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Crypto prices fall as FOMC looms and DeFi fears hit BTC

Last updated April 28, 2026
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Crypto market dips amid FOMC buzz and Kelp DAO fallout

Crypto caught a risk-off draught on Monday, with traders choosing caution over conviction ahead of the next Federal Open Market Committee meeting. Bitcoin hovered around $78,000 after failing near $78,700, while Ethereum clung to $2,300 and XRP weakened around $1.43. Therefore, the tape felt less like a breakout and more like a market waiting for permission.

Even so, the bid has not vanished. Spot Bitcoin ETF inflows have topped $2.1 billion over the latest streak, offering a steady, institutional counterweight to shorter-term macro nerves. However, with no rate cuts expected, many desks prepared for a familiar mix of whipsaw and forced de-risking.

Bitcoin steadies, but macro sets the tempo

Bitcoin pushed up to the top of its ascending channel, then slipped back into the middle of it. Meanwhile, ETF demand continued to do the quiet work that leveraged traders tend to neglect.

MicroStrategy added 3,273 BTC for about $255 million on April 27, its fourth purchase this month. As a result, the company kept reinforcing the “corporate treasury as a bid” narrative, even as broader markets looked jumpy. Elsewhere, Strive Asset Management has climbed into the top public holders with 14,557 BTC, which matters mainly because it broadens the set of institutions with a reason to defend dips.

Transparency also got a small lift. Block opened its Bitcoin reserves to public proof-of-reserves verification, a nod to a market that still remembers how quickly confidence can evaporate.

Yet the bigger catalyst sat in Washington. The White House teased a “major update” on a strategic Bitcoin reserve, which stirred speculation but did not offer details. Therefore, the headline risk cut both ways, with traders hesitant to chase rumours into a policy-shaped void.

Altcoins feel the squeeze as DeFi confidence wobbles

While Bitcoin steadied, altcoins absorbed the nervous energy. Solana broke out of a multi-year bearish channel, hinting at a rebound. However, DeFi confidence took a hit after the $292 million Kelp DAO exploit narrative spread across risk dashboards.

Aave outflows reportedly reached $8.6 billion, slicing total value locked from $26.3 billion to $17.7 billion, with USDT and USDC pools accused of being drained. Consequently, governance went defensive. Aave DAO moved to pause buybacks, while DeFi United promised an rsETH recovery plan. Circle, for its part, was said to have quietly backstopped losses with USDC, which calmed some nerves but raised fresh questions about who ultimately absorbs tail risk.

Meanwhile, ZetaChain halted transfers after a reported $300,000 hit. The figure was small, yet the timing was awful. Therefore, it fed the sense of a sector where operational risk still clusters at the worst moments.

XRP continued to trade like a chart, not a story. A bearish pennant pattern kept the $1 level in view for technicians, especially with cloud resistance overhead. However, Ripple has tried to shift the conversation with a quantum-resistant XRPL roadmap that targets a full rollout by 2028, with tests beginning this year.

Ethereum held $2,300, though a clean break would put $2,250 in play. Spot ETH ETFs drew about $23 million of inflows, helpful at the margin, but not yet a decisive trend.

Tokenisation keeps moving, quietly, under the noise

While prices dipped, the infrastructure story kept advancing. OKX integrated BlackRock’s BUIDL tokenised fund, pushing real-world asset rails further into crypto trading venues. Meanwhile, Ondo partnered with Broadridge to bring voting rights to tokenised stocks, a detail that will matter if tokenisation is to feel like ownership rather than a synthetic wrapper.

  • OKX added access to BlackRock’s BUIDL tokenised fund.
  • Ondo and Broadridge partnered on voting rights for tokenised equities.
  • Israel greenlit the BILS shekel stablecoin after a Solana pilot.
  • dLocal rolled out stablecoin payments across 44 emerging markets.

Stablecoins again did what they usually do in macro wobbles. They became the market’s cash register. Advocates noted that stablecoin settlement volume now exceeds Visa’s, though the comparison can be messy. Still, the direction is clear.

Policy and enforcement stay messy, which is the point

On regulation, momentum looked uneven. A Senate crypto bill snagged after Senator Thom Tillis pressed for limits tied to the White House. Meanwhile, the CLARITY Act missed an April deadline, despite a lobbying push from roughly 120 firms including Coinbase and Ripple.

The Blockchain Association urged the Fed to drop “reputation risk” from bank supervision, a phrase that often becomes a soft veto on crypto activity. Canada advanced a ban on political crypto donations. Meanwhile, the CFTC sued New York over prediction market labels, highlighting the growing turf war over what counts as gambling versus hedging.

By the numbers

  • BTC around $78,000, after testing $78,700.
  • ETH near $2,300; $2,250 marks the next downside level.
  • Spot Bitcoin ETF inflows: $2.1bn+ over the latest streak.
  • MicroStrategy bought 3,273 BTC for about $255m on April 27.
  • Aave TVL cited falling from $26.3bn to $17.7bn.

Key takeaways

  • Macro can trump crypto flows this week, so expect stops to matter more than narratives.
  • ETF inflows support dips in BTC, but they do not prevent intraday shake-outs.
  • DeFi headlines can spill into high-beta alts fast, especially when stablecoin pools look stressed.
  • ETH’s $2,300 line remains the cleanest “risk-on versus risk-off” tell in majors.
  • Tokenisation news keeps landing even on red days, which may shape the next rotation.

For now, crypto sits between two forces. Institutional inflows insist the floor is firmer than it used to be. However, the FOMC and the aftershocks of DeFi risk remind traders that floors can still feel like trapdoors.

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