Crypto Daybook Americas: Bitcoin Calm Masks Tension Over Fed, Geopolitics
By Francisco Rodrigues (All times ET unless indicated otherwise)
One of the biggest bitcoin (BTC) options expiries of the year has come and gone, and the largest cryptocurrency has declined just 0.6% in the past 24 hours to a little under $107,000.
In bitcoin terms, that's pretty much rock steady. For a look at how unperturbed traders are at the moment, consider Deribit's BTC Volatility Index (DVOL), a measure of implied volatility. That's now dropped to 37, its lowest level since late 2023. The broader crypto market is less sanguine, with the CoinDesk 20 (CD20) index down 1.2%.
Bitcoin's reduced volatility is "perhaps a sign that the market is increasingly confident in its macro-hedge role," Deribit's Chief Commercial Officer Jean-David Péquignot told CoinDesk. 'Bitcoin's $105K level is pivotal, with technicals suggesting caution if support fails."
The ceasefire in the Israel-Iran war has, no doubt, calmed geopolitical tensions for the time being, though that's far from the only conflict in the world. Investors may also be waiting for directional signs from the economy, with U.S. personal consumption expenditures (PCE) due later today. That's a report the Federal Reserve keeps a close eye on.
'Emergence of an external catalyst such as an escalation of the NATO-Russia tensions will test the market's resilience, although the general mid-term upward price trajectory seems to remain in play," Péquignot said.
Reports that the White House may announce a successor to Fed Chair Jerome Powell in coming months raised fresh questions about the U.S. central bank's independence, bringing down the greenback: The U.S. dollar index stumbled to a 3-year low.
Equity markets, meantime, have roared back to life. In Asia, shares hit a three-year high on optimism the U.S. and China have reached an agreement over the rare-earth trade, feeding a broader risk-on trend.
Still, the impending U.S. PCE report is dominating today's agenda. A figure above economists' estimates could hurt the chances of a July rate cut and undermine the current trend.
"The crypto market is currently in a wait-and-see phase, and the upcoming data will likely determine the short-term direction,' Bitfinix analysts told CoinDesk. 'If PCE results come in as expected or lean dovish, crypto assets may see a catch-up rally.' Stay alert!
Crypto
June 30: CME Group will introduce spot-quoted futures, pending regulatory approval, allowing trading in bitcoin, ether and major U.S. equity indices with contracts holdable for up to five years.
July 21: Coinbase Derivatives will launch perpetual-style crypto futures in the U.S., starting with bitcoin and ether (ETH). The futures have no quarterly expiration, are available 24/7, track spot prices, and are fully CFTC compliant.
Macro
June 27, 9:15 a.m.: Fed Governor Lisa D. Cook will deliver a speech at a Fed Listens event hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. Livestream link.
June 27, 8 a.m.: The Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) releases May unemployment rate data.
Unemployment Rate Est. 6.4% vs. Prev. 6.6%
June 27, 8 a.m.: Mexico's National Institute of Statistics and Geography releases May unemployment rate data.
Unemployment Rate Est. 2.5% vs. Prev. 2.5%
June 27, 8:30 a.m.: The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) releases May consumer income and expenditure data.
Core PCE Price Index MoM Est. 0.1% vs. Prev. 0.1%
Core PCE Price Index YoY Est. 2.6% vs. Prev. 2.5%
PCE Price Index MoM Est. 0.1% vs. Prev. 0.1%
PCE Price Index YoY Est. 2.3% vs. Prev. 2.1%
Personal Income MoM Est. 0.3% vs. Prev. 0.8%
Personal Spending MoM Est. 0.1% vs. Prev. 0.2%
June 27, 10 a.m.: The University of Michigan releases (final) June U.S. consumer sentiment data.
Michigan Consumer Sentiment Est. 60.5 vs. Prev. 52.2
July 1, 9:30 a.m.: Policy panel discussion chaired by Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell at the ECB Forum on Central Banking in Sintra, Portugal. Livestream link.
Earnings (Estimates based on FactSet data)
None in the near future.
Governance votes & calls
Lido DAO is voting on updating its Block Proposer Rewards Policy to SNOP v3. The proposal sets new standards for node operators, including use of vetted APMs and clearer responsibilities to enhance decentralization, fair rewards, and operational security. Voting ends June 30.
Arbitrum DAO is voting on lowering the constitutional quorum threshold to 4.5% from 5% of votable tokens. This aims to match decreased voter participation and help well-supported proposals pass more easily, without affecting non-constitutional proposals, which remain at a 3% quorum. Voting ends July 4.
The Polkadot community is voting on launching a non-custodial Polkadot branded payment card to 'to bridge the gap between digital assets in the Polkadot ecosystem and everyday spending.' Voting ends July 9.
Unlocks
June 30: Optimism OP to unlock 1.79% of its circulating supply worth $16.65 million.
July 1: Sui SUI to unlock 1.3% of its circulating supply worth $116.59 million.
July 2: Ethena (ENA) to unlock 0.67% of its circulating supply worth $10.22 million.
July 11: Immutable IMX to unlock 1.31% of its circulating supply worth $10 million.
July 12: Aptos APT to unlock 1.76% of its circulating supply worth $57.11 million.
July 15: Starknet STRK to unlock 3.79% of its circulating supply worth $13.72 million.
Token Launches
June 27: Moonveil (MORE) to be listed on Binance, WEEX, KuCoin, Bitget, BingX, MEXC and others.
June 27: Blum (BLUM) to be listed on Gate.io, MEXC, WEEX, BingX, CoinW and others.
June 27: DeFiTuna's TUNA airdrop checker, allowing users to verify eligibility for next month's token generation event, went live.
July 4: Biswap (BSW), Stella (ALPHA), Komodo (KMD), LeverFi (LEVER) and LTO Network (LTO) to be delisted from Binance.
The CoinDesk Policy & Regulation conference (formerly known as State of Crypto) is a one-day boutique event held in Washington on Sept. 10 that allows general counsels, compliance officers and regulatory executives to meet with public officials responsible for crypto legislation and regulatory oversight. Space is limited. Use code CDB10 for 10% off your registration through July 17.
Day 3 of 3: 7th Blockchain and Internet of Things Conference (Tsukuba, Japan)
Day 3 of 3: 7th International Congress on Blockchain and Applications (Lille, France)
Day 3 of 4: Solana Solstice 2025 (New York)
Day 2 of 2: Istanbul Blockchain Week
Day 2 of 2: Seoul Meta Week 2025
June 28: Cyprus Blockchain Summit 2025 (Limmasol)
June 28-29: The Bitcoin Rodeo (Calgary, Canada)
June 30: RWA Cannes Summit 2025 (Cannes, France)
June 30 to July 3: Ethereum Community Conference (Cannes, France)
June 30 to July 5: World Venture Forum 2025 (Kitzbühel, Austria)
July 1–6: Bitcoin Alaska (Juneau, Alaska)
July 4-5: The Bitcoin Paradigm 2025 (Neuchâtel, Switzerland)
July 4–6: ETHGlobal Cannes (Cannes, France)
By Shaurya Malwa
SAHARA plunged roughly 40% from a peak of 14 cents on its first day of live trading, dropping to a low near 8 cents, CoinGecko data show.
Trading volume exploded to $720M–$850M, a surge of as much as 2,700% over the prior day, indicating frenzied activity surrounding the listing.
SAHARA launched with 20% of total supply (2 billion tokens) in circulation, backed by a Binance 'HODLer airdrop' and large institutional funding, including Polychain, Pantera and YZI Labs (formerly Binance Labs).
With listings across major platforms including Binance and OKX, SAHARA was even part of a Binance airdrop campaign via its Simple Earn program.
The project aims to build a 'decentralized AI economy,' touting 1.4 million testnet users and ecosystem tools spanning data services, model marketplaces and compute networks .
The price briefly hit highs near $0.59 on secondary futures markets before crashing, indicative of how early stage AI‑crypto tokens can explode — and collapse — within hours.
The annualized three-month basis in BTC futures on offshore giants Binance, Deribit and OKX, has jumped above 5%, snapping the downtrend from late May's highs above 8% in a sign of renewed bias for longs.
ETH basis continues to trend lower and is holding below 5%.
On the CME, SOL futures have slipped below an annualized 10% basis, but remain elevated relative to BTC and ETH. SOL volume has cooled sharply to $72 million from $244 million on June 23.
In altcoins, XLM, BCH and APT stand out as coins with deeply negative perpetual funding rates, suggesting potential for a sharp short squeeze higher.
On Deribit, BTC risk reversals have shifted positively in favour of calls across all tenors. For ether, front-end options continue to show a bias for puts, with bullishness evident only after the September expiry.
Overnight BTC options flow on the OTC network Paradigm have been mixed alongside a rollover of put options in ETH.
BTC is down 0.63% from 4 p.m. ET Thursday at $107,154.23 (24hrs: -0.3%)
ETH is up 0.63% at $2,462.30 (24hrs: +0.03%)
CoinDesk 20 is down 0.41% at 2,968.88 (24hrs: -0.94%)
Ether CESR Composite Staking Rate is down 4 bps at 3%
BTC funding rate is at 0.0038% (4.1840% annualized) on Binance
DXY is up 0.12% at 97.26
Gold futures are down 1.55% at $3,296.10
Silver futures are down 2.26% at $36.09
Nikkei 225 closed up 1.43% at 40,150.79
Hang Seng closed down 0.17% at 24,284.15
FTSE is up 0.56% at 8,784.71
Euro Stoxx 50 is up 0.98% at 5,295.34
DJIA closed on Thursday up 0.94% at 43,386.84
S&P 500 closed up 0.80% at 6,141.02
Nasdaq Composite closed up 0.97% at 20,167.91
S&P/TSX Composite closed up 0.70% at 26,751.95
S&P 40 Latin America closed up +1.76% at 2,657.77
U.S. 10-Year Treasury rate is up 2 bps at 4.273%
E-mini S&P 500 futures are up 0.23% at 6,209.00
E-mini Nasdaq-100 futures are up 0.31% at 22,738.50
E-mini Dow Jones Industrial Average Index are up 0.22% at 43,814.00
BTC Dominance: 65.78% (-0.18%)
Ether to bitcoin ratio: 0.0229 (1.33%)
Hashrate (seven-day moving average): 827 EH/s
Hashprice (spot): $53.81
Total Fees: 7.57 BTC / $815,336
CME Futures Open Interest: 156,305 BTC
BTC priced in gold: 32.3 oz
BTC vs gold market cap: 9.2%
The bullish case for the bitcoin cash-bitcoin (BCH/BTC) ratio has strengthened with the 14-week relative strength index, a momentum oscillator, topping the 50 mark to suggest upward momentum.
The RSI is now at its most bullish reading since April 2024.
Effective June 30, the price for Galaxy will be for its Nasdaq listing denominated in U.S. dollars rather than the Canadian-dollar-denominated listing on the TSX.
Strategy (MSTR): closed on Thursday at $386.44 (-0.57%), -0.12% at $385.97
Coinbase Global (COIN): closed at $375.07 (+5.54%), -0.45% at $373.40
Circle (CRCL): closed at $213.63 (+7.56%), +4.18% at $222.55
Galaxy Digital Holdings (GLXY): closed at C$27.94 (+5%)
MARA Holdings (MARA): closed at $15.27 (+1.94%), -0.52% at $15.19
Riot Platforms (RIOT): closed at $10.51 (+5.1%), unchanged in pre-market
Core Scientific (CORZ): closed at $16.36 (+33.01%), +6.36% at $17.40
CleanSpark (CLSK): closed at $10.81 (+1.98%), -0.37% at $10.77
CoinShares Valkyrie Bitcoin Miners ETF (WGMI): closed at $21.5 (+10.37%), +2.79% at $22.10
Semler Scientific (SMLR): closed at $38.79 (-5.48%), unchanged in pre-market
Exodus Movement (EXOD): closed at $29.82 (-4.3%), +0.27% at $29.90
Spot BTC ETFs
Daily net flows: $226.7 million
Cumulative net flows: $48.35 billion
Total BTC holdings ~1.24 million
Spot ETH ETFs
Daily net flows: -$26.4 million
Cumulative net flows: $4.12 billion
Total ETH holdings ~4.08 million
Source: Farside Investors
The altcoin dominance index, representing the digital market share of all cryptocurrencies, excluding the top 10 tokens, has dropped to the lowest since January 2024, extending a multiyear slide.
The decline shows that the latest crypto bull market is primarily concentrated in major tokens.
Iran's Foreign Minister Says Nuclear Facilities 'Seriously Damaged' (The New York Times): Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, backed a bill to end IAEA cooperation and signaled a shift away from inspections, a move analysts say may be used as leverage in future negotiations.
Bitcoin's Double Top Warrants Caution, but a Full-Blown Price Crash Seems Unlikely: Sygnum Bank (CoinDesk): Only a shock event like Terra or FTX would be likely to trigger a major downturn, with current conditions instead favoring a sustained bull cycle, said Sygnum's head of investment research.
Market Cap of Euro Stablecoins Surges to Nearly $500M as EUR/USD Rivals Bitcoin's H1 Gains (CoinDesk): The market cap of euro-pegged stablecoins rose 44% to $480 million, driven by a 138% jump in Circle's EURC. Still, the combined market cap remains less than 1% of dollar-pegged stablecoins.
XRP's Price Volatility Crashes to Lowest Level Since Trump's Victory. What Next? (CoinDesk): XRP's price has stayed in a tight band despite the debut of XRP futures and positive regulatory developments, with volatility hovering just above levels that often precede sharp moves.
A Remote Himalayan Kingdom Bet Big on Bitcoin Mining. So Far, It Has Paid Off. (The Wall Street Journal): Bhutan began mining bitcoin in 2020 using its surplus hydropower and now holds a $1.3 billion stash, equal to 40% of GDP.
Brazil Supreme Court Rules Digital Platforms Are Liable for Users' Posts (Financial Times): The 8-3 ruling allows civil liability for platforms that fail to remove illegal content — even without court orders — drawing criticism social platform Meta over censorship and the increase in business risk.
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10 minutes ago
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Warren Buffett announces $6 billion in donations to five foundations
NEW YORK — Famed investor Warren Buffett is donating $6 billion worth of his company's stock to five foundations, bringing the total he has given to them since 2006 to roughly $60 billion, based on their value when received. Buffett said late Friday that the shares of Berkshire Hathaway will be delivered on Monday. Berkshire Hathaway owns Geico, Dairy Queen and a range of other businesses, and Buffett is donating nearly 12.4 million of the Class B shares of its stock. Those shares have a lower and easier-to-digest price tag than the company's original Class A shares, and each of the B shares was worth $485.68 at their most recent close on Friday. The largest tranche is going to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Trust, which will receive 9.4 million shares. The Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation will receive 943,384 shares, and the Sherwood Foundation, Howard G. Buffett Foundation and NoVo Foundation will each receive 660,366 shares. Buffett made waves a year ago when he said he plans to cut off donations to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation after his death and let his three children decide how to distribute the rest of his fortune. Berkshire Hathaway's Class B stock has climbed 19.1% over the last 12 months, topping the broad U.S. stock market's return of 14.1%, including dividends. Buffett is famous on Wall Street for buying companies at good prices and being more conservative when prices look too high. The bargain-hunting approach has helped him amass a fortune worth about $145 billion, with basically all of it in Berkshire Hathaway's stock. 'Nothing extraordinary has occurred at Berkshire; a very long runway, simple and generally sound decisions, the American tailwind and compounding effects produced my current wealth,' Buffett said in a statement. 'My will provides that about 99½% of my estate is destined for philanthropic usage.'


Washington Post
11 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Not just Mamdani: Centrist Democrats can win on affordability, too
Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nevada) still remembers her best tip ever, when she was a college student waiting tables outside Minneapolis for the local NHL team's holiday party. 'Nobody can party like hockey players,' Rosen said, recalling how they showed off their sport's hard-hitting nature by pulling out their fake teeth. 'They drank and spent so much money.' More than 45 years later, Rosen — who moved to Nevada after graduating from the University of Minnesota — has emerged as the biggest Democratic booster of a signature economic proposal from President Donald Trump. She co-sponsored a bill with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) to fulfill Trump's 2024 campaign promise for 'no taxes on tips,' the type of issue she experienced firsthand when the Minnesota North Stars left her a nearly $300 tip. A version of that legislation is tucked into the massive tax and immigration bill that Republicans are trying to pass on a party-line vote in the coming days. While every Democrat in Congress, including Rosen, opposes that broad legislation — largely because of its cuts to Medicaid — the Cruz bill won a unanimous vote last month in the Senate. If the massive legislation fails, Rosen will push her allies in the House to move a stand-alone tip bill to the president's desk. Her effort, fresh off a successful reelection bid in 2024, serves as a model for Democrats searching for a moderate approach to winning in swing districts and battleground states. Democrats are deep into internal battles drawn over generational and ideological fault lines and are debating how to use modern communications to get out their message. Many on the left see a model for winning in Zohran Mamdani, a 33-year-old democratic socialist poised to win the Democratic New York mayoral primary after running an online savvy campaign touting progressive ideas to fight inflation. Some centrist Democrats have pushed back against Mamdani for his far-left proposals, including free bus service and government-owned grocery stores. But similarities in the 33-year-old's mayoral bid and the 67-year-old senator's approach show the path to winning coalitions. Nevada was the only state that had twice voted against Trump but flipped to him last year — from a roughly 2.5 percentage point defeat in 2016 and 2020 to a more than 3 percentage point victory in 2024. But Rosen beat Trump-endorsed Republican Sam Brown by nearly 1.7 percentage points by embracing an aggressive approach to fighting inflation while positioning herself as an authentic voice, someone who didn't run her first political campaign until her late 50s. Rosen has held victory parties at Caesars Palace to remind folks that she was a cocktail waitress there. She gives off the political vibe of an encouraging aunt rather than career politician. 'It was really important to me to be present to people, for people, to listen to their stories,' she said in a recent interview. 'My motto is agree where you can, fight where you must.' In five presidential battleground states that hosted key Senate races, Democrats won four. Rosen was running her second statewide race ever, while Sens. Ruben Gallego (D-Arizona) and Elissa Slotkin (D-Michigan) were running their first and Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisconsin) was running her third. Incumbent Bob Casey, who lost in Pennsylvania, was running his eighth statewide bid in three decades. Two figures from opposite ends of the Democratic ideology spectrum recently noted Mamdani, a state lawmaker since 2021, offered a fresh alternative to former governor Andrew M. Cuomo, 67, with personal scandal baggage. 'The people are clearly asking for generational change,' Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-New York), a liberal icon, told reporters. 'They are looking for a new generation of leadership,' Slotkin said during a policy address touting her centrist vision. Republicans take a different view of Rosen's and Slotkin's victories, blaming their big-money donors for not believing in the GOP nominees until it was too late. 'Many didn't believe we had a chance to win. And the money was late breaking there. But I think had we had the resources earlier, Sam Brown would have won,' Sen. Steve Daines (Montana), who chaired the National Republican Senatorial Committee last year, said in a brief interview. Rosen raised about $50 million for her campaign, more than twice as much as Brown's, and outside political groups favored Rosen by an edge of about $55 million to $45 million, according to Open Secrets. Rosen received 4,000 fewer votes than Kamala Harris did at the top of the Democratic ticket, while Brown fell about 75,000 votes shy of Trump's tally. Rosen did have better appeal than Harris in what Nevadans call 'the rurals,' lightly populated conservative areas far from the Las Vegas Strip. Humboldt County, in the northernmost stretch of the state, favored Trump by more than 4,400 votes while Brown won by 3,662 votes. Rosen believes that national Democrats face higher hurdles in rural areas where they never campaign and end up branded with 'all that noise' from conservative media outlets. She overcame some of that as an incumbent senator with time to visit those parts of the state. 'You can't be everywhere. But in Nevada and some other states, people can really get to know you. So it is absolutely an advantage,' Rosen said. Rosen instantly knew the moment Trump started talking about 'no taxes on tips' that it would resonate in a state where roughly 1 in 4 workers are in the hospitality industry. They probably either receive tips or have close friends and family working for tips. That industry got crushed during the pandemic, and now inflation has prompted another decline in tourist visits to Las Vegas. 'It's such a variable job. You don't know what your tips are going to be day in and day out. One day good, one day not so good,' Rosen said. While Harris also supported eliminating taxes on tips, Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (Nevada) was the only other Democrat to join Rosen in co-sponsoring Cruz's bill. Culinary Workers Union Local 226, Nevada's largest union, also endorsed the proposal. Some Democrats on Capitol Hill have been hesitant to embrace the no-tax-on-tips policy, worried it is unfair to workers who receive a regular hourly wage. Critics of the proposal say the biggest beneficiaries of such a policy are staff at high-end restaurants who are already making high salaries, not the lowest-paid workers in the service industry. It could create a rush on employers shifting their workers into a tipped-wage system, leading to customers facing tip requests in places that rarely used to have them. But Rosen knew that Nevada, with the lowest percentage of college graduates of any battleground state, would embrace a proposal that appealed to its working-class image. 'We're always trying to find ways to put more money back into people's pockets,' the onetime culinary union member said. Without a deeply partisan background, she doesn't hesitate to break from her party's orthodoxy on issues including crime and border security. Rosen used her financial edge to start airing ads at least six months ahead of the election that ref far-left ideas such as defunding the police and open borders. 'I work with both parties on things like helping veterans exposed to burn pits and stood up to my own party to support police officers and get more funding for border security,' she said in one ad. Many of these positions run counter to the ideas embraced by Mamdani, Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont). But some Democrats point to issues Mamdani highlighted as appealing to most voters, allowing swing-district candidates to graft their own policy prescriptions into what fits their voters. 'It's not the left versus the middle — to win, it must be both. Mamdani's focus helps preview many of the issues liberals and moderates can embrace: affordability, quality of life and opposing slashing health care,' Steve Israel, the former New York Democratic congressman who ran the party's House campaign operation for four years, wrote in his Substack after the mayoral primary. For Rosen, that lesson goes all the way back to the time a bunch of professional hockey players got rowdy and left her a massive pile of cash. Rosen, who can't remember if she reported that tip on her taxes, moved away a few years later, and the North Stars became the Dallas Stars. But she always remember that lesson, one that resonates with a huge amount of voters in Nevada. 'Your tips were everything,' she said.

Associated Press
28 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Warren Buffett announces $6 billion in donations to five foundations
NEW YORK (AP) — Famed investor Warren Buffett is donating $6 billion worth of his company's stock to five foundations, bringing the total he has given to them since 2006 to roughly $60 billion, based on their value when received. Buffett said late Friday that the shares of Berkshire Hathaway will be delivered on Monday. Berkshire Hathaway owns Geico, Dairy Queen and a range of other businesses, and Buffett is donating nearly 12.4 million of the Class B shares of its stock. Those shares have a lower and easier-to-digest price tag than the company's original Class A shares, and each of the B shares was worth $485.68 at their most recent close on Friday. The largest tranche is going to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Trust, which will receive 9.4 million shares. The Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation will receive 943,384 shares, and the Sherwood Foundation, Howard G. Buffett Foundation and NoVo Foundation will each receive 660,366 shares. Buffett made waves a year ago when he said he plans to cut off donations to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation after his death and let his three children decide how to distribute the rest of his fortune. Berkshire Hathaway's Class B stock has climbed 19.1% over the last 12 months, topping the broad U.S. stock market's return of 14.1%, including dividends. Buffett is famous on Wall Street for buying companies at good prices and being more conservative when prices look too high. The bargain-hunting approach has helped him amass a fortune worth about $145 billion, with basically all of it in Berkshire Hathaway's stock. 'Nothing extraordinary has occurred at Berkshire; a very long runway, simple and generally sound decisions, the American tailwind and compounding effects produced my current wealth,' Buffett said in a statement. 'My will provides that about 99½% of my estate is destined for philanthropic usage.'