Ethereum Foundation's Staking Play: Big Money, Bigger Questions
The Ethereum Foundation just made its boldest staking move yet, doubling its allocation toward a 70,000 ETH target. But don't mistake activity for progress—or clarity.
The Ethereum Foundation just made its boldest staking move yet, doubling its allocation toward a 70,000 ETH target. But don't mistake activity for progress—or clarity.
Picture this: a Wall Street trader, fingers hovering over a button, mints a million in stablecoins in seconds. BitGo's latest move makes that real for institutions.
That BTC in your wallet? It's sweating. Buyers scramble to defend $66,500, but a crack could send prices tumbling to $60K, dragging altcoins like ETH and SOL into the abyss.
Your brokerage app might soon feel prehistoric. Securitize and the NYSE are tokenizing equities, promising instant settlements and global access that could slash fees for regular folks chasing stocks.
Your AI shopping assistant just got a wallet—and it doesn't need your credit card number. Stripe's expansion of Shared Payment Tokens reveals how the payments layer itself is transforming to serve autonomous agents, not just humans.
While everyone obsesses over AI hype and crypto casinos, a new wave of fintech companies is actually solving real problems: getting credit to students, helping small businesses borrow, and teaching teenagers how money works. Banks aren't ready for what's coming.
SoFi just bet big that enterprises want their boring bank account and their crypto wallet in one place. The question: is anyone actually asking for that?
X is finally doing something about crypto scams. The problem? It's treating a symptom, not the disease.
Bitcoin's stuck in a technical cage, and the exit door might lead straight down. If $76,000 doesn't hold as support soon, buckle up.
DeFi theft collapsed 89% year-over-year in Q1 2026, but don't celebrate yet. Security experts say the lull masks a far more sophisticated threat landscape emerging.
The Ethereum Foundation just staked $93 million in ether to hit its 70,000 ETH target. But here's what everyone's missing: this barely dents its $100 million annual burn rate.
Bitcoin's looking deceptively stable on the surface—institutional money keeps flowing in. But underneath, large holders are bailing out, and oil hitting $120/barrel just killed the rate-cut narrative that fueled the whole rally.
Bitcoin's looking vulnerable heading into Good Friday, and not for the reasons most people think. The real problem? The institutional buyers propping up prices are about to log off.