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  • UK fines 4chan nearly $700,000 for failing its online safety act obligations

    UK’s Ofcom has fined 4chan a total of £520,000 ($690,000) over the website’s failure to comply with the rules of Online Safety Act 2023. The biggest chunk of the amount came from 4chan’s failure to ensure children cannot encounter pornographic content on its website by implementing an effective age check mechanism. For that violation, the website has received a penalty of £450,000 ($598,000) and an order to apply an age check system by April 2. It carries a daily rate penalty of £500 ($664) until the website is compliant or until June 1, whichever comes sooner.

    Ofcom also found that 4chan has failed to carry out sufficient illegal content risk assessment on its website and has fined it £50,000 ($66,400) for that violation. 4chan has until April 2 to conduct a risk assessment, or it has to pay an additional £200 ($266) per day. Finally, the regulator has determined that 4chan failed to include provisions in its terms of service that specify how it protects users from illegal content. That carries a fine of £20,000 ($26,600), with a daily rate penalty of £100 ($133) a day from its compliance deadline of April 2 to June 1.

    The regulator started investigating 4chan, famous for its anonymous and unmoderated messaging boards, in June 2025 to determine if it was failing to meet its obligations under the law. In October, Ofcom announced its decision for some of the investigations it opened. It slapped 4chan with a £20,000 ($26,700) fine for ignoring its requests for a copy of the website’s illegal harms risk assessment and to provide information about its qualifying worldwide revenue. The regulator has confirmed to Engadget that 4chan has yet to pay that previous fine, which also earned cumulative daily punishment fees for 60 days.

  • Wall Street Giants Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Revise Their FED Interest Rate Forecasts Following Yesterday’s Decision!

    Wall Street Giants Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Revise Their FED Interest Rate Forecasts Following Yesterday’s Decision!

    The US Federal Reserve (FED), in its March FOMC meeting, kept interest rates unchanged, in line with expectations, at 3.50-3.75 percent.

    The decision was made with an 11-1 vote, with Stephen Miran opposing it with a proposal for a quarter-point reduction.

    In his oral statements, FED Chairman Jerome Powell mentioned the possibility of raising interest rates due to the increasing risk of inflation after a long period, and stated that he plans to cut interest rates once each in 2026 and 2027.

    Powell stressed that a decline in inflation, particularly goods inflation driven by tariffs, is necessary before interest rate cuts can resume. “If we don’t see that progress, there will be no interest rate cuts,” he said.

    Following these statements, US giants Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley revised the expected date for the first interest rate cut.

    Accordingly, Morgan Stanley shifted its expectations for interest rate cuts from June and September to September and December.

    Goldman Sachs also shifted its interest rate cut forecast from June to September.

    The primary reason cited for the revision in the forecasts was the Fed’s increased uncertainty regarding the conflicts in the Middle East.

    This marks a significant three-month delay compared to previous June and September forecasts in light of evolving economic events.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • CoinDesk 20 performance update: NEAR Protocol (NEAR) drops 3.3%, leading index lower

    CoinDesk 20 performance update: NEAR Protocol (NEAR) drops 3.3%, leading index lower

    CoinDesk Indices presents its daily market update, highlighting the performance of leaders and laggards in the CoinDesk 20 Index.

    The CoinDesk 20 is currently trading at 2029.25, down 1.6% (-33.09) since yesterday’s close.

    Two of 20 assets are trading higher.

    Leaders: APT (+0.4%) and BCH (+0.4%).

    Laggards: NEAR (-3.3%) and HBAR (-2.9%).

    The CoinDesk 20 is a broad-based index traded on multiple platforms in several regions globally.

  • Unifrance Executive Files Attempted Rape Complaint With Police Against French Actor Patrick Bruel

    Unifrance Executive Files Attempted Rape Complaint With Police Against French Actor Patrick Bruel

    Daniela Elstner, managing director of French cinema and TV export agency Unifrance, has filed a police complaint against French actor and singer and actor Patrick Bruel, accusing him of attempted rape and sexual assault dating back to an alleged incident from 1997.

    Elstner has spoken publicly about her experience in the past, including with The Hollywood Reporter, but declined to name Bruel, saying only that the alleged attacker was a high-profile figure in the film industry. She filed the complaint on March 12. On Wednesday, French investigative news website Mediapart named Elstner as one of eight women who have accused Bruel of sexual violence in incidents from between 1992 and 2019.

    Mediapart reported that a second woman lodged a complaint for rape against Bruel, for an incident alleged to have taken place at the Dinard British Film Festival in 2012, when Bruel was president of the jury.

    Elstner’s complaint claims Bruel assaulted her during Unifrance’s French Film Festival in Acapulco, Mexico, in 1997. Elstner was then 26 and working as an assistant at Unifrance. Bruel was attending the festival to promote the French thriller K, in which he starred alongside Isabella Ferrari and Marthe Keller. Speaking to Mediapart, Elstner said Bruel pushed her into a VIP car and forced himself on her, kissing and fondling her as she protested.

    “I remember the Mexican driver’s smiles in the rearview mirror as I struggled, and Patrick Bruel’s words, which were more or less: ‘Who are you? Nobody will believe you. You’re nothing. Do you know who I am?’” Elstner told Mediapart. “That sentence affected me as much as the physical assault, because it was very clearly intended to tell me that I didn’t exist. The car drove back up to the bungalow; it felt like the journey lasted forever.”

    Elstner said Bruel then bundled her into his room, but that she managed to escape, with much struggling and screaming. Speaking to Mediapart, Bruel’s lawyer Christophe Ingrain denied all allegations against his client. Bruel, Ingrain is quoted as saying, “never forced anyone into a sexual act or relationship,” and “never overruled a refusal.”

    Although not an international star, Bruel is a household name in France, with several chart-topping albums and dozens of television and film credits, including What’s in a Name? (2012) and The Best Is Yet to Come (2019).

    The Mediapart investigation outlines earlier allegations against Bruel, including, from 2019, complaints lodged by women working as masseuses in different luxury spas across France who accused the actor of sexual violence. Those cases were dismissed due to lack of evidence.

    Speaking to Mediapart, Elstner’s lawyer Jade Dousselin said her client made the “painful and significant decision” to file an official complaint against Bruel, well aware that the statute of limitations for the alleged crimes has expired. “Her approach today is less about seeking condemnation than about seeking liberation.”

    The allegations against Bruel come amid an industry-wide reckoning with sexual harassment and abuse in France. French star Gérard Depardieu was convicted last May of sexually assaulting two members of a film production crew and was placed on a list of sex offenders, but not jailed. He has been ordered to stand trial on a separate case, involving the alleged rape and sexual assault of actress Charlotte Arnould. Depardieu has denied the charges.

    In 2024, nine women publicly accused veteran French producer Alain Sarde of rape and sexual assault in a detailed expose published in the French edition of Elle magazine. Sarde has denied the charges, and he has not been formally charged with any criminal activity.

  • Tubi Inks Creator Development Deal With TikTok

    Tubi Inks Creator Development Deal With TikTok

    Tubi, the free ad-supported streaming platform owned by Fox Corp., is continuing to double down on creator-led content.

    The latest deal? A partnership with TikTok, which will give selected creators on that platform a pathway to developing their own shows for Tubi.

    Here’s how it will work: TikTok will work with Tubi to identify creators, and an initial cohort will be invited to the incubator program this summer. The shows, both scripted and unscripted, will debut exclusively on Tubi, with TikTok leveraging its Spotlight program to drive its users to the platform.

    Ultimately, it will give participating creators a chance to hone their skills in longer-form content, something that many of them are eager to do.

    “Tubi is doubling down on giving creators a real bridge from digital platforms to premium long-form storytelling,” said Rich Bloom, GM of creator programs and executive VP of business development at Tubi. “TikTok has become one of the most powerful engines for discovering creative voices and building passionate communities at scale. This partnership allows us to work with successful TikTok creators who are ready to take the next step creatively, expanding their fandoms to new audiences on Tubi and bringing Tubi fans more stories they can’t find anywhere else.”

    “TikTok is committed to empowering creators on our platform and throughout their career journey,” adds Dawn Yang, global head of entertainment partnerships at TikTok. “Our creators have built deeply engaged audiences on TikTok, and our partnership with Tubi will give the next generation of entertainers more opportunities to expand their audiences, tell bigger stories, and turn their creativity into lasting impact.”

    Tubi has been particularly aggressive in the creator space, inking licensing deals with creators like MrBeast, Alan’s Universe, Jomboy Media, and CelinaSpookyBoo, and more recently picking up original creator-led slates and feature films.

  • Trump attempts to distance US from Israeli strikes on key Iranian gasfield

    Questions raised over US knowledge of Israeli plans to strike key Iranian gasfield as Gulf region’s energy infrastructure becomes target for attack.

    United States President Donald Trump has tried to distance the US from Israel’s attack on Iran’s South Pars gasfield, describing his Israeli allies as having “violently lashed out” at the facility and promising that it would not reoccur if Tehran refrains from attacking Qatar.

    Trump said the US had “nothing to do” with the strike on the offshore gasfield facilities in Iran’s Bushehr province on Wednesday, which was followed by Iran pledging to strike energy facilities in Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

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    Qatar’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) export facility at Ras Laffan Industrial City later sustained “significant damage” in an Iranian missile strike, while the UAE suspended operations of the Habshan gas facility and the Bab oilfield amid missile attacks.

    “NO MORE ATTACKS WILL BE MADE BY ISRAEL pertaining to this extremely important and valuable South Pars Field,” Trump said on his TruthSocial platform late on Wednesday.

    “Unless Iran unwisely decides to attack a very innocent, in this case, Qatar – in which instance the United States of America, with or without the help or consent of Israel, will massively blow up the entirety of the South Pars Gas Field at an amount of strength and power that Iran has never seen or witnessed before,” he said.

    “The United States knew nothing about this particular attack, and the country of Qatar was in no way, shape, or form, involved with it, nor did it have any idea that it was going to happen,” Trump said.

    Earlier on Wednesday, ⁠The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump had approved of Israel’s plan to attack South Pars, which is the Iranian sector ⁠of the world’s largest natural gas deposit, and which Iran shares with Qatar.

    “Trump, who knew about the Israeli strike on South Pars in advance, supported it as a message to Tehran over its block of the Strait of Hormuz,” the Journal said, citing US officials.

    “The president believes Iran got the message and is now against attacks on Iranian energy infrastructure,” it said.

    Al Jazeera’s Rosiland Jordan, reporting from Washington, DC, said the strike on the gasfield – one of Iran’s key economic engines – raises serious questions.

    “This raises some questions about whether the Israelis did tell the US that they were planning to attack South Pars before the attack on Wednesday,” Jordan said.

    The strike on South Pars marked the first time in the current conflict that a site directly linked to fossil fuel production had been targeted, rather than broader oil and gas infrastructure.

    Analysts had suggested such facilities had been spared attack up to now to limit the risk of retaliatory strikes on such facilities across the region.

    The latest escalation has fuelled concerns that the conflict is expanding into the energy sector, with potentially far-reaching economic consequences globally.

  • You Can Now Trade Official S&P 500 Perpetual Futures via Hyperliquid

    You Can Now Trade Official S&P 500 Perpetual Futures via Hyperliquid

    In brief

    • S&P Dow Jones Indices licensed the S&P 500 to Trade[XYZ], enabling round-the-clock speculation on the largest publicly traded companies in the U.S.
    • The development comes as the CFTC develops a regulatory framework for perpetual futures in the U.S., which could be unveiled soon.
    • Perpetual futures tied to indices and exchange-traded funds are becoming increasingly popular on Hyperliquid, yet commodities and crypto still lead.

    Hyperliquid traders have gained access to perpetual futures that track the S&P 500 under a licensing agreement between S&P Dow Jones Indices and Trade[XYZ], enabling round-the-clock speculation on the largest publicly traded companies in the U.S.

    For the first time, investors outside the U.S. will be able to gain leveraged exposure to the stock index using an officially licensed product that’s also digitally native, the index provider said in a Wednesday announcement.

    In recent months, Trade[XYZ] has broadened access to markets based on real-world assets like gold and oil on Hyperliquid. The startup offers contracts that are settled in Circle’s USDC stablecoin and accessible through the decentralized exchange.

    “We developed XYZ with a vision of bringing the world’s most important markets on-chain,” Collins Belton, chief operating officer and general counsel at Trade[XYZ]’s parent company, said in a statement. “The S&P 500 is a natural starting point.”

    Perpetual futures tied to indices and exchange-traded funds are becoming increasingly popular on Hyperliquid, following an upgrade last year that allows firms like Trade[XYZ] to create markets independently. On Sunday, perpetual futures tied to those products commanded 5.5% of Hyperliquid’s trading volumes at $215 million, according to a Dune dashboard.

    Although that was far less than crypto (76%) and commodities (17%), the new licensing agreement shows that companies forming the bedrock of traditional finance are taking a closer look at the proliferation on-chain of perpetual futures.

    Hyperliquid’s native token changed hands around $43 on Wednesday, a 7% increase over the past day. Its price has tumbled 27% from an all-time high of $59 in September. Still, HYPE has soared 225% over the past year.

    Earlier this month, CFTC Chair Mike Selig indicated alongside SEC Chair Paul Atkins that his agency plans to establish a regulatory framework for perpetual futures in the U.S. soon. At the time, he argued the prior administration drove associated activity offshore.

    Perpetual futures allow a trader to speculate on an asset indefinitely, and their prices are anchored to their underlying asset through periodic payments, known as a funding rate. Over time, they have become the dominant form of derivatives across global crypto markets.

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  • The Open Reel Swoops on Málaga WIP Winner ‘Little Tragedies’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    The Open Reel Swoops on Málaga WIP Winner ‘Little Tragedies’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Italy’s The Open Reel has picked up international sales rights to Daniel Nolasco’s Brazilian hybrid feature “Little Tragedies” (“Pequenas tragédias”), winner last week of the Malaga Festival’s WIP Ibero-América Award.

    The film collected a €5,000 ($5,752) cash prize at MAFIZ, Málaga’s industry hub, during the festival’s 29th edition, held March 6-15. Written and directed by Nolasco, “Pequenas tragédias” draws on an overtly personal premise to explore memory, distance and queer belonging.

    Set in 2011, the film begins when Nolasco leaves his small hometown of Catalão, in Brazil’s interior, for Rio de Janeiro to attend college. He is the first of a group of queer friends to leave. 10 years later, none of them remain there: some have died, while the others have moved away.

    The film unfolds as a personal story of memory, loss and belonging set in Catalão, a place everyone says is “too good to live in,” hinting at the tensions beneath the surface.

    Produced by Cecília Brito and Nolasco for Brazil’s Rensga Produções, with Brito also serving as executive producer, the feature arrived to Málaga at post-production stage, with the team finishing sound and seeking partners to complete color correction and image compositing. For The Open Reel, the pickup is in line with the Italian sales company’s focus on indie auteur cinema and its continued work with emerging and established filmmakers on the international festival circuit.

    “We have worked with Daniel Nolasco since his debut and know his filmography very well,” Open Reel CEO Cosimo Santoro told Variety, describing “Little Tragedies” as a film that weaves autobiographical elements with subtle irony and restraint.

    “The film also confirms Nolasco’s skill behind the camera and his mastery in working with actors, qualities already evident in his earlier features ‘Dry Wind’ and ‘Only Good Things,’ and which make him one of the most compelling voices in contemporary cinema,” he added.

    “The themes explored in this deeply personal film, together with the fascinating and erotic imagery through which they are expressed, give us every reason to believe it can post strong sales results, as happened with his previous work, in key territories across Europe, North America and Asia.”

    Nolasco broke out internationally with “Dry Wind,” which premiered in Berlin’s Panorama in 2020, following a run of shorts and nonfiction work. His more recent credits include the short “Pedro Had a Horse” and the 2025 feature “Only Good Things,” which played the Frameline San Francisco Intl. LGBTQ Film Festival.

    Behind the camera, Nolasco is joined by cinematographer Felipe Quintelas, who previously collaborated with him on “Dry Wind.”

  • Coinshares Debuts Regulated DeFi and RWA Yield Strategy With Railnet

    Coinshares Debuts Regulated DeFi and RWA Yield Strategy With Railnet

    On Wednesday, Coinshares announced a new onchain asset management strategy that blends decentralized finance ( DeFi) yields with tokenized real-world assets within a regulated framework.

    Coinshares Launches Onchain Strategy Combining DeFi and Tokenized Asset Yields

    The Jersey-based digital asset manager said the strategy is built in partnership with infrastructure provider Kiln and powered by its Railnet orchestration layer, marking what the firm describes as the first time a regulated European asset manager has combined DeFi lending, institutional secured lending, and tokenized asset yields into a single product.

    The offering introduces a third pillar to Coinshares’ platform, alongside its crypto exchange-traded products and actively managed strategies. The firm said the new approach aims to integrate multiple yield sources into one managed allocation, allowing exposure across DeFi protocols, tokenized bond funds and ETFs, and delta-neutral basis strategies.

    Coinshares stated that the portfolio will draw from six distinct yield sources, with allocations adjusted over time based on market conditions and risk assessments. The structure is designed to diversify across credit, liquidity provision, and relative value opportunities while maintaining a consolidated view of risk.

    The strategy is managed under Coinshares Asset Management, which holds regulatory authorization under AIFMD and MiFID for financial instruments, as well as MiCA for crypto-assets. The company said this dual authorization allows it to allocate across both traditional securities and crypto markets within a single compliant framework, a capability it described as uncommon among asset managers.

    Railnet serves as the underlying infrastructure, connecting multiple venues and standardizing how yields from DeFi protocols, secured lending platforms, and tokenized assets are managed. Coinshares said this setup enables execution across different markets without being limited to a single protocol’s liquidity, while maintaining auditable oversight of portfolio activity.

    Coinshares CEO Jean-Marie Mognetti said the initiative reflects the firm’s long-standing view that traditional finance (TradFi) and DeFi are converging into a unified system of capital allocation. He described the strategy as a structured approach that combines multiple independent sources of return, including credit and liquidity-based opportunities, within a regulated investment framework.

    Kiln CEO Laszlo Szabo said the Railnet system is designed to bridge short-term blockchain-based activity with longer-term financial processes by encoding real-world constraints directly into onchain infrastructure. He added that the platform standardizes settlement, timing, and liquidity management across fragmented markets.

    Coinshares said the architecture also enables business-to-business distribution, allowing custodians, exchanges, and wallet providers to offer institutional-grade yield strategies to clients through a unified system. The firm said this expands access beyond simple asset holding to more complex income-generating products.

    The launch aligns with Coinshares’ broader strategy to expand across three areas: crypto exchange-traded products, actively managed digital asset portfolios, and onchain asset management. The company said this diversification positions it to capture demand from institutional investors seeking exposure to both traditional and blockchain-based financial instruments.

    FAQ 🔎

    • What did Coinshares launch? Coinshares launched an onchain asset management strategy combining DeFi yields and tokenized real-world assets.
    • What is Railnet’s role? Railnet provides infrastructure to connect and manage multiple yield sources across onchain and traditional markets.
    • Is the strategy regulated? Yes, Coinshares operates under AIFMD, MiFID, and MiCA frameworks for compliance across asset classes.
    • Who can access the strategy? Institutional clients and distribution partners such as exchanges and custodians can access the offering.
  • Banks risk another 2008 crisis after moving the equivalent of 18 million BTC into shadow lenders

    US banks “reduced” their credit risk after 2008 by shifting more of it to nonbank lenders.

    Since 2008, banks have shifted a growing share of their lending to nonbanks like private credit funds, making it their fastest-growing loan category.

    That shift doesn’t signal another 2008-style crisis today, but it does show where trouble could surface first if private credit starts to crack.

    This week, traders, analysts, and Investment firms are reviving a familiar question: are US banks setting up a repeat of 2008?

    The clean answer is no, based on the publicly available numbers. The same debate also points to a real shift in bank balance sheets that deserves a harder look.

    The chart below, which is circulating on X, shows that bank lending to nondepository financial institutions, or NDFIs, rose 2,320% over 15 years.

    An FDIC note documented $1.32 trillion of those loans by the third quarter of 2025, up from $56 billion in the first quarter of 2010, and called the category the fastest-growing loan segment since the 2008-09 crisis.

    After 2008, large banks pulled back from riskier direct lending, but they also funded the nonbank lenders that stepped in. That group includes private credit vehicles, mortgage finance firms, securitization structures, and other parts of the shadow banking system. The risk moved elsewhere rather than disappearing.

    However, that does not mean banks are already in trouble. The FDIC’s latest industry profile showed the banking sector earned $295 billion in 2025, posted a fourth-quarter return on assets of 1.24%, reduced unrealized securities losses to $306 billion, and counted 60 problem banks, still within the agency’s normal non-crisis range. Those are not the numbers of a system already in a panic.

    The issue is where losses, redemptions, and liquidity pressure land when the lending chain has more links.

    For crypto, that changes the timing of any stress. A classic bank panic starts at the bank. In the current structure, stress can begin in a fund, a warehouse line, or a financing vehicle, then work backward into banks if marks fall, borrowers miss payments, or investors ask for cash faster than the assets can be sold.

    The post-crisis shift is now visible in the numbers

    The official numbers make the structural change hard to dismiss. The FDIC said bank lending to NDFIs compounded at 21.9% a year from 2010 to 2024.

    By the third quarter of 2025, the total had reached $1.32 trillion, or roughly 10% of bank lending in the agency’s analysis.

    Not every dollar in that bucket is private credit, and exposures in the category carry different levels of risk. Even so, the scale shows that a large share of credit intermediation now sits in institutions that do not take deposits and often disclose less than banks do.

    That nuance is important. NDFI is a broad label. It can include mortgage intermediaries, consumer finance firms, securitization vehicles, private equity funds, and other nonbank lenders, alongside private-credit funds.

    A sloppy reading turns the whole bucket into one bet on private credit. A more accurate reading is that banks built a large, fast-growing set of links to the broader nonbank system.

    Private credit is one visible part of that system, and one of the most closely watched because it grew during a long period of higher rates, tighter bank regulation, and steady investor demand for yield.

    A Federal Reserve staff note sharpens this point. It is estimated that committed credit lines from the largest US banks to private-credit vehicles rose from about $8 billion in the first quarter of 2013 to about $95 billion by the fourth quarter of 2024, with roughly $56 billion already drawn.

    The same work put total committed bank lines to private credit and private equity at about $322 billion.

    That does not prove systemic failure is close. The Fed’s own conclusion was more restrained: direct financial-stability risk from this channel looked limited so far because the largest banks appeared able to absorb major drawdowns.

    Even so, growing links between banks and private-credit vehicles warrant close attention.

    The risk is best framed as continued bank funding for parts of the lending chain, which changes where stress appears first.

    In the public market, losses print quickly. In private markets, they can move more slowly because marks update less often, assets are less liquid, and investor withdrawals are managed through product rules.

    That delay can make the system look calm until cash needs force a sharper repricing.

    Global context points in the same direction. The Financial Stability Board said the nonbank financial intermediation sector accounted for about 51% of total global financial assets in 2024 and continued to grow at roughly twice the pace of banking, according to its latest report.

    This is no longer a US edge case. Credit has been moving into institutions outside the classic banking model for years, and the US private-credit boom is part of that wider pattern.

    Why the trade is getting tested now

    The issue became more urgent as structural data arrived while private credit began to show public strain. Some private-credit vehicles have limited or managed withdrawals, while JPMorgan tightened some lending against private-credit portfolios after markdowns.

    Those events stop short of establishing a full-market break and instead show where pressure is likely to emerge first: fund liquidity, financing terms, and collateral values.

    That is also why any comparison to 2008 needs restraint.

    The same FDIC report that drove renewed attention also showed banks entering this phase from a stronger income position than during past crises. The public banking system is not in free fall.

    The greater concern is a funding architecture that could transmit stress from nonbank lenders back into banks if private assets keep repricing lower or if investors want cash before loans can be sold or refinanced.

    Borrower quality and refinancing deserve more attention than broad slogans. In a recent Financial Times interview, Partners Group’s chair said that private-credit default rates could double from their roughly 2.6% historical average over the coming years. That is not an official baseline, and it should not be treated as one.

    It does, however, capture the key pressure point. A system built on long-duration private loans, slower marks, and regular financing lines can look stable until defaults rise and refinancing windows narrow at the same time.

    For Bitcoin, the setup is awkward in the short run and cleaner in the medium run. At the time of writing, $BTC traded near $73,777 and held 58.5% market dominance, with gains of 0.05% over 24 hours, 4.55% over seven days, and 7.51% over 30 days, according to CryptoSlate data.

    That price action suggests crypto is not trading as if a banking event is already underway. If a broader credit squeeze did hit, the first move would likely be a selloff in liquid assets, and Bitcoin is still one of the most liquid assets in global markets.

    Over a longer horizon, if the debate broadens into a deeper loss of trust in how the financial system carries leverage and values private assets, Bitcoin’s appeal as an asset outside the banking stack becomes easier to articulate.

    That second-order effect is the real contagion risk for crypto.

    A private-credit strain does not automatically send capital into Bitcoin on day one. It can easily produce the opposite move.

    Over time, though, if banks have to pull back, if fund financing gets harder, and if more investors start asking who really owns the credit risk, the case for holding some assets outside that system becomes easier to make. We know that trade. The banking data now place it in a new macro setting.

    What to watch in the next round of data

    The next phase of this story will likely emerge through three checks: whether more private-credit vehicles limit withdrawals or take larger marks, whether banks keep financing those funds on the same terms, and whether the NDFI loan book continues to expand at anything close to the pace the FDIC documented over the prior decade.

    That is where the current debate becomes more concrete than the usual “shadow banking” label. If banks tighten financing to nonbank lenders, middle-market borrowers can feel it quickly through cost and access, even if no household hears the acronym NDFI.

    If the funds meet redemptions by selling what they can, public credit can take some of the price discovery that private books avoided. If the funds do not sell and banks keep financing them, the exposure stays in the system longer.

    None of those paths requires a repeat of 2008. All of them can still change how credit flows.

    Pressure is already showing in all three areas

    The direction of travel so far looks like tightening, not collapse.

    On withdrawals and marks, semi-liquid private-credit vehicles are restricting cash more aggressively while investors push for fresher valuations.

    A recent report said Cliffwater’s flagship corporate lending fund received redemption requests equal to about 14% of shares and met only 7%, while Morgan Stanley’s North Haven fund received requests equal to 10.9% and honored only its 5% cap.

    The same report said BlackRock and other vehicles also hit standard quarterly limits, while Apollo moved toward monthly and then daily NAV reporting to answer criticism of stale pricing.

    That points to weaker liquidity conditions and stronger investor demand for faster price discovery and greater cash access at the same time.

    On bank financing, lenders are getting more selective rather than shutting the door outright.

    A separate report said JPMorgan marked down some software-backed private-credit collateral and restricted lending to affected funds, which reduced borrowing capacity and pointed to tougher collateral treatment in weaker pockets of the market.

    That stance is not universal. Other coverage said banks were still willing to finance some withdrawal needs. The signal is narrower and more useful: lenders are still in the market, but they are showing less tolerance for weak collateral and more willingness to tighten terms fund by fund.

    On balance-sheet growth, the NDFI loan book has already changed behavior without needing to contract outright.

    The FDIC’s February 2026 study said bank loans to NDFIs compounded at 21.9% annually from 2010 to 2024 and reached $1.32 trillion by the third quarter of 2025. A category that grew at that pace does not need an outright contraction to reset underwriting.

    Slower growth, more frequent markdowns, and tougher financing terms are enough to change redemption behavior, reduce leverage, and make investors less willing to assume that rapid balance-sheet growth can continue alongside benign losses.

    The official numbers argue against panic today, but they do not support complacency.

    The FDIC’s balance-sheet data show a large post-crisis migration in bank exposures. The Fed’s research shows large banks remain connected to the private-credit complex through financing lines. Global data show nonbank finance has become too large to treat as a side story, and the first public tests of private-credit liquidity are already showing up in the market.

    The next stress point may arrive through a route that looks safer in good times because it sits one step away from the bank.

    The next useful check is whether fund withdrawals stay contained, whether bank financing stays open, and whether the $1.32 trillion exposure that the FDIC documented keeps rising as private credit faces a harder year.