Crypto
Bitcoin Halving: Prices expected to increase as cryptocurrency gets scarcer
Bitcoin halving occurs about once every four years, and is designed to reduce the rewards for miners. With the fourth halving, the block subsidy has decreased from 6.25 BTC to 3.12 BTC. The reduction directly impacts miner revenue.
The total supply of Bitcoins is capped at 21 million coins. (Image Credit: Bing Image Creator).
Key Highlights
- A Bitcoin halving is a pivotal event that shapes the cryptocurrency ecosystem.
- Less efficient miners may exit the network due to reduced benefits.
- Only the most efficient ASIC machines can now mine profitably.
New Delhi: Bitcoin halving occurs about once every four years, driving prices up by reducing the rate at which new tokens enter circulation. This increases the scarcity of Bitcoins, and is expected to drive up the prices like the previous three halvings. The rewards for mining the flagship cryptocurrency has now reduced to 3.125 BTC from 6.25 BTC for every block mined. The reduction in rewards has a direct impact on the revenues of miners.
The Bitcoin halving event occurred on 19 April, 2024, as miners rushed to extract the remaining blocks before the reduction in rewards. The community expected the halving to occur on 20 April, but the 840,000th block was mined a day earlier. The network is configured to halve every 210,000 blocks. There have been three previous halving events in 2012, 2016 and 2020, reducing the rewards from 50 to 25 to 12.5 to 6.25 BTC.
Only the most efficient miners will be profitable
The halving is expected to introduce significant changes to the crypto ecosystem. Only the most efficient Application-Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) machines are expected to operate profitably going forward. Older and less efficient ASICs may be phased out from the market, with next generation ASICs expected to have specific breakeven power costs depending on the hashprice.
Miners are also looking at custom ASIC firmware such as BraiinsOS and LuxOS to increase the efficiency of hardware, that lower breakeven points for electricity costs. Less efficient miners are expected to exit the network, due to the impact on profitability. Miners will now be getting half the rewards for their efforts, going forward.
How the ecosystem reacted to previous halvings
Following the first halving in 2012, the network hash rate declined and the less profitable miners exited the network. In early 2013, Bitcoin saw its first bull run, with prices increasing to $1,000 from $13. Following the second halving in 2016, the prices initially plummeted to $670, but then rose again to $2,550 in 2017. At the time of the third halving in 2020, BTC prices were around $10,000, but increased to $62,000 a year later, in 2021. BTC prices are now around $65,000, and is expected to surge in about six months to a year.
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Crypto
Crypto’s Liquidity Outlook Darkens as Fed Hawkish Pivot Pushes Hike Odds to 77%
Key Takeaways
- Wintermute warned tighter Fed policy could slow key liquidity channels into crypto markets.
- Officials lifted the median 2026 rate outlook as inflation concerns broadened.
- Tighter monetary policy can raise funding costs and reduce risk appetite, limiting demand across all three channels.
Warsh-Led Fed Reprices Rate Expectations as Inflation Risks Move Higher
Crypto markets entered a tighter liquidity environment after the Federal Reserve held rates steady while signaling a firmer stance on inflation. Wintermute, a crypto market maker and liquidity provider, said the shift created a more challenging backdrop for digital assets reliant on sustained capital inflows.
Referring to the Fed’s policy shift and its implications for capital flows into digital assets, Wintermute wrote:
“For an asset class that needs liquidity arriving through ETFs, stablecoins and DATs, a Fed leaning toward tightening is the opposite of what gets those funnels flowing.”
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) channel institutional capital into crypto markets, stablecoins provide dollar-linked liquidity used for trading and settlement, and digital asset treasuries commonly refer to corporate or institutional balance sheets allocating funds to crypto. Tighter monetary policy typically raises borrowing costs and reduces risk appetite, which can slow inflows across all three channels.
Federal Reserve officials, at Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as chair, removed any easing bias and shifted projections toward tighter policy. The median 2026 rate outlook rose to 3.8% from 3.4%, with nine of 18 policymakers now expecting at least one hike this year and 17 flagging upside inflation risks. Markets reacted quickly, pushing December hike odds to about 77% from roughly 24% a month earlier.
Officials also shortened the policy statement to 130 words from 341, reinforcing the sharper change in tone. Brent crude fell 8.2% during the week on expectations tied to a reopening of the Strait, yet Wintermute noted that the Fed’s inflation concern appeared broader than energy.
Iran Breakdown Forces Crypto to Absorb Weekend Repricing
Geopolitical tensions added pressure after an Iran agreement expected to be signed on June 19 unraveled before completion. Israel’s strikes in southern Lebanon led Iran to exit negotiations, delaying a planned signing ceremony in Switzerland. Qatar has since worked to keep talks alive into late June, leaving the outcome uncertain.
Attention now shifts to upcoming macro data and diplomacy. The May Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) report will provide updated inflation readings, while Qatar’s mediation efforts will shape near-term geopolitical risk and energy market stability.
Wintermute highlighted the near-term catalysts tied to both macro data and diplomacy:
“May PCE on Friday, and the Qatar talks are the near-term catalysts.”
Market structure amplified the impact. U.S. equities were closed for Juneteenth, delaying repricing, while crypto traded through the weekend and absorbed the shift immediately.
BTC fell 3.8% for the week, dropping from near $67,000 to around $62,000 before stabilizing in the low $60,000s. ETH declined 1.2% and fell back below the $2,000 level, while altcoins were broadly flat. The move triggered about $600 million in long liquidations versus under $90 million in shorts, extending June’s pattern of one-sided unwinds.
Crypto
Man arrested for allegedly stealing $50,000 during meeting to purchase cryptocurrency
SINGAPORE – A man was arrested for allegedly stealing cash amounting to $50,000 from a victim during a meeting to purchase cryptocurrency late at night on June 21.
According to the police, who were alerted to a case of theft in New Upper Changi Road at 11.55pm that day, the victim had arranged to meet the suspect to purchase USDT cryptocurrency amounting to $100,000.
While preparing to hand the money over to the suspect, the victim had placed a portion of the cash on a bench, the police said in a statement on June 23.
The 25-year-old suspect then allegedly grabbed $50,000 worth of the cash placed on the bench and fled the scene.
Police officers arrested the suspect after establishing his identity with footage from police and CCTV cameras, and recovered cash amounting to $7,450.
The suspect is expected to be charged with the offence of theft on June 24. If found guilty, he can be jailed for up to three years, fined, or both.
Crypto
Safaricom Teams With Chainalysis as AI Hunts Payments Linked to Illegal Wildlife Trade
Key Takeaways
- Safaricom, Google, and Meta joined a United for Wildlife taskforce in 2024 to crush illegal trafficking.
- AI will monitor M-Pesa to disrupt a $23B illicit market that puts 1M species at risk of extinction.
- Next, British Airways and Heathrow will launch public campaigns to tighten the net on global smugglers.
Squeezing the Financial Flows
Kenyan telecom giant Safaricom has joined forces with a coalition of international technology, payments, and cryptocurrency firms to dismantle the financial networks driving the illegal wildlife trade. The initiative was announced at a recent event convened by Prince William and The Royal Foundation’s United for Wildlife taskforce.
According to a report, the coalition brings together technology giants, including Google, Meta, Tiktok, and Alibaba. The companies have committed to completely eradicating wildlife trafficking from their platforms using artificial intelligence (AI)-driven detection and prevention systems to catch illicit listings before sales take place.
While social media and e-commerce platforms focus on front-end listings, the battle is simultaneously moving to the financial back-end. Illegal wildlife trafficking is an extensively lucrative enterprise, with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) estimating it generates up to $23 billion annually. It is a driving factor behind putting an estimated one million plant and animal species at risk of extinction.
To sever these financial lifelines, Safaricom—alongside its parent companies Vodafone and Vodacom—will deploy AI within its anti-money laundering (AML) and transaction monitoring systems. The AI will be integrated across M-Pesa, Africa’s leading mobile money platform, to flag and disrupt suspicious transactions linked to poaching and trafficking syndicates.
Concurrently, mainstream payment processors and major cryptocurrency analytics firms—including Paypal, Chainalysis, TRM Labs, and Luno—have pledged to use blockchain tracking and advanced digital forensics to hunt down and expose cross-border crypto wallets and alternative payment pathways used by wildlife smugglers.
The urgent need for digital and financial intervention is underscored by the historic devastation of Africa’s iconic megafauna, most notably the white rhinoceros. The species serves as a stark warning of how rapidly unregulated, criminal markets can push an animal to the absolute brink of extinction.
While intensive, century-long conservation efforts successfully revived the Southern White Rhino population to around 17,000, a resurgence in organized poaching over the last two decades has threatened to undo those gains. Rhino horn, which is composed of keratin (the same protein found in human hair and fingernails), has been sold on the black market for up to $60,000 per kilogram—making it more valuable by weight than gold or cocaine.
This immense profit margin shifted poaching from localized hunting to highly organized, transnational crime syndicates. By cutting off the modern payment infrastructure used by these syndicates, the new coalition aims to ensure other vulnerable species do not suffer the same fate.
A Unified Front
The private sector’s massive, coordinated pivot marks a turning point in environmental corporate responsibility, moving past standard non-profit donations toward deploying core tech architecture against criminal networks.
“What we see from the private sector today is a recognition that the illegal wildlife trade is both an environmental and a business issue,” said David Fein, co-chair of United for Wildlife.
Supporting the digital crackdown on the ground and in the skies, aviation leaders British Airways and Heathrow Airport also announced they will launch expansive public awareness campaigns to help travelers identify and report suspected wildlife products, tightening the net on smugglers globally.
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