#分享美股交易赢英伟达股票 From the JPMorgan debate Coinb to Ethereum restructuring, understand the four major signals this Thursday to grasp the crypto market direction (5.31-6.6 review)


This week, the global crypto market faces a dense window of policy, personnel, black swan events, and institutional actions: US crypto legislation hurdles, European and American payment giants accelerating compliance implementation, traditional banks and top exchange executives publicly clashing, combined with Zcash's sudden security vulnerability plunge, ongoing personnel adjustments in the Ethereum ecosystem, RWA on-chain asset tokenization reaching a peak of implementation, regulation shifting from legislation to enforcement, industry accelerating toward compliance and real-world asset on-chain two main tracks.
1. Intensive implementation of new global regulations, US, Europe, and Asia-Pacific tightening compliance thresholds simultaneously
1) United States: CLARITY Act passes Senate committee, CFTC approves compliant Bitcoin perpetual futures
1) The US "CLARITY Act" passes the Senate Financial Committee vote, moving toward full chamber vote. The bill defines classifications of crypto assets, exchange licensing, custody access rules; JPMorgan CEO Dimon and Coinb founder Armstrong publicly debate this bill, becoming industry focus this week.
Dimon’s public statement (June 3): The deposit interest clause in the bill has major loopholes, crypto platforms lack bank deposit insurance, anti-money laundering standards are too low, firmly oppose lax implementation; Armstrong’s response (June 4): Regulatory implementation will push the industry toward standardization, long-term benefits for traditional banks expanding asset classes, both statements directly cause US stock crypto sector fluctuations. CFTC officially approves Kalshi’s launch of compliant US Bitcoin perpetual futures BTCPERP, and issues an exemption letter to Coinb, allowing US users compliant participation in offshore derivatives, opening policy for crypto derivatives on US exchanges, with NYSE and CME applying for 24/7 crypto contract trading licenses. The House releases 7 crypto tax draft bills, detailing institutional holdings, mining, token dividend taxation rules, shaping US crypto tax regulation framework.
2) EU & Asia-Pacific: MiCA countdown, Hong Kong stablecoin rules, Japan and Korea new regulations
EU MiCA law fully takes effect on July 1. This week, EU financial regulators notify all unlicensed crypto platforms within Europe to phase out existing users; unlicensed companies are prohibited from engaging in any crypto-to-crypto or fiat trading. CertiK releases industry report: global regulation focus shifts from securities classification to AML enforcement, mandatory smart contract audits become a licensing requirement.
Hong Kong SFC issues stablecoin regulation guidelines, distinguishing compliant algorithmic stablecoins and asset-backed stablecoins, with the first stablecoin licenses entering final review.
South Korea announced on May 31 that the Financial Supervisory Service will oversee all crypto regulation, implementing spot trading and custody risk control rules; India’s central bank governor reaffirmed on June 5 that the country maintains its crypto ban, with strict separation of CBDC and cryptocurrencies, no private trading allowed; Japan’s Senate passed amendments to the "Fund Settlement Act," easing entry thresholds for crypto matching service providers, allowing intermediary operations without full licenses.
3) Payment giants’ compliance implementation: Mastercard obtains New York BitLicense, builds cross-border stablecoin settlement channels with Chainlink, focusing on tokenized deposits and cross-border payments, not yet issuing crypto products to consumers, becoming another fully compliant international card organization after Visa.
2. Major institutional personnel changes + industry leaders’ heavyweight comments
1) Ethereum ecosystem: Foundation restructuring continues, Vitalik discusses leaner foundation logic, continuing last month’s core developer departures, announcing new organizational streamlining, protocol layer and L2 scaling teams continue outsourcing; Vitalik Buterin published an article: future foundation will reduce staff and ETH holdings, abandon leading ecosystem commercialization, focus on protocol upgrades, token market pricing to community and external institutions, positioning as a technical guardian rather than operational entity. Bankless founder David Hoffman announced liquidation of all personal ETH, expressing optimism for Ethereum network but skepticism about long-term token valuation, sparking broad community discussion.
2) Top exchanges & crypto asset management personnel movements:
1) Binance adjusts North American management structure, splitting retail and institutional sectors, shifting strategy from retail trading to Wall Street institutional services and RWA tokenization, previewing the launch of US stock tokenized spot trading product bStocks.
Veteran crypto VC firms like Multicoin see continued talent outflow, with many partners shifting to AI agents and robotics, industry talent gradually moving from native crypto to AI + Web3 crossover fields, becoming a fixed trend.
Robinhood completes Canadian regulatory approval, finalizes acquisition of WonderFi, and launches an on-chain AI smart trading account business line, with management team additions.
3) Mining listed company executives’ statements:
Japanese Bitcoin listed company Metaplanet CEO Simon Gerovich: BTC price volatility is not a product flaw but a core driver attracting long-term capital; the company continues monthly BTC accumulation as reserves.
4) Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor posted on X after Bitcoin’s worst weekly performance in nearly two years, summarizing the current Bitcoin community as four different forces, believing these groups are not opposed but collectively shaping Bitcoin’s long-term trajectory.
3. Major progress in public chains & Web3 projects (RWA, L2, public chain upgrades)
Sei Network officially releases Giga upgrade roadmap, aiming for 50x mainnet performance improvement, focusing on RWA tokenization and institutional asset on-chain scenarios, with ecosystem lock-up increasing 22% on launch day.
Cardano community votes down $1.8 million in treasury funds for Singapore summit, marking a milestone where community power surpasses project founders, a significant event in public chain governance.
RWA track accelerates: itget launches US stock tokenization protocol Reality, supporting on-chain stock holdings and automatic dividends; MetaMask and Robinhood jointly initiate OTL alliance, standardizing global on-chain asset trading and settlement, making RWA the industry’s certain implementation mainline.
Decentralized derivatives leader Hyperliquid’s weekly perpetual trading volume hits a new high, exceeding $720 billion, with HYPE token rising 9% against the market trend, a rare strong performer this week.
4. Institutional funds: listed companies continue accumulating BTC, mining firms rush US IPOs
Swedish listed firm K33 invests 10 million SEK to buy 10 BTC, recorded as assets; Bitcoin payment platform Strike discloses holdings of 1,500 BTC, ranking among top 25 global corporate BTC holders;
North American miner Bitmine officially applies for NYSE listing, planning to raise $18 million for bulk miner purchases and BTC holdings, with stock code BMNR, entering Russell small-cap index preliminary list;
US Treasury discloses over $1 billion in crypto assets seized related to Iran this week, with assets frozen, short-term geopolitical capital movements impacting market risk sentiment.
5. Major black swan event this week: Zcash privacy protocol high-risk vulnerability, ZEC plummets 50% in one day
On June 5, privacy leader Zcash disclosed a four-year dormant high-risk minting contract vulnerability, allowing hackers to arbitrarily create ZEC. After the news broke, ZEC dropped from $600 to $250 within 24 hours, a 50% daily plunge, causing privacy coins to collectively dive. The project urgently halted mainnet transfers, initiated vulnerability fixes and asset compensation plans. Privacy contract security issues reignited industry-wide audits, with multiple regulators demanding privacy coin platforms enhance KYC and risk controls.
6. Industry weekly summary on regulation
The world is leaving behind the wild growth legislative period, entering a year of enforcement in Europe, US, and Asia-Pacific. Licenses, AML, and tax rules are fully implemented, with non-compliant small platforms rapidly exiting; crypto practitioners are shifting, some to compliant institutions, others to AI + Web3 and RWA crossover sectors. Established public chain foundations generally slim down and delegate authority; main business tracks—RWA tokenization and compliant crypto derivatives—are the confirmed directions for the year. Traditional finance and payment giants continue to accelerate their entry beyond expectations.
On the risk side, privacy coin contract security, geopolitical asset seizures, and legislative implementation pace are the three major short-term market disturbances.
This article only summarizes publicly available industry information and does not constitute any investment or financial advice.
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#分享美股交易赢英伟达股票 From JPMorgan Debate Coinb to Ethereum Restructuring, Four Major Signals to Understand the Crypto Market Direction (5.31-6.6 Review)

This week, the global crypto market faces a dense window of policy, personnel, black swan events, and institutional actions: US crypto legislation passes hurdles, European and American payment giants accelerate compliance implementation, traditional banks and top exchanges' executives publicly clash, combined with Zcash's sudden security vulnerability causing a plunge, Ethereum ecosystem continues personnel adjustments, RWA on-chain asset tokenization reaches a peak of implementation, regulation shifts from legislation to enforcement, and the industry accelerates toward compliance and real asset on-chain two main tracks.

1. Global regulatory new policies are being implemented intensively, with compliance thresholds tightening simultaneously in Europe, America, and Asia
1) United States: The CLARITY Act passes the Senate Committee, CFTC approves compliant Bitcoin perpetual futures 1) The US "CLARITY Act" is approved by the Senate Finance Committee and will soon proceed to a full Senate vote. The bill defines classifications for crypto assets, exchange licensing, and custody access rules; JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon and Coinb founder Armstrong publicly debate this bill, becoming industry focus this week.
Dimon’s public statement (June 3): The deposit interest clause in the bill has major loopholes, crypto platforms lack bank deposit insurance, anti-money laundering standards are too low, and he firmly opposes lax implementation; Armstrong’s response (June 4): Compliance enforcement will push the industry toward standardization, long-term benefits for traditional banks to expand asset classes, and the statements directly cause volatility in US stock crypto sectors. CFTC officially approves Kalshi to launch compliant US Bitcoin perpetual futures BTCPERP, and issues an exemption letter to Coinb, allowing US users compliant access to offshore derivatives, opening policy for crypto derivatives on US stock exchanges. NYSE and CME follow with applications for 24/7 crypto contract trading licenses. The House releases 7 crypto tax bills detailing rules for institutional holdings, mining, and token dividends, shaping the US crypto tax regulatory framework.
2) EU & Asia-Pacific: MiCA countdown, Hong Kong stablecoin rules implemented, Japan and Korea introduce new regulations
EU’s MiCA bill fully takes effect on July 1. This week, the EU financial regulator notified all crypto platforms without licenses to exit existing users within a deadline, and non-CASP licensed firms are prohibited from any coin-to-coin or fiat trading; CertiK releases industry report: global regulatory focus shifts from securities classification to AML enforcement, with mandatory smart contract audits becoming a hard licensing condition.
Hong Kong’s SFC issues supporting circulars for stablecoins, distinguishing between compliant algorithmic stablecoins and asset-backed stablecoins, with the first stablecoin licenses entering final review.
Korea announced on May 31 that the Financial Supervisory Service will oversee all crypto regulation, implementing spot trading and custody risk control rules; India’s central bank governor reaffirmed on June 5 that the country maintains its crypto ban, with CBDC and cryptocurrencies strictly separated, no private trading allowed; Japan’s Senate approved amendments to the Funds Settlement Act, easing entry thresholds for crypto matching service providers, allowing intermediary operations without full licenses.
3. Payment giants’ compliance implementation: Mastercard obtains New York BitLicense, announced reliance on Chainlink to build cross-border stablecoin settlement channels, focusing on tokenized deposits and cross-border payments, not yet issuing crypto products to consumers, becoming another fully compliant international card organization after Visa.

2. Major personnel changes in leading institutions + heavyweight industry leaders’ statements
1) Ethereum ecosystem: Foundation restructuring continues, Vitalik Buterin discusses ongoing slimming, following last month’s core developer departures. This week, Ethereum Foundation announces a new round of organizational streamlining, with protocol layer and L2 scaling teams further split and outsourced; Vitalik Buterin published an article: the Foundation will reduce staff and ETH holdings, abandoning dominance in ecosystem commercialization, focusing on protocol upgrades, with token market pricing left to the community and external institutions. The Foundation’s future role is as a technical guardian rather than an operator. Bankless founder David Hoffman announced he has liquidated all his ETH, expressing optimism for Ethereum but skepticism about long-term token valuation, sparking broad community discussion.
2) Top exchanges & crypto asset management personnel movements: 1) Bn adjusts North American management structure, splitting retail and institutional sectors, shifting strategy from retail trading to Wall Street institutional services and RWA tokenization, with a preview of launching US stock tokenized spot trading product bStocks. Veteran crypto VC firms like Multicoin see continued talent outflow, with many partners shifting to AI agents and robotics, reflecting a trend of crypto-native talent moving into AI + Web3 crossover fields. Robinhood completed Canadian regulatory approval, finalized acquisition of WonderFi, and added an AI on-chain smart trading business line with new leadership.
3) Mining company executives’ comments: Japanese Bitcoin company Metaplanet CEO Simon Gerovich stated that BTC price volatility is not a product flaw but a core driver attracting long-term capital, with the company continuously increasing BTC holdings monthly as reserves.
4) Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor posted on X: after Bitcoin’s worst weekly performance in nearly two years, he summarized the current Bitcoin community into four groups, believing these groups are not opposed but collectively shaping Bitcoin’s long-term trajectory.

3. Major developments in public chains & Web3 projects (RWA, L2, public chain upgrades)
Sei Network officially released the Giga upgrade roadmap, aiming for a 50x performance boost of the mainnet, focusing on RWA tokenization and institutional asset on-chain scenarios, with on-day ecosystem lock-up increasing by 22%. Cardano community voted down a $1.8 million treasury fund for the Singapore summit, marking a milestone where community power surpasses project founders in governance. RWA sector accelerates: itget launched the US stock tokenization protocol Reality, supporting on-chain stock holdings and automatic dividends; MetaMask and Robinhood jointly initiated the OTL alliance to unify global on-chain asset trading standards, making RWA a key industry implementation focus. Decentralized derivatives leader Hyperliquid’s weekly perpetual trading volume hit a new high, exceeding $720 billion, with HYPE tokens rising 9% against the market, showing rare strength this week.

4. Institutional funds: listed companies continue accumulating BTC, mining firms rush US IPO
Swedish listed firm K33 bought 10 BTC for 10 million SEK, recorded as assets; Bitcoin payment platform Strike disclosed holdings of 1,500 BTC, ranking among the top 25 global corporate BTC holders; North American miner Bitmine officially filed for NYSE listing, planning to raise $18 million for bulk miner purchases and BTC accumulation, with stock code BMNR, now in Russell small-cap index preliminary list; US Treasury disclosed over $1 billion in crypto assets seized related to Iran this week, with assets frozen, impacting market risk sentiment short-term.

5. Major black swan event this week: Zcash privacy protocol high-risk vulnerability, ZEC plummets 50% in a single day
On June 5, privacy leader Zcash disclosed a critical bug in a contract that had been dormant for four years, allowing hackers to arbitrarily mint ZEC. After the news broke, ZEC dropped from $600 to $250 within 24 hours, a decline of over 50%, causing the entire privacy coin sector to plunge. The project team urgently halted mainnet transfers, initiated vulnerability fixes, and asset compensation plans. Privacy contract security issues have prompted renewed industry-wide audits, with multiple regulators demanding privacy coin platforms enhance KYC and risk controls.

6. Weekly industry summary on regulation
The industry is leaving the wild growth legislative phase, with Europe, America, and Asia-Pacific entering enforcement year, with licenses, AML, and tax rules fully implemented, leading to the rapid exit of non-compliant small platforms; native crypto practitioners are continuously dispersing—some moving to compliant institutions, others shifting to AI + Web3 and RWA crossover sectors. Old public chain foundations are generally slimming down and decentralizing authority; main business directions—RWA tokenization and compliant crypto derivatives—are the certain focus for the year, with traditional finance and payment giants entering at an unexpectedly fast pace. Risks include privacy coin contract security, geopolitical asset seizures, and legislative implementation pace, which are the main short-term market disturbances.

This article only summarizes publicly available industry information and does not constitute any investment or financial advice.
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HighAmbition
· 3h ago
To The Moon 🌕
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HighAmbition
· 3h ago
To The Moon 🌕
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Ryakpanda
· 3h ago
Hop on now!🚗
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Ryakpanda
· 3h ago
Just charge forward 👊
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