The post Court Lets Arbitrum DAO Transfer $71M in ETH Tied to North Korea Hack to Aave appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
A Manhattan federal judge has allowed Arbitrum DAO to move $71 million in frozen Ether to Aave, clearing the path for the DeFi protocol’s recovery effort following a North Korea-linked exploit. Judge Margaret Garnett of the Southern District of New York issued the order on Friday, modifying a restraining notice that had locked the assets inside Arbitrum DAO. The modification permits an onchain governance vote to send the funds to a wallet controlled by Aave LLC, and explicitly protects anyone who participates in the transfer from being held in violation of the freeze. The order still keeps the terrorism victims’ legal claim on the funds, meaning Aave can’t use the funds freely and could be forced to hand them over if the court ultimately rules in the terrorism victims’ favor. Judge allows Arbitrum to move funds to Aave. Source: Courtlistener The decision came afte
The post Why Tokenized Gold Trading Crossed $90B in Q1 2026 (And What It Means for DeFi) appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Tokenized gold trading volume reached $90.7 billion in Q1 2026 alone, exceeding the $84.6 billion recorded across all of 2025. The figure comes from CoinGecko’s Q1 2026 RWA Report, which documented tokenized commodities (overwhelmingly gold-backed) growing 289% from $1.43 billion to $5.55 billion in market capitalization over fifteen months. The numbers point to a category that crossed an inflection point sometime in late 2025. Tokenized gold is no longer a side experiment in DeFi; it’s a measurable segment of on-chain activity with volume comparable to mid-cap altcoins. This article looks at what drove the surge, how the category breaks down structurally, and what the volume signals for DeFi yield in the rest of 2026. What the $90B Number Represents The $90.7 billion figure covers Q1 2026 spot trading across PAXG, XAUT, KAU, KAG, Comtech Gold, and other token
The post How Hyperliquid Managed to Lead 3 DeFi Apps That Paid Holders $96 Million In 4 Weeks appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Three young DeFi applications, Hyperliquid, Pump.fun and edgeX, returned $96.3 million to token holders in 30 days. The figure marks one of the largest concentrated payouts from any DeFi cohort tracked in 2026. Each protocol used a different mechanism to deliver the cash. Only Hyperliquid funded its full payout from trading fees alone. Pump.fun split revenue with operations, and edgeX paid out roughly three times what it earned. The DeFi Shift From Emissions to Real Revenue During the past cycle, DeFi protocols rewarded users by minting tokens and distributing them through liquidity programs. The model inflated supply faster than demand, leaving holders to absorb relentless dilution. Hyperliquid (HYPE), Pump.fun (PUMP) and edgeX (EDGE) sit at the front of a different cohort. They generate fees from active products and route part of those fees back to holder
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The post Michael Saylor: Bitcoin as digital capital offers significant yield potential, how digital credit reduces volatility, and the transformative role of DeFi in crypto | The Wolf Of All Streets appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Need to know what happened in crypto today? Here is the latest news on daily trends and events impacting Bitcoin price, blockchain, DeFi, NFTs, Web3 and crypto regulation.
SUI climbs 6.17% past $1.08 as SUI Group reports 108M token holdings and Q1 2026 results. Here is what the chart and the balance sheet both suggest. The chart on Coinbase showed $1.0844. Up 6.17% on the day. That number had been a ceiling for weeks. SUI broke past it anyway. According to media_sui on […]
The post $SUI Supply Shock Loading: SUIG Pulls 108M Tokens Off DeFi as Price Explodes 6%+ appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.