GM!
Today’s top news:
Crypto majors rally 5-9% on peace progress, STRC bid; BTC +5% at $74,500 Saylor bought $1B in BTC last week, fully powered by STRC; Tom Lee bought $157M in ETH (ETH +9%) STRC moves $1.1B in volume, enough for 7,200+ BTC in record day Kraken shares that it’s being extorted, though customer funds are safe Circle won’t freeze customer funds without law involvement, looking at native token for Arc ️ The SEC Just Gave DeFi a Green LightThe SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets dropped a major piece of guidance Monday, creating a formal safe harbor for “Covered User Interfaces.”
The conditions are clear: never take custody of user assets or keys, don’t recommend or solicit specific trades, charge fixed and neutral fees (no transaction-based compensation), and disclose any relationships with connected trading venues. If a protocol fits within those defined terms, it’s safe.
This applies directly to platforms like Uniswap’s front-end, wallet extensions (MetaMask), and similar DeFi tooling. Huge news for DeFi.
This matters because Broker-dealer registration would have forced Uniswap to operate like a Fidelity account - full KYC on every user, net capital requirements, FINRA examinations, employee licensing, and ongoing regulatory supervision. Now they don’t.
But there is a catch—staff guidance is not law. A future administration can reverse it. That’s exactly why the Clarity Act still needs to pass to codify this permanently.
And with odds at just 53% of passing this year, DeFi’s future may hinge on a coin flip…
Key Details:
The SEC issued a staff statement creating a safe harbor for “Covered User Interfaces” - DeFi front-ends, wallet apps, and browser extensions used to prepare crypto securities transactions through self-custodial wallets; effective immediately, valid five years To qualify: non-custodial, non-discretionary, no trade recommendations or solicitation, fixed neutral fees, full disclosure of venue relationships and users must sign all transactions from their own wallets The catch: staff guidance, not law; a future administration can reverse itStrategy’s Monday 8-K confirmed it sold 10.03 million STRC shares for $1.001B in net proceeds between April 6-12, purchasing 13,927 BTC at an average of $71,902.
The kicker? It was funded entirely by STRC, zero common stock dilution.
Strategy now holds approximately 781,000 Bitcoin, within striking distance of BlackRock’s IBIT holdings.
Then today, STRC trading volume hit $1.1B in a single session, a new all-time daily record, blowing past the previous record of $746M set on March 12. STRC is designed to trade at par ($100) and pays 11.5% annually in monthly dividends. When volume spikes like this into a dividend cutoff, it signals institutional demand is pulling forward, which feeds directly into the following week’s Bitcoin purchase.
So it’s going to be a big week.
And with ~$21.6B still available in the STRC ATM program, the machine is not slowing down any time soon…
Key Details:
Strategy announced it spent $1B on Bitcoin last week, purchasing 13,927 BTC at avg $71,902 funded entirely by STRC proceeds; now holds ~781,000 BTC, closing in on BlackRock’s IBIT STRC hit an all-time daily volume record of $1.1B today, eclipsing the previous record of $746M set March 12; dividend cutoff date is Wednesday, likely meaning a slowdown and a dip under the $100 par value The ATM runway: ~$21.6B still available in the STRC program; Strategy has raised $3.8B+ in STRC since launch and the preferred share has become its primary funding vehicleBitcoin opened Monday at $70,741 after the Islamabad collapse and Hormuz blockade news hammered markets over the weekend. By the evening, BTC was back at $74,500, fully erasing the weekend drawdown and then some.
The move came alongside surging equities and oil retreating back below $93 per barrel as markets absorbed the blockade announcement and reassessed whether a naval operation could actually force the strait open quickly.
The pattern is becoming familiar. This is at least the third time in 2026 that a geopolitical weekend panic has been fully reversed by Monday’s US session. Each time, the mechanical bid from STRC volume and ETF inflows has acted as a floor.
CoinDesk noted that $6B in leveraged shorts were concentrated between $72,200 and $73,500 and that $79K remains the next key resistance. Perhaps Saylor’s mammoth STRC bid from this week will be enough to push it there…
Key Details:
Bitcoin erased its full weekend decline, closing at $74,300 Monday, up more than 4% on the day after opening near $70,741 following the Islamabad collapse; ETH +9% outpacing all majors Oil retreated below $93 as traditional markets opened and traders assessed the practical limits of a naval blockade The pattern: weekend geopolitical panic followed by Monday US session reversal has now played out multiple times in 2026; STRC volume, ETF inflows, and mechanical buying continue to provide a structural floorKraken disclosed Monday that it’s being extorted by a criminal group threatening to release videos of internal systems containing client data.
The exchange’s CSO Nick Percoco posted on X: “Our systems were never breached; funds were never at risk; we will not pay these criminals; we will not ever negotiate with bad actors.”
The underlying incidents: two separate support staff members improperly accessed limited client data: the first flagged in February 2025 after a video circulated on a criminal forum, the second more recently. Kraken terminated both employees, revoked access, tightened controls, and notified the approximately 2,000 affected accounts. The extortion demands started immediately after the second access was cut off.
Kraken says it has sufficient evidence to identify and arrest those responsible and is working with law enforcement across multiple jurisdictions. The disclosure also flagged a broader organized pattern of insider recruitment targeting crypto, gaming, and telecom firms simultaneously - this is far from an isolated incident.
Key Details:
Kraken is facing extortion after two insider-related support staff incidents gave limited access to ~2,000 client accounts (0.02%) What happened: two support employees accessed internal systems improperly; access revoked in both cases; no funds at risk, and no core systems breached The wider threat: Kraken flagged organized insider recruitment efforts targeting crypto, gaming, and telecom firms broadly, not an isolated attack on Kraken; Galaxy Digital also disclosed a separate minor incident involving an isolated development workspace this week“Circle follows the rule of law,” he said. “We are able to undertake actions such as freezing a wallet at the direction of law enforcement or the courts.”
His commentary comes after ZachXBT documented over $420M in illicit USDC flows escaping since 2022, along with cases where Tether froze equivalent USDT within hours while stolen USDC sat in visible wallets untouched.
The most recent example was the $285M Drift Protocol exploit on April 1 by (suspected) North Korean hackers, where $230M in USDC was bridged from Solana to Ethereum over six hours. Circle had the technical ability to act. It didn’t. Allaire called the choice a “moral quandary” and said the answer has to come from legislation, not corporate discretion.
Key Details:
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire stated clearly that Circle will not freeze USDC wallets without direction from law enforcement or courts The criticism: ZachXBT has documented $420M+ in illicit USDC escaping since 2022; Tether has repeatedly frozen equivalent USDT within hours in comparable incidents; the Drift Protocol $285M exploit was the most recent flashpoint Allaire’s defense: allowing a private company to make unilateral freeze decisions creates a “very significant moral quandary”; the resolution needs to be in legislation; Circle is pushing for safe harbor provisions in the CLARITY Act















