Crypto ETPs pull in $1.1B in a week as US-led Bitcoin demand returns
Bitcoin products took $871M, with $786.3M coming from US spot Bitcoin ETFs, while Ether briefly flipped back to inflows.
Bitcoin products took $871M, with $786.3M coming from US spot Bitcoin ETFs, while Ether briefly flipped back to inflows.
The attacker extracted about 108.2 ETH (~$237,000) before thin liquidity capped the payout, while Polkadot itself was unaffected.
He tied lawsuits, appellate briefs, and rulemaking to a bid to limit state gambling enforcement of event contracts.
The dispute hit as WLFI printed a $0.07 all-time low after WLFI-linked wallets borrowed stablecoins against WLFI collateral on Dolomite.
A TVL slide toward ~$100B alongside $300B+ stablecoin supply points to rotation, not a full exit from on-chain credit.
He framed the 50–60% drawdown as a weak-hand flush, even with $100 oil and rising yields in focus.
MARA, Riot, Cango and Bitdeer have reduced holdings while executives emphasize power strategy and HPC-style revenue.
BTC fell to about $70,900 in a second leg down after an earlier weekend drop tied to failed ceasefire-extension talks.
Luke Sully says USDT is increasingly used to settle cross-border trade as banks retreat from payment rails.
Coinbase’s Paul Grewal says a Senate Banking markup could be close, but stablecoin-yield disputes remain a hurdle.
Prediction-market pages briefly surfaced alongside major publishers for event-driven searches before disappearing.
A 1.87% drop tied to a risk-off headline triggered April’s largest long-liquidation print near $48M.
An SEC filing tied to the termination includes a $50 million payment due within 15 days from an unnamed payor.
Heavy sell volume flipped $1.35 into resistance, leaving $1.33 as the immediate line traders are defending.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent convened major financial institutions to discuss rapid AI developments.
Majors stayed flat after a ceasefire-driven rally forced $430M+ in bearish derivatives to unwind.
Weekend moves matched Monday’s opening direction 89% of the time, with 57% of the move priced before reopen.
Bank resistance to stablecoin yield is the main blocker as an as-early-as-April-20 vote window stays fluid.
March payroll gains skewed to healthcare and construction while tech-adjacent categories slipped and workers reported rework drag.
A ceasefire-driven push above $72K now tests whether that narrow bid can clear the $73K ceiling.