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Bitcoin Holds Above $70K as Crypto Market Stabilizes Amid Global Uncertainty

Andy Baehr, Managing Director of Asset Management at GSR, joins Remy Blaire to discuss why the crypto market appears to be stabilizing rather than entering a full risk-on rally and what that could mean for the next move in Bitcoin and the broader digital asset market.

Andy explains how institutional investors are approaching the market cautiously, actively managing macro risks instead of aggressively chasing upside. While overall market energy remains low, major institutions like Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, Kraken, and Nasdaq continue to build crypto infrastructure and expand trading capabilities, including 24/7 futures markets.

We also explore the latest trends in crypto derivatives and options trading. Activity is shifting from crypto-native platforms like Deribit to regulated U.S. markets and Bitcoin ETF options such as IBIT, creating a new dynamic between traditional finance and crypto-native markets.

Despite ongoing concerns around inflation and geopolitics, major assets have shown resilience. Bitcoin has remained between $63K and $71K, Ethereum near $2,000, and Solana around $85, suggesting the market may be forming a strong foundation for the next move.

Finally, we discuss the potential impact of crypto regulation, including the upcoming Clarity Act and the growing importance of stablecoins, which now exceed $300 billion in total value. Clearer rules around stablecoin yield could unlock major growth for the industry and benefit leading blockchains like Ethereum and Solana.

Crypto Developer Activity Falls to Multi-Year Lows as AI Absorbs the Industry’s Talent

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Weekly code commits are down roughly 75% from early 2025 highs and active developers have fallen 56%, even as overall GitHub usage accelerates. The gap is widening.

Developer activity in public crypto repositories has fallen to multi-year lows, with weekly code commits down approximately 75% from their early 2025 peak and the number of active developers declining 56% over the same period, according to data tracking open-source contributions across blockchain ecosystems. 

The decline is playing out against a backdrop of surging overall GitHub activity, making the crypto-specific drop all the more conspicuous: the platform is gaining contributors in nearly every other technical domain, and artificial intelligence is absorbing the lion’s share of that growth.

The data from individual ecosystems tells a consistent story. Ethereum, which has approximately 1,759 public repositories and has historically been the most active developer ecosystem in crypto, has seen a 54% decline in activity over the past three months and a 34% drop in weekly active developers, who now number around 2,800. Other major chains are exhibiting similar trajectories. Most major blockchain networks are losing developer headcount, and while more experienced contributors now account for a higher share of commits — suggesting a consolidation rather than a complete collapse — the volume of new developers entering the space has dropped sharply.

The talent competition with artificial intelligence is the dominant structural explanation. LinkedIn’s January 2026 labor market report documents the creation of 1.3 million new AI jobs globally between 2023 and 2025. AI engineer positions expanded 13 times over that period; roles described as forward-deployed engineer and product manager grew 42 times. Crunchbase reports $211 billion in global AI funding in 2025, accounting for roughly half of all venture capital deployed worldwide. By comparison, PitchBook pegs crypto venture capital deal value at $19.7 billion over the same period — meaningful, but operating at a categorically different scale of capital attraction.

The talent drain has become visible in the departure of senior figures from some of the industry’s highest-profile projects in early 2026. Akshay BD, who spent five years building Solana’s developer ecosystem, posted a note saying he was ‘grateful to pass the torch.’ Nader Dabit left Eigen Labs to join Cognition, working on software agents that produce production-grade code autonomously. Kyle Samani stepped back from managing partner duties at Multicoin to explore AI and robotics. Anthony Rose left zkSync after four years. The clustering of these departures was not coordinated, but their concentration in the ecosystem-builder and infrastructure layer — roles that connect capital to projects and developers to distribution — was notable.

A separate factor is the shift toward closed-source development. As crypto projects mature and face greater competitive pressure, more teams are moving their codebases off GitHub and into private repositories — a logical business decision but one that makes the public commit data look worse than the true state of builder activity. Electric Capital’s most recent developer report, updated in January 2026, found that while the total number of monthly active developers fell roughly 7% year-over-year in 2024, developers with two or more years of experience hit an all-time high, up 27%. Core builders are staying; newcomers and short-term participants are leaving.

The long-run question the data raises is whether the structural decline in new developer inflows will ultimately affect the quality and pace of protocol innovation. Bear markets have historically seen developer attrition followed by recovery once prices stabilize. But the AI pull is qualitatively different from a price cycle: it is offering developers faster product cycles, larger immediate distribution, deeper capital pools, and roles at the center of what is widely described as the most important technological transition in a generation. Whether crypto’s promise of rebuilding financial infrastructure proves compelling enough to draw back — or retain — developers who have experienced what working at frontier AI companies feels like is the central talent question for the industry over the next two years.

Ripple Launches $750 Million Share Buyback at a $50 Billion Valuation

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The buyback values the blockchain payments firm 25% above its November funding round, even as bitcoin and XRP have fallen more than 40% and 50% respectively from their peaks.

Ripple has begun buying back shares from employees and investors at a valuation of approximately $50 billion through a tender offer expected to run through April, according to CoinDesk’s reporting.

The program targets up to $750 million in shares, a figure that positions Ripple as one of the most valuable private companies in digital assets despite the broader market downturn that has erased trillions in crypto market capitalization since October 2024.

The $50 billion figure represents a 25% increase from the $40 billion valuation attached to Ripple’s most recent fundraising round, completed in November 2025. That round raised $500 million from an institutional roster that included affiliates of Citadel Securities, Fortress Investment Group, Pantera Capital, Galaxy Digital, Brevan Howard, and Marshall Wace. 

The higher implied valuation comes despite the fact that bitcoin has fallen more than 40% from its October peak and XRP, the token most closely associated with Ripple’s payments infrastructure, has declined more than 50% over the same period.

The timing is notable because it follows a failed predecessor. In September 2025, Ripple attempted to repurchase up to $1 billion in shares at a $40 billion valuation but saw the lowest participation rate of any buyback attempt in its history, with employees and investors declining to sell at what they believed was an undervalued price. That reluctance was itself a signal of internal confidence. The new offer, at a materially higher price, is designed in part to address that gap and provide liquidity to shareholders who may need it amid a prolonged bear market.

Ripple’s business has expanded substantially beyond its original focus on cross-border payment infrastructure for banks. The company acquired Prime Brokerage Hidden Road for $1.25 billion and purchased the Treasury Management business division GTreasury for $1 billion, broadening its footprint into institutional financial services. Its stablecoin RLUSD has been gaining traction with fintech firms for cross-border settlements. Ripple recently said it has processed more than $100 billion in total payment volume across its network.

CEO Brad Garlinghouse and president Monica Long have previously maintained that an initial public offering in the United States is not currently planned. That stance has held across multiple rounds of speculation and several funding cycles, suggesting the company is in no hurry to face the disclosure requirements and quarterly earnings pressure that comes with a public listing. The buyback program, which gives shareholders a structured exit at a premium to the November round price, functions as a partial substitute for the liquidity a public market would otherwise provide.

Goldman Sachs has emerged this week as the largest holder of spot XRP exchange-traded funds, according to separate filings, adding institutional context to the broader XRP ecosystem’s recovery story. Whether that institutional engagement translates into a sustained price recovery for XRP — and whether that in turn supports Ripple’s ability to raise again at a higher valuation — will be the operative question for shareholders deciding whether to participate in the tender.

Binance Sues the Wall Street Journal on claims that DOJ Opens Iran Sanctions Investigation into crypto transfers

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The exchange filed a defamation suit in New York hours after the paper reported the Justice Department was probing whether Iranian networks used the Binance platform to evade US sanctions.

Binance filed a defamation lawsuit against Dow Jones & Company, publisher of the Wall Street Journal, in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York on Wednesday, hours after the newspaper published a report that the Justice Department is investigating whether Iranian networks used the exchange to move funds in violation of American sanctions. The collision of the two developments – an escalating legal offensive against the media and a fresh federal inquiry – created one of the most volatile news cycles that the world’s largest crypto exchange has faced since its $4.3 billion settlement with the US government in 2023.

The Wall Street Journal’s Wednesday report said that DOJ officials have been contacting people with knowledge of transactions on the platform and gathering evidence. However, it was unable to determine whether the investigation is targeting Binance itself or customers who used the exchange. 

The investigation follows an earlier WSJ article published on February 23 that alleged Chinese entities had sent $1.7 billion in crypto through Binance to digital wallets linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, and that internal investigators who flagged those transactions were subsequently fired. Binance’s defamation lawsuit targets that February article directly.

In its complaint, Binance alleged the February piece contained ‘false and defamatory’ statements, that the exchange had provided factual corrections before publication which the Journal failed to incorporate, and that the newspaper ‘prioritized filing quickly on the heels of the NYT so that it could maximize views of the article.’ The suit targets at least 11 allegedly false statements, requests compensatory damages, attorney fees, and demands a jury trial. 

Binance’s global head of litigation Dugan Bliss said the lawsuit was ‘a necessary step to defend ourselves against misinformation, hold the WSJ accountable for prioritizing clicks over journalistic integrity, and address the significant reputational harm and business consequences that have resulted.’

Binance said it had never directly transacted with any sanctioned entities and described the activity flagged in the WSJ’s reporting as part of a ‘sophisticated, multi-jurisdictional pattern of financial activity spanning Asia, the Middle East, and beyond’ that the exchange itself identified, reported to law enforcement, and resolved. The company said direct exposure to Iran’s four major crypto exchanges had fallen 97.3%, from $4.19 million in January 2024 to $110,000 in January 2026. It also said it processed more than 71,000 law enforcement requests in 2025 and helped freeze and recover more than $131 million linked to illicit activity.

Meanwhile, the DOJ has opened a probe into alleged Iran-linked crypto transfers. It remains unclear, however, if Binance itself is under investigation. The decision to sue the WSJ on the same day that the DOJ story ran — before it could fully absorb the second report — may have been legally strategic. Binance’s former CEO Changpeng Zhao, who served four months in a US prison in 2024 before receiving a pardon from President Trump last October, has not commented publicly on Wednesday’s developments.

SEC and CFTC End Turf Wars With Landmark Crypto Oversight Deal

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A memorandum of understanding formalizes joint enforcement, joint examinations and a shared ‘golden age’ vision for digital asset regulation.

The two agencies at the center of a long jurisdictional battle over American financial markets ended their rivalry on Wednesday, signing a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that formally commits the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to coordinated oversight, with crypto assets listed as one of the core priorities of the new arrangement.

The agreement, signed by SEC chairman Paul Atkins and CFTC chairman Michael Selig, establishes a framework for the two regulators to share data, coordinate enforcement actions, conduct joint examinations of firms that operate across both jurisdictions, and develop a unified classification framework for digital assets. 

Alongside the MOU, both agencies announced the creation of a Joint Harmonization Initiative, co-led by Robert Teply from the SEC and Meghan Tente from the CFTC. It will address product definitions, clearing and margin frameworks, regulatory reporting, and cross-market surveillance.

‘For decades, regulatory turf wars, duplicative agency registrations, and different sets of regulations between the SEC and CFTC have stifled innovation and pushed market participants to other jurisdictions,’ Atkins said in a statement. ‘By aligning regulatory definitions, coordinating oversight, and facilitating seamless, secure data sharing between agencies, we will ensure our rules and regulations deliver the clarity market participants deserve.’ Selig framed the initiative as part of a broader effort to usher in what he called a ‘golden age of American finance.’

The practical significance for crypto firms hopes to be substantial. Under the prior arrangement, a digital asset company could face overlapping enforcement actions from both regulators simultaneously, be required to submit parallel registration applications, and receive conflicting guidance on whether a given product was a security or a commodity. 

The MOU says that when enforcement matters overlap, the two agencies will ‘confer on potential charges and relief, sequencing of filings, litigation strategy and public communications’ – eliminating the kind of duplicative prosecution that has historically consumed resources on both sides.

The agreement is a structural move, not a symbolic one. For the first time, the two regulators are embedding cross-agency coordination directly into their operational workflows. A harmonization website is being created where firms can request coordinated meetings with both agencies simultaneously, streamlining the approval process for new digital asset products. Atkins has previously argued that ‘shared supervisory findings, subject to assurances of confidentiality, should be the norm rather than the exception.’

Both Atkins and Selig were appointed by President Trump and arrived at their agencies with records of advising crypto clients in the private sector. They have made regulatory clarity for digital assets a top priority from day one. The MOU is the most concrete operational manifestation of that agenda to date. The CLARITY Act, the legislation intended to provide the statutory backbone for the new framework, remains stalled in the senate over disputes around stablecoin yield provisions and decentralized finance oversight. By acting now through an inter-agency agreement, the SEC and CFTC are signaling they will not wait for congress to provide the foundation. The agencies have opened public comment on the initiative, and market participants can submit input through the SEC’s harmonization initiative page.

Mastercard Recruits Solana, Binance, PayPal and Ripple for a New 85-Firm Crypto Partner Program

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The payments network is building a formal ecosystem to connect blockchain infrastructure with its global rails — mirroring, and competing with, similar moves by Visa.

Mastercard unveiled a new Crypto Partner Program on Wednesday that brings together more than 85 companies from across the digital asset and payments industries, signaling the card network’s most ambitious attempt yet to position itself as the connective tissue between blockchain-native payment systems and the conventional financial infrastructure that processes most of the world’s transactions. The program’s partner list includes some of the largest names in crypto: Binance, PayPal, Ripple, Circle, Gemini, Paxos, Crypto.com, Bybit, Anchorage Digital, Nexo, and SoFi, as well as blockchain network teams from Solana, Avalanche, Aptos, and Polygon.

The initiative targets practical applications. Mastercard has identified three primary use cases where it believes blockchain can deliver measurable value relative to existing infrastructure: cross-border money transfers, business-to-business payments, and high-volume global disbursements – payroll, vendor settlements, and similar large-scale corporate payment flows. 

These are areas where the speed, programmability, and cost structure of on-chain settlement have genuine comparative advantages over traditional correspondent banking rails.Partners in the program will work directly with Mastercard teams to design products that combine on-chain tools — programmable payments, tokenized assets, smart contract settlement — with Mastercard’s established card infrastructure and its network of banks, merchants, and consumers across more than 200 countries and territories. 

Ripple’s XRP plays a specific functional role in this context, given XRP’s original design purpose as a bridge currency for fast, low-cost cross-border liquidity provision. The inclusion of PayPal, which has 430 million active accounts and its own PYUSD stablecoin, adds a consumer-facing distribution dimension that many crypto exchanges cannot match.

The initiative also includes compliance and intelligence infrastructure: Elliptic and TRM Labs, two of the leading blockchain analytics and transaction monitoring firms, are listed as partners. Their inclusion signals that Mastercard is building regulatory integrity into the program’s design from the outset, not treating compliance as an afterthought. Mastercard’s existing Crypto Credential program, which ensures transactions processed through its network meet regulatory requirements and security standards, provides a foundation the new partner program can build on.

Mastercard’s Raj Dhamodharan and Sherri Haymond, the executives overseeing the initiative, described crypto assets as having entered ‘a new phase’ of integration with the traditional financial system. ‘As digital asset technologies mature, Mastercard will continue focusing on what we do best: enabling trust, setting standards, and connecting systems at scale,’ they said. The program builds on earlier Mastercard blockchain efforts including its Start Path accelerator for blockchain startups and its Engage platform for connecting crypto companies with its commercial network.

The context for the launch is competitive as much as strategic. Visa has been moving in a parallel direction, testing stablecoin-based payment settlements with a number of its issuing banks and running blockchain payment pilots with several of the same fintech partners Mastercard is now enrolling. The implicit race between the two card networks to become the trust and settlement layer for digital asset commerce mirrors the competition that played out over decades in conventional payment processing — with the significant difference that the regulatory environment, the technology stack, and the pace of change are all substantially more volatile than anything either company navigated in its original build-out.

Crypto Markets Under Pressure as Oil Shock Rattles Risk Assets

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Geopolitical tensions push bitcoin below $70,000, while ACX surges on a governance overhaul and XRP eyes a technical breakout

Oil shocks drag bitcoin into a slight slip  

Bitcoin slipped to $69,393 on Thursday morning, down 0.8% over the past 24 hours and 4.3% on the week, after attacks on two oil tankers in Iraqi waters sent brent crude surging back above $100 a barrel. 

The latest spike in oil and renewed Middle East tensions knocked Asian equities and the broader crypto market lower, with major tokens like ether and solana extending weekly losses. The move erased a brief relief rally that had lifted bitcoin above $71,000 earlier in the week. 

The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil shipments, and tanker traffic has been nearly halted amid security concerns. Iran has signaled an escalation from targeted strikes to sustained operations, raising the prospect of a prolonged supply disruption that could keep energy prices elevated for weeks.

Stagflation fears cloud the Fed outlook 

The energy shock is landing at a particularly sensitive moment for monetary policy. The Federal Reserve meets March 17–18, and with oil above $100 and inflation still elevated, rate cuts look increasingly unlikely in the near term. 

On-chain data show persistent selling pressure and weak demand for bitcoin, as investors grapple with conflict-driven stagflation fears and fading prospects for near-term Federal Reserve rate cuts. Rising energy prices have revived worries about global inflation just as central banks were beginning to consider easing policy, with analysts warning that sustained oil above $100 could complicate the Fed’s path toward rate cuts and pressure risk-sensitive assets such as cryptocurrencies. 

Bitcoin’s technical picture remains bearish, with the asset trading below its 50-day and 100-day moving averages and the Supertrend indicator flashing red on the daily chart.

ACX surges 80% on DAO dissolution plan 

Not all tokens are suffering. Risk Labs, the team behind cross-chain bridging protocol Across, is proposing to dissolve the project’s token-based DAO structure and transition its operations to a newly formed U.S. C-corporation, with ACX surging 70% on the news to $0.06. 

Under the plan, a new entity called AcrossCo would become the operating company behind the protocol, with ACX tokenholders given two options: an equity exchange and a token buyout. Holders could swap tokens for equity at a 1:1 ratio or redeem them in USDC at $0.04375, a 25% premium over the 30-day average. 

The team cited the current DAO structure as a bottleneck, noting that enterprise partners require enforceable contracts and a clear legal counterparty to close the kinds of commercial deals that would drive the protocol’s next growth phase. A formal governance vote is expected in early April.

XRP coils ahead of CPI data 

XRP offered a rare pocket of relative calm, trading near $1.38 as volatility compressed across the broader market. Bollinger Bands on the daily chart have tightened noticeably, a pattern that often precedes a larger directional move once liquidity returns, leaving XRP trading between resistance near $1.40 and support closer to $1.35–$1.37. 

On-chain and institutional activity remained robust, with daily XRP Ledger transactions topping 2.7 million and XRP-linked investment products amassing about $1.4 billion in assets. Ripple’s announcement of a $750 million share buyback, valuing the company near $50 billion, added a constructive fundamental backdrop. 

A decisive break above $1.42 could trigger a move toward $1.67, while losing the $1.35 support opens a path to the $1.30–$1.32 zone. With February CPI now digested and the FOMC meeting looming next week, the squeeze may not hold much longer.

Preply Hits $1.2B Unicorn Status: How AI Is Revolutionizing Language Learning

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Preply, the AI-powered online learning platform, has officially reached unicorn status with a $1.2 billion valuation following a $150 million Series D round led by Westcap. Joining from the New York Stock Exchange, CEO and co-founder Kirill Bigai shares how Preply is redefining language learning by connecting learners with the world’s best tutors through a personalized, global marketplace. With 100,000 active tutors and students in over 180 countries, Preply has delivered more than 100 million live one-on-one classes. Kirill explains how AI drives the platform—from matching learners with the perfect tutor to analyzing classes and generating exercises—while automating administrative tasks for tutors. He also discusses plans for scaling in Europe and the U.S., focusing on serious learners who see language skills as a critical investment for careers and global connections. With a mission to build a legendary learning brand, Preply continues to innovate at the intersection of AI, education, and human connection.

The Future of Startups: Investing in People Over Ideas

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Alice Bentinck, co-founder and CEO of Entrepreneurs First, joins to discuss the company’s unique approach to backing founders. Unlike traditional investors who focus on ideas, Entrepreneurs First bets on individuals first, supporting talented technologists before they even start a company. Alice explains that the next generation of transformative startups will emerge from the passions and insights of these young entrepreneurs, often building in their bedrooms and exploring new trends before anyone else sees them. The program runs across Europe, India, and the U.S., with all founders now relocating to the Bay Area to accelerate growth, gain access to investors and customers faster, and thrive in one of the world’s most competitive startup environments. Alice also shares how her team scouts talent globally, akin to a Hollywood-style talent agency, identifying individuals with rare traits such as exceptional drive, intelligence, and a belief in their own potential. By investing in people rather than ideas, Entrepreneurs First positions itself uniquely in the market, providing founders the tools, environment, and guidance to create the next generation of high-impact companies.

Peter Tuchman on Market Volatility: Discipline & Technicals Over Emotion

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Joining us on this episode from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange is the legendary Peter Tuchman, known as the “Einstein of Wall Street”. He breaks down the current market action amid volatility and mixed messaging. Peter shares his take on the muted trading, influenced by oil price movements, geopolitical noise, and the market’s reaction to yesterday’s flood of false news. Drawing on four decades of experience, he emphasizes the timeless lesson of not getting emotional about money and highlights the importance of discipline, consistency, and technical analysis in navigating uncertain markets. From managing risk with stop orders to focusing on singles and doubles instead of chasing home runs, Peter offers invaluable insights for traders and investors trying to make sense of today’s rollercoaster markets.