s June lows marked the start of a broader recovery.

Analyst Points to Long-Term Chart Patterns After ETH Rebound

According to a chart the market watcher shared on X, since 2021, Ethereum has been building what technical analysts call an expanding diagonal, consisting of five waves, with each successive wave becoming larger than the last one. They pointed out that the first four waves were already done, with the fourth having found support between $1,072 and $1,385.

“That’s the floor this entire structure was building toward,” NoName explained, adding that expanding diagonals often end with a fifth wave that breaks above the previous cycle high. They also compared ETH’s structure to a historical Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) fractal and said that both charts have a similar formation and could produce a similar breakout. Based on that interpretation, the projected target is anywhere from $12,000 to $22,000.

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“Same structure, same resolution,” wrote the analyst. “Wave 5 target: 12k-22k.”

They also described ETH as “one of the most underpriced assets on the market” currently, suggesting that many people had given up on it, which could create an opportunity for long-term investors.

Another analyst, Crypto Patel, reached a similar conclusion using a different framework. In his version, he said that Ethereum has been following a Wyckoff accumulation pattern that could eventually lift the asset toward $10,000 by 2027 or 2028, provided the recent swing low around $1,500 remains intact. The trader also identified resistance between $2,400 and $2,600 and called it the first major hurdle the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency will have to overcome before any larger advance in its price could begin.

CryptoQuant contributor CW8900 also struck an optimistic note, sharing data showing that Ethereum wallets holding more than 100,000 ETH have gone back to green following the latest rebound. According to him, whales have only fallen into loss during major market bottoms, and their return to profit on many occasions has coincided with either a sustained rally or a meaningful short-term recovery.

The Other Side of the Coin

In June, ETH went very close to the $1,500 level, but softer-than-expected US inflation data released this week helped push it up to its highest level in a month and a half at $1,940 before sellers dragged it back below $1,900.

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At the time of writing, CoinGecko data showed the asset trading close to $1,800, having dropped by about 5% in 24 hours but still up more than 3% during the past week.

But while those recent gains have improved sentiment, the market is not all rowing in the same direction. According to analyst Crypto Rover, a repeating 1,369-day cycle points to a scenario where ETH could move back below $1,500 before a lasting bottom forms.

The post Analyst Says Long-Term Bullish Setup Could Take Ethereum to $22K appeared first on CryptoPotato.

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AI Future Forum 2026 in Dubai!

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Crypto Breaking News

On December 1–2, 2026, in Dubai, alongside Blockchain Life 2026 — one of the world’s largest events for Web3, crypto, mining, and AI — the all-new AI Future Forum takes the stage.

Expect visionary founders, global investors, breakthrough AI projects, robotics, and the technologies that will shape the next decade of the digital economy.

With 15,000+ attendees from 130+ countries and 200+ industry-leading speakers, the AI Future Forum is set to become the world’s premier destination where AI, Web3, and crypto leaders come together to shape what’s next.

What awaits participants?

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🔹 A full week of live networking with key players from around the world: 2 days of the forum, hundreds of side events, exclusive meetings, and the Formula 1 Grand Prix Final.

🔹 200+ top speakers: leading AI experts, founders of technology companies, investors, representatives of top AI startups, and leaders of the digital industry. The focus will be on the practical application of AI, its integration with crypto and business, and the technologies shaping the new digital economy.

🔹 A large-scale expo zone: 200+ leading companies in robotics, AI development, Web3 projects, and the most progressive startups.

🔹 The legendary AfterParty at one of Dubai’s top clubs with a globally known headline artist.

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🔹 Startup Pitch – an opportunity to present your project to the international community and attract attention from investors and funds.

🎟️ One ticket. Two world-class events.

Exclusive limited offer! AI Future Forum ticket includes full access to Blockchain Life 2026.

🔥 Get 10% off with promo code WEB3DIGITAL before the prices go up: 

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https://ai-future.com/ 

Risk & affiliate notice: Crypto assets are volatile and capital is at risk. This article may contain affiliate links. Read full disclosure

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Tokenization has become a strategic priority for 84% of financial firms

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Tokenization has become a strategic priority for 84% of financial firms

On Wednesday, DTCC completed its first live production trades involving tokenized securities, marking a major step toward bringing blockchain technology into traditional financial markets.

Broadridge’s findings suggest those efforts are influencing the broader industry. Sixty-eight percent of respondents said tokenization will at least partially reshape financial markets within the next three to five years, while nearly one-third plan to increase investment in tokenization projects by 26% to 50% or more over the next two years.

The survey also found firms are not preparing for an all-onchain future. Instead, 92% expect digital and traditional assets to coexist for the foreseeable future, and 69% plan to integrate tokenization into existing infrastructure rather than build separate blockchain-native systems.

That mirrors the approach taken by many large financial institutions, which have generally focused on connecting blockchain networks to existing trading, custody and settlement systems instead of replacing them.

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Adoption remains uneven across the industry. Forty-four percent of capital markets firms said they already have tokenization initiatives in production or operating at scale, compared with 20% of asset managers and 9% of wealth managers.

The survey also pointed to where firms expect tokenization to gain traction first. About 80% of respondents believe tokenized mutual funds and money market funds will play a meaningful role within five years, reflecting the rapid growth of tokenized Treasury products. By comparison, only about half expect tokenized equities to achieve similar adoption over that period.

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Kaspersky Flags Malware Framework Targeting Crypto Investors

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Crypto Breaking News

Cybersecurity researchers are flagging a fresh wave of malware tactics aimed at people who hold, build, and advise on crypto-related software. Kaspersky, for instance, says it has discovered a new malware framework—dubbed OkoBot—that targets cryptocurrency investors by combining social engineering with data theft capabilities.

At the same time, SlowMist warns of a separate intrusion campaign that targets Web3 developers through seemingly legitimate recruitment messaging on LinkedIn, pushing victims to run poisoned code hosted on GitHub. Together, the incidents underscore how attackers are increasingly using everyday work routines—interviews, code trials, and app installs—as delivery mechanisms for malware.

Key takeaways

  • OkoBot is designed to steal crypto-related data by harvesting wallet files, browser information, credentials, and injected browser or extension activity.
  • Kaspersky says it has observed multiple OkoBot-linked attacks since January 2026, and that the framework evolved from an earlier campaign called TookPS.
  • OkoBot’s infrastructure reportedly routes all payload delivery through an SSH tunnel, enabling remote data transport to attacker-controlled systems.
  • SlowMist reports LinkedIn-based “recruiter” scams that deliver malicious GitHub repositories disguised as technical interview tasks for Web3 developers.
  • The recruitment workflow mirrors legitimate developer interviews closely enough to lower suspicion, increasing the chance victims will run the malicious code.

OkoBot targets crypto holders through wallet and browser theft

In a report released this week, Kaspersky described OkoBot as a malware framework that kickstarts an infection chain using social engineering and “malicious app” delivery tactics. According to Kaspersky, the initial entry includes tricks such as ClickFix, which aims to persuade users to execute harmful commands, as well as trojanized GitHub applications that can introduce a backdoor to a compromised device.

Once a system is under attacker control, Kaspersky says OkoBot is capable of collecting sensitive information that is directly relevant to crypto ownership. The company reports that the malware can:

  • Harvest cryptocurrency wallet files.
  • Extract browser data and user credentials.
  • Inject malicious extensions.
  • Capture wallet application windows, potentially enabling theft through on-screen or session-related data.

Kaspersky also stated that it identified multiple attacks using this malware family since January 2026. For investors, the practical concern is not only that wallets could be accessed, but also that browser activity and stored authentication data can be used to move faster toward account takeovers or transfer operations.

How the infrastructure works: payload orchestration via SSH

A notable detail in Kaspersky’s analysis is that OkoBot allegedly differs from prior campaigns by how it manages its malicious payloads. Kaspersky said the framework orchestrates all 20 malicious payloads via an SSH tunnel, which supports remote transport of data from compromised computers to systems controlled by attackers.

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That matters because it points to an operational model where the attacker retains strong control over follow-on stages after initial compromise. Instead of relying solely on static behavior, a tunneled architecture can help attackers adapt to victims and collect information more reliably, depending on what the malware finds on each host.

Kaspersky also described OkoBot as an evolution of TookPS, a malware campaign first identified in 2025 that distributed a Trojan downloader through fake software websites. By evolving from an earlier delivery approach and adding more coordinated payload handling, the OkoBot framework appears positioned to increase both infection success and post-compromise effectiveness.

LinkedIn recruitment scams push Web3 devs into running poisoned repositories

Separate research from SlowMist focuses on a different target set: Web3 developers. In a report published on Saturday, the firm said attackers are reaching developers through LinkedIn messages that impersonate Web3 recruiters.

SlowMist’s description of the workflow suggests attackers are deliberately choosing a high-trust, familiar entry point. After initial contact, victims are sent what appear to be fake GitHub repositories, framed as a “minimum viable product” that the developer should install and try before an interview.

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The technique is effective, SlowMist argues, because it resembles a real technical interview process. The report notes that a legitimate developer workflow often involves pulling code, installing dependencies, and launching a project—steps victims naturally perform while preparing for an interview. In that environment, malicious code can be less obvious, especially if the victim does not expect a security risk from a repository “connected” to a recruiting conversation.

What attackers aim to steal from developer systems

SlowMist said the end goal is to deliver a complete remote access trojan to the victim’s device. Once established, the malware could enable attackers to steal sensitive materials associated with development and operations, including project keys, cloud credentials, or data tied to wallet extensions.

SlowMist also emphasized that the recruitment approach is part of a broader pattern: attackers are increasingly leveraging scenarios such as recruitment, code reviews, and project collaborations to trick developers into running malicious repositories. In other words, this is not only about deception, but also about timing—waiting for the moment a developer is likely to execute code as part of normal work.

Importantly, this LinkedIn-focused warning came after SlowMist reported another campaign targeting macOS users. That earlier effort, as SlowMist described it, aimed to steal credentials and hijack Telegram sessions in order to coerce victims into submitting wallet recovery phrases through fake websites. While the TTPs differ between the campaigns, both point to the same underlying threat: attackers are methodically chaining social engineering and credential theft to ultimately compromise crypto access.

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Going forward, both reports suggest readers should watch for more “legitimate-looking” pathways into compromise—especially where code execution is requested via recruiters, interview workflows, or third-party repositories. For investors and developers alike, the immediate question is not only whether malware is present, but whether attackers can leverage everyday trust and authenticated sessions to reach wallet-relevant secrets quickly.

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Adam Back Talks About Bitcoin BIP-110 Controversy. “Satoshi Was Not Retarded”

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A 1997 Mailing List Holds a Clue to the Satoshi Puzzle

Adam Back, Blockstream’s CEO, dismissed claims that Satoshi Nakamoto backed BIP-110, a contested Bitcoin (BTC) soft fork proposal. He mocked its backers on X for failing to fund what he called a cypherpunk summer celebration.

The exchange unfolded on July 18, 2026, as the debate over BIP-110 proposal approaches a critical signaling deadline. Back predicted the fork attempt would collapse within weeks of that deadline.

Adam Back Questions the Satoshi Assumption

A user on X argued Nakamoto would still back BIP-110 if he were alive today. Back rejected the premise outright. He then questioned whether Nakamoto is even dead, calling it pure speculation either way.

Back also denied being Nakamoto himself. The remark reopened a long-running debate over Bitcoin governance and who speaks for its founding vision. Back has weighed in on this dispute before, in his earlier fork risk warning.

Bitcoin, meanwhile, traded near $63,944 on the Bitcoin price chart, up 1.43% in 24 hours.

BIP-110 Struggles to Gain Miner Support

BIP-110 would temporarily cap the size of arbitrary data miners can embed in Bitcoin transactions, targeting Ordinals-style inscriptions. However, miner backing has stayed minimal so far. Signaling data show just 0.86% of blocks in the current difficulty period support the proposal. That is far short of the 55% threshold needed for lock-in.

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Back mocked the proposal’s backers directly, pointing to their failure to monetize the campaign.

sad part is we didnt manage to get the 110 fork to pay for the cypherpunk summer afterparty. no airdrop, no liquidity, no fork futures. no money where their mouth is. ofc as they too know it’s failed.

Back

The comment, meanwhile, echoes the long-running BIP-110 dispute that has split developers for months.

What Happens When Signaling Turns Mandatory

Mandatory signaling begins around block 961,632, roughly three weeks from Friday’s chain tip near block 958,529. Back predicted the fork would stall almost immediately afterward.

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He said the first mandatory signaling block would trigger an automatic split. Bitcoin nodes always follow the chain with the most cumulative work.

Miners would have little reason to keep mining once their chain fell behind, Back said. He compared the abandoned fork to a “Pompeii chain,” frozen as a monument to the attempt’s failure.

The prediction follows Back’s earlier pushback against separate claims that Bitcoin would effectively fire noncompliant miners in August.

It also lands alongside renewed chatter about Satoshi’s dormant coins, another flashpoint in the identity debate.

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Whether BIP-110 activates or fades away may hinge on how many miners flip the switch once signaling turns mandatory.

The post Adam Back Talks About Bitcoin BIP-110 Controversy. “Satoshi Was Not Retarded” appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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SpaceX Stock Sinks Below IPO Price: The Hype Is Over?

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SpaceX Stock Sinks Below IPO Price: The Hype Is Over?

SpaceX (SPCX) shares slipped below their $135 initial public offering (IPO) price this week. The stock had peaked above $200 in the weeks following its record Nasdaq debut. Elon Musk dismissed the retreat and predicted the company will eventually outvalue Earth itself.

The stock was priced at $135 a share in June, raising $75 billion in the largest IPO on record. It has now lost roughly a third of its value from that peak. Short interest surged as the price fell.

SpaceX Stock Price Chart. Source: Yahoo Finance

SpaceX’s Bold Claim Meets a Falling Stock

Musk’s forecast followed a SpaceX stock crash that wiped billions from his fortune this month. Musk responded directly to entrepreneur Peter Diamandis on X.

Diamandis argued that all owned material wealth on Earth totals about $600 trillion. Space, in his view, holds nearly infinite quantities of the same resources.

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Musk’s math rests on that comparison, though it hinges on SpaceX reaching goals he never specified. The claim, however, is not new. Musk floated a similar SpaceX outvalue Earth argument earlier this month, well before the stock tested its IPO floor.

SpaceX Stock Price
SpaceX Stock Price. Source: TradingView

Short Sellers Draw Musk’s Ire

Bearish bets against SpaceX climbed sharply as the stock fell. Short interest reportedly reached about 185 million shares, or 29% of the tradable float.

That figure stood at roughly 40 million shares just three weeks earlier. It represents close to $25 billion in bearish wagers. Short sellers already hold an estimated $8.7 billion in paper profits.

The rapid buildup followed SpaceX’s historic IPO, which also sparked a rally in tokens tied to Musk, including Dogecoin. One widely shared post mocked the Ivy League pedigrees of short sellers. Musk then issued a warning of his own on X.

He offered no evidence for that claim, and the stock kept sliding regardless.

What Comes Next for SpaceX

The stock now trades near a level flagged in a recent falling wedge pattern. That pattern points to a possible rebound toward $158. Investors will also watch August share unlocks. That date lets insiders sell shares for the first time since the IPO, adding potential fresh supply.

SpaceX also scrubbed a Starship test flight this week. Automated safety systems halted the countdown at T-minus zero after several Raptor engines failed to ignite. Musk said two engines need replacement, with the next attempt likely early the following week.

Musk has separately argued that the scarcity of goods and services will eventually disappear. It reflects a related piece of his broader worldview on abundance.

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That vision, though, remains untested against SpaceX’s near-term performance. Short sellers, meanwhile, appear willing to bet against the stock before the unlock date arrives.

The post SpaceX Stock Sinks Below IPO Price: The Hype Is Over? appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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Kaspersky Flags Malware Framework Aimed at Crypto Investors

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Crypto Breaking News

Two separate cybersecurity reports point to a growing trend in crypto-related malware: attackers are no longer relying only on obvious phishing emails. Instead, they are moving closer to the workflows people already use—recruiting pipelines, developer code trials, and wallet-related software behavior.

Kaspersky says it has uncovered a cryptocurrency-targeting malware framework dubbed “OkoBot,” which initiates an infection chain through social engineering, malicious commands, and trojanized GitHub applications. Separately, SlowMist describes a campaign aimed at Web3 developers that starts with fake LinkedIn recruitment offers and ends with poisoned repositories designed to deliver remote access.

Key takeaways

  • Kaspersky links the OkoBot framework to wallet theft activity, including harvesting wallet files and capturing browser and credential data.
  • OkoBot is designed to steal assets by injecting malicious browser extensions and collecting wallet application windows, Kaspersky reports.
  • SlowMist warns that fake “recruitment” messages are being used to trick developers into running malicious GitHub repositories that resemble legitimate interview tasks.
  • SlowMist says the campaign’s goal is to deliver a remote access trojan that can exfiltrate project keys and cloud or wallet extension data.
  • Both reports emphasize social engineering paths—ClickFix-like tactics or developer-targeted collaboration scenarios—that make the attacks harder to spot.

Kaspersky: OkoBot targets crypto investors through wallet and credential theft

In a report released this week, Kaspersky describes OkoBot as a malware framework built to compromise cryptocurrency investors by chaining together multiple stages of intrusion. The first step is not purely technical; it relies on social engineering methods intended to get victims to act.

According to Kaspersky, initial access can come from tactics such as ClickFix, a technique that aims to trick users into running malicious commands. Alternatively, attackers may deliver similar outcomes by distributing trojanized GitHub apps that include backdoors once installed.

After gaining a foothold, Kaspersky says OkoBot has capabilities specifically relevant to crypto users and their systems. The malware can harvest crypto wallet files, collect browser data and user credentials, and manipulate the victim’s environment by injecting malicious extensions. It also reportedly captures wallet application windows, which can give attackers a more direct path to stolen assets than credential theft alone.

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Kaspersky added that it has observed multiple attacks involving the OkoBot malware family since January 2026, suggesting the framework is not a one-off operation but part of an active campaign.

Evolution from TookPS: more orchestration, more reach

Kaspersky also frames OkoBot as an evolution of a prior threat. The company says the malware framework evolved from “TookPS,” a campaign first identified in 2025 that distributed a Trojan downloader via fake software websites. That earlier stage matters because it signals a progression in how attackers deliver and manage malicious payloads: from initial trickery and download into a more structured compromise process.

A distinctive operational detail in Kaspersky’s account is how OkoBot manages its payloads. The report states that it orchestrates all 20 malicious payloads via an SSH tunnel, allowing remote transport of data from infected computers to infrastructure controlled by attackers.

For investors and defenders, this design choice matters because it can complicate incident response. Data exfiltration over an SSH tunnel may blend with normal encrypted traffic patterns, and the multi-payload architecture suggests victims may not see a single obvious “binary” responsible for damage.

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SlowMist: fake LinkedIn recruiting and “try before interview” repositories

In a separate report, SlowMist describes another approach to malware delivery: it targets Web3 developers by disguising an attack as recruitment. Rather than sending victims a generic phishing link, attackers reportedly contact developers through LinkedIn while posing as Web3 recruiters.

SlowMist says the attackers follow up with instructions to download and run code from fake GitHub repositories. The bait is framed as a realistic recruitment process: the repository is presented as a “minimum viable product” that the developer should try before the interview, which aligns closely with how technical screenings often work.

The company notes that the workflow looks and feels like a genuine interview assignment: developers are expected to pull code, install dependencies, and launch the project. That resemblance is a key factor in why the attack can be difficult to detect—there may be no obvious sign that a “try it now” task is actually weaponized.

Remote access trojan goals: keys, credentials, and extension data

According to SlowMist, the end goal of the LinkedIn-and-GitHub tactic is to deliver a complete remote access trojan onto the victim’s device. Once installed, SlowMist says attackers can steal sensitive information relevant to Web3 work, including project keys, cloud credentials, or wallet extension data.

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SlowMist also emphasizes that this is not an isolated tactic. The report argues that attackers are increasingly exploiting scenarios that encourage developers to run code—such as recruitment tasks, code reviews, and project collaborations—turning normal professional behavior into an infection vector.

It is also notable that SlowMist’s write-up arrives amid a broader pattern of recent warnings. The security firm had also previously cautioned about a separate malware campaign targeting macOS users, designed to steal credentials, hijack Telegram sessions, and ultimately pressure victims into entering wallet recovery phrases via fake websites.

For readers and builders, the common thread across both reports is the same: attackers are calibrating their intrusions to the moments when people are most likely to click “run,” install, or test code—whether that happens after a recruiter message on LinkedIn or after a malicious “app” appears to be a legitimate GitHub tool. The next thing to watch is whether these campaigns expand into more standardized tooling for developers and more automation for account-level compromise, since both Kaspersky and SlowMist describe activity that looks organized and iterative rather than sporadic.

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Kaspersky exposes OkoBot’s 20-module crypto wallet attack

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Kaspersky exposes OkoBot’s 20-module crypto wallet attack

Kaspersky has exposed OkoBot, a year-old malware operation that uses roughly 20 modules to steal crypto wallet recovery phrases and has affected users across at least five countries.

Summary

  • Kaspersky uncovered OkoBot using roughly 20 modules to steal crypto wallet credentials.
  • The malware has affected users in Brazil, Vietnam, Canada, Mexico, and Turkey.
  • OkoBot uses fake recovery screens, keylogging, spyware, and ClickFix commands to target victims.

Kaspersky researchers discovered that the malware has remained active for more than a year, according to a report published by Bits.media. Most identified victims were located in Brazil, Vietnam, Canada, Mexico, and Turkey, while the operators blocked IP addresses from Russia and other Commonwealth of Independent States countries.

Distributed through GitHub repositories, OkoBot is disguised as legitimate software, including Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio. Kaspersky found that the attackers rely on the ClickFix social engineering method, which tricks victims into running malicious commands on their own devices.

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The technique often presents users with fake error messages, verification steps, or repair instructions. Following those directions causes victims to execute code that installs the malware without realizing the command is malicious.

OkoBot targets seed phrases and wallet credentials

Among OkoBot’s modules, SeedHunter displays a fake recovery interface linked to hardware wallets such as Ledger and Trezor, according to Kaspersky. When users enter their recovery phrases into the fraudulent screen, the module sends the information to the malware operators.

A second module called MC Keylogger records keyboard input and monitors clipboard activity, allowing it to capture passwords, copied wallet addresses, and other credentials. OkoSpyware can track wallet passwords and record videos of open windows, giving attackers another way to observe activity on an infected device.

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Once a recovery phrase is exposed, the attackers can use it to take control of the associated wallet and move its assets. Kaspersky warned that victims have little chance of recovering stolen cryptocurrency because blockchain transfers are generally irreversible.

The malware’s modular design also lets its operators collect different types of information from a single infected system. According to the security company’s findings, OkoBot can target both wallet access data and credentials connected to other services used on the device.

ClickFix attacks have also targeted crypto developers

OkoBot is the latest malware campaign found using ClickFix against the cryptocurrency sector. As crypto.news reported in April, North Korea’s state-backed Lazarus Group used the same technique in a macOS campaign known as “Mach-O Man.”

Citing research from CertiK, the report found that Lazarus sent fake online meeting invitations to fintech and crypto executives. Victims were instructed to paste supposed repair or verification commands into the macOS Terminal, which installed malware capable of stealing cryptocurrency and corporate information.

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CertiK also found that the Mach-O Man toolkit deleted itself after running, making forensic analysis more difficult. The campaign combined social engineering with terminal-level commands instead of relying only on malicious file downloads.

Developer tools have provided another route into crypto systems. In May, crypto.news reported that TrapDoor malware was distributed through poisoned software packages targeting developers in cryptocurrency, decentralized finance, artificial intelligence, and security infrastructure.

According to that report, TrapDoor sought wallet data, API keys, cloud credentials, and SSH access tied to services and ecosystems including Coinbase, Binance, MetaMask, Brave, Solana, Sui, and Aptos. Researchers also found hidden prompts designed to manipulate Claude and Cursor into running fake security scans that exposed secrets and transmitted them to the attackers.

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France Orders ISPs to Geoblock Polymarket Over Gambling Rules

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Crypto Breaking News

France’s gambling regulator has ordered internet service providers to block access to Polymarket, escalating a wave of restrictions aimed at prediction platforms operating outside local authorizations.

In a Friday press release, the Autorité nationale des jeux (ANJ) said prediction websites fall under illegal gambling rules if they are not authorized, adding that advertising or promoting such sites is a criminal offense punishable by fines of up to 100,000 euros.

Key takeaways

  • France’s ANJ has ordered ISPs to block Polymarket, citing lack of authorization and illegal gambling promotion risks.
  • The regulator argues Polymarket’s features resemble regulated gambling, but without “protective mechanisms” found in the legal market.
  • ANJ also raised concerns about possible outcome manipulation, including allegations involving weather-related contracts.
  • Polymarket has already been geoblocked in multiple regions, according to its own documentation.
  • Regulatory scrutiny is not limited to Europe: similar legal disputes have played out in the US between state actors and federal authorities.

France moves to block Polymarket

The ANJ’s order targets access to Polymarket through internet service providers, framing the platform as an unauthorized gambling offering. According to the regulator, Polymarket’s operations are not authorized in France, and the advertising of gambling sites without permission constitutes a criminal offense.

The decision comes as prediction markets continue to gain mainstream attention. Polymarket, in particular, has grown rapidly over the last two years, with trading volume reaching billions of dollars, even as regulators worldwide question whether its event contracts are gambling products, unlicensed offerings, or something closer to financial instruments.

France’s action also reinforces a broader pattern of country-by-country enforcement. Polymarket access has been blocked in places including Singapore, Poland, Portugal, Hungary, Ukraine, Brazil, and Indonesia, while at press time Polymarket said it was geoblocked in 36 regions, based on its published API documentation.

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ANJ cites “addictive” mechanics and missing safeguards

Beyond the authorization question, the ANJ’s reasoning focuses on how prediction products are experienced by users. The regulator said Polymarket offers “addictive features” that are comparable to those of legally regulated gambling, but it claims those features are “amplified by the absence of the protective mechanisms found in the legal gambling market.”

This distinction matters for investors and users because it goes to how regulators classify the product. When a platform resembles regulated gambling mechanics but lacks corresponding protections—such as consumer safeguards and oversight—authorities are more likely to pursue takedowns, advertising restrictions, and access blocking, even if the platform markets itself as a different kind of market.

Outcome manipulation concerns and investigation status

The ANJ also pointed to the risk of outcome manipulation in certain event contracts. It cited alleged rigging, including a specific example: bets tied to weather outcomes where the regulator said weather sensors may have been hacked.

“Some of the bets offered on this platform appeared to be rigged: for example, bets on the weather revealed that weather sensors may have been hacked.”

In addition, the cybercrime unit of the Paris Public Prosecutor’s Office opened an investigation in May 2026 and, according to the article’s account of the regulator’s findings, identified a lack of identity verification safeguards such as Know Your Customer checks.

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For participants, this kind of enforcement pressure highlights a key operational fault line: regulators are not only focused on contract structure, but also on platform controls—especially around participant verification and the reliability of the information used to settle outcomes.

France builds on earlier warnings, while US regulators escalate

This is not France’s first move. Earlier coverage noted that the ANJ shared plans in November 2024 to block Polymarket after the platform allegedly failed to comply with national gambling laws, and the Friday decision follows through with the required ISP-level blocking.

The French action arrives amid an ongoing legal fight over prediction markets in the United States. On June 17, Kentucky sued five prediction market platforms, including Kalshi and Polymarket, alleging they were operating unlicensed sports betting platforms—according to the earlier reporting cited in the article. Additional states have followed suit. Separately, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has sued New Mexico, arguing that state-level interference encroached on the federal regulator’s exclusive authority over federally regulated event contracts, as reflected in the referenced CFTC dispute.

Taken together, the US and France developments underscore a persistent regulatory tension: prediction markets sit at the intersection of gambling law, securities and commodities frameworks, and consumer protection rules. Even when platforms frame themselves as market infrastructure for forecasting rather than wagering, regulators appear willing to treat them as gambling-like products when participation mechanics and consumer risk resemble traditional betting.

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As France implements the ISP blocking order, the next question for readers and market participants is how Polymarket and other affected platforms will adjust compliance, identity verification, and settlement-risk controls—and whether the broader trend shifts from geoblocking to more formal legal resolutions in major jurisdictions.

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Ethereum braces for CLARITY vote as bulls defend crucial support

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Polymarket chart shows 39% odds of the CLARITY Act becoming law in 2026.

Ethereum has risen 1.8% to $1,845 after Rep. Bryan Steil raised hopes for a Senate vote on the CLARITY Act next week, while ETF inflows and firm chart support kept traders cautiously bullish.

Summary

  • Ethereum rose 1.8% as Bryan Steil raised hopes for a CLARITY Act vote next week.
  • Spot Ethereum ETFs recorded $105 million in weekly inflows, their highest since April.
  • ETH must defend $1,830 and break $1,854 to target the $1,947 resistance zone.

Steil, who chairs the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Digital Assets, told FOX Business that the bill could reach the Senate floor in the coming week. Passage could place ETH under a digital commodity framework and establish federal rules for its trading and oversight.

During a July 17 hearing, Steil urged lawmakers to complete the legislation as the Senate prepares to consider it. “Let’s pass CLARITY,” he stated in remarks published by the House Financial Services Committee.

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Polymarket traders raised the probability of the bill becoming law in 2026 to 39% from 30% on July 17. However, unresolved disputes over ethics rules and stablecoin yields have kept the odds below 50%.

Polymarket chart shows 39% odds of the CLARITY Act becoming law in 2026.
Source: Polymarket

Institutional flows have also improved. SoSoValue data showed that spot Ethereum ETFs attracted $105 million between July 13 and July 17, their strongest weekly inflow since April.

Ethereum’s decentralized finance activity has grown alongside the ETF demand. DeFiLlama placed the network’s total value locked at about $40.5 billion, up from roughly $36 billion at the start of July. The network also processed $978.9 million in decentralized exchange volume and 2.46 million transactions over the past 24 hours.

Ethereum must clear $1,854 to reopen the path toward $1,947

Ethereum’s daily chart shows a double-bottom structure formed around $1,511, with the neckline near $1,847. ETH briefly climbed to $1,947 before returning to test the neckline, which now overlaps with the 0.786 Fibonacci retracement at $1,853.82.

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Ethereum daily chart shows ETH testing $1,854 resistance after forming a double-bottom pattern.
Ethereum daily price chart — July 18 | Source: crypto.news

A daily close above $1,854 would place the recent $1,947 high and the 100-day exponential moving average near $1,939 back in play. The double-bottom structure has a measured target near $2,180, while crypto analyst Michaël van de Poppe expects $2,200 to $2,400 if the $1,780 support remains intact.

Daily momentum still favors buyers, although the pace has slowed. The MACD line stands at 35.57, above the 21.69 signal line, while the positive histogram has contracted to 13.88. The relative strength index sits at 57.15, leaving ETH below overbought territory.

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On the 4-hour chart, Ethereum (ETH) remains inside an ascending channel that has guided the recovery since late June. Its lower boundary and the previous Supertrend support meet around $1,830, while the upper boundary extends toward $2,040. Chaikin Money Flow remains positive at 0.07, but the active Supertrend resistance at $1,908 must fall before buyers can retest the July high.

Ethereum 4-hour chart shows ETH holding near $1,830 support inside a rising channel.
Ethereum 4-hour price chart — July 18 | Source: crypto.news

CoinGlass’ 48-hour liquidation heatmap places the nearest dense leverage cluster between $1,860 and $1,870. More positions sit around $1,900, while downside liquidity has accumulated near $1,810 and $1,790.

Ethereum liquidation heatmap shows major leverage clusters near $1,870, $1,900, and $1,810.
Ethereum liquidation heatmap | Source: CoinGlass

According to analyst Ted Pillows, the $1,820–$1,850 region will decide ETH’s next move.

“If Ethereum holds above it, expect another uptrend towards $1,950–$2,000.”

A break below $1,780 would weaken Ethereum’s recovery

Ethereum would lose its 4-hour channel if sellers force a close below $1,830. Such a move would expose the 50-day EMA near $1,812 and could trigger leveraged long liquidations around $1,810.

A deeper decline below the 61.8% Fibonacci level at $1,780.64 would weaken the double-bottom setup and open the 50% retracement at $1,729.24. Pillows also cited the escalating U.S.-Iran situation as a risk to the $1,820–$1,850 support zone.

Political uncertainty remains another invalidation risk. Failure to resolve the CLARITY Act’s ethics and stablecoin provisions could delay a Senate vote, remove the immediate catalyst behind ETH’s rebound, and place the $1,780 support under renewed pressure.

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Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.

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