Whales Buy the Dip as Cardano’s Leios Testnet Nears and Price Plumbs Five-Year Low
Cardano’s native token ADA touched $0.16 on Tuesday, its weakest level in half a decade, even as some of the network’s largest holders ramped up their positions. The price now sits roughly 84% below the 52-week peak of $1.01 reached in August 2025, a reminder of the brutal drawdown that has wiped out more than 55% of the asset’s value since the start of the year.
Yet on-chain data tells a different story for the biggest players. Whales have accumulated roughly 370 million ADA tokens since mid-June, according to transaction records, providing a floor near the 52-week low of $0.15. Mid-sized wallets, by contrast, have been steadily reducing their exposure. The divergence points to a market split between retail despair and institutional conviction.
A Double Header of Network Upgrades
The price slide comes at an awkward moment for the development team. On June 23, Input Output Global is set to launch the public testnet for Ouroboros Leios, dubbed “Musashi Dojo.” The protocol extension aims to boost Cardano’s throughput from around 10 transactions per second to more than 1,000, using larger endorser blocks to handle traffic spikes. The testnet will roll out through five phases — protocol validation, network optimization, practical testing, security audits, and final preparations for mainnet — with data throughput increasing gradually from 4.5 KB/s to 200 KB/s. A production launch is not expected until late 2026 or early 2027.
A second milestone follows almost immediately. Voting is underway for the “van Rossem” hard fork, which would upgrade the network to protocol version 11 and accelerate smart contract execution. Already 89% of block production runs on compatible software, and the final activation is penciled in for June 28.
Institutional Doors Swing Open
While retail sentiment sours, traditional finance is taking notice. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has approved the T. Rowe Price Active Crypto ETF, an actively managed fund that allocates 3.37% of its portfolio to Cardano — a meaningful stamp of approval for an asset that has long battled skepticism from mainstream investors.
Parallel to that, the Cardano Foundation has signed a three-year partnership with the Brazilian Olympic Committee. The blockchain will be used to secure digital identities for athletes, marking a real-world use case beyond the speculative grind.
Markets Flash Oversold Signals
The bearish picture is hard to ignore. ADA has lost more than 34% over the past 30 days alone. Daily trading volume has collapsed from a prior peak of $6.3 billion to roughly $500 million. The total value locked across Cardano’s DeFi ecosystem has fallen below $90 million, and CME futures volume plunged 87% in three days. The relative strength index hovers near 30, deep in oversold territory. The next support levels sit at $0.15 and, below that, $0.14.
AI Agents Stir Controversy
Founder Charles Hoskinson has also had to manage a community backlash over the use of AI-generated influencer content on social media. He defended the experiments as demonstrations for “Midnight City,” an interactive simulation of autonomous AI agents running on the Midnight Network. Midnight, which launched its mainnet on March 31, relies on zero-knowledge cryptography for privacy-focused applications and uses two native tokens: NIGHT for governance and DUST for transaction fees. Hoskinson has championed the open-source “OpenClaw” platform for autonomous agents and acknowledged that AI-generated content, including voice cloning, will soon be indistinguishable from human output. The goal, he insisted, is augmentation, not replacement.
Governance Hits a Speed Bump
The decentralization ethos that Cardano prides itself on also tripped up one planned event. The network’s community voted down funding for the Cardano Summit 2026, failing to reach the required two-thirds majority. The decision underscores the tight budget discipline imposed by the project’s on-chain treasury mechanism — and leaves a notable gap in the ecosystem’s calendar.
What’s Next
The coming days will test whether technical progress can shift the narrative. If the Leios testnet runs smoothly and the van Rossem hard fork activates as scheduled on June 28, the whale accumulation could prove prescient. Any stumbles, however, risk adding to the selling pressure in a market already flashing deep oversold readings. Early feedback from the “Earth” phase of the testnet is expected within weeks, giving the community its first real gauge of the upgrade’s performance under stress.
Silver’s Bearish Paradox: A 67-Million-Ounce Deficit Meets Its Match in a Hawkish Fed and a Solar Slowdown
Even as the Silver Institute forecasts a sixth consecutive supply shortfall in 2026 — with a deficit of 67 million ounces — the metal is being pummelled by forces that no production gap can offset. The price has lost more than 20% in recent weeks, tumbling below $57 on Thursday and extending the rout on Friday to a low of $55.60. A late-session recovery to just over $58 offered only a fleeting reprieve; the broader downtrend remains firmly entrenched.
The Federal Reserve is the primary culprit. Under new chairman Kevin Warsh, the central bank has doubled down on its hawkish stance, with Bank of America analysts now expecting three more rate hikes this year that would lift the federal funds rate by 75 basis points to 4.50%. The US dollar has responded by punching above 101 on the dollar index and hitting a one-year high, making silver more expensive for overseas buyers. With US inflation running at 4.2% in May, traders are bracing for another increase in September, further draining the appeal of a zero-yielding asset.
Geopolitical relief has stripped away another layer of support. The interim peace deal signed in mid-June between the US and Iran — the Islamabad Memorandum — has calmed tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, with shipping volumes nearly back to pre-crisis levels. The risk premium that had been baked into commodity markets is rapidly evaporating, prompting speculative funds to unwind their silver hedges.
On the industrial side, the picture is equally troubling. The solar power sector, a key driver of silver demand in recent years, is cutting back sharply. Photovoltaic manufacturers — stung by historically high procurement costs — are substituting alternative materials and reducing the silver content in their panels. The Silver Institute estimates that solar demand will drop 19% this year to 151 million ounces. Jewelry and silverware orders are also slumping, compounding the demand-side weakness.
A simultaneous sell-off in US technology stocks added to the pressure, forcing leveraged investors to liquidate silver positions to meet margin calls. The result is a market that has been drained of both safe-haven and speculative bids.
Technical indicators underscore the severity of the decline. The Relative Strength Index has dropped to 27.5, signalling an oversold condition by conventional measures, but chartists see little room for a sustained bounce. The price has already undercut the next support level at $54.56, and if that line fails to hold, further losses are likely. Resistance now sits in the $58 area, a zone that silver struggled to reclaim on Friday.
Longer-term bulls point to the structural deficit and the fact that global inventories have shrunk by more than 760 million ounces since 2021. But with the Fed remaining resolute, the dollar strong, and industrial demand — particularly from solar — on the wane, the bears have the upper hand for now. A meaningful turnaround will require either a shift in monetary policy or a fresh catalyst from the industrial side of the equation.