Crypto World
‘We Investigated Ourselves’: ZachXBT Slams EdgeX After Sudden Token Collapse
The EDGE token collapsed to an all-time low of around $0.40 on June 1, less than two weeks after it hit an all-time high of $1.54.
The crash wiped off about 51% of the token’s value in a single day, triggering more than $6.2 million in liquidations across major exchanges and drawing immediate accusations of insider manipulation from on-chain researcher ZachXBT.
edgeX Points the Finger Outward
edgeX, the decentralized perpetual futures DEX that issues the EDGE token, posted on X several hours after the crash began, acknowledging what it called “a sudden and irregular price movement.” The team also said they were working to understand what happened. Two hours later, the project followed with a firmer statement, saying the following:
“The edgeX protocol were not compromised in any way. This is not a hack, exploit, or security breach. What we have identified so far suggests deliberate attempts by certain external party to manipulate the market price of EDGE.”
The company added that it was working with relevant exchanges and platforms to identify the cause and pursue accountability. It also promised to provide a more detailed update once the said investigations were over.
However, their explanation was not well received everywhere, with ZachXBT, an on-chain investigator known for calling out bad actors in crypto, pushing back directly and stating that the EDGE supply appeared to be controlled by a small group with low circulating float. He also challenged the edgeX team to disclose the platform’s counterparties and market maker agreements if they really cared about transparency, mocking the project’s self-investigation with a pointed paraphrase:
“We investigated ourselves and did not find ourselves guilty even though we control nearly the entire supply.”
On the price side, the damage was significant, with CoinGecko data showing that EDGE dropped from about $1.26 to near $0.40, which was a new all-time low, before it stabilized around $0.62 at the time of writing.
Additional data from CoinGlass showed the price fall caused liquidations of about $6.2 million in 24 hours, with long positions accounting for $4.84 million. That activity was mostly concentrated on Binance, Bybit, and OKX, which together handled the majority of the forced closures that affected at least 3,840 traders, with price volatility hitting 74.77% on the day.
A Rough Season for Crypto Security
There is a valid reason why many people, upon seeing EDGE’s behavior in the market, immediately thought its parent platform had been hacked and why edgeX came out to categorically deny that there had been such an incident.
This year, the crypto space has been rattled by a string of exploits, including a recent attack on DxSale, where more than 1,400 liquidity pools tied to its old contracts on the BNB Chain were drained of about $7.3 million worth of tokens. A hacker also stole about $11 million from the Verus bridge, while TrustedVolumes, a liquidity provider, lost just under $6 million.
The post ‘We Investigated Ourselves’: ZachXBT Slams EdgeX After Sudden Token Collapse appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Crypto World
Zcash Miner Fortitude to Go Public in HeartSciences Merger
Zcash miner Fortitude Mining Holdings is set to merge with medical technology company HeartSciences in a deal that will allow Fortitude to become publicly traded without pursuing a traditional initial public offering.
The all-stock transaction announced Tuesday will see Fortitude’s management team assume control of the combined company, which will operate under the Fortitude name and is expected to trade on Nasdaq under the ticker symbol TUDE, subject to regulatory approval. Existing HeartSciences shareholders will retain a minority ownership stake.
HeartSciences CEO Andrew Simpson hinted at the rationale behind the transaction, saying it would free the company from “the constant cycle of raising capital” while providing what it believes is the best path forward for shareholders.
While the combination brings together two unrelated businesses — Fortitude mines digital assets, while HeartSciences develops AI-enabled cardiac diagnostics — the deal is effectively a reverse merger that gives Fortitude access to the public markets through an existing Nasdaq-listed company. For HeartSciences, which has faced ongoing capital needs, the transaction offers shareholders continued exposure to a publicly traded business while allowing its healthcare unit to continue operating under Simpson’s leadership.
The structure is similar to other crypto companies that have reached the public markets through mergers rather than traditional IPOs. For example, Bitcoin miner Core Scientific listed via a SPAC merger in 2022, while Cipher Mining also went public through a SPAC transaction.
Shares of HeartSciences, which continue to trade on Nasdaq under the ticker HSCS pending completion of the transaction, rose as much as 91% on Tuesday, according to Google Finance data.

HeartSciences stock. Source: Google Finance
Related: CoinShares stock makes US debut on Nasdaq following SPAC merger
HeartSciences remained unprofitable before merger deal
HeartSciences has yet to achieve meaningful commercial revenue and has reported net losses for several consecutive years. According to MarketScreener, the company generated minimal revenue in fiscal 2025 while its net loss widened to $8.77 million from $6.61 million a year earlier.
Despite its financial challenges, HeartSciences advanced its product roadmap in fiscal 2025, launching its MyoVista Insights software platform, which is designed to modernize existing ECG management systems.
As a privately held company, Fortitude has disclosed little about its finances. However, it said it had scaled its annualized production to 157,000 Zcash (ZEC) as of May 31. ZEC was last trading at about $413 apiece, CoinMarketCap data showed at time of publication. That gave the token a market cap of $6.92 billion.
Crypto World
Bitcoin could drop to $59,000 in the short-term as liquidity dries up
Bitcoin and ether are grinding toward the lower end of their recent ranges, major market making firm Wintermute’s OTC trading desk said in a Wednesday note shared with CoinDesk, with both assets caught between last week’s hawkish Fed and the stop-start Iran headlines.
Options markets price a relatively tight move for the next 24 hours. Wintermute’s one-day straddle, a measure of expected swing derived from options pricing, put bitcoin in a $61,242 to $63,563 range and ether between $1,606 and $1,694, implying moves of about 1.9% and 2.7% respectively.
The backdrop is deteriorating. Token correlations are rising, meaning assets are moving together rather than on their own fundamentals, while liquidity is thinning into the summer months with no fresh institutional bid visible in ETF flows.
Wintermute flagged $59,000 as the level to watch, calling it the bear market low and the key support if current pressure continues.
Three catalysts shape the rest of the week: the U.S.-Iran peace deal and whether it holds, Thursday’s PCE inflation print, the Fed’s preferred measure of price growth, and the quarterly options expiry at month-end, which can amplify moves as traders roll or close large positions.
Crypto World
CFTC Sues Kentucky to Defend Its Exclusive Jurisdiction Over Prediction Markets

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission sued Kentucky on Tuesday to stop the state from using its own laws to shut down federally registered prediction markets. The suit widens a campaign the agency has now pressed against a string of states. The CFTC filed a Complaint for Declaratory and… Read the full story at The Defiant
Crypto World
Cboe Joins Prediction Market Race With Mini S&P 500 Binary Options
Cboe Global Markets has rolled out the first product in Cboe Predicts, its new prediction markets suite, listing binary options on the Mini-S&P 500 Index (XSP) through Interactive Brokers.
Charles Schwab will add access in the coming months, with other brokers to follow.
Cboe Targets Prediction Markets With Mini-S&P 500 Contracts
According to the press release, the contracts are listed under the symbols XSPBW and XSPBX.
“Cboe Predicts represents the latest expansion of Cboe’s S&P 500 Index (SPX) product suite. XSP allows customers to trade on the performance of the S&P 500 Index (SPX) but is scaled to 1/10th the size of SPX – making it a smaller, more retail-friendly alternative,” the global markets operator said.
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The contracts let traders take a simple yes-or-no position on where the index closes. A “yes” position pays $100 if the index settles at or above a chosen level. A “no” position pays the same if it settles below.
Cboe routes the products through leading retail brokers and clears them centrally through the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC).
JJ Kinahan, Cboe’s Head of Retail Expansion, tied the move to demand following zero-days-to-expiration (0DTE) options. Rob Hocking, Cboe’s Global Head of Derivatives, framed the launch as an effort to raise standards across the sector.
“We look forward to bringing our experience, trusted market infrastructure, and the deep liquidity of the SPX options ecosystem to prediction markets. Our goal is to help set a higher standard for market integrity, product design and investor protection…” he added.
The firm said that its future plans include adding XSP vertical spreads through Cboe’s patent-pending Quoted Spread Book. Cboe is the latest established firm to enter the territory pioneered by Polymarket and Kalshi. Even Meta reportedly wants in with a standalone app.
The launch lands as prediction markets attract record interest. Open interest across the sector recently hit an all-time high of $1.48 billion.
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The post Cboe Joins Prediction Market Race With Mini S&P 500 Binary Options appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
OG Bitcoin Selling Falls To 19-Month Low As New Bottom Signal Arises
Bitcoin (BTC) holders who acquired their coins more than five years ago have cut spending to a 90-day average of 962 BTC, the lowest level since November 2024, according to CryptoQuant data. The slowdown follows three major spending peaks over the past two years, including a high of 3,860 BTC in May 2024.
At the same time, BTC analysts said that market and profitability indicators are converging in the second half of 2026, putting a new timeline of a potential Bitcoin bottom.
Bitcoin “OG” holders step back
Crypto analyst Darkfost said the current cycle has produced the highest level of spending by long-term Bitcoin holders on record. The cohort tracked in the dataset consists of investors who acquired Bitcoin more than five years ago.
Using spent transaction outputs (STXO), which track Bitcoin that has moved across the network, the analyst identified three major spending waves following strong rallies.

OG Bitcoin Holders selling pressure. Source: CryptoQuant
The 90-day moving average peaked at 3,860 BTC in May 2024, 3,200 BTC in February 2025 and 2,360 BTC in September 2025. Individual sessions were far larger, with some days recording output exceeding 10,000, 30,000 and even 142,000 BTC.
That selling pressure has eased sharply. The 90-day average has dropped to 962 BTC, the lowest reading in 19 months. Darkfost said the most expensive coins held by this group were acquired for about $63,200, which is close to current prices. This indicates that many of these holders are choosing not to sell, even though their holdings are trading near their highest cost basis.
Bitcoin Researcher Axel Adler Jr. further noted a split between newer and older BTC investors. The analyst said that Bitcoin’s adjusted net unrealized profit/loss (aNUPL) has fallen to -0.14 from near zero a month ago, showing that the average holder has moved back into unrealized losses as BTC traded near $62,500. However, Adler Jr argued,
“STH capital has shrunk by -56%, while LTH capital has barely drawn down. Weak hands are capitulating. Strong hands have not even flinched.”
Adler Jr. added that the key metric has spent nearly half of the past three months below zero, indicating sustained pressure on newer BTC market participants rather than a broad capitulation across long-term holders.

STH vs LTH realized cap analysis. Source: Axel Adler Jr.
Related: Bitcoin slump worsens amid SpaceX rout: Can BTC price hold $60K any longer?
BTC halving cycle points to September bottom, says analyst
Crypto analyst LP highlighted a recurring pattern tied to Bitcoin’s halving cycles. The previous bear market entered a final capitulation phase 826 days after the halving event, followed by a major low and sideways consolidation for 70 to 110 days.
For the current cycle, the 826-day marker falls on July 6. Applying the same timing range places a potential bottoming window in early September.

BTC bottom analysis by LP. Source: X
The trader noted that the scenario becomes more relevant if Bitcoin continues to trade higher into early July.
Likewise, BTC trader Titan also identified downside liquidity below the current levels. On the quarterly chart, Bitcoin has an untapped low near $58,900 and an open fair value gap between roughly $49,000 and $58,900.
The trader explained that leaving the quarterly low untouched throughout September may draw more attention to that liquidity zone, eventually leading to a market bottom between Q3 and Q4.

BTC quarterly analysis. Source: X
Related: Bitcoin gets new $54K warning as BTC price hits 11-day low on Asia tech sell-off
Crypto World
Mark Zuckerberg Ordered Meta Staff to Develop Moneyless Prediction Market: NYT
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has reportedly directed his staff to create a prediction markets mobile app called “Arena” in what could become a challenge to platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket.
According to a Tuesday New York Times report citing two employees with knowledge of the matter, Zuckerberg ordered the development of the prediction markets app that would allow users to place wagers using a points system rather than money. The app will reportedly function independently of Meta’s existing platforms, including Facebook and Instagram.
The news outlet said insiders described the effort as experimental but a top priority for the company. If launched, it could challenge Kalshi’s and Polymarket’s market share for prediction markets, with Meta reporting its apps drew in 3.56 billion users daily as of March.
Meta has previously attempted to launch products with potential impacts on the crypto and blockchain industry, including its planned Libra stablecoin in 2019 that was later rebranded to Diem and dropped in 2022. In April, the company rolled out USDC payouts for certain Facebook creators in Colombia and the Philippines, with some US lawmakers expressing concerns about Meta’s US plans for stablecoins.
Meta reportedly planned to cut 10% of its staff in April amid the company pivoting to artificial intelligence, a move expected to affect about 8,000 people.

Source: Kalshi
Prediction markets still under scrutiny in US
While US regulators like the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) remain engaged in legal battles with several state authorities over prediction markets, lawmakers are also considering legislation to address issues like insider trading and profiting from nonpublic information while in office.
Some of lawmakers’ concerns stemmed from a soldier allegedly making more than $400,000 on a Polymarket event contract related to the capture of Venezuela President Nicolás Maduro, removed by US forces in January to face a criminal trial in New York City. The soldier, Gannon Ken Van Dyke, is scheduled to go to trial in December.
Magazine: Japanese pension fund tips 1% in crypto, G7 urges action on NK hackers: Asia Express
Crypto World
Bitcoin drops to $62,000 as the chip selloff deepens for a second day
Micron, Marvell and On Semiconductor, each more than doubled in 2026, led the drop. The selloff pulled the S&P 500 down 1.4% and the Nasdaq 100 down 3.3%. An attempted rebound in Asian chip stocks failed to hold on Wednesday, with Taiwan Semiconductor down more than 3%.
Oil kept falling as the other half of the macro picture. Brent crude slipped about 1% toward $76 a barrel as tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz became more visible following the US-Iran interim peace deal. A gauge of the dollar climbed to a seven-month high as investors moved toward safer assets.
The crypto-specific signal sits in the fund flows, said Mike McCluskey, co-founder of tx, in an email to CoinDesk. He called bitcoin’s stabilization in the low-to-mid $60,000s a measured response to the Federal Reserve’s hawkish turn, given how hard such shifts usually hit digital assets.
US spot bitcoin ETFs have seen a record 30-day net outflow of more than $6 billion, which McCluskey described as sustained institutional de-risking by the same buyers that drove this cycle. Until those flows clearly reverse, he said, relief rallies are likely to hit a hard ceiling.
McCluskey also flagged Friday’s options expiry on Deribit, with roughly $10.6 billion in notional value set to expire. An option is a contract giving the right to buy or sell at a set price, and notional value is the total value of the assets those contracts cover.
Crypto World
StarkWare Launches Zero-Knowledge KYC Demo on Starknet
Zero-knowledge scaling company StarkWare has introduced Private KYC on Starknet, enabling users to complete know-your-customer requirements without revealing their full personal information.
The system, announced Tuesday as a demo, uses STRK20 privacy features and zero-knowledge STARK proofs to let users prove specific attributes, such as being older than 18 or holding valid credentials, without revealing their full passport details or address.
“Whether you need to prove you’re over 18, hold a valid credential or meet an eligibility rule, verification should only confirm the precise fact,” StarkWare said. Corporations should not collect the full identity behind it, “because every identity database becomes a liability the moment it exists.”
KYC compliance involves handing over personal information and trusting companies to keep it safe. The rollout comes as the US hit a record 3,322 data compromises in 2025, a 79% increase over five years, and the global average cost of a data breach is $4.4 million, according to StationX.
StarkWare users start by scanning their passport on their phones, using the camera and NFC chip to read and confirm the document is genuine and signed by its issuing authority.
They can then encrypt identity data to their Starknet wallet, register attributes in a public onchain registry, and submit zero-knowledge proofs for selective checks. Verifiers can confirm eligibility by reading the public registry without ever seeing the actual identity data.
Related: Privacy push as StarkWare and Sui move toward compliance-ready confidential transfers
“Private KYC shows that verification and privacy aren’t a trade-off,” StarkWare said. “An institution can confirm exactly what it needs without assembling another copy of someone’s identity it then has to defend.”

Contracts check the proofs, not the passports. Source: StarkWare
“Identity checks today ask for your whole document when they only need one fact,” the Starknet team said.
The system is similar to Sam Altman’s World ID (Worldcoin), which uses zk-proofs to verify humanness via iris scans on hardware orbs. However, World ID faced backlash over centralized biometric custody, whereas StarkWare’s self-custody model aims to address that issue.
Data breaches cost millions
According to Axis Intelligence, more than 1 billion health care records have been breached, with an average cost of $7.42 million, as of 2026. In the US, 772 large health care data breaches were confirmed in 2025, the highest annual total ever recorded.
The largest and most damaging data breach in the crypto industry occurred at hardware wallet provider Ledger, which suffered a massive database hack in 2020, resulting in the leak of more than 270,000 customer records and a wave of phishing attacks that continue to this day.
Magazine: Japanese pension fund tips 1% in crypto, G7 urges action on NK hackers: Asia Express
Crypto World
Democrats Urge Probe Into Trump Crypto Dealings With UAE
A group of US Senate Democrats is urging Senate Republican leaders to hold hearings into a reported $500 million deal between the Trump family’s crypto firm and Abu Dhabi royalty.
In a letter on Tuesday, the Democrats told Republicans, who control the Senate, lead its committees and decide on hearings, that they should “immediately hold hearings” into the deal and have Trump administration officials testify about it under oath.
The Wall Street Journal reported in January that an Abu Dhabi investment company backed by Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the United Arab Emirates’ national security adviser, signed a deal in January 2025 to buy a 49% stake in World Liberty Financial, the crypto platform tied to US President Donald Trump.
Months later, in May 2025, the Trump administration made a major arms and artificial intelligence chip deal with the UAE, which the Democratic senators said came “despite concerns raised by US national security officials that China could access the chips.” Trump has said he wasn’t aware of the World Liberty deal.
The letter is the Democrats’ latest bid to probe World Liberty Financial’s dealings and its possible ties to decisions the president has made. Both Trump critics and supporters have criticized the perceived conflict of interest posed by the Trump family’s sprawling crypto interests amid Trump’s push to deregulate the sector.

Donald Trump (right) meeting with Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan (centre) at the White House in March 2025. Source: The White House
“We are deeply concerned about this series of events, which raise questions about what more the UAE may receive — or may have already received — at the expense of US national security after investing in the Trump family crypto company,” the Democrats wrote.
“Congress has a responsibility to investigate the details of the reported investment and whether it influenced subsequent actions by President Trump and the Trump Administration,” they added.
The senators said that they’re also concerned about the Trump administration’s “steps to weaken enforcement” by exempting crypto service providers from financial services regulations and disbanding the Justice Department’s crypto enforcement team.
Senators Elizabeth Warren, Richard Blumenthal, Gary Peters, Dick Durbin and Ron Wyden signed the letter.
Related: Crypto isn’t the problem with the US economy, says senator
Warren has called for an investigation into the UAE deal before, urging Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in February to determine if the deal should be subject to a Committee on Foreign Investment probe.
Earlier this year, Democrats pressed Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Paul Atkins over the decision to drop a fraud case against Justin Sun, a major World Liberty Financial backer.
In May, Democratic Senator Peter Welch and Representative Dave Min launched a probe into Trump’s pardons, including that of Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao.
The pardon came after Binance accepted a $2 billion investment from an Abu Dhabi fund in early 2025 and agreed for the funds to be paid in World Liberty Financial’s stablecoin, USD1.
Magazine: Trump’s crypto ventures raise conflict of interest, insider trading questions
Crypto World
Senator Kennedy Says Crypto Isn’t a US Economic Problem
During a Senate Banking Committee hearing focused on U.S. affordability, Cody Carbone, CEO of the cryptocurrency advocacy group The Digital Chamber, argued that digital assets could reduce costs in payments and make it easier to own and move value. Carbone’s testimony, however, drew limited follow-up from most lawmakers, with only a small number of senators engaging directly on specific questions tied to stablecoins and foreign remittances.
The exchange came as Congress continues to weigh the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act, a proposal advanced by the committee earlier this year. While the bill is widely expected to reach a broader Senate vote soon, additional political and regulatory concerns—particularly around ethics requirements and cross-sector regulatory treatment—are creating uncertainty around timing and final scope.
Key takeaways
- Cody Carbone used the hearing to argue that digital assets could improve affordability through faster, cheaper transactions and reduced frictions in asset ownership and transfers.
- Most lawmakers did not question him on digital assets; Senators Tim Banks and John Kennedy were among the only members to engage directly.
- Carbone linked his affordability argument to the Senate’s progress on the CLARITY Act, which committee leaders moved forward in May.
- Beyond ethics debates, external industry groups are pressing for clarifications that the bill would not expand the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s reach over certain prediction-market activities.
Testimony on affordability and pressure on payment rails
In the Tuesday hearing titled The Affordability Agenda, Carbone presented digital assets as a potential competitive counterweight to incumbent payment systems. He argued that the industry could support affordability outcomes by enabling faster and less costly settlement, applying “competitive pressure” on existing rails, and lowering barriers to purchasing and transferring digital assets.
For institutional stakeholders, the key compliance-relevant aspect of this framing is not the affordability concept itself, but the policy implication that lawmakers may increasingly view digital-asset infrastructure as part of the broader U.S. financial-services toolkit. If Congress advances that approach, firms may need to anticipate tighter legislative integration between digital assets and existing regulatory expectations covering consumer protection, disclosures, and market integrity.
Carbone’s reception on the Senate floor also highlighted the uneven level of legislative attention to crypto-specific implementation details in general policy hearings. Other than questions focused on stablecoins and remittances, senators largely did not interrogate the evidence or compliance mechanisms underlying Carbone’s claims.
Limited engagement from lawmakers, with stablecoin and skepticism
Senators Tim Banks and John Kennedy provided the most direct responses during the hearing. Banks asked Carbone about the cost of foreign remittances relative to options involving U.S. dollar–pegged stablecoins, suggesting an interest in how stablecoin-mediated transfers might affect end-to-end costs for cross-border payments.
Kennedy’s remarks were more dismissive. He told Carbone, “Mr. Carbone, you seem to be here to promote cryptocurrency,” adding that he did not believe digital assets were the core driver of the economic issues the hearing addressed.
This split underscores a continuing challenge for the industry: affordability narratives may resonate rhetorically, but legislative scrutiny may still hinge on whether digital-asset mechanisms deliver measurable consumer and financial-stability benefits in practice—and on how regulators would oversee those mechanisms.
CLARITY Act advances, but ethics and scope disputes persist
Carbone’s testimony centered on the CLARITY Act, which the Senate Banking Committee advanced in May. Committee momentum is important because it signals that at least one major congressional venue views clearer digital-asset market rules as a priority. Still, passage is not guaranteed.
According to reporting on the bill’s committee movement, lawmakers are calling for additional ethics provisions. Such provisions can affect how the legislation is drafted and implemented, including how conflicts of interest, industry influence, and governance standards are addressed in any framework that authorizes or regulates market participants.
Meanwhile, timing remains fluid. Some lawmakers have expected the Senate to consider the bill before the chamber breaks for an August recess, but as of Tuesday, there was no scheduled floor vote.
For compliance teams and financial institutions, this phase matters because it can determine whether firms will need to adapt operational and governance policies in advance of enactment or only after final language is finalized. Ethics-related amendments can also influence how regulators interpret standards and enforce obligations once the statute is in effect.
Industry pushback on prediction markets and CFTC jurisdiction
Separate from ethics disputes, gambling industry groups have reportedly urged the Senate to clarify that the CLARITY Act would not allow the CFTC to pursue sports betting oversight in prediction markets. The concern stems from regulator statements regarding “exclusive jurisdiction” over certain platforms, including examples cited in public discussion such as Kalshi and Polymarket.
The underlying policy issue is jurisdictional boundaries—how a new legislative framework might interact with the existing Commodity Exchange Act and the CFTC’s authority. For firms operating in or adjacent to prediction markets, the uncertainty can have concrete compliance consequences: categorization of products, registration expectations, marketing restrictions, and enforcement risk can all shift depending on how Congress defines regulatory responsibility.
These disputes also illustrate the cross-border and cross-regulatory complexity of crypto-adjacent markets. A bill intended to address digital-asset market structure can inadvertently affect adjacent sectors—particularly where digital tokens, derivatives, or exchange-like trading are involved—requiring careful drafting to avoid unintentionally broad regulatory coverage.
Cointelegraph previously reported that gambling organizations sought clarity on this point as the CLARITY Act advanced, aligning with broader concerns that market structure legislation can produce second-order effects beyond digital-asset trading itself.
Closing perspective: a bill that could reshape oversight priorities
Carbone’s appearance at the affordability hearing points to a legislative strategy that connects digital assets to broader financial policy goals, but the path for the CLARITY Act remains unsettled. The next developments to watch are whether senators agree on ethics amendments and whether the bill’s final text resolves prediction-market jurisdiction concerns without expanding enforcement authority in ways that stakeholders view as unanticipated.
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