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5 May 2026, 21:43
XRP set for 45 percent rally after 70 days flat

🚀 $XRP is trading flat for 70 days, primed for a 45 percent surge. Large investors have quietly added $81.63M in April alone. Continue Reading: XRP set for 45 percent rally after 70 days flat The post XRP set for 45 percent rally after 70 days flat appeared first on COINTURK NEWS .
5 May 2026, 21:40
Strategy reported a $12.54 billion Q1 net loss, or $38.25 per diluted share

Strategy (MSTR) closed the first quarter of 2026 with a $12.54 billion net loss, while revenue rose to $124.3 million. The loss came in at $38.25 per diluted share, a much worse result than Wall Street had penciled in. Four analysts tracked by Yahoo Finance expected an average GAAP loss of $18.98 per share. The most bearish estimate was $36.89 per share, and Strategy still came in below that. The quarter was ugly because Bitcoin had a terrible start to the year. BTC fell more than 23% between January and March, making it the worst first quarter for Bitcoin since 2018. The selloff came as tech stocks dropped, Bitcoin ETF outflows grew, Trump’s 15% global tariff hit markets, the U.S.–Iran military escalation raised fear, and the Federal Reserve kept rates at 3.5% to 3.75%. Bitcoin losses drag Strategy deeper into the red as revenue still grows Strategy reported an operating loss of $14.47 billion for Q1 2026, compared with $5.92 billion in the same quarter last year. The company’s Bitcoin accounting took the hit. It recorded a $14.46 billion unrealized loss on its digital assets, versus $5.91 billion in unrealized losses in Q1 2025. The net loss also got much worse. Strategy lost $12.54 billion in the quarter, compared with $4.22 billion a year earlier. The loss tied to common stockholders was $12.77 billion, up from $4.23 billion in Q1 2025. Revenue went the other way. Strategy brought in $124.3 million, up 11.9% from $111.1 million last year. Gross profit was $83.4 million, compared with $77.1 million in the prior-year quarter. Its gross margin came in at 67.1%, down from 69.4%. Cash also slipped a little. Strategy had $2.21 billion in cash and cash equivalents on March 31, 2026, down from $2.30 billion on December 31, 2025. The Bitcoin bag was still huge. As of May 3, 2026, Strategy held 818,334 BTC. The company paid about $61.81 billion for that stash, or around $75,537 per coin. By May 1, those coins were worth about $64.14 billion, based on a price of $78,374 per Bitcoin. That left Strategy with about $2.3 billion in paper gain on its Bitcoin cost basis, even after the quarter punched it in the face. Strategy also kept buying during the quarter. It added about 89,600 BTC for $5.5 billion, making it the second-biggest quarterly Bitcoin purchase in its history. Then the buying stopped for more than a week before earnings. The last reported buy came on April 27, when Strategy bought 3,273 BTC at $77,906 per coin. Strategy uses STRC and ATM sales to keep funding its Bitcoin plan CEO Phong Le told investors: “Adoption of Bitcoin continues to grow in 2026. Digital Credit, highlighted by STRC, has been a big success. STRC has shown strong demand, high liquidity, and low volatility. We raised $5.6 billion year-to-date of STRC gross proceeds, increased daily trading volume to $375 million, while bringing volatility down to 3%, all done during a bitcoin bear market.” According to Phong, Strategy continues to see traditional finance and major banks, including Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and Citi, announcing bitcoin ETFs, trading, custody, and lending services. Phong named Morgan Stanley (MS), Goldman Sachs (GS), and Citigroup (C) while talking about banks building around Bitcoin products and services. Strategy CFO Andrew Kang said, “Strategy is the dominant issuer of Digital Credit in the world, with over $13.5 billion of preferred equity outstanding, supported by a fortress Bitcoin balance sheet. Strong demand for our Digital Credit instrument, STRC, has driven a BTC Yield of 9.4% and BTC $ Gain of approximately $5 billion through the first four months of the year.” Meanwhile, Strategy founder and Executive Chairman Michael Saylor said : “STRC has scaled to $8.5 billion in just 9 months and is now the largest preferred stock by market cap in the world. By extracting bitcoin’s performance and engineering price stability, we have produced a credit instrument with a 2.53 Sharpe ratio.” Strategy said its BTC Yield was 9.4% for the 2026 year-to-date. Its BTC Gain was 63,410 BTC, while BTC dollar gain was $4.97 billion. The company also raised about $7.37 billion in gross proceeds through its ATM offering program during the first quarter, then raised another $4.32 billion from April 1 to May 3. There’s a middle ground between leaving money in the bank and rolling the dice in crypto. Start with this free video on decentralized finance .
5 May 2026, 21:15
White House now wants to review AI models before they are released to the public

The White House is considering a plan to review some of the most powerful artificial intelligence systems before they are released to the public. The proposal, first reported by The New York Times on May 4, would introduce federal scrutiny at a critical point in the AI lifecycle, just before deployment. Officials are increasingly concerned that frontier models are now capable of identifying and exploiting weaknesses in the software that underpins essential infrastructure. An analysis published by The Conversation points to growing evidence that recent AI systems can uncover large numbers of vulnerabilities in operating systems and web browsers. That capability, while valuable for defensive security, also raises the stakes if such tools were to be misused or fall into the wrong hands. Model capabilities prompt policy rethink The policy discussion gained urgency after Anthropic opted to delay wider release of its latest model, Mythos . Internal testing revealed advanced cybersecurity capabilities, including the ability to identify numerous exploitable flaws. In response, the company restricted access to a limited group of organizations responsible for critical infrastructure through its “Project Glasswing” initiative. According to The Conversation , the White House stepped in when Anthropic explored expanding access, signaling a more hands-on approach to AI oversight even as broader tech policy has remained relatively market-driven. Concerns are not limited to a single company or system. The UK AI Safety Institute reported in an April evaluation that OpenAI GPT-5.5 demonstrated comparable performance on advanced cybersecurity tasks. In one test highlighted by the institute, the model reverse-engineered a custom virtual machine and solved a complex challenge in minutes, far quicker than a human expert using professional tools. “A key question was whether this reflected a breakthrough specific to one model, or part of a broader trend,” the institute wrote in its report. “Results from an early checkpoint of GPT-5.5 suggest the latter.” Taken together, the findings suggest these capabilities are becoming a common feature of leading AI systems, rather than an isolated breakthrough. AI security concerns take on a geopolitical dimension The implications extend beyond technology into national security. Researchers cited by The Conversation warn that state-linked groups could use similar tools to carry out cyber operations, potentially targeting infrastructure or economic systems. There are already early signs of this shift. Anthropic has reported suspected state-backed actors using its models in espionage campaigns affecting dozens of organizations. Meanwhile, Microsoft and OpenAI said in 2024 that government-affiliated groups were leveraging AI to enhance cyberattacks. At the same time, researchers are still grappling with how to reliably control these systems. Work cited by The Conversation suggests that safety filters applied after training can be bypassed, while some models may appear compliant without fully eliminating risky capabilities. This has led to a growing view among policymakers that safety measures may need to be embedded during model development rather than added later. Policy outlook: fragmented frameworks, rising pressure The U.S. proposal is taking shape within a broader, still-evolving global regulatory landscape: The EU AI Act sets out a risk-based framework with strict requirements for high-risk applications, though it does not mandate centralized approval for frontier models. The UK has leaned on voluntary cooperation through the UK AI Safety Institute, focusing on testing and evaluation partnerships with developers. The emerging U.S. approach appears to be moving toward direct oversight of the most advanced systems, potentially through pre-release review. Lawmakers have begun examining these issues more closely, with congressional hearings in April on AI safety and governance, though no comprehensive legislation has yet advanced. If implemented, a U.S. pre-release review system would represent a shift toward earlier intervention, placing oversight at the point where risks can be anticipated rather than after they materialize. Such a move could set an informal global standard, particularly given the concentration of leading AI developers in the United States. At the same time, it raises the possibility that companies may shift parts of development or deployment to regions with fewer restrictions. The challenge for policymakers is balancing innovation with risk management in a field where capabilities are advancing quickly, and the consequences of misuse could be far-reaching. For now, the most concrete safeguards remain voluntary. Companies such as Anthropic are limiting access to sensitive systems, while organizations like the UK AI Safety Institute continue to run independent evaluations. Whether the United States formalizes its approach—and whether other countries align with it—will be a key factor in shaping how AI is governed in the years ahead. The smartest crypto minds already read our newsletter. Want in? Join them .
5 May 2026, 21:13
Bitcoin short liquidations push BTC to multi-month highs: Is $90K next?

Short liquidations and rising open interest may be signs of the bulls’ plan to push the Bitcoin price closer to $90,000.
5 May 2026, 21:00
Monero rises 30% in a month: Charting XMR’s path to $799 ATH

XMR traders can expect a 6% rally beyond $400 based on the price structure and extension levels.
5 May 2026, 21:00
Is XRP A Scam Or A Trillion-Dollar Coin? Pundit Shares The Answers

The XRP price action has long been a topic of debate in the crypto community, with analysts and investors discussing the reasons behind its weak performance despite ongoing bullish developments. Given the cryptocurrency’s persistent downtrend, some market participants have labeled XRP a scam, suggesting that it lacks real potential and its price is being deliberately suppressed. However, a crypto pundit has addressed these claims, debunking the scam label while shedding light on XRP’s long-term potential as a trillion-dollar asset. Why Crypto Users Are Calling XRP A Scam Vincent Van Code, a crypto analyst on X, has outlined several reasons that counter the idea that XRP, the native token of the XRP Ledger (XRPL), could be a scam. In his post, he asked why people believed “XRP is a scam or it’s not being used.” The analyst’s question connects to the broader criticism that XRP’s price has remained low for years despite its active use in cross-border payments, strong community, partnerships with key financial institutions, and expansion into different regions. Related Reading: Ripple Execs Are Firing Back And XRP Investors Could Be In For A Good Time Before XRP’s rally above $3.5 in 2025, the cryptocurrency was in a steady downward trend for years. The XRP price had been consolidating around the $0.5 level for over four years before it broke past that level in 2024 and jumped above $2. With the SEC lawsuit officially over and new developments emerging for Ripple and the XRP Ledger, many believed it would be only a matter of time until the price began rallying again to an explosive high. However, XRP has done the opposite. After crashing from above $3.5 last year, the cryptocurrency has been trading at lower levels around $1.3 for months. This weak price action has prompted many in the crypto community to doubt XRP’s potential, with some labeling it a scam token. Analyst Debunks XRP Scam Labels In his X post, Van Code noted that XRP cannot be a scam if Ripple, a $50 billion company, is actively using the cryptocurrency and working to make it a multi-trillion-dollar asset. He said that there are ongoing plans to use XRP to handle over $1.5 trillion in cross-border payments each year, highlighting its potential role as a bridge currency in global transactions. Related Reading: XRP Price Set To Rise As It’s Set To Capture A $180 Trillion Market; Analyst Rather than focusing on near-term price action and current performance, the analyst emphasizes XRP’s core utility as a payments solution and how this could drive long-term potential. Van Code suggested that as XRP continues to be used for payments and gains widespread adoption, its price would begin to appreciate in good time. Until then, he urges investors and holders to remain patient as XRP builds real-world use and expands its network. Van Code also referenced a recent statement made by Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, who emphasized the importance of XRP, saying that “all roads lead back to Ripple’s North Star, XRP.” Featured image from Adobe Stock, chart from Tradingview.com









































