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Strong Economy, Rising Risks: What’s Driving Markets Right Now?

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James Knightley, Chief International Economist at ING, joins from the floor of the New York Stock Exchangeto break down the latest market moves and global economic outlook. Despite ongoing volatility and geopolitical uncertainty, markets remain surprisingly resilient, with the S&P 500 still hovering just below all-time highs. Knightley highlights the strength of the U.S. economy, pointing to low unemployment, solid consumer demand, and continued investment in technology and AI as key drivers supporting the current market environment. However, he notes that sentiment remains closely tied to developments in the Middle East, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz, where any progress toward stability could act as a catalyst for lower oil prices and stronger equity markets.

The conversation also turns to a busy week for global central banks, including the Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, and Bank of England, with investors closely watching policy signals and economic data. Knightley expects most central banks to hold rates steady while reinforcing confidence in the economic outlook, though he flags Reserve Bank of Australia as one to watch for a potential surprise move. Looking ahead, he also emphasizes the importance of business investment trends in the U.S., noting strong growth in tech and AI-related capital expenditure but raising concerns about a lack of broader investment across other sectors. As markets navigate inflation pressures, labor market signals, and global uncertainty, Knightley provides key insights into the forces shaping the next phase of the economic cycle. 

Blockfills bankruptcy, Ethereum sale, Bitcoin milestone, Datavault Tokenization

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Chicago-based crypto mining company Blockfills has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. The company reported estimated assets between $50 million and $100 million, with liabilities ranging from $100 million to $500 million. According to the company, the filing follows extensive discussions with investors, clients, and creditors as it seeks a path forward through restructuring.

Meanwhile, the Ethereum Foundation sold 5,000 ETH to Tom Lee’s BitMine in a deal valued at about $10.2 million. The funds will support the foundation’s core operations, including protocol research and development and ecosystem grants as part of a broader treasury strategy balancing Ethereum and fiat assets.

The Bitcoin network also reached a major milestone after miners produced the 20 millionth Bitcoin, leaving just one million coins left to be mined. Because of Bitcoin’s fixed supply cap, analysts estimate it could take more than a century to mine the remaining coins.

Finally, DataVault AI introduced its Tokenized Legacy platform during Luminary 2026 held during Academy Awards weekend. The platform aims to help entertainment and sports talent monetize and protect their name, image, and likeness (NIL) rights using blockchain technology.

Jane King with the latest from the NYSE.

1099-DA Debut: Why Crypto Traders Must Now Track Their Own Cost Basis

Crypto tax reporting in the United States is entering a new and more complex era. For the first time, digital asset brokers are required to issue IRS Form 1099-DA, creating major implications for investors ahead of the Internal Revenue Service filing deadline.

Trish Turner, Vice President of Public Sector at Asset Reality and a former IRS digital assets specialist, joins Remy Blaire to explain what crypto investors need to know as tax season approaches.

A key challenge in the 2026 filing season is that exchanges are currently reporting gross proceeds only on Form 1099-DA. That means if you sold Bitcoin or other digital assets in 2025, you must personally track your cost basis to calculate gains or losses. For many investors—especially those using DeFi, yield farming strategies, and multiple wallets—this could require reconstructing years of transaction history.

Turner breaks down the practical issues tax professionals and investors are encountering, including inconsistent data across exchanges, missing records from defunct platforms, and the difficulty of tracing peer-to-peer transactions.

Turner also shares practical tips for investors who haven’t started their crypto taxes yet—including when it might make sense to file a tax extension before the April 15 deadline.

Yat Siu: Why Bitcoin Could Become the “Digital Gold” of a More Digital Economy

The crypto market is entering a new phase of structural change. After a year where many investors pinned their hopes on political support and the so-called “Trump trade,” the industry is now shifting toward institutional capital, tokenization and artificial intelligence as its primary growth drivers.

Yat Siu, Chairman of Animoca Brands, joins Remy Blaire to break down the evolving crypto landscape and explains why Bitcoin could increasingly be viewed as digital gold in a more digital global economy.

The conversation also explores how regulatory clarity in the United States—particularly from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission—is shaping the future of crypto innovation worldwide. While many in the industry once hoped that President Donald Trump would quickly transform crypto regulation, Siu explains why the industry must continue building adoption organically rather than relying solely on politics.

Another major theme is the rise of tokenization, where real-world assets like gold, stocks, and funds are converted into blockchain-based tokens that can be traded globally with lower fees and faster transactions. This shift is already gaining traction among major financial institutions and expanding access to markets for millions of people worldwide.

The discussion also dives into the powerful intersection of crypto and artificial intelligence, particularly agentic AI—autonomous AI systems capable of executing transactions, managing digital wallets, and interacting on blockchain networks. According to Siu, billions of AI agents could eventually operate on blockchain infrastructure, dramatically accelerating crypto adoption.

From AI Layoffs to Oil Disruptions: The Economic Risks Investors Can’t Ignore

Global tensions, rising inflation risks and uncertainty around Federal Reserve policy are shaping the investment landscape. Jeff Gitterman, Managing Director at Gitterman Asset Management, joins Remy Blaire to share his insights on how the ongoing Middle East conflict and higher oil prices could impact markets and investor portfolios.

Jeff discusses the growing risk of stagflation—a challenging economic scenario marked by high inflation and rising unemployment. With potential disruptions to oil and fertilizer supplies through the Strait of Hormuz and AI-driven layoffs affecting the labor market, investors may face increased volatility in the months ahead.

The conversation also explores why the Federal Reserve may keep interest rates higher for longer, how rising mortgage rates and Treasury yields are influencing the economy, and why investors should stay cautious rather than reacting emotionally to short-term market swings.

Jeff also shares practical advice on risk tolerance and portfolio strategy, reminding investors that markets can behave like a roller coaster—and that having the right strategy and guidance can help prevent costly emotional decisions during market downturns.

U.S. Stocks Open Higher as Investors Weigh Oil Shock, Tariff Risks and Fed Outlook

U.S. markets are kicking off the final two trading weeks of Q1 on a strong note, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500 all opening higher. But beneath the early optimism, investors are watching several major risks that could shape market direction in the weeks ahead.

Ongoing conflict in the Middle East and surging global oil prices continue to weigh on sentiment, while new tariff investigations targeting imports from Canada, Mexico and China add fresh trade uncertainty. At the same time, pressure is building in the software sector, private credit markets, and major bank stocks.

To break it all down, Brian Jacobsen, Chief Economist at Annex Wealth Management, joins Remy Blaire to discuss what investors should expect as the quarter comes to a close.

We discuss whether markets can repeat last year’s rebound despite geopolitical uncertainty, how rising oil prices and supply shocks could impact Q1 earnings season, why the Federal Reserve is likely to stay cautious rather than react aggressively to inflation spikes, how Chair Jerome Powell may emphasize vigilance without overreacting, the long-term economic impact of AI and which industries may face short-term disruption, why private credit fears may be overblown despite market anxiety and the sharp sell-off in financial stocks and what it signals for investors.

We also dive into global currency and bond markets, including how rate differentials between the U.S. and the European Central Bank could eventually weaken the dollar after its recent geopolitical-driven strength.

Finally, we examine rising gas prices as the national average hovers near $3.71 per gallon — and what drivers can expect as the summer travel season approaches.

Global Central Banks Face Crucial Rate Decisions Amid Rising Geopolitical and Inflation Pressures

This week marks a pivotal moment for global monetary policy, with major rate decisions coming from the Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Bank of Japan and the Bank of England.

While the FOMC is widely expected to hold rates steady, policymakers are facing a complicated backdrop: a cooling labor market, rising energy prices, and escalating geopolitical tensions. Adding to the uncertainty is unprecedented political drama, including legal challenges involving Fed Chair Jerome Powell.

Michael Brown, Senior Research Strategist at Pepperstone, joins Remy Blaire to discuss why markets are reacting cautiously despite elevated oil prices, whether central banks are likely to “wait and see” rather than make aggressive moves, how energy-driven inflation complicates the outlook, the risks surrounding the Fed’s dot plot projections, why markets may be overpricing rate hikes in the U.K. & the Eurozone and how monetary policy expectations could shift heading into 2026.

We discuss how with headline inflation expected to rise due to energy shocks—but uncertainty around how long those pressures will last—central banks may prioritize flexibility over firm forward guidance.

Finally, we also examine how Chair Powell may handle political pressure while reinforcing the Fed’s independence, and whether policymakers like Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey and European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde will push back against hawkish market expectations.

Bitcoin Drops 3.5% as Middle East Escalation Halts Rally in Its Tracks

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A promising crypto rally ran into a wall on Monday after fresh headlines from the Middle East abruptly reversed bitcoin’s climb to a near one-month high.

Bitcoin surged to nearly $74,000 earlier in the session before reversing sharply to $71,200 Monday morning, as news of the UAE’s Fujairah port was hit and is suspending oil loads. The Wall Street Journal has also reported the Pentagon is deploying a Marine expeditionary unit of roughly 2,500 troops to the region, including forces attached to the USS Tripoli. President Trump has also warned that Nato faces a ‘very bad’ future if allies fail to help secure the strait of Hormuz. 

U.S. equities surrendered early gains, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq turning to losses of 0.4% to 0.5%, while oil climbed more than $5 per barrel from its session lows.

Paul Howard, director at trading firm Wincent, noted that optimism over geopolitical developments, including Russian sanction relief, had been a driver of the earlier price action, but cautioned that such headlines tend to have a short half-life.

Crypto-linked equities held onto gains, with bitcoin miner Marathon Digital jumping 10% and Galaxy Digital, Bitmine and Cipher Mining each climbing between 5% and 7%. The divergence between spot crypto prices and mining stocks suggested markets viewed the pullback as a temporary reaction rather than a fundamental shift in sentiment. 

Bitcoin Hits 20 Million Coins Mined, but Could the Industry That Got It There Be Moving On?

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The bitcoin network crossed a historic threshold this week when the 20 millionth coin was mined, leaving just 1 million btc remaining to be issued as block rewards. The event, 16 years in the making, has prompted some assessment across the mining industry about what comes next, and for many operators, the answer increasingly has nothing to do with bitcoin.

The significance of the milestone lies in what it reveals about bitcoin’s core design. Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of the network, capped total supply at 21 million coins and built in a mechanism, the halving, that cuts miner rewards in half approximately every four years. 

The remaining 1 million coins, according to Wolfie Zhao, head of research at TheEnergyMag, could take roughly another 115 years to fully unlock. That timetable frames the mining industry’s dilemma in stark terms: sustaining operations for more than a century on progressively smaller rewards is not a business model many companies can support.

John Todaro, managing director and senior research analyst at Needham & Company, expects the shakeout to accelerate well before then. He told Decrypt that he anticipates a large portion of publicly traded bitcoin miners will sell down nearly all of their bitcoin holdings before year-end 2026, funding a pivot toward AI and high-performance computing workloads. By 2027 and 2028, he expects many to exit bitcoin mining altogether. 

The economics are hard to argue with: “Stubbornly low hash price combined with the upcoming 2028 halving presents a concerning environment for bitcoin mining operations,” he said. “Many operators are at or near breakeven costs today, while NOI margins in HPC are north of 80%.” Every publicly traded miner his firm covers has already allocated some share of its computing capacity to AI infrastructure.

The pivot is already well underway at some of the industry’s most prominent names. Bitdeer, the Singapore-based miner led by Bitmain co-founder Jihan Wu, is converting facilities into AI data centers while simultaneously developing its own next-generation mining chips. Ross Gan, Bitdeer’s chief communications officer, framed vertical integration as the defining competitive advantage going forward. “The miners that endure will be the ones that control more of the stack themselves,” he told Decrypt. HIVE Digital Technologies, which began investing in HPC infrastructure earlier than most of its peers, echoed a similar philosophy. Executive Chairman Frank Holmes argued that the miners best positioned for the future will be those who can source low-cost, stranded energy and convert it into durable computing infrastructure, whether for bitcoin or something else entirely.

Not everyone sees the transition as a retreat. Holmes characterized the upcoming halving not as an endpoint but as a filter. “Block rewards will decrease, but that does not mean the industry will disappear. It means the bar rises,” he told Decrypt.

For bitcoin’s price, the implications of a shrinking miner cohort may be more limited than they appear. Todaro pointed out that miners have already lost much of their historical influence over the market. They currently hold roughly 0.5% of circulating supply, while Strategy, the world’s largest corporate holder of bitcoin, holds seven times more bitcoin than all miners combined. Selling pressure from miners liquidating holdings, while real, is likely to be modest relative to the broader holder base.

The 20 million-milestone is a reminder that bitcoin’s supply mechanics have always been the headline. The harder question, one the mining industry is now being forced to answer, is whether the businesses built around those mechanics can survive long enough to see the final coin issued.

Blockfills Files for Bankruptcy After $75 Million in Losses and Asset Freeze

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Chicago-based institutional crypto trading firm BlockFills, founded in 2028, has filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, the latest casualty of sustained pressure on digital asset lending businesses.

BlockFills’ operator, Reliz Ltd., along with three affiliated entities, filed voluntary restructuring petitions on March 15 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, according to court documents reviewed by CoinDesk. The filing shows assets of between $50 million and $100 million set against liabilities of $100 million to $500 million, a gap that underscores the scale of the firm’s financial deterioration.

The company said the decision followed consultations with investors, clients, and creditors. “After extensive discussions with investors, clients, creditors, and other stakeholders, BlockFills has determined that a voluntary chapter 11 filing is the most responsible path forward in order to preserve the value of the business and maximize recoveries for stakeholders,” the firm said in an official statement.

The collapse had been building for weeks. BlockFills halted customer withdrawals and deposits in February, citing deteriorating market and financial conditions. CoinDesk subsequently reported the firm had suffered approximately $75 million in losses and was seeking either a buyer or emergency funding. Co-founder and CEO Nicholas Hammer stepped down in late February, with Joseph Perry taking over as interim chief executive.

Legal troubles compounded the firm’s difficulties. Creditor Dominion Capital filed a lawsuit alleging that BlockFills had misappropriated customer cryptoassets, commingled client funds and concealed significant losses. A U.S. federal judge issued a temporary restraining order against the company in connection with that case.

The bankruptcy filing stands in stark contrast to the firm’s recent operational scale. BlockFills, reported processing more than $60 billion in trading volume in 2025, a 28% increase from the prior year, and served roughly 2,000 institutional clients, including hedge funds, asset managers, and mining companies. Its backers included Susquehanna Private Equity Investments, CME Ventures and Nexo Inc.