Crypto World
Circle backs Tazapay extension, boosting Series B to $36M
Tazapay, a cross-border payment infrastructure provider, has closed an extension to its Series B funding round, lifting total funding to $36 million. The extension was led by Circle Ventures and included participation from Coinbase Ventures, CMT Digital, Peak XV Partners and Ripple. The new capital will be used to expand digital settlement technology for cross-border payments, secure additional licenses, broaden geographic reach across Asia, Latin America, the Middle East and the Americas, and build infrastructure for what the company calls “agentic payments.”
Tazapay serves more than 1,000 enterprises and fintechs across 30 countries, and holds licenses in Singapore, Canada, Australia and the United States, with active applications underway in the European Union, United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong. “The demand we’re seeing from enterprises and fintechs across Asia, LATAM, and the Middle East is unmistakable; businesses want to move money faster, cheaper, and with full regulatory confidence,” said Kanupriya Sharda, chief business officer at Tazapay.
Cointelegraph asked Tazapay for the size of the extension tranche and the company’s valuation, but did not receive a response by publication.
Related: Ripple joins Singapore sandbox to test RLUSD in trade finance
Key takeaways
- Tazapay’s Series B extension brings total fundraising to $36 million, with Circle Ventures leading and participation from Coinbase Ventures, CMT Digital, Peak XV Partners and Ripple.
- The fresh capital targets expansion of cross-border digital settlement tech, licensing pursuits, and regional growth into Asia, LATAM, the Middle East and the Americas, plus development of “agentic payments.”
- The funding news comes against a backdrop of growing interest in stablecoin–based cross-border rails, with Ripple expanding its institutional stablecoin platform to over 60 markets and processing more than $100 billion in volume.
- Other early-stage fintechs are also scaling stablecoin–fiat payment networks, such as Conduit, which raised $36 million in May 2025 to broaden its fiat and stablecoin offerings and serve as an alternative to SWIFT.
- Regulatory licensing, interoperability, and real-world adoption remain pivotal for pushing these rails from pilots to mainstream use.
Tazapay’s expansion blueprint and regulatory footprint
According to the company, the new funding will accelerate the rollout of its cross-border settlement technology by pursuing additional licensing and expanding in key regions, including Asia, Latin America, the Middle East and the Americas. Tazapay currently maintains licenses in Singapore, Canada, Australia and the United States, with active applications in the European Union, United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong. The firm reported serving more than 1,000 enterprises and fintechs across 30 markets, underscoring growing demand for faster, cheaper, and regulation-compliant cross-border payments. The chief business officer, Kanupriya Sharda, highlighted “unmistakable” demand from enterprises and fintechs across Asia, LATAM, and the Middle East for improved money movement capabilities.
Stablecoins and the race to upgrade cross-border rails
The extension of Tazapay’s Series B comes as a wave of fintech and crypto companies push to embed stablecoins into cross-border payment workflows. Ripple, for example, has expanded Ripple Payments into an end-to-end stablecoin and fiat platform for banks and fintechs. The platform is live in more than 60 markets and has processed over $100 billion in volume, signaling a meaningful move toward institutional-grade stablecoin rails in global payments.
In the same ecosystem, regulatory and sandbox activity around stablecoins continues. For instance, Ripple recently joined Singapore’s sandbox to test RLUSD in trade finance, illustrating how regulated pilots are shaping the rollout of new settlement tools across jurisdictions.
Beyond Tazapay and Ripple, the market has seen other notable fundraising tied to cross-border rails. In May 2025, Conduit announced a $36 million Series A round led by Dragonfly and Altos Ventures to scale its fiat and stablecoin payment network, positioning the project as a potential alternative to traditional messaging corridors such as SWIFT.
These developments reflect a broader industry shift: a push to replace or augment legacy rails with programmable, regulator-friendly settlement networks built on stablecoins and crypto rails, designed to cut settlement times and costs while preserving compliance and risk controls.
What this means for readers and market watchers
For investors, Tazapay’s extension signals continued appetite for platforms that can operationalize cross-border liquidity with robust licensing and multi-jurisdictional reach. For enterprises and fintechs, the move reinforces a trend toward using stablecoin-based settlement to reduce friction in international payments while maintaining regulatory confidence. For builders, the emphasis on “agentic payments”—where payment flows can be orchestrated and automated at the edge of networks—points to a future where payment rails are more integrated with enterprise workflows and financial ecosystems.
As the sector scales, observers will want to watch licensing progress, regional execution, and the ability of these platforms to deliver truly cost-effective and faster settlement at scale. Regulatory clarity across key markets—especially around stablecoins and cross-border fintech operations—will continue to shape how quickly and broadly these rails can be adopted.
Readers should keep an eye on further disclosures from Tazapay about the extension’s size and valuation, as well as ongoing updates from Ripple, Conduit and other players as they publish new milestones and regulatory milestones in the coming quarters.
The story continues to unfold as more regional licenses, pilot programs, and enterprise deployments come online, potentially reshaping the architecture of global payments over the next few years.
Crypto World
Sui Surges 50% on Institutional Interest and Stablecoin Push
Sui network’s native token, SUI, has climbed 50% over the past seven days after a Nasdaq-listed company staked a large portion of the token’s supply and developers announced upcoming features, including zero-fee stablecoin transfers and private transactions.
SUI traded around $0.94 on May 4 before climbing to $1.41 on Sunday, according to CoinGecko. Over the same timeframe, trading volume surged from more than $213 million to over $2.5 billion.
Ryan McMillin, co-founder and chief investment officer of Australian crypto investment manager Merkle Tree Capital, told Cointelegraph the rally has likely been driven by multiple reinforcing catalysts.
He pointed to a “meaningful supply squeeze” as the “clearest near-term trigger” after Nasdaq-listed SUI Group Holdings revealed Friday that its entire SUI treasury of more than 108 million tokens, worth over $143 million, has been staked.
Sui launched its mainnet in May 2023, aiming to be scalable and process transactions fast enough for financial institutions. African payments infrastructure company Paga Group announced at Consensus 2026 in Miami on Thursday that it has partnered with Sui to develop blockchain‑powered cross‑border transfers and stablecoin products.
Private fee-free stablecoin promise
Adeniyi Abiodun, a co-founder of Mysten Labs, the developers behind the Sui network, also announced at Consensus 2026 that zero-fee stablecoin transfers would roll out soon and reiterated plans to add a private transaction feature.
Privacy-focused cryptocurrency Zcash (ZEC) spiked by more than 70% last week as crypto traders started paying closer attention to privacy-focused projects. Privacy had been a significant investment theme for crypto in 2025, with privacy-focused tokens surging despite a broader downturn in the rest of the market.

Source: Adeniyi Abiodun
“This positions Sui as low-friction rails for payments and liquidity and also attractive to agentic AI payments. The Nasdaq angle is also notable: it puts SUI in the same public company treasury/equity market access group as BTC, ETH, SOL and others, signaling growing institutional comfort,” McMillin added.
“Sui is shifting from promising L1 or high-beta play to actual adoption story. The combo of institutional staking, zero-fee ambition and regulated futures access is rare among alts. Watch on-chain metrics post-announcement for confirmation.”
At the same time, Abiodun said Friday the Sui network’s prediction market DeepBook Predict was going live on the testnet. A March report from Bitget Wallet and Polymarket found that prediction markets are among the most active on-chain applications, with $25.7 billion in trading volume that month.
Rally’s success depends on execution, rollout
SUI has settled at around $1.31 as of Monday. McMillin said that in the short term, the token could extend its rally because supply shocks and product news generally sustain momentum.
“We are also in an environment where we are seeing green shoots all over the crypto ecosystem and it looks more and more likely the bear market hibernation is over,” he said.
“Medium-term: more uncertain but constructive. Success depends on execution, actual zero-fee rollout, Paga integration traction in Nigeria and stablecoin volume growth. Sui has real tech edges and usage momentum, but token unlocks and broader crypto cycles remain risks.”
Magazine: Guide to the top and emerging global crypto hubs — Mid-2026
Crypto World
BoE’s Bailey sees a Potential ‘Wrestle’ With US Over Stablecoins
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said international regulators will have to “wrestle” with the US over global rules for stablecoins, which are largely denominated in and backed by US dollars.
“If we want stablecoins to be part of the architecture of payments globally […] they’re only going to work if we have international standards,” Bailey said at a conference on Friday, according to Reuters.
“Frankly, that, I think, is going to be a coming wrestle with the [US] administration,” he added.
US President Donald Trump has the goal of attracting the crypto industry to the US and has promoted the use of stablecoins through the GENIUS Act, which gave a regulatory framework to stablecoin issuers.
Other regulators are looking into greater oversight and control of stablecoins compared to the US, seeing them as a lighter-regulated alternative to the banking system that could impose systemic risks.
The stablecoin market is currently valued at more than $317 billion, according to CoinGecko, with the largest stablecoins by market capitalization dominated by tokens pegged to the US dollar, most of which use US Treasury bills and US dollars as backing assets.
Bailey, who chairs the Financial Stability Board, an international body that aims to coordinate regulation, said he sees stablecoins as a potential threat to financial stability.

Andrew Bailey at a press conference in February after a meeting of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee on interest rates. Source: YouTube
Bailey added that he was concerned some stablecoins could not be readily converted to cash without the use of a crypto exchange, which could limit their convertibility in changing market conditions.
He said if stablecoins are widely used for cross-border payments, then the US dollar tokens that are hard to convert could flow to other countries, like the UK, which is planning to have strong laws around converting stablecoins.
“We know what would happen if there was a run on a stablecoin; they’d all turn up here,” Bailey said.
Related: US Senator questions Mark Zuckerberg on Meta’s stablecoin plans
US banking groups have raised similar concerns about stablecoins with Congress and have pushed for a Senate crypto market structure bill to include a ban on third-party platforms, such as crypto exchanges, offering yield payments on stablecoins.
Crypto and banking groups failed to come to an agreement on the ban after months of negotiations, and the latest version of the bill, released earlier this month, prohibits stablecoin rewards on idle balances while allowing crypto platforms to “offer other forms of customer rewards.”
The Senate Banking Committee, which indefinitely postponed a vote on advancing the bill in January, has scheduled a markup of the bill on Thursday.
Magazine: How crypto laws changed in 2025 — and how they’ll change in 2026
Crypto World
Bitcoin whipsaws near $82K as President Trump rejects Iran peace offer
Bitcoin held near the $80,000 mark on Monday after President Donald Trump rejected Iran’s latest response to a U.S. peace plan.
Summary
- Bitcoin defended $80,000 as Trump’s Iran rejection fueled fast swings across weekend crypto markets again.
- Short liquidations jumped after BTC rebounded above $82,000, showing leveraged traders remain exposed to headlines.
- Traders now watch $85,000, while $78,000 remains the key downside level for Bitcoin bulls.
The move kept traders focused on the conflict, oil prices, and the Strait of Hormuz. Trump called the Iranian counterproposal “TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE” after Tehran pushed for compensation, sanctions relief, an end to the blockade, and recognition of its control over the strait.
Bitcoin (BTC) first fell from $81,430 to $80,520 within 45 minutes of Trump’s post, then climbed to $82,347 less than three hours later, according to crypto.news data. The rebound wiped out nearly $410 million over 24 hours, based on Coinglass data.
Hormuz tensions keep risk assets on edge
The Strait of Hormuz remains central to the market reaction. Reuters reported that the waterway carried one-fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas flows before the war began on February 28.
Oil prices jumped more than $4 a barrel after Trump rejected Iran’s proposal, showing that energy markets are still reacting quickly to each new statement from Washington or Tehran.
The dollar also gained for a second day in Asian trading as strong U.S. jobs data and safe-haven demand supported the currency. Brent crude rose 4.5% to $105.85 a barrel after the rejection. That mix of higher oil, a stronger dollar, and war uncertainty left Bitcoin trading in a tight but volatile range.
Repeated pattern
Recent crypto.news coverage had already linked Bitcoin’s $80,000 test to Iran headlines. On May 1, crypto.news reported that BTC rose toward $78,700 after Iran sent a revised peace proposal through Pakistani mediators, easing some oil pressure and improving risk sentiment. The report cited 21Shares chief market strategist Adrian Fritz, who said $80,000 was “quite a resistance” and that a move above $85,000 could show early signs of a broader reversal.
Crypto.news also reported on May 4 that Bitcoin climbed to $80,529 after Trump announced “Project Freedom,” an effort linked to cargo ships affected by the Strait of Hormuz closure.
In an earlier report, crypto.news said Bitcoin’s sharp moves showed how geopolitical headlines continue to drive short-term crypto price action.
Traders watch $85K as next upside test
Analysts are now watching whether Bitcoin can turn $80,000 into support. Crypto Tony posted that there was a 79% chance Bitcoin could hit $85,000 this month, while CoinsProbe said a channel breakout placed the $85,000 target in play.
The downside level remains clear. Several traders are watching $78,000 as the first major support if Bitcoin fails to hold the $80,000 area.
A confirmed move above $82,450 could support another attempt toward $85,000, but a fresh breakdown in U.S.-Iran talks may keep BTC exposed to fast reversals.
Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.
Crypto World
Bitcoin (BTC) mining pools with 75% of hashrate back open standard for block construction
The biggest decentralization move bitcoin mining has seen in years just happened quietly, with seven of the largest pools agreeing to back the same open standard.
Foundry, AntPool, F2Pool, SpiderPool, MARA Pool, Block Inc, and DMND have all joined the Stratum V2 working group, the group announced last week.
Stratum V2 is an open-source protocol governing how mining pools communicate with the individual miners in those pools. The biggest practical change it introduces is letting individual miners construct their own block templates, meaning the choice of which transactions get included in each new block sits with the miner rather than whoever operates the pool.
Foundry alone controls 34.2% of global bitcoin hashrate, AntPool another 14.2%, F2Pool 11.3%, and SpiderPool 10.5%, with MARA Pool adding 4.7%, per Hashrate Index data. Together with the rest of the Stratum V2 signatories, the seven pools now backing the standard represent close to 75% of all bitcoin hashrate.

Under the current Stratum V1 standard, the transaction selection for nearly every new block sits with the pool operators rather than the individual miners actually doing the work. That concentration has been the loudest structural concern about modern mining for the past two years.
Stratum V2 does not change hashrate concentration, but it does change who decides what goes into each block, which is the part the Bitcoin community actually worries about.
A single pool controlling more than 30% of hashrate is less than ideal, as the same pool deciding the transaction order for that share of blocks is the actual risk people point to.
The protocol has existed since 2022, when Braiins and Spiral co-founded the working group. Until now it had been treated as a niche side project with limited adoption. Foundry and AntPool joining gives it real reach, with the working group framing the move as the start of a new phase of accelerated deployment.
The timing also matches what the broader mining cohort is dealing with. CoinShares estimates up to 20% of miners are currently unprofitable, with hashprice (the revenue a miner earns per unit of computing power) sitting at $38.57 per petahash per second per day, at or near breakeven for operators running mid-generation hardware.
Difficulty is set to rise again on May 15 from 132.47T to 135.64T, per CoinWarz. Network hashrate now sits at 998 exahash per second.
Crypto World
Bitcoin rises 2.3% as Trump calls Iran peace proposal unacceptable
Bitcoin traded in a choppy session as geopolitical headlines dominated sentiment, with a dramatic swing after President Donald Trump rejected Iran’s counteroffer to a peace deal. The cryptocurrency briefly dipped below the 81,000 level before reclaiming ground and punching above 82,000 in a matter of hours.
Price data from CoinGecko show BTC slipping from around 81,430 to about 80,520 within 45 minutes, then rallying to a high near 82,347 less than three hours later. Derivatives data from Coinglass indicated roughly $64 million worth of short positions were liquidated in the four-hour window surrounding the move, underscoring the speed and sensitivity of markets to headlines. The broader backdrop remains a tense US-Iran dynamic, with oil prices advancing and U.S. stock futures nudging higher as the day progressed. Trump characterized Iran’s proposal as “totally unacceptable” in a Truth Social post addressing the offer.
The political flare-up sits atop a longer-running narrative around Middle East risk, the Strait of Hormuz, and the way macro forces translate into crypto and conventional assets. Oil prices rose about 4.6% to roughly $98.7 per barrel after Trump’s comments, while the S&P 500 futures index edged higher by about 0.13% in early trading. The headlines also intersect with regional instability and its potential to influence global risk sentiment, complicating an already nuanced environment for investors and traders in digital assets.
Key takeaways
- Bitcoin briefly dipped to around 80.5k and rebounded to about 82.3k within hours following Trump’s rejection of Iran’s counteroffer, showcasing BTC’s sensitivity to geopolitical headlines.
- About $64 million worth of short positions were wiped out in a four-hour window as the price moved higher, according to Coinglass data.
- Oil rose roughly 4.6% to near $98.7 per barrel, while U.S. equity futures showed modest gains, illustrating a broader risk-off/risk-on dynamic around the same headlines.
- Two potential catalysts in the U.S. Senate this week could inject regulatory clarity into the crypto sector: the confirmation vote for Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve chair and the CLARITY Act markup.
- Bitcoin has climbed about 29.7% since the US-Iran conflict began on Feb. 28, outperforming the S&P 500 and gold over the same period, according to available market tallies.
Market pulse after headlines
The price action around BTC underscores how sensitive digital assets remain to real-time geopolitical developments. After a sharp downward move on the initial volley of headlines, Bitcoin’s bounce back above 82,000 signals persistent demand at the higher end of the trading range, even as risk sentiment flickers between caution and appetite for allocation in non-traditional assets. While some traders have continued to ride the volatility, others have used the volatility as an opportunity to adjust hedges or recalibrate risk exposure.
From a liquidity perspective, the short-covering burst highlighted in Coinglass’ data is notable: liquidations can amplify near-term moves as market participants recalibrate positions in response to headlines and evolving risk signals. In the same moment, the oil market’s reaction—the 4.6% jump to around $98.7 per barrel—reflects how macro shocks and geopolitical risk translate into both commodity and crypto markets, underscoring the interconnectedness of energy, equities, and digital assets.
Regulatory momentum could shape the Bitcoin roadmap
Beyond the immediate headlines, market observers say this week could mark an inflection point for regulatory clarity around digital assets in the United States. Markus Thielen, CEO of 10x Research, highlighted two upcoming Senate actions as potential catalysts that could “lean bullish” for Bitcoin by reducing institutional friction and smoothing the path for policy transitions.
“Two catalysts stand out this week: a Senate vote on Monday for Kevin Warsh’s confirmation as Federal Reserve chair and the Senate Banking Committee’s markup on the CLARITY Act on Thursday. Warsh is widely regarded as more hawkish on inflation than the current chair, Jerome Powell, but his confirmation could remove an overhang of uncertainty. The CLARITY Act represents what many in the industry view as the most significant crypto-legislation in years, potentially paving a clearer regulatory path for digital assets.”
Thielen’s view points to a broader narrative: regulatory clarity can lower the friction for institutional participation and foster a more predictable operating environment for crypto markets. In this framing, the two events could complement monetary policy dynamics, reducing policy uncertainty that often weighs on risk assets during leadership transitions and major legislative reviews.
Bitcoin’s resilience through the US-Iran conflict
Since the onset of the crisis — marked by events in late February that intensified after a U.S. airstrike targeted Iranian leadership figures — Bitcoin has advanced roughly 29.7%. That recovery places BTC ahead of the S&P 500 and gold over this span, suggesting that investors view digital assets as a potential hedge or diversification instrument even as traditional markets wrestle with geopolitical risk. The price trajectory adds a layer to a longer-running debate about Bitcoin’s role in macro risk-off or risk-on environments, and whether the asset can sustain a narrative of resilience during heightened tensions.
Looking back, Bitcoin’s volatility in response to geopolitical headlines is not a new phenomenon, but the current episode reinforces how macro shocks can intersect with sector-specific narratives around custody, liquidity, and regulatory clarity. If the regulatory tailwinds materialize in the coming weeks, the market could see a more stable path for institutional flows, potentially supporting a broader adoption arc for digital assets beyond a purely risk-on or speculative cycle.
As markets digest both diplomacy-focused headlines and policy signals, investors will be watching how the central bank’s leadership transition unfolds and what lawmakers deliver on crypto legislation. The coming days may reveal whether the combination of macro resilience and regulatory certainty can sustain Bitcoin’s momentum or whether volatility will reassert itself as geopolitical headlines evolve.
Readers should stay tuned for the next wave of regulatory updates and any fresh color on Fed leadership’s approach to inflation and market stability, as these factors will likely shape crypto volatility and institutional participation in the weeks ahead.
Crypto World
Canton Network builder nears $300M raise led by a16z crypto
Digital Asset Holdings is reportedly raising about $300 million at a valuation near $2 billion, according to Bloomberg.
Summary
- Digital Asset’s reported $300 million round could become its largest funding raise to date.
- a16z crypto’s lead role points to rising venture interest in privacy-focused institutional blockchains.
- Canton Network’s recent Visa and DTCC links strengthen its pitch to regulated finance firms.
The round is said to be led by Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto arm, a16z crypto, and could close in the coming weeks.
The company is known for developing Canton Network, a blockchain built for financial institutions. Bloomberg cited people familiar with the matter, while Digital Asset and a16z crypto did not comment on the report.
Canton Network draws institutional attention
Canton Network is designed for tokenized assets, payments, and settlement activity where privacy is required. Its model allows institutions to share selected transaction data while keeping sensitive details private.
That privacy focus has helped Canton attract major financial names. Visa joined Canton Network as a Super Validator in March 2026 and added Canton to its stablecoin settlement pilot in April.
Additionally, the reported round would follow Digital Asset’s $135 million raise in June 2025. That funding was backed by DRW Venture Capital, Tradeweb Markets, Goldman Sachs, Citadel Securities, DTCC, and other financial firms.
Digital Asset also raised $50 million in December 2025 from investors including BNY Mellon, Nasdaq, S&P Global, and iCapital, according to prior reports. The new round would mark a larger vote of confidence in Canton’s role in institutional blockchain infrastructure.
DTCC and tokenized assets add context
The funding talks come as DTCC prepares to test tokenized securities activity. As previously reported, DTCC has said it plans to pilot tokenized versions of some assets it custodies, with testing expected in July and a wider launch targeted for October.
Canton has also gained links with Moody’s, Japan Securities Clearing Corporation, and Swiss crypto bank Amina. These moves show how Digital Asset is positioning Canton for regulated finance rather than retail crypto trading.
Crypto World
Ripple-linked XRP spikes 2.5%, beating bitcoin and ether, in breakout above $1.45
XRP finally forced its way through the $1.45 area that had capped rallies for weeks, and the move came fast. Volume arrived all at once during the breakout, which usually points to larger positioning rather than retail chasing, though the rally started losing momentum as price approached the psychological $1.50 level.
News Background
• Traders had been watching XRP’s tightening range for days as multiple analysts pointed to bull flag and triangle formations building beneath resistance.
• Thin liquidity conditions across major exchanges added to expectations that any confirmed breakout could produce exaggerated moves in either direction.
Price Action Summary
• XRP climbed from $1.4176 to $1.4524 during the 24-hour session, trading within a 6.5% range.
• The breakout accelerated during the May 10 16:00–17:00 window, when volume surged above 169M and pushed price through $1.4450.
• XRP later reached a session high of $1.5073 before pulling back toward the $1.45 area as traders locked in profits.
Technical Analysis
• The move above $1.45 matters because that level had repeatedly rejected upside attempts since April.
• Breakout volume was unusually strong, suggesting real participation behind the rally rather than a thin squeeze higher.
• Momentum cooled quickly near $1.50, where sellers stepped back in and triggered short-term liquidation pressure.
• Despite the pullback, XRP is still holding above the prior breakout zone, keeping the broader bullish structure intact for now.
What traders should watch
• $1.44-$1.45 is now the key support area. Holding above it keeps the breakout structure alive.
• $1.50 remains the immediate resistance level after the sharp rejection from session highs.
• A sustained move above $1.50 could reopen momentum toward $1.56 and potentially the $1.80 area highlighted by several analysts.
• Failure back below $1.44 would increase the risk of a retracement toward the $1.38-$1.40 range.
Crypto World
Ethereum Faces Sell-Off Risk as Whale Moves $1.35 Billion in ETH to Binance
A crypto whale, Garrett Jin, has transferred $1.35 billion in Ethereum (ETH) to Binance, sparking concerns of a sell-off amid swelling exchange reserves.
The deposits, tracked by Lookonchain, coincide with institutional outflows and exchange inflow spikes that have pushed Binance’s ETH holdings to nearly a quarter of the centralized supply.
Whale Sends $1.35 Billion in ETH to Binance Over Just 4 Days
Lookonchain data shows Jin moved the entire 577,896 ETH position to Binance over four days. Most of these tokens were swapped from Bitcoin (BTC) eight months ago. At the time, the second-largest cryptocurrency was trading around $4,591.
“He is now down ~$1.3 billion,” the post added.
Meanwhile, asset managers added to the pressure. BlackRock and Fidelity sent more than 35,000 ETH into Coinbase Prime last week.
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While transfers to exchanges do not always indicate imminent selling, they often raise market concerns about potential liquidation pressure.
The pattern among large holders has added to these concerns. An analyst flagged a series of hourly spikes in Ethereum inflows on Binance in May.
The analyst noted that Binance now holds around 3.62 million ETH, accounting for roughly 24.6% of all centralized exchange ETH supply.
According to CryptoQuant data, total exchange reserves have also climbed from 14.36 million ETH on May 5 to 14.95 million ETH.
Whether these deposits become outright sales remains to be seen. Whales sometimes move funds for collateral or liquidity management rather than immediate disposal.
Still, the convergence of whale activity and rising reserves leaves a heavier supply overhang.
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Crypto World
‘Visible Flaws’ In Bitcoiners’ Mid-Bear Market Comparison: Analyst
Bitcoin may have already bottomed in early February at around $60,000 and is unlikely to go lower this year, according to a crypto analyst, despite expectations of another downturn.
“The dozens of bottom signals only flashed in synchrony at the bottoms. They were not flashing in the middle. Yet they all flashed in Q1 2026 at 60k,” Matthew Hyland said in an X post on Friday.
“To compare the current price action to mid bear market price action has major visible flaws because you did not have bottom signals flashing in the middle; they flashed at the bottoms,” Hyland said, pointing to chart movements in prior cycles.

Source: Matthew Hyland
Analysts are divided over whether $60,000 was the bottom
Bitcoin (BTC) analysts have recently been divided over whether the asset already bottomed in February or if it still has further downside in this cycle.
Veteran trader Peter Brandt said in March that $60,000 may not be the lowest level for 2026, forecasting that Bitcoin could retest or even move “slightly lower” in September or October this year.
Bitcoin analyst Willy Woo said in an X post on March 17 that, from a liquidity perspective, Bitcoin is about one-third of the way “through the bear market.”
More recently, in an X post on Friday, MN Trading Capital founder Michael van de Poppe pointed to a forming pattern on Bitcoin’s short-to-long-term realized value ratio chart to argue that Bitcoin is nearing the end of the bear phase.
“The levels are hit again, which shows that we’re at the end of the bear market, and not at the start,” van de Poppe said.

Source: Michael van de Poppe
Bitcoin recently reached its highest price in three months
Bitcoin reached $82,499 on Wednesday, its highest price since Jan. 31. At the time of publication, Bitcoin is trading at $79,646, approximately 32.74% higher than the $60,000 level it reached in February, according to CoinMarketCap.
Related: Bitcoin bulls target $115K by December: Does data back the expectation?
Bitcoin analyst Kyle Chasse pointed out the price increase in an X post on Thursday, saying he expects further upside in the near term.
“$82,000 this week. Up 5% in five days. Crypto legislation is moving through Congress. Iran peace talks reducing risk-off pressure,” Chasse said.
“The technicals are clean. Bull-stacked moving averages. Shorts getting squeezed,” Chasse said, adding that the “next wall” is $85,000.
“Above that, the path to $100k opens back up,” Chasse said.
Magazine: XRP ‘probably going to $12,’ Bitcoin ETFs add $1B: Market Moves
Crypto World
Rate Hike Back on the Table? Pimco Sounds Alarm Over Iran War Inflation
Pacific Investment Management Company (PIMCO), a leading US bond manager, has warned that the Federal Reserve may need to raise rates rather than cut them.
This comes as the US-Iran war drives inflation higher and undermines the central bank’s 2% target.
Wall Street Heavyweights Warn Against Fed Easing Path
CIO Dan Ivascyn said Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz has compounded long-standing challenges for US policymakers who have struggled to bring inflation down to target.
“US is further away from that, but you are going to see more tightening as it looks today in Europe, the UK and maybe even Japan, and I wouldn’t take it completely off the table for the US either,” he said
Ivascyn warned that cutting borrowing costs now could backfire.
“He added that any reduction in US borrowing costs ‘would be counter-productive . . . given the inflation dynamic and the uncertainty around inflation, the uncertainty around inflation expectations’, noting that any such move ‘very well could lead to higher intermediate long-term rates,” the FT reported.
Franklin Templeton Chief Executive Jenny Johnson also said inflation will be difficult to contain.
“It’s going to be difficult for the Fed to cut,” she warned.
Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs pushed back its forecast for the next two Fed cuts to December 2026 and March 2027. The bank expects energy cost passthrough to keep core PCE near 3% through 2026.
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Sticky Inflation Tightens Liquidity for Crypto
The Fed has held its benchmark rate at 3.50% to 3.75% since January 2026, pausing after three reductions delivered through 2025. March consumer prices climbed 0.9% on the month, pushing annual inflation to 3.3%.
Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE), the Fed’s preferred gauge, rose to 3.5%, the highest level in nearly three years.
A higher-for-longer rate path compresses valuations for risk assets, including Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH). Historically, a stronger dollar tied to that outlook weighs on broader crypto markets, with altcoins absorbing the bulk of the selling.
Bitcoin reclaimed $80,000 in early May after the Trump administration moved to ease tensions with Iran, but a hawkish Fed pivot at the June FOMC meeting could cap further upside.
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