Crypto World
Ripple wins with JPMorgan, so why is XRP still stuck?
Ripple keeps winning. A five-second cross-border Treasury settlement with JPMorgan and Mastercard, ten major deals this year, an IPO the chief executive keeps hinting at. XRP keeps trading near a dollar and change. The gap between the company and the token is the entire story.
Summary
- Ripple’s institutional wins are real, but they do not always create XRP demand.
- The JPMorgan Treasury settlement used RLUSD, not XRP, as the cash leg.
- Ripple equity and XRP remain separate assets with different value drivers.
- XRP needs utility to become token demand before the price can break its range.
In June 2026, Ripple completed something that should have been a milestone for its token. Working with JPMorgan, Mastercard, and Ondo Finance, it settled the redemption of a tokenized United States Treasury fund across borders and across banks on the XRP Ledger, and the blockchain leg finalized in under five seconds, against the one to three business days the same transaction takes on traditional rails.
The participants were real, the speed was real, and the headline wrote itself: Wall Street is settling Treasuries on Ripple’s blockchain. And yet XRP, the token, barely moved, and where it did move it often fell.
The asset spent most of 2026 trading in a narrow band near a dollar and change, while news exactly like this piled up around it. That disconnect, a company stacking institutional wins while its token goes nowhere, is one of the most instructive puzzles in crypto.
The answer is more revealing than either the bulls or the bears usually admit.
This piece takes the puzzle apart. It covers the settlement that did not move the token and the detail the headlines skipped, the structural separation between Ripple the company and XRP the asset, the supply overhang that quietly weighs on the price, the genuine catalysts XRP does have, and why those catalysts keep getting priced as maybes.
The aim is to explain, without spin in either direction, why good news for Ripple so often fails to become good news for XRP, and what would actually have to change for the token to break out of its range.
The win that did not move the token
The June settlement was not a small thing. For years the tokenization story has been mostly demonstrations on private chains, so a live, cross-border, cross-bank redemption of a real tokenized Treasury on a public ledger, with JPMorgan’s settlement platform delivering dollars to Ripple’s bank in Singapore in the same flow, is a credibility win for the XRP Ledger.
It connected one of the largest settlement institutions in the world to a public blockchain, outside normal banking hours, in seconds. As a proof that the rails work, it was about as strong as these announcements get.
That is the settlement broken down in detail. The transaction matters because it shows that regulated institutions are willing to test the XRP Ledger for real-world asset settlement.
The market’s reaction told a different story. XRP did not rally on the news in any durable way, and on the day of an earlier version of the same pilot it actually fell almost 5%, erasing a brief pop.
This was not an anomaly. It fit a pattern that has defined XRP through 2026, where Ripple partnership headlines arrive, the token spikes briefly or not at all, and then drifts back down.
Traders have a weary phrase for it: every Ripple deal seems to be followed by the XRP price dropping. When a genuinely impressive institutional milestone produces a shrug or a selloff, the explanation is rarely that the milestone was fake.
It is usually that the milestone has less to do with the token than the headline implies.
The detail the headlines skipped: XRP was barely in the trade
Here is the part that reframes everything. In that landmark Treasury settlement, XRP the asset did almost no work.
The bridging and settlement were done with RLUSD, Ripple’s dollar-pegged stablecoin, not with XRP. The tokenized Treasury, Ondo’s product, was redeemed by exchanging it for RLUSD, and XRP appeared only as the tiny network fee that every XRP Ledger transaction pays.
Those fees are fractions of a cent on a trade moving far larger sums. The asset that the headlines attached to the news was, in the actual mechanics, a bystander.
This is not an accident or an oversight; it is by design, and the reason matters. Institutional settlement needs a stable, audited, dollar-denominated instrument, because no treasurer is going to settle a Treasury redemption in an asset that can swing 10% in a day.
RLUSD is built for exactly that role: dollar-pegged, backed by cash and Treasuries, and regulated. XRP’s price volatility rules it out of the settlement leg by definition, which is why Ripple deliberately built the product to use RLUSD as the cash leg.
That is the RLUSD that did the settlement work. It is useful precisely because it is not supposed to move.
So when Ripple wins an institutional settlement deal, the direct beneficiary is the XRP Ledger as infrastructure and RLUSD as the settlement token, while XRP the asset captures only the minuscule fee. The headline says XRP.
The transaction says RLUSD. The price reflects the transaction.
Ripple the company versus XRP the token
Step back and the deeper issue comes into focus: Ripple the company and XRP the token are not the same thing, and the market has started pricing them separately.
Ripple is a private company that sells software and payment services, signs deals with banks, holds a large treasury, and may one day go public. XRP is a cryptocurrency that trades on its own supply and demand.
Owning XRP does not make you a shareholder in Ripple, does not entitle you to its profits, and does not give you a claim on its corporate success. The two are linked by association and by Ripple’s large XRP holdings, but they are distinct assets with distinct drivers.
This is why the IPO chatter, which intensified after chief executive Brad Garlinghouse called the moment real ahead of a company event, is more complicated than it sounds for token holders. An initial public offering would let people buy Ripple equity, and it would reward Ripple’s shareholders.
It would not, by itself, pay anything to XRP holders, who own a separate asset.
That is the IPO question for token holders. The most realistic answer is that any benefit would be indirect unless Ripple deliberately created a program for XRP holders, and no such program exists.
Garlinghouse’s strongest argument is an indirect one, and it has genuine merit: because Ripple remains the largest single holder of XRP, the company has a built-in incentive to drive the token’s value, and its partnerships and integrations do plausibly increase XRP’s long-term utility and demand.
That alignment is real. But it is indirect, a rising tide the company hopes to create, not a dividend it pays, and a holder who treats a possible IPO as a direct reward is counting on a maybe attached to a maybe.
The market’s persistent refusal to rally Ripple’s wins into XRP’s price is, in effect, the market enforcing this distinction.
The supply overhang nobody wants to discuss
There is also a more mechanical weight on the token, and it sits on the supply side.
Ripple holds an enormous quantity of XRP in escrow, a locked reserve it releases on a schedule, and that release is a structural source of new supply hitting the market. Each month Ripple can release up to one billion XRP from escrow, then re-locks most of it, but the net amount that actually reaches circulation still runs into the hundreds of millions of tokens monthly.
That is a steady stream of potential selling pressure built into the token’s design.
The significance is that it sets a high bar for any bullish supply story. Some XRP optimists point to the tiny fees burned on each ledger transaction as a deflationary force, but at current transaction volumes the burn is a rounding error next to the escrow releases.
For fee burn to tighten supply in any meaningful way, on-chain activity would have to grow by orders of magnitude, enough to offset hundreds of millions of newly released tokens every month. A single institutional settlement test does not move that needle.
So even when Ripple announces real adoption, a holder has to weigh it against a supply schedule that keeps running on its long-set path. The demand side has to climb a down escalator, and one impressive pilot does not change the speed of the steps.
What XRP actually has going for it
None of this means XRP is a lost cause, and a fair account has to give the bull case its due, because the token’s position has improved in ways that are concrete.
The years-long legal cloud has lifted. The Securities and Exchange Commission’s case against Ripple ended in 2025 with the courts’ finding that XRP sold on public exchanges was not a security, and a later joint classification treated XRP as a digital commodity, giving the token more regulatory clarity than almost any other asset of its size.
That clarity is real and durable, even if it rests partly on interpretation rather than statute.
The institutional door has also opened. Spot XRP exchange-traded funds launched in late 2025 from a roster of established issuers and pulled in well over a billion dollars in assets, with major institutions appearing among the disclosed holders.
That is where XRP demand is actually coming from. ETF flows are not enough by themselves to erase the supply overhang, but they are measurable demand in a way that partnership headlines are not.
Ripple’s stablecoin, RLUSD, crossed a billion dollars in market value in under a year and is being woven into real settlement and card products. Ripple has also kept expanding its payments footprint, including a Bitso partnership around a regulated MXN-backed stablecoin on XRPL and a Flutterwave investment aimed at expanding RLUSD settlement across African payment corridors.
Those are not trivial supports. They show Ripple pushing both sides of its strategy: the ledger as institutional settlement infrastructure and stablecoins as the cash leg that enterprises actually want to use.
The single biggest potential catalyst is legislative. If the CLARITY Act passes and writes XRP’s digital-commodity status into federal law, analysts have projected several billion dollars of additional XRP ETF inflows.
That is the catalyst that could codify XRP’s status. It is the one event that could turn today’s regulatory interpretation into statutory certainty.
These are the ingredients of a genuine bull case, and they explain why XRP has held a floor rather than collapsing, even as it refuses to break out.
Why the catalysts keep getting priced as maybes
So the puzzle resolves into a simpler observation: XRP has real catalysts, but the market keeps pricing them as possibilities instead of facts, and there is a logic to that caution.
A proof-of-concept settlement is priced as a proof of concept until it becomes recurring volume. An ETF is priced on the flows it actually attracts, not the flows it might.
A legislative catalyst is priced on the probability of passage, which for the CLARITY Act has hovered well short of certainty as the bill grinds through the Senate. Each of these is a maybe, and a token sitting on a stack of maybes trades like a token sitting on a stack of maybes: range-bound, reactive, and quick to sell the news.
The pattern of selling Ripple’s wins is the market expressing exactly this. When XRP spiked after its legal victory in 2025, long-term holders used the burst of volume to sell, and the token settled back into its range.
Every subsequent partnership has met a version of the same response, because the partnerships, however real, have not yet produced measurable, sustained demand for the token itself.
The market is not being irrational. It is distinguishing between infrastructure adoption, which benefits Ripple and the ledger, and token demand, which is what actually moves XRP, and it is waiting for proof that the first turns into the second.
What the chart has been saying all year
If you want a blunt summary of everything above, look at what XRP’s price actually did around its biggest catalysts, because the chart has been telling the story in plain language.
When Ripple’s long legal fight with the Securities and Exchange Commission finally ended in 2025, XRP spiked hard, touching levels far above where it trades now, and then it faded. Long-term holders used the surge of volume and attention to sell into strength, and the token drifted back down through the rest of the year and settled into the narrow range it has occupied for months.
Each subsequent institutional headline produced a smaller version of the same shape: a brief pop, a fade, a return to the range. The 200-day moving average, a common gauge of the longer trend, has sat well above the price for much of the year, which is a technical way of saying the market has been in a patient holding pattern, neither convinced enough to break out nor scared enough to break down.
A second signal is easy to overlook because it points the other way. While Ripple was landing marquee partnerships, the payments company MoneyGram, once one of Ripple’s most-cited real-world users, moved its on-chain settlement work toward a rival blockchain.
One defection does not undo a year of deals, and the strategic damage may be small, but it punctures the simplest version of the bull narrative, the one where every institution that touches Ripple stays forever and compounds XRP demand.
Adoption is not monotonic. Partners arrive and partners leave, and the network effect that XRP optimists count on is more contested than the announcement cadence suggests.
The chart reflects this ambivalence honestly: a market that has seen real progress and real setbacks, and has priced the token as a thing that might work out, with the proof still pending.
The lesson in the price action is the same lesson the mechanics teach. Markets are forward-looking, and they will pay up in advance for catalysts they believe will convert into demand.
XRP’s refusal to sustain its rallies is the market saying, repeatedly, that it does not yet see the conversion, that the partnerships and pilots have not become the recurring, token-level demand that would justify a rerating.
That is not a permanent verdict. It is a standing challenge, and the chart will be the first place the answer shows up, long before any press release confirms it.
The bigger pattern: when the network wins and the token waits
XRP’s predicament is not unique, and seeing it as one case of a broader pattern makes the whole situation less mysterious.
Across crypto, there is a recurring gap between the success of a network and the price of the token attached to it. A blockchain can attract real usage, real institutions, and real volume while its native token languishes, because adoption of the infrastructure and demand for the token are two different things that only sometimes move together.
A network captures value for its token when using the network requires buying, holding, or burning that token in volume large enough to matter against its supply. When the network can be used without much of the token changing hands, the usage and the price decouple, and the token becomes a spectator to its own success.
XRP sits squarely in that trap. The XRP Ledger is being adopted for serious settlement work, but those settlements lean on RLUSD as the cash leg and use only a sliver of XRP as a fee.
So the network’s growth does not pull much demand through to the token. This is the same dynamic that has frustrated holders of other infrastructure tokens whose chains saw heavy use that never translated into proportional token demand.
The token is not useless; it secures the ledger, pays the fees, and provides liquidity. But the volume of XRP that the network’s growth actually requires is small relative to the token’s large and steadily expanding supply, and that imbalance is the core of the disappointment.
The market is not failing to notice Ripple’s progress. It is noticing, correctly, that the progress runs largely through rails that do not require much XRP.
Understanding this reframes what a holder is really betting on. To own XRP in expectation of price appreciation is to bet not merely that Ripple succeeds, but that Ripple’s success comes to require XRP itself in growing quantities, through settlement volume, ecosystem use, and demand that finally outpaces the escrow supply.
That is a more specific and more demanding bet than simply believing in the company, and it is the bet the market keeps declining to front-run.
The network can keep winning for years while the token waits, and the waiting ends only when usage and token demand finally converge. Until they do, the gap that has defined XRP through 2026 is less a puzzle than a predictable feature of how value accrues, or fails to accrue, to a token whose network can succeed without it.
What would actually break the range
If you want to know when XRP might finally move, the framework above tells you where to look, and it is not the next partnership headline.
The thing that breaks the range is the conversion of utility into token demand: settlement volume large enough that fees and ecosystem use begin to matter against the escrow supply, ETF flows that compound instead of trickle, and a regulatory catalyst like the CLARITY Act actually crossing the line and pulling institutional money off the sidelines.
Those forces aligning, not any one of them alone, is the strongest version of the XRP thesis.
Until then, the disconnect is likely to persist, and understanding why is the most valuable thing a holder can take from the past year. Ripple is winning, genuinely and repeatedly, in the institutional arena it has targeted for a decade.
But Ripple’s wins flow first to Ripple the company, to the XRP Ledger as a piece of infrastructure, and to RLUSD as a settlement instrument, and only indirectly, slowly, and conditionally to XRP the token.
A holder who watches the partnerships and wonders why the price will not follow has been watching the wrong variable. The variable that matters is whether all that institutional adoption ever turns into durable demand for XRP itself, and so far, the market has decided it has not seen enough proof.
The deal with JPMorgan was a milestone. It was just a milestone for the ledger, not yet for the coin.
Frequently asked questions
What did Ripple and JPMorgan actually do?
Ripple, JPMorgan, Mastercard, and Ondo Finance completed the first cross-border, cross-bank redemption of a tokenized United States Treasury fund on the XRP Ledger. Ondo’s tokenized Treasury product was redeemed on the ledger while Mastercard’s network and JPMorgan’s settlement platform delivered dollars to Ripple’s bank in Singapore, with the blockchain leg settling in under five seconds versus one to three business days on traditional rails. It is a real milestone for tokenized settlement and for the XRP Ledger as infrastructure.
Why did XRP not go up after the JPMorgan deal?
Because XRP the asset was barely involved in the transaction. The settlement used RLUSD, Ripple’s dollar-pegged stablecoin, as the cash leg, while XRP appeared only as the tiny network fee. Institutional settlement needs a stable, audited dollar instrument, and XRP’s price volatility rules it out of that role by design. So the deal benefited the XRP Ledger and RLUSD far more than XRP, which is why the token did not rally and, on an earlier version of the pilot, actually fell.
Is XRP the same as owning a stake in Ripple?
No. Ripple is a private company, and XRP is a separate cryptocurrency. Owning XRP does not make you a Ripple shareholder, does not entitle you to its profits, and would not give you a claim in a Ripple IPO. The two are linked because Ripple is the largest holder of XRP and its business can increase the token’s utility over time, but that benefit is indirect. A Ripple IPO would reward Ripple’s equity holders, not XRP holders directly.
Why is XRP stuck in a range?
A mix of supply and demand factors. On the supply side, Ripple releases large amounts of XRP from escrow each month, a steady source of selling pressure that small fee burns cannot offset at current volumes. On the demand side, Ripple’s institutional wins have not yet produced sustained demand for the token itself, so the market prices each partnership, ETF, and legislative catalyst as a maybe instead of a confirmed driver, leaving XRP range-bound and quick to sell the news.
What could actually push XRP higher?
The conversion of utility into real token demand. That means settlement volume large enough that ecosystem use begins to matter against the escrow supply, ETF flows that compound instead of merely trickling, and a regulatory catalyst such as the CLARITY Act passing and writing XRP’s digital-commodity status into federal law, which analysts project could draw billions in additional ETF inflows. Those forces aligning together, not any single headline, is the strongest case for a breakout.
Does XRP have a real bull case at all?
Yes. XRP has more regulatory clarity than almost any major token after the SEC case ended and a later classification treated it as a digital commodity. Spot XRP ETFs launched in late 2025 and gathered over a billion dollars, with major institutions among the holders, and RLUSD crossed a billion dollars in market value quickly. The CLARITY Act could codify XRP’s status and unlock further ETF demand. These are genuine supports, which is why XRP has held a floor, even as it waits for adoption to translate into token demand.
This article is information, not investment advice. Prices, partnership details, and corporate and legislative plans change quickly and reflect reporting available as of June 24, 2026. Verify current data with official sources before relying on anything described here.
Crypto World
Prevailing Currency in Digital Assets: Infrastructure
This trend is becoming even more relevant as real-world assets enter the digital landscape. Stablecoins have already demonstrated the power of blockchain-based representations of traditional value, becoming the most successful digital asset use case to date. Tokenized deposits, bonds, funds, and other real-world assets are poised to follow, expanding the range of opportunities available to businesses and individuals worldwide.
For the end user, however, the underlying asset may become increasingly irrelevant. Most people are unlikely to care about the blockchain protocol, token standard, or settlement mechanism powering a transaction. What matters is accessibility, speed, security, and trust. Users want to access global opportunities using their local resources, through partners they know and platforms they can rely on.
In this environment, the long-term competitive advantage belongs to those who build and operate the infrastructure connecting participants, assets, and markets. Coins may evolve, protocols may change, and new forms of digital value will continue to emerge. But the institutions that enable trust, connectivity, and seamless access will remain at the center of the ecosystem.
The prevailing currency in digital assets may change over time. Infrastructure, however, is what endures.
Principled Perspectives
Bitcoin’s liquidation cascade peaked before the bottom
– By Alen Pavlović, Portfolio Manager, Liquibit Capital
Using CoinDesk’s liquidation feed, the forced selling flushed early and high. By the time Bitcoin bottomed on 5 June, the cascade was already over.
Crypto World
SBI Group Launches JPYSC, Japan’s First Trust Bank-Backed Yen Stablecoin
JPYSC has officially launched today, Japan’s first trust bank-backed yen stablecoin, issued by SBI Shinsei Trust Bank and distributed exclusively through SBI VC Trade. The token is pegged 1:1 to the yen, classified as an electronic payment instrument under Japan’s Payment Services Act, and carries no transaction cap, a structural detail that separates it from every prior yen stablecoin attempt in the domestic market.
Earlier fund-transfer-type stablecoins in Japan were subject to a 1 million yen ceiling on both transactions and balances, a constraint that rendered them useful for retail payments and little else. JPYSC removes this ceiling, opening the door to institutional-scale on-chain settlement, tokenized RWA transactions, and cross-border FX use cases that the prior generation of Japanese stablecoins structurally could not support.
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Trust-Bank Structure: Digital Yen Stablecoin Regulatory Differentiator
The structural distinction that makes JPYSC huge within Japanese crypto regulation is the issuance architecture. SBI Shinsei Trust Bank holds reserve assets, cash, and highly liquid yen-denominated instruments in a segregated trust account. Holders carry a direct legal claim under trust law to the underlying yen.
The Payment Services Act classification as an electronic payment instrument reflects this structure. Japan’s revised framework created a legal pathway specifically for trust bank stablecoins, and JPYSC is the first product to reach the market through that route.
Singapore-based Startale Group, co-developer of JPYSC alongside SBI, provided the blockchain infrastructure and developer tooling; Startale CEO Sota Watanabe described the token as infrastructure for “Japanese retail users, enterprises, and global financial institutions” to transact onchain.
In October 2025, JPYC received approval as Japan’s first legally recognized yen stablecoin, but under the fund-transfer framework with its 1 million yen cap intact. Japan’s three megabanks, MUFG, SMBC, and Mizuho, are jointly developing a stablecoin and announced plans in June 2026 to begin live commercial transactions during fiscal year 2026. JPYSC beat them to market with a structure the megabank project has not yet matched publicly.
The multi-chain architecture Startale has outlined for JPYSC, targeting deployment across multiple public chains via Sony-backed infrastructure, would further differentiate the token if it materializes. A single-chain yen stablecoin is a payment rail. A multi-chain yen stablecoin with no transaction cap and trust-law reserve backing starts to look like foundational settlement infrastructure for Japan’s on-chain financial market.
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JPYSC Is Infrastructure, Not a Liquidity Event
Initial access to JPYSC is restricted to SBI VC Trade account holders, a deliberate constraint SBI has indicated will remain in place until regulatory and tax treatment is fully clarified. This is a reasonable sequencing decision for a novel instrument, but it also means the token’s near-term addressable market is limited to SBI’s existing exchange client base.
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SBI VC Trade has flagged a JPYSC lending service as a near-term addition, which would add yield mechanics to a pure settlement instrument and potentially accelerate institutional adoption. The tokenized RWA angle is the more consequential long-term use case. It’s no secret that a yen-denominated stablecoin with no cap and trust-law backing is a natural settlement layer for Japan’s growing pipeline of tokenized securities, real estate, and structured products.
The regulatory trajectory across major jurisdictions reinforces why this structure matters. Ripple’s RLUSD received MiCA approval in the EU on the strength of its regulated, reserve-backed structure. Regulatory legitimacy is increasingly the price of admission for stablecoins targeting institutional flows, and JPYSC clears that bar within the Japanese framework.
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Crypto World
SpaceX (SPCX) Stock Plunges 10.6% Despite Securing $6.3B AI Computing Contract
Key Takeaways
- Reflection AI, an emerging AI firm, has entered into an agreement with SpaceX for Nvidia GB300 chip access at the Colossus 2 facility, costing $150 million monthly.
- The contract extends through 2029, potentially generating approximately $6.3 billion in total revenue over its duration.
- Despite lacking any released products or revenue streams, Reflection AI secured $2 billion in funding last October, achieving an $8 billion valuation with Nvidia’s backing.
- Following the announcement, SpaceX stock (SPCX) experienced a decline of approximately 10.6%, even though the contract represents substantial recurring income.
- The Colossus data center portfolio now includes major clients such as Anthropic, Google, Cursor, and Reflection AI.
SpaceX (SPCX) stock experienced a significant decline of roughly 10.6% following news of a massive $6.3 billion computing agreement with Reflection AI — an AI startup that has yet to launch a commercial product or generate any revenue.
Space Exploration Technologies Corp, SPCX
CNBC broke the story on June 22. According to the agreement’s structure, Reflection AI will gain prompt access to Nvidia GB300 processors located within SpaceX’s Colossus 2 Memphis data center. Monthly installments of $150 million commence on July 1, 2026, with the contract extending until 2029.
If executed in full, the arrangement would generate roughly $6.3 billion in total payments. Both parties retain the option to terminate with 90 days’ notice following an initial three-month period.
Neither SpaceX nor Reflection AI provided responses to Reuters’ inquiries.
Reflection shared on LinkedIn that “additional compute capacity enables us to further advance the boundaries of open models,” offering no additional specifics.
Expanding Client Portfolio
SpaceX has been methodically assembling an impressive collection of high-profile computing clients at its Colossus facilities. Anthropic secured exclusive access to all of Colossus 1 for approximately $1.25 billion monthly. Google subsequently committed to $920 million per month for transitional capacity while constructing its proprietary data centers, with service beginning October this year and continuing through June 2029. Reflection represents the fourth major tenant in a portfolio that emerged from nothing within the past year.
Reflection was established in early 2024 by co-founders Misha Laskin and Ioannis Antonoglou, both alumni of Google DeepMind. Laskin previously directed reward modeling efforts for Gemini. Antonoglou co-developed AlphaGo. The startup completed a $2 billion funding round last October at an $8 billion valuation, with Nvidia serving as the lead investor. By spring 2026, industry reports suggested its valuation had climbed toward $20 billion. The company has not yet released any public model.
The organization has established itself as an open frontier laboratory concentrating on government and national security applications, including initiatives connected to the Department of Energy’s Genesis Mission and various Pentagon AI contracts.
Understanding the Stock Movement
Despite securing billions in guaranteed recurring revenue from an additional tenant, SPCX shares fell approximately 10.6% on announcement day — marking the sharpest single-day decline since the company’s June 11 public debut at a $1.77 trillion valuation.
The market reaction surprised several analysts. SpaceX is securing guaranteed, recurring payments against existing infrastructure assets. The Colossus 2 agreement alone contributes $1.8 billion in annual contracted revenue. This financial dynamic doesn’t immediately explain the negative market response.
Looking Ahead
The agreement features a 90-day termination provision following the initial three-month period, meaning the critical evaluation point arrives around late October. Should Reflection choose not to exercise this exit option, the lease essentially transitions from potentially temporary to confirmed long-term demand.
Reflection’s LinkedIn communication mentioned advancing the frontier on “open models.” The company has not disclosed a timeline for any public product release.
SpaceX, Reflection AI, and Nvidia had not provided additional comments by publication time.
Crypto World
BTC declines to $60,000 area as investors turn to stocks for investment gains
Bitcoin dropped to the $60,000 area on Wednesday for the second time this month, continuing its poor price action in the face of risk market rallies elsewhere.
Also continuing to lose ground on Wednesday were gold and oil, each falling below key levels — gold $4,000 per ounce and oil $70 per barrel.
Read more: Gold, silver and bitcoin tumble as ‘debasement’ trade unwinds
The declines in crypto, precious metals, and oil came as tech stocks rebounded following Tuesday’s modest one-day slump, with the AI trade continuing to draw investor interest and dollars.
South Korean memory chip giant SK Hynix on Wednesday filed to raise nearly $30 billion in a U.S. share offering, in what would be the overseas company capital raise since Saudi Aramco’s mammoth $26 billion sale in 2019.
The Nasdaq at midday Wednesday was up 0.8% against bitcoin’s 3.2% slump.
Bitcoin has lost the plot
Billionaire hedge fund manager Philippe Laffont succinctly summed up investor sentiment Tuesday, telling CNBC he has become “a little bit more worried” about bitcoin’s future, arguing that investors now have a wider range of opportunities to choose from than in previous years.
Crypto World
LastPass customer info leaked again after third-party data breach
LastPass, the password manager that inadvertently facilitated the theft of $150 million in crypto from Ripple co-founder Chris Larsen, is now warning users that their personal information was stolen via an attack on third-party market firm Klue.
The company emailed its customers this week to inform them that Klue was breached on June 11 and that data including customer names, phone numbers, email addresses, and physical addresses, as well as support case data and sales-related data, had been stolen.
Despite this, LastPass stressed that the incident affects only Klue-integrated systems and that “LastPass products, services, and infrastructure were not impacted in any way and customer vaults remain secure.”
Multiple cybersecurity firms reliant on Klue have also seen customer data leaked.
The cybercrime group Icarus claimed responsibility for the breach and is reaching out to users and threatening to leak their data.
LastPass users have been warned to stay vigilant about social engineering and phishing attacks that may attempt to swindle them out of more information and funds.
LastPass’s 2022 breach lost Ripple co-founder $150M
LastPass suffered multiple major breaches in 2022 that saw sensitive data stolen from customers’ password vaults.
Crypto sleuth ZachXBT noted in 2024 that a threat actor was able to use data from this breach to steal $5.4 million worth of crypto from over 40 addresses.
Prior to this, in 2023, ZachXBT also reported that roughly $4.4 million was drained from over 25 victims because of the 2022 breach.
Possibly the biggest theft from LastPass involved Ripple co-founder Chris Larsen, who lost $150 million worth of crypto after his private keys were leaked in the 2022 breach.
Read more: ‘AudiA6’ crypto laundering suspects face extradition to US
Two people behind a $389 million cryptocurrency laundering service dubbed “AudiA6” have also, according to ZachXBT, helped launder stolen funds from LastPass users.
LastPass was fined £1.2 million by the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office last year over the 2022 data breach.
The body claimed it impacted 1.6 million UK users, and that LastPass “failed to implement sufficiently robust technical and security measures, which ultimately enabled a hacker to gain unauthorised access to its backup database.”
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Crypto World
Why Perfectly Fair Crypto Transaction Ordering Isn’t Achievable
Today’s blockchains already treat consensus as a matter of two properties: nodes must agree on the same history (consistency) and the system must keep processing transactions (liveness). But that framing leaves a crucial gap—what users ultimately care about is not only whether transactions get confirmed, but whether their relative ordering is meaningfully fair when multiple parties submit transactions that can interact economically.
A new line of research is trying to formalize “transaction order fairness” and map out what is possible under real-world networking constraints. The core takeaway: perfect “first-come, first-served” ordering is mathematically out of reach in asynchronous distributed systems, even before considering adversaries. The practical question becomes how to approximate fairness while keeping liveness and minimizing opportunities for extractive behavior.
Key takeaways
- Perfect receive-order fairness (“first-seen, first-executed”) cannot be guaranteed on public networks because messages arrive at different times and there is no shared clock.
- Even when each node has a clear local arrival order, group preferences can conflict—captured by the Condorcet paradox—making a single linear order impossible to satisfy.
- Hashgraph’s fairness model uses a DAG of events with median timestamps to respect causal relationships while bounding how far adversarial influence can shift ordering.
- BOF-style protocols (from the Aequitas/Themis line of work) relax fairness by ordering transaction “batches” derived from Condorcet cycles, enabling stronger liveness guarantees.
Why “fair ordering” is harder than it sounds
In public blockchains, ordering isn’t just an implementation detail—it can decide who captures value and who pays. When privileged roles like block builders or sequencers determine execution order, they can potentially exploit that power through strategies that front-run, back-run, or sandwich transactions. Research on maximal extractable value (MEV) describes this as a direct consequence of who can influence ordering.
To counteract this, some proposals treat transaction ordering fairness as a third consensus objective alongside consistency and liveness. The general idea is to constrain the block producer’s ability to bias ordering beyond what the network conditions and protocol rules imply—making execution more predictable and less vulnerable to systematic exploitation.
But the most intuitive fairness notion runs into a structural limitation. In an asynchronous distributed system, there is no globally defined reception order because different nodes observe transaction messages at different times. Without a shared clock and with arbitrary message delays, no protocol can ensure that every node’s “arrival order” maps perfectly onto a single network-wide execution order.
The Condorcet paradox: why majority “first” can loop
The strongest form of fairness is often described as Receive-Order-Fairness (ROF): if most nodes receive transaction A before transaction B, then A should be processed before B. ROF sounds straightforward, but the network reality undermines it. Nodes see messages at different speeds, so different nodes can legitimately observe different pairwise “firsts.” Even if those local observations are consistent for each node, the collective can still become inconsistent.
This is where the Condorcet paradox comes in from voting theory, and it translates cleanly to distributed ordering. Even when each participant has an internal preference for which of two items comes first, the majority preference across multiple pairs can form a cycle:
- Most nodes see A before B
- Most nodes see B before C
- Most nodes see C before A
When that happens, there is no single linear ordering that satisfies all majority pairwise preferences. The implication for blockchain consensus is direct: if fairness is defined too strictly in terms of majority “first-seen” comparisons, the protocol may be unable to produce any ordering that matches the majority view across all pairs.
Because of this impossibility, systems aiming for “fairness” must adopt weaker—but more achievable—guarantees.
Hashgraph’s approach: DAG causality plus median timestamps
Hedera’s hashgraph algorithm tackles transaction ordering fairness through a leaderless, event-driven model. According to the described model, transactions are transformed into cryptographically linked events inside a directed acyclic graph (DAG). Consensus ordering then emerges from how nodes collectively observe and sign those events, rather than from a single proposer unilaterally choosing a sequence.
Operationally, when a node receives a transaction, it creates an event and gossips it to peers. Subsequent events record hashes of earlier events they have seen, and nodes digitally sign the result. This creates a provable causal structure: if one event is an ancestor (direct or indirect) of another, the protocol provides a cryptographic guarantee about which event was created first by some node.
The ordering logic then distinguishes between events with causal relationships and those that are concurrent. Events connected by DAG ancestry are ordered according to their causal dependencies. For concurrent events (those without ancestor relationships), the protocol resolves relative ordering using a “round-received” concept and then refines that using median timestamps.
Median timestamps, as described, are derived from a set of node-reported local receive times, but constrained by the hashgraph’s ancestry. That constraint matters: nodes cannot claim to have observed an event before its causal predecessors without creating detectable inconsistency in the DAG. Under the standard assumption used in Byzantine fault tolerance—fewer than one-third of nodes are Byzantine—the median timestamp should remain within a bounded range of honest timing reports, limiting adversarial ability to arbitrarily skew ordering.
However, hashgraph’s fairness is not infinite. The described research emphasizes that fairness is bounded by an adversarial “surface” where a node can still influence its gossip behavior: which events it relays first and whether it delays relaying. While the DAG cannot fabricate a false causal history, strategic propagation patterns can reshape the inputs that ultimately feed into median timestamp computation.
There is also the Condorcet paradox risk for concurrent events. The DAG eliminates ambiguity for causally linked events because the ancestry is fixed at creation. But concurrent events can still be observed in different orders by different nodes, leaving some ordering tension that is then handled by the protocol’s round and median mechanisms.
BOF protocols: fairness by collapsing Condorcet cycles
Another line of work frames fairness differently—by explicitly embracing cycles. BOF (Batch-based Order Fairness) protocols define “blocks” as sets of transactions that form a Condorcet cycle, then enforce fairness at the level of how those blocks relate, while allowing arbitrary internal ordering inside each block.
In the BOF formulation described, fairness is controlled by a parameter γ: if a sufficient fraction γ of nodes observe block b before block b′, then honest nodes cannot output b after b′. When fairness constraints induce a cyclic relation, the protocol collapses the strongly connected component (SCC) into a single batch/block, because no linear order can satisfy all the directed constraints simultaneously.
A key practical point is that this approach relaxes strict ROF requirements. When a cycle occurs, internal ordering becomes irrelevant to the fairness guarantee, since the protocol treats the entire cycle participation as atomic at the batch level. The research description notes that deterministic rules (such as a hash-based rule) may then sort transactions within the batch, but the fairness criterion does not attempt to make those internal orders correspond to any global first-seen preference.
The Aequitas protocol line is described as having weaker liveness: its strict fairness constraints require waiting for complete Condorcet cycles, and if cycles can chain indefinitely, finalization delays could grow without bound—creating a “freeze” risk.
Themis is introduced as a refinement intended to preserve γ-BOF while improving liveness. As described, Themis also builds a dependency graph and collapses SCCs during a “FairFinalize” stage, but it avoids waiting for the full cycle to close. Instead, it uses deferred ordering and “batch unspooling” so SCCs can be output incrementally while new transactions keep flowing. The result, as presented, upgrades Aequitas’ weak liveness into standard liveness with a delay bound.
Themis also addresses communication scaling concerns. In its basic form, participants exchange messages with most other nodes, leading to communication growth roughly proportional to the square of the network size. An optimized variant, SNARK-Themis, replaces much of that direct exchange with succinct cryptographic proofs, so verification can scale more efficiently as the node count increases.
Finally, the protocol design includes a mechanism to prevent denial-style manipulation. If a malicious proposer tries to exploit the system by proposing an empty block, Themis’s deferred ordering accepts a partially ordered batch and leaves exact finalization to a subsequent honest proposer, based on verifiable transaction relationships rather than discretionary choices by the current proposer. This is framed as a way to tie finalization to bounded network delay rather than arbitrary proposer behavior.
What to watch next
The central unresolved question across these approaches is how to balance fairness guarantees against the operational costs—especially complexity, communication overhead, and the practical handling of concurrency. As more consensus designs incorporate formal ordering fairness ideas, investors and builders should watch for implementations that demonstrate bounded delays in real network conditions while maintaining robustness against adversarial reordering.
Crypto World
Kalshi launches Zcash and SHIB perps as lawsuit heats up
Kalshi has expanded its CFTC-regulated crypto perpetuals lineup to 13 digital assets after launching new contracts tied to Zcash, Near Protocol, and Shiba Inu, while legal battles over the platform’s products continue to intensify.
Summary
- Kalshi expanded its CFTC-regulated crypto perpetuals lineup with Zcash and Near contracts, while Dogecoin and Shiba Inu perpetuals are also live.
- The rollout comes as CME Group challenges the CFTC’s approval of similar products and the regulator fights Kentucky over market oversight.
- Traditional finance firms, including CBOE and Charles Schwab, are increasingly exploring perpetual and prediction-style trading products.
According to Kalshi’s latest listings, the prediction market operator has expanded its “American Perpetuals” lineup with contracts tied to Zcash (ZEC) and Near Protocol (NEAR), while Dogecoin (DOGE) and Shiba Inu (SHIB) perpetuals are also now available for trading. The additions bring the total number of supported crypto assets to 13, alongside Bitcoin and other altcoins.
The contracts are available through a structure approved by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and do not carry expiration dates.
Recent filings submitted by Kalshi show the platform sought regulatory clearance for the new products on Tuesday. Zcash perpetuals are being offered with up to 2x leverage, while Near contracts allow leverage of up to 2.6x. Shiba Inu’s perpetual contract, listed under the ticker KSHIB, also carries a maximum leverage ratio of 2x. Dogecoin perpetuals are also listed on the platform as part of the latest wave of CFTC-approved crypto contracts.
The additions follow an earlier wave of filings covering assets including XRP, Solana, Dogecoin, Chainlink, Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash, Sui, Hyperliquid, Polkadot, Hedera, and Stellar. Kalshi has already secured approval for most of those products, though contracts linked to Stellar, Polkadot, and Hedera remain under review by the CFTC.
Legal scrutiny has grown around perpetual contracts
While Kalshi continues adding crypto products, regulatory questions surrounding the structure of perpetual contracts have become more prominent. As previously reported by crypto.news, CME Group filed a lawsuit against the CFTC and Chairman Michael Selig, arguing that certain contracts approved by the agency should be classified as swaps rather than futures products.
The debate has expanded beyond crypto markets. Earlier today, the CFTC sued Kentucky in federal court after the state sought to enforce gaming laws against Kalshi, Polymarket, and brokerage partners connected to Coinbase, Robinhood, and Webull.
In its complaint, the regulator argued that designated contract markets operating under federal oversight fall under the Commodity Exchange Act rather than state gaming regulations. Kentucky, however, maintains that sports-linked event contracts meet the state’s definition of sports wagering and should remain subject to local licensing requirements.
At the same time, regulators are seeking public feedback on how derivatives products should be classified. The SEC and CFTC have jointly requested comments on definitions involving swaps and related instruments, an issue that has gained urgency as event-based trading products become more common.
Traditional exchanges are moving toward similar products
Interest in perpetual-style contracts has also spread across traditional financial markets. As reported by crypto.news, CBOE Global Markets has begun evaluating whether its continuous Bitcoin and Ether futures could be converted into perpetual contracts after crypto perpetuals generated more than $8.5 billion in trading volume on Kalshi within weeks of launch.
Charles Schwab has likewise entered the prediction-markets segment through a partnership with CBOE, introducing all-or-nothing contracts tied to the performance of the S&P 500. The brokerage joins firms including CME Group and Interactive Brokers that have recently expanded into event-driven trading products.
Outside the United States, Kalshi is facing a different challenge. An updated members’ agreement published on Wednesday shows the company has added India to its list of restricted jurisdictions.
Indian authorities have classified prediction-market platforms under the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act 2025, arguing that products involving real-money speculation on uncertain outcomes can fall within prohibited betting activity regardless of how operators describe them.
Crypto World
Cardano wallet SecondFi hit by $2.4 million exploit, up to $20 million in user funds at risk
SecondFi, the Cardano wallet formerly known as Yoroi, says it has patched a major exploit that drained roughly 16 million ADA, worth approximately $2.4 million, from 374 user wallets across three separate attacks.
The root cause was a flaw in SecondFi’s proprietary wallet generation software. The vulnerability sits at the address level, meaning simply moving a seed phrase to another wallet offers no protection. “The security risk occurs when an affected user signs a transaction,” the team said on X.
Before attackers could reach a further 129 million ADA, SecondFi said it triggered emergency rescue measures, routing the funds to an independent third-party custodian. An external accounting firm has been engaged to verify those holdings and affected users can submit claims to SecondFi.
Blockchain security firm SlowMist estimates total losses could exceed $20 million when accounting for the full range of compromised wallets and tokens, a figure that remains unconfirmed pending an independent audit.
Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson acknowledged the incident but noted the dollar amount was modest relative to other crypto hacks, though he stressed that offered little consolation to those affected. “It hurts them whenever they lose anything,” he said. “This is the unfortunate reality of crypto.”
ADA is currently trading around $0.15, its lowest level since 2020.
Crypto World
Ethereum reclaims $1,650 as Ethereum Foundation cuts 20% of workforce
Key takeaways
- The Ethereum Foundation has reduced its workforce by 20% following the completion of a major reorganization.
- ETH is up by 1% and is now trading above $1,650.
The Ethereum Foundation (EF) has completed a broad organizational restructuring that includes reducing its workforce by approximately 20%, affecting 54 employees across multiple teams.
In a blog post published Tuesday, the Foundation said the changes conclude a months-long reorganization process tied to the implementation of its updated mandate and treasury management strategy.
Ethereum Foundation introduces new organizational structure
As part of the overhaul, the EF has reorganized its operations into five core clusters: Protocol Layer, Access Layer, User Layer, Community Layer, and Institutional Layer. Two additional clusters will oversee management and operational functions.
According to the Foundation, each cluster has been designed with specific responsibilities, accountability frameworks, and internal structures tailored to its objectives.
“Each domain of work requires a different approach, is held accountable for different kinds of results, and has a different internal structure tailored to the work that needs to be done,” the EF stated.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin revealed in a post on X that the workforce reduction comes as the Foundation pursues a significant spending reduction strategy.
The EF plans to lower annual spending from approximately 15% of its remaining treasury before 2026 to a long-term target of 5% after 2030. As part of this effort, the Foundation is reducing its budget by roughly 40% this year.
Buterin acknowledged the human cost of the restructuring, rejecting the notion that the layoffs were simply an efficiency exercise.
“Often, when an organization goes through something like this, people try to pretend that nothing of great value was lost,” Buterin wrote. “I will not try to pretend this. I respect my EF colleagues far too much to pretend that there was not much that is lost.”
The Foundation said affected employees will receive severance packages and transition assistance, similar to support provided to previous departing team members.
Ethereum price forecast: ETH risks further decline below key support
Ethereum continues to face downside pressure, with liquidation data highlighting persistent weakness in market sentiment.
On the 4-hour timeframe, ETH continues to trade below its 20-day, 50-day, and 100-day Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs), located near $1,753, $1,901, and $2,064, respectively.
The cryptocurrency also remains below a previously broken descending trendline around $1,729 and a key horizontal resistance zone near $1,741. These technical barriers suggest the broader bearish structure remains intact.
Ethereum is now approaching the important support level at $1,611 after being rejected near the convergence of the descending trendline and the 20-day EMA.
A decisive break below $1,611 could expose the next major support zone at $1,524. If selling pressure intensifies, additional downside targets emerge at $1,404 and potentially $1,155.
Unless buyers reclaim key resistance levels, Ethereum’s price action remains vulnerable to further losses in the near term.
Crypto World
XRP News: Why Ripple’s 9-Year Clock Divides the Community
Australian lawyer and prominent XRP community commentator Bill Morgan has been in the news headlines as he called on Ripple to relock less of its monthly 1 billion XRP escrow release. According to Morgan, accelerating the path to full circulating supply would establish XRP as a credible hard money asset and eliminate the supply overhang that continues to weigh on sentiment.
The argument is not new in outline, but the specifics of Morgan’s framing push it into sharper territory, and Ripple’s own CTO Emeritus has already drawn a clear line on how far the company is willing to go.
With 32.74 billion XRP still locked in escrow and the current release pace stretching the full-circulation timeline to roughly nine years, the structural math gives Morgan’s argument its weight. The question the XRP community is now openly debating is not whether the overhang is real, but whether Ripple has both the incentive and the flexibility to compress that timeline.
Discover: The Best Crypto to Diversify Your Portfolio
Ripple Supply Overhang
Ripple established its escrow system in 2017, placing 55 billion XRP into 55 separate on-ledger contracts, each releasing 1 billion XRP on the first of every month. The mechanism was designed to create a predictable, auditable supply and avoid an unannounced dump from a centralized treasury.
However, what it also created, by design, was an indefinitely extendable schedule: Ripple takes what it needs for operations and institutional distribution, then relocks the remainder into new contracts, effectively rolling the timeline forward month after month.
Morgan’s position, stated publicly on X, is direct:
The logic is three-layered. First, relocking less shortens the nine-year horizon. Second, full circulation removes the psychological shadow supply that suppresses valuation. Third, a fixed, fully-circulating crypto supply is structurally more credible for institutional participants who price assets on known fundamentals rather than unknowable future release schedules.
It is worth noting that Morgan is looking for an argument. He has previously defended the escrow mechanism itself against claims that it is a deliberate price-suppression tool. He also pointed out that XRP ran from roughly $0.50 to above $3.00 between November 2024 and January 2025 while monthly releases continued uninterrupted. His current call is for faster completion of a process he considers legitimate.
Discover: The Best Token Presales
David Schwartz Draws the Line
Ripple CTO Emeritus David Schwartz has not endorsed acceleration, and he has flatly rejected the most radical version of the proposal circulating in the XRP community: burning the escrowed supply outright.
Schwartz cited Stellar’s token burn as his primary cautionary reference. He argues that supply destruction produced a short-lived market reaction rather than a durable valuation re-rating. His broader defense of the current model is that Ripple voluntarily relocks whatever XRP it does not immediately need.
On the timeline question specifically, Schwartz acknowledged the inherent uncertainty:
“It’s hard to predict because you have to make assumptions about how much XRP Ripple uses and how much gets put back into subsequent escrow months.”
Schwartz’s position is structurally consistent with how Ripple has managed the escrow since inception. The company has positioned measured, predictable distribution as a feature, not a constraint. Changing that calculus would require Ripple to decide that the reputational and institutional benefits of acceleration outweigh the risks of increased near-term sell pressure. Basically, a trade-off that the company has not yet indicated it is willing to make.
Ripple’s recent MiCA regulatory approvals in Europe reinforce the pattern: the company is building compliant infrastructure, and supply stability is part of that institutional pitch.
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What the Community Debate Actually Reveals About XRP Beyond the News Headlines
Beyond the news headlines, the split inside the XRP community maps cleanly onto two different theories of what XRP is supposed to be. The pro-acceleration camp, aligned with Morgan, treats the hard money narrative as the primary long-term value proposition. A fixed, fully-circulating supply that can be evaluated on demand fundamentals alone. The pro-current-pace camp treats Ripple’s controlled distribution as an asset for institutional credibility, not a liability.
A third concern runs underneath both camps: if Ripple releases more net XRP per month without a corresponding increase in demand, the additional supply hits the market as sell pressure. XRP’s current price action does not obviously signal that the market is capacity-constrained on the demand side in a way that would absorb larger monthly net releases cleanly.
The token burn option, meanwhile, is effectively closed. Schwartz’s Stellar reference reflects a settled internal view that destroying escrow reserves would produce noise and would permanently eliminate the optionality Ripple currently holds.
Discover: The Best Crypto to Diversify Your Portfolio
The post XRP News: Why Ripple’s 9-Year Clock Divides the Community appeared first on Cryptonews.
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LEGAL EXPERT BILL MORGAN URGES RIPPLE TO UNLOCK XRP TOKENS FASTER
(@Xrp_Guru1)
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