Crypto World
Chainlink connected SWIFT to crypto. LINK trades at $7
Chainlink has wired itself into the plumbing of global finance, with SWIFT, JPMorgan, UBS, and DTCC building on its infrastructure. Its token trades around $7, roughly 86% below its all-time high. The gap between the adoption and the price is the whole story, and it is the same story as XRP.
Summary
- Chainlink has embedded itself in traditional finance, with SWIFT, JPMorgan, UBS, DTCC, and others building on its cross-chain infrastructure, yet LINK trades near $7, about 86% below its 2021 high.
- The disconnect mirrors XRP almost exactly: the network’s adoption is real and growing, but the token captures the value only indirectly and slowly.
- Chainlink secures more value than any other oracle network and its cross-chain protocol processes billions of dollars a month, but the fees actually reaching LINK holders are tiny next to the headline adoption.
- A new strategic reserve converts protocol revenue into LINK and staking locks up supply, but neither yet offsets weak token-level demand and a soft market for high-risk altcoins.
- The gap closes only if bank usage scales into real, recurring fee demand for LINK, and the clearest test is whether SWIFT’s integration moves from pre-production into live settlement volume.
Chainlink may be the most widely adopted piece of infrastructure in all of crypto, and its token trades like an afterthought.
Over the past two years the network has wired itself into the core of traditional finance, with SWIFT, the messaging backbone that connects roughly 11,000 banks and moves on the order of $150 trillion a year, moving from pilot to pre-production on Chainlink’s cross-chain technology.
JPMorgan, UBS, ANZ, Fidelity International, SBI, DTCC, Euroclear, and Mastercard have also built around its infrastructure, while the value secured across its oracle network has climbed past $90 billion, many times that of any competitor.
By the measure of institutional adoption that crypto has chased for a decade, Chainlink has arguably won. And yet LINK, its token, trades around $7, roughly 86% below the all-time high near $53 it reached back in 2021.
The fundamentals keep setting records and the price keeps disappointing. That gap, between a network embedding itself in global finance and a token that acts like none of it is happening, is the entire story.
Anyone who followed XRP through 2026 will recognize it immediately, because it is the same adoption-versus-token gap.
This piece works through why Chainlink’s extraordinary adoption has not lifted its token. It covers what Chainlink actually does and why banks cannot easily avoid it, what SWIFT and the institutions signed up for, the central problem of how value is supposed to reach the token at all, the mechanisms Chainlink has built to try to close that gap, why the market still refuses to pay up, and what would finally have to change for the price to follow the adoption.
The aim is not to talk LINK up or down, but to explain one of the most striking disconnects in the market: how a project can win the institutional race it set out to win and watch its token languish anyway.
The most important company in crypto you do not trade
Start with what Chainlink does, because its importance is easy to miss precisely because it is infrastructure.
Blockchains have a built-in blindness: they cannot, on their own, see anything that happens outside their own network. A smart contract on a blockchain has no native way to know the price of a stock, the result of a shipment, the value of a currency, or whether a payment cleared in a bank account.
This is called the oracle problem, and it is a hard limit on what blockchains can do, because a contract that cannot react to real-world information is a contract that can only move tokens around inside its own walls.
Chainlink exists to solve exactly this. It is a decentralized network that feeds outside data onto blockchains and connects them to one another and to traditional systems, acting as the secure bridge between the on-chain world and everything else.
Without something like Chainlink, the entire edifice of decentralized finance, and the much larger project of tokenizing real-world assets, simply does not function.
That is why what oracles feed data to matters. Smart contracts are only as useful as the data and systems they can reliably touch.
Because that role is foundational, Chainlink has become close to unavoidable for anyone serious about putting financial activity on a blockchain.
Its price feeds underpin major lending and trading protocols across decentralized finance. Its cross-chain protocol has been adopted by large exchanges and protocols as a bridging standard.
Critically, its institutional push has landed the names that matter most. The roster of traditional-finance firms building on Chainlink reads like a directory of the global banking system, and the total value its oracle network secures runs into the tens of billions, many times that of the nearest competitor.
By the standard crypto has always used to define success, real institutions using the technology for real financial activity, Chainlink is at or near the top of the entire industry.
It is, in a sense, the most important company in crypto that most people never think to trade, because its product is the invisible plumbing rather than the visible coin.
And a token that trades like the adoption is not happening
Now place that adoption next to the chart, and the contrast is jarring.
LINK trades around $7, down roughly 86% from its 2021 peak near $53, and it spent the most recent stretch sliding rather than rising, sitting below the technical levels that traders watch for signs of strength.
The pattern across the last couple of years has been almost comically consistent: record after record on the fundamentals, the cross-chain protocol moving billions a month, the value secured hitting new highs, the bank partnerships piling up, while the token closed well below where it traded years earlier.
Analysts who follow Chainlink closely have taken to describing its recent history in exactly those terms, as a period of record fundamental milestones paired with significant price disappointment.
The ETF channel has not solved the problem either. Chainlink spot ETFs recently saw a net outflow, ending a six-month inflow streak and showing that even new institutional access does not automatically create uninterrupted demand.
This is what makes Chainlink such a clean case study, and such a frustrating holding for its believers.
It is not a story of a failing project ignored for good reason; the project is, by adoption metrics, thriving. It is a story of a thriving network whose token has decoupled from its success.
That forces an uncomfortable question that applies to a whole category of crypto assets: what is the actual link between a network being used and its token rising in value?
For Bitcoin the answer is relatively direct, since the asset itself is the product. For an infrastructure token like LINK, the answer is far murkier, and the murkiness is precisely what the price reflects.
The market is not saying Chainlink has failed. It is saying it does not yet see how all that institutional adoption turns into sustained demand for the token.
Until it does, the chart and the deal sheet point in opposite directions.
The oracle problem, and why it made Chainlink unavoidable
To understand both the strength of Chainlink’s position and the weakness of its token, it helps to sit with the oracle problem a moment longer, because it explains the moat.
A blockchain is a deterministic system: it is brilliant at agreeing on its own internal state, who holds what, but it is mathematically incapable of knowing anything about the outside world on its own.
If a smart contract needs to know the price of an asset to liquidate a loan, or whether a real-world bond has matured, it has to get that information from somewhere. If it gets it from a single source, it inherits that source’s vulnerability to error or manipulation.
That would undermine the security that makes blockchains worth using in the first place.
Chainlink’s design answers this by gathering data through a decentralized network of independent node operators, aggregating their inputs, and delivering a result that no single party can easily corrupt.
That decentralized, tamper-resistant design is why Chainlink became the default rather than one option among many.
Once a network of high-quality node operators is securing tens of billions of dollars across hundreds of applications, that track record itself becomes a moat. A bank deciding whose data and cross-chain infrastructure to trust with real money is going to choose the one with the longest, most battle-tested history.
This is the foundation of the institutional strategy.
Chainlink’s cross-chain protocol added a risk-management layer, an independent set of nodes that watches for anomalies and can halt transfers if something looks wrong. That is the kind of dual-layer safeguard large institutions demand before moving significant capital on-chain.
The result is that Chainlink occupies a position closer to critical utility than to speculative token: the oracle and interoperability standard that the tokenized-finance future is being built on.
The strength of that position is not in doubt. What is in doubt is whether holding the token captures any of it.
What SWIFT and the banks actually signed up for
The institutional adoption is concrete and worth spelling out, because it is genuinely impressive and it is also, on close inspection, the source of the token’s problem.
Chainlink built a suite of products aimed squarely at banks and asset managers: a cross-chain protocol for moving assets and messages between blockchains and legacy systems, a runtime environment that lets institutions build and manage tokenized-asset workflows, a compliance engine that embeds rules like identity checks directly into tokenized assets, a confidential-compute layer that lets sensitive institutional data be processed without exposing it on a public chain, and data services that bring benchmark and index information on-chain.
This is not a retail product suite. It is enterprise financial infrastructure, designed to slot into how large institutions already operate.
The marquee relationship is with SWIFT, and it captures both the scale and the nature of the adoption.
SWIFT connects roughly 11,000 banks and carries the messaging behind an enormous share of global settlement, and Swift and Chainlink’s ongoing work moved from early pilot toward pre-production.
The goal is to let banks send traditional SWIFT messages that trigger smart-contract actions across blockchains, without those banks having to rip out and rewrite their legacy systems.
That is a profound integration: it means the existing banking messaging layer could reach into the on-chain world through Chainlink as the connective tissue.
More recently, Chainlink also partnered with more than 50 banks on Project Pangea for T+0 foreign-exchange settlement, another sign that traditional finance is testing Chainlink as an institutional bridge rather than a crypto side experiment.
But notice the shape of it. What the banks signed up for is infrastructure, a way to connect their systems to blockchains using Chainlink’s technology.
They signed up to use the network. Nothing in a SWIFT pre-production integration, a JPMorgan tokenization pilot, or a bank FX settlement project necessarily requires anyone to buy, hold, or even think about the LINK token.
The adoption is real, and it is adoption of Chainlink the infrastructure. That is different from demand for LINK the asset.
That distinction is the hinge on which the entire price puzzle turns.
The value-accrual problem: adoption is not token demand
Here is the core issue, the one that explains the chart.
For a token to rise because its network is being used, there has to be a mechanism that converts that usage into demand for the token. For infrastructure tokens, that mechanism is often weak, indirect, or still being built.
When a bank uses Chainlink’s Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol, it pays fees, and those fees are part of how value is meant to flow to the network.
But the fees generated even by substantial institutional usage are, so far, small relative to the headline numbers that make the adoption sound overwhelming.
The value secured across the network may be measured in tens of billions, but the value secured is not revenue. Revenue is not automatically token demand either.
A pilot or a pre-production integration generates little in the way of recurring fees, and even meaningful live usage produces fee flows that are modest next to LINK’s multi-billion-dollar market value.
This is the value-accrual problem, and it is the single best explanation for why LINK trades where it does.
The market is making a distinction that the celebratory headlines blur: between adoption of the infrastructure, which benefits the network and its users, and demand for the token, which is what actually moves the price.
It is the identical distinction that explains why XRP failed to rally on Ripple’s bank deals, because those deals ran through the company and its stablecoin while the token captured only a sliver.
For Chainlink, the question every prospective LINK buyer faces is simple and unforgiving: if SWIFT and JPMorgan can use the network without the token being central to the economics, then what exactly am I buying when I buy LINK?
The project has answers to that question, and they are improving. But the market has not yet been convinced that the answers are large enough to matter.
That is why the adoption keeps growing and the token keeps waiting.
The strategic reserve and staking: Chainlink’s answer
Chainlink is acutely aware of the value-accrual problem, and it has been building mechanisms specifically designed to tie network usage to token value.
That is the strongest part of the bull case.
The first is a fee model that converts revenue generated across the network, including from institutional and off-chain use, into LINK, accumulating it in the Chainlink Reserve.
The logic is that as adoption grows and generates more revenue, more of that revenue is converted into LINK and held, creating a structural source of buying tied directly to usage.
This is meant to be the bridge between adoption and token demand that infrastructure tokens so often lack.
It is a way to make sure that when the network earns, the token benefits. The reserve has been growing, adding millions of LINK, which is a tangible sign of the mechanism working, even if the amounts remain small relative to the total supply.
The second mechanism is staking.
Chainlink lets LINK holders stake their tokens to help secure the network’s data feeds and services, locking up supply and giving the token a direct role in the system’s security and economics.
As more high-value feeds and services come to rely on staked LINK as a security backstop, demand to stake, and therefore to acquire and lock the token, is meant to rise.
That makes Chainlink part of a broader move toward security-backed crypto networks. For context, another staking-secured network shows how tokens can accrue value when they are required to secure services rather than simply sit beside them.
Together, the reserve and staking are Chainlink’s answer to the question of why anyone should own LINK instead of simply admire the network.
The reserve ties revenue to token accumulation. Staking ties the token to the network’s security and to a yield.
These are real, well-designed mechanisms, and they are the reason the bull case is not empty.
The honest caveat is that they are still early and still modest in scale relative to a multi-billion-dollar market cap. They point in the right direction, but they have not yet generated token demand large enough to overcome the broader forces pushing the price down.
Why the chart still says no
Even granting the reserve and staking, several forces keep weighing on LINK, and naming them explains why the token has not responded to the adoption.
The first is the simple gravity of the broader market. LINK is a high-beta altcoin, meaning it tends to move more violently than the market as a whole, rising faster in booms and falling harder in downturns.
Through a stretch of macro pressure and a weak environment for risk assets, infrastructure tokens like LINK have been sold off regardless of their individual progress.
When capital flees risk, the quality of a project’s bank partnerships offers little protection, because the selling is driven by macro flows, not fundamentals.
The second force is competition. Chainlink leads the oracle space by a wide margin, but rivals are chasing the same market with different technical models, faster delivery in certain niches, or lower costs.
The existence of credible competitors caps the pricing power and the perceived inevitability that would justify a higher token valuation.
The third and deepest force is the value-accrual skepticism already described.
The market keeps treating Chainlink’s institutional milestones as proofs of concept instead of as recurring revenue, pricing a SWIFT pre-production integration as a promising experiment instead of as a stream of token demand, because that is what it currently is.
Until the pilots become production volume large enough to drive real fees into the reserve and real demand into staking, the market is, not unreasonably, declining to pay in advance.
This is the same discipline that kept XRP pinned through its own parade of bank wins. The chart is not ignoring the adoption; it is refusing to pay for token demand that has been promised but not yet delivered at scale.
What would finally make LINK follow the adoption
If you want to know when LINK might finally track its fundamentals, the analysis points to a specific set of conditions, and none of them is simply another partnership announcement.
The first and most important is the transition from pilots to production volume.
A SWIFT integration in pre-production is a promise; SWIFT-connected banks routing real, recurring settlement volume through Chainlink’s protocol would be a structural source of fee demand unlike anything in the token’s history.
Even a small fraction of the volume that flows through global bank messaging would dwarf current usage.
The clearest single catalyst to watch is whether that integration goes fully live and starts carrying real traffic, because that is the moment infrastructure adoption could begin converting into the recurring revenue that feeds the reserve.
The policy backdrop also matters. Chainlink executives have warned that delays in U.S. crypto rules benefit overseas competitors, because institutions need clarity before they can scale production deployments.
The second condition is the maturation of the token mechanisms themselves: the strategic reserve growing large enough that its accumulation of LINK becomes a meaningful, visible source of demand, and staking scaling to the point where locking the token to secure high-value services pulls significant supply off the market.
The third is the broader environment, since even strong fundamentals struggle against a hostile macro tape, and a friendlier market for risk assets would let Chainlink’s progress show up in the price.
The new exchange-traded products tracking LINK add another potential channel for demand if they gather assets. But as the recent outflow showed, the ETF channel must become a sustained buyer, not just another headline.
The honest synthesis is that Chainlink has done the hard part, winning the institutional adoption that the rest of crypto only talks about.
The remaining question is purely about conversion: whether all that adoption can be turned into durable, measurable demand for the token through fees, the reserve, and staking, at a scale large enough to matter.
Until it is, LINK will keep trading like the adoption is not happening, not because the market is blind to Chainlink’s success, but because it is watching the one number that has not yet moved. That number is demand for the token itself.
Frequently asked questions
Why does Chainlink have so much adoption but a low token price?
Because adoption of the infrastructure is not the same as demand for the token. Banks and protocols use Chainlink’s data feeds and cross-chain protocol, generating fees, but those fees are still small relative to LINK’s multi-billion-dollar market value, and nothing about a SWIFT or JPMorgan integration requires anyone to buy or hold LINK. The market distinguishes between the network being used, which benefits the infrastructure, and token demand, which moves the price. So far, the adoption has not converted into token demand large enough to lift the price, which is why LINK trades around $7 despite record fundamentals.
What does Chainlink actually do?
Chainlink solves the oracle problem. Blockchains cannot natively access information outside their own network, so a smart contract has no built-in way to know a price, a payment status, or a real-world event. Chainlink is a decentralized network that feeds outside data onto blockchains and connects them to one another and to traditional systems, using many independent node operators so no single party can easily corrupt the data. This makes it foundational infrastructure for decentralized finance and for tokenizing real-world assets.
What did SWIFT and the banks sign up for with Chainlink?
They signed up to use Chainlink’s infrastructure, chiefly its cross-chain protocol, which lets banks send traditional SWIFT messages that trigger smart-contract actions across blockchains without rewriting their legacy systems. JPMorgan, UBS, DTCC, Euroclear, and others are building on Chainlink’s suite of institutional products for tokenized assets, compliance, and data. Crucially, this is adoption of the infrastructure, not a commitment to buy or hold the LINK token, which is exactly why the impressive partnerships have not directly lifted the price.
How is Chainlink trying to connect adoption to the token?
Through two main mechanisms. A fee model converts revenue generated across the network, including from institutional use, into LINK and accumulates it in a strategic reserve, creating buying tied to usage. Staking lets holders lock LINK to help secure the network’s data feeds and services, taking supply off the market and giving the token a direct economic role. Both are well-designed attempts to bridge the gap between adoption and token demand, and the reserve has been growing, but they remain modest relative to LINK’s market value and have not yet offset the forces pushing the price down.
Will LINK go up if SWIFT fully adopts Chainlink?
It could, but the key is volume, not the integration itself. A pre-production SWIFT integration is a promise; SWIFT-connected banks routing real, recurring settlement volume through Chainlink would generate fee demand on a scale unlike anything in the token’s history, because even a fraction of global bank messaging volume would dwarf current usage. That fee flow could feed the strategic reserve and drive real token demand. So the catalyst to watch is whether the integration goes live and carries actual traffic, turning infrastructure adoption into recurring revenue, instead of the announcement of the integration alone.
Is Chainlink’s situation similar to XRP’s?
Very. Both are cases where a network or company achieved real institutional adoption while the token failed to follow, because the value flows first to the infrastructure and only indirectly to the token. Ripple’s bank deals ran through its stablecoin and ledger while XRP captured a sliver; Chainlink’s bank integrations run through its infrastructure while LINK captures fees that are still small relative to its valuation. In both cases the market prices the adoption as promising proof of concept instead of as token demand, and in both cases the token waits for pilots to become production-scale volume.
This article is information, not investment advice. Cryptocurrency is volatile, and figures for Chainlink and LINK reflect reporting available as of June 26, 2026, which can change quickly. Do your own research and verify current data from primary sources before making any decision.
Crypto World
Senators urge CFTC to probe Polymarket over fake ad claims
U.S. senators have urged the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to investigate Polymarket over allegations that the prediction market platform used deceptive advertising to reach American users despite restricting access in the country.
Summary
- Senators Adam Schiff and John Curtis have asked the CFTC to investigate Polymarket over alleged deceptive advertising practices.
- The lawmakers questioned whether the CFTC has sufficient authority and resources to oversee prediction markets and protect consumers.
- The request comes as the CFTC faces legal and regulatory scrutiny over crypto perpetual futures and derivatives oversight.
According to a letter obtained by The Wall Street Journal, Senators Adam Schiff and John Curtis asked CFTC Chair Michael Selig to examine claims that Polymarket promoted its markets through simulated trading websites, staged transactions, and undisclosed paid influencer campaigns. The lawmakers wrote that, if the allegations are accurate, they warrant immediate regulatory scrutiny.
The request follows a Wall Street Journal investigation alleging that Polymarket hired content creators to record trades using fake trading interfaces instead of the live platform.
The report also claimed some influencers failed to disclose they were being paid and that promotional material exaggerated potential winnings, creating a misleading impression for U.S. audiences, even though the platform does not serve domestic users.
The senators requested that the CFTC provide a written response by July 10 stating whether it has opened an investigation into the allegations. If the regulator has decided against pursuing the matter, they asked it to explain that decision.
Lawmakers question CFTC oversight of prediction markets
Beyond the advertising allegations, Schiff and Curtis asked the CFTC to outline the consumer safeguards it currently expects prediction market operators to maintain. Their questions covered advertising standards, age verification, responsible gaming tools, addiction warnings, affiliate marketing practices, and disclosure requirements for influencer promotions.
The lawmakers also challenged whether the agency has the authority, expertise, and resources needed to carry out responsibilities traditionally handled by state and tribal gaming regulators. Their letter asked whether the CFTC can deliver comparable licensing, enforcement, and consumer-protection measures while continuing to argue that prediction markets fall under its exclusive jurisdiction.
Those concerns arrive as the CFTC continues defending that position in court. Earlier this week, the regulator sued Kentucky after state authorities moved against prediction market operators, including Polymarket and Kalshi, arguing that federal law gives the agency sole oversight of those products.
Schiff and Curtis cautioned the regulator against allowing federal oversight to become a way for companies to avoid state or tribal gaming laws or weaken consumer protections through misleading promotional campaigns.
Regulatory pressure extends beyond prediction markets
The letter lands during a period of increasing debate over how the CFTC is supervising crypto-linked derivatives.
Last week, CME Group sued the regulator and Chairman Michael Selig after the agency approved U.S. crypto perpetual futures, arguing the contracts should be classified as swaps rather than futures under the Dodd-Frank Act.
According to CME’s complaint, the CFTC departed from its long-standing interpretation of perpetual-style contracts and approved the products without going through formal rulemaking. CME Chief Executive Terrence Duffy had previously stated that the exchange planned legal action after platforms including Kalshi and Coinbase received approval to list regulated crypto perpetual futures.
On Friday, the CFTC and the Securities and Exchange Commission opened a 60-day public consultation on crypto derivatives regulation. The agencies are seeking feedback on portfolio margining across securities, swaps, futures, and related products while separately reviewing whether Dodd-Frank definitions governing swaps and security-based swaps still match current derivatives markets.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins said closer coordination between the two regulators could improve market efficiency, strengthen consumer protections, and reduce overlapping regulatory responsibilities as crypto derivatives and tokenized financial products continue to expand in the U.S.
Crypto World
RTX holders must register wallets before token distribution begins
Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.
Remittix has urged RTX presale buyers to register wallets ahead of the upcoming token distribution.
Summary
- Remittix urges RTX presale buyers to register wallets ahead of token distribution and upcoming launch updates.
- RTX holders are encouraged to complete wallet registration as Remittix prepares for token distribution.
- Remittix opens wallet registration for RTX presale participants before token distribution and launch announcements.
Remittix has issued a major reminder to RTX holders as airdrop registration continues ahead of the upcoming token distribution phase. Presale buyers are now being encouraged to register their wallets through the official Remittix site before distribution begins.
The update has added fresh urgency across the Remittix community, with holders moving to complete registration and stay connected before the next launch-stage announcement. As attention builds around the upcoming RTX launch price reveal, wallet registration has become one of the most important steps for presale participants.
Wallet registration is now the key step
The Remittix airdrop refers to the distribution of RTX tokens purchased during the presale. This is not being positioned as a separate free-token giveaway, but as the process linked to getting presale tokens ready for holders.
To register, users need to visit the official Remittix airdrop registration page, connect their wallet, submit their wallet address, and complete the registration page. There is also an optional section where users can add notification details to receive future updates linked to the airdrop and token distribution process.
Once the process has been completed, the page confirms that the user has successfully registered.
For RTX holders, this step is important because it helps keep them updated as Remittix moves closer to token distribution. The community is being urged to use only official Remittix links and avoid connecting wallets to any unofficial pages or accounts.
Token distribution moves closer
With registration now live, the focus is shifting toward the next phase of the Remittix launch process. Presale holders have been waiting for clearer updates on token distribution, launch price, and wider exchange activity.
The launch price reveal remains one of the most-watched updates in the Remittix community. As that announcement moves closer, wallet registration gives holders a direct action to take now instead of waiting on the sidelines.
This is why the current update has created renewed attention around the project. It gives RTX buyers a clear checkpoint before the launch phase begins and helps bring the community back into focus.
Live platform adds more confidence
The registration update also comes as Remittix continues to highlight its live crypto-to-fiat platform. The platform is designed to let users send crypto while recipients receive fiat directly into their bank accounts.
Multiple community members have reportedly received fiat payments into their bank accounts through the Remittix system, giving the project an active utility story alongside its token launch preparations.
That combination is now driving the latest wave of attention around Remittix. The platform is live, airdrop registration is open, and the community is waiting for the launch price reveal.
For RTX holders, the message is simple. Register your wallet through the official Remittix site, stay alert for future updates, and make sure you are prepared before token distribution begins.
For more information, visit the official website and airdrop registration.
FAQ
What is the Remittix airdrop for?
The Remittix airdrop refers to the distribution of RTX tokens purchased by holders during the presale, rather than a separate free-token giveaway.
How do RTX holders register for the airdrop?
Holders can register through the official Remittix site by connecting their wallet, submitting their wallet address and completing the registration process.
Why is the Remittix launch price reveal important?
The launch price reveal is one of the biggest upcoming updates because it will help shape expectations around RTX as the project moves from presale into its launch phase.
Disclosure: This content is provided by a third party. Neither crypto.news nor the author of this article endorses any product mentioned on this page. Users should conduct their own research before taking any action related to the company.
Crypto World
Democratic Senators Urge Curtailing CFTC Funding for Prediction Markets
A group of 17 Democratic US senators has asked leadership of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government to prevent the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) from using federal funding to continue lawsuits targeting state regulators over prediction markets. The senators’ request centers on Chair Michael Selig’s litigation strategy, which asserts that the CFTC has “exclusive jurisdiction” over certain prediction market products.
The letter—sent to the chair and ranking member of the appropriations subcommittee—frames the issue as a practical and compliance-relevant question of federal oversight, state consumer-protection authority, and how enforcement resources are deployed in parallel regulatory systems.
Key takeaways
- 17 Democratic senators urged subcommittee leadership to block CFTC access to federal funds for litigation against state gaming authorities tied to prediction market enforcement.
- The senators contend that ongoing CFTC lawsuits could undermine state consumer protections and intensify a “race-to-the-bottom” dynamic across jurisdictions.
- CFTC litigation has targeted multiple states, while some market operators—including Kalshi and Polymarket—have brought related lawsuits challenging state actions.
- The dispute sits within a broader legislative debate over the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act and the division of authority between the CFTC and SEC.
- Legal observers have pointed to the possibility that one of the cases could eventually reach the US Supreme Court, potentially revisiting the balance of state authority in sports betting.
Senators seek limits on CFTC litigation funding over state actions
In the Wednesday letter, Senators Richard Blumenthal, Jeff Merkley, and 15 additional Democrats asked the appropriations subcommittee to intervene in the budgeting and oversight process governing how the CFTC can use federal resources. Their request is directed at preventing the CFTC from employing federal funds in Chair Michael Selig’s legal challenges against state-level authorities pursuing crackdowns on prediction markets.
The senators argue that the CFTC’s litigation posture risks distorting federal-state regulatory balance in a way that could benefit online prediction markets while reducing consumer protection and oversight. They specifically warn that the CFTC’s use of enforcement litigation as leverage against state authorities may enable platforms to evade local guardrails.
While appropriations do not determine the legality of the CFTC’s underlying statutory interpretations, the senators’ intervention signals a policy and accountability concern: whether enforcement resources should be used in a way that the senators view as escalating conflict rather than clarifying jurisdiction.
Jurisdictional fight: CFTC “exclusive jurisdiction” and “swaps” characterization
At the center of the dispute is the CFTC’s position that certain contracts used on prediction market platforms fall within its regulatory authority. According to the senators’ framing, Selig and the agency defend the view that the event contracts in question qualify as “swaps,” placing them under the CFTC’s purview.
This jurisdictional argument has been tested across a growing set of state challenges. As of June, the CFTC has pursued legal actions involving prediction markets in a range of states, including Connecticut, Illinois, Arizona, Kentucky, Wisconsin, New York, Minnesota, Rhode Island, and New Mexico. In parallel, some companies, including Kalshi and Polymarket, have filed their own lawsuits against state authorities, a development that underscores how quickly these disputes have evolved into multi-forum litigation.
According to Cointelegraph’s reporting, the CFTC’s cases have included litigation such as its suit against Kentucky after state-level prediction market enforcement actions. Cointelegraph has also covered related operator litigation, including challenges that support the CFTC’s broader view of federal jurisdiction.
Potential Supreme Court implications and the sports-betting jurisdiction precedent
As the legal battles progress, some experts have suggested that the trajectory of these cases could ultimately produce a Supreme Court outcome. The concern is not limited to prediction markets alone; it also relates to the broader constitutional and statutory question of how much regulatory space states retain when federal agencies assert exclusive control over particular types of wagering or trading-like instruments.
The senators’ letter implicitly draws on the existing legal framework around state regulation of sports betting. In the 2018 Supreme Court decision Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Association, the Court held that states may regulate sports betting. If the justices were to grant review in one of the currently pending prediction market-related matters, they could be asked to clarify or revisit the scope of state authority under circumstances where federal regulators contend that certain products fall within an exclusively federal regulatory category.
For compliance and legal teams, the potential for Supreme Court review matters because it could reshape how state gaming rules apply to contracts characterized by federal agencies as financial derivatives. It could also determine whether state enforcement efforts remain viable when operators argue federal preemption or exclusive jurisdiction.
CFTC leadership, agency structure, and the CLARITY Act debate
Beyond the litigation itself, the senators’ intervention comes amid a broader debate over how US regulators should divide responsibility for digital assets and related market structures. Chair Michael Selig is currently the sole commissioner and chair of the CFTC, giving him significant control over the agency’s leadership-driven policy direction. The senators’ focus on appropriations reflects their view that the CFTC’s current approach is not merely an isolated enforcement matter, but part of a wider institutional posture toward prediction market regulation.
The CFTC is expected to have a bipartisan group of five commissioners in the long run, but as of Friday there had been no announcement of additional CFTC appointments to fill vacancies. That governance context can affect regulatory predictability: when leadership is concentrated, courts and Congress may scrutinize whether enforcement priorities align with statutory intent and legislative design.
Meanwhile, the US Senate is expected to vote on the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act, a proposal intended to establish separate regulatory roles for the CFTC and the SEC over digital assets. The prediction market enforcement controversy intersects with this legislative discussion because some stakeholders have argued that the CLARITY Act should not be used to extend federal oversight in ways that they believe exceed the CFTC’s mandate.
Last week, gaming organizations petitioned the Senate to add language barring sports event contracts from CLARITY’s coverage, contending that the CFTC was not created to regulate such wagers. This reflects how prediction markets are increasingly treated as a legal and policy test case for the broader question of how Congress intends to allocate authority across regulators.
What to watch next
The immediate next step is whether appropriations subcommittee leadership will act on the senators’ request to restrict federal funding for the CFTC’s prediction market litigation. Separately, the ongoing multi-state cases and related challenges by market operators will determine how quickly courts clarify jurisdictional boundaries—potentially culminating in higher-court review. Until then, uncertainty remains for institutions trying to map compliance obligations across federal and state regimes, particularly where contract structuring, derivative labeling, and wagering classifications overlap.
Crypto World
Securitize (SECZ) Set for NYSE Debut with $400M SPAC Merger Backing
Key Highlights
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Tokenization platform Securitize anticipates $400M in capital from CEPT transaction
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NYSE trading debut under ticker SECZ scheduled for July 2
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Critical shareholder approval meeting set for June 29
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Minimal redemption requests preserve transaction funding
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Platform currently oversees $4B in real-world tokenized assets
The impending business combination between Securitize and Cantor Equity Partners II is projected to deliver roughly $400 million in total gross funding. Following a crucial shareholder vote scheduled for June 29, the transaction could finalize on July 1, paving the way for public trading to commence under the SECZ symbol on the New York Stock Exchange just one day later.
Minimal Redemption Activity Preserves Transaction Capital
According to recent disclosures, under 30% of CEPT’s Class A stockholders exercised their redemption rights. This outcome ensures substantially more funding will be accessible to the merged entity upon deal completion. The anticipated $400 million figure encompasses accompanying private investment but does not account for deal-related expenses.
The capital infusion will enable Securitize to expand its footprint in the rapidly developing tokenized asset sector. The firm presently administers over $4 billion worth of tokenized real-world assets across its platform. Its infrastructure powers investment vehicles created in partnership with numerous prominent international asset management firms.
Before the merger can proceed, CEPT investors must grant their approval at the specially convened meeting on June 29. Both organizations must also satisfy or obtain waivers for all standard closing conditions. Current projections indicate the deal will reach completion forty-eight hours following the stockholder vote.
Public Market Entry Positions SECZ on NYSE
Once finalized, the unified enterprise will conduct business publicly as Securitize Corp. The company’s common shares are anticipated to launch trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the SECZ ticker symbol on July 2. This public listing will establish a prominent tokenization services provider within traditional equity capital markets.
Securitize delivers compliant infrastructure enabling the creation, administration, transfer, and exchange of tokenized financial instruments. The platform collaborates with industry giants including BlackRock, Apollo, BNY, Hamilton Lane, KKR and VanEck. These strategic alliances bridge conventional asset management firms with distributed ledger technology-based financial systems.
The organization maintains multiple regulated subsidiaries spanning North America and Europe. Within the United States, its operations encompass a licensed broker-dealer, securities transfer agent, registered investment adviser, and fund administration entity. Its European division functions under the European Union’s specialized DLT Pilot Regime framework.
SPAC Transaction Stems from Late 2025 Agreement
Securitize and CEPT publicly unveiled their binding merger agreement on October 28, 2025. CEPT functions as a blank-check company sponsored by an affiliate of Cantor Fitzgerald. The framework established plans for the post-combination company to obtain a New York Stock Exchange listing.
In subsequent months, both entities have compiled comprehensive regulatory submissions and deal documentation for investor examination. These disclosures encompass CEPT’s mandated regulatory filings and Securitize’s registration statement submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The documentation details transaction mechanics, corporate structure, funding arrangements, and potential risk factors.
Citigroup is acting as financial and capital markets advisor to Securitize for this transaction. Cantor Fitzgerald provides advisory services to CEPT, with both institutions additionally coordinating the associated private placement offering. Multiple legal firms are delivering counsel to the companies and placement representatives.
Securitize approaches this prospective public listing with more than eight years of operational history in asset tokenization. The platform integrates securities issuance, transfer agency services, fund oversight, and secondary market trading within a unified regulated framework. The SECZ public debut would link its tokenization capabilities with enhanced access to mainstream capital markets.
Crypto World
Ondo Finance Launches 24/7 Minting and Redemption for Tokenized US Stocks and ETFs

Ondo Finance has enabled around-the-clock minting and redemption for tokenized US stocks and ETFs on Ethereum and BNB Chain, removing the prior weekday-only constraint that had tied the creation and cancellation of positions to US market hours. The upgrade, announced by Ondo Finance on Wednesday,… Read the full story at The Defiant
Crypto World
4 Binance Delisting Targets Tumble as Traders Rush for the Exit
Binance will remove four digital assets from its platform on July 10, 2026, and the announcement drove three of the tokens to record lows the same day.
The exchange will delist Alchemix (ALCX), Ardor (ARDR), NFPrompt (NFP), and Marlin (POND) after a periodic review that weighs liquidity, compliance, and overall project quality.
Traders Rush to Exit Positions
The selloff hit hardest among the smaller tokens. NFPrompt and Marlin each dropped about 20% after the announcement, repeating the recent double-digit losses tied to delisting calls.
Alchemix fell just as hard, while Ardor held up better, slipping roughly 6%. Thin trading volume left little cushion once the selling began.
As of this writing, Alchemix traded around $2.67, NFPrompt sat near $0.0054, and Marlin changed hands at about $0.0011.
All four had already shed more than 30% over the past month. Alchemix, NFPrompt, and Marlin each touched an all-time low the same day, while Ardor avoided a fresh record.
Why Binance Pulled the Tokens
Binance reviews listed assets on a set schedule, weighing trading volume, liquidity, network security, team commitment, and regulatory factors.
The four had become long-tail bets. All trade more than 98% below their record highs, and each has posted negative returns over the past year.
NFPrompt stands out. Binance launched the token on its own Launchpool in December 2023. NFP then peaked near $1.17 the day it listed before sliding about 99%.
The removal is the latest in a run of 2026 delistings, including an earlier move to delist four other altcoins.
Spot trading for ALCX, ARDR, NFP, and POND stops on July 10, while withdrawals stay open until September 9. Binance Futures liquidated the related perpetual contracts earlier, on July 2.
Holders still have time to move or sell their tokens before the deadlines. The coming weeks will show whether the removals deepen the slide or echo the pressure on other altcoins facing removal.
The post 4 Binance Delisting Targets Tumble as Traders Rush for the Exit appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Binance Triggers a Brutal Collapse for 4 Altcoins: Here’s How
Four lesser-known cryptocurrencies have plummeted by double digits over the past 24 hours, and this time the main culprit is not the broader market correction but Binance.
Meanwhile, the company has faced significant regulatory challenges that could negatively impact its users in the European Union (EU).
The Normal Reaction
The world’s largest crypto exchange conducted another review to verify that the coins listed on the platform meet the necessary standards and industry requirements. The checklist includes a variety of factors, such as the team’s commitment to the project, network stability, the level of development activity, adequate liquidity, and more.
As a result, Binance decided to terminate all services with Alchemix (ALCX), Ardor (ARDR), NFPrompt Token (NFP), and Marlin (POND). The actual delisting is scheduled for July 10, but the announcement has already caused a major decline for the affected tokens. They have all headed south by double digits, with NFP taking the biggest blow after posting a 21% daily plunge.

Reactions of that type shouldn’t come as a surprise, as losing backing from a market leader like Binance typically leads to thinner liquidity, reduced availability, and reputational damage.
Earlier this month, it delisted Contentos (COS), Dar Open Network (D), Highstreet (HIGH), and MOBOX (MBOX), which resulted in similar price drops. Prior to that, Automata (ATA), Harvest Finance (FARM), Enzyme (MLN), Phoenix (PHB), and Syscoin (SYS) fared even worse after an analogous effort from the exchange.
The Problems in Europe
Perhaps the biggest news surrounding Binance as of late concerns its issues with financial regulators in the European Union. Several days ago, the media outlet Reuters reported that the company might seek the necessary MiCA license from another country rather than Greece.
Binance officially addressed the issue by saying that it has withdrawn its application with the Hellenic Capital Market Commission (HCMC) in the southern European nation.
“When we are ready to announce that Member State, we will do so publicly. We made this decision after careful consideration of the status and the timeline of the process in Greece, with our users’ interests at the center,” it added.
The exchange’s CEO Richard Teng stated that it remains committed to securing a MiCA authorization in the coming months, while “providing clarity, minimizing disruption, and keeping users informed directly.” It is important to note that the deadline for obtaining such a license is July 1, and some of Binance’s competitors, including Kraken and Coinbase, have already met the requirements.
The company assured customers that their assets are safe and promised to unveil further details in due time. Meanwhile, users in other European nations such as Poland, Italy, Spain, and France have reportedly been told to withdraw their funds from the platform.
The post Binance Triggers a Brutal Collapse for 4 Altcoins: Here’s How appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Crypto World
Base Resumes Block Production After Roughly Two-Hour Mainnet Halt

Coinbase-incubated Layer 2 Base stopped producing blocks for about two hours on Thursday after an invalid block stalled its chain, before the network recovered and resumed normal operation. The halt revived questions about the centralized sequencer that orders transactions on most major rollups…. Read the full story at The Defiant
Crypto World
Sophon Shuts Down Its zkSync Chain and Rebuilds as a Consumer App Studio on Base

Sophon is decommissioning its zkSync-based Layer 2 chain and pivoting to "Soph+," a consumer product studio that will build exclusively on Base, Coinbase's Layer 2. The shutdown announcement came Thursday, capping a chain that raised $60 million through node sales but attracted fewer than 200 daily… Read the full story at The Defiant
Crypto World
Crypto Markets Erase $120B as Bitcoin Tanks to $58K Amid Growing Strategy FUD: Weekly Recap
Although there are still some days left in June, the month has turned out to be one of the worst for the entire cryptocurrency market in recent history.
Before we explore what took place in the past week alone, let’s rewind the clocks to last Friday when the most significant news came from the new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, who continued Powell’s policy of maintaining the interest rates unchanged and had a hawkish conference after the FOMC meeting. In addition, the promised deal between the US and Iran failed as both parties have yet to reach a permanent agreement.
Bitcoin reacted with a nosedive from $67,200 to $63,000. Although the bulls managed to defend that level and even push the cryptocurrency to $65,500 on Monday, the real trouble was just ahead.
BTC was quickly and violently rejected there and dropped by over three grand in hours. Its recovery attempt was halted at $63,000, and the bears initiated another leg down on Wednesday, taking the asset south to $59,000, which became a new multi-year low. Bitcoin reacted well at first and quickly rebounded to $62,000, but that turned out to be a dead-cat bounce.
The bears were even more persistent during the next phase of the correction, driving the asset down to $58,000 for the first time since October 2024. That support level has held for now, and BTC has recovered some ground, but still remains below $60,000 as the overall market uncertainty continues. This is particularly true for Michael Saylor’s Strategy, but more on that a bit later.
The weekly chart below will paint a clear picture, as red dominates almost all charts. BTC is down over 5%, while ETH and XRP have bled 8.5% and HYPE 7%. DOGE, ZEC, ADA, and XLM have plummeted by double digits. The only notable exceptions are RAIN (8%) and AAVE (20.5%) in the green. The total crypto market cap is down by over $120 billion weekly.
Market Data

Market Cap: $2.14T | 24H Vol: $99B | BTC Dominance: 55.6%
BTC: $59,555 (-5.1%) | ETH: $1,560 (-8.5%) | XRP: $1.04 (-8.5%)
This Week’s Crypto Headlines You Can’t Miss
Saylor Should Stop Buying Bitcoin, Says CryptoQuant. As mentioned above, Strategy continues to be the main talk in crypto, with CQ urging the firm to halt its BTC buying spree in favor of rebuilding its USD reserve. The company indeed followed a similar philosophy over the past week, buying just $35 million in BTC while increasing its USD reserve by $300 million.
MSTR’s Bitcoin Per Share Gets ‘Annihilated’ in Extreme Bear Case: Analyst. Meanwhile, a popular analyst outlined the massive risks to Strategy and its stock price if BTC’s bear market extends, including a worst-case scenario for MSTR of a drop to $1. Separately, KALEO warned last week that the firm might have to sell over 50,000 BTC in the next couple of years.
Polymarket to Refund Users After Hackers Steal $3M in Frontend Attack. The team behind the popular platform confirmed on Friday that a compromised third-party vendor allowed attackers to inject malicious code into its frontend, draining $3 million from a handful of users. It promised to fully reimburse the affected customers.
Hyperliquid Responds After Appearing on Singapore’s Investor Alert List. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) added Hyperliquid to its Investor Alert List (IAL), raising concerns within the industry. However, the exchange claimed that this doesn’t necessarily constitute a regulatory violation, an enforcement action, or a ban.
Bitcoin Miners Flood Binance as Exchange Inflows Hit Four-Month High. On-chain data shared by CryptoQuant showed that BTC miners had sent massive portions of their bitcoin holdings to some exchanges, including Binance. This coincided with the asset’s violent price drop.
Bitcoin Didn’t Lose to Gold, the Rotation Story Is Wrong: Analyst. Although both assets have turned red in 2026, gold continues to take the recent market-wide correction better. However, analyst Shanaka Anslem Perera believes the rotation story from BTC to the precious metal is actually wrong.
Charts
This week, we have a chart analysis of Ethereum, Ripple, Cardano, Binance Coin, and Hyperliquid – click here for the complete price analysis.
The post Crypto Markets Erase $120B as Bitcoin Tanks to $58K Amid Growing Strategy FUD: Weekly Recap appeared first on CryptoPotato.
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