Crypto World
Crypto Security and Regulation Roundup, DeFi Exploits and Wallet Updates
Crypto markets and policy did not move in a vacuum this week. On one side, the security environment in decentralized finance continued to produce major incidents tied to bridges, rollup infrastructure, and MEV-related trading. On the other, regulators in the United States and the European Union advanced proposals and rules that could reshape how transactions are processed, especially for centralized exchanges and custodial services.
Separately, a wallet application update brought a set of product changes, including expanded token and transaction display features and additional third-party trading providers. While these updates do not directly address protocol-level vulnerabilities, they influence user workflows around custody, routing, and compliance controls.
DeFi exploits: multiple incidents across bridges, rollups, and MEV
Aztec Connect and other deprecated bridge components targeted
The week’s most notable theme was how attackers continued to find value in systems that were already in decline. According to the roundup, Aztec Connect was drained twice via distinct exploits. The first incident involved an alleged $2.1 million outflow, described as linked to a privacy-focused rollup bridge that had been deprecated in 2023. A separate incident was then described as pulling an additional $2.15 million from another private rollup bridge, reportedly deprecated in 2022.
From an industry perspective, these cases underline a recurring challenge in DeFi security: “deprecated” does not always mean “fully unreachable” for every integration, contract dependency, or edge-case flow. Even when a product is scheduled for retirement, interfaces that remain technically exploitable can continue to create attack surfaces.
Taiko exploit described as forged proof verification
The roundup also described an incident on Taiko tied to chain-state verification. It characterizes the issue as attackers submitting forged message proofs that were accepted as valid by Ethereum mainnet.
The described impact included roughly $1.7 million drained in USDC and ETH, alongside nearly 2 million TAIKO tokens. If accurate, the incident highlights a critical class of risk for layer-2 and bridging systems, where correctness depends on verification logic. Even when verification is meant to protect downstream execution, weaknesses in proof-handling can create outsized consequences.
MEV bot manipulation: “fake wrapped assets” and simulated profitability
Beyond bridges and rollups, the roundup points to a case involving an MEV bot on Ethereum, identified as Jaredfromsubway.eth. The description focuses on attackers tricking automated trading logic by creating fake wrapped assets and liquidity pools that simulated a profitable sandwich trade.
The roundup states that approximately $7.5 million was siphoned through permissions already granted to the bot. In practice, MEV strategies often rely on pre-approved token allowances and on fast transaction execution. This incident, as summarized, fits a broader pattern where adversaries attempt to make an automated system believe in a profit opportunity that exists only in a simulated environment.
Illinois adopts a digital asset transaction tax plan
Regulation in the United States also featured in this week’s roundup. It describes Illinois’ passage of a $55.9 billion state budget that includes the Digital Asset Privilege Tax Act. The plan, as outlined, would impose a 0.2% transaction-level levy on crypto activity starting January 1, 2027.
The described scope focuses on digital asset brokers, including exchanges and custodians that exchange, transfer, or store crypto for Illinois customers. The summary also notes registration requirements and felony charges for noncompliance. Additionally, the roundup references concerns raised by the Crypto Council for Innovation, describing the tax as among the most punitive in the country and warning about precedent effects.
For businesses, a transaction tax at the protocol or transaction level can change unit economics. For users, it may ultimately influence which services offer custody and routing into and out of regulated intermediaries.
EU rules target cash, identity checks, and privacy-asset access via on/off-ramps
On the European side, the roundup summarizes a set of incoming rules affecting cash payments, identity verification, and the ability of regulated providers to handle certain transactions.
It describes a proposed cash cap in the EU: cash payments above €10,000 would be prohibited for goods and services. It also states that cash transactions over €3,000 would trigger mandatory identity verification. For regulated crypto service providers, the roundup notes identity checks on transactions of €1,000 or more and indicates that anonymous accounts are banned.
Crucially, the roundup frames privacy assets as not being outright criminalized for self-custody ownership, but it says the rules would restrict regulated intermediaries from touching privacy coins in certain contexts. It also emphasizes that peer-to-peer onchain transfers between self-custody wallets would remain outside the regulation’s reach, while on-ramps and off-ramps would face tighter constraints.
If these provisions are enacted as described, the immediate operational impact likely falls on exchanges, custodians, and payment providers, which may have to implement stricter routing, monitoring, and customer identification workflows. Over time, this could affect liquidity, pricing, and availability of certain assets through centralized channels.
Wallet and app update: UTXO address generation and expanded trading options
Alongside security and policy, the roundup includes a wallet product update labeled v5.39. While it is not a security incident response, it signals how mainstream crypto apps are adapting their user experience around transaction visibility and third-party trading providers.
MoonPay Trade, Apple Pay via Mercuryo, and provider controls
The roundup states that MoonPay Trade was added to the provider lineup, with features such as filtering between centralized exchanges and decentralized exchanges and the ability to rate providers after a swap. It also notes iOS support for purchasing crypto using Apple Pay through Mercuryo.
UTXO dynamic address generation and Solana history visibility
The update also reportedly includes dynamic address generation for selected UTXO networks, producing a new address for each incoming transaction. It further describes Solana transaction history appearing in the app.
Tangem Pay improvements and card management changes
Separately, the roundup mentions improvements to Tangem Pay, including the ability to reissue and rename a Tangem Pay card and adjust daily spending limits. It frames these changes as making real-world spending more flexible for users operating a self-custody setup.
What this week signals for security and compliance risk
Across the items summarized, a few themes stand out for industry watchers.
- Security risk persists after deprecation. Protocol retirement does not automatically close all pathways, especially where contracts remain technically accessible.
- Verification systems remain high-value targets. The Taiko incident description points to the importance of proof correctness and end-to-end validation across chains.
- Automation increases the stakes of trust assumptions. MEV bots can be exploited by adversaries who design fake liquidity and permissions-aware execution paths.
- Regulation is converging on intermediaries. U.S. and EU measures described in the roundup emphasize identity checks and transaction handling controls by exchanges, custodians, and regulated providers.
For users, the practical takeaway is not only to monitor security headlines, but also to understand how evolving compliance rules can change access paths and the reliability of on/off-ramps. For builders, the incidents reinforce the need for rigorous decommissioning plans, continuous audit coverage for legacy components, and stronger guardrails around automated trading logic.
Crypto World
Strategy Boosts USD Reserve to $1.4B, Buys $34.9M in Bitcoin
Michael Saylor’s Strategy has expanded its Bitcoin holdings and increased its US dollar reserve after its perpetual preferred stock STRC slipped below $90.
Strategy acquired 520 Bitcoin (BTC) for $34.9 million between June 15 and Sunday, according to a Monday 8-K filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. The purchase was made at an average price of $67,068 per BTC, bringing Strategy’s total Bitcoin holdings to 847,363 BTC.
Strategy’s cumulative purchases now total $64.1 billion, giving the company an average acquisition cost of $75,651 per Bitcoin.
Strategy said on X that it added $300 million to its US dollar reserve, bringing the total to $1.4 billion. According to the company’s 8-K filing, the figure includes expected cash proceeds from its at-the-market (ATM) share sales that had not yet settled.

Source: Strategy
Strategy’s financing decisions are closely watched because the company is the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin and one of the market’s most active buyers. The firm’s funding model has also become a template for a growing number of Bitcoin treasury companies.
MSTR share sales fund Bitcoin purchase and USD reserve
Strategy funded its latest Bitcoin purchase and liquidity reserve using proceeds from sales of its Class A common stock (MSTR). The company raised $335.5 million through its ATM equity program during the reporting period.
While $34.9 million of the proceeds was used to buy 520 Bitcoin, $300 million was allocated to Strategy’s US dollar reserve, which is designed to support dividend payments and debt obligations.

Source: SEC
“Strategy plans to continue replenishing the USD Reserve over time based on market conditions to support the credit quality of its Digital Credit securities,” the company said in the 8-K filing.
MSTR and STRC tumble at Thursday’s close
Ongoing volatility in Strategy’s shares and preferred stock continued to draw market attention, particularly as STRC, which is designed to trade near $100, fell below $90 last week.
MSTR dropped 3.46% to $112.53 at Thursday’s close ahead of Friday’s market holiday, according to Yahoo Finance data. STRC, the company’s perpetual preferred stock, slipped 0.46% to $88.59 at Thursday’s close. It traded at $90.59 during Monday’s premarket session.
Bitcoin advocate Samson Mow said on X on Monday that STRC has a “self-repairing mechanism” that activates when the security trades below its $100 reference level. He said that when the price falls below that level, the company stops issuing new shares through its ATM program, which limits new supply.
Related: Bitcoin doesn’t need Ethereum-style yield, says Strategy’s Michael Saylor
Mow added that lower prices effectively increase the yield for buyers relative to their purchase price, which can encourage demand and help push the price back toward $100. He described the structure as relying on market incentives rather than active intervention from Strategy to maintain stability.
Magazine: Bitcoin decouples from tech stocks, Ether eyes ‘selling wave’: Market Moves
Crypto World
Trump Signs Quantum Executive Orders: What Do They Mean for Crypto Security?
President Donald Trump signed two quantum executive orders on Monday. They push federal agencies toward quantum-resistant encryption and a more powerful quantum computer.
The orders revive a long-running question about quantum risks to Bitcoin and cryptocurrency in general. One sets a 2031 deadline for post-quantum cryptography, while the other targets quantum computing.
What the Quantum Executive Orders Do
The cryptography order accelerates a deadline that ran to 2035 under the 2022 National Security Memorandum-10. Agencies must now reach quantum-resistant standards years earlier.
Federal systems must use post-quantum cryptography for key establishment by the end of 2030. High-impact systems must move their digital signatures to the new standards by the end of 2031.
The order also tasks the Commerce Department and NIST with a pilot migration project. Federal systems should convert by the end of 2027, while CISA supports critical infrastructure operators.
A companion order is titled “Ushering in the Next Frontier of Quantum Innovation.” It launches a national push for a quantum computer that handles major scientific work.
The order also funds quantum sensors and networks over the next five years.
Officials frame the cryptography order around a threat called harvest now, decrypt later. Adversaries can store encrypted data today and try to unlock it once quantum machines mature.
That is a long-discussed risk to crypto holdings.
“The first Executive Order launches a national effort to produce a Quantum Computer capable of performing important scientific calculations, and to develop quantum-enabled sensors and networks in the next 5 years,” Trump remarks.
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What it Means for Crypto Security
Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) secure ownership with elliptic-curve signatures. A large enough quantum computer running Shor’s algorithm could derive a private key from a public key.
The risk centers on coins whose public keys are already visible on-chain.
That exposure, often called Q-Day, gains a firmer government deadline through these orders. The timeline still gives developers room to respond.
The defensive tools already exist. NIST finalized three post-quantum standards on August 13, 2024, including ML-DSA for digital signatures.
Bitcoin contributors have floated a Bitcoin quantum migration plan and quantum-safe soft forks to adopt them.
Few researchers see urgency. A 2022 University of Sussex study estimated about 1.9 billion physical qubits to break a key inside Bitcoin’s block window.
Google’s Willow chip held just 105 qubits in December 2024, so many treat the threat as not an immediate risk.
Markets showed no immediate reaction. Bitcoin traded near $64,200 and Ethereum near $1,730, each up about 1% over 24 hours.
The orders set deadlines for government systems, not for decentralized networks.
Washington also holds the asset at stake, having established a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve in March 2025.
Bitcoin’s contributors moving as fast as federal agencies remains an open question.
The post Trump Signs Quantum Executive Orders: What Do They Mean for Crypto Security? appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
SharpLink (SBET) Stock Climbs on Ethlabs Ethereum Research Initiative
Key Highlights
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SBET shares climb following Ethlabs nonprofit announcement
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SharpLink invests in independent Ethereum research organization
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New nonprofit aims to enhance Ethereum institutional infrastructure
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Ethlabs pursues improved settlement speed for enterprise users
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Founding members include prominent Ethereum Foundation veterans
Shares of SharpLink, Inc. advanced 1.43% to close at $5.37 following the company’s participation in launching Ethlabs. This newly formed nonprofit entity aims to advance Ethereum research while building infrastructure suited for institutional deployment. During the trading session, SBET briefly touched $5.55 before settling lower.
New Nonprofit Receives Backing From Multiple Ethereum Supporters
SharpLink contributed funding alongside Bitmine Immersion Technologies, Joe Lubin, Anchorage, Octant, and SNZ to establish Ethlabs. The initiative operates as an independent nonprofit dedicated to advancing Ethereum’s technical capabilities. Priority areas include institutional finance requirements and supporting expanded onchain operations.
The organization was cofounded by five former senior-level researchers from the Ethereum Foundation. This founding team consists of Ansgar Dietrichs, Barnabé Monnot, Caspar Schwarz-Schilling, Josh Rudolf, and Julian Ma. Their collective expertise spans protocol finality, network scaling, data availability solutions, economic modeling, and virtual machine architecture.
The new entity offers these researchers consistent financial backing within a structured operational framework. Ethlabs maintains full autonomy from its financial contributors regarding research direction. Leadership retains complete authority over technical choices and overall development objectives.
Research Priorities Target Infrastructure Improvements
Initial research efforts will concentrate on accelerating settlement times, enhancing cross-network interoperability, and expanding Ethereum mainnet throughput. The organization will additionally support native digital asset creation and transfer mechanisms across interconnected blockchain systems. These developments could enable institutions to utilize Ethereum with improved efficiency, security, and predictability.
Rising adoption of stablecoins and tokenized real-world assets is expected to drive increased demand for robust Ethereum infrastructure solutions. Investment funds and automated trading systems may require enhanced settlement mechanisms and data processing capabilities. Consequently, Ethlabs intends to refine common standards that support applications throughout the ecosystem.
Having operated for over ten years, Ethereum currently underpins a substantial decentralized finance landscape. Nevertheless, broader institutional integration demands greater throughput and reliable cross-chain communication protocols. Ethlabs addresses these challenges through focused protocol research and infrastructure enhancement initiatives.
Governance Model Ensures Research Autonomy
A third-party grants administrator will oversee contribution vetting, asset assessment, and capital distribution processes. This arrangement maintains separation between financial backing and decisions regarding research initiatives and technical focus areas. The organization commits to publishing quarterly transparency reports alongside annual independent audits.
SharpLink characterized this investment as aligned with its commitment to Ethereum’s sustainable growth. The firm maintains ETH holdings and engages in initiatives designed to fortify Ethereum’s enterprise-grade infrastructure. This participation connects SBET’s corporate objectives with ongoing expansion throughout the Ethereum network.
Meanwhile, Ethereum’s development landscape continues evolving toward multiple independent research and governance entities. The Ethereum Foundation maintains its foundational mission while external organizations pursue complementary technical initiatives. Ethlabs enters this ecosystem with direct financial support from corporate entities and established community stakeholders.
Crypto World
Fomo Raises $75M in Series B Round at $550M Valuation
Crypto startup Fomo has raised $75 million in a Series B funding round led by venture capital firm Index Ventures, which valued the social trading and token discovery platform at $550 million.
The funding round also received participation from Union Square Ventures and the company’s existing investor, Benchmark, along with angel investors including Zynga co-founder Mark Pincus, Eventbrite co-founder Kevin Hartz, Discord CEO Humam Sakhnini, Nexos AI co-founder Tomas Okmanas and others, Fomo announced on Monday.
Fomo allows users to trade assets across multiple blockchains without having to manually bridge funds or handle gas fees. The company said it has attracted more than 625,000 traders since launching a year ago, generating $4 billion in trading volume and 110 million social interactions.
The raise adds to a growing list of crypto venture deals in 2026, even as digital asset prices remain below recent highs. According to RootData, crypto startups raised $4.1 billion across 147 funding rounds during the second quarter.

Crypto and Web3 funding by quarterly sum. Source: Root Data
Fomo says 68,000 users made first crypto purchase on platform
Fomo said more than 68,000 users made their first cryptocurrency purchase on the platform using Apple Pay, representing roughly $25 million in transaction volume.
Related: Kalshi in early IPO talks with investment banks: Report
Crypto research firm Delphi Digital said in a December X post that the platform’s social features may be helping attract users by making trading feel “more like scrolling a feed than sitting at a terminal.”
“In November, @fomo_family generated more monthly fees than Moonshot, despite being a younger product with lower fees,” Delphi Digital wrote.

Source: Delphi Digital
Fomo allows users to view trades made by other users in real time and execute similar trades across multiple blockchains without manually bridging assets or managing separate wallets.
Other crypto exchanges offering copy-trading features include Binance, Bybit, OKX, Bitget, BingX, MEXC, Gate.io, KuCoin, Phemex and BitMart.
On June 11, Fomo launched perpetual futures contracts powered by Hyperliquid for users outside the United States. On June 2, the company said it had surpassed $2 million in referral fees paid to users.
Magazine: The legal battle over who can claim DeFi’s stolen millions
Crypto World
Secret Network's Axelar Bridge Drained $4.67M via Infinite-Mint Flaw

Secret Network's cross-chain bridge to Axelar has been suspended after an attacker exploited a years-old minting flaw to drain $4.67 million in wrapped tokens over seven undetected days. Both teams disclosed the incident on June 19, confirming approximately $4.67 million in assets were taken from… Read the full story at The Defiant
Crypto World
Bitcoin Funding Rate Reaches 2-Week High, $70K Scrutiny Returns
Bitcoin edged toward the $65,500 area on Monday as traders leaned more bullish on derivatives—an uptick reflected in rising perpetual futures funding rates. Yet the broader risk backdrop remained cautious, with US-listed spot Bitcoin ETF outflows continuing to drain demand and keeping a near-term push toward $70,000 on hold.
Optimism showed up in leverage as well. The annualized funding rate on Bitcoin perpetuals jumped to 7%, its highest level in nearly three weeks and a move that typically aligns with stronger long-side confidence. Still, the market’s full picture was mixed, with options positioning turning more defensive and traditional assets failing to provide the kind of risk-on tailwind that often supports breakout bids.
Key takeaways
- Bitcoin perpetual futures funding rose to 7% (highest in nearly three weeks), indicating growing bullish confidence among leverage traders.
- Put demand outpaced calls on Deribit, with the put-to-call premium ratio more than double, suggesting traders increasingly sought downside protection.
- Order-book liquidity improved: aggregated bids on major exchanges exceeded offers by about $12 million, helping limit bearish read-through from weaker spot levels.
- Macro signals stayed cautious as stocks, bonds, and gold weakened together, and higher US Treasury yields pointed to elevated return requirements for capital.
- Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded continued outflows, with CoinGlass data citing $228 million in net outflows the prior week—likely a headwind for any rapid $70,000 attempt.
Derivatives confidence rises, but options show hedging
The most direct read on trader sentiment came from Bitcoin perpetuals. According to Laevitas data, the annualized funding rate climbed to 7% on Monday, a sign that long positions were paying more to remain open. While that figure remains within the often-cited neutral 6%–12% band, the jump to the highest point in nearly three weeks suggests bulls gained ground over the weekend into Monday.
Crude oil also contributed to the day’s tone. Brent fell to $77.50, its lowest level since March, which can ease inflation- and risk-premium concerns in broader markets. For Bitcoin, that kind of macro relief sometimes helps lift short-term demand—especially when derivatives liquidity supports it.
However, options data signaled that traders were not fully committing to upside. Laevitas-referenced Deribit metrics showed put (sell) options demand running more than twice ahead of call activity on Monday. This skew has leaned bearish since Friday, representing a reversal from the prior week’s direction. In practice, that combination—higher perpetual funding alongside heavier put buying—often points to a market that is still trying to grind upward, but with active hedging in case price fails to follow through.
Order books improve even as traditional markets stay risk-averse
Bitcoin’s immediate price action around $65,000 did not appear to be driven by a lack of depth. CoinGlass data referenced in the report showed that bids on aggregated major exchange order books exceeded offers by about $12 million on Monday, reversing the weekend trend.
That matters because a failure to hold a key level can sometimes reflect fading liquidity and widening spreads. With the order-book imbalance turning more supportive, Monday’s inability to firmly reclaim higher territory looks more like timing and positioning than a structural sell-side pressure shift.
At the same time, the macro backdrop stayed uneven. Nasdaq 100 futures slipped about 1% as artificial intelligence-related stocks weakened. In company-specific news, SpaceX shares dropped sharply after the company announced plans to raise debt despite holding more than $100 billion in cash. Investors appear to have focused on the possibility that the sector may need higher funding and longer timelines before profitability.
Beyond equities, gold fell roughly 0.9% on Monday while US government bonds were also pressured as yields rose. The report attributed the move in yields to investors demanding higher returns—potentially reflecting inflation concerns or the market anticipating dilution effects tied to rising US government debt levels.
With stocks, bonds, and gold moving lower together, the day looked less like a broad risk-on session and more like investors preferring cash. That is the kind of environment where Bitcoin can still trade firm on crypto-native signals, but breakouts tend to struggle unless ETF flows and broader momentum align.
Corporate and liquidity cues: Strategy’s reserve update helps, but ETFs still weigh
A portion of market attention also focused on Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), whose Bitcoin holdings make it a bellwether for institutional-style accumulation. Shares of Strategy traded about 13% below the roughly $64.1 billion cost to acquire 847,363 BTC, as investors weighed whether the company might need to sell assets to meet obligations. The report noted Strategy had debt of about $6.75 billion and that earlier worries centered on reserve liquidation risk.
Those concerns eased somewhat after Strategy announced an additional cash position—described as a $300 million reserve acquisition—referenced via earlier Cointelegraph coverage. The development matters because it reduces the immediate need for forced selling in a volatile tape, which can support sentiment around large, long-duration Bitcoin holders.
Even with those internal crypto-industry positives, the external demand channel remained a drag. The report pointed to continued weakness in US-listed Bitcoin ETFs. According to CoinGlass data cited, Bitcoin spot ETFs logged $228 million in net outflows in the prior week. The narrative significance is straightforward: when ETF balances decline week after week, it can reduce the marginal buyer that often complements derivative-led optimism.
In that context, the odds of a quick, clean rally to $70,000 look limited. Higher funding and improving order-book bids can push prices upward, but persistent ETF outflows can cap how far those pushes travel—especially when options positioning indicates traders are actively preparing for downside volatility.
As traders watch the tape, the tension to monitor is clear: derivatives are showing confidence (funding at 7% and stronger order-book bids), while options and traditional markets reflect caution (put skew, weaker macro complex) and ETF flows continue to drain fresh spot demand.
Going forward, investors will likely focus on whether ETF outflows slow or reverse and whether the options hedging trend on Deribit keeps deepening. If funding stays elevated while put demand cools and spot ETF flows stabilize, Bitcoin could gain the momentum needed to test higher levels more convincingly. If not, Monday’s signals may translate into choppy consolidation rather than a sustained breakout.
Crypto World
UK Central Bank Eases Stablecoin Rules Following Market Response
The Bank of England has abandoned previous proposed rules on stablecoins in its final policy and draft rules.
The latest revisions were made in response to widespread concern that the rules would stand in the way of the market’s growth and development.
Relaxed Rules
The central bank revealed on Monday that it has scrapped its plans to cap individual holdings, instead choosing to limit total issuance per stablecoin, which was initially set at $52.8 billion.
“This is a major milestone in delivering greater choice and innovation in UK payments,” said Deputy Governor for Financial Stability Sarah Breeden.
Per the bank, the new guardrail will allow systemic stablecoin firms to run viable operations and “support daily volumes and transactions” as compared to other systems.
Additionally, the BOE has reduced its requirements on backing assets, increasing the figure to 70% from 60%, which is the share of backing assets that can be held in short-term government debt. Meanwhile, the rest must now be held in central bank deposits that don’t bear any interest.
Breeden believes that innovation depends on trust and that the new guidelines will build confidence in stablecoins by ensuring quick redemptions, strong consumer protections, and Central Bank backing.
The BOE Still Has Reservations
The BOE has also warned that while stablecoins can make payments faster and cheaper for cross-border transactions, their growing adoption could reduce bank deposits and potentially affect lending and borrowing costs.
Stablecoins are here to stay, though, with most crypto executives viewing them as tools to unlock working capital and enhance treasury operations. A recent survey conducted by Ripple found that 72% of institutions believe that offering these digital assets is key to remaining competitive in the market.
The post UK Central Bank Eases Stablecoin Rules Following Market Response appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Crypto World
Major Figure in $15 Billion Bitcoin Scam Network Arrested in Tokyo
Hu Shi is allegedly a senior member of Prince Group, which has been sanctioned by the U.S. government
Tokyo Metropolitan police have arrested alleged crypto crime kingpin Hu Xiaowei, aka Hu Shi, after tracking his movements across various luxury hotels in Osaka.
Hu is believed by police to be a high-ranking member of Prince Group, which CryptoPotato has reported is responsible for high-level pig-butchering scams and investment fraud totaling $15 billion in Bitcoin.
Tokyo Arrest: Prince Group Crypto Kingpin Hu Xiaowei (Hu Shi) Nabbed – Linked to $15B Bitcoin Scam Empire
According to Asahi Shimbun, Tokyo police arrested Hu Xiaowei (Hu Shi), a senior figure allegedly tied to Cambodia-based Prince Group, one of Asia’s largest transnational… pic.twitter.com/n3hT8vE2hA
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) June 22, 2026
Fall of an empire
Prince Group is one of Asia’s largest organized groups, operating at least 10 scam compounds staffed at the height of its power. The suspected leader of the group, Chen Zhi, was arrested in Cambodia and extradited to China in January.
The U.S. government sanctioned 146 entities linked to the group in October 2025, and the British government has blacklisted several individuals for alleged ties to the Prince Group.
A national of Cyprus and Cambodia, Hu Shi is currently charged with submitting a fraudulent change-of-address form to obtain permanent residency in Japan.
Two Chinese nationals were arrested for submitting paperwork on his behalf. Tokyo police said that the individual named Chen Xiao’er on the U.S. sanctions list is the same person as the Hu Shi they now have in custody, and that a wider investigation into Prince Group and Hu’s involvement is still underway.
The post Major Figure in $15 Billion Bitcoin Scam Network Arrested in Tokyo appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Crypto World
U.S. Senate passes housing bill that carries four-year ban on a Fed CBDC
Thanks to the newly passed U.S. Senate housing affordability bill, the Federal Reserve may be heading toward a formal ban from instituting a digital dollar in the form of a central bank digital currency (CBDC), despite the fact the Fed wasn’t working on such a project.
Republican politicians had embraced an aggressive opposition campaign against the U.S. following in European and Chinese footsteps in the pursuit of a CBDC, labeling the idea a dangerous overreach of government surveillance. So they insisted it get inserted into the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act that just passed the Senate in an 85-5 vote Monday night.
The concept of a digital dollar likely would have needed the backing of the White House, Congress and the Federal Reserve, none of which pushed to pursue one. But if the House of Representatives follows suit and votes to send the housing bill to President Donald Trump for his signature, the CBDC will be legally stifled.
However, the ban would only last for a very limited four years until the end of 2030.
Crypto World
Silver Faces Make-or-Break Level, Will Price Keep Dropping?
Silver is fighting to reclaim $69 after a near 3% bounce, yet the metal trades 45% below its January record and sits at a level that will decide its next major move.
The rebound tracks easing Middle East tension as a days-old US-Iran ceasefire holds. However, a stronger dollar and a cautious Federal Reserve keep pressure on precious metals, leaving silver caught between recovery and a deeper slide.
Why Kiyosaki Is Watching Silver but Not Buying Yet
Silver (XAG) climbed to around $66.7 on Monday, up close to 2.8% on the day. The move followed a ceasefire that drained the safe-haven demand that had earlier powered metals.
Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, said this week that he is waiting before adding to gold, silver, Bitcoin (BTC), and Ethereum (ETH). He argues that the macro environment, not falling prices, signals when to buy.
Kiyosaki gave no price target and no timeline. That leaves one question for traders. What would a genuine reversal look like on silver’s chart?
The Make-or-Break Level at $68.88
On the four-hour chart, silver has slipped below the 0.618 Fibonacci retracement at $68.88 and is fighting to win it back. The level marks the pivot for the next leg.
Independent analyst Kamile Uray flags $63 as the support that has held so far. A break above $71 would open the door toward the $77 to $89 resistance zone.
A close back above that band would suggest the rebound has more room. Until then, the metal stays trapped between $63 support and $71 resistance.
XAG Price Prediction Hinges on the $68.88 Line
The daily chart shows silver in a clear downtrend since January. It has printed successive lower highs near $96 and $89 and matching lower lows.
The price now sits about 45% below its $121.76 record, a sign the correction is widening. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) has ticked up near 40 but stays below the neutral 50 mark.
Reclaiming the retracement at $68.88 would shift focus to $79, then to the $89 resistance band. Losing it points toward $55, the 0.786 level that aligns with long-term support.
That makes $68.88 the line Kiyosaki’s awaited reversal must clear. A weekly close above it would signal the turn, while a rejection keeps the bearish structure intact.
For now, the trend favors sellers until silver proves it can hold above that mark.
The post Silver Faces Make-or-Break Level, Will Price Keep Dropping? appeared first on BeInCrypto.
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