Crypto World
Polish Parliament Stalls on Crypto Law, Local Firms Look Abroad
Poland’s parliament, the Sejm, has yet to pass a domestic enabling act for the EU’s regulations on cryptocurrencies.
The parliament has again failed to override a presidential veto on a key crypto regulation bill. President Karol Nawrocki defended his veto, citing concerns over excessive regulation that could harm small businesses. Opponents state that the lack of framework makes the Polish market vulnerable to fraud and free-for-all for illicit actors. The political path forward is unclear.
Outside the political arena, the reality is that Poland is the only EU member state left to implement the bloc’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulatory framework. The deadline for the transitionary period ends on July 1.
This already makes it difficult for local firms to stay competitive in Europe. But after July 1, if a solution isn’t forthcoming, it will be impossible. Some are already taking their business elsewhere and moving abroad.
Crypto industry, Polish president claim bill is burdensome
In November 2025, the Sejm passed the Crypto-Asset Market Act, which would update Polish law to comply with MiCA.
Local enterprise groups were not pleased with the result. In an October letter, the Warsaw Enterprise Institute, a business-focused think tank, outlined a few of the perceived problems with the law.
First was the length. Including draft secondary regulations, the total length was well over 300 pages. The Warsaw Enterprise Institute said that, while other EU member states were satisfied with just a few dozen pages, “the Polish law has several hundred articles and provides for additional regulations.”
It said the act introduces “a ban on marketing activities related to basic cryptocurrencies and the possibility of blocking websites by administrative decision, without the right to appeal to a court.”
“Such solutions are not justified by MiCA and put Polish companies in a worse competitive position compared to entities operating in other EU countries.”.
Of further concern was the role the Polish Financial Supervision Authority (KNF) would play under the new regime. Under the law, the KNF would be the sole regulator of the entire crypto market. It would have the power to levy heavy fines as well as maintain and enforce a blacklist of “unreliable” crypto domains that Polish ISPs would have to block.
Not only would the KNF be incredibly powerful, but it is already notoriously slow. According to a payment institution peer review by the European Banking Authority, the KNF’s authorization times were the slowest in Europe. In an October letter, the Warsaw Enterprise Institute claimed that the KNF has only issued two licenses for brokerage houses in the last 10 years. In the same time period, it has only issued one electronic money institution license, while Lithuania has registered over 100.

Related: EU crypto firms turn to legal support as deadline for MiCA compliance nears
On Dec. 1, 2025, Nawrocki vetoed the law, citing bloated regulation. The government failed to override the veto, and then reintroduced the exact same bill. Nawrocki vetoed the bill for a second time in February, and on April 17, the Sejm repeated itself in failing to overrule the veto.
Polish parliament struggles to find path forward for MiCA
The battle over the crypto bill shows no signs of stopping.
Firstly, for Nawrocki, passing the bill after being reintroduced in the same form would have presented a political problem.
Piech told Cointelegraph, “Once the president had already argued that the bill breached constitutional principles and contained excessive, disproportionate and vague provisions […] signing a near-identical version would have meant contradicting his own stated reasoning.”
“In that sense, the second push looked less like compromise and more like an attempt to pressure the president into a constitutional U-turn.”
Some in the crypto industry hailed the veto as Nawrocki sticking to his pro-crypto, sound regulatory principles.
“The veto is not anti-regulatory, it brings common sense back into the law-making process. […] The industry did not ask for privileges. It asked for proportionality,” said Sławomir Zawadzki, co-CEO of Kanga Exchange.
Different coalitions and groups have attempted to introduce their own versions. According to Piech, Finance Minister Andrzej Domański said that the government started work yesterday on solutions for a new crypto-asset bill.
In December, after the first veto, the Polska 2050 political party announced “an improved draft that is a step forward from the President’s arguments, which, although far-fetched, are perhaps worth considering.”
Nawrocki himself has said he would submit a draft but the speaker in the Sejm has blocked the introduction of presidential proposals.
The Confederation of Liberty and Independence and the Law and Justice have filed versions, while another political coalition, the Center Club, announced it would prepare another draft.
Overall, Poland’s political class is “still deeply split on crypto.”
“This is no longer just a technical argument about implementing MiCA. It has become a broader fight over whether crypto should be brought into a normal legal framework, or treated as a politically suspicious sector that can be overregulated, stigmatised or used as a proxy battlefield after the Zonda Crypto controversy,” he said.
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, himself a member of the Civic Coalition, has accused local exchange Zonda Crypto of illicit funding and ties to Russian criminal networks. It has undergone a funding crisis, pausing withdrawals, and has reportedly lobbied against the bill.

Related: Zonda exchange says 4.5K BTC wallet inaccessible amid withdrawal crisis
Tusk also claimed that it “sponsors political and social events in Poland and promotes very specific political forces,” including the opposition far-right Law and Justice party, of which Nawrocki is a member.
Zonda Crypto did not respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment.
Polish crypto companies look abroad
For companies in Poland, passing a new law by the end of the MiCA transitional period on July 1 may be a case of shutting the barn doors after the horses have bolted.
Said Piech, “A new law may still matter institutionally, especially for banks and larger financial institutions that may want to enter crypto once there is a clear legal path. But for all existing Polish crypto firms, it is already very late.”
Some domestic crypto firms are already looking abroad. Crypto exchange Kanga is considering a move to Latvia, “a country whose representatives have openly used conferences in Poland to attract crypto firms, offering a MiCA-friendly regime, faster procedures and relatively low supervisory fees,” per Piech.
Robert Wojciechowski, president of the Polish Chamber of Commerce for Blockchain and New Technologies, said, “Since we founded the chamber, about 70-80 percent of companies have sailed abroad. Now my colleagues say they are talking to the Czech Republic to move their business there.”
The Chancellery of the President has itself raised the alarm, stating that, “Overregulation is a guaranteed way to push companies abroad — to the Czech Republic, Lithuania or Malta — instead of creating conditions for them to operate and pay taxes in Poland.”
Zonda Crypto CEO Przemysław Kral has previously told Cointelegraph, “Although we are a company with Polish roots and the largest player in the crypto industry on the Polish market, we have been operating outside Poland for years.”
“We are confident that we will remain a key player on the market. However, many small Polish crypto companies will lose the opportunity to operate on the market,” he said.
Now it’s a race against the clock, as July 1 draws closer. Piech doesn’t see a “realistic chance” for a bill to pass, and if it doesn’t, “domestic firms without a functioning Polish route are left at a structural disadvantage.”
Magazine: Adam Back says current demand is ‘almost’ enough to send Bitcoin to $1M
Crypto World
LMAX Unveils Digital Asset Collateral Platform for Institutions
LMAX Group has unveiled Kiosk, a hosted portal designed for institutional clients to deposit digital assets into LMAX Custody and use them as collateral across a broad trading universe that spans spot foreign exchange, precious metals, CFDs, perpetual futures, and digital-asset markets. The platform, announced on Tuesday, provides tools for deposits and withdrawals, API credential management, WalletConnect, security controls, and treasury management, delivering an integrated on-ramp for traditional and crypto trading workflows.
Hyper-efficient collateral will be the foundation of modern, converged capital markets, and Kiosk offers a compliant way for institutions to integrate digital assets into their core trading infrastructure.
David Mercer, CEO of LMAX Group, described the platform as a practical step toward merging digital assets with conventional market infrastructure, underscoring the emphasis on compliance and operational readiness for institutions venturing into on-chain collateral.
The launch aligns with LMAX’s broader strategic push to connect traditional and digital markets, enabling crypto holdings to back trading activity across multiple asset classes. By turning digital assets into usable collateral within a regulated framework, the firm aims to streamline liquidity and custody without forcing clients to abandon established processes.
The move sits within a wider industry trend where core financial gatekeepers are exploring tokenized and on-chain collateral assets. Earlier in February, Franklin Templeton announced an institutional collateral program with crypto exchange Binance that lets clients use tokenized money market fund shares as collateral while the underlying assets remain in regulated custody. The model is designed to let institutions earn yield on regulated MMF holdings while leveraging the same assets to support digital-asset trading, without relinquishing custody arrangements.
In another signal of growing momentum, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) disclosed plans on May 4 to test tokenized securities in a pilot set to begin in July, with a broader rollout targeted for October. The plan emphasizes that tokenized real-world assets would carry the same protections and ownership rights as their traditional counterparts, a message likely to reassure institutions wary of custody and governance risk in on-chain assets.
Key takeaways
- LMAX’s Kiosk enables institutional clients to post digital assets as collateral for a wide range of trading activities, including spot FX, metals, CFDs, perpetual futures, and digital assets, via a hosted portal connected to LMAX Custody.
- The platform integrates deposits/withdrawals, API credential management, WalletConnect, security controls, and treasury management to streamline on-chain collateral within a regulated framework.
- The rollout reflects a broader trend of major financial players exploring tokenized collateral and on-chain assets to support multi-asset trading without disrupting custody arrangements.
- Franklin Templeton’s collateral program with Binance and DTCC’s tokenized-securities pilot illustrate the sector-wide shift toward on-chain collateral while maintaining traditional investor protections and custody standards.
- Regulatory and governance considerations, as well as adoption pace, will shape how quickly such cross-asset collateral facilities scale across institutions and asset classes.
LMAX’s Kiosk in the context of converged markets
LMAX frames Kiosk as a pivotal piece in its effort to blend traditional and digital asset ecosystems. By enabling institutions to deposit digital assets into custody and simultaneously deploy them as collateral for conventional and crypto-native trading, the firm signals a growing appetite among incumbents to leverage crypto liquidity within established risk and compliance frameworks. The product’s design emphasizes practical interoperability, including WalletConnect support and API credential management, which reduces friction for institutions transitioning to on-chain collateral while preserving operational controls and security standards.
On-chain collateral as a growing institutional theme
The Kiosk launch comes amid a broader industry arc where large financial players are trialing tokenized and on-chain collateral solutions. Franklin Templeton’s collaboration with Binance illustrates how tokenized money market fund shares can function as collateral, with the underlying assets retained in regulated custody to address risk and custody concerns. This approach aims to deliver yield opportunities on traditional assets while simultaneously expanding the set of assets usable as collateral for digital trading activity.
DTCC’s announced tokenized-securities pilot further underscores the sector’s shift toward on-chain representation of real-world assets. Scheduled for a July pilot with an October full launch, the plan envisions tokenized securities offering the same investor protections and ownership rights as their conventional counterparts, potentially accelerating cross-border settlement, custody, and liquidity among a broader ecosystem of market participants.
What this means for markets and participants
For institutions, Kiosk represents a practical pathway to harmonize digital-asset holdings with existing risk controls and trading workflows. If such platforms prove scalable and compliant at a broad scale, firms could see faster collateral turnover, improved capital efficiency, and new avenues to monetize crypto holdings without compromising custody or governance standards. Traders and fund allocators may gain more flexible access to collateralized liquidity, while custodians and fintech providers are pushed to strengthen security, governance, and interoperability across on-chain and off-chain environments.
However, the convergence of traditional markets with on-chain collateral also raises questions about regulatory alignment, disclosure expectations, and liability in the event of asset price swings or platform outages. As DTCC and other regulators explore tokenized assets and cross-asset collateral, market participants will closely watch how safeguards evolve, how risk is measured across multi-asset positions, and how enforceable protections translate into real-world trade execution and settlement.
For now, Kiosk stands as a concrete example of how institutions are experimenting with using digital assets to support broad collateral needs, rather than merely holding crypto for speculative purposes. The pace of adoption will hinge on continued clarity from regulators, the robustness of custody solutions, and the interoperability of cross-asset platforms with existing risk management frameworks.
Readers should keep an eye on next steps from LMAX and its peers, including how the DTCC tokenized-securities program progresses and how Franklin Templeton’s model unfolds in practice. These developments will shape the trajectory of converged capital markets and influence the evolving role of on-chain collateral in traditional finance.
Crypto World
Mitsui Digital AM Launches Japan’s First Land-Backed RWA Digital Security Tied to AEON Omiya
TLDR:
- Mitsui & Co. Digital AM launched Japan’s first land-backed digital security tied to AEON Omiya’s leasehold rights.
- The asset carries an appraisal value of 8.6 billion yen, with a minimum investment entry point of 100,000 yen.
- Investors earn a 3.4% pre-tax annual yield backed by a 50-year fixed-term lease running through June 2076.
- Unit holders receive 500 WAON POINTS annually per 10 units, linking returns to Aeon Group’s retail ecosystem.
Digital security backed by land rights is now a reality in Japan. Mitsui & Co. Digital Asset Management has launched a tokenized product tied to AEON Omiya’s land.
The company describes this as Japan’s first digital security backed by low-lying land assets. The property carries an appraisal value of approximately 8.6 billion yen. Investors can enter from 100,000 yen, with an expected annual yield of 3.4% pre-tax.
Investment Structure and Asset Details
The investment targets the land beneath AEON Omiya, located in Kita-ku, Saitama City. The site spans about 46,475 square meters and holds an appraisal value of roughly 8.6 billion yen.
Mitsui & Co. Digital AM described the move as “a new small-lot model for real estate investment,” marking a new direction for tokenized assets in Japan.
Aeon Retail Co., Ltd., a core Aeon Group company, serves as the lessee on this asset. A 50-year fixed-term leasehold agreement runs from June 2026 to June 2076.
This long-term lease provides investors with a reliable source of monthly land rent income throughout the holding period.
Since the offering covers only land and not the building above it, repair cost exposure remains minimal. The product is structured with income gain as the primary objective.
The company noted the design is “structured with an emphasis on income gain,” reducing the burden typically associated with direct property ownership.
The product issues a total of 356,000 units, with a minimum entry point of 100,000 yen. Redemption is scheduled for July 31, 2031, covering an operating period of roughly five years and one month. Mitsui & Co. Digital AM offers the product through its alternative investment platform, ALTERNA.
Blockchain Infrastructure and Investor Benefits
The digital security runs on the iBET for Fin blockchain infrastructure, developed for financial applications in Japan. It is structured as tokenized securities through a beneficiary securities issuance trust scheme. This setup ensures the product meets Japan’s existing regulatory framework for real estate digital securities.
Investors holding 10 or more units receive 500 WAON POINTS as an annual benefit. WAON is the loyalty program linked to the Aeon Group’s broad retail network.
The company confirmed that “500 WAON POINTS are awarded as a preferential treatment every year for each 10 units held,” adding non-financial value to the product.
Omiya serves as a major transportation hub where more than 10 rail lines converge, including the Shinkansen. Kita Ward, Saitama City, continues to record steady population growth, supporting demand for large commercial facilities.
Mitsui & Co. Digital AM noted that the area is “expected to continue to have residential demand as the population continues to grow.”
New family-oriented condominiums are also under construction in the surrounding area. This residential development is expected to bring consistent foot traffic to AEON Omiya over time.
As a result, the commercial facility is well-positioned to maintain stable occupancy throughout the investment period.
Crypto World
US Inflation Just Beat Wages, But Bernstein Says One Stock May Escape the Pain
US April inflation rose 3.8% year-over-year, outpacing 3.6% wage growth and reigniting fears that the Iran war energy shock is bleeding into food, transportation, and core consumer prices.
Bernstein, however, told clients Tuesday that tokenization platforms can sidestep the macro repricing, reiterating its $67 price target on Figure Technology Solutions (FIGR) and signaling 72% upside despite the deteriorating backdrop.
Energy Shock Bleeds Into the Real Economy
Headline US CPI rose 3.8% in April, above the 3.7% consensus, while wages climbed just 3.6%. Many US workers are losing purchasing power for the first time in roughly three years.
Energy CPI rose 3.8%, and food prices climbed 0.5%, with average US gasoline now near $4.50 a gallon, up from $3.14 a year ago. President Trump floated a temporary suspension of the federal gas tax to relieve pressure on drivers.
Plastics and manufacturing costs are rising as Iran war supply disruptions ripple through global chemical inputs, lifting the risk that price pressure spreads beyond energy and food.
The US has delayed a plan to suspend beef import tariffs that Trump pitched as a grocery price fix.
Markets Reprice for Sticky Inflation
The Bank of Japan signaled rate hikes could come as soon as June, with one policymaker citing the oil shock as justification for near-term tightening. UK 30-year yields hit their highest level since 1998.
Hot inflation is the latest argument for the Federal Reserve to delay rate cuts further into 2026, with dollar strength and elevated bond yields historically pressuring risk assets.
“While April CPI inflation rose to 3.8%, inflation is much higher in many basic necessities. This has driven cumulative inflation since 2020 to +29%, meaning goods that cost $100 in 2020 now cost $129 today. Inflation remains a major issue for Americans,” analysts at the Kobeissi Letter indicated.
The S&P 500 is still up 8.3% year-to-date despite the macro tape.
Bernstein analysts led by Gautam Chhugani argued that Figure’s blockchain-based loan origination platform is insulated from the macro repricing, with Q1 tokenization volumes rising 113% year-over-year to $2.9 billion.
Whether the repricing extends into core CPI or eases with an Iran ceasefire will determine how aggressively the Fed tightens through summer, and whether Bernstein’s macro-immune tokenization thesis holds.
The post US Inflation Just Beat Wages, But Bernstein Says One Stock May Escape the Pain appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Bitcoin Rallies on Aggressive Spot Demand as Market Absorbs U.S. Economic Data: Bitfinex
Following a period of speculation-driven surges, bitcoin (BTC) appears to be rallying due to spot demand. Within a short time, spot demand metrics have shifted from contraction to growth. This development comes as the crypto market digests U.S. economic data.
According to the latest Bitfinex Alpha report, the ongoing bitcoin breakout reflects a widening gap between historical information about the U.S. economy and rapidly deteriorating sentiment evident in consumer data. This macro dynamic is significantly affecting risk assets like BTC and driving their prices higher.
BTC Sees Structural Improvement
Since the beginning of April, the crypto market capitalization has risen by $200 billion, following a 12% BTC rally that led to the strongest monthly performance in a year. By early May, BTC had broken above $80,000 – a level not touched since January 31. The move cleared the $78,000–$79,000, which had a dense overhead supply zone. Although the digital asset traded around $80,900 at the time of writing, the rally pushed it close to $83,000.
Bitfinex analysts have stated that the move marked a structural improvement and shifted BTC above a major aggregate cost-basis level near $79,800. This price doubles as the True Market Mean, which BTC has now reclaimed.
The most interesting part of this rally is that it was driven by aggressive spot demand. CryptoPotato reported last week that the market was not positioned for a surge above $80,000 due to weak demand.
Spot Demand Recovers
On-chain data shows that spot Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) rose sharply after May 8, reflecting buyers absorbing supply at premium levels. Additionally, order books moved from bid-skewed to more neutral. Spot demand has stemmed from exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and from open-market accumulation.
As of two weeks ago, Michael Saylor’s Strategy was also a major driver of spot demand. However, there is less momentum from the company’s end because the purchases have been linked to the yield-bearing product, STRC. Unfortunately, the stock has not traded at or above its $100 par value, which is a threshold required for Strategy to purchase more BTC. In fact, the business intelligence entity is even looking to sell some of its bitcoins.
Nevertheless, conviction buyers, who are entities that accumulate BTC and rarely sell regardless of price, have increased their holdings. Analysts say they currently hold roughly 4 million BTC, following their largest surge since the COVID-19 crash. Historical data show that such growth from this cohort often precedes major price recoveries.
The post Bitcoin Rallies on Aggressive Spot Demand as Market Absorbs U.S. Economic Data: Bitfinex appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Crypto World
JPMorgan Picks Ethereum Again in New Money Market Fund Filing
JPMorgan has filed to launch the JPMorgan OnChain Liquidity-Token Money Market Fund (JLTXX), a tokenized Treasury vehicle on Ethereum powered by Kinexys Digital Assets.
According to the filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), under normal conditions, the fund invests only in US Treasury securities and Treasury-collateralized overnight repurchase agreements.
JPMorgan Files To Launch A Second Tokenized Treasury Fund on Ethereum
The prospectus further says the fund will invest in a manner that satisfies eligible reserve requirements under the GENIUS Act, the US stablecoin law passed in July 2025.
“The Fund invests in a manner intended to satisfy the requirements for eligible reserve assets that stablecoin issuers are required to maintain under the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act (otherwise referred to as the GENIUS Act) and regulations adopted thereunder, to support investment in the Fund by stablecoin issuers seeking to comply with such requirements,” the filing reads.
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JPMorgan’s prospectus signals that JLTXX will start on Ethereum but may expand to other networks. The launch deepens the bank’s tokenization push, alongside similar initiatives from institutional players such as BlackRock.
JLTXX would be JPMorgan’s second tokenized money market fund on Ethereum after My OnChain Net Yield Fund (MONY). The bank launched it in December 2025 with an initial investment of $100 million.
Why Ethereum, Again
Ethereum hosts the majority of distributed tokenized real-world asset (RWA) value tracked by RWA.xyz. The network currently accounts for more than 53.99% of the distributed RWA market share and supports around 846 tokenization projects,
The chain has become the leading settlement layer for institutional issuance, including funds from BlackRock and Franklin Templeton. Insights from BeInCrypto’s Expert Council indicated that institutional preference for Ethereum is less about ideology and more about institutional risk management, comfort, and defensibility.
“I think Ethereum probably wins for the next little while on the back of TradFi getting involved. As banks and other build stuff on blockchain space, it’s almost all going to happen on Ethereum for the next couple of years, I think,” Geoff Kendrick, Global Head of Digital Asset Research at Standard Chartered, told BeInCrypto.
Kendrick expects Ethereum to win the bulk of TradFi flows over the next couple of years.
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The post JPMorgan Picks Ethereum Again in New Money Market Fund Filing appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Solana price retreats from $100 after rejection, will upcoming SMA crossover trigger rebound?
Solana price pulled back on Monday after facing rejection near the key $100 psychological level, though traders continue watching a potentially bullish moving average crossover that could support another upside attempt.
Summary
- Solana price pulled back toward $95 after facing rejection near the key $100 psychological resistance zone.
- SOL continues trading above its 20-day, 50-day, and 100-day SMAs, with a bullish crossover now approaching.
- A breakout above $100 could open the door toward the $112–$115 region, while $85 remains key support.
According to data from crypto.news, Solana (SOL) traded around $95 at press time on May 12 after briefly climbing as high as $97.6 earlier in the session. The token remains up sharply from its April lows near $80 despite the latest rejection from the upper resistance zone.
The recent cooldown comes as broader crypto market sentiment weakened following Bitcoin’s retreat below the $82,000 level amid rising geopolitical uncertainty tied to renewed U.S.-Iran tensions. Risk appetite across altcoins also softened after investors began locking in profits from last week’s rally.
Despite the pullback, Solana continues to show signs of improving technical structure after reclaiming several important moving averages over the past two weeks.
Market sentiment around the Solana ecosystem has also remained relatively stable as on-chain activity gradually recovers. While decentralized application volumes remain below peak levels seen earlier this year, network usage and validator participation have stopped deteriorating at the same pace witnessed during the first quarter correction.
At the same time, derivatives positioning has started improving modestly, with futures activity stabilizing after weeks of subdued participation. Traders now appear focused on whether Solana can establish support above the mid-$90 region before another breakout attempt toward $100.
Solana price analysis
On the daily chart, Solana recently broke above the important resistance cluster near $92 before rallying toward the $97–$100 region, where sellers quickly stepped back in.

However, the broader structure still appears constructive as SOL continues trading above its 20-day, 50-day, and 100-day simple moving averages, which are now tightly compressed between roughly $85 and $88. The close convergence between these moving averages often signals that momentum is preparing for a larger directional move.
Notably, the 20-day SMA is now approaching a bullish crossover above the 50-day SMA, which could strengthen short-term bullish momentum if confirmed over the coming sessions.
The Supertrend indicator has also flipped green for the first time since January, suggesting that buyers may gradually be regaining broader trend control after months of bearish pressure.
Still, the higher timeframe trend remains somewhat cautious as Solana continues trading below its downward-sloping 200-day SMA near the $113 region, which remains a major long-term resistance barrier overhead.
If bulls manage to reclaim momentum and push above the recent high near $97, the next major upside target could emerge at the psychological $100 level. A successful breakout above that region may then open the door toward the $112–$115 resistance area near the 200-day SMA.
On the downside, failure to hold above the moving average cluster near $85–$88 could weaken the bullish setup and potentially trigger a pullback toward the $80 support region, where buyers previously stepped in aggressively.
Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.
Crypto World
BlackRock files second tokenized fund with SEC, doubling down on Securitize
BlackRock has filed a second Securitize‑powered tokenized fund with the SEC, signaling BUIDL’s $2.3B success is becoming a repeatable on‑chain RWA product line, not a pilot.
Summary
- BlackRock has submitted a new tokenized fund application to the SEC, again tapping Securitize as its on-chain infrastructure partner, marking the asset manager’s second move into the tokenized fund space.
- The filing builds on the success of BUIDL, BlackRock’s first Securitize-powered tokenized fund launched in 2024, which has grown to roughly $2.3 billion in assets under management.
- The new application signals that BlackRock is treating tokenized funds as a repeatable product line rather than a one-off experiment, accelerating the broader race among traditional asset managers to bring regulated on-chain investment products to institutional clients.
BlackRock has filed a new tokenized fund application with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, once again choosing Securitize as the infrastructure provider, according to reporting by The Defiant. The filing has not yet been approved, and details on the fund’s target asset class, chain deployment and fee structure remain limited in the public record, but the move confirms that the world’s largest asset manager — overseeing more than $11.5 trillion in assets — is moving from pilot to product line in the tokenized fund space.
The new application leans on a relationship that has already produced one of the most successful tokenized fund launches in history. BlackRock and Securitize co-launched BUIDL, the BlackRock USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund, in March 2024 on Ethereum, initially targeting accredited investors with a $5 million minimum and a focus on short-term U.S. Treasury exposure. BUIDL has since grown to approximately $2.3 billion in assets, making it the largest tokenized Treasury fund globally and the clearest proof point that institutional demand for on-chain, yield-bearing dollar instruments is real and scalable.
Securitize, which serves as BUIDL’s transfer agent and tokenization platform, has built its business around being the regulated middleware between traditional fund structures and public blockchains. The firm is registered with the SEC as a transfer agent and operates a broker-dealer, giving it the compliance infrastructure that large asset managers need before they can list tokenized products to institutional clients. By returning to Securitize for a second filing, BlackRock is effectively endorsing that compliance stack as fit-for-purpose and signaling that it does not intend to build its own on-chain fund infrastructure from scratch.
Tokenized funds as a product line, not a pilot
The broader context matters here. BlackRock’s second filing arrives as the tokenized asset market is accelerating across multiple fronts simultaneously. A recent crypto.news story on Ondo Finance’s tokenized stock bridge detailed how the RWA tokenization market has scaled past $1.5 billion in TVL for equities alone, while a separate story on DTCC’s tokenized securities platform showed how post-trade infrastructure giants are now building the settlement rails that would make multi-billion-dollar tokenized fund flows operationally viable at scale.
For BlackRock, the strategic logic of a second tokenized fund is straightforward: BUIDL proved the model works for short-duration Treasury exposure, and a second product allows the firm to test a different asset class, duration profile or investor base on the same regulatory and technical architecture. The move also puts competitive pressure on Franklin Templeton, whose BENJI tokenized money market fund was an early BUIDL rival and whose XRPZ ETF recently led XRP spot inflows, and on Fidelity and State Street, both of which have filed or hinted at tokenized product ambitions of their own.
At a policy level, the filing lands in the same week that the CLARITY Act is heading to Senate Banking Committee markup and the White House is pushing for Trump to sign a crypto market structure bill before July 4, a convergence that turns BlackRock’s SEC submission into more than a routine product launch. As a crypto.news story on BNY’s Abu Dhabi digital asset custody expansion illustrated, the largest names in traditional finance are no longer hedging their blockchain bets — they are building production infrastructure and filing with regulators, treating tokenization as the next decade’s core product category rather than an emerging technology experiment.
Crypto World
JPMorgan Debuts Tokenized Money Market Fund Aimed at Stablecoin Issuers
JPMorgan Chase has filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to launch a tokenized money market fund on Ethereum. The vehicle aims to hold reserves backing stablecoins in a regulated, cash-like structure while earning interest for investors.
The OnChain Liquidity-Token Money Market Fund, ticker JLTXX, would invest in US Treasury bills and overnight repurchase agreements collateralized by US Treasuries or cash, according to the SEC filing. The fund is designed to comply with the GENIUS Act, a stablecoin-focused law signed in July.
Investors would face a $1 million minimum investment, and the fund carries a 0.16% annual fee after waivers. JPMorgan’s blockchain unit, Kinexys Digital Assets, would manage the strategy. The filing indicates the regulatory filing becomes effective on Wednesday, though a formal launch date was not disclosed.
Tokenization has drawn increasing attention from Wall Street executives in recent months, who see on-chain structures as potentially improving the efficiency of trading and settlement compared with traditional systems. Data from RWA.xyz shows more than $32.2 billion of real-world assets tokenized on-chain, excluding stablecoins, across asset classes such as commodities, equities, bonds, and real estate. The platform notes that nearly every major asset class has been tokenized to some degree.
Bloomberg analyst Eric Balchunas described JPMorgan’s JLTXX as a “big deal” due to its 0.16% fee for a money market fund with a stable asset value, highlighting the potential for cost-efficient on-chain reserve management.
Key takeaways
- JPMorgan is pursuing a regulated, cash-like tokenized money market vehicle on Ethereum to back stablecoin reserves, via the JLTXX fund.
- The fund targets a 0.16% annual fee after waivers, a historically low fee for stable-value money market products, according to market commentary.
- The project aligns with the GENIUS Act, signaling ongoing regulatory engagement with tokenized financial assets and stablecoin ecosystems.
- This filing follows JPMorgan’s broader tokenization experiments, including the MONY product and related blockchain experiments, underscoring a continuing corporate push into tokenized yields.
- The momentum in asset tokenization is evidenced by industry data showing hundreds of billions in real-world assets on-chain, while regulators warn about risks around ownership clarity, settlement finality, and market fragmentation.
JPMorgan’s tokenization playbook expands
The JLTXX filing adds to JPMorgan’s growing roster of blockchain-enabled products. The bank’s earlier tokenized offering, the My OnChain Net Yield Fund (MONY), launched in December and also operates on Ethereum. MONY holds short-term debt securities intended to deliver returns that exceed typical bank deposit rates, with interest and dividends accruing daily. The SEC filing for JLTXX suggests an intent to broaden the range of on-chain, cash-like investment options available to stablecoin issuers and other on-chain actors seeking regulated yield.
In a related development, JPMorgan participated in a pilot transaction last week that demonstrated the movement of a tokenized US Treasury fund from the United States to a JPMorgan account in Singapore. The transfer leveraged XRP Ledger and interbank rails to complete in seconds, illustrating how tokenized assets can traverse traditional borders with improved settlement speed.
Industry peers have also advanced tokenized reserve strategies. In April, Morgan Stanley unveiled the Stablecoin Reserves Portfolio, a facility allowing stablecoin issuers to park reserves in a bank money market fund and earn interest. The juxtaposition of these initiatives underscores a broader trend: financial institutions experimenting with on-chain representations of real-world assets to enhance liquidity, yield, and settlement efficiency.
Regulatory and market context
While the rapid pace of tokenization activity attracts bullish sentiment around efficiency gains, major international bodies have sounded cautions. The International Monetary Fund, in a recent report, warned that tokenization can shift certain risk exposures from traditional banking systems to shared ledgers and smart-contract code, complicating interventions during stress events. The IMF stressed that without clear legal ownership records and settlement finality, tokenized markets risk becoming fragmented or peripheral.
Industry observers remain attentive to governance and legislative developments designed to address these gaps. Prominent voices, including investor Kevin O’Leary, have argued that comprehensive crypto market-structure legislation—often discussed under frameworks like the CLARITY Act—will be necessary to clarify ownership, settlement, and regulatory expectations as tokenized finance evolves.
Beyond regulatory framing, the market is watching how tokenized assets scale. The RWA.xyz data cited above indicates substantial on-chain tokenization across asset classes, suggesting meaningful adoption potential. Yet observers emphasize that standards, interoperability, and robust risk controls will determine whether these tokenized vehicles can become mainstream tools for investors, stablecoin issuers, and financial institutions alike.
Source material and context for these developments reflect filings with the SEC, industry commentary, and market data aggregators tracking tokenized real-world assets and cross-border settlement initiatives. The evolution of JPMorgan’s on-chain offerings, alongside peers’ initiatives, points to a broader shift in how traditional finance interfaces with blockchain-enabled infrastructure.
As the JLTXX filing moves through regulatory review, market watchers will be keen to see whether the fund gains a launch timeline, how its reserve strategy performs in varying market regimes, and what additional tokenized products emerge to complement on-chain yield and liquidity solutions.
What remains uncertain is how rapidly stablecoin issuers will adopt on-chain reserve vehicles at scale and how policymakers will balance innovation with resilience and investor protection. The coming months will indicate whether JPMorgan’s approach signals a durable path toward on-chain money markets or if regulatory and technical hurdles will slow the rollout.
Crypto World
Can DOGE reclaim $0.50? Altseason signals and Musk noise collide at $0.195
Dogecoin sits near $0.195, 70% below its 2025 peak, as altseason signals from SUI and ETH collide with Musk‑driven sentiment and a fragile path toward the $0.50 level.
Summary
- Dogecoin is trading around $0.195, down roughly 70% from its 2025 peak, even as altseason momentum and rising open interest across the top-10 begin to suggest a broader rotation out of Bitcoin dominance.
- SUI’s 31% single-day surge to $1.40 and Ethereum’s push toward a “parabolic” breakout on some timeframes are being cited on Crypto Twitter as early altseason signals that historically precede DOGE’s most explosive moves.
- Elon Musk’s continued dominance of X — now a tradeable data point on Polymarket’s tweet-count markets — keeps Dogecoin tied to one of crypto’s most unpredictable sentiment catalysts, even as its on-chain fundamentals slowly mature.
Dogecoin (DOGE) is currently trading around $0.195, a level that places it roughly 70% below the $0.65 peak it reached during the 2025 rally and well below the $0.50 psychological threshold that permabulls have flagged as the first real target in any sustained recovery. The drawdown is steep even by crypto standards, but it is also consistent with DOGE’s historical pattern: the token tends to underperform Bitcoin and large-cap altcoins for extended periods before compressing years of gains into weeks of vertical price action when sentiment flips.
That sentiment flip may be starting to take shape elsewhere in the market. A previous crypto.news story on SUI’s 31% single-session surge to $1.40 noted how open interest across derivatives venues jumped from roughly $450 million to over $620 million in a single day as traders rotated into high-beta altcoins following a supply shock from Nasdaq-listed SUI Group Holdings. That kind of move — a top-10 token exploding on a combination of fundamental catalyst and short squeeze — is exactly the precursor pattern that has historically preceded broader DOGE runs, as capital flows down the risk curve from large-caps to mid-caps and eventually into meme coins once speculative appetite is fully engaged.
Ethereum is adding another data point. Analysis circulating on X describes ETH as forming a “parabolic” breakout structure on the weekly chart, with Ethereum’s recent upgrade roadmap — detailed in a crypto.news story on the Glamsterdam devnet going live and the Hegotá scalability roadmap advancing — giving the second-largest asset a fundamental narrative to match its technical setup. When ETH leads, DOGE has historically followed with a lag of days to weeks, as retail traders who miss the Ethereum move look for the next high-leverage, high-beta play with name recognition and exchange liquidity.
The Musk variable and the road back to $0.50
No DOGE forecast is complete without addressing Elon Musk, and in May 2026 that variable is stranger than ever. As covered in a recent crypto.news story on Polymarket’s Elon Musk tweet-count contracts, Musk’s posting behavior is now literally a tradeable market, with millions of dollars wagered on whether he will post between 100 and 139 times in a given week. That financialization of Musk’s X activity is a two-edged sword for DOGE: it keeps him in the daily conversation of crypto traders, maintaining the ambient association between Musk and Dogecoin that has driven some of the token’s most violent pumps, but it also means any single pro-DOGE tweet now lands in a market that is already pricing his behavior probabilistically rather than reacting to it as a pure surprise.
On the fundamental side, DOGE’s case for a recovery is thin but not nonexistent. Daily transaction counts on the Dogecoin network have held above 50,000 in recent months even during the price drawdown, and the token continues to be accepted as payment by a small but growing list of merchants enabled through integrations that X’s payments infrastructure could eventually formalize. None of that is a near-term price catalyst on its own, but it does mean DOGE is not quietly dying during the bear phase — it is maintaining a baseline of utility that gives it a platform to rally from when conditions improve.
The price prediction range most consistent with the current setup runs something like this: in a base case where altseason continues to build off SUI and ETH momentum but does not fully ignite, DOGE could push toward $0.25 to $0.30 in the next four to six weeks as Bitcoin consolidates above $80,000 and capital continues rotating. In a bull case where the CLARITY Act passes committee this week, the stablecoin bill clears the House on May 14, and Bitcoin makes a clean break above $90,000, DOGE has historically traded at roughly 0.25% to 0.30% of Bitcoin’s price at peak altseason euphoria — a ratio that would put it between $0.225 and $0.27 at current BTC levels, and closer to $0.45 to $0.54 if Bitcoin reaches $150,000 to $180,000 by end of year in the most optimistic scenario. The bear case — a Wyckoff retest pulling Bitcoin back toward $60,000 and open interest liquidations cascading through altcoins — could drag DOGE back toward $0.12 to $0.14, erasing most of the recovery from last year’s lows and resetting the base for a later, larger move.
Crypto World
Can SOL hit $200 as Coinbase adds $100,000 SOL collateral lending?
Coinbase now lets users borrow up to $100K against SOL via Morpho on Base, turning Solana into its third major collateral pillar as the token eyes a retest of $200.
Summary
- Coinbase has added Solana as a supported collateral asset in its on-chain lending product, letting users borrow up to $100,000 against SOL holdings via the Morpho protocol on Base, expanding a service that has already issued over $2.3 billion in cumulative loans.
- Bitcoin dominates Coinbase’s lending book with $2.17 billion in cumulative collateralized loans, followed by ETH at $110 million and XRP at $31.6 million, with SOL now joining that roster as Coinbase pursues its “Everything Exchange” strategy.
- The SOL addition lands despite Coinbase reporting a $394.1 million net loss in Q1 and cutting roughly 14% of its workforce, with CEO Brian Armstrong maintaining that “all finance will migrate on-chain” and multiple Wall Street desks keeping buy ratings on COIN stock.
Coinbase has expanded its on-chain crypto lending product to include Solana as collateral, allowing users to borrow up to $100,000 against SOL holdings through an integration with the Morpho lending protocol on the Base network, according to reporting by The Block.
Coinbase bets on SOL as its third major collateral pillar
The product previously supported Bitcoin and Ethereum as collateral assets, and the SOL (SOL) addition marks the first time a major non-BTC, non-ETH Layer 1 has been added to Coinbase’s lending stack, reflecting the exchange’s assessment that Solana has reached the liquidity depth and institutional acceptance needed to function as reliable loan collateral.
Ben Shen, Coinbase’s Head of Financial Services and Loyalty Products, framed the move explicitly around platform strategy, saying the addition of SOL collateral is “an important step for Coinbase to become the best platform for trading and holding Solana” and that it reflects the company’s broader push to build an “Everything Exchange” — a single venue where users can trade, hold, earn, borrow and settle across any major asset without leaving the Coinbase ecosystem. Since launching its crypto lending product last year, Coinbase has issued more than $2.3 billion in cumulative loans, with Bitcoin accounting for $2.17 billion of that total, ETH at roughly $110 million and XRP at $31.6 million, followed by smaller positions in cbETH, DOGE, ADA and LTC.
SOL is currently trading around $171, having pulled back from highs above $260 earlier in the cycle, and sits in a market where the addition of a major exchange’s collateral lending service has historically acted as a mild but persistent price support: users who might otherwise sell SOL to raise dollar liquidity can instead borrow against their position, reducing spot sell pressure while keeping exposure intact. That dynamic has been well-documented in Bitcoin’s lending market, where the growth of BTC-collateralized loans is cited as one structural reason why long-term holders have been able to extract liquidity without triggering the kind of forced selling that characterized earlier cycles.
“Everything Exchange” strategy survives a $394M quarterly loss
The SOL lending launch arrives in the same news cycle as Coinbase’s Q1 earnings disclosure, which showed a net loss of $394.1 million and a workforce reduction of approximately 14%. Those numbers reflect a broader revenue compression from lower trading volumes and the cost of Coinbase’s aggressive product expansion, but CEO Brian Armstrong has been consistent in framing near-term losses as the price of building infrastructure for what he calls the inevitable migration of “all finance on-chain.” Institutional analysts appear to agree with that framing: Bernstein, Benchmark and Rosenblatt have all maintained buy ratings on COIN stock, with Bernstein specifically noting that Coinbase is “gradually validating the feasibility of its Everything Exchange strategy” through cumulative data points like $2.3 billion in loans issued and the UK market expansion completed last month.
For Solana’s price trajectory, the Coinbase lending integration is one of several institutional signals converging this week. Huma Finance’s V2 PayFi platform, detailed in a recent crypto.news story, is built on Solana and recently survived a legacy Polygon exploit that underlined the architectural superiority of its Solana-native rebuild. Meanwhile, a crypto.news story on SUI’s 31% single-session surge showed how supply shocks and new institutional products can compress months of sideways price action into days of vertical movement for high-liquidity Layer 1 tokens.
At roughly $171, SOL would need a 17% move to retest $200 — a level it held briefly in early 2026 before the broader market correction — and a 52% recovery to challenge its cycle high above $260. The Coinbase collateral addition does not by itself generate that kind of move, but it does remove one structural friction point by giving large SOL holders a dollar-liquidity option that does not require selling, and it extends Coinbase’s institutional credibility to Solana in the same way that BTC and ETH lending helped normalize those assets as balance-sheet instruments. Combined with the altseason rotation signals flagged in a separate crypto.news story on Tuesday’s top-100 movers, a clear break above $180 to $185 in the near term looks more achievable than it did before Coinbase put SOL on the same collateral shelf as Bitcoin.
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