Bitcoin ETFs logged outflows today while parts of the altcoin market moved in the opposite direction. Monero is flashing bullish signals, XRP is under short-term pressure, and elsewhere in the ecosystem new stablecoin approvals, crypto-backed credit cards, and blockchain security tools are moving forward.
According to SoSoValue, the Bitcoin spot ETFs saw a total net outflow of $263.18 million yesterday. The Bitcoin Spot ETF with the highest net outflow yesterday was Fidelity's ETF FBTC, with a daily net outflow of $150.40 million.
The second highest was Grayscale's ETF GBTC, with a daily net outflow of 46.63 million USD, and the total historical net outflow of GBTC currently stands at $26.26 billion.
The total net asset value of Bitcoin Spot ETFs is $101.23 billion, with an ETF net asset ratio of 6.57%. The historical cumulative net inflow has reached $58.30 billion.
Israel has approved the launch of BILS, a shekel-pegged stablecoin created by crypto exchange Bits of Gold.
The stablecoin ran a two-year pilot on Solana before getting the nod.
Reserves will be held in separate accounts in Israel. The token pegs one-to-one with the shekel.
This structure is intended to ensure transparency, security, and confidence that every token issued is backed by real funds.
The fintech Aven launched its Aven Bitcoin Visa Card. This provides access to credit lines of up to $1 million using Bitcoin as collateral.
According to the company, this card introduces a first for the sector: loans with fixed rates and terms of up to 10 years, with an APR of 7.99%, eliminating the interest rate volatility.
By partnering with BitGo for asset custody and Coastal Community Bank for issuance, Aven seeks to democratize access to cheap capital, allowing digital asset holders to use their wealth without needing to liquidate it, saving up to 50% in interest compared to unsecured debt.
Also Read: Tether Mints $1B USDT as Bitcoin Tops $76K and Liquidity Rises
Will Taylor, Cryptoinsightuk analyst, says Monero’s multi-year structure could support a move toward the $1,000 level and could potentially reach $1,160 if the current weekly trend holds.
Taylor shared a weekly XMR chart on X and argued that Monero’s market structure has continued to improve despite the regulatory and exchange pressure facing privacy-focused assets.
“Looking to see if this trend continues or not. Structural higher lows and higher highs, with the volatility of the upside moves increasing. I’m thinking a TP below/around the psychological level of $1,000,” Taylor wrote.
He added, “We still have today to confirm on the weekly, of course, but just an idea. There is also an argument for the $1,160 region that would align with the 2.618 fib level.”
XRP dropped 3% from $1.44 to $1.39, slipping below the $1.40 mark.
This movement occurred after a high-volume break of a support level that buyers had defended for weeks. The current setup positions $1.40 as a crucial pivot level for the token.
On-chain data shows that nearly 35 million XRP has moved off exchanges within 24 hours, marking the sixth largest outflow recorded this year, according to Santiment.
Historically, similar spikes in exchange outflow, particularly those observed in February and March, were followed by price increases ranging from 20% to 50%.
Also Read: Top XRP Futures Trading Platforms in 2026
Solana's ecosystem has introduced three open-source tools under the Squads Protocol v4 to enhance multisig management practices.
According to Foresight News, these tools aim to elevate security standards in collaboration with STRIDE. The tools include multisig-cli, a Rust command-line tool designed for reviewing, simulating, signing, and executing multisig proposals, suitable for high-trust operational scenarios.
Multisig-verifier offers a static zero-backend browser interface that reads multisig wallet status directly from Solana RPC, allowing members to approve or reject proposals through their wallets.
Multisig-monitor provides real-time monitoring of specified multisig wallet activities, decoding operations and issuing notifications during creation, voting, execution, or configuration changes.