News
19 Jan 2026, 10:30
Solana Labs CEO Says Ethereum-Style ‘Walkaway’ Thinking Is a Death Wish

Over the weekend, Solana Labs CEO Anatoly Yakovenko pushed back on Vitalik Buterin’s latest case for Ethereum “ossification,” arguing that for Solana, continuous protocol iteration is not optional, it is survival. The exchange was sparked by a Jan. 12 post in which Buterin said “Ethereum itself must pass the walkaway test,” framing Ethereum as a base layer that should remain usable even if the community largely stops making substantive protocol changes. “It must support applications that are more like tools than like services that lose all functionality once the vendor loses interest in maintaining them,” Buterin wrote. “But building such applications is not possible on a base layer which itself depends on ongoing updates from a vendor in order to continue being usable […] Hence, Ethereum itself must pass the walkaway test.” Why Solana Can’t Afford To Ossify Yakovenko replied that he “actually think[s] fairly differently on this,” laying out a philosophy that treats adaptability as core to Solana’s value proposition. “Solana needs to never stop iterating,” he wrote. “It shouldn’t depend on any single group or individual to do so, but if it ever stops changing to fit the needs of its devs and users, it will die.” In Yakovenko’s framing, the risk is not merely technical stagnation; it is a network losing relevance to the people building and transacting on it. Buterin’s “walkaway test” rests on the idea that Ethereum should reach a point where its usefulness does not “strictly depend on any features that are not in the protocol already,” even if the ecosystem continues improving via client optimizations and limited parameter changes. He also sketched a set of medium-term protocol objectives, ranging from quantum resistance and scalable architecture to long-lived state design and decentralization safeguards, aimed at making Ethereum robust “for decades” and reducing the need for frequent disruptive upgrades. Yakovenko’s critique is less about those specific goals than the premise that a base layer should aspire to being able to “ossify if we want to.” In his view, ossification is not a neutral milestone; it risks locking in a protocol that can’t keep pace with developer and user demands. “To not die requires to always be useful,” he wrote. “So the primary goal of protocol changes should be to solve a dev or user problem.” At the same time, he emphasized prioritization over maximalism: “That doesn’t mean solve every problem, in fact, saying no to most problems is necessary.” A key overlap in both positions is a skepticism toward dependence on a single “vendor,” though they operationalize it differently. Buterin wants Ethereum’s base layer to become sufficiently complete that it can remain dependable even if the upgrade cadence slows dramatically. Yakovenko, by contrast, argues that Solana should assume upgrades will keep coming, but not necessarily from any one core team. “You should always count on there being a next version of solana, just not necessarily from Anza or Labs or fd,” he wrote, referencing major entities in Solana’s development orbit. He then pointed to a future where governance and funding mechanisms could directly underwrite that work, suggesting “we are likely to end up in a world where a SIMD vote pays for the GPUs that write the code,” a nod to both on-chain coordination and the growing role of AI-assisted development. At press time, SOL traded at $133.84.
19 Jan 2026, 10:30
Myrmikan Capital: Gold’s Growth Highlights the Weakness of the US Stock Market

Daniel Oliver, Managing Member of Myrmikan Capital, exposed the weakness of the U.S. stock market through gold. Using gold as a reference instead of dollars, the SPX has receded 33% since October 2023, and the dollar has lost 59% of its value in gold terms in the same period. Myrmikan Capital: SPX- Gold Ratio Reveals
19 Jan 2026, 10:28
CertiK links $63M in Tornado Cash deposits to $282M wallet compromise

Blockchain data showed that stolen Bitcoin was bridged to Ethereum, fragmented into multiple wallets and later routed into the crypto mixer.
19 Jan 2026, 10:28
Bitcoin Near $92,550 as 22,918 BTC Sell Claim Fuels Dump Fears

Bitcoin came under pressure as large BTC outflows appeared across major exchanges, while social media accounts pointed to heavy selling by whales and trading firms. At the same time, a bearish technical call added to market tension, with traders debating whether recent moves signal deeper downside. Large BTC outflows hit major venues as DeFiTracer alleges coordinated selling An X post from DeFiTracer said “insiders sold 22,918 BTC” and blamed a broad market drop on heavy Bitcoin selling across exchanges and trading firms. The post listed Coinbase at 2,417 BTC, Bybit at 3,339 BTC, Binance at 2,301 BTC, and Wintermute at 4,191 BTC, while claiming whales and exchanges sold more than $4 billion worth of BTC in the last hour. Bitcoin Outflows List. Source: Arkham Data shown on Arkham’s Bitcoin flows view reflected large outflows tied to major entities over the selected period, with Bitcoin trading around $92,550 at the time of the display. The list showed a top outflow of about 2,425.1 BTC, while Coinbase appeared near the top with about 2,417.29 BTC in outflows. Binance’s hot wallet also showed about 2,301.61 BTC in outflows, and Bybit hot wallets appeared with outflows including about 1,814.26 BTC and about 1,525.05 BTC. The Arkham flow figures show wallet movements, but they do not explain intent on their own. Transfers can reflect customer withdrawals, internal wallet rebalancing, custody movements, or other operational activity, and they do not automatically confirm spot selling. As a result, the DeFiTracer claim of a “coordinated dump” remains an allegation, even as the on-chain dashboard showed unusually large BTC outflows linked to major venues. Bitcoin Bear Flag Call Fuels Fresh Crash Debate Meanwhile, a Bitcoin commentator on X said the “mother of all Bitcoin crashes” has already begun, arguing the latest bounce looks like a trap and not the start of a new uptrend. Posting under the handle King of the Charts, the user said Bitcoin “already topped and started a bear market,” pointing to weekly moving averages and a bear flag formation as key signals. The post claimed Bitcoin rebounded from the 100 week moving average, then started shaping a continuation pattern that could send price lower if the rally fades. Bitcoin Weekly Bear Flag Chart. Source: King of the Charts on X The account said a measured move from the bear flag targets about $61,000, which would pull Bitcoin back toward a lower rising trendline and the 200 week moving average shown on the chart. The user framed that level as a potential “50+%” drop from the prior peak, adding that past bear markets often began with declines of a similar size. If Bitcoin reaches that zone, the post predicted a stronger rebound could follow, with price recovering toward the 50 week moving average. However, the user argued the current bounce looks smaller, calling it a short relief move before another leg down. The account also said it turned bearish after what it described as a top on Oct. 6, 2025, citing multiple signals on daily and weekly time frames and resistance at two major trendlines. The claims reflect one trader’s technical view and remain unconfirmed by independent market data.
19 Jan 2026, 10:26
XRP slips toward $1.85 as EU–US trade tensions deepen crypto market losses

It is a bearish Monday for the cryptocurrency market as the major cryptocurrencies are currently in the red. Bitcoin dipped to the $92k level, while XRP briefly retested the January 2nd low following an excellent start to the year. With XRP wiping out its recent gains, it could encounter further losses as increasing exchange reserves show that investors are reducing their exposure to the cryptocurrency. XRP retests $1.85 as bulls suffer huge losses The cryptocurrency market was bullish last week, but most of the gains were wiped out a few hours ago thanks to the ongoing trade tension between the United States and the European Union (EU). XRP is down 3.7% in the last 24 hours and is now trading at $1.97 after briefly retesting the January 2nd low of $1.85 a few hours ago. The trade war between the United States and the EU bloc began trade war emerged after President Donald Trump threatened to escalate tariffs, starting at 10% on February 1 and rising to 25% by June, on imports from eight NATO allies (Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands, and Finland). Trump added that the tariff will stay in place unless Denmark agrees to sell Greenland to the United States. European leaders criticized the move, describing the demands as blackmail and warning of a “dangerous downward spiral” in transatlantic relations. However, Min Jung, associate researcher at Presto Research, pointed out that the cryptocurrency market is currently weak compared to other financial markets. Jung added that, “While US-EU trade war concerns have had the largest impact on sentiment, other risk assets, including the KOSPI, are trading flat to higher. This suggests that crypto-specific weakness persists, with investors favoring other risk assets, a theme that has continued as most markets rally while crypto remains the laggard.” XRP could reclaim $2.0 if the swing low holds The XRP/USD 4-hour chart is bearish as XRP has lost 4% of its value in the last seven days, making it one of the worst performers in the top 10. The momentum indicators are bearish, suggesting that sellers are currently in control of the market. The RSI of 40 is below the neutral 50, indicating a growing selling pressure on the coin. The MACD line also crossed into the negative zone on Thursday, adding further bearish confluence to XRP. If the selloff continues, XRP could retest the Monday low of $1.8533 in the near term. An extended bearish performance could bring the $1.80. However, if the market recovers, XRP could surge past the $2.06 resistance over the next few hours or days. The $2.2 resistance remains a strong one for XRP following multiple failed attempts in recent weeks. The post XRP slips toward $1.85 as EU–US trade tensions deepen crypto market losses appeared first on Invezz
19 Jan 2026, 10:25
Bitcoin ETF inflows hit three-month high as trade tensions trigger crypto pullback

US spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds recorded their strongest weekly inflows in more than three months last week, underscoring renewed institutional demand even as the broader crypto market turned sharply lower at the start of this week amid escalating geopolitical tensions. According to data from SoSoValue, US spot bitcoin ETFs attracted a combined $1.42 billion in net inflows in the week ended January 16. This marked the highest weekly total since early October, specifically the week ended October 10, when inflows were last at similar levels. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) accounted for the bulk of last week’s inflows, pulling in $1.03 billion over the five-day period. The surge in ETF demand coincided with a strong move higher in Bitcoin prices, with the world’s largest cryptocurrency climbing to around $97,000 toward the end of the week, up from roughly $90,500 at the start of the period. The rebound in prices and flows suggested that institutional investors were returning to the market after year-end portfolio rebalancing and a volatile stretch in November and December. Market participants viewed the magnitude of the inflows as a sign that demand for regulated Bitcoin exposure remains robust when macro conditions are supportive. Spot Ethereum ETFs also saw a notable pickup in activity. Ether-linked funds recorded $479 million in net inflows last week, their strongest weekly inflow total since the week ended October 10, mirroring the recovery in bitcoin-related products. Bitcoin pulls back on geopolitical headlines The positive momentum, however, proved short-lived. Bitcoin retreated over the weekend and into Monday after headlines emerged around rising tensions between the United States and the European Union related to Greenland. Bitcoin fell about 2.6% over the past 24 hours to around $92,618, down from roughly $95,400 earlier in the day. The broader cryptocurrency market also came under pressure, with major altcoins such as Ether, Solana, and Cardano sliding in tandem with Bitcoin. The selloff coincided with a broader risk-off move in traditional markets following mutual tariff threats between Washington and Brussels. While crypto markets traded through the weekend and initially appeared to ignore the news, selling accelerated once Asian markets opened. Tariff threats spark risk-off mood US President Donald Trump said he would impose tariffs on eight European nations that have opposed his proposal for the United States to acquire Greenland. Trump announced a 10% tariff on goods from Denmark, Sweden, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Finland, the United Kingdom and Norway, starting Feb. 1, and said the measures would remain in place until the U.S. is allowed to buy Greenland. According to a Financial Times report on Sunday, EU capitals are weighing retaliation, including up to €93 billion ($101 billion) in tariffs on U.S. goods or restrictions on American companies’ access to the EU market. The escalating rhetoric triggered a wave of risk aversion among traders, weighing on assets perceived as higher risk, including cryptocurrencies. Heavy liquidations amplify the move The downturn was exacerbated by forced liquidations across the crypto derivatives market. In the past 24 hours, roughly $824 million in positions were liquidated, according to Coinglass data aggregated from publicly available sources. Of that total, about $763.7 million were long positions, highlighting how heavily positioned the market had become on the bullish side. The single largest liquidation was reported on Hyperliquid, where a BTCUSDT position worth $25.83 million was wiped out. Bitcoin fell as much as 3.8% shortly after the Asian trading session opened, before trimming losses to around 2.5% during European hours. Analysts noted that the move occurred during a period of relatively low liquidity, allowing sellers to exert outsized influence and trigger stop orders. The post Bitcoin ETF inflows hit three-month high as trade tensions trigger crypto pullback appeared first on Invezz








































