Crypto markets steadied on Thursday as two forces tugged in the same direction. First, regulators in several capitals moved closer to rules traders can actually price. Meanwhile, institutions kept buying pipes and plumbing, not memes. Therefore, the tape looked calmer even as conviction stayed thin.
Bitcoin hovered near a key support zone around $90,000. However, volumes stayed patchy, which left the market jumpy around every headline. Large holders accumulated into the dip, yet many smaller traders still watched $80,000 as the next obvious liquidity pull. That split matters because it shapes the next break, if one comes.
Pi network’s bounce shows enthusiasm, and strain
Pi Network’s token rose more than 3% after six straight down sessions. The move came as the project touted community milestones and a surge in participation. Still, price traded in a tight range, roughly $0.188 to $0.21, which tells you buyers remain cautious.
Forecasts for Pi are all over the place. Some quantitative models flag downside risk towards $0.1566 in early February. Others centre nearer $0.2082 across the year. Longer-dated projections stretch from about $0.126 to $0.504 for 2026, which is less a forecast and more a weather vane.
However, the more revealing detail sat outside the chart. A mainnet voting event on January 22 drew such heavy participation that the app overloaded. That is both flattering and worrying. It signals demand, yet it also highlights operational fragility at exactly the wrong moment.
Solana nears a line in the sand
Solana traded near $126.64 and looked stuck between competing narratives. On one hand, buyers point to ecosystem growth and stablecoin innovation. On the other, technicians see weakening momentum and a market that needs to prove itself.
The near-term map is simple. The $123 to $129 band acts as support. If it fails, the next obvious area sits near $110. Therefore, the coming sessions may matter more than the latest grand 2026 price targets.
Those targets vary wildly anyway. Some conservative models put SOL around $128 in 2026 with little upside. More optimistic scenarios reach $289 to $350. The loudest calls push $425, but those assume sustained institutional demand and rapid application growth.
Meanwhile, institutional signals mixed. Forward Finance’s accumulation of 7 million SOL suggests conviction at current levels. However, lighter volume hints that marginal buyers are not yet chasing. Solana also gained a modest catalyst as new USDC-linked products from Circle and Ondo Finance rolled onto the network, adding yield infrastructure that could pull in steadier capital.
Regulation and infrastructure move from theory to trade
The more durable story sat in market structure. BitGo, the crypto custodian, priced its IPO above the marketed range at $18 a share. That is not a price chart story. Instead, it is a signal that custody and compliance have become investable mainstream services.
In Washington, senators unveiled updated cryptocurrency market legislation as the SEC and CFTC continue their turf debate. Even with lawmakers juggling other priorities, the direction looks clearer than it did a year ago. Abroad, Thailand’s SEC has been finalising ETF rules ahead of a projected 2026 launch. Therefore, the regulatory map is starting to rhyme across jurisdictions.
Tokenisation and yield stablecoins pressure banks
Wall Street’s fascination has shifted from coin flips to financial rails. Tokenisation tests, including blockchain-linked vehicles tied to US Treasury Bills, aim to turn crypto from a speculative arena into a settlement layer. If that thesis sticks, it will matter more than any single weekend rally.
Meanwhile, yield-bearing stablecoins are forcing awkward comparisons. Products offering 3% plus annual returns with limited price volatility make treasurers ask why idle cash should sit in low-yield deposits. However, banks still control distribution and trust. The next 18 to 24 months may decide whether stablecoin yield stays niche or becomes a genuine competitor.
Politics, XRP narratives, and the risk-on reflex
Political mood also lifted risk appetite after the Trump administration stepped back from tariff threats linked to Greenland and trade disputes. Crypto, as usual, took the hint. XRP drew attention as traders bet that clearer rules could revive a once-stalled growth story.
Some positioning calls point to 200% upside, built on hopes of regulatory clarity and Ripple partnerships with NYSE-listed technology firms. However, XRP remains a sentiment barometer. When narratives turn, they tend to turn fast.
Quiet upgrades: quantum planning and cheaper swaps
Under the day’s louder themes, two quieter moves stood out. Coinbase formed a quantum risk board aimed at protecting Bitcoin and broader blockchain infrastructure from future cryptographic threats. It reads like science fiction, yet it is also what institutional maturity looks like.
Elsewhere, 1inch removed gas token requirements via a partnership with Rewardy across five networks, cutting friction for decentralised swaps. Therefore, the long game continues. Less hassle often beats louder marketing.
By the numbers
- BTC: whales accumulated near $90,000 support; some traders eye $80,000 below.
- Pi: traded roughly $0.188 to $0.21; rose 3%+ after a six-day slide.
- SOL: traded near $126.64; key support band $123 to $129; next risk area near $110.
- BitGo: IPO priced at $18 per share, above the marketed range.
Key takeaways
- Watch BTC $90,000 as a sentiment anchor; weak volume raises false-break risk.
- SOL sits on a tight technical trigger; breaks may accelerate quickly in either direction.
- Pi shows community energy, yet infrastructure strain can cap upside until resolved.
- Regulatory and custody progress favours infrastructure winners over noisy single-token punts.
- Yield stablecoins and tokenised T-bills are the slow-burn trend that could reshape flows.