- The U.S. Federal Reserve kept rates at 4.25% with two dissenters for a cut, and Powell’s hawkish tone briefly pushed BTC below $116,000 before it rebounded above $118,000 by Thursday.
- Ethereum marked its 10th anniversary on July 30, trading above $3,800 and up about 23% in recent weeks, with spot ETH ETFs posting 18 consecutive days of net inflows.
- Block Inc.’s Square began rolling out Bitcoin payment support for millions of merchants, with full availability targeted by 2026.
- CryptoQuant signaled altcoin season for consecutive weeks, with Sei Network’s SEI up 41% and Sui’s SUI up 36% in a single week, while ETH rose 23% versus Bitcoin’s 9%.
- Solana unveiled an ACE roadmap—Application-Controlled Execution—that would let smart contracts dictate transaction sequencing with sub-second precision and target 10,000+ TPS for the next milestone.
- Gala Games announced GalaChain’s integration with China’s state-approved NFT infrastructure via the Trusted Copyright Chain, opening access to 600 million Chinese gamers and using GALA as gas with a portion burned.
- The White House released a 163-page crypto strategy on July 30, proposing GENIUS Act stablecoin regulation and the Clarity Act, and urging SEC/CFTC to use existing authorities to regulate digital assets.
- The Justice Department announced the largest-ever crypto seizure to date, $225 million from pig-butchering romance scams, with civil forfeiture to return funds to victims.
- Two crypto cases moved toward major outcomes: Samourai Wallet developers pleaded guilty to operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business, while Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm’s trial closed with a verdict expected soon.
- NFTs rebounded as CryptoPunks floor rose 29%, Pudgy Penguins floor value surged 66.7%, Bored Ape Yacht Club recovered nearly 10% in 30 days, and the NFT market cap jumped to $6 billion, aided by a $4.3 million purchase of 12 CryptoPunks.
Bitcoin and Ethereum on a Knife’s Edge
Fed Sparks Volatility: Mid-week macro news jolted crypto. The U.S. Federal Reserve held interest rates at 4.25%, but notably two Fed officials dissented in favor of a cut, stoking concerns about political influence on monetary policy [1]. “There are increasing concerns about the Fed’s independence… this should strengthen the case for crypto in the long term,” observed Jimmy Yang, co-founder of Orbit Markets [2]. Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s hawkish tone briefly sent Bitcoin (BTC) plunging below $116,000 as traders rushed to unwind leveraged bets [3]. BTC quickly rebounded after the initial shock, regaining the $118K level by Thursday, while Ether (ETH) recovered to around $3,870 [4].
Rangebound Near Highs: Despite the turbulence, Bitcoin remains stuck in a tight range not far from its all-time high (~$122,800 set in mid-July). It spiked to $118,640 on Wednesday before swiftly retracing 2.6% to ~$115,700 [5] [6]. Analysts at QCP Capital said the muted price response to what should be bullish news – from institutional fund inflows to favorable regulatory moves – is “textbook late-cycle behavior.” “Price action has failed to respond meaningfully to a string of positive headlines… Caution is warranted,” QCP wrote, noting signs of short-term exhaustion in BTC’s rally [7] [8]. Similarly, Bitfinex’s market team warned that excess leverage in altcoins could leave the market “vulnerable to sharp deleveraging events” if sentiment turns [9].
Ethereum at 10 Years:ETH held firm above $3,800 [10] and is quietly outperforming – up about 23% in recent weeks, outpacing Bitcoin’s gains [11] [12]. July 30 marked Ethereum’s 10th anniversary, a milestone accompanied by renewed momentum for the “world computer.” After languishing near $1,500 in April, ETH has rebounded amid new use cases in decentralized finance (DeFi), growing tokenization of real assets, and even companies holding ETH in treasury to earn yield [13]. Institutional interest is picking up: spot Ether ETFs have now seen 18 consecutive days of net inflows, one of the longest streaks since launch [14] – a sign of sustained demand. In a symbolic nod to its birthday, the Ethereum community even launched a commemorative NFT drop for users, capping a week of global events celebrating Ethereum’s evolution [15]. (On the horizon, Ethereum’s developers continue work on scaling via sharding and Layer-2 rollups, aiming for 10,000+ TPS in the next milestone roadmap update, according to core researchers.)
Adoption News – Square Embraces BTC: Mainstream adoption also advanced. Payments giant Square (a Block Inc. subsidiary) began rolling out Bitcoin payment support for millions of its merchants, with a target of full availability by 2026 [16]. This move will allow sellers to seamlessly accept BTC for transactions – a significant step bridging crypto with everyday commerce. Square’s pilot is limited, but insiders say merchant demand for crypto payments has been “solid.” Combined with recent moves by PayPal (which this week enabled checkout in 100+ different cryptocurrencies for U.S. merchants [17]), the barriers between crypto and traditional payments are steadily dissolving.
Altcoin Trends and Surges
Altcoin Season Rumblings: Capital is rotating into altcoins after a long BTC-dominated rally. CryptoQuant’s market index flashed an “altcoin season” signal for consecutive weeks for the first time since mid-2024, indicating a broad shift in momentum [18] [19]. Over the past month, several alternative layer-1 coins far outpaced Bitcoin: for example, Sei Network’s SEI token jumped 41% and Sui (SUI) rallied 36% in a single week, while Ether itself notched +23% vs. Bitcoin’s +9% [20] [21]. Unlike the meme-coin frenzies of previous cycles, this altcoin uptick has been driven by projects with fundamental activity. “This time appears more precise and surgical – tokens tied to projects with merit are the ones moving,” CoinDesk’s Oliver Knight noted, as meme coin dominance has waned markedly since the start of the year [22] [23]. Even so, if Bitcoin decisively breaks out of its range, it could draw liquidity back out of alts, traders warn [24] [25]. For now, however, mid-cap altcoins are enjoying a renaissance as investors diversify.
Solana’s Big Upgrade Plan: In the infrastructure realm, Solana developers unveiled an ambitious roadmap for what they call an “Internet Capital Markets” paradigm – a decentralized, high-performance trading stack on Solana. The core proposal is Application-Controlled Execution (ACE), which would let Solana smart contracts dictate transaction sequencing with sub-second precision [26]. This could vastly improve on-chain trading, enabling complex DeFi applications like order book exchanges and high-frequency strategies. “In our conversations across the ecosystem, market microstructure is the single most important problem in Solana today,” the roadmap’s authors wrote, underscoring that giving apps finer control over execution is key to Solana’s next growth phase [27]. The plan, co-authored by teams from Solana Foundation, Jito Labs, Drift and others, also emphasizes reducing latency and building new fee markets. If successful, Solana’s network could more closely resemble traditional financial exchanges – potentially attracting sophisticated traders to its DeFi ecosystem. Analysts note this is part of a broader trend of layer-1s differentiating: while Solana focuses on speed and trading, others like Polkadot are pushing interoperability (e.g. via its new Hyperbridge integration with Uniswap) to deepen liquidity across chains [28] [29]. Competition among altcoin networks is heating up on the technical front.
Notable Altcoin Moves: Among major alts, Ripple’s XRP held steady around the mid-$0.70s as the community awaits the next chapter in its legal saga (the SEC’s appeal of Ripple’s partial court victory remains pending). Cardano (ADA) and Avalanche (AVAX) ticked higher (~5–8% weekly gains), buoyed by network development news – Cardano’s Mithril upgrade went live, improving node syncing, and Avalanche saw a spike in daily active users after a new gaming app launch (according to AVAX Labs). Tron (TRX) jumped ~3% after founder Justin Sun teased a “big partnership” on social media, though details remain scant. And BNB Coin (BNB) briefly rose above $800, despite Binance facing ongoing regulatory pressure – traders seem to be betting on Binance’s resilience as it restructures compliance. Overall, the total altcoin market cap (excluding BTC) is up slightly on the week, even as the CoinDesk Market Index flatlined, indicating selective strength in certain sectors rather than a broad rally [30]. Sector-wise, exchange tokens and gaming/metaverse tokens led gains, while older DeFi tokens lagged.
DeFi and NFT Developments
Polygon’s Brief Outage: A hiccup in the Polygon network on July 30 reminded DeFi users that even “layer-2” blockchains aren’t immune to stress. Polygon’s Heimdall consensus layer (which coordinates validators) suffered a one-hour outage Wednesday due to a suspected bug triggered by a validator’s abrupt exit [31] [32]. Fortunately, Polygon’s Bor block-production layer kept running and no block production halt occurred [33]. Block explorers did show inconsistent data for a time, but no transactions were lost. The Polygon team rushed out a fix and collaborated with node providers to resolve syncing issues that lingered after Heimdall was restarted [34]. “Following Heimdall’s recovery, we observed sync inconsistencies… We are now actively collaborating with all RPC partners to accelerate resolution,” Polygon stated in an update [35]. The incident comes just weeks after Polygon’s major Heimdall v2 upgrade (in early July) – dubbed the network’s “most technically complex hard fork” to date – which had improved performance but also added complexity [36]. Polygon’s swift remediation drew praise, but the event highlights the fragility of DeFi infrastructure. As one analyst noted, “consistent network uptime is critical” in a 24/7 DeFi market [37], and even an hour-long hiccup can sow chaos in trading markets. Users and devs are watching closely as Polygon and other chains harden their systems against such glitches going forward.
NFT Market Rebounds: After a prolonged bear market, the NFT sector is showing flickers of a comeback. Blue-chip NFT collections have seen significant price upticks over the past month. CryptoPunks, for instance, are up 29% in floor price, and the playful Pudgy Penguins collection has soared 66.7% in floor value [38]. Even Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs – which had been sliding – recovered nearly 10% in value in 30 days [39]. Overall, the total market cap of NFTs jumped to $6 billion, a 66% increase in the last 30 days [40] [41]. One driver was big-ticket buying: a crypto whale spent $4.3 million scooping up 12 CryptoPunks in rapid succession, dramatically boosting market confidence [42]. “The NFT market is experiencing a resurgence,” noted CoinDesk, with top-tier collectibles leading the charge [43]. However, trading volumes remain well below their 2021 peaks, and many lesser-known NFT projects are still languishing at low prices [44]. NFT analysts say the recent rally may reflect value hunting – collectors snapping up historically significant NFTs at what they perceive as bargain prices, now that the froth of speculation has cleared.
Gala Enters China – 600M Gamers to Get NFTs: In a major development for NFTs and gaming, Gala Games announced that its proprietary blockchain GalaChain has become the first foreign blockchain to integrate with China’s state-approved NFT infrastructure [45] [46]. Gala struck an agreement with the Trusted Copyright Chain (TCC) – a government-affiliated ledger that registers and manages digital copyrights in China – effectively allowing GalaChain’s in-game assets and NFTs to be legally recognized and traded in the massive Chinese market. This “historic regulatory breakthrough,” as Gala called it, opens the door to over 600 million Chinese gamers who can now access GalaChain’s assets within a compliant framework [47] [48]. Under the partnership, all cross-border NFT transfers will be logged, timestamped, and settled under Chinese regulations [49], addressing government concerns over unregulated marketplaces. Uniquely, transactions on GalaChain will use the GALA token as gas, and a portion of each fee will be burned (destroyed) to reduce supply [50]. This creates a deflationary loop: as Chinese user activity grows, GALA token scarcity could increase. “This integration provides a compliant bridge… a blueprint for cross-market integration,” Gala’s team said, emphasizing that data sovereignty and copyright law are fully respected [51]. The move also coincides with China’s cautious warming to NFT technology (often termed “digital collectibles” there) even as it maintains a ban on cryptocurrency trading. If successful, GalaChain’s model could be replicated by other foreign gaming platforms looking to tap China’s enormous user base without running afoul of regulators. For now, the news sparked excitement in the NFT community – a sign that Web3 gaming could truly go global by working within local laws.
Regulatory and Legal Developments
White House Crypto Strategy: The U.S. government’s crypto agenda took center stage with a comprehensive White House report released on July 30. The 163-page document is the Trump Administration’s most detailed blueprint yet for crypto policy [52]. It outlines efforts ranging from stablecoin regulation (implementing the new GENIUS Act, which for the first time creates a federal framework for stablecoin issuers [53]) to wider crypto market oversight (the proposed Clarity Act, which has passed the House and is pending in the Senate [54]). The report mostly reiterates known initiatives – such as plans to modernize financial rules, crack down on illicit uses, and foster blockchain innovation – but notably provides no new details on President Trump’s earlier call for a U.S. “Bitcoin Strategic Reserve.” That idea, announced via executive order months ago, envisions the government stockpiling BTC and other crypto, but it remains a “black box” with scant information even in this report [55] [56]. Instead, the White House emphasized empowering regulators now. The report urges the SEC and CFTC to “use their existing authorities to immediately enable the trading of digital assets at the federal level,” essentially prodding agencies to move forward with rulemaking even before Congress acts [57].
Regulators Empowered and Industry Reaction: Senior officials framed the strategy as a measuring stick for progress in making the U.S. a leader in crypto innovation while protecting consumers. SEC Chairman Paul Atkins embraced it, saying “as the report makes clear, the SEC will continue to play a key role in developing a federal framework by using its existing authorities to establish new rules and regulations, and to implement any new legislation crafted by Congress.” [58] This suggests the SEC under Atkins (a Trump appointee) will keep aggressively policing crypto markets in the absence of new laws. The report also floats tax reforms (echoing ideas from Senator Cynthia Lummis) to ease burdens like de minimis exemptions for small crypto transactions [59]. Crypto industry leaders cautiously praised the holistic approach. “By addressing critical areas such as decentralization, market structure, tax, GENIUS implementation, global competitiveness and much more, this report offers a constructive path forward that supports responsible innovation and U.S. leadership in the digital economy,” said Ji Kim, CEO of the Crypto Council for Innovation [60]. Still, some in the industry note the report lacks specifics on when certain policies (like a possible Bitcoin ETF approval or clarity on token classifications) will come to fruition. All eyes are now on how quickly regulators like the SEC act on the White House’s call to action.
Enforcement: Hacks and Scams Crackdown: U.S. law enforcement continues to make examples of crypto bad actors. New data from security firm CertiK revealed that over $2.47 billion in crypto was stolen in the first half of 2025, already exceeding all of last year’s losses [61]. Two mega-heists accounted for the bulk of it: the Bybit exchange breach and an exploit of Solana’s Cetus DEX, which combined for $1.78 billion stolen [62]. “While the overall figures are alarming, it’s important to point out the majority of H1 losses came from two high-impact events,” noted CertiK’s co-founder Ronghui Gu, tempering the panic [63]. Still, he added, the crime wave is a stark reminder that “there is still much work to be done” to secure the crypto ecosystem [64]. U.S. authorities are responding with bigger stings: In late July, the Justice Department announced the largest-ever seizure of crypto linked to investment scams – a $225 million haul from fraudulent “pig butchering” romance schemes [65]. “These scams prey on trust… and often result in extreme financial hardship for victims,” said Secret Service Agent Shawn Bradstreet, whose team helped trace and confiscate the funds [66]. The DOJ filed a civil forfeiture to begin returning money to hundreds of victims, and officials warned this won’t be the last action as they “relentlessly pursue” crypto fraudsters [67] [68].
Legal Cases – Samourai and Tornado Cash: High-profile crypto legal battles reached turning points this week. In New York, two developers of the Samourai Wallet (a Bitcoin privacy wallet) pleaded guilty to charges of operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business [69]. Prosecutors alleged the Samourai team ran a coin-mixing service called “Whirlpool” within the wallet that enabled users to obfuscate transactions – essentially functioning as an illegal money mixer. By pleading guilty, the Samourai developers admitted to flouting anti-money-laundering laws; they now face potential prison time at sentencing. And in a federal court in Manhattan, the closely watched trial of Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm is wrapping up. Tornado Cash, an Ethereum-based mixer, was used to launder over $1 billion in illicit crypto (including North Korean hacking proceeds), according to the government’s evidence [70]. Storm is charged with money laundering conspiracy, violating sanctions, and other counts [71]. This week, closing arguments were delivered: Prosecutor Benjamin Gianforti told jurors they had seen a “front-row seat to the dark underbelly of global financial crime,” arguing that Tornado’s vaunted privacy features were just a “cover story”. “The real money wasn’t in so-called ‘privacy’ for normal people,” Gianforti said – “It was in hiding dirty money for criminals.” [72] [73] He likened Tornado Cash to a laundromat that does wash clothes but primarily exists to clean dirty money. The defense maintains Storm built neutral tools and can’t control how users choose to use them. The jury begins deliberations on Thursday [74] [75], and the verdict – expected soon – could have far-reaching implications. A guilty verdict would send a chilling message that software developers can be held criminally liable if their code is used for crime [76]. The crypto community (and civil liberties groups) are anxiously awaiting the outcome, which many see as a referendum on code-as-speech and developer liability in the U.S. legal system.
Market Insights & Outlook
Late-Cycle Signals?: Seasoned market watchers are debating whether crypto’s bull run is entering a late-cycle phase. QCP Capital, in its latest strategy note, pointed to “textbook” signs of fatigue in Bitcoin’s uptrend [77] [78]. They highlight the fact that even a string of ostensibly positive headlines – like BlackRock’s spot BTC ETF application, or the SEC green-lighting improved ETF trading mechanics – failed to push Bitcoin to new highs. Such lackluster reaction to good news often precedes a cooling-off period. “New highs remain a strong possibility over the medium term,” QCP wrote, “but… price action has failed to respond meaningfully… Caution is warranted.” [79] [80] In similar fashion, analysts at Bitfinex warned that the exuberance in smaller altcoins (many of which saw double-digit gains recently) could unwind quickly. They noted a buildup of leverage in altcoin futures and said the broader crypto market is “vulnerable to sharp deleveraging events” if one of those highly-levered bets goes awry [81]. In other words, a rapid drop in a popular altcoin’s price could cascade through the system as margin calls and liquidations – a risk to keep in mind amid the current optimism.
Institutional View and Macro Factors: On the flip side, institutional-focused analysts remain long-term bullish. Laurent Kssis, a crypto ETF expert, cheered the SEC’s approval of in-kind redemptions for Bitcoin and Ether ETFs as a “watershed moment.” “For institutional investors managing large allocations, this represents a fundamental improvement… Having implemented this in Europe, we can attest that in-kind processes fundamentally transform market dynamics,” Kssis said [82]. By allowing ETF managers to swap shares for actual crypto rather than cash, this change is expected to tighten spreads, reduce tax friction, and boost liquidity – all positive for price stability. Market strategists also note that Bitcoin’s correlation with traditional markets remains in flux. This week saw a surging U.S. dollar – the DXY dollar index hit a 5-week high – which often pressures Bitcoin. “This week’s rally in the dollar is highly unusual – a classic short squeeze,” observed Robin Brooks, a senior economist at the Brookings Institution [83]. He expects the squeeze to soon fizzle out, ending the “lazy dollar bearish narratives” and perhaps relieving some downward pressure on BTC [84]. In the big picture, many analysts still foresee higher highs for Bitcoin later this year, but with increased choppiness en route. As Matt Hougan of Bitwise commented in a Bloomberg interview (paraphrasing): “This market is digesting a lot – regulatory shifts, macro uncertainty, and its own rapid price appreciation. Don’t be surprised by pockets of volatility, but the trajectory by year-end is likely upward.” The coming weeks (with a U.S. ETF decision deadline and several macro data releases) could prove pivotal in determining whether crypto’s late summer brings a final breakout or a healthy breather before the next climb.
Key Takeaway: Across the board, the message is prepare but don’t panic. The past two days saw Bitcoin weather a policy scare, alts show resilience, and regulators chart a clearer path for crypto – a mix of signals that veteran traders interpret as the maturation of a still-volatile market. Keep an eye on leverage, watch the Fed and SEC, and HODL on tight – the second half of 2025 is poised to be anything but boring.
Sources: CoinDesk [85] [86] [87] [88], Decrypt [89] [90], Cointelegraph [91] [92], Bloomberg Crypto, DLNews [93] [94], Cryptonews [95], Official press releases [96] [97].
References
1. www.coindesk.com, 2. www.coindesk.com, 3. www.coindesk.com, 4. www.coindesk.com, 5. decrypt.co, 6. decrypt.co, 7. decrypt.co, 8. decrypt.co, 9. decrypt.co, 10. cryptonews.com, 11. www.coindesk.com, 12. www.coindesk.com, 13. www.coindesk.com, 14. cryptonews.com, 15. crypto-economy.com, 16. www.coindesk.com, 17. fortune.com, 18. www.coindesk.com, 19. www.coindesk.com, 20. www.coindesk.com, 21. www.coindesk.com, 22. www.coindesk.com, 23. www.coindesk.com, 24. www.coindesk.com, 25. www.coindesk.com, 26. www.coindesk.com, 27. www.coindesk.com, 28. www.coindesk.com, 29. www.coindesk.com, 30. www.coindesk.com, 31. cointelegraph.com, 32. cointelegraph.com, 33. cointelegraph.com, 34. cointelegraph.com, 35. cointelegraph.com, 36. cointelegraph.com, 37. cointelegraph.com, 38. www.coindesk.com, 39. www.coindesk.com, 40. www.coindesk.com, 41. www.coindesk.com, 42. www.coindesk.com, 43. www.coindesk.com, 44. www.coindesk.com, 45. blockchainreporter.net, 46. blockchainreporter.net, 47. blockchainreporter.net, 48. blockchainreporter.net, 49. blockchainreporter.net, 50. blockchainreporter.net, 51. blockchainreporter.net, 52. www.coindesk.com, 53. www.coindesk.com, 54. www.coindesk.com, 55. www.coindesk.com, 56. www.coindesk.com, 57. www.coindesk.com, 58. www.coindesk.com, 59. www.coindesk.com, 60. www.coindesk.com, 61. www.coindesk.com, 62. www.coindesk.com, 63. www.coindesk.com, 64. www.coindesk.com, 65. www.justice.gov, 66. www.justice.gov, 67. www.justice.gov, 68. www.justice.gov, 69. www.coindesk.com, 70. www.dlnews.com, 71. www.dlnews.com, 72. www.dlnews.com, 73. www.dlnews.com, 74. www.dlnews.com, 75. www.dlnews.com, 76. www.dlnews.com, 77. decrypt.co, 78. decrypt.co, 79. decrypt.co, 80. decrypt.co, 81. decrypt.co, 82. www.coindesk.com, 83. decrypt.co, 84. decrypt.co, 85. www.coindesk.com, 86. www.coindesk.com, 87. www.coindesk.com, 88. www.coindesk.com, 89. decrypt.co, 90. decrypt.co, 91. cointelegraph.com, 92. cointelegraph.com, 93. www.dlnews.com, 94. www.dlnews.com, 95. cryptonews.com, 96. www.justice.gov, 97. www.justice.gov