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Bitcoin Dips Below $60,000 - What's Going On!? Several Things...

The world's largest cryptocurrency sank as low as $59,099 on Friday, dragging it back beneath the level it sat at on the night Donald Trump won the U.S. presidential election in November 2024. That was supposed to be the turning point, the moment crypto finally got a friend in the White House and an open runway higher. Instead, eighteen months and one $126,000 peak later, bitcoin has given all of it back, plus a bit extra for good measure. Anyone who bought on election night and held through the entire "crypto president" era is now sitting on a loss, which is not exactly the bedtime story the industry's biggest cheerleaders were telling a year ago.

The slide did not happen in one dramatic afternoon. It has been more of a slow leak that turned into a flood this week, with bitcoin shedding close to 20 percent of its value in a matter of days. A hot U.S. jobs report on Friday made things worse by killing off whatever hope traders had left for an interest rate cut, and instead got markets pricing in the opposite outcome, a possible hike. Add in stubbornly high inflation numbers and a market that was already on edge, and you get the kind of session where every green candle gets sold into almost on principle.

Saylor breaks his own rule, and the market panics anyway

Some of the freshest pressure traces back to a name longtime bitcoin watchers never expected to see attached to a sell order: Michael Saylor. His company, Strategy, offloaded 32 bitcoin earlier this week at an average price near $77,000, banking roughly $2.5 million to help cover preferred stock dividend payments. In the context of a treasury that still holds more than 843,000 BTC, that sale amounts to a rounding error, something like 0.004 percent of the stack. But symbolism has always carried weight in crypto, and the idea of Strategy selling at all, after years of "never sell" sermons from its chairman, was enough to spook a market that was already looking for reasons to run.

The reaction snowballed from there. Spot bitcoin ETFs are now in the middle of their longest outflow streak since they launched in early 2024, with total fund assets dropping from roughly $107.8 billion in mid-May to about $82.8 billion now. That is not a rounding error. Billions of dollars have quietly walked out the door over a couple of weeks, and when the buyers who powered last year's rally start acting like sellers, the floor underneath the price tends to disappear fast. Liquidation data backs that up too, with well over a billion dollars in leveraged long positions wiped out across the derivatives market in a single 24-hour stretch.

The money did not vanish, it just found a flashier party

Here is the part that should sting bitcoin's biggest believers more than the price chart does: the capital pulling out of crypto does not appear to be hiding under a mattress. It is rotating straight into AI stocks and the wave of blockbuster IPOs from companies like SpaceX and Anthropic that have investors buzzing about the next big payday. Analysts at K33 and elsewhere have been warning for weeks that bitcoin would struggle as long as the AI trade kept handing out bigger, faster headlines. Apparently they were onto something, because that is exactly what has been happening, and the opportunity cost of parking money in a sideways or falling bitcoin looks worse every day that the AI darlings keep climbing.

None of this means bitcoin is finished, and plenty of traders who have lived through past 50 percent drawdowns will tell you this is just another rough patch for an asset that is famous for testing nerves. CoinDesk's market desk noted that even some bitcoin bulls, like Bitmine chairman Tom Lee, are framing this slump as classic "bottom behavior," the kind of capitulation that tends to show up right before sentiment turns. Whether that call ages well or gets filed next to a hundred other bottom calls that did not pan out is the kind of thing only a few more weeks of price action will settle.

Bottom line

What is clear right now is that the easy "Trump is in office, so bitcoin only goes up" trade has officially expired, and the market is being forced to find a new story to tell itself. A 32-coin sale from Strategy should not have been able to rattle a multi-trillion dollar asset class on its own, and on its own it did not. It was simply the spark that landed on a pile of dry kindling made up of ETF outflows, a more hawkish rate outlook, and a louder, shinier trade sitting right next door. For traders riding this out, the next few weeks of jobs data, Federal Reserve commentary, and ETF flow reports will probably matter more than anything Michael Saylor posts online.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

Binance Opens 7,000 US Stocks to Trade With Crypto - and Americans Are Specifically Excluded

Binance just opened up trading on more than 7,000 US stocks and ETFs from inside its crypto exchange, and the one country specifically blocked from using the feature is the United States itself.

The rollout went live on June 1, dropping Apple, Tesla, Nvidia and thousands of other US-listed names into the same app that handles Bitcoin and Ethereum trades. Users fund their stock buys with stablecoins, mostly USDC, with BNB, USDT and a few others also supported. There is no minimum account balance, the smallest trade is $5, and Binance is charging zero commission with a floor fee of $0.35 per order. Trading runs 24 hours a day, five days a week, tracking normal US market hours plus the global extended sessions other crypto-aware brokers have started offering.

For anyone watching the slow blur between crypto exchanges and traditional brokerages, this is a bigger jump than the usual "we now offer Tesla" announcements. Binance is the largest crypto exchange in the world by spot volume, with a user base that already trusts the platform to hold their digital assets. Adding US equities turns the app into something closer to a global brokerage that happens to run on stablecoin rails, which is the explicit goal CEO Richard Teng has been describing as Binance's "super app" pivot. Fortune was first to report the wider strategy, with Binance confirming the public launch through its own newsroom. The new equities product sits beside spot crypto, derivatives, savings, and the existing payments stack.

The tradfi back end nobody on the front end sees

The trades themselves are not really happening on Binance. Order routing and execution are handled by Nest Trading, a broker dealer regulated out of Abu Dhabi's ADGM, while custody of the actual shares sits with New York based Alpaca, which has quietly become the back end for a long list of fintech and crypto apps offering stock trading. Dividend payments, corporate actions and the rest of the unglamorous brokerage plumbing also run through Alpaca. Binance, despite the branding, is acting as the access layer rather than the broker. That structure is the same model Revolut and a few neobanks already use, except now it is sitting on a stablecoin balance sheet rather than a fiat one. It is a way to launch fast without applying for a US broker dealer license, which Binance is almost certainly never going to receive.

bStocks and the real story for crypto-natives

The launch also previewed something called bStocks, which Binance says will roll out "in the coming weeks" pending regulatory sign off. These are tokenized versions of select US stocks and ETFs, minted on BNB Chain and issued through a special purpose vehicle called BTECH Holdings, registered in ADGM. Users will be able to trigger tokenization themselves, taking shares they already hold in the stock product and minting an on-chain representation. The tokens are designed to be DeFi compatible, meaning users will eventually be able to post them as collateral, supply them to lending markets, or pool them for liquidity. This is the part that should grab the attention of anyone watching real world asset tokenization, because it is one of the first attempts by a major exchange to put US equities directly into a DeFi loop with proper SPV backing.

It is also where the regulatory questions get loud. Tokenized stocks have been tried before, most notably by FTX, which had to wind that product down well before its collapse. The bStocks structure looks more conservative on paper, with the SPV holding the underlying shares and the token representing a claim against the SPV rather than a free floating synthetic. Whether US securities regulators consider tokenized claims on Apple to be securities themselves is still an unsettled question, and that is before you get to how individual countries treat retail derivatives. Binance is clearly betting that the ADGM jurisdiction and the non-US user wall give it enough room to find out.

Locked out at home

The clearest signal of where Binance still stands with US regulators is the geographic restriction baked into the launch. American users cannot access US stock trading on Binance, with the company citing American securities rules as the reason. That is not surprising given the 2023 settlement that left the exchange under US monitoring, and the renewed Treasury attention covered on Global Crypto Press last month. It is, however, a strange marketing position for a product whose entire selling point is access to the US equity market. The irony has not been lost on commentators, who keep pointing out that the only people who cannot use Binance to buy Apple are the ones who could just open a Robinhood account and do it for free.

The bigger picture is that the line between a crypto exchange and a brokerage is now barely visible. Coinbase has its own equity ambitions, Robinhood is pushing tokenized stocks in Europe, and Kraken's parent company recently bought a Hong Kong stablecoin firm to bolt payments onto its trading stack. Binance is moving faster than most of them, and on a much larger user base. Whether American regulators eventually let any version of this product through the door is the question that decides how much of it stays offshore. If bStocks actually launches and US equities start trading on chain through a regulated SPV, anyone still asking whether crypto and traditional markets are converging will have their answer.

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Author: Ren Nakamura
Asia Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

Michael Saylor's Strategy Just Sold Bitcoin for the First Time Since 2022 - The 'Never Sell' Era Is Over

strategy bitcoin

Michael Saylor spent five years saying one thing about Bitcoin: Strategy would never sell. That sentence is no longer true.


The company disclosed in a June 1 SEC filing that it offloaded 32 BTC at an average price of $77,136 in late May, pulling in roughly $2.5 million. It is the first time the company has sold any of its Bitcoin since 2022, and the first sale under the corporate strategy Saylor built his entire public identity around. The amount is tiny - about 0.004% of the company's stack of roughly 843,706 BTC - but in this market, symbolism moves harder than basis points. By Monday afternoon, Strategy's stock was off around 4% and Bitcoin had slid back below $70,000 for the first time in nearly two months.

The sale itself is the kind of housekeeping that should not have made anybody flinch. The amount Strategy raised would barely cover a long weekend of dividend payments. What it did do is force every Bitcoin maximalist who has been quoting Saylor for the last five years to update their script. It also gave a nervous market exactly the headline it did not need. And it forced Saylor himself to defend a move he had spent half a decade promising would never happen.

Why a $2.5M Sale Out of Tens of Billions Even Matters

The money is going toward dividend obligations on STRC, the perpetual preferred stock Strategy launched and brands as "Stretch." That share class carries fat coupon payments that have to be funded with actual cash, and Strategy's cash flow from its software business is not enough on its own to cover the full bill. Across all of its preferred share classes, the company is staring down well over a billion dollars a year in dividend obligations, by various analyst estimates. So when the books needed to clear, a tiny slice of the world's largest corporate Bitcoin pile got sold to write the check. Saylor took to X within hours of the disclosure to defend the move, saying the company's goal is "to make STRC the best credit instrument in the world."

Translation: this was not a confidence problem about Bitcoin. It was a plumbing problem about Strategy. The financial engineering Saylor has used to keep buying Bitcoin, issuing preferreds and convertibles and equity, is the same engineering now quietly forcing him to sell a sliver of it. That trade is fine on the spreadsheet. It is far less fine for the mythology built around it.

From 'Never Sell' to 'Never Be a Net Seller'

Up until last month, the Saylor line was clean. Bitcoin will never be sold. Period. After a May 5 hint that Strategy might trim a tiny portion of its position to fund dividends, the language started shifting. Now the company's framing is that it will never be a "net seller," meaning Strategy still plans to buy far more Bitcoin than it sells. Saylor's pitch to investors is that the firm will buy 10 to 20 BTC for every 1 BTC it ever sells. That math actually checks out for Strategy's balance sheet, but it is not what bag-holders and true believers have been quoting in YouTube comments for years.

Coverage from outlets including The Block framed the sale as a watershed even at this size, because every single one of Saylor's previous public appearances had hammered the same point. He has compared selling Bitcoin to chopping up the family heirloom. He has said the only way the company would ever sell was if the entire thesis collapsed. The thesis has not collapsed. And yet 32 coins are gone, and the slogan got quietly upgraded to something a little more flexible.

The Market Did Not Need Another Reason to Sell

The timing also stings. Bitcoin slipped below $70,000 this week for the first time in nearly two months, and crypto-wide liquidations passed $1.5 billion in a 24-hour window. US spot Bitcoin ETFs have now logged 11 straight sessions of net outflows, with investors pulling close to $3.5 billion across that stretch. Fresh tension around Iran and a new round of US Treasury sanctions targeting an Iranian crypto exchange added more macro noise on top of that. Traders were already nervous, and a Strategy sell-disclosure, even a token one, landed on a market that was looking for an excuse to keep panicking.

That is the meaningful part of the story. Strategy did not break anything. The actual Bitcoin thesis, that big institutions will keep buying, that the supply is finite, that public companies will keep parking treasury into BTC, is all still intact. But the single most public Bitcoin bull on the planet finally hit a sell button. Even if it is for the most boring reason imaginable, the optics travel further than the trade.

What Happens Next

Strategy is still by far the largest public-company Bitcoin holder, the preferred stock structure is currently delivering more buying power than it is costing in dividend obligations, and 32 coins is a footnote in raw terms. According to disclosures summarized by CoinDesk, Saylor has already promised the next quarterly filing will show heavy net buying, not selling. The math should hold. The slogan will not. And every analyst who covers MSTR is going to be reading the next preferred-stock disclosure with a magnifying glass.

For the man who turned "never sell" into a corporate religion, that first sell ticket is a line crossed and there is no uncrossing it. Investors will watch the next quarterly disclosures more closely than they used to, and Saylor's old slogan will need a permanent rewrite. If Strategy keeps buying 10 to 20 BTC for every one it offloads, this will look like nothing in a year. If preferred-dividend pressure forces bigger trims down the road, that is when the conversation actually changes. For now, the "never sell" era is over, replaced by something a little more honest and a lot more boring.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

As Tech Companies Rush To Build AI Datacenters, Crypto Miners Already Have What They Need - The New Ecosystem Emerging RIGHT NOW...

A new layer 1 blockchain has done something nobody expected in 2026 - made GPU mining briefly profitable again.

Recently launching their mainnet, Pearl (PRL) had a pitch clever enough that it sounded like it shouldn't work. Secure the chain by running the same matrix multiplications that power AI inference and training, the kind of math that already runs on every modern Nvidia card. Mine a coin and, in theory, do useful AI compute on the side. The protocol team calls the consensus mechanism Proof of Useful Work, a direct shot at the wasted-energy criticism that has followed Bitcoin around for a decade. For a few weeks after launch the numbers looked unreal, the kind of numbers that send people on YouTube to start filming rig builds with a soft jazz background.

For a crypto miner, it doesn't feel much different - keep their hardware powered up and online, and crypto appears in their wallet.  But behind the scenes, they're no longer processing crypto transactions, they're renting out their GPU's to AI companies training models or doing whatever they do, and getting paid for it in crypto. 

A single GPU like Nvidia's RTX 5090 was pulling over $30+ a day at peak.

Crypto Twitter started looking like 2017. Posts went viral claiming $100 to $200 a day was possible if you stacked GPUs or rented them in bulk from cloud providers like RunPod and Vast.ai. The Pearl token itself hit an all-time high of $1.65 on May 29 according to coin tracking sites, and listings appeared on smaller exchanges almost overnight. Together AI, a serious AI cloud company, even signed on as a partner and launched a Pearl-powered discounted inference endpoint for the Gemma-4 model that runs more than 25 percent cheaper than its standard pricing. That part of the story is what gives this coin its serious edge over the usual mining gimmick, since real customers using real models are actually subsidizing the GPU work.

The rush met network reality fast

As of this week, that same RTX 5090 is generating around $17.19 a day in PRL according to data flagged by Tom's Hardware. That is a 49 percent drop in roughly six weeks. The reason is exactly what veteran miners would tell you before you opened the wallet app to check. Too many GPUs joined the network, mining difficulty climbed steeply to match, and per-card payouts collapsed at the speed network economics always collapse them. Most of the new mining capacity is not even sitting in someone's basement, which makes the squeeze even sharper.

A lot of the supply rush has come from rented cloud GPUs rather than hobbyist rigs. Miners have been spinning up RTX 4090 and 5090 instances on RunPod, Vast.ai, and similar platforms, doing the math on whether the rental fee per hour is lower than the daily PRL yield, and renting in bulk when the spread looks good. That arbitrage is what causes these gold rushes to die quickly now compared to the Ethereum mining era. You don't need to wait for a six-week shipping delay on a 3080 or hope the hardware market cooperates. You just open a tab, click rent, and instantly add hashrate that everyone else on the network now has to share earnings with.

Useful work is the real argument here

Strip away the speculation noise and Pearl is one of the more interesting technical experiments to come out of the AI-crypto crossover this year. Bitcoin miners get accused of burning electricity for nothing, and that argument has stuck even with people who like the asset. Pearl's claim is that every block mined produced something a real customer was going to pay for anyway, which is matrix multiplication for inference and training. If the Together AI partnership scales, the model is that companies get cheaper AI compute, miners get token rewards, and the network gets secured all from the same operation. That framing is genuinely new for proof systems, even if the early profitability charts are following the same old curve.

The risk for anyone late to this story is the math. If you bought hardware or made rental commitments based on the April profitability numbers, those numbers are already half what they were and still falling. The supply side responds within hours on rented capacity, so any upward move in PRL price gets eaten by new miners almost immediately. Crypto traders who lived through the Ethereum mining cycle will recognize this pattern, with the difference that everything is happening in weeks now instead of months. The token may still have plenty of upside as an investment, but the mining-side return on capital is a separate question that has clearly already turned.

What it means for the next AI-tied coin

For now, credit goes to Pearl for making GPU mining briefly profitable again, for how long is the question, so this could end as another 2026 footnote that proved the AI hype cycle eats new tokens faster than ever. Either way, the model it pioneered is going to attract copies. Useful work blockchains tied to real AI workloads are a much harder sell for regulators and environmentally minded institutional money to dismiss, since the energy is doing something a customer paid for. Expect more projects pitching similar economics over the next several months, especially ones that try to fix the difficulty death spiral with smarter emission schedules. For anyone holding PRL or thinking about adding hashrate, the smart move is to check today's revenue numbers, then check again next week, because the curve is still bending in the same direction.

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Author: Dorian Fenwick
Silicon Valley Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

FBI's $8 Billion Bitcoin Bust Just Set the Record for the Largest Crypto Forfeiture in U.S. History

The biggest cryptocurrency forfeiture in U.S. history just happened, and it has a name: Operation Blackout.

Federal officials this week confirmed the FBI has seized roughly $8 billion in cryptocurrency tied to a sprawling network of overseas "scam compounds" that funneled stolen funds out of American bank accounts. The figure breaks every previous record for a single coordinated crypto enforcement action, and it puts a hard number on something that until recently was treated like background noise in the industry. The bureau says the operation also resulted in nearly 300 arrests and the rescue of close to 2,000 people who were allegedly trafficked into forced labor inside the compounds. For the average crypto holder, this is the rare federal headline that has nothing to do with regulating exchanges or stablecoin issuers. It is about where a meaningful chunk of stolen retail money has actually been going.

The centerpiece of the seizure is roughly 127,000 bitcoin pulled from wallets connected to Chen Zhi, the chairman of Cambodia-based Prince Holding Group. Chen has been charged with wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy in a federal indictment unsealed out of the Eastern District of New York. Officials value the haul at $8 billion at current prices, with some estimates pegging the peak value closer to $15 billion. Chen himself is not in custody and is currently listed as at large. If he is ever brought back to the United States and convicted on every count, he faces a maximum of 40 years in prison.

Inside the so-called "pig butchering" pipeline

The schemes underneath all of this are the ones most crypto users already know by reputation, even if they have not been targeted directly. They are the long-running romance and friendship scams that start with a wrong-number text or a too-friendly LinkedIn message, drift into months of conversation, and end with the victim being walked through a fake trading platform and told to wire crypto into it. The industry term, borrowed from Mandarin, is "pig butchering" - the victim is fattened up emotionally before being financially slaughtered. The Justice Department alleges the Prince Group ran exactly this playbook at industrial scale, operating compounds across Cambodia where trafficked workers were forced to run the scripts under threat of violence. Prosecutors say the compounds were ringed with high walls and barbed wire and functioned less like offices than like prisons.

Operation Blackout is actually an umbrella that covers at least four separate investigations. The Prince Group case is the one labeled Operation Zephyr Exodus. A second strand, Operation Sand Dollar, targeted scam compounds in the United Arab Emirates and led to the arrest of 275 people in Dubai with the help of local police, six of whom are now lined up for extradition to face federal charges in San Diego. The DOJ alleges each of the nine Dubai compounds raided was pulling in around $6 million a year in fraud proceeds. The other operations folded into Blackout cover related cells across Southeast Asia, with cooperation from law enforcement in the UK and other partner countries.

Wider implications...

The number to sit with is not really the $8 billion. It is the figure the FBI's own Internet Crime Complaint Center put out earlier this month: nearly 72,000 complaints last year tied to cryptocurrency investment fraud, with reported losses of more than $7.5 billion. That is bigger than the headline value of most exchange hacks combined, and almost all of it is alleged to have come from individual victims, not institutions. The bureau also says its Operation Level Up program, which proactively warns people who appear to be mid-scam, has flagged nearly 9,000 victims so far and that 77 percent of them had no idea they were being scammed. That program is credited with stopping more than $560 million in losses before the money moved.

For traders and long-term holders, the practical takeaway is uncomfortable but useful. The biggest threat to most retail crypto users right now is not a smart contract exploit or a centralized exchange going under. It is a stranger who will spend three months pretending to care about your weekend before pointing you at a wallet address. Anything that arrives unsolicited, especially anything that ends with a link to an "investment platform" you have never heard of, deserves the same suspicion you would give a check from a Nigerian prince. The fact that the federal government just clawed back $8 billion of this money does not mean the pipeline is gone. It means we finally know how big the pipeline is.

What happens to the seized coins next is its own open question. The DOJ has signaled the bitcoin will move through formal forfeiture proceedings, which can take years, and that the government will try to return funds to identifiable victims where possible. In practice, those recoveries are usually partial and slow. The rest could end up in the U.S. Marshals Service's auction pipeline or, depending on policy choices made in Washington, the country's strategic bitcoin reserve. Either way, this is the largest single transfer of bitcoin from criminal hands to the U.S. government on record. For an asset class that spent its first decade arguing it could not be touched by traditional law enforcement, that is a notable moment.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

Mastercard Just Got New York's Toughest Crypto License - The Stablecoin War Coming to Wall Street...

One of the world's biggest payments networks just walked through the door that took crypto-native firms a decade to even get a knock on.

Mastercard Transaction Services (U.S.) LLC has received a BitLicense from the New York State Department of Financial Services, clearing it to operate digital asset, stablecoin, and tokenized deposit activity inside the state. The approval was announced on May 27, and it's a big deal for one specific reason - the NYDFS BitLicense is widely considered the hardest crypto compliance regime to clear in the United States. Established in 2015, the framework requires applicants to meet detailed standards on capital reserves, cybersecurity, anti-money laundering, fraud monitoring, consumer protection, and operational resilience. Plenty of crypto firms have spent years and millions of dollars trying to obtain one. Mastercard now has it, and the move tells you exactly where the world's biggest payments network sees the next decade of money movement going.

Under the license, Mastercard can legally transmit, store, convert, and trade digital currencies and stablecoins on behalf of customers in New York. The approval also covers tokenized deposits, the bank-issued, blockchain-based representations of deposit balances that most major banks have started experimenting with. Importantly, this isn't Mastercard launching a Coinbase competitor or a consumer wallet app. The company has been pretty clear that it is targeting the plumbing - settlement rails and back-end infrastructure that other businesses will use, not retail customers swiping cards to buy ETH. The strategic logic is that whoever controls the on-chain settlement layer between stablecoins, banks, and merchants gets to sit in the middle of an enormous amount of future transaction flow.

It matters more than you may think...

To understand why Mastercard burning through compliance hoops in New York is a story, you have to look at what they bought two months ago. In March, the company agreed to acquire stablecoin payments firm BVNK for $1.8 billion, with up to another $300 million in performance-based payouts on top. BVNK isn't a household name in crypto circles, but among fintechs and cross-border payment processors it's a serious piece of infrastructure for moving stablecoins across borders and converting them in and out of fiat. Mastercard didn't write that kind of check because they thought stablecoins were a passing phase. They wrote it because they expect stablecoin volume to keep ripping into mainstream B2B payments, and they want to own the rails before someone else does.

The New York approval is what makes the BVNK strategy actually executable inside the United States. Without a BitLicense, Mastercard would have been heavily restricted in offering digital asset settlement services to New York-based customers, who include some of the largest banks and corporations in the country. With it, the company can plug BVNK's stablecoin infrastructure straight into its existing global card network and start offering settlement services to enterprise clients without each one having to go figure out their own crypto regulatory situation. According to reports, Mastercard Chief Product Officer Jorn Lambert framed regulatory clarity as central to the company's plan to scale stablecoins and tokenized deposits globally. Translated out of executive speak, that means they were not going to push hard on stablecoins until they had cover from regulators, and now they have it.

The compliance gap is now Mastercard's moat...

Here's the part that should make crypto-native companies nervous. The NYDFS BitLicense framework is brutal for newer firms - the consumer protection, AML, sanctions screening, and cybersecurity requirements are calibrated for big banks, not for protocol developers who want to ship code on weekends. Several well-funded crypto companies have been stuck in BitLicense limbo for years, and some have pulled out of New York entirely rather than keep fighting. Mastercard, which already runs bank-grade compliance for one of the largest payment networks on earth, plugged its existing controls into the crypto stack and got approved. The same set of requirements that has been a barrier for crypto firms is essentially a tailwind for a payments giant that does this stuff for a living.

This is exactly what regulators in Washington and Albany have been signaling for the last year. As stablecoins get treated more like real financial instruments, anti-money laundering controls, sanctions enforcement, and consumer protection are no longer optional add-ons. They're the price of admission. Established financial players who already meet those standards get to move first. Industry observers are calling the new dynamic a "compliance war," and at the moment Mastercard has artillery that most crypto-native firms can't match yet.

For the average trader...

If you trade or hold crypto, you probably won't notice anything change overnight. Mastercard isn't going to start letting you buy Bitcoin off a debit card swipe at Walgreens, at least not because of this approval. What you should expect to see over the next 12 to 24 months is more transactions, especially cross-border B2B payments and merchant settlements, quietly running on stablecoin rails behind the scenes. The stablecoin you receive after selling a coin on a major exchange may settle through Mastercard's infrastructure. The remittance someone in your family receives from abroad may have ridden a stablecoin for a few minutes before arriving as dollars in a bank account. That's the long game here, making the dollar move on blockchain without anyone needing to know or care.

The bigger picture is that the line between traditional finance and crypto keeps getting thinner, and it's moving in a very specific direction. Visa quietly built out stablecoin settlement years ago. Coinbase got a federal trust bank charter last month. Now Mastercard has the toughest state-level digital asset license in the country and a stablecoin infrastructure firm sitting on its balance sheet. The companies that crypto natives once viewed as the legacy enemy are now the ones doing the most aggressive blockchain build-out. Whether you find that vindicating or unsettling depends on which side of the trade you were on, but it's clearly the direction things are heading from here.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

Wall Street's Infrastructure King Just Integrated Chainlink - The DTCC Move Everyone's Been Waiting For

DTCC wallstreet

Wall Street's plumbing just got a major upgrade, and the company that clears trillions in trades every day is bringing Chainlink along for the ride.


On May 12, the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation, the obscure New York institution that quietly settles essentially every US stock and bond trade you have ever made, announced that it is integrating Chainlink to power a new tokenized collateral platform. DTCC plans to launch the platform, called the Collateral AppChain, in Q4 of this year. For anyone watching the slow march of crypto infrastructure into traditional finance, this is a milestone that should not be underestimated. The DTCC sits at the absolute center of US capital markets, processing trade settlements measured in the hundreds of trillions of dollars annually, and it does not partner with random crypto outfits on a whim.

What DTCC Is Actually Building

The Collateral AppChain is a blockchain-based system designed to automate the messy and surprisingly manual work of moving collateral between trading partners around the clock. In traditional finance, collateral management still runs on schedules built in a pre-internet era, with cutoff times, batch processes, and operational windows that can leave billions of dollars of capital sitting unproductive during weekends or off-hours. DTCC's pitch is that smart contracts can do this work continuously, with pricing, valuation, margin calls, and settlement all happening in real time on chain. Chainlink will provide the data infrastructure that makes this possible, supplying price feeds, identity verification, and the cross-system messaging layer Chainlink calls its Runtime Environment.

The technical pieces being borrowed from Chainlink are familiar to anyone who has watched the protocol's work in DeFi over the past few years. Chainlink's oracle network is what feeds price data into smart contracts so they know when collateral becomes insufficient and needs to be topped up. Its Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol, known as CCIP, is what lets one blockchain talk to another in a verifiable way. According to DTCC's own announcement, the AppChain will use both, along with Chainlink's emerging data standard, to handle pricing, valuation, margining, collateral optimization, and settlement.

Why This Matters More Than the Headlines Suggest

If you have followed institutional crypto adoption stories for any length of time, you have heard a lot of vague announcements about banks "exploring" tokenization or "studying" blockchain pilots. This is something different. The DTCC is not exploring. It is naming a launch quarter and naming a specific vendor for a specific function that touches the core of how Wall Street manages risk. Smart NAV, the 2024 pilot that brought mutual fund net asset value data on chain with JPMorgan, Franklin Templeton, and BNY Mellon participating, was the warmup. The Collateral AppChain is the production deployment. That progression, from pilot to mainnet for one of the most conservative institutions in finance, is itself the story.

For Chainlink, the timing could not be better. The LINK token has been treated by markets as a kind of barometer for institutional crypto adoption for years, often moving on news of new pilots or integrations. Having the DTCC name Chainlink by name as the infrastructure backbone for tokenized collateral, with a Q4 production launch attached, gives the network something it has rarely had during its long history of grinding adoption work, which is a clear public milestone with a confirmed timeline and a brand-name customer at the center of US clearing.

The Bigger Pattern Wall Street Is Following

This deal does not exist in a vacuum. In the past few months, Coinbase landed a federal trust bank charter, Morgan Stanley launched crypto trading on E*Trade, Charles Schwab opened waitlists for spot Bitcoin and Ethereum trading, and Kraken's parent dropped $600 million on a Hong Kong stablecoin firm. Major US financial institutions are no longer asking whether to engage with crypto rails, they are racing to lock in their positions before competitors do. The DTCC's move, given how central it is to the actual machinery of US markets, sends a louder signal than any of those individual announcements. When the institution that settles the trades decides the future of collateral management runs on blockchain, the rest of the industry tends to follow.

For ordinary investors and traders, the immediate impact will be invisible. Collateral management is back-office plumbing, not something you see when you open an app. But the longer-term implications are real. A 24/7 collateral system means margin calls that can be met in minutes instead of overnight, reduced counterparty risk during volatile markets, and capital that does not have to sit idle waiting for settlement windows to open. It also means that, by Q4, the country's most important trade clearing house will be running on the same blockchain oracle infrastructure that powers most of DeFi. Whether the crypto industry deserved that endorsement or not, it now has it.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News

A Hacker Just Minted $77 MILLION in Fake Bitcoin on Echo Protocol - But Only Walked Away With $816,000

A DeFi attacker pulled off what looked like one of the year's biggest heists, then watched the payout shrink to chump change.

On Tuesday, Echo Protocol confirmed that a hacker had used a compromised administrative key to mint roughly 1,000 unauthorized eBTC tokens on the Monad blockchain, a stash with a paper value of about $77 million. For a few hours that number ricocheted around crypto Twitter as the next mega exploit of 2026, following a year that has already seen more than a billion dollars vanish from DeFi protocols. Then the on-chain reality set in. The Monad eBTC market simply did not have enough liquidity for anyone to dump that much fake Bitcoin without crashing the price into the dirt. By the time the attacker finished what they could actually cash out, the realized take was roughly $816,000 in ETH, deposited into Tornado Cash to muddy the trail. Echo regained control of the admin keys, burned the remaining 955 eBTC sitting in the attacker's wallet, and paused its Aptos bridge as a precaution while it works out what went wrong.

How an Admin Key Turned Into a $77 Million Mint Button

The mechanics here are familiar to anyone who has followed DeFi exploits over the last 18 months, and they should embarrass anyone running a protocol with this much money in it. According to onchain analysts and Echo's own post-incident statement, a single administrative private key controlled minting privileges for eBTC on Monad, with no multisig protection, no timelock, no per-block mint cap, and no rate limit on issuance. Once the attacker got hold of that key, they could do whatever they wanted, and they did. They granted their own wallet minting privileges, spun up 1,000 fresh eBTC, and immediately tried to monetize the bag. Onchain sleuths spotted the suspicious mint within minutes and the alarm went up across crypto Twitter before Echo had finished writing its first statement.

The path is worth tracing because it shows where the money actually exists in cross-chain DeFi. The attacker deposited 45 eBTC, about $3.45 million on paper, into Curvance as collateral. From there, they borrowed roughly 11.29 WBTC, real Bitcoin, worth around $867,000. That WBTC was bridged to Ethereum, swapped for ETH, and 384 ETH were funneled into Tornado Cash. According to a detailed breakdown of the exploit, the actual realized loss came in at around $816,000 once everything was accounted for. The other 955 eBTC were essentially worthless, because there was no one on the other side of the trade willing to buy them at anything close to fair value.

The Mint Worked. Cashing Out Did Not.

This is the part of the story that should keep DeFi teams up at night, even when their protocols are not the ones getting drained. The vulnerability was as simple as it gets, a single point of failure on an admin key. The minting worked perfectly. The borrowing worked. The bridging worked. The mixer worked. What did not work was the actual market, because Monad is still a young chain and the eBTC pool sitting on it was thin. The attacker built a $77 million pile of synthetic Bitcoin and could only convert roughly 1% of it into real value. If the same setup had been waiting for them on Ethereum mainnet or a deep Solana market, the realized losses would have looked dramatically different, and Echo would be writing a very different statement today.

Echo Protocol has insisted the incident was isolated to Monad, with no evidence of any compromise on its Aptos deployment. The team said aBTC on Aptos and eBTC on Monad are separate, non-bridgeable assets, with current Aptos exposure limited to about $71,000 across Echo lending markets and Hyperion liquidity pools, with no confirmed losses there. Even so, the Aptos bridge has been fully paused while the team conducts a wider review. This brings May's running tally of crypto exploits into double digits according to industry trackers, continuing what has been a brutal first half of 2026 for DeFi security, with admin key compromises now eclipsing classic smart contract bugs as the leading cause of stolen funds.

What the Echo Mess Says About DeFi in 2026

For anyone holding wrapped Bitcoin variants across newer chains, the lesson here is uncomfortable. Wrapped assets are only as safe as the admin keys that control them, and "admin key on a hot wallet" is still apparently considered acceptable risk management at protocols sitting on tens of millions of user dollars. Multisig setups, timelocks, hardware key storage, and mint caps exist for exactly this reason, and they are not optional features anymore. The team behind Echo deserves some credit for moving quickly to lock the keys back down and burn the remaining tokens, which kept the damage from getting worse. But none of that would have been necessary if those basic protections had been in place on day one.

The smaller silver lining, if you want to call it that, is the thin market that turned a $77 million attack into an $816,000 one. The attacker got lucky enough to find a hole and unlucky enough to find it on a chain where the loot was unsellable. The next attacker who pulls the same trick on a deeper market will not have that problem, and the next admin key sitting unprotected on a hot wallet is out there somewhere, just waiting to get noticed. Users picking which Bitcoin DeFi platforms to trust would do well to ask about key management before depositing anything, because the answer matters a lot more than most marketing pages let on.

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Author: Dorian Fenwick
Silicon Valley Newsroom
Breaking Crypto News