Crypto World
Bernstein says quantum threat to Bitcoin is real but manageable
Network News
BERNSTEIN SAYS QUANTUM THREAT TO BITCOIN IS REAL BUT MANAGEABLE: Wall Street broker Bernstein said the rise of quantum computing poses a credible but manageable threat to Bitcoin and the broader crypto ecosystem, as recent breakthroughs compress timelines for potential attacks on modern cryptography. Advances such as Google Quantum AI’s reported reduction in qubit requirements suggest the risk is no longer a distant, decade-long concern, the broker noted. Still, the firm cautioned that scaling quantum systems to the level needed to break widely used encryption remains a complex, multi-step challenge. “Quantum should be seen as a medium to long term system upgrade cycle rather than a risk,” analysts led by Gautam Chhugani said in the Wednesday report. Quantum computing uses the principles of quantum mechanics rather than classical physics. Instead of binary bits, it relies on qubits that can exist in multiple states at once, a property known as superposition, allowing many possibilities to be processed simultaneously. Combined with entanglement, this enables quantum systems to solve certain problems, such as breaking encryption, far more efficiently than classical computers. Quantum computers could eventually weaken cryptographic systems like elliptic curve encryption, which underpin crypto wallets, by solving problems beyond the reach of classical machines. However, the report said the threat spans industries from finance to defense and should be viewed as a manageable, long-term risk rather than an existential one for Bitcoin. — Will Canny Read more.
EXPLOITS TO ESPIONAGE: DRIFT HACK REVEALS MORE COMPLEX OPERATIONS: When Drift disclosed the details behind its $270 million exploit, the most unsettling part wasn’t the scale of the loss — it was how it happened. According to the team behind the protocol, the attack wasn’t a smart contract bug or a clever piece of code manipulation. It was a six-month campaign involving fake identities, in-person meetings across multiple countries and carefully cultivated trust. The attackers, allegedly from North Korea, didn’t just find a vulnerability in the system. They became part of it. This new threat is now forcing a broader reckoning across decentralized finance. For years, the industry has treated security as a technical problem, something that could be solved with audits, formal verification and better code. But the Drift incident suggests something far more complex: that the real vulnerabilities may lie outside the codebase altogether. Alexander Urbelis, chief information security officer (CISO) at ENS Labs, argues the framing itself is already outdated. “We need to stop calling these ‘hacks’ and start calling them what they are: intelligence operations,” Urbelis told CoinDesk. “The people who showed up at conferences, who met Drift contributors in person across multiple countries, who deposited a million dollars of their own money to build credibility: that’s tradecraft. It’s the kind of thing you’d expect from a case officer, not a hacker.” If that characterization holds, then Drift represents a new playbook: one where attackers behave less like opportunistic hackers and more like patient operators embedding themselves socially before making a move onchain. — Margaux Nijkerk Read more.
SOLANA FOUNDATION NEW AD ‘DONT WASTE TIME ON CRYPTO’: The Solana Foundation is taking a deliberately contrarian approach to crypto marketing in San Francisco, rolling out a billboard campaign that reads: “Don’t waste time with crypto.” At first glance, the message may seem a bit confusing as a crypto foundation is saying not to waste time with crypto. But according to the Solana Foundation, it is a bullish bet on the future of crypto that intersects with agentic AI. Essentially, what this means is that rather than wasting your time executing transactions with crypto, which might be cumbersome and time-consuming, let your AI agents do the hard work. The ad directs passersby to the x402 account on X, a nod to a growing push within the Solana ecosystem to position blockchain not as a consumer-facing product, but as invisible infrastructure for the next phase of the internet. — Margaux Nijkerk Read more.
NEW ALCHEMY AI TOOL: Alchemy, a cryptocurrency infrastructure provider used by many blockchains and firms in the space, has released a new tool, AgentPay , that lets different AI payment systems, from companies like Coinbase, Stripe, Visa, Mastercard, and Circle, work together. The new tool addresses the problem that agentic payment systems currently coming online aren’t “interoperable,” or in other words, don’t talk to one another, meaning a merchant that wants AI agents as customers has to build a separate integration for every protocol. “That’s not sustainable, and it’s only going to get more fragmented as more systems launch,” said Alchemy CTO Guillaume Poncin in an email. “AgentPay fixes that. A merchant registers their existing API with us, we give them a new endpoint, and any agent on any supported protocol can pay them through it.” Alchemy is widely seen as the “AWS of Web3,” as it provides the infrastructure, developer tools, and node services needed to build blockchain applications. AgentPay promises one integration for every protocol, citing the likes of x402, MPP, A2P or L402. “We sit in the middle as the translation layer, where AgentPay routes instructions, and Alchemy never touches the funds,” Poncin said. — Ian Allison Read more.
In Other News
- Adam Back has denied claims that he is Satoshi Nakamoto after a New York Times story argued that the British cryptographer is the strongest candidate yet for Bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator. In a post on X after the article was published, Back said his long record in cryptography, privacy tools and electronic cash research explains why reporters keep finding links between his work and Bitcoin’s design. “I’m not satoshi,” Back wrote. He said he had been “early in laser focus on the positive societal implications of cryptography, online privacy and electronic cash,” and that his work from about 1992 onward, including discussions on the cypherpunks mailing list, led to Hashcash and other ideas later echoed in Bitcoin. Back, said NYT reporter John Carreyrou, had found “many interesting bitcoin analogs in early attempts to create a decentralized ecash,” adding that early researchers explored concepts such as peer-to-peer systems, proof-of-work, and routing models that looked like prototypes for Bitcoin. — Helene Braun Read more.
- Wall Street investment bank JPMorgan (JPM) said the pace of capital flowing into digital assets slowed markedly in the first quarter of 2026, with total inflows estimated at around $11 billion. That implies an annualized run rate of roughly $44 billion, about one-third of the pace seen in 2025, according to the report published last week. “Investor flows, either retail or institutional, have been small or even negative YTD with the bulk of the digital asset flow in Q1’26 stemming from Strategy’s (MSTR) bitcoin purchases and concentrated crypto VC funding,” wrote analysts led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou. Crypto markets had a volatile and broadly negative first quarter, with prices and market value retreating sharply amid a risk-off backdrop. Total crypto market capitalization fell roughly 20% over the period, while bitcoin dropped around 23% and ether (ETH) declined more than 30%, marking one of the weakest first-quarter performances in years. The selloff was driven by macroeconomic and geopolitical pressures, triggering liquidations and a broad pullback in risk assets, with altcoins hit even harder. — Will Canny Read more.
Regulatory and Policy
- Polymarket removed a betting market tied to the rescue of U.S. service members in Iran, after intense backlash and criticism from lawmakers this weekend. The market allowed users to wager on when the U.S. would confirm the rescue of two airmen after an F-15E fighter jet was shot down over Iran. The crew members have since been rescued. Rep. Seth Moulton, a Democrat from Massachusetts, criticized the listing in a post on X, calling it “disgusting” and arguing it reduced a military rescue effort to a financial trade. Moulton has taken a hard line on prediction markets, recently banning his staff from using platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi over concerns that financial incentives could influence policy decisions. A Polymarket spokesperson said the listing did not meet its integrity standards and the contract was removed shortly after it appeared. The company added that it is reviewing how the market passed internal safeguards. — Francesco Rodrigues Read more.
- The U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. formally proposed its approach to stablecoin issuers as one of the federal financial regulators required to write and oversee rules under last year’s Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act. The FDIC’s proposal —meant to align closely with what its sister banking agency, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, proposed in February — will be open for a 60-day public comment period on the lengthy list of 144 questions posed Tuesday by the agency. The FDIC’s job is to police U.S. depository institutions, and under the GENIUS Act, its role is to regulate such institutions issuing stablecoins from their subsidiaries. To that end, it posed capital, liquidity and custody standards for those firms, though the details won’t be set in stone until the rule is finalized — not likely to occur until the agency spends further months reviewing input and writing the final language. This is the second GENIUS Act proposal from the banking agency after its December pitch on the issuer application process. As expected under the law, stablecoins won’t enjoy the deposit insurance that the banks maintain on traditional banking accounts, according to the proposal. — Jesse Hamilton Read more.
Calendar
- Apr.15-16, 2026: Paris Blockchain Week, Paris
- May 5-7, 2026: Consensus, Miami
- Sept. 29-Oct.1, 2026: Korea Blockchain Week, Seoul
- Oct. 7-8, 2026: Token2049, Singapore
- Nov. 3-6, 2026: Devcon, Mumbai
- Nov. 15-17, 2026: Solana Breakpoint, London
Crypto World
CoinDesk 20 performance update: Internet Computer (ICP) rises 12.1%

NEAR Protocol (NEAR) joined Internet Computer (ICP) as a top performer, climbing 8.9% from Tuesday.
Crypto World
MicroStrategy’s Michael Saylor Doesn’t Buy The Adam Back Is Satoshi Story
Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor rejected the New York Times investigation identifying Adam Back as Bitcoin’s (BTC) pseudonymous creator, Satoshi Nakamoto.
Saylor said stylometry is “interesting, but not proof.”
Why Saylor Demands Cryptographic Evidence
Saylor pointed to contemporaneous 2008 emails between Satoshi and Back as evidence that the two were separate people.
Back first received a message from Satoshi in August 2008 confirming the Hashcash citation in the upcoming white paper.
“Stylometry is interesting, but not proof. The contemporaneous emails between Satoshi and Adam Back suggest they were distinct individuals. Until someone signs with Satoshi’s keys, every theory is just narrative,” said Saylor.
That position aligns with his broader philosophy. Saylor has repeatedly described Satoshi’s disappearance as a deliberate act that strengthened BTC by removing any central authority figure.
He once wrote that Satoshi “created a way, gave it away, and walked away.”
What MicroStrategy Has at Stake
Strategy holds 766,970 BTC acquired for roughly $54.57 billion, making it the largest corporate holder globally.
That position depends on BTC functioning as a decentralized, leaderless monetary network, not on who designed it.
BTC dipped roughly 2.4% after the NYT article dropped, falling from $68,269 to $66,634. Saylor has previously dismissed such moves as temporary noise, calling volatility “Satoshi’s gift to the faithful.”
Back himself firmly denied being Satoshi, attributing writing overlaps to shared cypherpunk interests and confirmation bias.
The stylometric analysis, led by computational linguist Florian Cafiero, found Back as the closest match among 12 suspects but described the results as inconclusive.
For Saylor, the answer remains simple. Without a signature from Satoshi’s private keys, no investigation settles the question.
The post MicroStrategy’s Michael Saylor Doesn’t Buy The Adam Back Is Satoshi Story appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Standard Chartered is Taking Over Full Crypto Custody Platform Zodia
Standard Chartered is planning to reabsorb the client-facing custody operations of Zodia Custody into the digital assets division of its Corporate and Investment Bank (CIB).
The restructuring, which could be announced as early as this month, would leave Zodia operating only as a standalone Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) platform for custody technology, according to Bloomberg sources familiar with the matter.
From Incubation to Independence to Reabsorption
Standard Chartered established Zodia Custody in late 2020 through its innovation arm SC Ventures, alongside Northern Trust.
The custodian later attracted minority investors, including SBI Holdings, National Australia Bank, and Emirates NBD. It now employs around 150 people across seven offices globally.
Zodia had been gaining traction. In January 2026, it became the first custodian to support AUDM, an Australian dollar stablecoin.
The following month, it launched Zodia Switch, enabling clients to swap assets directly within the custody platform without external pre-funding.
However, Standard Chartered launched its own Luxembourg-based digital asset custody last year and rolled out institutional crypto trading separately.
The overlap between parent and subsidiary made a restructuring likely.
It remains unclear whether Standard Chartered has consulted Zodia’s minority shareholders.
Banks Are Pulling Custody In-House
The digital asset custody market currently exceeds $1 trillion and is projected to reach $7 trillion by 2035 at a compound annual growth rate of roughly 23.7%.
According to the 2026 EY-Parthenon survey, 73% of institutional investors plan to increase digital asset allocations this year.
That growing demand is pulling banks deeper into direct custody. State Street and BNY Mellon have scaled internal digital custody divisions.
Morgan Stanley filed for a dedicated national trust bank charter in February to custody and stake crypto assets under federal supervision.
Analysts see the restructuring as a turning point, with some arguing that when a Tier-1 global bank moves crypto custody into its investment bank, it stops being a contest between crypto and TradFi and becomes crypto embedded inside TradFi.
Zodia was originally built as a standalone vehicle to test the waters safely, and its reabsorption only happens when the parent sees digital assets as real, fee-generating capital markets business.
Meanwhile, others suggest a wider pattern of traditional banks pulling digital asset functions from experimental ventures into core regulated operations, noting that running parallel services was simply inefficient.
“…The suits finally realized running the same thing twice is inefficient. Revolutionary,” one user stated.
What This Says About Crypto Custody Independence
The answer appears increasingly clear. Independence for bank-backed custodians served a specific purpose during the experimental phase of 2020-2023, when regulatory uncertainty made arm’s-length structures necessary.
Now that frameworks like MiCA in Europe and the GENIUS Act in the US have reduced that friction, banks no longer need buffer entities to engage with digital assets.
“This mirrors a wider trend of traditional banks pulling digital asset functions from experimental ventures into core regulated ops – driven by frameworks like MiCA and VARA,” the user added.
Zodia’s hybrid outcome is telling. The technology retains standalone value as SaaS, but the actual safekeeping of client assets, the highest-trust and highest-margin piece of the value chain, moves back onto the parent bank’s books.
That distinction reveals what banks truly want to own versus what they are willing to license out.
Crypto-native custodians like Coinbase Custody, BitGo, and Fireblocks still hold nearly half the global market.
Can they defend that share against a banking sector now determined to bring custody in-house?
The post Standard Chartered is Taking Over Full Crypto Custody Platform Zodia appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
FDIC Approves Proposed Rule Under GENIUS Act
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation a proposed rule that would establish a framework for stablecoin issuers supervised by the FDIC.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation proposed new rules on Tuesday to oversee stablecoins issued through the banking system under the GENIUS Act. The FDIC board of directors voted to advance the proposal, which sets parameters for how stablecoins may be issued and managed by regulated depository institutions.
The proposal represents the FDIC’s formal regulatory framework for stablecoin operations within the traditional banking sector. Details on specific requirements and implementation timelines were included in the Tuesday statement.
Sources: FDIC
This article was generated automatically by The Defiant’s AI news system from publicly available sources.
Crypto World
Polymarket Acquires Brahma to Strengthen DeFi Infrastructure
Polymarket has acquired Brahma to enhance its DeFi infrastructure and trading performance capabilities.
Polymarket has acquired Brahma, a DeFi infrastructure provider, to strengthen its platform’s trading performance and underlying infrastructure. The acquisition was announced on April 8, 2026, and aims to bolster Polymarket’s capabilities in the decentralized finance ecosystem.
Brahma’s integration into Polymarket is expected to enhance the prediction market platform’s technical infrastructure and user experience. The deal represents continued consolidation in the DeFi sector as platforms seek to improve their competitive positioning.
Source: Polymarket
This article was generated automatically by The Defiant’s AI news system from publicly available sources.
Crypto World
Iran eyes crypto toll for oil tanker transits through Strait of Hormuz
Iran will collect crypto payments as transit fees from oil tankers passing through the Strait of Hormuz during the two‑week ceasefire with the U.S., an industry official told FT.
Hamid Hosseini, spokesperson for Iran’s Oil, Gas and Petrochemical Products Exporters’ Union, said that crypto-denominated tolls will be charged for fully loaded vessels as the nation seeks to “monitor what goes in and out of the strait to ensure these two weeks aren’t used for transferring weapons.”
Hosseini’s comments signal Tehran’s willingness to use cryptocurrency for toll payments, highlighting the expanding real‑world use cases of digital assets in high-stakes geopolitical developments.
This isn’t new — nations at odds with the U.S. or its allies have long turned to crypto as a way to bypass traditional banking channels that leave a paper trail. Russia has indeed used cryptocurrency as part of broader efforts to evade Western sanctions, and in Iran’s case, Tehran is exploring digital payments as it looks to unlock funds for rebuilding the war-destroyed infrastructure.
The proposed framework will require tankers to notify cargo details to Iranian authorities via email, and the toll will reportedly be calculated at $1 per barrel of oil. Authorities will then instruct on how to settle the fee in digital assets, with officials citing bitcoin as a potential payment method.
Hosseini suggested that empty tankers would transit without charge, but fully laden vessels must comply with the reporting and crypto payment process before being cleared for passage.
“Once the email arrives and Iran completes its assessment, vessels are given a few seconds to pay in Bitcoin, ensuring they can’t be traced or confiscated due to sanctions,” he said.
The comments also indicated Tehran may direct traffic along the northern route of the Strait close to its coastline, a move that could raise questions about whether Western and Gulf‑linked shipping firms are prepared to navigate the risky Iranian waters.
Crypto World
Deposit Flight Concerns Over Stablecoin Yield Are ‘Quantitatively Small’: White House Report
A White House Council of Economic Advisers study released Wednesday concludes that banning stablecoin yield would have minimal impact on bank lending and would harm consumers.
The White House Council of Economic Advisers released a study Wednesday examining stablecoin yield and its impact on deposit flight and bank lending. The report finds that eliminating stablecoin yield would increase bank lending by just 0.02%—approximately $2.1 billion—while resulting in a net welfare loss to consumers. The findings directly contradict concerns from some Senate Banking lawmakers who had pressed the White House to release the report.
The report concludes that deposit flight concerns related to stablecoin yield are “quantitatively small,” noting that most stablecoin reserves remain within the banking system with only a limited share removed from lending activity. The executive summary states: “a yield prohibition would do very little to protect bank lending, while forgoing the consumer benefits of competitive returns on stablecoin holdings.”
Sources: White House
This article was generated automatically by The Defiant’s AI news system from publicly available sources.
Crypto World
Standard Chartered explores full takeover of crypto custodian Zodia: Bloomberg
Standard Chartered PLC is reportedly seeking to fully acquire Zodia Custody Ltd. to merge it with one of its digital asset divisions, sources close to the matter told Bloomberg on Wednesday.
The ‘restructuring’ plan, which could come as soon as this month, contemplates merging Zodia’s crypto custody business into one of the investment bank’s divisions that provides similar services, the sources told Bloomberg.
The sources also said Standard Chartered is considering allowing Zodia Custody to continue operating as a separate software-as-a-service (SAAS) business for cryptocurrency custody.
The people close to the negotiations, according to Bloomberg, did not clarify whether Standard Chartered has approached Zodia Custody’s minority shareholders, which include Northern Trust Corp., Emirates NBD Bank PJSC, National Australia Bank Ltd. and SBI Holdings Inc.
Emirates NBD and Northern Trust declined to comment, while SBI Holdings and NAB did not immediately respond to requests for comment, Bloomberg wrote.
Standard Chartered told CoinDesk it would not comment on the news of the potential takeover. Zodia did not immediately respond to a request for confirmation.
Standard Chartered has expanded its digital asset footprint in recent years. The bank launched its own digital asset custody services out of Luxembourg in January last year and introduced crypto trading for institutional clients last summer, becoming one of the first global banks to offer spot bitcoin and ether trading.
Banks have ramped up their digital asset activities as regulatory clarity improves in key regions such as the U.S. and Europe. Crypto custody in particular has become a competitive battleground, with firms including State Street, BNY Mellon and Morgan Stanley expanding their presence, with Morgan Stanley recently naming Coinbase and BNY Mellon as custodians for a proposed bitcoin ETF.
Zodia, which was aimed at financial institutions and began custodianship of emeralds in June 2025, raised $18.5 million in a Series A funding round in July of last year to expand and develop its stablecoin payment services.
The firm was originally established in 2020 as a joint venture between Standard Chartered and Northern Trust and has since raised external capital multiple times. Zodia Custody employs around 150 people across seven offices in London, Dublin, Luxembourg, Singapore, the UAE, Sydney and Hong Kong.
Crypto World
Zcash Price Surges Over 30% in 24 Hours as Grayscale Accumulates $46 Million in Shielded ZEC

The Zcash price surged over 30% in 24 hours after the Grayscale Zcash Trust reportedly accumulated approximately $46 million in shielded ZEC, triggering the sharpest single-day rally the privacy coin has seen in weeks and pushing daily trading volume past…
Crypto World
Crypto Markets Surge as US-Iran Ceasefire Triggers Short Squeeze
Bitcoin touched a three-week high above $72,700 while $470 million in short positions were liquidated as geopolitical tensions eased.
Crypto markets rallied sharply on Wednesday as a surprise two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran sent Bitcoin to its highest level since mid-March.
Bitcoin is changing hands at $71,638, up 4.3% over the past 24 hours, according to CoinGecko. Ethereum climbed 6% to $2,220, while the total crypto market capitalization rose nearly 4% to $2.51 trillion.

Ceasefire Sparks Short Squeeze
The rally kicked off on Tuesday evening after President Trump announced a conditional two-week ceasefire with Iran, agreeing to suspend military operations for two weeks pending further negotiations. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif brokered the deal, with formal peace talks scheduled to begin Friday in Islamabad.
CoinGlass data showed approximately $654 million in crypto futures positions were liquidated over 24 hours, with bearish short bets accounting for roughly $470 million of the total.
The Crypto Fear and Greed Index recovered to 17, up from a low of 9 earlier in the week, but it remains deep in “extreme fear” territory.
Oil markets moved sharply in the opposite direction. WTI crude dropped to roughly $94 per barrel from Tuesday’s highs above $112, as the ceasefire raised hopes that the Strait of Hormuz would reopen to tanker traffic.
Altcoins Outperform
Altcoins broadly outpaced Bitcoin on the day. Zcash (ZEC) led the charge, surging 23% to $332.
AI-sector tokens also posted strong gains: Render climbed 8% to $2.04, Bittensor’s TAO rose 7% to $332, and NEAR Protocol gained 8% to $1.34. Internet Computer climbed 9% to $2.50.
Among large caps, Avalanche gained 6.5% to $9.19, Sui rose 6% to $0.92, Solana added 5% to $84, and XRP gained 4% to $1.35.
Morgan Stanley Launches Bitcoin ETF
Morgan Stanley’s spot Bitcoin ETF began trading on NYSE Arca on Wednesday under the ticker MSBT, making the bank the first major U.S. institution to issue a spot Bitcoin ETF under its own name.
The fund carries a 0.14% annual fee, undercutting BlackRock’s IBIT at 0.25% and every other spot Bitcoin ETF currently on the market. Coinbase provides BTC custody, while BNY Mellon handles cash custody and administration.
The debut comes on the heels of strong demand for existing ETFs.SoSoValue data showed U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs pulled in $471 million in net inflows on April 6, the largest single-day intake since late February. Spot Ethereum ETFs attracted $120 million, reversing prior outflows.
Looking Ahead
Despite the sharp bounce, Bitcoin remains trapped in a multi-month range, trading between support at $62,000 and resistance at $75,000 since early February, a range defined largely by the geopolitical overhang from the Iran conflict.
Whether the rally continues depends on the ceasefire’s durability. Iran confirmed the two-week pause but cautioned that reopening the Strait of Hormuz faces “technical limitations” and requires coordination with its military. The country’s Supreme National Security Council stressed the agreement does not imply an end to the broader conflict.
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