Cryptocurrency exchanges believed to be financing Russia’s war in Ukraine have been sanctioned by the U.K. government in the first attempt to prevent evasion via “dark networks.” The move indicates a new focus on digital sanctions evasion, and compliance teams should expect these rules to develop further, potentially in the EU and other jurisdictions.
Crypto
Stack’s Bowers Auctions Funded 0.5 Bitcoin Casascius Token From America’s 237th Birthday
Key Takeaways
- Stack’s Bowers Galleries auctions a funded Casascius 0.5 BTC token graded MS-66 on June 18, 2026.
- Only 15 Casascius coins exist at MS-66, with 11 graded finer, tightening supply for collectors.
- Stack’s Bowers’ 120-lot crypto sale tops $500K intrinsic value, including Topps Allen and Ginter crypto cards.
What’s Being Sold
According to the Stack’s Bowers Galleries announcement shared with Bitcoin.com News, the token is graded MS-66 by the Professional Coin Grading Service (PCGS). Only 15 examples exist at that grade. Just 11 coins have been graded finer, all at MS-67. The token remains funded, meaning the 0.5 BTC loaded onto the blockchain at creation is still intact and redeemable.
The coin was produced by Mike Caldwell, a Utah-based software engineer who began minting the Casascius series in 2011. Each physical coin holds a private key beneath a tamper-evident hologram, with real bitcoin loaded onchain at the time of minting.
Why Casascius Coins Are Scarce
Caldwell halted production after regulators flagged the operation as a potential unlicensed money transmission business in 2013. The short production window left a finite supply. Attrition has narrowed that supply further: some owners have “peeled” their coins to claim the bitcoin, destroying the collectible and erasing its numismatic value in the process. Funded examples in high grades are now rare by any measure.
The Auction Context
The June 18 sale is not a one-lot showcase. Stack’s Bowers has assembled more than 120 crypto collectibles with a combined intrinsic value exceeding $500,000. The sale includes coins from the Casascius, BTCC, and Lealana series, alongside lower-mintage modern issues from producers including Mybits, Satori, Denarium, Ballet, and Freedom Bitcoin.
The auction also marks the firm’s first offering of crypto trading cards from Topps’ Allen and Ginter series, a crossover expected to draw interest from sports card collectors who track that product line separately from the crypto space.
Early Bitcoin Magazine issues round out the sale, including a copy of Issue No. 1 and a consecutive run of Issues 9 through 15.
Who’s Behind the Gavel
Stack’s Bowers Galleries has operated for more than 90 years and is a wholly owned subsidiary of A-Mark Precious Metals Inc. (Nasdaq: AMRK), which acquired parent company Spectrum Group International in early 2025 for $92 million. The firm is a PCGS Authorized Dealer, a member of the Professional Numismatists Guild, and the official auctioneer for major numismatic events, including ANA World’s Fair of Money conventions.
“American coinage and commerce have always been a mirror to the nation’s journey toward liberty and success,” James McCartney, Director of Numismatics at Stack’s Bowers Galleries, remarked.
The Stack’s Bowers Galleries executive added:
“There is no greater context in which to offer this historic Fourth of July funded 0.5 bitcoin.”
What Buyers Should Know
Bidders should account for buyer’s premiums, which typically run above 20% at premium auction houses. The token’s collectible value operates separately from its bitcoin spot value, and both factors are relevant to the final price. The auction is open for bidding through the Stack’s Bowers platform.
The firm is also accepting consignments for its Summer 2026 Global Showcase Auction, which will hold in-person previews at the ANA World’s Fair of Money in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Specialists will also be available at the FUN Show in Orlando, Florida, running July 9 through 11.
With America’s 250th anniversary two weeks out and bitcoin trading actively, the timing places a 13-year-old physical token at an intersection that few collectibles have occupied before. Whether that intersection holds lasting value is a question the market will answer on Thursday.
Crypto
U.K.’s sanctions on cryptocurrency exchanges signal new focus on illicit digital financing – Compliance Week
Crypto
Trader Turns $2 Million of ETH Into $14,208 as Lighter Token Rallies 53%
Key Takeaways
- Lookonchain data shows the trader paid roughly 140 times LIT’s market price of $2.46 per token.
- Lighter burned 15.5M LIT, 6.3% of supply, on July 2 as its permanent buyback-and-burn program began.
- A whale lost $8.2M in Lighter’s thin ARC market in February, a caution for traders chasing the rally.
Paying 140 Times the Market Price
The transaction was flagged yesterday and the math behind it was brutal. At $2.01 million for 5,776 tokens, the trader paid an effective price of roughly $348 per LIT, about 140 times the token’s market price of $2.46 at the time of the trade. Had the same 1,126.44 ETH, implying an ether price near $1,784, been routed through a deep venue at market rates, it would have bought roughly 817,000 LIT. The wallet received 5,776.
Losses of this scale typically occur when a large market order is routed through an onchain liquidity pool with minimal depth and no slippage protection. Slippage refers to the gap between a trade’s expected price and its executed price; most decentralized exchange ( DEX) interfaces let users cap it, automatically canceling any order that would move the market beyond a set percentage. Whether the trader disabled that protection or used a custom route remains unclear.
The setup was especially dangerous because LIT’s float is unusually tight, given roughly 57% of the circulating supply is staked and another 145 million LIT sits locked in liquidity programs (while the token’s deepest markets sit on centralized exchanges and on Lighter’s own platform rather than in public pools).
In those conditions, a $2 million market order can exhaust a pool’s inventory within a single block, with arbitrage and maximal extractable value (MEV) bots capturing the difference almost instantly.
Why LIT Is Red-Hot
Lighter is an Ethereum-based decentralized exchange focused on perpetual futures, the derivatives category that turned rival Hyperliquid into one of crypto’s defining stories. The project describes itself as “the first exchange to offer verifiable order matching and liquidations while delivering best-in-class performance on par with traditional exchanges.”
LIT traded near $2.60 at the time of writing, up 22.5% in 24 hours and 53.3% on the week, making it the second most-searched coin on Coingecko. The token commands a $675 million market capitalization on 250 million circulating tokens, with $533.6 million in total value locked (TVL) on the platform and $116.76 million in daily trading volume.

Even after the rally, LIT sits 65.7% below its all-time high of $7.86 set Dec. 30, 2025 and roughly 245% above the $0.78 low it printed on March 31.
The surge follows a July 1 tokenomics overhaul in which Lighter said all LIT repurchased with protocol fees will be permanently burned. The first burn destroyed 15.5 million LIT, about 6.3% of the circulating supply, on July 2, and the team set a 6% staking yield target, with the platform directing more than 70% of its daily revenue to the buybacks.
Retail access is widening at the same time. Robinhood Wallet integrated Lighter’s perpetual futures last week, a catalyst that pushed LIT up 24% in a single day, while public praise from Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin added further momentum.
Thin Markets Keep Claiming Victims
Sunday’s botched swap is not the first fortune lost on Lighter’s order books this year. In February, a whale lost $8.2 million attempting to squeeze the platform’s illiquid ARC perpetuals market, with about $2 million of the position liquidated directly on the order book.
Skeptics also note that only a quarter of LIT’s 1 billion total supply is in circulation, leaving a $2.7 billion fully diluted valuation and a long unlock runway once emissions resume. Whether the trader recovers anything is doubtful. MEV operators have occasionally returned funds captured in extreme slippage events, but such refunds are voluntary and rare.
Crypto
The Top Cryptocurrency to Buy and Hold Right Now – AOL
Key Points
-
Hyperliquid is the leader of the decentralized perpetual futures market.
-
The trading activity it captures from that market generates a lot of fees.
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Those fees are almost entirely spent on buybacks of its own token.
Crypto bear markets, like the one we’re in right now, have a way of separating the wheat from the chaff in terms of what’s worth investing in. While the popular coins of yesteryear that were held up merely by the market’s hot air have now collapsed, many of them by 90% or more, a new generation of quality assets is rising, and they’re avoiding the flaws that made their predecessors also prone to having their value evaporate when the market cools.
One of those rising challengers is Hyperliquid (CRYPTO: HYPE), and it’s the top cryptocurrency to buy and hold at the moment. Here’s what’s special about it.
Missed Nvidia in 2009? This Rare Signal Is Flashing Again. In 2009, a “Double Down” signal flashed for a little-known chipmaker called Nvidia. For the first time in years, that same “Total Conviction” signal is flashing for a company 1/100th the size of Nvidia. Continue »
An investor sitting in a cafe leafs through a pair of notebooks.
Image source: Getty Images.
This coin has a tokenomics loop that pulls its weight
Hyperliquid is a decentralized exchange for financial derivatives that runs on its own blockchain. Users trade its most popular type of derivatives, perpetual futures, as well as spot token pairs, tokenized commodities, tokenized stocks, and even prediction markets, all from one platform.
Much as a company can buy back shares of its own stock to reduce the shares in circulation and thereby make the remaining shares more valuable, 99% of the platform fees on Hyperliquid go toward buying the network’s native token, Hype, on the open market. With more trading, more fees are generated, which in turn creates more buyback pressure. Around 46.8 million Hype, or 15.7% of its circulating supply, worth around $3.1 billion, has been bought back since the network’s launch in late 2024.
Its share of global perpetual futures trading volume (which includes platforms outside the crypto sector) is currently 7.4%. Among its peers running decentralized on-chain platforms for perpetuals, it controls 68.4% of the market by volume. It thus stands to capture a lot of the growth in perpetuals trading volume.
Another important capability is that, for a fee, anyone can deploy their own perpetuals market on Hyperliquid and then capture some of the fees generated from its volume. Those self-deployed markets make up around 33% of the network’s total volume, and they’re likely to be a driver of growth.
There isn’t a free lunch here
Every investment has risks, and Hyperliquid is no exception.
First, it can’t yet operate legally in the U.S., which locks it out of the largest pool of retail and institutional capital seeking exposure to its perpetuals. Its ceiling is capped for as long as this remains the case.
Second, and more importantly, the buyback mechanism could lose steam if trading volume drops, and competition from numerous other players, like Aster and Lighter, is fierce and intensifying. So competitors may well erode its early lead.
Finally, its supply isn’t fully circulating. 41.3% of its supply remains locked and is set to be issued in the future. If the pace of the buybacks doesn’t surpass the pace of the supply unlocks, holders’ value will be diluted tremendously. But so far, that hasn’t happened.
Hyperliquid is, in my view, the most compelling investment opportunity in crypto at the moment, and it’s worth buying and holding for at least a few years, with the understanding that it’s a pretty risky play.
Should you buy stock in Hyperliquid right now?
Before you buy stock in Hyperliquid, consider this:
The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Hyperliquid wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.
Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004… if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $418,761!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005… if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,195,804!*
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Alex Carchidi has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Hyperliquid. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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