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  • Microsoft’s new college deal is a half-hearted answer to the $500 MacBook Neo

    Apple’s MacBook Neo is a $600 (or $500 for students) shot across the bow at affordable Windows laptops, and it seems like Microsoft has ready its first response. The newly announced “Microsoft College Offer” is a bundle of Microsoft 365 Premium, Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, custom Xbox controller and discounted laptop that the company thinks could woo students away from Apple’s new deal.

    With the purchase of a discounted machine directly from Microsoft, retailers like Amazon and Best Buy or PC makers like HP, ASUS and Acer, you can get what the company says is an extra $500 of value from its bundle. The laptop deals include a Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 3x with a Snapdragon X chip, 16GB of RAM and 256GB of storage for $500 from Best Buy, around $250 off the laptop’s usual $750 price. Or if you wanted something even cheaper, Walmart is selling an HP Omnibook 3 for $429, a discount of $270 off its usual $699 price. Microsoft is less generous with the deals on its own laptops and tablets, but you can even get a discount on a Surface Laptop as part of the offer.

    A discounted laptop is great, but where the value of the Microsoft College Offer gets harder to define is with the services the company is packing in. Getting what would normally be a $200 year-long subscription to Microsoft 365 Premium for free is a meaningful deal, but many colleges give their students access to Microsoft’s apps (and other software) with the cost of their tuition. A year of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, which costs $30 per month as of October 2025, sounds like significant savings, but the offer is only valid for new subscribers. That leaves the free custom Xbox controller as the simplest bonus of the bunch, a value of around $76.

    Windows PC makers are expected to make more serious attempts to compete with the Neo over the next year. For now, though, the Microsoft College Offer isn’t exactly a bad deal, but it’s certainly not as straightforwardly appealing as an Apple-quality laptop for $500 with a college discount.

    The Microsoft College Offer is available to students starting April 15 and runs through June 30, 2026. Microsoft says redemption of the full bundle of services and accessories it’s offering needs to happen by July 31, 2026.

  • Arthur Hayes says crypto markets are crashing because the community can’t agree on why they’re crashing

    Arthur Hayes says crypto markets are crashing because the community can’t agree on why they’re crashing

    Arthur Hayes says the crypto crowd is getting hit while still fighting over the reason for the drop. In his latest essay, Arthur warns that: “I don’t know anything about war fighting,” and makes clear he has no inside line into what global leaders may do next.

    What he does say he has is public data, basic math, propaganda AI agents, and a portfolio to protect.

    He says there are really four possible outcomes, but one is useless for investors. Nuclear destruction is not something he thinks anyone can trade around, so he throws it out. That leaves three main paths, plus one middle case tied to a US blockade. Arthur says he is trying to find a portfolio setup that can beat hydrocarbons, food, and fuel prices in the best case, and in the worst case still do better than most major assets.

    Arthur Hayes says Bitcoin comeback is waiting for Fed liquidity injection

    In the first case, Arthur says the war stops and things go back to what they were before, but that still would not solve the deeper problem because the bigger threat is AI replacing white-collar workers across the US economy.

    “The American economy is the most exposed because its GDP is ~70% driven by consumer spending. Consumers finance their materialism using bank credit, and these loans become assets on banks’ balance sheets,” says Arthur.

    Arthur says the AI-led bust could be as serious as the 2008 subprime mess. He writes that rising consumer delinquencies are already showing up before the real layoff wave has even started.

    He also gives a story from a crypto gaming founder who tested the latest Claude model during Christmas 2025, built usable code fast, then brought top engineers together to rethink the company.

    After that, the firm built an agent workflow that coded all day and all night, including code review. He says that led the company to plan cuts to 50% of staff. He adds that top engineers may get 10x to 100x more productive, while average workers get pushed out. He says the median annual unemployment payout in US states is about $28,000, far below the $85,000 to $90,000 earned by many knowledge workers.

    That gap, according to Arthur, leads straight to missed debt payments. Even then, Arthur says Bitcoin may only get a limited bounce, maybe to $80,000 or $90,000, until the Fed steps in with real liquidity.

    Arthur tracks yuan tolls, oil stress, and money printing through Bitcoin, gold, and bonds

    In the second case, Arthur says Iran keeps control over the Strait of Hormuz and lets friendly ships pass after paying a $2 million toll in yuan, crypto, sanctioned dollars, or other deals.

    He says that would hit the petrodollar hard. Since most big economies run trade deficits with China, they would need to sell US Treasuries or tech stocks, buy physical gold, then swap that gold for yuan in Shanghai or Hong Kong. He notes only Brazil and Russia among the ten biggest economies run trade surpluses with China.

    Arthur pointed out that foreign securities holdings at the Fed dropped $63 billion after the war started, while non-monetary gold became the biggest US export in four of the last five months, up 342% from a year earlier. He also says Swiss refineries are recasting US gold for China and that rising CIPS volumes matter because Iran cannot use SWIFT. As Arthur puts it:

    “The yuan and gold will most likely become the two primary currencies of sovereign trade. If holding dollars cannot guarantee pirates won’t tank your stuff, why hold them at all?”

    In the third case, the US military reopens the strait by force. Arthur says that could briefly restore faith in the dollar, but it could also destroy Iran, wreck Gulf energy output, and force central banks to print into a commodity spike. He writes, “The spice definitely won’t flow.” He says some countries would face hyperinflation, while America and Russia would be the only big swing producers left.

    For Bitcoin, Arthur says, “If the blockade ultimately ends via a punitive bombing campaign of Iran followed by an Iranian destruction of all Persian Gulf energy production, this could lead to the destruction of the Iranian state. The rally in Bitcoin, inspired by money printing, might be short-lived because the destruction of the Iranian state materially raises the prospect of WW3.”

  • Bitcoin Price Targets $75K Break, Is a New Rally Incoming?

    Bitcoin Price Targets $75K Break, Is a New Rally Incoming?

    Bitcoin price started a fresh surge and cleared the $74,500 zone. $BTC is consolidating and might aim for more gains above the $75,000 level.

    • Bitcoin managed to stay above $73,500 and started a fresh increase.
    • The price is trading above $74,000 and the 100 hourly simple moving average.
    • There is a declining channel forming with resistance at $75,000 on the hourly chart of the $BTC/USD pair (data feed from Kraken).
    • The pair might extend gains if it stays above the $73,650 and $73,300 levels.

    Bitcoin Price Aims for Steady Gains

    Bitcoin price found support near $73,000 and started a fresh increase. $BTC gained pace for a move above the $73,500 and $73,650 resistance levels.

    The last swing high was formed at $76,088 before there was a downside correction. The price dipped below $74,000. It even spiked below the 38.2% Fib retracement level of the upward move from the $70,518 swing low to the $76,088 high.

    Bitcoin is now trading above $74,000 and the 100 hourly simple moving average. There is also a declining channel forming with resistance at $75,000 on the hourly chart of the $BTC/USD pair.

    Source: BTCUSD on TradingView.com

    If the price remains stable above $73,650, it could attempt a fresh increase. Immediate resistance is near the $75,000 level. The first key resistance is near the $75,500 level. A close above the $75,500 resistance might send the price further higher. In the stated case, the price could rise and test the $76,000 resistance. Any more gains might send the price toward the $77,500 level. The next barrier for the bulls could be $78,000.

    Another Decline In $BTC?

    If Bitcoin fails to rise above the $75,500 resistance zone, it could start another decline. Immediate support is near the $74,250 level. The first major support is near the $73,650 level.

    The next support is now near the $73,300 zone or the 50% Fib retracement level of the upward move from the $70,518 swing low to the $76,088 high. Any more losses might send the price toward the $72,650 support in the near term. The main support now sits at $72,000, below which $BTC might struggle to recover in the near term.

    Technical indicators:

    Hourly MACD – The MACD is now gaining pace in the bullish zone.

    Hourly RSI (Relative Strength Index) – The RSI for $BTC/USD is now above the 50 level.

    Major Support Levels – $73,650, followed by $73,300.

    Major Resistance Levels – $75,000 and $76,000.

  • Three kittens rescued from car engine in California

    Three kittens rescued from car engine in California

    Odd News // 4 weeks ago

    More than 1,050 people form human shamrock in Dublin, Ohio

    March 18 (UPI) — The city of Dublin, Ohio, unofficially broke a Guinness World Record by arranging more than 1,050 people into the shape of a massive shamrock.

  • Robert Eggers’ ‘Werwulf’ Brings Scares to CinemaCon

    Robert Eggers’ ‘Werwulf’ Brings Scares to CinemaCon

    Horror king Robert Eggers is back with another creature feature, which got a special sneak peek at CinemaCon on Wednesday.

    Following the success of vampire flick Nosferatu, Eggers has moved onto werewolves with Werwulf, which he co-wrote and directed. During Universal’s presentation to theater owners and distributors in Las Vegas, the first footage was shown with the declaration that it would be “his most terrifying motion picture yet.”

    The film is largely black and white, with hints of color; the clips showed Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Lily Rose Depp as a villager couple, trudging along in dirty clothes and dragging a few kids behind. “Do not dread the darkness,” says a husky voiceover, with a supercut of violent images and horses running the forest. The footage ended on a close-up of Taylor-Johnson’s face screaming in horror — and no reveal of the titular monster, much like how Nosferatu‘s monster was hidden in promotional materials.

    Taylor-Johnson, Depp and Willem Dafoe star in the movie, which like Nosferatu is set for a Christmas Day (2026) release in an act of counter-programming. It’s set in 13th-century England, where a mysterious creature stalks the foggy countryside, transforming local folklore into terrifying reality for its villagers.

    Eggers has a particularly affinity for medieval projects, having said around the release of Nosferatu that “the idea of having to photograph a car makes me ill. And the idea of photographing a cellphone is just death. And to make a contemporary story you have to photograph a cellphone — it’s just how life is” so he did not plan to make any modern-set movies.

    Both Eggers and co-writer Sjón are producing alongside Focus Features. Chris and Eleanor Columbus, who worked with Eggers on Nosferatu, serve as executive produce. Nosferatu brought in more than $180 million worldwide, becoming Eggers’ highest-grossing movie to date, and was nominated in four craft categories at the Oscars.

  • Steven Spielberg’s ‘Disclosure Day’ Reveals First Look at Alien in New Footage

    Steven Spielberg’s ‘Disclosure Day’ Reveals First Look at Alien in New Footage

    Steven Spielberg took the stage at CinemaCon for the first time in his career to promote his upcoming Universal release, Disclosure Day.

    After an introduction from star Colman Domingo, the filmmaker received rapturous applause from the annual convention of movie theater owners in Las Vegas on Wednesday. Spielberg accepted the Motion Picture Association’s America250 Award from the group’s chair, Charles Rivkin, in celebration of the director’s work that embraces the nation’s wonders.

    “I haven’t done a Western yet — that’s next,” the 79-year-old director said. He noted that his first CinemaCon stage appearance had been great: “This will not be my last, I promise.”

    He recalled his transformative first visit to the cinema: “Nothing could compete with sitting in the first three rows of a movie palace, watching a Cecil B. DeMille epic with color by Technicolor. Nothing would ever be the same.”

    Spielberg admitted, “Sometimes, it feels to me like a cage fight between the small screen and the big screen.” He noted that the theatergoing experience was “clobbered” by COVID but added, “There was reason for hope.” He went on to praise projects like Chloé Zhao’s Hamnet, which counted Spielberg as a producer.

    Then, the filmmaker sat down on stage with Domingo to discuss the exhibition business, with Spielberg recalling inviting his boyhood friends over to his parents’ home to screen popular titles. “I made money by charging 12 cents on popcorn,” he quipped.

    Turning to Disclosure Day, the director explained that he has long been fascinated by the potential for extraterrestrial life. “I’ve been curious ever since I was a little kid about what’s happening in the night sky, what’s happening in the sky during the daytime,” Spielberg said. He remembered his dad telling him about “advanced civilizations” that didn’t exist on Earth.

    Spielberg recalled a 2017 New York Times story about a Navy pilot spotting something via camera that could not be explained. “In 2017, I got very curious again,” he said, pointing out that his alien feature Close Encounters of the Third Kind was made 50 years ago. “Half a century later, I made Disclosure Day with certainty that there is a lot more truth than fiction to what you’re going to see on June 12.”

    He said of Disclosure Day, “I truly believe that this movie is going to answer questions and cause you to ask a lot of questions.” He also teased, “This movie is an experience, and all you need to get from the beginning to the end is a seatbelt.”

    Spielberg introduced new footage from the film, which stars Emily Blunt and Josh O’Connor, chronicling what might happen if humanity were to receive proof of non-human intelligent life. Disclosure Day marks Spielberg’s first new movie since 2022’s The Fabelmans and also stars Domingo, Colin Firth, Wyatt Russell and Eve Hewson.

    The footage shows Blunt as a meteorologist who finds herself unable to speak during a live segment. In describing the viral footage of Blunt’s weather broadcast, O’Connor notes that he can understand the gibberish that she is saying: “It’s math.”

    Viewers see an emotional meeting between O’Connor and Blunt. “I know you,” he says, to which she replies, “I know you, too.” There was also plenty of action in store, as Blunt tries to jump from a car onto a moving train. The footage ends with the movie’s first glimpse at its alien life form.

    Disclosure Day represents Spielberg’s return to the UFO genre, and fans have speculated that it could be a closet sequel to 1977’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Blunt recently told Empire magazine, “There are definitely questions posed by Close Encounters that are answered in Disclosure Day.”

    When appearing at the South by Southwest Film & TV festival last month, Spielberg said, “I don’t know any more than any of you do, but I have a very strong suspicion that we are not alone here on Earth right now — and I made a movie about that.”

    The footage comes one day after Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna’s deadline came and went for the Pentagon to declassify and release several specific video files that she’s requested which purportedly show previously unseen instances of UAP/UFOs activity.

    On Tuesday, Luna posted the following update on X: “No one from the Pentagon had responded until we reached out, and it appears that someone did not pass the letter to the appropriate authorities. How convenient. Nonetheless, we will be getting the requested list. We are not waiting for a briefing at some unspecified future date. The Secretary of War is someone I consider a friend and someone who backs the President. The President has authorized the release, so whoever is trying to be cute at the Pentagon can take a hike.”

    Universal can only hope any such videos — which would doubtless help generate buzz for the film — will be released in time for the opening weekend of Disclosure Day, which comes out June 12.

  • Ethereum DeFi Exchange CoW Swap Pauses Protocol Following Website Compromise

    Ethereum DeFi Exchange CoW Swap Pauses Protocol Following Website Compromise

    In brief

    • CoW Swap, an Ethereum-based decentralized exchange aggregator, warned users to avoid interacting with its protocol after suffering a front-end compromise.
    • Although the scope of losses was initially unclear, one noted cybersecurity researcher estimated that $500,000 had been taken from unsuspecting users so far.
    • CoW Swap said the attack didn’t affect the protocol’s underlying smart contracts, but the decentralized exchange aggregator had been paused as a precaution.

    CoW Swap, an Ethereum-based decentralized exchange aggregator, warned users on Tuesday to avoid using the protocol, disclosing that its front-end interface had been compromised.

    “We are now actively working to resolve the situation,” the project frequently used by Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin said in a post to X. “The CoW Protocol backend and APIs were not impacted, but we have paused them temporarily as a precaution.”

    CoW Swap indicated that attackers had gained control of the website domain that users typically visit before engaging with the protocol. That gave bad actors the opportunity to direct users to a different website where funds could be stolen through the approval of malicious transfers.

    Although the compromise didn’t affect CoW Swap’s underlying smart contracts, the protocol appeared to remain frozen three hours after the attack was divulged. Meanwhile, users on Discord reported losses within the project’s official server.

    “I don’t know what to do anymore,” said one user who claimed that they lost more than $50,000 via CoW Swap’s compromised front end. “I have no money at all.”

    Despite apparent frustrations, the scope of losses sustained wasn’t immediately clear. 

    A pseudonymous member of the CoW Swap team who goes by MooKeeper told Decrypt that reports are actively being investigated and verified. They added that a more complete assessment would be released tomorrow or later this week.

    “We have evidence that a small number of users signed malicious approvals for very small amounts,” MooKeeper added.

    Still, a noted cybersecurity researcher who goes by Vladimir S. on X said that around $500,000 worth of digital assets had been “drained from a few addresses so far.”

    Martin Köppelmann, co-founder and CEO of decentralized infrastructure provider Gnosis, noted in a post to X that the attack’s scope appears limited. He said that users are potentially affected only if they approved interactions with CoW Swap within the past few hours.

    Websites that try to trick users by mimicking established DeFi projects aren’t entirely uncommon. Last year, for example, Curve Finance suffered its second DNS hijack. The first one, which took place in 2022, resulted in $570,000 in losses for users.

    Buterin, who has swapped notable amounts of Ethereum for stablecoins using CoW Swap this year, had engaged with the protocol as recently as a week ago, data from on-chain analytics firm Arkham Intelligence showed. In 2024, he also used the decentralized exchange aggregator to offload holdings of a meme coin modeled on a baby pygmy hippo from Thailand.

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  • Trump Is Hosting Another Meme Coin Gala—The Price for VIP Access Is Down 90%

    Trump Is Hosting Another Meme Coin Gala—The Price for VIP Access Is Down 90%

    In brief

    • VIPs for the latest TRUMP meme coin event at Mar-a-Lago held considerably less than the first exclusive event.
    • While VIPs averaged $4.7 million in TRUMP tokens last event, some earned VIP status with around $300,000 worth of TRUMP tokens this year.
    • TRUMP is down about 96% from its all-time high, recently changing hands at $2.79.

    President Donald Trump is set to host another in-person event for his meme coin holders later this month at Mar-a-Lago, but in perhaps a sign of times, the price to attend is considerably lower than it was last year.

    The team behind President Trump’s Solana-based token, which trades as TRUMP, finalized the list of attendees on Tuesday, with the guest list based on a leaderboard tied to token holdings and other factors.

    Last time around, a select group of attendees attained “VIP” status by each amassing millions of dollars’ worth of the tokens. But earning the VIP label for President Trump’s latest event, a luncheon and conference to be held for top holders, cost roughly 90% less this time around—down from approximately $3 million to around $300,000.

    VIP status, the top level of access for the event, grants attendees a private “meet and learn” experience with “superstar” attendees like Tether’s Paolo Ardoino, retired boxer Mike Tyson, and Ark Invest’s Cathie Wood. That bonus reward, beyond access to the luncheon with President Trump, was granted to the top 29 registered TRUMP holders who earned points based on time-weighted holdings of the token from March 12 to April 14.

    Based on available on-chain holder data compared to the Trump meme team’s final leaderboard, at least one account that earned VIP status and ranked 12th overall—a Solana address beginning in “Ciz7y”—never held more than 114,212 TRUMP tokens during the more than month-long snapshot period.

    That amount, now worth around $318,000, peaked at about $473,000 when the token traded at $4.14 on March 15. 

    Other VIPs, like Solana address “2ciorM,” transferred in around 102,000 TRUMP tokens on March 12 and made no other moves. Those tokens, now valued at $283,000, were good enough to rank the address 17th, well above the VIP cutoff. 

    Those sums are dramatically smaller than those seen for last year’s initial exclusive event for Trump meme coin holders, where the top finalists each held millions of dollars’ worth of tokens to earn VIP status, which conferred exclusive benefits. The final VIP holder for last May’s event, ranked 25th, had nearly $3 million worth of TRUMP tokens around the time of the snapshot. 

    At that time, gaining VIP access to the first TRUMP meme coin gala required around $4.78 million worth of the president’s official meme coin, on average. The top holder—an account labeled “Sun” that Tron founder Justin Sun confirmed was his—buoyed the group by possessing around $19 million in TRUMP at the time of the snapshot last year.

    The Tron founder, who earlier this week publicly bashed the Trump family’s World Liberty Financial business—a separate crypto venture, was again the top holder on this year’s meme coin leaderboard.

    This time, though, the value of his account is only around $9.3 million, as the TRUMP token’s price has fallen precipitously from its highs. He maintains a balance of around 3.3 million TRUMP tokens, or 1.4 million more tokens than the first time around.

    As it stands, the official TRUMP token was recently trading around $2.80, down 29% in the last month and now 96% off its all-time high of $73.43 achieved shortly after launch. The token briefly jumped around 40% after the announcement of the latest in-person event, but has since erased those gains. 

    By comparison, during last year’s exclusive event, the token closed the snapshot day trading around $13.08—about 370% higher than its current trading price. 

    This time around, token holders were also awarded 10 points for every $1 spent on purchases of Trump-branded merchandise—like hats and watches—during the token-holding period, which is something that can’t be accounted for with on-chain data.

    That bonus could have moved the needle for some prospective VIPs, but otherwise, it appears that holders needed to spend far less on TRUMP tokens this year to gain special access.

    Last year’s TRUMP meme coin dinner drew scrutiny from Democratic lawmakers, who demanded an ethics probe into the invitation. Famously, Senator Elizabeth Warren called the event an “orgy of corruption,” alleging that people could use it to buy access to the president.

    This year’s Mar-a-Lago event will require attendees to pass a background check, and ensure they are not residents of a KYC-watchlist country. According to the terms and conditions, the event, slated for April 25, may be cancelled for any reason, and does not guarantee the attendance of President Trump. 

    If Trump can not attend, or the event does not take place, then attendees will receive a Trump-themed NFT. 

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  • What are Iran’s $100bn in frozen assets and where are they held?

    What are Iran’s $100bn in frozen assets and where are they held?

    As momentum builds for a second round of talks between the United States and Iran aimed at ending their war, one central issue has emerged as a bone of contention: Tehran’s frozen assets held in other countries.

    Iran’s economy has been ailing for years due to sanctions imposed on the country by the US and other nations. These sanctions have been imposed since 1979, first over the US hostages held at the American embassy in Tehran following the Islamic revolution, and then amplified over Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missiles programmes. These measures have restricted Tehran’s ability to access its own assets, like revenues from oil sales, which have been frozen in foreign banks.

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    On April 10, before the first round of ceasefire talks began in Pakistan, the speaker of Iran’s parliament, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said on X that Iranian frozen assets (revenues frozen in foreign banks) must be released before any negotiations could begin.

    A day later at the ceasefire talks in Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad, some reports emerged suggesting that Washington had agreed to unfreeze at least some of the Iranian assets being held outside the country. But the US government quickly dismissed those reports, insisting that those assets remained frozen.

    With talks expected to resume in the coming days, ahead of the expiry of the current US-Iran ceasefire in the early hours of April 22 in the Middle East, that tension is expected to resurface.

    But how many Iranian assets are frozen, why is Tehran unable to access them, where are these funds at the moment, and why are they important to Iran?

    What’s the volume of Iran’s frozen assets?

    While the exact amount of Iran’s frozen assets is unclear, official Iranian reports and experts have set the total amount of frozen Iranian assets overseas at more than $100bn.

    Frederic Schneider, a nonresident senior fellow at the Middle East Council on Global Affairs told Al Jazeera that these assets are about four times what Iran earns annually from the sale of hydrocarbons.

    “This is a very substantial sum, especially for a society that has been suffering under decades of US-led sanctions,” he said.

    But he added that it remains unclear whether the US — even if it were to release these assets — would make that conditional on how they are used.

    “Iran definitely has a dire need for the assets but given the very chaotic history of sanctions and the lack of specialists on the US side to negotiate the details, Iran is sceptical,” he said.

    Jacob Lew, who was secretary of the Treasury under former US President Barack Obama, said in 2016 that Iran would not be able to access all of its assets frozen abroad even if all sanctions were lifted. At the time, Iran had agreed to a landmark deal with the US and other nations, capping its nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief.

    Lew had told Congress that in reality, Iran would be able to access only about half of its frozen assets at best, because the rest were already committed to previously promised investments or for loan repayments.

    Currently, Tehran’s key demand in the ceasefire talks is to release at least $6bn of its frozen assets, as a confidence-building measure.

    What are frozen assets?

    When the funds, property or securities of a person, company or country’s central bank are temporarily retained by another nation’s authorities or a global body, that constitutes the freezing of assets.

    This restricts the owners’ ability to sell these assets due to sanctions, court orders or other regulatory reasons.

    Assets could be frozen by a court, by another country or international body or a banking institution. Officially, countries say that they freeze the assets of another nation or company over accusations of criminal activities, money laundering or violations of international law.

    But critics of the practice point to its selective use to target rivals of the West — Israel, for instance, has faced repeated accusations of carrying out rights abuses, waging illegal wars and perpetrating apartheid. Yet its overseas assets have not been frozen by any country.

    By contrast, Iran, Russia, North Korea, Libya, Venezuela and Cuba are some of the countries whose assets have been frozen by foreign governments. The common thread that binds them all: they’re opposed — or have been opposed — to the US dominance of the international order.

    Why does Iran have frozen assets?

    According to US government archives, the first asset freeze took place in November 1979 when the US president at the time, Jimmy Carter, said that Iran “constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy and economy of the United States”.

    At the time, Iranian students were holding 66 American citizens hostage in the US embassy in Tehran.

    The secretary of the Treasury at the time, William Miller, told reporters that Iran’s liquid assets back then amounted to less than $6bn, the largest component of which was $1.3bn in Treasury notes held by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. In 1981, the Algiers Accords, brokered by Algeria between the US and Iran, resulted in the US unfreezing a significant portion of these assets in return for Iran releasing the 52 American captives who were still being held at that point in Tehran.

    In the following years, however, relations between the US and Iran continued to sour, with Washington uneasy over Tehran’s nuclear programme.

    Iran has always maintained that its uranium enrichment programme is for civilian energy purposes only, despite having enriched uranium far beyond the threshold required for that.

    Israel and the US have repeatedly accused Iran of enriching uranium to develop nuclear weapons. The US and its allies, especially Europe, have slapped multiple rounds of sanctions on the country, even though Israel — the only Middle Eastern country widely believed to already hold nuclear weapons built through a clandestine programme — has faced no such scrutiny.

    In 2015, Iran struck a pact with world powers negotiated by the US under President Barack Obama, called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Under the pact, Tehran agreed to scale down its nuclear programme and, as a result, regained access to most of its assets abroad at the time.

    But in 2018, during his first term as president, Donald Trump unilaterally pulled the US out of the pact, calling it “one-sided” and reimposing sanctions on Iran, freezing its foreign assets once again.

    In 2023, the US and Iran agreed to a prisoner swap deal, which saw Tehran release five US-Iranian citizens in exchange for the US releasing several Iranians jailed in the country, and giving Iran access to billions of dollars in frozen funds. The funds in question were $6bn in oil revenue that was frozen in South Korea due to US sanctions.

    Under the scheme, the money was transferred to Qatar to oversee. But the following year, United States President Joe Biden imposed new sanctions on Iran in response to its missile and drone attack on Israel, leading to Iran’s losing access to these assets in Doha yet again.

    Besides the US, the European Union has also partially frozen Iran’s central bank assets on grounds of Iran allegedly committing human rights violations, and over accusations of nuclear-related noncompliance, terrorism and its drones programme supporting Russia’s war against Ukraine.

    Which countries hold Iran’s frozen assets?

    Iran’s frozen assets are held by multiple countries.

    The exact amount each country currently holds is unclear, but Iranian media have previously reported that Japan, another important Iranian oil customer, holds about $1.5bn, Iraq holds around $6bn, China holds at least $20bn and India holds $7bn.

    The US also holds approximately $2bn in directly frozen Iranian assets, while EU countries like Luxembourg hold about $1.6bn.

    Qatar holds about $6bn — the amount that was moved from South Korea to pay Iran, but subsequently blocked by the US.

    Why is unfreezing the assets important to Iran?

    Iran’s economy is in crisis, with decades of sanctions limiting its oil exports and stalling its ability to attract investments and modernise its industry and technology.

    A surge in inflation and a fall in the value of the currency, the rial, led to massive protests in December and January that then grew into a larger campaign challenging the ruling establishment. Thousands were killed amid a crackdown by security forces. Iranian officials claim that “terrorists” funded and armed by the US and Israel were responsible for the killings. Trump recently confirmed that the US had armed some protesters.

    Against this backdrop, the frozen assets are locked cash that Iran could readily use: $100bn represents almost a quarter of the country’s GDP.

    Roxane Farmanfarmaian, academic director and lecturer in international politics specialising in Iran at the University of Cambridge, told Al Jazeera that unfreezing Iran’s assets would be significant to the country.

    “It would mean being able to repatriate its funds earned in hard currency from oil sales, for example, back into its own economy. It would also give it control over its currency fluctuations, and hence avoid the vulnerability to currency swings that, for example, set off the December 2025 protests,” she said.

    She noted that significant industries, including its oil fields, water systems and electricity grids, are facing infrastructure decline and would all benefit from upgrades if the country gets free access to its assets. With the assets, Iran could pay foreign companies and its own industries to begin improving, she said.

    “Obviously, it [Iran] will also have to rebuild after the war, and freed-up assets would immediately make that process quicker and more efficient,” she said.

    “Having access to its frozen funds will also jump-start the economic growth it needs, improving the government’s relationship with the public and begin the long process of draining out the corruption that is the inevitable accompaniment to sanctions regimes,” she added.

    The US decision on whether to unfreeze Iranian assets would also serve as a critical diplomatic message, Chris Featherstone, a political scientist at the University of York, told Al Jazeera.

    “Internationally, unfreezing the assets could signal a lessening of the US pressure on the Iranian economy,” Featherstone said. “This could enable increased engagement from other international actors and regional neighbours, developing trade and integration.

    “However, with the Trump administration’s unpredictable approach to international politics and the war with Iran, this could also be interpreted as further evidence of how difficult it is for allies and enemies of the US to predict the Trump administration’s next move.”

  • US-Iran talks: What’s the latest on mediation efforts?

    US-Iran talks: What’s the latest on mediation efforts?

    A renewed diplomatic push is under way to revive talks between the United States and Iran amid a fragile two-week ceasefire agreed last week following nearly six weeks of fighting in the US-Israeli war on Iran.

    The truce, which expires on April 22, has created a small window for negotiations to end the war, which has killed more than 4,000 people across the Middle East, overwhelmingly in Iran and Lebanon.

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    The first round of talks was held on Saturday in Islamabad under Pakistani mediation, but failed to secure an understanding or agreement between Tehran and Washington.

    Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is on tour this week, making a flurry of stops including in Saudi Arabia and Turkiye, to shore up support for the process and prevent a return to all-out war.

    Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump says the war is “very close to being over” and has signalled that a second round of talks could resume within days, again potentially in the Pakistani capital.

    Here is what we know about the latest mediation efforts:

    What happened in the first round?

    The first round of high-level talks took place in Islamabad on April 11 and 12, and marked the most significant direct engagement between the US and Iran in decades.

    Mediated by Pakistan, the talks lasted more than 20 hours and included both indirect and direct exchanges between delegations led by US Vice President JD Vance and senior Iranian officials.

    According to reports, the discussions focused on several core issues, including Iran’s nuclear programme, sanctions relief, Iran’s frozen assets, and control of the Strait of Hormuz.

    The talks concluded without a resolution or memorandum of understanding, with Vance claiming Iran chose “not to accept our terms”, adding that the US needs to see a “fundamental commitment” from Tehran not to develop nuclear weapons.

    Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the leader of Tehran’s delegation, said it raised “forward-looking” initiatives, but the US had failed to gain the ‌‌‌‌trust of his delegation in the talks.

    What do we know about the next round of potential talks?

    Reports in US and international media suggest there are growing prospects for a second round that could take place in a matter of days.

    On Wednesday, the AP news agency reported that Washington and Tehran had given an “in principle agreement” to extend the ceasefire to allow for diplomatic overtures, citing unnamed regional officials.

    However, a US official was quoted by Reuters as saying that ⁠⁠Washington has not ⁠⁠formally agreed to ⁠⁠the extension of its ceasefire with ‌‌Iran. There is “continued engagement ⁠⁠between the ⁠⁠US and Iran to reach ⁠⁠a deal”, the US official said.

    Meanwhile, world leaders have made differing statements over the past week about the ceasefire and the chance for further talks.

    On Tuesday, US President Trump suggested talks could resume within days. “You should stay there, really, because something could be happening over the next two days, and we’re more inclined to go there [Islamabad],” he told a New York Post reporter in Islamabad.

    However, Pakistan’s PM Sharif began a four-day trip to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkiye on Wednesday to rally support for the negotiations, making it unlikely that talks could be held in the timeframe Trump was suggesting.

    On Wednesday, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said he ⁠⁠⁠⁠was hopeful about negotiations despite roadblocks.

    “We are conveying the necessary suggestions and carrying out initiatives to ease tensions, extend the ⁠⁠⁠⁠ceasefire and maintain talks. There can be no negotiating ⁠⁠⁠⁠with clenched fists,” Erdogan said.

    While reports, including Trump’s own remarks, suggest that Islamabad would be the likely host, no announcement has been made.

    What are the main sticking points in negotiations?

    Nuclear programme

    The thorniest issue remains Iran’s nuclear programme. In particular, the US and Israel are pushing for complete restrictions on uranium enrichment, and have accused Iran of working towards building a nuclear weapon, while providing no evidence for their claims. In March 2025, Tulsi Gabbard, the US director of National Intelligence, testified to Congress that the US “continues to assess that Iran is not building a nuclear weapon”.

    Iran insists its enrichment effort is for civilian purposes only. It is a signatory to the 1970 Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)

    In 2015, the US was a signatory to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) under then-US President Barack Obama. In that agreement, Iran pledged to limit its uranium enrichment to 3.67 percent and to comply with inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in return for the removal of international sanctions.

    However, in 2018, during his first term, Trump withdrew the US from the JCPOA despite the IAEA saying Iran had complied with the agreement up to that point.

    Strait of Hormuz

    Access to and control of the vital waterway connecting the Gulf to the Arabian Sea remains a major flashpoint. One-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplies are shipped through the Strait of Hormuz in peacetime. Since the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran at the end of February, shipping through the passage has fallen by 95 percent as Iran has threatened to target tankers. During the conflict, Iran has allowed some ships it sees as friendly, as well as others that pay a toll, to pass.

    The US wants free passage through the waterway, while Iran insists on its sovereignty over the strait, saying all “non-hostile” ships can pass through.

    Moreover, Iranian officials insist on having the authority to levy tolls on ships passing through the strategic strait, including after the war concludes.

    In a further escalation, Trump imposed a naval blockade on Iranian ports on Monday, creating another obstacle to the prospects of talks restarting.

    INTERACTIVE - Strait of Hormuz - March 2, 2026-1772714221
    (Al Jazeera)

    Lebanon

    A key demand from Iran is that Israel end its offensive against Iran’s ally Hezbollah in Lebanon. Tehran said the ceasefire agreed last week included the war in Lebanon, but the US and Israel have both rejected that. Trump has called Israel’s assaults on its neighbour “a separate skirmish” even though Hezbollah entered the war in defence of Iran.

    An initial social media post by Pakistani PM Sharif announcing the ceasefire included Lebanon. Following that announcement, however, Israel launched its most widespread attacks since March, when fighting with Hezbollah began, striking more than 100 targets across the country in just one day – Wednesday – last week.

    Hezbollah is Tehran’s most powerful regional ally and a central part of the “axis of resistance”, a network of armed groups across the Middle East aligned with Iran against Israel, including Yemen’s Houthis and a collection of armed groups in Iraq.

    While Israel and Lebanon held direct talks in Washington on Tuesday, the first formal meeting between the two countries, Israel says it will not stop its attacks on Hezbollah.