Crypto Weekly 3/29/26
Bitcoin Falls Below $65,000 as Iran Talks Collapse, Circle Drops 22% on a Leaked Stablecoin Yield Ban, and the White House Opens 401(k)s to Crypto
PRICE CHANGE: WTD/YTD
- Crypto Market Cap ($2.37T): -3% / -22%
- BTC ($66,297): -3% / -24%
- ETH ($1,990): -4% / -33%
- SOL ($81): -7% / -35%
- UNI ($3.35): -4% / -40%
- OP ($0.10): -12% / -62%
- COIN ($161): -18% / -29%
- Tether Mkt Cap ($184B): 0% / -2%
- USDC Mkt Cap ($78B): -2% / +2%
- BTC / ETH Dominance: 56% / 10%
THIS WEEK IN CRYPTO
- Bitcoin fell below $65,000 along with risk-assets after another round of negotiations between Iran and the US fell through, pushing oil prices and treasury yields higher and causing a sell-off of risk assets across the board. Link. Link.
- Bitcoin experienced a rare two-block reorganization after Foundry USA Pool overtook AntPool and ViaBTC in the Bitcoin mining race. Link.
- The White House has cleared the review of a Labor Department rule that would open the $10 trillion 401(k) market to crypto and private equity investments. Link.
- A US court dismissed a crypto developer’s lawsuit seeking preemptive legal protection from federal money transmitter laws, as legal uncertainty surrounding non-custodial and open-source software remains unresolved. The judge ruled the developer failed to show “substantial threat of prosecution” and that ongoing DOJ prosecutions related to non-custodial crypto services centered on money laundering operations, rather than the mere operation of a business tool. Link.
- USDC stablecoin issuer Circle saw its shares fall over 22% over a leaked draft of the CLARITY Act, which would ban passive yield on stablecoin balances. 95% of Circle’s revenue comes from interest on USDC reserves. Link. Link.
- USDT stablecoin issuer Tether has engaged Big Four accounting firm KPMG to conduct its first full independent financial statement audit. Link.
- NYSE has partnered with Securitize to develop a 24/7 tokenized securities platform that will enable the creation and management of tokenized shares for stocks and exchange-traded funds. Link. Link.
- Mortgage giant Fannie Mae will soon accept crypto-backed mortgages for the first time. Mortgage company Better Home and Coinbase unveiled a new mortgage product that allows home buyers to pledge their crypto holdings when getting a Fannie-backed mortgage, instead of selling the crypto to make a cash down payment. Link. Link.
- Franklin Templeton is partnering with Ondo Finance to offer tokenized versions of its ETFs that can be traded 24/7 through crypto wallets, bypassing traditional brokerage accounts and trading hours. Link.
- Visa has joined the Canton Network as a Super Validator via a DAO governance proposal. Canton is a privacy-enabled Layer-1 blockchain backed by institutional players like BNP Paribas, Citadel, Goldman Sachs, and Circle, among others. Link. Link.
- The US has accused two China-based pharmaceutical firms of using cryptocurrency to sell chemicals necessary for creating fentanyl to Mexican cartels distributing drugs across the US. Link.
- Balancer Labs is shutting down operations after a $128 million exploit in November, leaving the Balancer protocol itself to continue operating via its DAO. Link.
- The UK government has banned all cryptocurrency donations to UK political parties, following an independent review into foreign electoral interference. Link.
- Ethereum treasury firm BitMine launched an institutional staking platform called “Made in America Validator Network” that allows investors to earn rewards by validating transactions on Ethereum’s network. Link.
- Crypto advocacy group Stand With Crypto has endorsed six candidates from both parties in key battleground congressional races ahead of November midterm elections. Picks include: Zach Nunn (R-Iowa), Mike Lawler (R-New York), Rob Bresnahan (R-Pennsylvania), Don Davis (D-North Carolina), Susie Lee (D-Nevada), and Greg Landsman (D-Ohio) Link. Link.
- Google has set a 2029 deadline to transition its systems to post-quantum cryptography. The Ethereum Foundation also announced necessary upgrades to make the protocol quantum-resistant by 2029. Link. Link.
- Crypto infrastructure firm BitGo reported a quarterly loss of $50 million, or $1.03 per share, in its first earnings report after going public, despite a 440% surge in revenue to $6.2 billion. Link.
- David Sacks, the White House’s crypto and AI czar, is leaving his post to take on a broader role as co-chair of the President’s Council of Advisers on Science & Technology (PCAST). Link.
- The CFTC launched a new Innovation Task Force to focus on shaping the regulation of cryptocurrencies, artificial intelligence, and prediction markets, in coordination with other federal agencies like the Securities and Exchange Commission. Link.
- Police have arrested the last suspect involved in the 2025 kidnapping of Ledger co-founder David Balland, who had his finger cut off by a criminal gang demanding a $11.5 million Bitcoin ransom. Link.



The three headlines this week are more connected than they look. Iran talks collapsing → oil price spike → stagflation risk → BTC sells off. But Circle dropping 22% on the stablecoin yield ban news is actually the more important data point for anyone thinking about where crypto's next growth leg comes from. If you can't earn yield on stablecoins, DeFi protocols become the default yield layer — which is a massive tailwind for Aave, Compound, and USDC alternatives. The 401(k) crypto access news is flying under the radar but it's potentially the biggest pipeline story of the year. $9.3T in 401(k) assets, even 1% allocation, changes the demand picture completely. BTC dominance at 63.7% tells you the market already knows which asset absorbs that inflow first.