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Goldman Sachs Jumps Into the Bitcoin ETF Game, Files for New Fund...

Goldman Sachs has filed for its first bitcoin ETF product, and the structure is more income-focused than maximalist-Bitcoin purist friendly. The proposed fund would buy bitcoin-linked exchange-traded products and sell call options on them, a setup meant to generate regular income while sacrificing some upside when BTC rips higher.

That matters because it signals another big traditional finance player is not just tolerating crypto exposure, but packaging it for clients who want something closer to yield than moonshot exposure. Reuters reported the filing on April 14, and the market's reaction was predictably split between "institutional adoption keeps widening" and "yes, finance will turn everything into an income product if given enough time."

The immediate trading relevance is straightforward. If large banks keep rolling out structured Bitcoin products, they may help expand demand from investors who want exposure but dislike direct ownership or wild volatility. That does not automatically boost spot BTC in a straight line, but it can deepen the market and normalize Bitcoin further inside mainstream portfolios.

It is also a subtle sign of where the market is in the adoption cycle. Goldman is not entering crypto because the story is new anymore - it is entering because the client demand has gotten too large to ignore. That is usually when Wall Street starts acting like it discovered the asset class five minutes ago.

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Author: Dorian Fenwick
Silicon Valley Newsroom

Drift Protocol Hack Keeps Haunting Solana Traders...

Drift solana hack

The Drift Protocol exploit remains one of the most damaging crypto security stories of the year, with investigators and security firms describing a roughly $285 million attack tied to suspected North Korean actors. Chainalysis and Elliptic both said the incident was the result of a highly coordinated operation, and Elliptic said the on-chain behavior is consistent with DPRK-linked tactics.

Drift is a major Solana-based perpetuals venue, so the damage was never going to stay confined to one protocol. The hack reportedly wiped out more than half of Drift's total value locked and triggered a suspension of deposits and withdrawals while teams worked to contain the fallout.

For traders, the important part is not only the size of the theft, but what it says about confidence in DeFi plumbing. Large exploits tend to hit sentiment across the chain they live on, especially when the protocol sits near the center of liquidity, leverage, and active trading. Solana has plenty of supporters, but a $285 million hack is not the sort of headline anyone wants attached to a network trying to sell speed and scale.

The other reason this story still matters is that the laundering trail and recovery efforts can take weeks or months to resolve. That keeps the event alive in market memory longer than the original attack window, which is bad news for anyone hoping the ecosystem simply shrugs and moves on. Security risk is rarely a one-day event, no matter how much everyone wishes it were.

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Author: Rowan Marrow
Seattle Newsroom

Tax Day in the USA - is Bitcoin in for a Sell Off?

Bitcoin is heading into the U.S. tax deadline with a familiar seasonal headache: traders who owe capital gains tax may need to sell crypto to raise cash, and this year the number being tossed around is as high as $2.8 billion. That estimate, cited in recent coverage, lands on a market already rattled by weak sentiment, geopolitical uncertainty, and thinning futures activity.

What makes this story worth watching is not just the size of the potential selling, but the timing. April 15 has a habit of turning into a market stress test, and this one arrives with Bitcoin already fighting to hold its recent recovery. If the forced selling wave is real, traders could get a clean read on how much demand is waiting underneath the market once the tax overhang clears.

Some analysts are framing the setup as a coiled spring, arguing that once the deadline passes, the market could see relief buying and redeployed capital. That may be true, but the near-term trade is still obvious: tax-day pressure first, optimism later, assuming Bitcoin behaves and does not decide to make the chart uglier out of sheer spite.

The bigger question is whether this year's tax pressure is a temporary drag or another reminder that crypto liquidity can get fragile fast when macro fear and calendar events line up. For traders, that is the part worth paying attention to, not the usual social-media theater around "sell in April" folklore.

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Author: Cedric Holloway 
New York Newsroom

North Korea Allegedly Drained $280 Million from Solana's Drift Protocol on April Fool's Day

Happy April Fool's Day... Your $280 Million Is Gone. Really. 

On April 1st, the Solana-based DeFi platform Drift Protocol had $280 million drained from its accounts in what blockchain security firm Elliptic says bears all the hallmarks of a North Korean state-backed operation. The attack was no prank - and for Drift's users, it was about as far from funny as it gets.

What made this one technically notable was the attack vector. Rather than a straightforward exploit or the social engineering tricks North Korean hackers are known for, the alleged attackers abused a Solana feature called a durable nonce - a mechanism designed to prevent transaction timeouts. According to reporting by Fortune, the attacker used this mechanism to dupe Drift's Security Council into pre-approving transactions that wouldn't execute until weeks later - effectively planting a time bomb inside the protocol's own administrative layer.

Drift confirmed the incident in a post on X, describing how "a malicious actor gained unauthorized access to Drift Protocol through a novel attack involving durable nonces, resulting in a rapid takeover of Drift's Security Council administrative powers." The platform immediately suspended deposits and withdrawals for all users.

North Korea's Crypto Crime Streak Continues

Elliptic's attribution is consistent with a now well-established pattern. North Korea was responsible for roughly $2 billion in stolen crypto throughout 2025 - around 60% of all digital assets stolen globally that year, per blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis. The country's most brazen job was the alleged $1.5 billion hack of crypto exchange Bybit in early 2025, still the largest single crypto theft on record.

North Korean hackers typically rely on social engineering - building fake identities, infiltrating teams, and manipulating insiders into handing over credentials. The Drift attack represents something different: a patient, technically sophisticated exploit that weaponized the platform's own security infrastructure against it. The attacker didn't break down the door. They convinced someone inside to leave it unlocked.

Who Is Drift?

Drift Protocol was founded in 2021 by Cindy Leow and David Lu. It offers perpetual futures and other trading products on Solana, and had accumulated over $400 million in total deposits before the attack. That figure is now considerably different. The platform has not yet provided a detailed public timeline for resuming normal operations.

The Drift hack is a reminder that DeFi's security model - which relies on multisig councils, on-chain governance, and community-held administrative keys - is only as strong as the humans and processes behind it. A durable nonce isn't a bug; it's a feature. But features can be weaponized, and North Korea's alleged hackers appear to have studied Solana's mechanics carefully enough to do exactly that.

For the broader Solana ecosystem, the timing couldn't be worse. The network has spent the better part of two years positioning itself as the institutional-grade DeFi layer of choice. A $280 million heist - allegedly handed to a regime under international sanctions - is not a great look, regardless of which chain the exploit ran on.

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Author: Cedric Holloway
New York Newsroom

Wall Street's $12 TRILLION GIANT, Charles Schwab, Opening a Waitlist for Spot Bitcoin and Ethereum Trading...

Charles Schwab Crypto

Charles Schwab - the 55-year-old brokerage giant sitting on $12.22 trillion in client assets - has opened a waitlist for "Schwab Crypto," a new platform that will let clients buy and sell Bitcoin and Ethereum directly. No ETF wrapper, no futures contract, no middleman exchange. Just spot crypto, inside the same account where someone keeps their index funds and retirement savings.

The launch is expected in the first half of 2026, and according to TheStreet, it will be offered through Charles Schwab Premier Bank, SSB - putting it in direct competition with Coinbase and Robinhood from day one. For two platforms that have spent years cultivating the retail crypto market largely by default, this is the kind of competition that demands attention.

CEO Rick Wurster has been telegraphing this move for months. On a podcast published April 2nd, he laid out the logic plainly: roughly 5% of Schwab's clients already have crypto exposure, mostly through spot Bitcoin ETFs like IBIT and FBTC. But a meaningful chunk of that customer base is also holding spot crypto at Coinbase or Robinhood specifically because Schwab didn't offer it. "We'll have it in the next several months," Wurster said.

What Schwab's Clients Are Actually Getting

The fine print matters here. Schwab Crypto will not be available to clients in New York or Louisiana, or to any international accounts. It will be held through the Premier Bank platform and will sit outside the usual safety nets. It is not covered by SIPC protection, not FDIC-insured, and not classified as a security. Schwab is being transparent about this, but it does mean that clients used to the institutional backstops of a traditional brokerage are stepping into different territory the moment they buy their first satoshi.

Schwab is also not alone in making this move. Morgan Stanley expanded crypto access to all wealth management clients in 2025, with advisors encouraged to recommend allocations of up to 4%. Bank of America followed, opening crypto recommendations to wealth advisers from January 2026. Morgan Stanley has since filed for a dedicated national trust bank charter for digital assets, planning to offer custody, trading, swaps, and staking. The old-money institutions are no longer tiptoeing around this.

Crypto Will Be More Accessible than Ever to the 'Average Investor'

Schwab's entry into spot crypto isn't just a product launch - it's a signal about where the industry's center of gravity is shifting. When a firm with 12 trillion dollars under management builds a waitlist for Bitcoin and Ethereum trading, it reflects a client base that has already decided crypto belongs in a portfolio. Schwab is catching up to demand that has been there for a while.

For crypto natives, the irony is not lost that the same boomer-friendly brokerage that once seemed indifferent to digital assets is now racing to offer the same products as Coinbase. The difference is that Schwab brings with it decades of trust, an enormous existing client base, and distribution that no crypto-native exchange has ever come close to matching. When the waitlist opens into a live product, the impact on spot Bitcoin and Ethereum demand could be significant - and mostly quiet, routed through accounts that don't look like crypto at all.

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Author: Rowan Marrow
Seattle Newsroom

Bitcoin Is the Only Market Open This Easter Weekend - and the Stakes Just Got Higher...

Most investors this Easter weekend have one option: watch and wait. Stock markets are closed. Bond markets are closed. But Bitcoin doesn't care about holidays, and neither does geopolitical risk.

While traditional markets pause for Good Friday and Easter Monday, Bitcoin is trading around the clock - exposed to everything happening in the world right now. That includes renewed tension with Iran, a fresh oil price spike, and a U.S. jobs report that came in hotter than expected, raising fresh questions about the Federal Reserve's path on interest rates.

What's Moving Markets This Weekend

Oil surged sharply after reports of escalating military activity near the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for global energy supply. Geopolitical risk in that region historically rattles financial markets - but those markets are closed until Monday. Bitcoin, by contrast, is open and reflecting those tensions in real time.

At the same time, Friday's U.S. jobs report showed the labor market is still running hotter than the Fed would like. That's bad news for anyone hoping for quick rate cuts. Higher rates tend to weigh on risk assets, and Bitcoin has shown sensitivity to Fed signals throughout 2024 and into 2025. Crypto traders are watching that data closely, even over a holiday weekend.

According to analysts at CryptoSlate, Bitcoin's role as the only major liquid asset this weekend makes it a pressure gauge for everything building up in traditional finance right now.

Safe Haven? or Risk Asset? Both...

One of the ongoing debates in crypto is whether Bitcoin is a safe haven like gold or a risk asset like tech stocks. In practice, it often behaves like whichever the market needs at a given moment - and this weekend, that's genuinely unclear.

In some scenarios, investors could rotate into Bitcoin as the only liquid store of value available while everything else is locked. In others, broad risk-off sentiment could push prices down as traders reduce exposure across the board. What makes this weekend unusual is that Bitcoin is the only asset that will actually reflect either of those moves while it's happening.

Gold, which would normally absorb some of the safe-haven demand, is also closed for the holiday. That puts Bitcoin in an unusual position: it's the only major asset that's liquid, responsive, and tradeable right now.

The Main Things Traders Should Be Watching...

Weekend trading in Bitcoin generally sees lower volume, which means price moves can be exaggerated in either direction. A moderate amount of selling pressure can push prices down further than it would on a normal Tuesday. The same is true on the upside. Thin order books amplify volatility.

If the Iran situation escalates further over the weekend, or if additional economic data comes in that reshapes rate expectations, Bitcoin will be the only market reflecting that in real time. When stock markets open Monday, they'll be pricing in everything that happened while they were closed - and Bitcoin traders will have had a two-day head start.

The world doesn't take holidays. Neither does Bitcoin. This Easter weekend, that distinction matters more than usual. Traders who are paying attention will have information that the rest of the market won't fully process until markets open again.

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Author: Mark Pippen
London Newsroom
GlobalCryptoPress | Breaking Crypto News

Coinbase Just Got a Federal Bank Charter - And It Changes Everything for Institutional Crypto

Coinbase Just Got a Federal Bank Charter - Here's Why That's a Much Bigger Deal Than It Sounds

Coinbase has received conditional approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) for a national trust bank charter - a move that fundamentally changes what the largest US crypto exchange is allowed to do, and how it competes in the institutional market going forward.

The approval was confirmed Thursday, and while "conditional approval" sounds like bureaucratic hedging, it's actually a very meaningful step. The charter gives Coinbase the ability to operate under a single federal regulatory framework rather than navigating a patchwork of 50 different state licenses. For a company that has spent years playing regulatory whack-a-mole, that's a significant operational upgrade.

One thing worth clarifying upfront: Coinbase is not becoming a bank in the traditional sense. It explicitly said it will not take retail deposits or engage in lending. This is a trust charter - focused on custody and payment services - not a commercial banking license. That distinction matters, because it means Coinbase avoids the risks that come with fractional reserve banking while still locking in the federal legitimacy that institutional clients increasingly demand.

This Matters to Institutional Crypto Investors

The trust charter builds on groundwork Coinbase laid years ago. Its custody arm gained recognition as a qualified custodian under New York's Department of Financial Services back in 2018, which helped it win early institutional business. The OCC approval takes that one step further - nationwide, and under a federal standard that institutional investors and regulators in other jurisdictions recognize more readily than state-by-state approvals.

For institutional clients - think pension funds, asset managers, sovereign wealth funds - the question of custody is often the last barrier between "we're curious about crypto" and "we're actually allocating." Having a federally chartered custodian in Coinbase removes one more piece of friction from that conversation.

The approval also aligns with developments around the GENIUS Act, which grants the OCC oversight authority for stablecoin issuers operating as national trust banks. Coinbase already has a close relationship with Circle, the issuer of USDC, and the charter positions the exchange to expand into stablecoin-adjacent payment services under a framework regulators are actively building out.

Coinbase Is Not Alone - This Is Part of a Bigger Shift

Other major crypto players have been moving in the same direction. Anchorage Digital was the first federally chartered digital asset bank. Ripple, BitGo, and Paxos have all received similar approvals at various stages. Kraken recently gained access to Federal Reserve payment infrastructure through a master account. The trend is clear: the era of crypto operating entirely outside the traditional financial system is over, and the firms that build regulatory credibility now are positioning themselves to dominate the next phase of institutional adoption.

Not everyone is pleased. The Independent Community Bankers of America and the Bank Policy Institute have pushed back, arguing that extending bank-like privileges to crypto firms blurs regulatory lines and could introduce systemic risks. Senator Elizabeth Warren and other critics have raised concerns about conflicts of interest. Their worries aren't entirely without merit - crypto firms entering regulated banking territory creates novel oversight challenges - but the momentum is clearly moving in one direction.

In Closing...

For traders and investors watching Coinbase stock, the charter is a positive signal. It represents regulatory clarity - the thing the market has been asking for since crypto first started colliding with the traditional financial world. The path to institutional adoption just got a little less bumpy, Coinbase's competitive moat against smaller, less-regulated competitors just got a little deeper, and its ability to offer custody at scale under a recognized federal standard opens doors that were previously hard to reach.

The conditional piece means there are still steps to complete before the charter is fully active, and banks will continue to argue that the line between "trust company" and "bank" is being stretched. But the direction of travel is set. Crypto is moving into the financial mainstream, the regulators are building the on-ramps, and Coinbase just secured one of the better spots near the entrance.

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Author: Oliver Redding
Seattle Newsdesk  / Breaking Crypto News

Trump's New Pro-Crypto 'Acting AG' Holds Up to $485K in Digital Assets...

Todd Blanche, the man who as deputy attorney general drafted the Justice Department's memo scaling back federal crypto enforcement, is now running the DOJ as interim attorney general. President Trump made the appointment after Pam Bondi's departure, and the crypto industry is paying close attention to what happens next.

Blanche is not a random pick. Before joining the Trump administration, he was Trump's personal defense attorney. His rise from deputy AG to acting AG at this particular moment - with crypto regulation still evolving and major cases still in play - makes this appointment more than just a routine reshuffle.

The Memo That Changed Things

Earlier in his tenure as deputy AG, Blanche sent a memo to federal prosecutors that directed them to back away from cases centered on regulatory disagreements in the crypto space. The basic message: don't waste resources on cases where a company is disputing how a law applies to it. Focus on actual fraud, actual theft, actual harm. Leave the regulatory gray-zone fights to the agencies whose job that is.

The practical effects showed up quickly. The case against Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm saw certain charges dropped, then later reinstated - a signal of how messy the transition has been. More broadly, crypto companies accused of securities violations found a DOJ less eager to pile on while SEC cases were already in motion.

For the industry, this shift was welcome. For oversight advocates, it was alarming. The debate over where the line sits between "regulatory dispute" and "actual crime" in the crypto space is not a clean one, and Blanche's memo pushed that line in a direction favorable to the industry.

The Ethics Questions Aren't Going Away

What complicates Blanche's new role is his personal financial position. According to a ProPublica investigation, Blanche held between $159,000 and $485,000 in digital assets around the time he sent that enforcement memo. His holdings reportedly included Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, several smaller altcoins, and equity in Coinbase - the same Coinbase that just received a major federal bank charter.

Blanche has said he transferred these assets to family members, but questions remain about the timing of that transfer relative to when he was making decisions that affected the crypto industry. Federal ethics rules require officials to recuse themselves from matters that affect their financial interests, or to divest before taking those decisions. Whether Blanche's alleged actions satisfied those requirements is still being scrutinized by oversight bodies.

The optics are genuinely awkward. The man now running the Justice Department wrote a policy that benefited an industry he was personally invested in, and is now in an even more powerful position to shape how that policy plays out.

What I'm Watching..

The short-term read is probably positive. A DOJ led by someone with a demonstrated preference for pulling back from aggressive crypto enforcement means less immediate threat of headline-driven enforcement actions. Institutional investors who have been sitting on the sidelines partly because of legal uncertainty may see the environment as incrementally safer.

The longer-term read is more complicated. An enforcement environment that leans heavily on the industry to self-regulate is only as good as the industry's willingness to self-regulate. It also creates policy uncertainty - Blanche's position is "interim," meaning a Senate-confirmed replacement eventually takes over, and that person may bring a completely different philosophy.

The US government's relationship with crypto is clearly in a period of active reconfiguration. Blanche's appointment is one more data point in that process - meaningful, consequential, and still far from settled.

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Author: Jules Laurent
Euro Newsroom Breaking Crypto News