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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 Physical Squeeze Intensifies as Geneva Hopes Flicker and Fed Hawks Tighten Their Grip

Silver’s spot price clawed back to $66.42 an ounce on Monday, gaining 1.31% after a brutal 46% slide from the January 2026 record near $121. The rebound came not from any shift in the underlying supply-demand balance, but from a diplomatic breakthrough in Geneva that briefly loosened the market’s most punishing headwind: the energy-inflation feedback loop.

Underneath the daily price noise, however, the metal’s structural story is moving in the opposite direction. The global silver market is heading for its sixth consecutive annual deficit in 2026, with the shortfall now projected at 46.3 million ounces. Mine output continues to shrink — silver is overwhelmingly produced as a byproduct of other metals, making supply unresponsive to higher prices — while industrial demand, though shifting in composition, remains robust.

Solar Thrift Puts a Dent in Industrial Demand — But Not Enough

The most notable shift is in the solar sector. Chinese manufacturers have cut their silver consumption by roughly 19% this year to about 151 million ounces, substituting copper or moving to silver-free module designs. That has removed a significant chunk of demand from the market. Yet other industries are filling the gap. Artificial intelligence data centers, electric vehicle electronics and broader automotive applications are soaking up more silver than expected at the start of the year. India’s physical investment demand jumped 33% in 2025. The net effect is a slower but still widening deficit — supply is contracting faster than demand is faltering.

Geneva Breakthrough, Then Breakdown

Monday’s bounce followed news that the US and Iran had agreed on a 60-day roadmap toward a comprehensive peace accord after direct talks in Geneva, mediated by Qatar and Pakistan. Brent crude fell roughly 2% on the announcement. That matters for silver because high oil prices had been feeding directly into US inflation: energy accounted for more than 60% of the April consumer price index reading of 4.2%. Lower energy costs would relieve that pressure and, crucially, reduce expectations for further Federal Reserve rate hikes.

But the respite may prove short-lived. The same diplomatic channel has since hit a roadblock: the next round of US-Iran talks was cancelled, with Switzerland reporting that planned discussions would not take place. Traders now expect energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz to take months to return to pre-conflict levels. That uncertainty keeps the inflation-risk premium alive and the Fed’s hawkish bias intact.

The Fed’s Iron Grip

The central bank’s June meeting delivered exactly the kind of hawkish surprise that silver markets dread. Under Chairman Kevin Warsh, the Federal Open Market Committee held rates steady but stripped out dovish language and raised its dot-plot projections. Nine of the 19 policymakers now see at least one rate hike still this year, and markets assign a roughly 70% probability to a move by September. In the week of the FOMC decision alone, silver tumbled from $69.85 to $64 — a drop of nearly 8%.

Higher interest rates strengthen the dollar and push bond yields up, making non-yielding assets like silver less attractive. The gold-silver ratio, which stood at 55:1 in May, has surged to roughly 64:1 after the Fed’s hawkish June 16–17 meeting. Silver has lost more than 40% of its value since the start of the Iran conflict — not because geopolitical risk has faded, but because the conflict has shifted inflation expectations and, by extension, monetary policy expectations.

PCE Data as the Next Catalyst

All eyes now turn to the US personal consumption expenditures price index, due this week and the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge. If falling oil prices — aided by a sustained de-escalation in the Middle East — pull the energy component lower, the 89% probability the market currently assigns to a December rate hike could evaporate. That would be the catalyst silver bulls have been waiting for.

The range of institutional forecasts for end-2026 underscores how polarized the outlook has become. TD Securities sees silver at $44 an ounce. JP Morgan projects an annual average of $81, the Commerzbank at $90. One bullish participant in the LBMA survey calls for above $165, while a Reuters poll puts the consensus near $79.50.

A Market Torn Between Two Forces

Silver’s near-term trajectory will be determined by which force wins out: the hawkish Fed and the fragile geopolitics that keep energy prices elevated, or the deepening physical deficit and the potential for lower inflation to force the central bank to pause. Should the Iran situation truly de-escalate and energy costs continue to fall, the rate-hike narrative collapses. At that point, the fundamental case — six years of supply deficits, growing industrial demand beyond solar, and a gold-silver ratio near 64 — would quickly reassert itself, giving silver room to rally back toward the $80 level.

XRP’s Seven-Year Supply Low Meets July’s Escrow and Regulatory Challenges

XRP is caught in a paradox. The amount held on centralized exchanges has cratered to 1.6 billion tokens – a seven-year trough and half the peak of 3.76 billion recorded in October 2025. In theory, dwindling available supply should support the price. In practice, XRP changes hands at $1.16, down roughly 38% from the start of 2026 and 69% below its 52-week high of $3.65.

Two events on 1 July will test whether the supply narrative can overcome immediate selling pressure. Ripple will unlock its monthly escrow tranche of 1 billion XRP, worth around $1.14 billion at current prices. That same day, California’s Digital Financial Assets Law takes effect. Ripple holds over 40 money-transfer licenses across the U.S., but its DFAL compliance status remains unclear – a potential snag for the company’s RLUSD stablecoin operations in the state.

RWA inflows and the technical makeover

Beyond the short-term noise, the XRP Ledger is quietly becoming a home for tokenized real-world assets. In the past 90 days, net inflows to the XRPL reached $1.9 billion, outpacing Ethereum ($1.6 billion) and Stellar ($1.4 billion) in the same period. A closer look shows $1.7 billion of that came in the last 60 days alone. The total value of tokenized assets on the ledger has ballooned from roughly $10 million in early 2025 to $400 million today.

The network’s development team and the XRP Ledger Foundation have laid out a five-point technical roadmap to sustain this momentum. The most ambitious pillar is quantum resistance, with a target of 2028, using hybrid signature technology to transition the ledger’s encryption as quantum hardware matures. Other components include a native credit protocol based on specification 3.1.0 that allows uncollateralized loans via single-asset vaults, an upgraded automated market maker (version 2 with StableSwap and concentrated liquidity), AI-powered red-teaming security audits – which have already identified 287 vulnerabilities on GitHub – and formal protocol verification using the Lean4 tool.

Institutional money trickles in despite market fear

Spot ETFs on XRP have accumulated $1.45 billion in net inflows since launch. The flow is far from uniform: in the week of 14-18 June, ETFs attracted $10.66 million, led by Franklin Templeton’s product with $6.69 million and Bitwise with $3.97 million. Just days later, on 21 June, a single-day surge of $17.1 million hit the funds – a sign that institutional appetite exists, but remains episodic.

The broader market mood is anything but bullish. The Fear & Greed Index sits at 23, deep in “extreme fear” territory. XRP’s daily trading volume jumped more than 50% in 24 hours to $1.19 billion, as the token briefly touched $1.12 before recovering. The relative strength index stands at 43, neutral leaning bearish. From a technical standpoint, XRP is firmly below both the 50-day moving average of $1.29 and the 200-day moving average of $1.54, leaving the chart pattern skewed toward the downside.

Escrow logic and expansion bets

Approximately 38.15 billion XRP remain locked in Ripple’s monthly escrow contracts. Pro-XRP attorney Bill Morgan has consistently argued that the recurring unlocks are already priced in; Ripple typically re-locks the majority of the tokens, stabilizing circulating supply rather than flooding the market. That defense has not stopped the slide, and the July unlock will provide another real-world test of that thesis.

Meanwhile, Ripple is pushing its operational footprint beyond the ledger. The company is applying for an Australian financial-services license through BC Payments Australia. Its RLUSD stablecoin has been integrated into the Mastercard network and the infrastructure of Flutterwave, a payments firm valued at $3.2 billion. A new protocol called x402 enables AI agents to make automated payments in XRP and RLUSD, and Ripple is recruiting for a generative AI platform in San Francisco.

With the July 1 regulatory and supply catalysts ahead, and a long-term roadmap that won’t deliver results for years, XRP’s short-term path remains hostage to the same forces that have kept it near the bottom of its range – despite the strongest on-chain fundamentals the network has seen in years.

Silver’s Dollar Dilemma: How a Hawkish Fed and Geopolitical Safety Trade Undermine a Sixth Year of Physical Scarcity

Silver’s relentless slide has pushed the metal to $64.09 an ounce, a fresh low that caps a monthly decline of nearly 16 per cent. The losses accelerated on Friday, with the precious metal shedding another 2.6 per cent as restrictive signals from the US Federal Reserve overwhelmed any positive sentiment from the recent US–Iran peace deal. At nearly 47 per cent below its 52-week peak of roughly $122, silver now finds itself caught between a macro-driven sell-off and a physical market that is tightening at an extraordinary pace.

The immediate culprit is monetary policy. The Fed has held its benchmark rate steady at 3.50–3.75 per cent, but nine policymakers now see at least one rate increase before year-end. Markets are pricing in roughly a 70 per cent probability of a hike by September. Higher borrowing costs raise the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset like silver, and the dollar has surged as investors seek a safe haven amid lingering geopolitical uncertainty. Even the prospect of normalised shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz has done little to stem the outflow from precious metals.

Yet behind this price weakness lies a supply story that is growing more extreme by the month. The Silver Institute projects a global deficit of 46.3 million ounces in 2026, marking the sixth consecutive year of shortfall. Cumulative shortfalls since 2021 now exceed 760 million ounces, draining above-ground inventories at an alarming rate. Comex warehouse stocks have fallen by roughly 75 per cent from their 2020 peak to just 88 million ounces — the physical metal that is actually deliverable against futures contracts is becoming scarce. Mine output remains constrained because silver is primarily a by-product of copper and zinc mining, limiting any rapid supply response.

Demand patterns are also shifting beneath the surface. The solar industry, once a key driver of silver consumption, is actively reducing the metal’s content per cell to cut costs. This year, the photovoltaic sector is expected to consume roughly 151 million ounces, a 19 per cent drop from 2025. But new sources of demand are emerging rapidly. Data centres and artificial-intelligence infrastructure require silver for high-efficiency electrical components and thermal management systems, with global IT power capacity reaching nearly 50 gigawatts last year. Electric vehicles are also adding to consumption — a typical EV uses 25 to 50 grams of silver, more than 70 per cent higher than a conventional internal-combustion car, with additional metal going into battery management systems and charging infrastructure.

Analysts remain broadly optimistic despite the recent carnage. A Reuters consensus forecast puts the average silver price for 2026 at $79.50 an ounce, while Citigroup has set a second-half target of $110, citing persistent physical scarcity. J.P. Morgan maintains an annual average of $81, supported by the same structural deficit narrative. The current gold‑silver ratio of 61.7 also points to moderate undervaluation, historically a precursor to mean-reversion rallies. On the charts, support lies at $61.02 and then $54.46, with the first major resistance at $71.80 — a level that now seems distant but could be tested swiftly if macro headwinds ease and the underlying supply deficit reasserts itself.

High Usage and Hollywood Star Power Fail to Halt XRP’s Slide Below $1.15

The XRP Ledger processed nearly one million transactions in a single day last week, and Ripple secured Matt Damon as a keynote speaker for its flagship conference — yet the token’s price continues to bleed lower. On Friday, XRP lost its grip on the $1.15 support level, falling 3.4 percent to around $1.14, before edging back to roughly $1.15. The selloff accelerated in the afternoon, with trading volume surging to over 134 million tokens — a spike of roughly 170 percent above the session average.

The divergence between on-chain vibrancy and price action is striking. The network handled approximately 900,000 transactions on June 15 and nearly 770,000 the following day, with more than half classified as direct payments. Yet that fundamental strength has failed to translate into any technical momentum. Ripple’s Swell conference, scheduled for October 27–29 in New York, will feature Damon alongside Tom Farley, chairman and CEO of Bullish, and more than 75 speakers across 50-plus sessions covering stablecoins, tokenization, DeFi, ETFs, and AI-powered finance. Damon’s appearance is tied to Ripple’s partnership with Water.org, where the company serves as exclusive digital-asset and payments partner for the “Get Blue” campaign. Ripple provides initial capital and uses its payments platform to facilitate low-cost loans for water and sanitation. The connection to XRP is indirect but real: Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin runs on the XRP Ledger infrastructure, meaning any RLUSD transactions pass through the same network — even if XRP itself is not used as the settlement token.

None of that has stopped the technical deterioration. Year-to-date, XRP has lost nearly 39 percent of its value, and it trades well below the 200-day moving average. The token has plunged roughly 70 percent from its 52-week high of $3.65 set in July 2025. The relative strength index sits at 40, signaling weak momentum without reaching oversold territory. The $1.15 level, which was support, now flips to resistance. If buyers fail to reclaim it quickly, the next downside target lies in the $1.13–$1.14 zone. The year’s low of $1.05, marked in early June, is once again within striking distance.

A sustained trend reversal would require a clean break above the descending trend line at $1.25 — a line that has capped every relief rally. Until then, every bounce is likely to attract fresh selling. The Swell announcement alone has done little to change that calculus. Whether the conference in October generates enough network activity to alter the technical picture — and whether traders interpret it as a buy signal — will depend on execution, not star power.