Crypto Markets Daily: Daily Briefing

CME Outage, Miner Sell-Off & Institutional BTC Ownership Deepens

5 min · 23. juni 2026
episode CME Outage, Miner Sell-Off & Institutional BTC Ownership Deepens cover

Beskrivelse

(00:00:00) CME Outage, Miner Sell-Off & Institutional BTC Ownership Deepens (00:01:12) Miners Selling Into a Deficit (00:02:07) Hashrate Exits Accelerating (00:02:48) Miners Pivoting to AI Hosting (00:03:18) Institutional Ownership Deepens (00:03:57) What to Watch Next CME's crypto derivatives platform went dark for four hours on June 22nd — not because of an internal failure, but because an unnamed external network provider took it down, freezing an estimated $456 million in notional volume. It was the fourth major disruption in 18 months, and it exposes a structural vulnerability at the heart of U.S. regulated crypto derivatives infrastructure. With no obvious alternative for institutional traders, the single-point-of-access risk is impossible to ignore. On the mining side, the numbers are increasingly hard to dismiss. Bitcoin has traded below the estimated $78,000 production cost for five consecutive months, and publicly traded miners responded by liquidating more than 32,000 BTC in Q1 alone — more than their total sales for all of 2025. Mining difficulty dropped 10% in the second week of June, signalling real hashrate leaving the network. JPMorgan's difficulty beta reading of 0.62 suggests the network is now more reactive to price moves than at any recent point. Larger operators are pivoting hard toward AI and high-performance computing hosting, locking in multi-year contracts that sidestep Bitcoin price volatility entirely. Whether those announced deals convert to deployed infrastructure is the critical question. Meanwhile, the demand picture tells a different story. Spot Bitcoin ETFs launched in 2024 collectively hold approximately 1.26 million BTC — 6% of the 21 million maximum supply. Sovereign entities, including central banks and state-linked institutions, now hold an estimated 2.5% of supply. Nation-state participation adds a geopolitical layer to Bitcoin demand that has no precedent in earlier market cycles. The honest read: institutional ownership is building, but the infrastructure holding it together has visible cracks. This episode includes AI-generated content.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Crypto Markets Daily: Daily Briefing sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

49 Episoder

episode CBDC Ban Without a Signature, ETH Foundation Cuts & Bitcoin Stalls at $60K cover

CBDC Ban Without a Signature, ETH Foundation Cuts & Bitcoin Stalls at $60K

(00:00:00) CBDC Ban Without a Signature, ETH Foundation Cuts & Bitcoin Stalls at $60K (00:01:09) Ethereum Foundation's Lean Era (00:02:00) Stablecoin Convergence: RLUSD Japan (00:02:49) Bitcoin Fails at Sixty Thousand (00:03:19) Kraken, AAVE, and CoinEx (00:04:03) What to Watch Next Congress passed a ban on a U.S. retail central bank digital currency with overwhelming bipartisan support — 358-32 in the House, 85-5 in the Senate — but the signing ceremony was canceled when President Trump linked the housing bill to a separate voting identification measure. The result: two major crypto policy milestones, the CBDC ban and the Clarity Act, are now contingent on political variables outside the industry's control. Meanwhile, the Ethereum Foundation announced one of its most significant structural changes in years: 54 employees laid off, representing roughly 20% of its workforce, with overall spending cut 40% and a shift to an endowment-style model targeting annual expenditure of around 5% of assets. The move raises real questions about coordination gaps during a critical period of Ethereum scaling upgrades. On the global stablecoin front, Ripple's RLUSD launched in Japan as a Type Four Electronic Payment Instrument via VCTRADE and an SBI partnership. Former BIS head Agustín Carstens publicly acknowledged stablecoins can coexist with fiat currencies — a notable reversal. Circle is also advancing Japan settlement plans with Nomura. Regulated stablecoin adoption is accelerating faster outside the U.S. than within it. Bitcoin bounced from $58,100 but failed to reclaim $60,000, with derivatives positioning pointing to elevated risk in the $54,000–$56,000 range. PCE inflation hit 3.4% year-over-year — the highest since October 2023 — keeping Fed uncertainty elevated. Finally, Kraken is reportedly pursuing a 15% governance stake in Aave, sending AAVE up 6.8% on the day. CoinEx pushed back on a Wall Street Journal report alleging Iran exposure, citing geo-fencing measures active since 2021. Two signals dominate the outlook: whether the CBDC ban gets signed into law, and whether Bitcoin holds $60,000 support. This episode includes AI-generated content.

I går4 min
episode CoinUp Fallout, SecondFi Hack & Exchange Licensing Race | June 24-25 cover

CoinUp Fallout, SecondFi Hack & Exchange Licensing Race | June 24-25

(00:00:00) CoinUp Fallout, SecondFi Hack & Exchange Licensing Race | June 24-25 (00:00:55) SecondFi Dual Attacker Forensics (00:01:56) Coinbase Luxembourg MiCA Headquarters (00:02:26) Exchange Licensing Race APAC (00:03:07) SEI Rally Sustainability Warning (00:03:51) What To Watch Next Today's briefing opens with one of the starkest reputational risk signals of the year: CoinUp's CPX token collapsed after Binance co-founder Yi He publicly linked the exchange to an alleged fraud scheme on June 24. No hack was confirmed. No system was compromised. The token sold off anyway — a reminder that in crypto markets, association can be as damaging as an actual breach. From there, we move to SecondFi's dual-attacker forensic breakdown. Two threat actors exploited a wallet-generation vulnerability — not a smart contract — draining 16 million ADA between June 21 and 23. That's roughly $2.4 million lost, with $129 million ADA preserved through emergency protocols. One attacker still holds approximately 4 million ADA. The structural takeaway: attackers are migrating up the stack toward key management and custody infrastructure that the industry has been slow to harden. On the regulatory front, Coinbase formally designated Luxembourg as its MiCA headquarters, securing EU-wide market access ahead of the compliance deadline. The same week, BitMart received an Australian Financial Services Licence under Australia's 2026 Digital Assets Framework, and SKHTU filed for Malaysia's RMO license. Three exchanges, three jurisdictions, one week — regulatory positioning is now a commercial moat, not just a legal checkbox. Finally, SEI surged 8.67% on a 128% volume spike, but EVM transactions fell 29%. Fewer users, higher per-user revenue. The chain is consolidating around professional DeFi participants, not expanding. RSI is approaching overbought, and the technical structure remains bearish beyond the short-term pop. A YesWee production. Built using AI technology. This episode includes AI-generated content.

25. juni 20265 min
episode Binance EU Collapse, $706M Liquidations & Ethereum Foundation Cuts cover

Binance EU Collapse, $706M Liquidations & Ethereum Foundation Cuts

(00:00:00) Binance EU Collapse, $706M Liquidations & Ethereum Foundation Cuts (00:01:06) Seven Hundred Million Dollar Liquidations (00:01:51) Stablecoin Supply Contraction Signal (00:02:16) Ethereum Foundation Workforce Cut (00:02:53) Solana Double-Top Breakdown (00:03:19) Quantum Policy Deadline Formalized Binance has withdrawn its Greek MiCA license application with no alternative EU jurisdiction confirmed, leaving the world's largest exchange without a legal path to operate across all 27 EU member states after July 1. Around 60% of EU crypto users are currently on platforms lacking full MiCA authorisation — a displacement risk that is now weeks away from becoming real. The market backdrop adds pressure. A global tech selloff triggered $706 million in crypto liquidations in 24 hours, pushing Bitcoin to $62,400 and Ethereum to $1,650. This is macro deleveraging, not an isolated crypto event — Fed rate expectations remain sticky, and crypto's leveraged structure amplifies every move in a thin summer liquidity environment. On the liquidity side, combined USDT and USDC balances have dropped to $260 billion, the lowest since March, as capital rotates out of crypto into AI equities and other risk assets. Less stablecoin dry powder heading into a historically slow seasonal window is a structural headwind. The Ethereum Foundation announced a 20% workforce reduction — 54 employees cut — reorganising into five divisions to sharpen focus on the Glamsterdam protocol upgrade. Strategic tightening, but the effects on development pace and ecosystem responsiveness remain untested. Solana broke through $68 support, forming a double-top pattern with a downside target near $60.80. DEX volumes, network fees, and on-chain activity are all contracting. And a US executive order has formalised a December 2031 deadline for post-quantum cryptography migration, putting a policy timeline on a vulnerability affecting roughly 7 million Bitcoin worth $440 billion. Key watchpoints for the next session: Binance's jurisdiction move, Bitcoin's $62K support, and early signals from the Ethereum Foundation's restructure. This episode includes AI-generated content.

24. juni 20264 min
episode CME Outage, Miner Sell-Off & Institutional BTC Ownership Deepens cover

CME Outage, Miner Sell-Off & Institutional BTC Ownership Deepens

(00:00:00) CME Outage, Miner Sell-Off & Institutional BTC Ownership Deepens (00:01:12) Miners Selling Into a Deficit (00:02:07) Hashrate Exits Accelerating (00:02:48) Miners Pivoting to AI Hosting (00:03:18) Institutional Ownership Deepens (00:03:57) What to Watch Next CME's crypto derivatives platform went dark for four hours on June 22nd — not because of an internal failure, but because an unnamed external network provider took it down, freezing an estimated $456 million in notional volume. It was the fourth major disruption in 18 months, and it exposes a structural vulnerability at the heart of U.S. regulated crypto derivatives infrastructure. With no obvious alternative for institutional traders, the single-point-of-access risk is impossible to ignore. On the mining side, the numbers are increasingly hard to dismiss. Bitcoin has traded below the estimated $78,000 production cost for five consecutive months, and publicly traded miners responded by liquidating more than 32,000 BTC in Q1 alone — more than their total sales for all of 2025. Mining difficulty dropped 10% in the second week of June, signalling real hashrate leaving the network. JPMorgan's difficulty beta reading of 0.62 suggests the network is now more reactive to price moves than at any recent point. Larger operators are pivoting hard toward AI and high-performance computing hosting, locking in multi-year contracts that sidestep Bitcoin price volatility entirely. Whether those announced deals convert to deployed infrastructure is the critical question. Meanwhile, the demand picture tells a different story. Spot Bitcoin ETFs launched in 2024 collectively hold approximately 1.26 million BTC — 6% of the 21 million maximum supply. Sovereign entities, including central banks and state-linked institutions, now hold an estimated 2.5% of supply. Nation-state participation adds a geopolitical layer to Bitcoin demand that has no precedent in earlier market cycles. The honest read: institutional ownership is building, but the infrastructure holding it together has visible cracks. This episode includes AI-generated content.

23. juni 20265 min
episode MEV Bot $15M Trap, UK Stablecoin Reform & Hong Kong CBDC Pilot cover

MEV Bot $15M Trap, UK Stablecoin Reform & Hong Kong CBDC Pilot

(00:00:00) MEV Bot $15M Trap, UK Stablecoin Reform & Hong Kong CBDC Pilot (00:01:10) ATM Token's Second Breach (00:01:48) Ethereum Validator Reward Proposal (00:02:47) UK Stablecoin Rule Easing (00:03:24) Hong Kong CBDC Derivatives Pilot (00:03:47) Bitmine ETH Treasury Scale In today's crypto market briefing, the headline is a $15 million defeat for JaredFromSubway — Ethereum's most aggressive sandwich attack bot — drained via a fake token approval trap that exploited the bot's own automated logic rather than any smart contract flaw. Roughly $7.5M has been confirmed lost, with 1,000 ETH already laundered through Tornado Cash. Also on BNB Chain, the ATM token suffered its second exploit in weeks, losing $950,000 in a PancakeSwap liquidity pool attack — raising serious questions about whether the underlying vulnerability has been genuinely resolved. On the Ethereum protocol front, a new research proposal would let validators redirect up to 10% of staking rewards toward ecosystem development, potentially generating $120M annually — but the governance risks of validator coordination are already generating debate. In regulation, the Bank of England cut mandatory cash reserve requirements for systemic stablecoins from 40% to 30% and replaced individual holding caps with a £40 billion per-stablecoin circulation ceiling — a meaningful reduction in capital drag for institutional stablecoin issuers in the UK. Hong Kong's HKEX and HKMA launched a joint wholesale CBDC pilot targeting after-hours derivatives margin settlement, the latest central bank move from theory toward institutional application. Finally, Bitmine now holds 5.67M ETH — roughly 4.7% of total supply — with over 4.7M tokens actively staked generating an estimated $223M in annualized yield. Corporate ETH accumulation at this scale represents a distinct institutional signal. Analytical, factual, no hype. A YesWee production built using AI technology. This episode includes AI-generated content.

22. juni 20265 min