Crypto World
Mashinsky Hit With Permanent Trading Ban
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has concluded its remaining enforcement matter against Alex Mashinsky, the founder of failed crypto lender Celsius Network, permanently banning him from trading in markets overseen by the CFTC. The regulator said the action was resolved through a court consent order.
According to the CFTC, the settlement also prevents Mashinsky from ever registering with the agency, bringing to a close a case the CFTC first filed in 2023. The development is significant for compliance stakeholders because it further delineates enforcement risk for individuals associated with crypto lending platforms that marketed financial returns and interacted with digital-asset markets.
Key takeaways
- The CFTC permanently bars Alex Mashinsky from trading CFTC-regulated commodities, futures, and derivatives.
- A consent order also prohibits Mashinsky from ever registering with the CFTC, effectively ending the CFTC enforcement action filed in 2023.
- The regulator stated it viewed the conduct as involving misrepresentations about Celsius’ safety, profitability, and regulatory compliance.
- The ban follows Mashinsky’s criminal conviction and sentencing in May 2025 for fraud tied to Celsius’ collapse.
- The outcome adds to prior U.S. regulatory restrictions, including an FTC settlement and ongoing civil litigation by the SEC.
CFTC consent order ends 2023 enforcement case
In its announcement, the CFTC said the matter was resolved by court consent order. The order permanently bars Mashinsky from trading in any market the CFTC regulates, and it also prohibits him from registering with the agency in the future.
The CFTC characterized the alleged conduct as a scheme to defraud customers by misrepresenting key features of Celsius’ digital asset-based finance platform. In particular, the regulator said the alleged misstatements related to the safety of customer funds, the platform’s profitability, and its regulatory compliance.
For institutional observers, the practical effect is straightforward: even where criminal or civil outcomes are still unfolding, CFTC-specific trading bans can materially constrain an individual’s ability to participate in regulated derivatives and commodities markets. Such orders often carry compliance implications for counterparties, background checks, and internal controls used by regulated entities.
Broader market-structure implications for digital assets
The CFTC’s action arrives amid a U.S. regulatory landscape in which the classification of crypto assets affects which agencies have primary oversight. Earlier this year, the CFTC and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued guidance indicating that they considered most major cryptocurrencies to be commodities. As a result, conduct tied to certain digital assets has been repeatedly framed through the lens of commodities and derivatives regulation.
While the consent order is case-specific and does not itself reclassify assets, it underscores how enforcement authorities may apply commodity and derivatives rules to crypto-related financial services. For compliance teams, the emphasis is less on asset marketing language alone and more on whether authorities view a platform’s conduct as misleading or fraudulent in ways that intersect with regulated markets.
The CFTC also described the settlement as ending its first case against a digital asset lending platform, and as closing one of the last remaining regulatory actions pending against Mashinsky. That positioning matters: it suggests authorities are using the remaining enforcement pathways to remove recidivism risk by restricting access to regulated trading venues and regulatory processes.
Criminal conviction, prior FTC restrictions, and ongoing SEC case
The CFTC’s ban follows Mashinsky’s criminal sentencing in May 2025. Authorities had prosecuted him in connection with misleading Celsius customers and the platform’s subsequent collapse in 2022. The CFTC said its allegations included that Celsius received about $20 billion in customer funds and made risky investments to meet the returns it promised.
In addition to the CFTC’s actions, Mashinsky has already faced broad restrictions arising from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). According to the article’s account, Mashinsky settled an FTC complaint in April, resulting in a permanent bar on working with any product or service that can be used to “deposit, exchange, invest, or withdraw assets.”
Separately, the SEC’s case against Mashinsky remains pending. The SEC filed charges in July 2023 alleging, among other issues, that he participated in an unregistered securities offering, misrepresented Celsius’ business and safety, and manipulated the price of Celsius’ CEL token. As described in the earlier court activity, the SEC told a federal court in late May that it had engaged in substantive settlement discussions, but that no agreement had been reached. The court granted the regulators an additional 60 days to continue negotiations.
There is also an active post-conviction dispute. Mashinsky filed a motion in late May seeking to vacate his 12-year sentence, claiming ineffective assistance of counsel and alleging evidence was tainted by misconduct. He also argued that another individual, identified as Sam Bankman-Fried, was responsible for token-related manipulation. A court ordered prosecutors to respond to that motion by mid-August.
For regulated firms and compliance officers, this procedural layering—criminal conviction, FTC restrictions, CFTC ban, and SEC litigation—highlights the need to treat enforcement outcomes as evolving risk signals rather than isolated events. Each forum has distinct legal standards, remedies, and enforcement theories, and organizations should map those differences to onboarding policies, monitoring frameworks, and vendor due diligence.
Why the ban matters for compliance and enforcement readiness
Although the CFTC consent order is limited to Mashinsky, the compliance implications extend beyond one individual. Permanent trading bans can affect:
- Counterparty risk management: regulated firms often screen principals and beneficial owners against public enforcement orders and permanent bars.
- Programmatic controls: entities managing trading access—especially those interfacing with futures or derivatives—must ensure restricted persons cannot participate directly or indirectly.
- Regulatory reporting and attestations: compliance statements to counterparties or regulators may require updated disclosures when enforcement status changes.
- Cross-border enforcement alignment: where platforms operate internationally, overlapping U.S. restrictions can intersect with local licensing conditions and suitability requirements.
At a policy level, the case also reflects how U.S. regulators have been using civil enforcement and criminal prosecutions to address conduct that authorities characterize as fraud and customer deception, particularly in high-yield or “returns” models offered through crypto infrastructure. The Celsius collapse remains a reference point for regulators seeking to prevent similar structures from operating without adequate investor protections.
However, uncertainty remains where other proceedings are still active. Even with the CFTC matter closed, the SEC case and post-conviction motion could change the overall legal landscape for Mashinsky, including how allegations are ultimately resolved and what additional sanctions might follow. Until those processes conclude, compliance frameworks should account for both current restrictions and potential future developments.
Closing perspective
The CFTC’s permanent trading and registration ban closes a significant enforcement chapter tied to Celsius’ founder, but it does not end all legal exposure. Market participants and compliance teams should monitor the status of the SEC litigation and the outcome of the post-sentencing motion, as these proceedings may further shape the regulatory and legal record relevant to crypto lending, customer disclosures, and the enforcement posture of U.S. agencies.
Crypto World
What happens when ChatGPT becomes the front door to crypto
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The next crypto user may start outside exchanges
For most of crypto’s history, new users followed a fairly standard path. They signed up on an exchange, completed identity checks, learned how wallets worked, bought their first cryptocurrency and only then started exploring decentralized applications (DApps).
It was rarely a smooth process.
Wallet addresses often looked intimidating. Seed phrases confused beginners and gas fees were hard to understand. Even buying a small amount of Bitcoin could mean using several platforms and dealing with unfamiliar ideas.
This process is slowly changing.
Instead of starting on an exchange or wallet app, tomorrow’s users may begin with a simple conversation. They could ask an AI assistant what Bitcoin is, how to buy it or how to send money abroad. The same assistant could then guide them through the steps or even help complete the transaction.
Recent developments suggest this future could arrive sooner than expected. MoonPay is now available inside ChatGPT for crypto-buying flows. At the same time, Coinbase’s Base ecosystem is building tools that allow AI assistants to work with wallets and blockchain applications.
The result could change how people first enter crypto space.
The next wave of onboarding may not begin inside exchanges or wallets. It may begin inside chatbots.
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Crypto onboarding has long been a usability problem
One of crypto’s biggest challenges has not been the technology itself. It has been the user experience.
To experienced users, private keys, wallet addresses and blockchain confirmations may feel normal. To newcomers, they can seem intimidating.
Traditional onboarding asks users to learn several unfamiliar systems at once. They need to understand how exchanges, wallets, security tools and transactions work before they can use crypto with confidence.
This complexity has caused many mistakes over the years. People have sent money to the wrong addresses, lost access to their wallets and fallen for scams because they did not clearly understand the tools they were using.
The industry has spent years trying to make this process easier. AI is now becoming the latest attempt to solve that problem.
Did you know? Long before modern AI assistants, crypto users relied on simple Telegram and Discord bots to check prices, send alerts and carry out basic trades. Today’s AI-powered crypto assistants are far more advanced versions of those early tools.
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ChatGPT becoming more than an information tool
Early AI assistants mainly helped users learn. They answered questions, but they did not complete actions. People could ask questions such as:
- What is Bitcoin?
- How do stablecoins work?
- What is a crypto wallet?
The chatbot would give clear answers, but the actual transaction still happened on another platform. That separation is starting to disappear.
New integrations allow AI systems to do more than explain crypto. They can now connect users directly to services for buying, transferring and using blockchain networks.
Picture a newcomer saying:
“I want to buy $100 worth of Bitcoin.”
Instead of sending the user to another site, the AI could create a purchase link, explain the steps and guide them through the full process.
The conversation itself becomes the onboarding process. For beginners, this may feel natural because it matches how they already use AI for everyday tasks.
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When chatbots move from answers to actions
The next phase of AI-crypto integration goes beyond simple asset purchases. It is also about letting users manage more crypto tasks through chat.
Projects like Coinbase’s Base Model Context Protocol (MCP) gateway aim to connect AI assistants with wallets, blockchain apps and other crypto services.
This could allow users to give instructions such as:
- Send 50 USDC to my friend.
- Swap ETH for USDC.
- Check my wallet balance.
- Find the cheapest route for a token transfer.
Instead of moving between different apps and websites, users would interact through normal language.
This follows earlier changes in computing. Users once had to remember command-line instructions. Graphical interfaces made that easier. Mobile apps made things simpler again.
AI assistants may be the next step. They could let people describe what they want to do instead of learning complex software steps.
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Understanding MCP and its importance
Much of this change comes from MCP. It gives AI systems a standard way to connect with outside tools and services.
Instead of remaining standalone chatbots, AI assistants can now connect with databases, apps, wallets and other software systems.
MCP acts as a bridge between normal conversation and real action.
Without this kind of setup, AI systems can only provide information. With it, they can carry out tasks for users while keeping the right context.
For crypto, the value is clear. Blockchain apps often involve several technical steps in a specific order. MCP-supported systems can handle many of those steps automatically while the user stays inside a single chat window.
This could make AI the main layer people use to manage financial tasks.
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When users no longer have to see the crypto layer
The biggest change may not be what users do. It may be what they no longer have to deal with directly.
Today’s crypto experience is still very visible. Users know they are dealing with exchanges, wallets and blockchains because they have to move through each layer themselves.
In a future shaped by AI, much of that complexity could move out of sight.
A user might simply say:
“Send $100 to my brother.”
The AI assistant could identify the steps, explain what will happen and show a clear confirmation before anything goes through.
The blockchain still runs. The wallet still exists. The user simply interacts with them through conversation instead of technical controls.
In this sense, crypto becomes less visible even as more people start using it.
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Why this approach may appeal to new users
For new users, chat-based crypto tools could offer several practical benefits:
- They lower technical barriers.
- They explain things when users need help.
- They can guide users through unfamiliar steps one at a time.
- Most importantly, they feel familiar.
People already ask AI assistants for help with travel plans, meal ideas and work tasks. Asking the same assistant how to buy Bitcoin may feel like a natural next step, not a completely new behavior.
This could help crypto reach a wider audience.
Many people who once felt uneasy with traditional crypto apps may feel more comfortable using crypto through chat.
Did you know? Future crypto users may never have to copy a wallet address manually. Instead of pasting long strings of characters, they could simply tell an AI assistant who to pay while the technical details stay hidden in the background.
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The trust issue nobody is talking about
Convenience also creates new problems. Earlier, users dealt directly with crypto platforms. They placed their trust in exchanges, wallets or blockchain networks.
In a chatbot-based setup, much of that trust shifts to the AI assistant. The chatbot becomes the main point of contact. Users may start accepting its suggestions simply because they sound clear and confident.
Most people have limited knowledge of blockchain technology. They also know little about how large language models work.
As a result, they may rely too heavily on systems they do not fully understand. The main concern is not always bad intent. It is overreliance.
A chatbot can make decisions feel so simple that users stop questioning the actions they approve.
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What happens when AI makes a mistake
AI systems are still far from perfect. Mistakes, misunderstandings and inaccurate answers remain common.
In most cases, these issues may cause little harm if the person using AI reviews the output carefully. A wrong historical detail or a weak suggestion can usually be caught before it creates a major problem.
Financial transactions are different. A mistake involving wallet addresses, token symbols or transaction details could easily lead to financial losses.
Even small errors can matter in blockchain systems, where transactions are usually final and cannot be reversed. That is why human review remains important.
AI can be a useful assistant, but users must still check what they are authorizing. Convenience cannot replace careful review.
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New security concerns in AI-enabled crypto tools
As AI starts connecting directly with wallets and financial tools, new risks come with it.
Bad actors may try to influence AI systems through prompt injection. Malicious plugins could abuse trusted connections. Scammers may use AI-generated conversations to make scams seem more believable.
These risks are not limited to crypto, but the financial impact can be much higher here. A wrong answer from a chatbot is one problem. A wrong transaction is another.
Security becomes more important as AI moves from giving advice to taking action. The industry will need to keep these tools easy to use while still building strong protections.
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Could AI replace exchanges as crypto’s main entry point?
One major question is whether exchanges could slowly move into the background as support systems.
Users rarely think about the servers behind their favorite websites. They simply use search engines, browsers and apps. A similar change could happen in crypto.
Exchanges may still provide liquidity and carry out trades while AI assistants become the visible face of the system.
If that happens, control of the user experience could matter more than control of the technology behind it. Companies that shape the conversation may gain more influence over how people find, access and use crypto services.
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How AI agents could change automated finance
The link between AI and crypto goes far beyond human users. Developers are now building AI agents that can interact with financial systems on their own.
Over time, these agents could handle subscriptions, adjust investment portfolios, make payments and use decentralized finance protocols with limited human input.
Crypto networks are well suited for this kind of activity. They are programmable, available worldwide and open around the clock.
Fully independent financial agents are still a developing idea, but the basic tools are already being built.
Together, AI and blockchain may one day support financial systems where machines interact directly with other machines.
Crypto World
Bitcoin falls below $63,000 as risk assets sell off and the week’s bounce fades
The pressure came from a wider retreat in markets. Global equities slipped in holiday-thinned trading, with US, Chinese, Hong Kong and Taiwanese markets closed, and a gauge of Asian shares falling 0.6% after a five-day run to record highs. Brent crude traded around $79 a barrel, down about 9% on the week, as shipping through the Strait of Hormuz returned to normal under the signed US-Iran deal and eased what had been a historic supply shock.
Attention now turns to talks over Iran’s nuclear program, with Vice President JD Vance saying a 60-day clock to settle the deal’s details has started.
The bigger question hanging over the market is where this cycle goes, and whether the altcoins that usually rally late in a bull run get their turn at all. Michael Egorov, founder of Curve Finance, told CoinDesk he thinks bitcoin is behaving differently this cycle because spot ETFs were approved just before the 2024 halving, the roughly four-yearly event that cuts the rate of new bitcoin issuance, pulling in institutional demand that did not exist before and breaking the old pattern.
The speculative energy that once flowed into altcoins, he said, went instead into “useless memecoins” right after the ETFs launched.
Crypto World
Bitcoin to $145K by October? This Old Post With ‘Crazy Accurate’ BTC Price Predictions Say So
A viral social media post is reviving an alleged Bitcoin prediction that appears to have called several major BTC price levels from 2019 through 2024, with one final target remaining: $145,000 by October 2026.
Key takeaways:
- The new viral post appears to be an iteration of an older post with different Bitcoin price targets.
- It also claims the author holds more than 90% of the Bitcoin supply, which is mathematically impossible.
The Bitcoin target still requires proof
The screenshot, shared by crypto account Corleone, shows an anonymous 4chan-style post dated Dec. 20, 2018.

Bitcoin price prediction screenshot. Source: X/Corleone
It claims that a certain group holds “around 90% of total supply” and lists Bitcoin price targets for October 2019, February 2021, July 2021, November 2021, April 2022, November 2022, March 2024, July 2024, September 2024 and October 2026.
At first glance, the prediction looks unusually correct, with Corleone calling them “crazy accurate.” Bitcoin did trade at several of the listed historical levels, including around $67,000 in November 2021 and near $16,000 during the November 2022 bear-market low.
But there are several problems with treating the screenshot as authentic.
The original post is not publicly verifiable
The biggest issue is provenance. The screenshot does not show a verifiable archive link, tripcode, or any identity marker tying the prediction to a repeatable 4chan user.
That matters because 4chan posts are usually anonymous by design. “Anonymous” is not a single person or account. Without an archived source, there is no reliable way to prove that the same person predicted the events before they happened.
A Binance Square post from July 2024 uses the same “we hold around 90% of total supply” wording and many of the same targets, but lists Bitcoin at $105,400 in September 2024.

Bitcoin price prediction screenshot. Source: Binance Square
The newer viral screenshot instead shows September 2024 at $74,000 and adds the October 2026 target of $145,000.
Related: Bitcoin $150K price calls are ‘drying up,’ which is healthy
That difference is a major red flag. It suggests the image or prediction list may have been edited over time to better match Bitcoin’s historical price action.
The market cap claim does not add up
The screenshot also says the prediction would produce a $5.7 trillion market cap, with Bitcoin dominance at 40%–47%.
If the $5.7 trillion figure refers to Bitcoin alone, it is mathematically wrong. At $145,000 per BTC and roughly 20 million BTC in circulation, Bitcoin’s market capitalization would be about $2.9 trillion.
Even using Bitcoin’s full 21 million maximum supply, the market cap would be around $3.05 trillion.
If the post refers to the total crypto market, the wording is unclear and still does not prove anything about the prediction’s authenticity.
The “90% of BTC supply” claim lacks proof
The screenshot also claims: “We hold around 90% of total supply now.”
Bitcoin has about 20.04 million BTC in circulating supply and a 21 million BTC supply cap, so 90% would imply control of roughly 18 million BTC.
Also, the top 100 richest Bitcoin addresses control about 15.27% of the BTC supply, while the top 10,000 addresses hold about 53.89% of the same, according to data resource Bitinfocharts.
That is far below the 90% supply supposedly held by the viral post’s author.
For now, the claim that an anonymous 4chan user accurately predicted Bitcoin’s major price moves through 2026 should be treated as unproven. It appears more likely to be an edited or recycled crypto meme than proof of a trader who “does not miss.”
Crypto World
BlackRock Says Bitcoin is Onboarding Investors Into TradFi
BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin exchange-traded fund has been a gateway for new investors to enter the wider ETF market, according to Jay Jacobs, US head of equity ETFs at BlackRock.
Around three-quarters of investors in BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF have never owned an ETF before, Jacobs told Cointelegraph on the Chain Reaction podcast Thursday.
“IBIT was a way for traditional investors to now get into digital assets. But we have seen a lot of people really kind of enter into IBIT, starting with digital asset ETPs,” he said.
Bitcoin ETFs were heralded as a way to bring traditional investors into the world of digital assets. BlackRock’s Jacob suggests the shift has been two-way.
The iShares Bitcoin Trust, launched in January 2024, is BlackRock’s flagship crypto product with $48 billion in assets under management. It holds 765,936 BTC and has been an on-ramp for many digital asset investors to engage with ETPs.
However, Jacobs said that once investors get exposure to the Bitcoin product, many start buying other BlackRock funds, such as S&P 500 (IVV), artificial intelligence (BAI) and gold (IAU).
“We absolutely see it as this is a way to engage with a different group of people than maybe we’ve engaged with in the past,” he said.
The company launched a new product called the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF (BITA) on Wednesday, which generates income by selling covered call options on Bitcoin holdings.
The “Great Convergence” of TradFi and crypto
Bitcoiners’ engagement with TradFi comes amid a growing overlap between crypto, decentralized finance and traditional finance, which BlackRock is calling the “Great Convergence,” according to Jacobs.
“Historically, you’ve seen a lot of different assets held separately,” he said. “DeFi versus TradFi, actively managed funds versus index funds, private assets versus publicly listed assets… and what’s happening is people are looking for more solutions to manage their portfolios,” he said.
“I think you’re gonna hear a lot less about versus, you know, TradFi versus DeFi, and I think you’re gonna see a lot more ampersands, it’s TradFi and DeFi.”
Related: TradFi advisers want stablecoins, tokenization over Bitcoin: Bitwise
A recent example could be seen during the high-profile SpaceX IPO earlier this month, with crypto traders given an opportunity to get a piece of the action through pre-IPO perpetual futures or tokenized stocks.
Pre-IPO perps enable investors to get exposure to private companies before they start trading on TradFi exchanges.
All major crypto exchanges are now offering pre-IPO perps, and trading volume has skyrocketed from around $1 billion in early May to about $22 billion, with Binance establishing itself as the largest venue, according to CryptoQuant.

Pre-IPO perp volumes on crypto exchanges have surged over the past few weeks. Source: CryptoQuant
Magazine: The end of anon? AI could unmask crypto’s hidden identities
Crypto World
XRP tests key trendline support as bullish divergence fuels recovery hopes
XRP has dropped nearly 5% after a Fed-induced risk-off move swept across crypto markets, though traders remain focused on bullish chart signals and a major liquidity cluster near $1.30.
Summary
- XRP fell nearly 5% after a hawkish Fed outlook triggered a broad crypto market selloff.
- Analysts have identified a bullish divergence and key trendline support near the $1.16-$1.18 zone.
- Ripple’s Flutterwave investment and $1 billion revenue target offer fundamental support amid macro uncertainty.
The pullback began shortly after XRP (XRP) failed to break through the $1.25 resistance area. XRP fell nearly 5% in 24 hours to an intraday low of $1.16 on June 18 as heavy spot selling intensified below the recently reclaimed $1.20 level, triggering stop-loss orders and leveraged liquidations.
XRP also fell alongside a broader crypto market retreat after the Federal Reserve kept rates unchanged at 3.50%-3.75% while projecting additional tightening risks in 2026.
Despite the decline, XRP has continued to attract attention from market participants looking for signs that the correction may be nearing exhaustion. Several technical indicators, derivatives metrics, and recent Ripple business developments have kept bullish sentiment alive even as macro conditions remain challenging.
XRP technical structure remains intact above $1.16 support
The four-hour chart shows XRP pulling back within a descending channel that formed after the token rallied toward $1.29 earlier this month. The asset’s price is currently testing the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement level near $1.165 while holding above an ascending trendline that has supported the market since early June.

Momentum indicators have weakened but have not yet entered deeply bearish territory. The Relative Strength Index has retreated to around 43, while the MACD histogram remains below zero after a bearish crossover.
A decisive break below $1.16 could expose the June swing low near $1.12, while reclaiming $1.20 would place resistance levels at $1.23, $1.26, and ultimately $1.29 back into focus.
On the daily timeframe, XRP remains below the Supertrend resistance level near $1.26. At the same time, the Aroon indicator shows Aroon Up above 78% and Aroon Down near 14%, suggesting the longer-term trend has not fully shifted in favor of bears despite the recent decline.

Several market commentators continue to watch for reversal signals despite XRP’s recent weakness. According to analyst Gerla, the token has flashed a bullish divergence on the three-day chart.
“$XRP just flashed a bullish divergence on the 3D chart while trading inside a falling wedge. Momentum is turning higher even as price makes lower lows.”
Gerla argued that the divergence suggests selling pressure may be losing strength even as XRP continues printing lower lows, raising the possibility of a breakout if buyers can reclaim nearby resistance levels.
Another trader, Nebraskangooner, highlighted a possible accumulation structure forming on the daily chart. Commenting on the setup, the analyst noted that confirmation would require “a break above $1.34,” which remains a key level to monitor for a larger trend reversal.
Derivatives positioning also reveals significant liquidity concentration above current prices. CoinGlass liquidation heatmaps show one of the largest leverage clusters sitting near $1.30, with additional liquidation pockets extending toward $1.34. Those levels could act as magnets for price if buyers regain control and trigger a short squeeze.

Ripple business expansion offsets some macro headwinds
Away from the charts, Ripple has continued expanding its payments ecosystem. Earlier this week, the company acquired an equity stake in African fintech firm Flutterwave in a transaction that valued the payments company at $3.3 billion.
While the deal does not include a commercial partnership, it gives Ripple exposure to one of Africa’s largest payments networks as Flutterwave continues expanding across the region.
Ripple has also raised expectations for its operating business. The company recently said it expects to finish 2026 with a $1 billion revenue run rate, excluding XRP held on its balance sheet. The projection provides investors with another fundamental growth metric beyond XRP price performance.
However, macro conditions continue to remain the primary risk factor for the token. Elevated oil prices, uncertainty surrounding Middle East tensions, and the Federal Reserve’s higher-for-longer policy stance continue to limit risk appetite across speculative assets. Any further deterioration in global market sentiment could pressure XRP alongside the rest of the crypto market.
For bulls, holding the $1.16-$1.18 demand zone remains critical. Losing that support would invalidate the current recovery structure and increase the probability of a deeper move toward $1.12. A rebound above $1.20, however, could place the large liquidation clusters near $1.30 back into play and revive momentum toward the upper boundary of XRP’s recent trading range.
Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.
Crypto World
XRP and stablecoins are not rivals, XRPL validator says
A debate among XRP Ledger community figures has put fresh focus on how stablecoins, payments and XRP may work together on XRPL.
Summary
- XRPL validator Vet said XRP and stablecoins are complementary parts of the payment stack.
- Eri argued Ripple has used stablecoins to bridge ODL while keeping XRPL liquidity important too.
- The debate centers on whether neutral native assets can reduce fragmented liquidity across payment routes.
In an Eri post, the researcher said Ripple has used Tether and USDC stablecoins to support On-Demand Liquidity flows, while liquidity on XRPL remains central.
Eri also said XRP has use cases outside payments, including collateral and DeFi. The post pointed to future financial products on XRPL that may use XRP in ways beyond simple transfer settlement.
Stablecoin sandwich gets clarified
Vet, an XRPL dUNL validator and XRPL Foundation contributor, responded that he sees “XRP and Stablecoins as complementary parts of the stack.” In a Vet post, he said a stablecoin sandwich works like a normal payment, not a cross-currency payment.
He said local currency swaps can happen at the sender and receiver ends. In that setup, the swap does not need to happen on-chain or touch the XRPL DEX. Still, he said quality assets and stablecoins are needed so service providers can build reliable payment flows.
In addition, Vet argued that once many issued currencies exist on-chain, markets still need a bridge asset. Without one, liquidity can split across too many direct pairs. He said XRP can serve that role on the XRP Ledger when a bridge transaction makes sense.
As crypto.news reported earlier, XRPL Foundation’s AMM proposal would add StableSwap and concentrated liquidity to improve stablecoin, RWA and DeFi pricing. The proposal aims to reduce slippage for assets that trade close to the same value, including stablecoins.
XRP’s neutral bridge role stays debated
Vet said an issued asset should not become the main bridge asset on a decentralized network because regulated issuers follow local laws. He argued that native assets are better suited for neutral bridging where no single issuer controls the system.
According to an earlier crypto.news report, RLUSD’s 40-chain rollout expanded Ripple’s stablecoin access for payments, tokenization and institutional liquidity. crypto.news previously reported that XRP Ledger utility beyond payments is moving into tokenized assets, DeFi and lending.
The debate does not settle whether stablecoins reduce or strengthen XRP demand. It shows that XRPL builders see the two as separate tools. Stablecoins may handle routes where price-stable settlement works, while XRP may still matter where neutral cross-asset liquidity is needed.
Crypto World
Ireland Proposes Crypto Safeguards Amid Regulatory Risk Concerns
Opening summary
Ireland has released a new national assessment on the risks associated with digital assets, marking the first such review in seven years. The government’s findings emphasize heightened exposure to money laundering and terrorist financing risks, alongside concerns about fraud, bribery, sanctions evasion, and weak oversight in parts of the crypto ecosystem.
The assessment forms part of Ireland’s policy work toward implementing “standards relating to the acceptance of crypto-related activities as a source of funds” by the second half of 2027. For compliance teams and regulated firms, the document signals that authorities are refining threat models and tightening expectations around monitoring, reporting, and controls for crypto-related flows.
Key takeaways
- Ireland’s finance department describes crypto assets as posing “very significant” risks of money laundering and terrorist financing.
- The 2026 report cites rising money-laundering prosecutions and fraud activity where crypto is “particularly attractive” to criminal groups.
- The assessment flags vulnerabilities including sanctions evasion potential, tax compliance and enforcement challenges, and use of crypto in bribery.
- Ireland identifies regulatory fragmentation and largely unregulated areas (including decentralized finance) as risk multipliers for Irish service providers.
- The review is positioned to support implementation of industry standards on accepting crypto-related activities as a source of funds during 2027.
Ireland’s national risk assessment: scope and main findings
According to the Irish government’s national risk assessment released on Thursday, crypto assets present “very significant” risks connected to money laundering and the financing of terrorism. The assessment frames these risks within a broader set of criminal typologies seen across the last several years, including fraud schemes in which digital assets increase operational anonymity and cross-border reach.
The report also notes that, since Ireland’s previous published risk assessment on digital assets, authorities have observed changes that raise the compliance stakes. It points to an increase in money-laundering prosecutions and to incidents of fraud where the use of crypto has become “particularly attractive” for criminal actors.
In addition to financial crime, the assessment highlights operational and supervisory stress points for the Irish market. It says crypto can facilitate sanctions evasion, create vulnerabilities that complicate tax compliance and enforcement, and be used to pay bribes tied to decisions affecting the industry. The document also identifies “inconsistent international regulation” as a factor that can put Irish service providers under additional pressure—particularly when counterparties and intermediaries operate under different legal regimes.
Regulatory gap analysis: why weak coverage matters
A central theme of the assessment is that Ireland does not yet have the same breadth of crypto-specific laws and regulatory coverage seen in some other jurisdictions, including within the European Union and the United States. While Ireland has a comparatively high level of retail participation relative to some peers, the government argues that the legal and supervisory framework has not kept pace with the threat landscape.
Institutional compliance significance is twofold. First, regulatory gaps can widen the distance between the risks authorities describe and the controls firms are required to deploy. Second, fragmentation across jurisdictions can lead to inconsistent customer due diligence outcomes, uneven monitoring standards, and challenges in building auditable compliance trails for cross-border activity.
The assessment also points to “largely unregulated” segments of the industry, explicitly referencing decentralized finance as an area where typical oversight mechanisms may be less effective. For regulated entities, this creates practical questions around how they manage counterparty and customer exposure to activities that are not subject to the same obligations as centralized platforms.
Criminal misuse and financial integrity risks
Ireland’s assessment expands beyond headline money laundering and terrorism financing concerns by detailing specific misuse pathways that can affect regulated firms. The government notes vulnerabilities that may facilitate sanctions evasion, creating a compliance burden for institutions required to screen counterparties, track origin and destination of funds, and maintain controls capable of responding to fast-moving schemes.
It further links crypto activity to challenges in tax compliance and enforcement. While the assessment does not quantify tax losses, the emphasis indicates authorities view digital assets as complicating standard compliance processes—especially when transactions can be structured across jurisdictions, with limited transparency and varying reporting practices.
On bribery, the assessment states crypto is “increasingly used to make payments to corrupt officials.” This aligns with a broader pattern in anti-corruption enforcement where digital assets can be leveraged to obscure payment trails. The government’s framing is important for institutions because it broadens the compliance perimeter: controls cannot be limited to laundering typologies alone, but must be responsive to broader financial integrity risks, including fraud and corruption-related payment flows.
Connection to licensing and enforcement trends
Although Ireland’s assessment is not presented as a court or regulator-specific action, it is issued against a backdrop of enforcement by Irish authorities in the broader crypto compliance domain. For example, in November 2025 the Central Bank of Ireland fined Coinbase Europe Limited about $24 million for Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism violations, citing delays in reporting failures related to its transaction monitoring system.
This enforcement context underscores the operational relevance of the new risk assessment. A national risk assessment typically informs supervisory expectations, supervisory priorities, and the risk-based approach taken by financial intelligence and regulators. For regulated service providers, the assessment’s emphasis on transaction monitoring, fraud attraction, and cross-border vulnerabilities suggests firms will be expected to ensure monitoring programs are capable of detecting high-risk patterns, documenting decisions, and escalating issues in line with legal requirements.
The report’s attention to areas with inconsistent international regulation also signals the compliance complexity that remains for Irish firms dealing with global counterparties. As European regulatory structures evolve and cross-border standards develop, firms may face continuing pressure to demonstrate that their due diligence and monitoring are effective even when counterparties operate under different regimes.
Political donations and policy constraints
The assessment also addresses the use of crypto for political purposes. While it notes concerns that crypto could be used to make payments to corrupt officials, Ireland has already moved to limit crypto involvement in political financing. The government states that accepting cryptocurrencies for political donations has been banned in Ireland for more than four years.
In April 2022, officials proposed restrictions that would prevent Irish political parties from accepting cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Ether, privacy coins, and other digital assets. The inclusion of this policy detail in the 2026 risk assessment suggests authorities view crypto-linked payments as part of the same broader risk framework that covers bribery, corruption, and the integrity of public decision-making.
Closing perspective
Ireland’s return to publishing a digital asset national risk assessment is likely to influence how regulators and supervised firms interpret and implement financial integrity obligations in the lead-up to 2027. The next phase to watch is how the assessment’s threat analysis translates into practical supervisory priorities—particularly around transaction monitoring effectiveness, sanctions-related controls, and approaches to exposure in less-regulated segments such as decentralized finance.
Crypto World
Wealthsimple Adds Kalshi-Powered Prediction Markets for Canada
Canadian fintech Wealthsimple is preparing to launch a new prediction markets app, Wealthsimple Predict, built on Kalshi contracts. The rollout—scheduled for this summer—aims to give Canadian retail investors regulated access to thousands of event-based contracts across themes such as financial markets, economic indicators and climate.
The move follows a regulatory green light earlier this year from the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization (CIRO), which authorized Kalshi to offer certain prediction market contracts in Canada. Investors will receive the contracts through Wealthsimple’s standalone interface, but the underlying structure remains tied to Kalshi’s exchange listings and Canadian derivative rules.
Key takeaways
- Wealthsimple Predict is scheduled for summer and will provide Canadian users access to roughly 4,000 Kalshi event contracts.
- CIRO authorization in March means the contracts are treated as regulated derivatives, with settlement periods of at least 30 days.
- Kalshi’s Canada rollout arrives as the company moves further into crypto derivatives, including perpetual futures.
- Established exchange players are pushing back: CME Group has sued the CFTC over its approval framework for Kalshi-style perpetual futures.
- Prediction markets remain controversial globally, with regulators in Europe and Asia taking actions ranging from access blocks to bans and investigations.
Wealthsimple brings Kalshi event contracts to Canada
Wealthsimple’s planned app is designed to be a retail-facing doorway into prediction markets. According to the announcement, Wealthsimple Predict will offer Canadian users access to about 4,000 Kalshi-listed event contracts. The available markets span areas such as:
- Financial markets
- Economic indicators
- Climate
Regulation is central to the pitch. In March, CIRO authorized the firm to offer prediction market contracts linked to those categories. The regulator also positioned the business as the second investment dealer authorized by CIRO to offer prediction market trading in Canada.
Importantly for compliance-minded investors, CIRO’s framework treats these instruments as derivatives. The contracts must also include settlement periods of at least 30 days, a requirement intended to shape how event positions are held and resolved.
Kalshi expands again: perpetual futures go live
Wealthsimple’s Canada launch comes as Kalshi continues broadening beyond its reputation as a prediction-market venue. On Thursday, the company said its perpetual futures products were live for trading, following a May 31 announcement that marked Kalshi’s entry into the crypto perpetual futures market.
That expansion matters because it changes the company’s risk profile and audience: moving from event-based contracts to perpetual derivatives brings Kalshi into a more traditional—yet heavily contested—regulatory and exchange-competition arena. In practice, it means investors who start with “events” may increasingly encounter derivatives structures that behave more like crypto trading products than pure market forecasting tools.
CME challenges the CFTC’s crypto perpetual futures approvals
Kalshi’s derivatives expansion has already triggered pushback from incumbents. CME Group reportedly sued the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) over the regulator’s approval of cryptocurrency perpetual futures contracts offered by Kalshi and similar products by Coinbase. CME’s argument is that the CFTC misclassified the products under federal law.
The filing followed comments from CME CEO Terrence Duffy stating the exchange planned to challenge the approvals in court. The dispute underscores a broader industry tension: whether certain crypto derivatives should be treated under existing futures and swaps frameworks—or whether regulators have overstepped their authority when characterizing the instruments.
These developments build on the CFTC’s earlier actions. In May, the agency approved Bitcoin perpetual futures for Kalshi and issued a no-action position allowing Coinbase to offer similar products. Since then, other crypto trading venues have also leaned into regulated perpetual access, including Coinbase expanding institutional availability to global crypto derivatives markets and Kraken launching perpetual futures for U.S. traders through its Bitnomial exchange.
Prediction markets face mounting regulatory resistance
Canada’s approval contrasts sharply with the regulatory headwinds prediction markets continue to face elsewhere. In Spain, regulators ordered internet providers to block access to Kalshi and Polymarket while investigating whether the platforms were breaching national gambling rules.
Other jurisdictions have taken harsher steps. In Indonesia, Polymarket was banned after users reportedly traded contracts tied to whether President Prabowo Subianto would leave office early. Meanwhile, Japan saw warnings to users regarding Polymarket-linked transfers, and South Korea has reportedly involved police investigations into alleged gambling violations tied to local users.
In the United States, the conflict is less about a single ban and more about legal classification. At least 11 states have challenged prediction markets in recent months, with the disagreement centered on whether event contracts should fall under state gambling laws or under federally regulated CFTC derivatives oversight. The stakes are practical: the same contract could be framed legally as a wager by one regulator and as a derivative by another.
Speaking at Bitso’s Stablecoin Conference in Mexico City on June 16, Digital Chamber CEO Cody Carbone said the CFTC-versus-state gambling regulator conflict is likely headed to the U.S. Supreme Court. The comment reflects how quickly prediction-market legality has shifted from a niche policy debate into an institutional legal fight.
What to watch next
With Wealthsimple Predict set to bring CIRO-authorized event contracts to Canadian retail investors, the immediate question is how smoothly the offering scales within derivative guardrails—especially the 30-day settlement requirement. At the same time, Kalshi’s move into perpetual futures and CME’s lawsuit against the CFTC signal that the regulatory battle is widening beyond prediction markets, so readers should watch for court developments and any further changes to how derivatives are classified and approved.
Crypto World
Upbit Listing Announcement Triggers Price Swings Across 9 Altcoins
Upbit will list 9 digital assets across its Bitcoin (BTC) and Tether (USDT) markets on June 19, adding Lido DAO (LDO), PAX Gold (PAXG), Morpho (MORPHO), and six others in a staggered rollout spanning four hours.
The South Korean exchange will open trading in hourly windows from 3 PM to 7 PM Korea Standard Time (KST).
Upbit Listing Brings 9 New Altcoins to BTC and USDT Markets
The sequence begins with PEAQ and LIT at 3 PM KST. Kamino Finance (KMNO) and Morpho (MORPHO) follow at 4 PM. Gram (GRAM), which recently rebranded from Toncoin, opens at 5 PM.
LDO and PAXG begin at 6 PM. Osmosis (OSMO) and AMP close the rollout at 7 PM. Each token will gain both BTC and USDT pairs, except Amp (AMP), which will trade only against USDT.
The exchange said that the deposits will open within three hours of the notice. Upbit will apply short-term trading restrictions.
For the first five minutes after trading opens, traders will not be able to place buy orders, and sell orders priced more than 10% below the previous day’s closing value will be blocked.
Additionally, the exchange will permit only limit orders for approximately two hours after trading support begins.
“Deposits and withdrawals are supported only on the specified networks. Deposits sent through unsupported networks may not be recoverable and can require lengthy return procedures,” Upbit said.
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Tokens Diverge as Market Weakens
The altcoins all saw modest gains following the announcement, but some fell quickly after. PEAQ was up 21.90% at press time, by far the strongest move among the nine. KMNO added 2.79%.
OSMO rose 1.74%, while LDO gained 1.07%. AMP and MORPHO edged up 0.76% and 0.65%, respectively. The rest of the two tokens fell. GRAM was down 2.75%, the weakest performer. LIT slipped 1.68%.
The uneven reaction follows days of pressure across the digital asset market. Bitcoin and the broader crypto market have fallen as macroeconomic fears weigh on risk appetite.
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The post Upbit Listing Announcement Triggers Price Swings Across 9 Altcoins appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Forget Meme Coins: Tokenized Stocks and RWAs Are Becoming Fastest-Growing Categories
Tokenized stocks emerged as the fastest-growing crypto coin category between January 2024 and May 2026, according to a new CoinGecko report tracking the number of coins listed across major sectors.
The category expanded by a whopping 3,314.3% during the period, after rising from just 14 listed coins to 478.
Crypto’s Fastest-Growing Category
Real World Assets (RWA) followed closely as another major growth area, as it increased by 1,903.1% from 64 coins to 1,282. The sharp rise in both categories highlights growing interest in bringing traditional financial assets onto blockchain networks. CoinGecko said that the shift toward real-world asset tokenization accelerated significantly from late 2024 onward.
Despite these emerging trends, Decentralized Finance (DeFi) remained the largest non-meme crypto category by the end of the study period. The number of DeFi-related coins climbed from 549 in January 2024 to 2,328 by May 2026, which represented growth of 324.0%.
Another major theme during the period was the rapid expansion of AI-related coin listings. CoinGecko found that AI became the second-largest listed category on its platform after surging from 145 coins at the start of 2024 to 1,798 by May 2026, a rise of 1,140.0%.
In the process, AI overtook Gaming (GameFi), which had occupied the second spot for much of 2024. GameFi grew by almost 263% and ended the period with 1,379 listed coins. CoinGecko said the AI category gained momentum in October 2024 alongside the launch of the AI-themed meme coin Goatseus Maximus (GOAT).
Growth continued as artificial intelligence became a mainstream topic, further fueled by the rapid expansion of companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic, and Nvidia. Within crypto, the trend was driven by two key developments: a growing number of AI-branded meme coins and the emergence of on-chain AI agents, which attracted significant speculative attention and developer activity toward the end of 2024.
Meme Coin Trends Evolve
Meme coins followed a different path from the broader crypto market. 3,287 coins were listed on CoinGecko across 10 meme coin categories by May 2026. Dog-themed tokens remained the biggest group with 1,055 coins, after exploding during the 2024 meme coin craze as traders piled into Solana-based dog coins alongside the DOGE and WIF rallies.
AI Meme was another standout. This cohort grew from virtually nothing at the start of 2024 to 499 coins by May 2026 as interest in AI spread across crypto. Boy’s Club ecosystem grew into one of the largest memecoin subcategories in the crypto market and reached 346 coins. Meanwhile, PolitiFi surged ahead of the 2024 US election but stopped growing afterward. Chinese Meme was the newest trend, as it climbed to 117 coins by May 2026.
Despite the rapid growth in meme coin listings, market performance has been far less encouraging. According to CryptoRank, the meme coin sector has struggled to recover since its 2024 peak. Its overall market value has shrunk significantly despite several rebound attempts. While Dogecoin remains the dominant player, most major meme coins continue to trade well below their previous highs.
The post Forget Meme Coins: Tokenized Stocks and RWAs Are Becoming Fastest-Growing Categories appeared first on CryptoPotato.
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