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Schwab and Citadel Eye Entry into Crypto Prediction Markets

Traditional finance giants are signaling a renewed interest in prediction markets, a sector that has surged in public attention as retail and institutional players explore hedging tools tied to real-world events. Charles Schwab and Citadel Securities each indicated they are weighing how to participate, signaling a potential shift from curiosity to concrete product ideas in the near term. During an investor call, Schwab CEO Rick Wurster said the firm “likely will have prediction markets” at some point, though they are not currently of primary interest among Schwab clients. He added that if the firm does pursue such offerings, it would be “quite straightforward” to roll them out as part of a broader wealth-building platform. Wurster also stressed one caveat: Schwab’s approach would intentionally sidestep markets tied to sports, politics or pop culture, aiming instead to align with long-term financial planning for clients. He noted that, in his view, the typical gambler’s edge in predicti...
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Judge Rules Jenner's Memecoin Not a Security; Lawsuit Dismissed

A California federal judge has cleared Caitlyn Jenner of a class-action push stemming from her JENNER memecoin, ruling that the token does not meet the basic securities requirements under U.S. law. In a Thursday order, U.S. District Judge Stanley Blumenfeld Jr. said the plaintiffs failed to plausibly plead that JENNER tokens were investment contracts because the venture did not pool investor money or use funds to develop a related product or technology. Defendants stated that “the $JENNER token is a memecoin on the Ethereum blockchain intended solely for entertainment purposes,” and that its value would increase because Jenner would use her fame and influence to promote it, increasing demand. Promotion alone, however, does not establish a common enterprise absent pooling or a structure linking investor fortunes. The case traces back to November 2024, when a group of JENNER memecoin buyers filed suit against Jenner and her late manager, Sophia Hutchins, alleging an unregistered securiti...

Bitcoin mining difficulty falls; next adjustment projected higher

The Bitcoin mining landscape tightened again as the network’s difficulty dipped on the latest adjustment, underscoring the pressure facing public mining operators that have been selling BTC to fund ongoing costs amid higher energy prices and a subdued price environment. Data from CoinWarz placed the current mining difficulty at about 135.5T, a roughly 1.1% decline over the prior 24 hours, signaling a modest relief for issuers still dealing with razor-thin margins. Looking ahead, CoinWarz estimates the next adjustment will push the difficulty higher to around 137.43T, with the change expected on May 1, 2026, at about 01:24 PM UTC. The calculation places the shift at 1,865 blocks from now, roughly 12 days, 18 hours, and 41 minutes of lead time. These sequential moves illustrate the ongoing tug-of-war between miners’ costs and the rewards embedded in the BTC network’s protocol. Key takeaways The Bitcoin network’s mining difficulty fell to roughly 135.5T, a 1.1% drop in the last 24 hours, ...

Kelp Restaking Protocol Exploited, $293M Drained

DeFi markets faced another high-profile setback this weekend as Kelp, a liquid restaking protocol, disclosed a cyber attack targeting its rsETH restaking token. The incident prompted an immediate pause of rsETH smart contracts across Kelp’s mainnet and multiple Layer-2 networks as the project investigates potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in losses. Blockchain security firm Cyvers later pegged the damage at about $293 million, signaling a significant hit to users and counterparties tied to the restaking ecosystem. Kelp stated on X that it detected suspicious cross-chain activity involving rsETH and subsequently halted rsETH contracts on mainnet and several Layer-2s to prevent further damage while the investigation unfolds. Cyvers added that the attacker exploited the rsETH adapter bridge—the software component that manages the rsETH token—allowing the drain of funds from the platform. The firm also noted that the attacker has been actively moving funds, with a substantial por...

Solana futures open interest up 20% this week; price upside hinted

Solana’s SOL token has rallied about 10% over the past five days, trading at a three‑week high as broader risk appetite improves following news of a ceasefire extension between the United States and Iran. Despite the price strength, SOL remains a relative laggard in 2026, with the token underperforming the wider crypto market year-to-date. Derivative markets point to renewed interest in SOL. Aggregate SOL futures open interest rose to about $4.2 billion on Friday, up from roughly $3.5 billion at the start of the week. While higher open interest signals growing participation, the perpetual funding rate has hovered around 3% annually, suggesting that buyers are not yet fully convinced and that leverage demand remains moderate. In a neutral setting, funding rates typically sit higher—roughly 5% to 10% annually—so the current reading implies cautious optimism rather than robust bullish conviction. As Solana’s price action unfolds, on-chain activity presents a mixed picture. Solana continue...

Iran Sees Bitcoin as Strategic Asset; USDt Dominates Oil Tolls, BPI

Iran’s government has named Bitcoin (BTC) as one of the payment options for tolls on oil shipments passing through the Strait of Hormuz, a move highlighted by observers as a clear signal of Bitcoin’s role as a neutral and strategic asset in a sanctions-driven economy. Sam Lyman, head of research at the Bitcoin Policy Institute (BPI), described the development as a notable instance where Bitcoin’s censorship-resistant properties are front and center in state-level financial decisions. According to Lyman, the Iranian authorities chose BTC for its resilience to external interference—“No one can freeze Bitcoin. No one can shut down the Bitcoin network.” Yet he cautions that, at present, there is no on-chain evidence of BTC toll payments being executed, and Iran’s payments ecosystem remains diversified across multiple instruments, including Chinese yuan and US dollar-pegged stablecoins. Iran’s payment mix for tolls now includes yuan, USD-pegged stablecoins, and BTC, a combination that refle...

Liquidity Splits Push Stablecoins Into FX Markets, Eco CEO

Stablecoins, pegged to the dollar or other fiat, operate as a fragmented on-chain foreign exchange market. Liquidity sits in dispersed pools across issuers, blockchains, and DeFi venues, which can create price differences and uneven access to dollar liquidity for traders big and small. Moving stablecoins may look straightforward on the surface, but in practice it often requires a multistep, cross-chain journey through multiple pools and routes. “It’s a very special case of a foreign exchange market onchain, and that leads to bad user experience, with unexpected slippage, transaction reversion and unfamiliar information when moving your dollar from point A to point B,” said Ryne Saxe, CEO of Eco, a stablecoin infrastructure company, in an interview with Cointelegraph. DefiLlama data put stablecoins’ total market capitalization above $320 billion, led by Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC. As institutions and large traders start moving bigger sums on-chain, executing cleanly and efficiently...