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Cardano Faces Governance Reckoning: Summit Scrapped by 1.46 Points as $7.9M Research Vote Hangs in Balance

Cardano’s on-chain governance machinery produced a split-screen drama this week. One day after the community narrowly blocked a $2 million funding request for the Cardano Summit in Singapore, a separate—and far larger—treasury proposal worth nearly $7.9 million hurtled toward its deadline with a single delegate casting a massive stake in its favour.

The Summit rejection, decided on 7 June, exposed the bite of Cardano’s Voltaire system. The Cardano Foundation had sought 7.8 million ADA to stage the event, but under the network’s governance rules, high-relevance financial votes require a 66.67% supermajority from delegated representatives. The final tally came in at 65.21%—just 1.46 percentage points short. Opponents had pointed to a budget that exceeded projected ticket revenue of $450,000, arguing the gap was too wide. For supporters, the no-vote dealt a blow to what is seen as a key networking fixture for the ecosystem.

Now all eyes are on a second ballot that closes today, 8 June. The proposal, “Cardano Vision 2026: Human Centred, Scalable, Post Quantum Secure — IO Research,” requests 32.9 million ADA (roughly $7.9 million) from the network treasury. It comes from Input Output Research, a consortium of nine research and development partners. The plan maps out three priorities—human-centred design, scalability and post-quantum security—across seven work packages containing 42 deliverables, including 38 scientific papers, eight problem descriptions, 12 prototypes and five Cardano Improvement Proposals. Funding is split into four equal tranches tied to milestones: a signed service agreement, a mid-year progress report, a research and development session in Q3, and a year-end report. Unspent funds would flow back to the treasury.

The vote’s most striking moment came from a single delegate, @ItsDave_ADA, who cast 70.68 million ADA in favour—more than double the amount requested. That outsized signal underscores how Cardano’s stake-based model concentrates power in the hands of “DReps,” on-chain representatives who accumulate voting weight from delegators. Intersect, the ecosystem’s coordination platform, oversees process integrity but has no say in the final outcome.

Market conditions have made the timing especially delicate. ADA currently trades at $0.17, up 6.5% on the day, though it had slipped to $0.16 during the Summit vote. The relative strength index sits at 21.2, deep in oversold territory, while the weekly decline stands at 28.9% and the monthly slide at 38.8%. Year-to-date, the coin has lost 53.71%, and over the past twelve months the drop reaches 75.21%. The 52-week low of $0.15 was touched just last Saturday.

Yet on-chain data paints a more nuanced picture. Wallets holding more than 10 million ADA have climbed to a four-month high, suggesting large holders are selectively accumulating during the downturn even as smaller participants retreat. The broader ecosystem has faced headwinds beyond price: Charles Hoskinson announced a temporary social-media hiatus on 3 June, and TapTools, a well-known analytics platform on Cardano, is set to shut down.

Attention is already shifting to the protocol layer. Ouroboros Leios, a scalability upgrade that promises 10- to 65-fold throughput gains via parallel block processing, is scheduled to launch its testnet in June 2026. If successful, Cardano could exceed 1,000 transactions per second—a milestone that would refocus debate away from governance drama and onto technical delivery. For now, the community has drawn a clear line: it will scrutinise every treasury request, but it may still approve a bold research vision if the numbers and milestones stack up.

XRP’s Ledger Rebrand and Tokenization Push Collide with 19-Month Price Floor

XRP is living a double life. Its native token has slumped to levels not seen in 19 months, yet the technology underpinning it is undergoing the most significant identity shift in its history. The XRP Ledger team has announced version 3.2.0, a release that does more than patch code—it renames the core software from “rippled” to “xrpld”, a move that forces every infrastructure provider, validator, and node operator to update their systems before migration. A technical handbook for the transition is in development.

The rebranding follows version 3.1.3, which went live in May 2026 and carried fixes for NFTs, vault systems, and lending protocols. Version 3.2.0 builds on that groundwork by targeting the network’s foundations. Ripple CTO David Schwartz has made no secret of where this is heading: the XRP Ledger is meant to evolve from a payments backbone into a platform for institutional tokenization, supporting tokenised repo deals, corporate loans, and equities.

That ambition already has tangible evidence. Tokenised assets on the XRPL have reached a volume of roughly $3.5 billion this year. A pilot involving Ondo Finance, JPMorgan, and Mastercard settled tokenised US Treasury bonds on the ledger in under five seconds. Separately, an analyst cited roughly $1.5 billion in new real-world asset inflows over the past 30 days, though the figure lacks official confirmation.

Those numbers stand in stark contrast to the price action. XRP touched $1.05 on Friday, its lowest in 19 months, before crawling back to $1.15. That leaves the token 68% below its July 2025 high of $3.65 — or 69% using the 52-week peak. Year-to-date, XRP has shed nearly 39% of its value. The relative strength index sits near 30–31, deep in oversold territory. Technically, the asset has reclaimed support at $1.10 but faces immediate resistance at $1.15 and $1.17. The 200-day moving average looms at $1.61, meaning the current price is about 29% beneath it.

Institutional money, however, has been flowing against the grain. XRP spot ETFs recorded net inflows of $2.62 million in the week from June 1 to June 5 — a period when Bitcoin ETFs suffered billions in outflows. The Canary XRP ETF led with $4.13 million of fresh capital, followed by the Franklin Templeton fund at $3.83 million. Those were partially offset by a $4.06 million outflow from the Bitwise XRP ETF. Cumulatively, XRP ETFs have amassed $1.43 billion in net inflows since their launch in November 2025. In May alone, roughly $132 million entered these products. UBS, according to SEC filings, holds nearly 200,000 shares of the Volatility Shares XRP ETF, worth around $1.5 million.

On-chain signals also tell a story of accumulating conviction. Roughly 25 million XRP were pulled from exchanges within 48 hours, a move typically interpreted as declining sell-pressure. The number of wallets holding more than one million XRP has hit a multi-year high.

Beyond the ledger and the token, institutional infrastructure continues to advance. Ripple Prime — born from the $1.25 billion acquisition of Hidden Road — has been confirmed as a participant in the DTCC working group on tokenization. The DTCC, which settles $114 trillion in transactions annually, plans its first production trades of tokenised assets in July 2026, including Russell 1000 index shares, ETFs, and US Treasuries. A full platform launch is scheduled for October 2026.

On the regulatory front, the CLARITY Act — a US bill aimed at clarifying the legal classification of digital assets — moved onto the Senate calendar on June 1. Whether that or the DTCC timeline provides a near-term catalyst remains an open question. For now, XRP’s price sits well below its highs, but the infrastructure beneath it is being rebuilt at a pace that few tokens can match.

Gold’s Sharpest Weekly Loss Masks a Battle Between Fed Rate Bets and Central Bank Stockpiling

Gold is caught in a tug-of-war few analysts anticipated just weeks ago. A blockbuster US jobs report has reignited fears of another Federal Reserve rate hike, sending the metal to its worst weekly finish in months. Yet beneath the surface, central banks continue to accumulate bullion at a pace that suggests the long-term demand story remains intact.

The numbers tell a stark story. Gold settled at $4,352.90 an ounce on Friday after a 3.33% single-day rout that dragged the weekly loss to 4.75%. The sliding 30-day performance is now a 7.03% decline, leaving the year-to-date gain barely positive at 0.26%. More alarmingly for technical traders, the price has fallen more than 6% below its 50-day moving average, a breach that often signals further downside.

That damage was inflicted by the May nonfarm payrolls report, which showed 172,000 new jobs created — double the 85,000 that economists had penciled in. The labor market is not cooling as many had hoped, and the futures market responded by pricing in roughly a 50% probability of at least one quarter-point rate increase by year-end. For gold, which generates no income, a rising rate environment is lethal: higher real yields and a firmer dollar sap its appeal.

But the selloff is not uniform across the market. Institutional investors have been trimming their exposure, with physically backed gold ETFs — particularly the flagship SPDR Gold Shares — seeing notable outflows. That institutional flight is amplifying the price pressure and could accelerate if the exodus continues.

Offsetting that weakness is a powerful countercurrent from the official sector. Central banks bought a net 244 tonnes of gold in the first quarter, according to the World Gold Council. Bar demand alone reached 397.7 tonnes, up 20% from the previous quarter and 50% year-on-year. The European Central Bank noted in a recent report that by the end of 2025, gold had overtaken US Treasuries as the largest reserve asset by market value, now accounting for 27% of global official reserves. The ECB cautioned that this milestone primarily reflects gold’s steep price appreciation over recent years, but the shift in reserve composition is unmistakable.

Geopolitical crosscurrents add another layer of complexity. The Middle East conflict typically bolsters gold’s safe-haven appeal, but this time the dynamic is different. While US President Donald Trump has spoken of peace negotiations entering their final phase, Iran has dismissed meaningful progress, and Hezbollah has rejected a US-brokered ceasefire proposal. The resulting uncertainty drives oil prices higher, feeding inflation expectations that in turn weigh on gold through the rate channel.

All eyes now turn to the macro calendar. Wednesday’s consumer price index for May is the next critical data point, followed by producer prices and weekly jobless claims on Thursday, and the University of Michigan inflation expectations survey on Friday. Hot inflation readings would reinforce the hawkish repricing of Fed policy, while cooler data could allow a technical bounce as pressure from yields eases.

Analysts remain cautious. Some see a potential slide toward $3,816 by year-end if geopolitical risks and rate fears converge. For now, the immediate technical support sits at $4,280, a level that could be tested if Wednesday’s CPI comes in hot. The structural demand from central banks provides a floor, but it may not be strong enough to halt the slide if the market’s rate calculus continues to harden.

XRP’s Deepening Slump Defies Network Upgrade and Regulatory Progress – Shorts Outnumber Bulls Nine to One

The XRP market is sending conflicting signals. While the XRP Ledger rolls out a major software overhaul and a landmark regulatory bill inches toward a Senate vote, the token’s price has fallen to a 52-week low of $1.11, a 7.55% drop in a single session. Since the start of the year, XRP has lost 37.80% of its value, and the selling pressure shows no sign of abating.

The relative strength index has plunged to 19.7, deep in oversold territory—down from 23.2 earlier in the week—and short sellers have tightened their grip. Bearish positions now outnumber long bets by a ratio of nine to one, according to exchange data. The token briefly hit $1.07 on June 5, its weakest level since November 2024, and currently trades just 8.89% above that floor.

Regulatory milestone on the horizon

Against this bleak price action, the regulatory outlook for XRP has brightened considerably. The CLARITY Act, which would classify decentralized cryptocurrencies as commodities under CFTC oversight, reached the Senate calendar on June 1. The bill explicitly names XRP as a digital commodity, potentially ending years of legal uncertainty. The White House has targeted July 4 for a signature, though missing that deadline could push enactment into the autumn. Sixty votes are still needed in the Senate.

British banking giant Standard Chartered sees enormous potential if the bill passes. Its analysts project additional institutional inflows of $4 billion to $8 billion into XRP-related investment products.

Technical upgrade renames core software

Meanwhile, the XRP Ledger is modernizing its infrastructure. On June 4, XRP Ledger Operations confirmed that version 3.2.0 will rename the server software from “rippled” to “xrpld” — a move that goes beyond cosmetic rebranding. Validators and node operators will need to prepare for the mandatory update, supported by a new technical handbook. The upgrade follows version 3.1.3, activated in May, which fixed critical issues around NFTs, vault systems, and the lending protocol.

Ripple CTO David Schwartz has outlined a broader vision: the ledger should evolve from a payments backbone into a platform for institutional tokenization. That vision is already taking shape. Tokenized assets worth $3.5 billion now reside on the XRP Ledger, including repos, money market funds, public equities, and loans.

Institutional cash flows in, but ETF trends diverge

A striking disconnect has emerged between retail sentiment and institutional activity. While the spot price crumbles, US-listed XRP ETFs posted net inflows of $131 million in May, bringing cumulative inflows since launch to $1.6 billion. Yet not all days are green: on June 3, ETFs recorded net outflows of $5.34 million, a reminder that even institutional demand can waver.

The contrast with Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs is stark — those products have suffered weeks of redemptions, while XRP funds continue to attract fresh capital. Standard Chartered’s billion-dollar forecast underscores the belief that a clear regulatory framework could supercharge this trend.

Wall Street taps the ledger for real-time settlement

Real-world applications are gaining traction. Ondo Finance recently completed the redemption of a tokenized US Treasury fund on the XRP Ledger in near real-time, with cross-border settlement handled by Mastercard’s network and J.P. Morgan participating. Ripple facilitated the token exchange on-ledger. Such use cases, if backed by regulatory clarity, could become standard.

The ecosystem’s own stablecoin, RLUSD, processed $22 billion in transaction volume during the quarter, serving as a crucial on-ramp and off-ramp for the network. Separately, Flare completed an automated liquidity rollover of $4 million for stXRP duration pools on June 4, reallocating capital to new markets maturing at year-end.

Chart warns of further downside

Technically, XRP is under pressure from all angles. The token sits 15.58% below its 50-day moving average and 28.24% below the 200-day moving average — a textbook downtrend. The oversold RSI suggests a bounce is possible, but with shorts overwhelmingly in control, any rally could be short-lived.

The immediate support zone between $1.00 and $1.05 is critical. A decisive break below that level would worsen the technical picture. If XRP can stabilize, attention may shift back to the xrpld upgrade and the Senate’s looming vote. For now, the bears have the upper hand, and only a positive surprise from Washington could trigger the kind of short squeeze that would reverse the token’s fortunes.

Ethereum’s Identity Crisis Spills Into the Open as ETF Inflows Fail to Stem the Slide

The bitterest debate in crypto right now isn’t about regulation or scaling — it’s playing out between the two founders of Bankless, the media platform that helped define Ethereum’s bullish narrative for years. Ryan Sean Adams and David Hoffman have gone public with a fundamental disagreement over whether Ether can ever function as a store of value, and that schism is hitting home at a moment when the token is plumbing depths not seen since 2024.

Adams fired the first shot, declaring Ethereum a “failed project” if ETH does not ultimately serve as a multi-trillion-dollar global asset. Network growth, rising stablecoin usage or DeFi expansion are irrelevant, he argues, unless ETH itself absorbs and retains value. Hoffman countered bluntly: he sees no mechanism that forces Ethereum’s on-chain activity to translate into token appreciation. The network, in his view, behaves more like a non-profit protocol where developers capture the upside, leaving ETH as “pocket change” relative to Solana or NEAR.

That is not an abstract position for Hoffman. In mid-May he publicly sold his entire ETH holdings — a move that reverberated through the community precisely because it came from a figure whose platform had long championed the ecosystem. Adams held his position, but the split exposes a vulnerability that price charts already reflect: Ethereum could thrive as infrastructure while ETH itself trades like an over-supplied utility token in a crowded market.

The institutional channel, meanwhile, just flashed a tentative green light. Spot Ether ETFs in the US recorded their first net inflows in 17 days on June 4, pulling in $19.3 million. BlackRock’s ETHA led the charge; the other issuers stayed neutral. The preceding drought had been the longest on record for Ethereum ETFs — 17 consecutive days without net inflows — and had pushed May 2026 to the worst month since the products launched in 2024, with roughly $401 million exiting. By comparison, even Bitcoin ETFs never suffered a comparable stretch; the outflows were an Ethereum-specific problem.

The single day of inflows did not flip the weekly picture. On June 5, another 10,082 ETH ($16.04 million) entered the ETFs, but the weekly outflow still stood at 117,037 ETH ($186.21 million). The managed assets of the Ether ETF complex now total $9.78 billion, or 4.57% of circulating market cap, with cumulative net inflows since launch at $11.21 billion. One positive session after 17 negative ones is statistically notable, not yet trend-defining.

Price action has ignored the ETF uptick altogether. Ether slid to $1,592 on Friday, a new two-year low, and the relative strength index plunged to 13.3 — territory that screams oversold. From the all-time high of $4,946 hit in August 2025, the token has lost nearly 68%. Year-to-date the loss is 47%; over 12 months, 39%. The immediate trigger was a macro-driven selloff: Broadcom’s disappointing outlook rattled global tech sentiment, and South Korea’s KOSPI fell 4.7%, adding to the risk-off mood.

The liquidation cascade that accompanied the drop was brutal. Over four hours, $615.6 million in crypto positions were wiped out, 87% of them longs. Ethereum alone accounted for $294.8 million of those forced closures; Bitcoin saw $358.1 million. That wave of leverage unwinding explains why the ETF inflow could not prop up the spot price — a classic case of structural selling overwhelming marginal buying.

On-chain data adds another layer of nuance. The ETF outflow trend in May coincided with whale wallets quietly accumulating 1.02 million ETH, a divergence that may now be narrowing if the ETF channel stabilizes. But the two flows have been working in opposite directions for weeks, and a single inflow day does not resolve the tension.

Technical catalysts could shift the narrative. The Glamsterdam upgrade, originally slated for June, has been officially pushed to the third quarter of 2026. It includes parallel transaction processing (EIP-7928), block-building decentralization (EIP-7732), and a gas limit hike from 60 million to 100 million or more. Standard Chartered analyst Geoff Kendrick sticks to his year-end price target of $4,000 for ETH and a long-term vision of $40,000 by 2030, citing network activity at all-time highs despite the price disappointment.

Whether any of that matters depends on which story wins: that Ethereum is a settlement layer so valuable that ETH must eventually reflect it, or that a thriving network can coexist with a token that simply fails to capture that value. The Bankless founders just proved that the question can split the most loyal believers — and the market is still waiting for an answer.