Crypto headlines: Bitcoin squeezes higher, DeFi bleeds $600m, XRP eyes breakout
Bitcoin pushed back towards $79,000 on Thursday before easing, yet the mood stayed bullish. However, the more telling action sat in derivatives, where positioning ahead of a jumbo expiry looked like a slow, deliberate squeeze. Meanwhile, DeFi suffered another ugly fortnight, with April losses already at $606m and developers reaching for emergency brakes. Elsewhere, XRP tightened into a chart pattern traders love to argue about, with $1.50 now the obvious line in the sand.
Market movers: Bitcoin’s rally looks like positioning, not a conversion
Bitcoin notched an 11-week high above $78,000 and briefly reclaimed the $79,000 handle. However, the rally read less like fresh fundamental demand and more like a mechanical tug of war. With roughly $7.9bn of bitcoin options due to expire, call interest sat well above puts, therefore forcing dealers and short-vol traders to chase spot higher as price rose.
Price later hovered around $75,900, as traders weighed whether the squeeze had already paid out. Meanwhile, spot ETF flows stayed a prop, with BlackRock’s iShares vehicle again dominating the day’s net intake. Corporate buying added to the narrative too, after Strategy’s latest $2.54bn purchase lifted its bitcoin stash past 815,000 coins.
Risk appetite also bled into ether talk. Fundstrat’s Tom Lee kept the $250,000 long-term ETH target in circulation, while Bitmine’s reported $230m ether purchase gave bulls something concrete to point at. Meanwhile, a Trump-linked mining play drew attention after American Bitcoin surged 12% on news of 11,298 additional miners, taking reported hash power to 28.1 EH/s.
DeFi carnage: $606m gone, and the month is not half done
April 2026 has turned into another stress test for decentralised finance. Losses hit $606m in 18 days, making it the worst month since February 2025. However, the bigger worry is the rhythm, with large hits landing quickly enough to trip liquidations and spook lenders.
The headline incident was the $290m KelpDAO exploit, which investigators tied to North Korea’s Lazarus Group. The knock-on effect was brutal, as DeFi total value locked fell by about $13bn in two days. Meanwhile, Lazarus tactics reportedly shifted again, with crypto executives targeted using fake meeting invites designed to lure them into credential theft.
Developers responded in crisis mode. Flying Tulip shipped a withdrawal circuit breaker to slow exits and buy time. CertiK also warned that AI-enabled misuse and basic infrastructure gaps could drive 2026 losses higher, therefore turning security spend into a competitive advantage rather than a cost line.
Speculation did not stop, of course. RaveDAO surged 106% in a single session, though it still traded under the shadow of a claimed 95% crash scandal flagged by on-chain sleuth ZachXBT. In this tape, traders buy recoveries quickly, but they also sell stories faster.
XRP and regulation: a triangle tightens as lawmakers stir again
XRP coiled into a tightening triangle pattern, and chart watchers focused on $1.50 as the breakout trigger. However, catalysts still matter more than geometry. Firelight and Sentora announced a native DeFi protection partnership on XRP, which supporters hope can make the chain feel less like a trading token and more like a usable settlement rail.
Meanwhile, the regulatory drumbeat continued. Crypto advocates pushed the Senate to advance the Clarity Act, while Kraken pressed lawmakers to fix staking rules and stop treating routine transactions like taxable trivia. Elsewhere, Thailand’s SEC moved to streamline crypto derivatives rules, while New York and Illinois barred state staff from prediction markets.
Sam Bankman-Fried withdrew a new trial bid and asked for a new judge, keeping one of crypto’s longest-running legal dramas in the frame.
Drama and deals: funding, exits, and the AI everywhere trade
Personnel churn kept coming. MetaMask co-founder Dan Finlay departed Consensys, while WLFI co-founder Zach Witkoff faced renewed scrutiny tied to a 2022 arrest video. Meanwhile, a Believe founder arrest added pressure to an already noisy token case.
On the money side, Blockchain Capital weighed a $700m raise spanning early and growth funds. GSR launched what it billed as the first active multi-asset crypto staking ETF on Nasdaq, a structure that will test how much yield mainstream investors want when the underlying assets can gap 5% in an hour. Robinhood also backed OpenAI with a $75m retail strategy, while Google Cloud and CVC signed a multi-year agentic AI deal. KPMG, meanwhile, debuted AI tooling aimed at month-end finance chores, therefore pushing the “AI for back office” theme into the mainstream professional class.
By the numbers
- BTC spot: reclaimed $79,000 briefly, later near $75,900
- BTC options expiry: about $7.9bn notional
- Strategy BTC buy: $2.54bn, holdings above 815,000 coins
- DeFi losses (April 1-18): $606m
- KelpDAO exploit: $290m, with Lazarus blamed
Key takeaways
- BTC’s tone is still set by options mechanics, therefore watch expiry levels more than headlines.
- ETF flows and corporate buys support dips, yet they do not eliminate air pockets.
- DeFi risk is rising faster than yields, so size trades like you expect outages.
- XRP needs a clean break above $1.50 and follow-through volume, otherwise it remains range chop.
- Regulation chatter can move single names quickly, however it rarely moves the whole complex for long.
For traders, the near-term map is simple. Follow bitcoin into expiry, fade exuberance if the squeeze exhausts, and treat DeFi as a minefield until exploit cadence slows. Meanwhile, keep XRP on a tight leash, because triangles resolve quickly and reverse just as fast.

