Tag: CRYPTOS FoxBusiness.

  • Pump.fun expands app beyond native tokens with support for WBTC, USDC and rival launchpads

    Pump.fun expands app beyond native tokens with support for WBTC, USDC and rival launchpads

    Pump.fun, a Solana-based token launchpad, announced a significant expansion of its mobile application today, allowing users to trade assets beyond its native ecosystem for the first time.

    It’s time to bring the Pump fun app to the next level

    For the first time ever, users can trade more than just Pump fun coins

    With support for other launchpads, WBTC, $PUMP, USDC & more, the Pump fun app is more versatile than ever 👇 pic.twitter.com/FkKEwJ8zR8

    — Pump.fun (@Pumpfun) March 2, 2026

    The platform said its app now supports tokens from external launchpads alongside established Solana assets including $PUMP, wrapped Bitcoin and wrapped Ethereum through Wormhole, GIGA, and PENGU.

    The shift transforms the interface from a single-launchpad tool into a multi-asset trading environment.

    The company reported its mobile application has exceeded 1.5 million downloads over the past year. It characterized the update as an effort to minimize user friction by enabling trading and custody of diverse assets within a single platform.

    Promotional material accompanying the announcement displayed mentions of Raydium and Meteora within the interface, suggesting additional protocol integrations may follow.

  • Iran crypto outflows surge 700% after US-Israel strikes as capital flees offshore

    Iran crypto outflows surge 700% after US-Israel strikes as capital flees offshore

    Crypto analytics firm Elliptic detected a significant spike in digital asset withdrawals from Nobitex, Iran’s dominant crypto exchange serving more than 11 million users, in the immediate aftermath of initial US-Israel military strikes on Iranian territory.

    The London-based blockchain intelligence company said the surge in outflows last Saturday may indicate capital flight. Outgoing transaction volumes spiked by 700% within minutes of the first strikes.

    Elliptic said the data suggests Iranian users converted rials into digital assets and moved funds to external wallets beyond the reach of conventional banking oversight.

    Nobitex handled $7.2B in crypto transactions in 2025, establishing itself as a cornerstone of Iran’s digital asset infrastructure. The platform has faced scrutiny over alleged financial ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

    In January, Elliptic reported evidence suggesting Iran’s central bank utilized the exchange to prop up the country’s weakening currency.

    Early tracing of recent withdrawals shows funds flowing toward foreign trading platforms that have historically absorbed substantial volumes originating from Iran.

    The pattern mirrors previous episodes this year. The most pronounced earlier spike occurred on January 9, coinciding with mass protests and a government-imposed internet shutdown. Withdrawal activity declined during the blackout but persisted at reduced levels, suggesting some users maintained access to their holdings despite the platform going offline.

    Two subsequent surges aligned with fresh US sanctions announcements targeting Tehran, reinforcing observations that digital assets serve as a potential route around financial restrictions.

  • TD Securities sees NYSE tokenization as institutional turning point

    TD Securities, a major Canadian investment bank with operations across North America, says tokenization may be approaching an institutional turning point following the New York Stock Exchange’s push into tokenized equities.

    In recent commentary, TD Securities Reid Noch, vice president for electronic trading, said tokenization is beginning to carry real implications for market structure, pointing to the NYSE’s proposed tokenized equities alternative trading system (ATS) as a key development.

    The planned platform would enable 24-hour trading and near-instant settlement of tokenized stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), subject to regulatory approval.

    Rather than creating a parallel crypto-native marketplace, the venue is designed to operate within existing US market rules while leveraging blockchain-based settlement infrastructure.

    Source: Cointelegraph

    Noch described the structure as closer to a “2.0” market shift, where custody and settlement would remain anchored to the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC), while trading would comply with National Best Bid and Offer (NBBO) requirements. This means prices must reflect the best available bid and offer across U.S. exchanges to prevent fragmented liquidity.

    Although Noch said early activity is expected to be retail-driven, the broader implications extend well beyond individual traders.

    TD Securities’ institutional focus suggests the company sees potential impact on core market plumbing, including trading hours, collateral management, settlement cycles and liquidity, areas that shape how large financial institutions operate.

    Tokenized equities gain institutional traction

    Tokenization accelerated in 2024, led primarily by private credit and U.S. Treasury products, which have accounted for the bulk of onchain real-world asset (RWA) issuance, according to industry data.

    Despite broader crypto market volatility, capital inflows into tokenized assets have continued, suggesting sustained institutional interest in blockchain-based settlement and ownership models.

    More recently, tokenized equities have begun gaining traction. Kraken’s xStocks platform has emerged as one of the more visible entrants, reporting more than $25 billion in cumulative trading volume since launching last year.

    The market for tokenized stocks has grown rapidly. Source: RWA.xyz

    Although tokenized equities remain a small fraction of global stock market activity, their growth reflects a broader shift toward bringing traditional financial instruments onchain within regulated frameworks.

  • Battle for Bitcoin’s soul opens as first block supporting ‘clean-up’ proposal is mined

    Battle for Bitcoin’s soul opens as first block supporting ‘clean-up’ proposal is mined

    Bitcoin’s latest governance clash escalated this week as the first block signaling support for a temporary soft fork designed to restrict arbitrary, non-monetary data in the blockchain’s transactions was produced by mining pool Ocean.

    The proposal, formally assigned BIP-110 after evolving from earlier drafts, aims to reinstate strict limits on transaction output sizes and arbitrary data fields for about a year. The idea is to curb what proponents see as “spam” uses of block space for non-financial data. They argue that unchecked data, including large inscriptions and so-called OP_RETURN payloads, threaten the original blockchain’s role as sound monetary infrastructure and burden node operators.

    The community remains deeply divided. Prominent critics, including Blockstream CEO Adam Back, have warned that consensus-level intervention could harm Bitcoin’s credibility and lead to preferential treatment of some transactions in violation of the principle of neutral transaction capacity. He also questioned the level of support for the proposal, which, he said, increased the risk of the blockchain being split.

    Adding fuel to the debate, a developer recently inscribed a 66 KB image in a single transaction on Bitcoin, an apparent pushback against BIP-110’s core claims and a demonstration of how large amounts of data can be encoded even without relying on OP_RETURN.

    OP_RETURN and similar approaches are script instructions used to mark a transaction output as invalid for spending, effectively allowing users to repurpose that space to permanently embed arbitrary data — like text or images — directly into the blockchain

    As the controversy unfolds, it underscores enduring philosophical tensions within Bitcoin. Should network aggressively defend a narrowly defined monetary purpose or maintain maximal neutrality toward arbitrary uses of its base layer?

  • Weekend warriors: How HyperLiquid became retail’s bear market playground

    The crypto bear market has dragged down most major digital assets this year, but $HYPE has moved in the opposite direction. Year to date, the token is up 23.9%, matching gold’s gain over the same period. The S&P 500 is slightly negative, while bitcoin has fallen 23.7% and ether more than 33%.

    The divergence is notable not only because $HYPE is crypto-native, but because it has decoupled from the broader digital asset market. Its performance increasingly reflects the value of the platform behind it rather than the market’s direction.

    HyperLiquid, the decentralized derivatives exchange that underpins $HYPE, is built to monetize activity rather than price appreciation. In bull markets, capital tends to concentrate in spot exposure. In choppier conditions marked by drawdowns and macro shocks, derivatives volume tends to persist. Traders shift from buying to positioning, and the platform collects fees on both sides.

    While trading volume on competitor platforms Aster and Lighter has tumbled in recent months, HyperLiquid’s has increased, rising from $169 billion in December to more than $200 billion for both January and February. Aster, meanwhile, went from $177 billion in December to less than $100 billion in February, with Lighter suffering an even sharper drop, DefiLlama data shows.

    Total volume on HyperLiquid since its inception has now hit a whopping $4 trillion.

    Volatility as a business model

    HyperLiquid’s core product is perpetual futures, which allow traders to go long or short with leverage. When prices grind higher, leverage amplifies upside. When markets slide, shorting and basis trades step in. The exchange collects fees on both sides.

    That structure becomes particularly relevant in a year marked by turbulence across asset classes. Rather than relying on sustained price appreciation, the exchange captures turnover. In sideways or declining markets, traders often increase frequency, hedge exposure, or rotate into relative-value strategies. Activity replaces direction as the primary driver.

    And that business model has yielded positive results. Gross protocol revenue grew by 96% in Q3 of 2025 to $354 million, with the fourth-quarter total hitting $286 million, the majority of which came from perpetual trading fees.

    That revenue comes from a super-lean team of fewer than 15 employees, with half focused on engineering. HyperLiquid founder Jeff Yan has also refused investment from venture capitalists to maintain independence – a bold approach uncommon in the crypto industry.

    Trading beyond market hours

    More recently, HyperLiquid has expanded beyond crypto-native pairs. It now offers synthetic exposure to foreign exchange, commodities and major equity indices. It also provides weekend trading for U.S. equities, an innovation that resonates with retail traders accustomed to crypto’s round-the-clock rhythm.

    For a generation raised on app-based brokerage platforms, the traditional market calendar feels restrictive. As seen over the past weekend, geopolitical escalations often land outside the typical weekday trading window. HyperLiquid’s structure allows traders to react in real time rather than wait for Monday’s open.

    HyperLiquid’s silver market has also been a resounding success with trading volume nearing $750 million over a recent 24-hour trading period despite traditional markets being closed for the majority of Sunday.

    The exchange has also introduced pre-IPO perpetual markets tied to companies such as Anthropic, OpenAI and SpaceX. These instruments are synthetic and do not confer equity ownership, but they offer directional exposure to private companies. In effect, they create a parallel venue for price discovery among retail participants otherwise excluded from late-stage venture valuations.

    The product FTX tried to build

    The model carries echoes of an earlier vision. FTX pitched 24-hour trading, tokenized equities and seamless leverage across asset classes. Its collapse stemmed from custody risk, shoddy balance-sheet practices, and the commingling of funds.

    HyperLiquid operates on a non-custodial framework, with on-chain settlement and transparent vault mechanics. Users interact with smart contracts rather than deposit funds into a centralized entity’s balance sheet. In a post-FTX landscape, that distinction carries weight. Retail traders who absorbed losses from centralized failures remain sensitive to counterparty exposure.

    HyperLiquid delivers many of the features once marketed by FTX, but through infrastructure designed to reduce reliance on a single custodian.

    The exchange also leans into competition and gamification. Leaderboards prominently rank traders by performance, creating protagonists like James Wynn, who lost $100 million on HyperLiquid after engaging in a high-risk long-only trading strategy using leverage when bitcoin was above $100,000.

    The mechanic encourages engagement. Traders can build reputations through short positions, market-neutral strategies or well-timed directional bets, and that creates a buzz on social media – effectively acting as a marketing vehicle even in volatile markets.

    The centralization test

    Claims that HyperLiquid is insulated from bear markets require context. One year ago, the protocol faced a credibility shock that raised questions about decentralization.

    In April 2025, the total value locked in the Hyperliquidity Provider vault fell from $540 million to $150 million within a month. The trigger was a trading episode involving a token called JELLY. A trader opened a large short position on HyperLiquid while simultaneously buying the token on illiquid decentralized exchanges. Thin liquidity distorted price feeds and forced the vault into a toxic position via liquidation.

    As JELLY’s reported price spiked to levels unsupported by deep liquidity, the vault’s unrealized losses mounted. HyperLiquid intervened, force-closing the market and settling JELLY at $0.0095 rather than the roughly $0.50 price being relayed by oracles. The decision protected the vault from substantial losses, but it ignited backlash.

    Critics argued that a protocol marketed as decentralized had exercised discretionary control reminiscent of a centralized exchange. Governance optics deteriorated quickly. Yield on the vault fell sharply, and users withdrew capital.

    Security researchers described the episode as an economic design flaw rather than a smart contract exploit. Jan Philipp Fritsche of Oak Security characterized it as unpriced vega risk, where leveraged exposure to volatile assets drained the risk fund in a predictable manner. The episode underscored that economic vulnerabilities can be as destabilizing as technical bugs.

    HyperLiquid later modified its governance process, shifting asset delistings to an on-chain validator voting mechanism. The change did not eliminate scrutiny, but it addressed one of the central criticisms.

    The vault has since recovered to $380 million in TVL, offering users a 6.93% APR.

    Resilience through activity

    Despite the controversy, trading volume on the exchange remained robust, and with competitors Aster and Lighter losing momentum, HyperLiquid is positioning itself as a mainstay in the ongoing cryptocurrency bear market.

    Risks remain. Regulatory attention could intensify around synthetic exposure to private companies and U.S. equities. Liquidity fragmentation in thinner markets could resurface pricing distortions. Governance mechanisms will continue to be tested under stress.

    Yet $HYPE’s relative strength this year reflects a structural distinction. Rather than functioning as a high-beta bet on digital asset appreciation, it increasingly behaves like a claim on a venue that monetizes volatility.

    In a cycle defined less by sustained rallies and more by sharp swings, that positioning has mattered.

  • As the New Week Begins with US-Iran Tensions, a Critical Report for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Altcoins Has Been Released! What’s the Current Situation?

    As the New Week Begins with US-Iran Tensions, a Critical Report for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Altcoins Has Been Released! What’s the Current Situation?

    Bitcoin (BTC) and altcoins started the new week with the US-Iran conflict. Bitcoin fell to $63,000 over the weekend before recovering to around $66,000.

    As market weakness and uncertainty persist, Coinshares released its cryptocurrency report, stating that it experienced $1 billion in inflows last week.

    “Cryptocurrency investment products saw $1 billion in inflows, ending a five-week streak of $4 billion in outflows.”

    “The decline in prices, technical resets, and the regrouping of large investors supported this trend.”

    Bitcoin and Altcoins Relieved!

    Looking at crypto funds individually, it was observed that inflows were mainly in Bitcoin.

    Bitcoin saw inflows worth $881.5 million, while Ethereum (ETH) experienced inflows of $116.9 million.

    Looking at other altcoins, XRP saw inflows of $1.9 million, Solana (SOL) $53.8 million, and Chainlink (LINK) $3.5 million.

    “Bitcoin was the top performing asset with inflows of $881 million.”

    Ethereum also saw inflows totaling $117 million. This was the largest inflow since mid-January.

    Both Ethereum and Bitcoin have remained in a net outflow position since the beginning of the year.

    In contrast, Solana saw inflows of $53.8 million last week and $156 million since the beginning of the year.

    Chainlink saw a small inflow of $3.4 million, with no other significant outflows.

    Looking at regional fund inflows and outflows, the US ranked first with an inflow of $957 million.

    After the US, Canada saw inflows of $34.1 million, Germany $31.7 million, and Switzerland $28.4 million. In contrast, Sweden experienced small outflows of $3.3 million and France $1.2 million.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Tom Lee’s Bitmine boosts ether holdings to 4.47 million tokens with $98 million ETH purchase

    Tom Lee’s Bitmine boosts ether holdings to 4.47 million tokens with $98 million ETH purchase

    Bitmine Immersion Technologies (BMNR) on Monday reported purchasing nearly 51,000 more $ETH tokens last week, increasing its holdings to 4.474 million.

    “In the midst of this ‘mini crypto winter,’ our focus continues to be on methodically executing our treasury strategy and steadily acquiring $ETH and in turn, optimizing the yield on our $ETH holdings,” said Chairman Tom Lee.

    The company said it now has 3,040,483 $ETH staked, worth about $6 billion at current prices. Lee said annualized staking revenue stands at $172 million. At full scale, staking rewards could reach $253 million annually based on a 2.86% yield over the last seven days, Lee continued.

    The company holds 4,473,587 ether ($ETH), valued at $1,976 per token, along with 195 bitcoin and $868 million in cash, as well as a $200 million stake in Beast Industries and a $14 million investment in Eightco Holdings. Bitmine said its ether position represents 3.71% of Ethereum’s 120.7 million token supply.

    Lee added that the firm is developing its Made in America Validator Network, or MAVAN, a staking platform slated for launch in early 2026. Bitmine said it is working with three staking providers as it builds the network.

  • Iranian crypto outflows jump 700% minutes after U.S.-Israeli airstrikes, Elliptic says

    Iranian crypto outflows jump 700% minutes after U.S.-Israeli airstrikes, Elliptic says

    Crypto outflows from Iran’s largest exchange jumped 700% within minutes of the first U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on Tehran, blockchain analytics firm Elliptic said in a Monday blog post.

    Elliptic said transaction volumes leaving Nobitex spiked almost immediately after the strikes, suggesting a rush to move funds offshore. Initial blockchain tracing indicates the crypto was sent to overseas exchanges that have historically received significant inflows from Iran.

    The activity “potentially represents capital flight from Iran that bypasses the traditional banking system,” according to Dr. Tom Robinson, Elliptic’s co-founder and chief scientist.

    Over the weekend, coordinated U.S. and Israeli airstrikes struck multiple targets in Iran, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and escalating a wider Middle East conflict. The attacks stoked market volatility as investors priced in potential disruptions to oil supplies through the strategic Strait of Hormuz, sending global crude prices sharply higher and triggering broad sell-offs in equities and safe-haven buying across assets.

    Nobitex allows users to convert Iranian rials into crypto and withdraw funds to external wallets, offering a route around traditional banking channels.

    The exchange processed $7.2 billion in crypto transactions in 2025 and claims more than 11 million users, making it central to Iran’s digital asset ecosystem, Robinson said.

    Elliptic has previously linked the exchange to IRGC-aligned financial activity and reported in January that Iran’s central bank appeared to use Nobitex in efforts to support the weakening rial.

    Iran’s crypto ecosystem

    Previous reports have detailed Iran’s growing use of cryptocurrencies as a hedge against a weakening rial and as a potential workaround to international sanctions, with U.S. authorities probing whether digital-asset platforms have enabled state-linked actors to move funds and access hard currency outside the traditional banking system. Blockchain research cited in those reports estimates that Iran-linked crypto activity has reached into the billions of dollars annually, spanning retail users as well as, according to officials, sanctioned entities.

    Robinson also flagged additional surges in Iranian crypto outflows earlier this year. The largest came on Jan. 9, following widespread anti-regime demonstrations and a subsequent government-imposed internet blackout.

    Two additional surges followed U.S. sanctions announcements targeting Iranian actors, the report said, suggesting crypto may be used to mitigate the impact of sanctions.

    Bitcoin $BTC$65,525.47 and major altcoins dropped sharply in the immediate aftermath of the strikes, with $BTC briefly falling below $64,000 before recovering to the mid-$60,000s, underscoring crypto’s sensitivity to geopolitical tensions. Ether (ETH) and other tokens also declined, though several remained above pre-strike levels, pointing to a relatively swift rebound after the initial sell-off.

    The world’s largest cryptocurrency was over 2% lower at publication time, trading around $65,500. Ether, the second-largest crypto by market cap, was 3.8% lower at around $1,930.

    Read more: Iran crisis puts the regime’s $7.8 billion crypto shadow economy in spotlight

  • CoinDesk 20 performance update: NEAR Protocol (NEAR) jumps 12.4% over weekend

    CoinDesk 20 performance update: NEAR Protocol (NEAR) jumps 12.4% over weekend

    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 1907.12, up 0.3% (+5.99) since 4 p.m. ET on Friday.

    Eight of the 20 assets are trading higher.

    Leaders: NEAR (+12.4%) and SOL (+2.1%).

    Laggards: DOT (-7.3%) and BCH (-4.5%).

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

  • Option Whales Turn Bullish on Bitcoin (BTC) After Five-Month Decline! This Price is Expected in March!

    Option Whales Turn Bullish on Bitcoin (BTC) After Five-Month Decline! This Price is Expected in March!

    Bitcoin (BTC), which has been fluctuating between $70,000 and $63,000 since February, experienced a sharp drop over the weekend due to the US-Iran conflict, but subsequently recovered.

    While Bitcoin remains around the $66,000 level, Singapore-based cryptocurrency analysis platform QCP Capital has shared its latest analysis for Bitcoin.

    According to QCP analysts, the cryptocurrency market remained within a narrow range amid escalating US-Iran tensions. Following the US attack on Iran, Bitcoin and Ethereum fell to $63,000 and $1,910 respectively before recovering.

    Saturday’s US attack on Iran resulted in the liquidation of approximately $300 million in long positions, but this was subsequently brought under control.

    According to the analysis, options reacted moderately. 1-day implied volatility rose to 93% but then retreated to below 60%.

    In particular, even as the conflict between the US and Iran escalated, option buyers continued to purchase Bitcoin call options with strike prices of $74,000 and $75,000 for the March expiry.

    This suggests that some investors are positioning themselves for a rebound in March after five consecutive months of decline.

    QCP analysts emphasize that the market is currently able to tolerate the fact that the Donald Trump administration has indicated that the military operation against Iran will last “approximately four weeks.”

    *This is not investment advice.