
Anthropic has abruptly disabled its flagship AI models after a US government directive citing national security concerns.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX completed its landmark IPO on the Nasdaq on Friday, but crypto users seeking tokenized exposure to the IPO were left empty-handed after allocations fell through.
Reyna's goal highlights a shift in sports marketing, moving away from crypto-centric sponsorships towards more traditional branding strategies.
The post Gio Reyna scores best goal of World Cup with trivela golazo appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Derke's standout performance highlights the growing skill gap in esports, emphasizing the need for versatility and adaptability in top-tier play.
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TL;DR
Arbitrum governance is weighing a large funding proposal for the Arbitrum Foundation, with an active on-chain vote seeking $16 million in real-world assets, 1,700 ETH and 230 million ARB tokens to support another year of operations.
The proposal appeared in a June 11 Arbitrum governance roundup covering active and upcoming votes. It is described as “Continued Funding for the Arbitrum Foundation” and is intended to fund the Foundation beyond the period covered by AIP 1.1.
The Arbitrum Foundation sits at the center of the ecosystem’s operational structure, handling areas such as technology stacks, partnerships, ecosystem funding and costs associated with Arbitrum One and Arbitrum Nova.
The new request is substantial. According to the governance roundup, the proposal asks for $16 million in RWAs, 1,700 ETH and 230 million ARB tokens. That mix of dollar-denominated assets, ETH and native governance tokens reflects the different types of expenses and treasury resources involved in DAO-funded operations.
For token holders, the size of the request makes the vote more than an administrative item. It is a direct question about how much capital the DAO should allocate to the Foundation’s next year of work, and how aggressively Arbitrum should fund growth, technical development and ecosystem support.
The roundup says technical costs are projected to represent 54% of all anticipated expenses for 2027. That is a notable detail because Layer 2 networks are not simply marketing communities; they require ongoing engineering, infrastructure, security and ecosystem integration work.
Arbitrum One remains one of the most closely watched Ethereum scaling networks, while Arbitrum Nova serves a different segment of the ecosystem. Maintaining and developing these networks requires funding beyond headline grants or user incentives.
Still, DAO funding proposals can be sensitive. ARB holders may want clarity on expected deliverables, spending controls, transparency, reporting cadence and how unused funds would be handled.
The governance roundup says on-chain voting closes on June 25, 2026. Until then, the proposal remains subject to token-holder approval.
The outcome will help show how Arbitrum governance balances decentralization with the practical need to fund a central operating body. Many DAOs face the same tension: foundations can provide execution speed and continuity, but they also require large budgets and strong accountability.
For Arbitrum, the vote comes at a time when Layer 2 networks are competing not only on fees and throughput, but also on ecosystem depth, developer support and institutional credibility.
Large treasury allocations can affect market sentiment around a governance token, especially when the request includes hundreds of millions of native tokens. The proposal does not automatically mean those tokens will hit the market, but holders will still watch structure, vesting, spending and reporting closely.
If approved, the funding would extend the Foundation’s operating runway and give it resources to continue supporting the Arbitrum ecosystem through 2027. If rejected or challenged, it could force a revised proposal with tighter scope or different funding terms.
Either way, the vote is a meaningful governance moment for Arbitrum because it asks token holders to decide how much central operational support the network should have as it continues to compete in Ethereum scaling.
TL;DR
Crypto scammers are already positioning around the 2026 World Cup, with TRM Labs warning that fake ticketing portals, fixed-match betting schemes and speculative fan tokens are beginning to appear before the tournament.
In a June 11 report, TRM said it had identified four addresses connected to three live operations targeting football fans. The amounts received so far are small, but the firm framed the activity as early-stage scam infrastructure rather than a finished campaign.
The most direct consumer risk is fake ticketing. TRM described phishing-style ticket checkout pages that push users into crypto payment flows controlled by scammers. These pages can look like legitimate event portals, but payments are routed to addresses linked to fraudulent processors.
One Polygon ticket scam address cited by TRM received $1,562, mostly on April 1, 2026. Across the initially identified World Cup-related scam addresses, total receipts were under $1,700.
That small figure is important. It suggests the schemes are still being seeded and tested rather than already operating at large scale. But early detection matters because sports-related scams can grow quickly as major tournaments approach and search demand rises.
TRM also highlighted fixed-match betting schemes, where scammers promise insider information or guaranteed results in exchange for upfront crypto payments. According to the report, funds from those operations may be routed toward exchange custodial accounts.
The report also flagged speculative commemorative tokens, including a $WORLDCUP token listed on LBank. TRM said such tokens lack official FIFA affiliation and can expose users to pump-and-dump risk.
This is a familiar pattern in crypto. Major cultural events can become magnets for tokens that lean on branding, fan excitement or implied association without any official connection. Some may be harmless speculation, but others can be designed to trap retail buyers after early promoters exit.
For users, the key point is simple: event-themed tokens should not be treated as official just because they reference a major tournament, team or slogan. Verifying affiliation through official channels matters.
TRM said scammers continue to use cross-chain swaps and custodial exchanges as part of their operational flow. In one example, the report described movement from Polygon to Tron, a route that can complicate tracing for casual observers.
More broadly, TRM said scammers have moved $1.9 billion through cross-chain bridges to complicate tracing. The firm also cited approximately $35 billion flowing to fraud-linked wallets in 2025 and a record $158 billion in total illicit crypto activity that year.
Those larger figures are not specific to the World Cup scams. They are useful context for why even small early campaigns deserve attention: the infrastructure and playbooks used in small scams often resemble those used in larger fraud networks.
The 2026 World Cup is still ahead, but the crypto angle has already become more visible through sponsorships, betting markets, token speculation and cross-border payments.
That gives scammers a wide surface area. Fake ticketing appeals to fans, fixed-bet schemes target gamblers, and event-themed tokens target speculative traders looking for the next short-lived narrative.
TRM’s warning is not that World Cup crypto scams have already exploded. It is that the first signs are visible, and users should treat crypto payment requests around tickets, betting tips and unofficial fan tokens with extra caution before the tournament hype cycle accelerates.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is moving to dismantle a stock-trading rule that has governed Wall Street for two decades.
On June 11, the agency submitted a proposal that would rescind Rule 611 of Regulation NMS, the trade-through rule that requires trading centers to prevent stock trades from executing at prices worse than protected quotes displayed elsewhere. It would also eliminate Rule 610(e), which restricts locked and crossed quotations, along with related definitions.
For most of Wall Street, the proposal is a market-structure fight over routing, exchanges, wholesalers, displayed quotes, and execution quality.
For crypto firms and banks exploring tokenized shares, it is something more specific: the SEC is targeting one of the rules that made blockchain-based stock trading difficult to reconcile with the national market system.
Rule 611 was adopted in 2005 as part of Regulation NMS, a broad overhaul of US equity-market rules. The goal was to protect investors from having their orders executed at inferior prices when a better displayed quote was available on another exchange.
In practice, that system tied stock trading to the National Best Bid and Offer (NBBO), the best displayed bid and offer across protected venues. Broker routers, exchanges, and trading firms built systems around that obligation.
However, that framework is harder to apply to automated market makers (AMMs), the software-based trading pools that power much of decentralized finance.
AMMs do not work like Nasdaq, NYSE, or Cboe. They price trades through liquidity pools, bonding curves, slippage, and block-time execution.
Alex Thorn, Galaxy Digital’s head of research, pointed out that the rule was one of the largest structural barriers to DeFi-based trading of tokenized equities.
“An AMM cannot comply with 611 by construction,” Thorn said. It executes against a bonding curve at the pool price, with slippage and block-time granularity.
The issue is not simply a technical inconvenience. An on-chain pool cannot easily route intermarket sweep orders, ingest consolidated market data with the latency guarantees expected in US equities, or halt a swap because a better quote briefly appears on Nasdaq.
Under the current framework, a pool trading a tokenized version of an NMS stock could repeatedly print prices that differ from protected off-chain quotes. That creates the risk that the pool would be viewed as constantly violating the trade-through rule or functioning as an unlawful trading center.
Rule 610(e) raises a related problem. AMM prices can drift as liquidity shifts and trades move through a pool. That means on-chain prices could lock or cross the displayed NBBO, something current market rules are designed to prevent.
Tokenized stocks are blockchain-based representations of company shares or share-linked claims. Supporters argue they could allow around-the-clock trading, fractional ownership, faster settlement, collateral mobility, and broader international access.
The market has been small compared with traditional equities, but interest has increased as banks, crypto exchanges, and asset managers look for ways to bring regulated financial instruments onto public or permissioned blockchains.
Christopher Perkins, chief executive of 250 Digital Asset Management, said Regulation NMS and the NBBO have been among the biggest obstacles to unlocking tokenized equities. If Rule 611 is rescinded, he said, “it’s a whole new ballgame.”
He added:
“Major unlock for DeFi. Incumbents won’t be happy.”
That reaction reflects a view spreading among digital-asset firms: tokenized equities do not need a technological breakthrough as much as a regulatory pathway. Securities are already largely electronic.
In the US, ownership is recorded through a system of depositories, brokers, and transfer agents. Tokenization would change the ledger and settlement architecture, not the economic concept of a share.
The harder question is whether that new architecture can satisfy the obligations embedded in securities law and market-structure rules.
That is where the SEC proposal becomes important. If the trade-through rule is rescinded, the focus would likely shift more heavily toward best execution, the broker-dealer obligation to use reasonable diligence to obtain favorable terms for customers under prevailing market conditions.
Indeed, Thorn said that the framework is more compatible with blockchain trading than a per-trade NBBO protection requirement. A broker routing to an on-chain pool could review execution quality over time, compare venues, and document its routing process.
He said:
“That framework can accommodate an AMM. The old one never could.”
Meanwhile, the proposal also reaches beyond tokenized shares.
Max Resnick, lead economist at Anza, a Solana-focused development firm, said rescinding Rule 611 could affect long-running debates over exchange design, including asymmetric speed bumps.
Speed bumps are delays used by some trading venues to reduce the advantage of ultra-fast market participants. Asymmetric speed bumps treat different order types or market participants differently, which has made them contentious in the US market structure.
Resnick said Rule 611 made those models harder to approve because a venue with an asymmetric speed bump could post tighter quotes than venues without one. If those quotes were included in the consolidated tape, other exchanges could be forced to match prices they could not economically support.
His point underlines why the SEC move is not only about crypto. Rule 611 has influenced how venues compete, how liquidity is displayed, and how firms route orders. Removing it would change the incentives for exchanges and brokers across the equity market.
SEC Chairman Paul Atkins has framed the proposal as an overdue review of a rule he believes created unintended consequences. The agency said the change is intended to simplify market structure, reduce costs, and allow competition and innovation to shape equity trading.
That language has drawn attention from tokenization advocates because it overlaps with the SEC’s broader digital-asset agenda.
Atkins and Commissioner Hester Peirce have previously discussed an innovation exemption that could allow limited experimentation with tokenized securities trading through automated market makers and other on-chain systems.
Such an exemption could include safeguards such as volume limits, whitelisting, and a temporary framework while the agency considers permanent rule changes.
Thorn said the sequencing is important. In his view, the SEC is first seeking to remove one of the hardest market-structure obstacles and then address venue-registration issues through an innovation exemption.
At a high level, he said, the agency appears to be following the “Project Crypto” playbook.
Despite this potential rulemaking, the risk for investors is that tokenized stocks can mean many different things.
A token may represent a direct share, a custodial claim, a depositary receipt, a derivative, or a synthetic instrument that tracks a stock price without giving the holder voting rights, dividends, or a claim on the underlying security. Those distinctions matter, even if the token trades at a price close to the public share.
That is why rescinding Rule 611 would not, by itself, legalize tokenized equities. Firms would still need to answer questions about whether the product is registered, where it trades, who holds the underlying asset, how corporate actions are handled, whether investors receive shareholder rights, and how settlement works.
Thorn stated:
“Tokenized NMS stocks still face a host of other questions re: exchange/ATS registration questions, clearance and settlement, and many other rules not designed for defi or peer-to-peer trading.”
In view of this, Anthony Bassilli of Coinbase Asset Management described the SEC proposal as a clearing hurdle for tokenizing stocks in the US, while adding that the process remains important to watch.
That caution is shared by traditional-market groups. SIFMA, the trade group representing broker-dealers, investment banks, and asset managers, welcomed the SEC’s review but warned that the US market structure is made up of many interconnected pieces.
It said regulators should study the effect of any changes on investors, execution quality, transparency, and the development of overnight trading and tokenized securities.
Those concerns are likely to shape the public comment period. Critics may argue that removing Rule 611 could fragment markets, weaken displayed quotes, or make it harder for ordinary investors to know whether they received a fair price.
On the other hand, crypto supporters will argue that best execution, competition, and better market design can replace a rule they view as overly rigid.
The post SEC targets 20-year-old rule standing between Wall Street and blockchain trading appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Bitcoin’s largest buyers are no longer behaving like a reliable backstop for the largest cryptocurrency.
The exchange-traded funds, public-company treasuries, and Bitcoin-linked equities that helped define the market’s institutional era are showing signs of strain, just as the world’s largest digital asset struggles to hold above $60,000, one of its most closely watched price levels.
This persistent drawdown has prompted a broader reevaluation of the cryptocurrency’s role in institutional portfolios, raising questions about whether the current environment reflects a temporary profit-taking exercise or a structural retreat from digital assets.
The clearest reversal has come from US spot Bitcoin ETFs, which entered 2026 as one of the market’s most important drivers of demand.
For much of the period after their January 2024 debut, the funds were treated as evidence that traditional financial investors were steadily adopting Bitcoin.
Their inflows helped create a simple bull-market thesis that showed that access to Wall Street would bring more capital into a fixed-supply asset, giving Bitcoin a durable source of upward pressure.
However, that thesis has been tested heavily in recent weeks.
Data from SoSoValue shows US spot Bitcoin ETFs have recorded a five-week outflow streak totaling more than $5 billion.

This is further corroborated by Glassnode data, which shows the 30-day moving average of net ETF flows has fallen to -2,450 BTC per day, the fastest sustained pace of outflows since the products launched.
The size of that flow is significant because it exceeds the network's daily supply of newly created Bitcoin.
After the 2024 halving, miners produce about 450 BTC per day. A sustained ETF outflow of 2,450 BTC a day is more than five times that new supply, turning what had once been a source of absorption into a source of pressure.
Short bursts of ETF selling are not unusual in volatile markets. A negative 30-day moving average carries more weight because it smooths out daily noise and captures broader changes in positioning. Until that trend improves, institutional flows are less likely to provide support for Bitcoin prices.
Moreover, trading in the ETFs has also cooled. The 30-day moving average of daily volume in US spot Bitcoin ETFs has fallen to about $960 million from $4.4 billion in October, a 78% decline, Glassnode reported.

That decline points to more than simple profit-taking. It shows that speculative demand from traditional market participants has thinned even as redemptions have accelerated.
Lower volume can make price moves harder to absorb because fewer buyers are available when selling intensifies.
The ETF reversal has coincided with a slowdown in another major source of Bitcoin demand: digital asset treasury companies.
These firms, often listed publicly, raise capital or use balance-sheet resources to accumulate Bitcoin as a treasury asset. Their rise helped extend institutional adoption beyond ETFs, giving investors another way to express demand for Bitcoin through equity markets.
Like the ETFs, their buying has faded in June.
Glassnode analysts noted that while these companies remain net buyers overall, their daily accumulation has slowed to a fraction of the pace seen earlier in the quarter.
According to them:
“Corporate treasury accumulation has slowed sharply, with net inflows falling from peaks above $500 million per day to near-zero levels since June.”
This slower buying removes one of the market’s clearest sources of incremental demand at a time when ETF flows are also negative.
Some of the concerns have centered on Strategy, the largest public corporate holder of Bitcoin. The company disclosed that it sold 32 BTC in the final week of May, a small amount relative to its overall holdings but a symbolically important move because of its role in popularizing the corporate Bitcoin treasury model.
Strategy later returned to the market during the selloff, buying about $100 million worth of Bitcoin. However, the purchase did not stop the price from falling below $60,000.
Other BTC-focused companies have also drawn attention. Fold and Nakamoto have sold part of their Bitcoin holdings, adding to concern that the treasury-company trade is becoming less one-directional than it appeared during the rally.
While these sales do not amount to a broad retreat by corporate buyers, they show that some treasury firms are becoming more selective, more liquidity-conscious, and more willing to adjust positions as market conditions worsen.
That shift matters because the corporate treasury model depends partly on confidence. When share prices are strong, and investor demand is high, companies can raise capital, buy Bitcoin, and benefit from the perception that they are leveraged proxies for the asset.
However, when Bitcoin falls and demand for equities weakens, the model becomes harder to sustain.
Meanwhile, that slowdown is also evident in trading activity in these companies' equities.
Glassnode data show that the total daily trading volume for major publicly listed Bitcoin-holding companies, measured by the 30-day simple moving average, has dropped by 49% over about six months. Their volume fell from $34.2 billion in December to $17.4 billion as of press time.

That decline suggests investors are pulling back from the broader Bitcoin proxy trade, not just from the asset itself.
During stronger market periods, public Bitcoin holders often attract investors seeking leveraged exposure. Their shares could rise faster than Bitcoin's when sentiment improves because they combine treasury holdings, operating businesses, and capital-market optionality.
That made them popular vehicles for traders who wanted equity-market exposure to crypto without directly holding tokens. But as Bitcoin corrected, that demand has significantly weakened.
The institutional distribution has created a climate of widespread market unease, affecting participants across the wealth spectrum.
Data from CryptoQuant indicates a significant rise in exchange deposits from both large-scale holders and retail investors. Typically, such deposits are associated with an intent to sell.
As Bitcoin briefly breached the $60,000 floor, large holders, or “whales,” accelerated their movement of assets to trading platforms.

Over the past three months, whale inflows to the Binance exchange have averaged 5,280 BTC per day, a sharp increase from the 1,900 BTC daily average observed in March. Retail investors have mirrored this behavioral shift, with their average daily exchange inflows climbing to 410 BTC.
This parallel movement highlights how macroeconomic uncertainty levels the playing field regarding investor psychology.
The current environment marks the second major episode of elevated exchange deposits this year. A similar pattern emerged in early February, when Bitcoin tested the $60,000 threshold, with whale inflows spiking to 6,200 BTC and retail inflows reaching 570 BTC.
Such periods of heightened market stress historically facilitate the transfer of assets from short-term speculators to long-term holders, though the immediate effect is substantial downward price pressure.
This overall market has arrived as broader crypto trading activity has also cooled.
Santiment data show trading volume across the largest non-stablecoin crypto assets has fallen to levels last seen in mid-2024. The decline reflects a market in which many traders appear unwilling to chase prices higher or sell aggressively amid recent liquidations, macro uncertainty, and geopolitical risks.

For Bitcoin, that creates a two-sided setup.
On one side, a thin volume can leave the market vulnerable. When participation is low and large buyers are less active, even moderate selling can have an outsized effect on price. A negative ETF flow trend, slower treasury accumulation, and weaker proxy-stock demand can therefore weigh more heavily than they would in a stronger liquidity environment.
On the other side, low volume can also indicate exhaustion. Some of crypto’s stronger rebounds have followed periods when trading activity, attention, and conviction were weak. Markets often recover when positioning has already been reduced and sidelined capital begins to return.
That possibility keeps the current setup from being a straightforward bear-market call. Bitcoin continues to have institutional holders, public-company buyers, and long-term investors. Development across the broader digital asset industry has not stopped, and the ETF market remains an established bridge between Bitcoin and traditional finance.
But the immediate question is narrower. Bitcoin does not need institutions to abandon it to face pressure. It only needs the largest buyers to slow down, sell selectively, or stop absorbing supply at the same pace.
That is what the market is confronting now.
Until ETF flows stabilize, treasury-company demand recovers, or trading activity returns to Bitcoin-linked equities, the market may remain exposed to a more difficult reality: the institutional bid is still there, but it is no longer strong enough to carry the trade on its own.
The post Bitcoin price faces new risk as big buyers lose conviction appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Anthropic disabled access to its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models on June 12 after the US government issued an export control directive citing national security authorities to suspend availability for any foreign national.
The order forced Anthropic to comply immediately for all users, even though the company publicly disagrees with the underlying reasoning.
An export control directive is a US government order that restricts the transfer of specific technologies to foreign nationals. In this case, the order targets Anthropic’s Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models, including access by foreign national Anthropic employees inside the country.
The company received the directive at 5:21 p.m. ET on June 12. Anthropic confirmed that to ensure full compliance, access had to be disabled for every customer, while reiterating that all other Anthropic models remain available without any disruption.
“The US government, citing national security authorities, has issued an export control directive to suspend all access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the United States, including foreign national Anthropic employees. The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance. Access to all other Anthropic models will not be affected,” Anthropic said in an official statement.
The letter did not specify the exact national security concern. However, Anthropic believes the government became aware of a method for bypassing, or “jailbreaking,” Fable 5. The company reviewed a demonstration of the technique and called it minor.
Anthropic also noted that the vulnerabilities identified appear simple. Furthermore, other publicly available models, including OpenAI’s GPT-5.5, are able to discover similar flaws without requiring any bypass at all.
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Anthropic emphasized that Fable 5 launched with stronger safeguards than any previously deployed model. Before the release, the company worked with the US government, UK AISI, and multiple third-party teams to red-team the safeguards for thousands of hours.
No tester has yet found a universal jailbreak capable of bypassing Fable 5’s protections across a wide range of cyber capabilities. As a result, Anthropic adopted a defense-in-depth approach combining narrow safeguards, monitoring, and 30-day data retention for Mythos-class models.
“We are complying with the government’s legal directive and are removing access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all users. However, we disagree that the finding of a narrow potential jailbreak should be cause for recalling a commercial model deployed to hundreds of millions of people. If this standard was applied across the industry, we believe it would essentially halt all new model deployments for all frontier model providers,” Anthropic said.
So far, the government has provided only verbal evidence of a narrow, non-universal jailbreak. The technique reportedly involves asking the model to read a codebase and fix software flaws, a use case widely available across the industry.
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Anthropic argued that pulling a commercial model deployed to hundreds of millions of users over a narrow vulnerability sets a problematic precedent. If applied across the industry, this standard would essentially halt all frontier AI model deployments.
The company is fully complying with the directive but has called the action a likely misunderstanding. Anthropic plans to share more technical details over the next 24 hours and is working to restore Fable 5 and Mythos 5 access as soon as possible.
The post Anthropic Suspend Access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 After US Government Export Directive appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Anthropic’s newest AI model, Claude Fable 5, predicts Spain will beat France in the 2026 World Cup final on July 19. The model gives its own pick just an 18% chance of success.
BeInCrypto ran several simulations with the model to assess its predictive capabilities, as the tournament kicked off this week with 48 teams for the first time. Fable 5 built its prediction from tournament structure, squad depth, and almost a century of hosting history.
The model’s first argument concerns structure rather than talent. The expanded tournament features 104 matches over 39 days across the US, Canada, and Mexico. A champion must now win 8 matches instead of 7.
According to Fable 5, that extra knockout round changes the math. More matches mean more fatigue, more rotation, and more exposure to a single bad night. The model, therefore, weights squad depth and system reliability above peak individual talent.
Playing conditions form the second pillar. Venues such as Dallas, Houston, Miami, and Monterrey bring intense summer heat. Mexico City adds altitude, and travel distances exceed any previous edition.
“Spain’s positional game is an energy-conservation system. Teams that hold the ball rest on it, while teams that chase it suffer most in North American heat,” Claude Fable 5, said.
The model cites 3 reasons for backing Spain. First, La Roja proved their system under maximum pressure at Euro 2024. They beat Croatia, Italy, Germany, France, and England in a single tournament and won every match.
Second, the age curve favors them. Lamine Yamal turns 19 during the tournament, while Pedri and Nico Williams are 23. Rivals must instead manage decline, with Lionel Messi at 38, Cristiano Ronaldo at 41, and Harry Kane at 32.
Third, Spain carries no single point of failure. France without Kylian Mbappé becomes a different team. Spain’s output stays systemic, so losing any one attacker changes little.
France still reaches the final in the AI’s bracket. Two consecutive finals give Les Bleus the strongest recent track record in international football.
However, the model argues Didier Deschamps wins through risk minimization, producing tight knockout games decided by fine margins. Over 8 matches, Fable 5 expects that approach to fall one moment short against a side that dominates possession.
The model places Argentina and England in the semifinals. It rules out a title defense because no champion has repeated since Brazil in 1962. Winning squads age together, opponents study 4 years of film, and Messi’s minutes become an unsolved problem across a 39-day schedule.
England carries elite talent, but a structural question. Thomas Tuchel faces his first international tournament, and debut managers historically underperform their squad’s paper quality. The AI sees England losing a Euro 2024 semifinal to Spain in a rerun.
Brazil ranks as the most dangerous outsider thanks to Carlo Ancelotti’s knockout pedigree. Portugal follows if Ronaldo accepts a reduced role, while Morocco’s 2022 semifinal run gets labeled repeatable rather than a fluke.
Norway’s bench depth concerns the model despite Erling Haaland’s scoring power.
For the Golden Boot, Fable 5 picks Mbappé over Haaland. Norway’s likely ceiling caps Haaland near 5 matches, while Mbappé projects for 8 plus penalty duty.
Fable 5 then attacks its own forecast. Spain exited in the round of 16 in both 2018 and 2022 and fell at the group stage in 2014. Favorites win World Cups far less often than fans assume.
History adds a harder objection. Across 21 previous editions, Germany in 2014 remains the only European champion crowned in the Americas.
Every other tournament hosted there ended in a South American side winning. The model consciously overrides that pattern, arguing modern travel and conditioning have erased the old geographic penalty.
Its full probability table reads Spain at 18%, France at 14%, Argentina at 11%, England at 10%, Brazil at 8%, and Portugal at 7%.
“My own pick is 82% likely to be wrong. That is what a 48-team knockout tournament looks like. Any AI claiming certainty about a World Cup winner is performing, not predicting,” the AI added.
Wall Street reached a similar conclusion on Friday. Goldman Sachs published World Cup probabilities in a report led by Jan Hatzius, the bank’s chief economist and head of Global Investment Research.
Goldman’s model puts Spain first at 26%, ahead of France at 19% and Argentina at 14%. The bank weighs historical performance, scoring talent, momentum, geography, and other variables.
Its analysts also flagged a “winner’s slump,” cautioning that Argentina may underperform after lifting the 2022 trophy.
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Crypto-native prediction markets price the race much more tightly. On Polymarket, Spain leads at 17%, followed by France at 16%, Portugal at 11%, England at 10%, and Argentina and Brazil at 9% each.
Kalshi traders show a narrower gap. Spain trades at 17.7% on the regulated exchange, with France at 17.1% and rising. England and Portugal sit level at 10.8%, ahead of Argentina at 8.9% and Brazil at 8.5%.
The forecasts agree on the final but split on conviction. Goldman’s model shows the most confidence in Spain at 26%, while traders on both venues price a coin flip with France. Fable 5’s 18% lands almost exactly on the market price.
The clearest divergence is Portugal, which traders rate at 11% compared to the AI’s 7%. The 7 remaining knockout rounds will reveal whether bank models, AI reasoning, or crowd-priced markets read this World Cup best.
Disclaimer: The predictions in this article were generated by Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 AI model and reflect probabilistic estimates, not certainties. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute betting or financial advice.
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The post Anthropic’s Claude Fable Picks Its 2026 FIFA World Cup Champion appeared first on BeInCrypto.
On June 12, Securitize, a leading platform for tokenization of real-world assets (RWAs), announced that it is expanding its Securitize Tokenized AAA CLO Fund (STAC) to the Solana blockchain network.
BREAKING: @Securitize is expanding STAC, its tokenized AAA CLO fund, to Solana in collaboration with @BNYglobal. @Ethena plans to allocate $250M to the fund.
With more than $1.3 trillion in global CLO issuance, one of the world’s largest fixed-income markets is coming onchain. pic.twitter.com/4vwC2blTY1
— Solana (@solana) June 12, 2026
The fund will be launched on Solana in collaboration with Bank of New York (BNY) Mellon, which will work as the main custodian for the fund’s underlying assets.
Ethena Labs is planning to allocate $250 million to the Securitize Tokenized AAA CLO Fund. It will be done through its native stablecoin USDe. This is one of the biggest investments in tokenized structured products on the Solana blockchain till now.
“By bringing STAC to Solana, we’re making institutional-grade credit available on one of the fastest and most widely used blockchains in the world,” stated in the official thread shared by Securitize.
The Securitize Tokenized AAA CLO Fund was first introduced on Ethereum in October 2025. STAC is providing exposure to the mix of USD-based collateralized loan obligations, which comes with the highest AAA credit rating.
The fund is designed in a way that investors can earn impressive returns while keeping risks low. The fund is using a strategy linked to the study of fundamentals linked to the underlying loans, and it does not use borrowed money to increase returns.
According to the official data, STAC is holding up around $102.16 million in assets under management (AUM) with a 30-day yield of approximately 4.50%.
Nick Ducoff, a leading member of the Solana Foundation, stated in the official announcement that, “Solana is the premier destination for institutional capital moving onchain. The launch of STAC on Solana highlights the growing convergence between traditional financial assets and blockchain-based markets. We’re excited to support the next generation of tokenized financial products being built on Solana.”
The arrival of STAC on the Solana blockchain is making the network a perfect fit for institutional investors in the blockchain ecosystem. According to the report, the global issuance of collateralized loan obligations has soared to over $1.3 trillion when it combines the United States and Europe.
This expansion of STAC on Solana will be put in the leaderboard along with other assets such as the BlackRock BUIDL fund and Bitwise’s Crypto Carry Fund (USCC).
The announcement of STAC’s launch on Solana comes amid the explosive growth of tokenized funds. BlackRock BUIDL is one of the leading tokenized funds, which is also issued by Securitize. According to rwa.xyz, BUIDL is holding up around $2.64 billion in assets under management across various blockchains.
On June 11, Backpack Securities announced the launch of tokenized SpaceX stocks on the Solana blockchain via SunriseDeFi.
On June 11, Backpack, a leading cryptocurrency exchange on Solana, announced that tokenized SpaceX’s share $SPCX will be available on Solana via SunriseDeFi. This announcement is coming at a time when SpaceX is going to make its debut on Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX on June 12.
$SPCX goes live on @Solana via @SunriseDeFi following SpaceX’s Nasdaq debut.
Issued by Backpack Securities. On/off-ramp SpaceX shares between traditional brokers and Solana. pic.twitter.com/fau7rmg9zC
— Backpack 🎒 (@Backpack) June 11, 2026
This tokenized version of SPCX will be issued by Backpack Securities, which is a regulated platform of the Solana-based Backpack ecosystem. This tokenized stock issued on Solana will represent 1:1 ownership of actual shares issued by a public company.
The announcement will allow users to transact money in and out between regular brokerage accounts and Solana wallets. They can trade these tokenized stocks on the blockchain-based platform at any time.
Backpack Securities has also confirmed the launch with SunriseDeFi, which is a gateway for assets developed by Wormhole Labs. Sunrise is also a major platform that provides support for the creation of official markets on Solana.
SpaceX is planning to roll out the biggest initial public offerings in the history of the company. The company has decided to keep its IPO price at $135 per share, which will help the company gain a valuation of around $1.77 trillion. It is expected to raise around $75 billion, which will help it to surpass previous records such as the Saudi Aramco listing. The company filed its paperwork with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in May 2026. This IPO has sparked excitement among investors, and some reports are suggesting major oversubscription.
The IPO has managed to generate a significant amount of buzz amongst the retail investors. The buzz is mainly because SpaceX has reserved around 30% of the offering for the retail investors. Moreover, Goldman Sachs is leading the underwriting process.
The biggest IPO in history is coming at a time when there is a boom in tokenized securities sector, thanks to growing regulatory clarity around it under the leadership of pro-crypto U.S. President Donald Trump. The tokenized version of SpaceX shares will allow crypto holders to gain exposure to the rocket and satellite company through digital tokens.
Solana has become a leading blockchain for tokenized stocks. In 2025, Backed Finance announced the launch of its xStocks on Solana, which helped it to bring more than 60 United States stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) onto the blockchain. There are already tokenized stocks available for popular companies like Tesla, Apple, Nvidia, and others.
Traders can use their tokenized stocks as collateral for lending protocols such as Kamino or on decentralized exchanges such as Jupiter and Raydium.
According to rwa.xyz, the total distributed value of tokenized stocks is currently around $1.43 billion. In less than 8 months, xStocks has surpassed $25 billion in total transaction volume. Ondo Finance is currently holding up around $867 million in tokenized stock value.
The main reason behind the growth in tokenized stocks is the major progress in regulatory frameworks for digital assets. Backpack Securities is working as a regulated United States brokerage platform, which ensures that the tokenized assets are linked back to real shares in its custody.
This approach is directly linked to the regulatory frameworks decided by the Securities and Exchange Commission for tokenized securities, which allows transfer agents and broker-dealers to distribute tokenized shares on blockchain networks.
TL;DR
Fireblocks says institutional Ethereum staking is moving into a more standardized phase as the amount of ETH committed to validators continues to rise across the network.
In a June 11 post, the crypto custody and infrastructure company introduced ETH Staking Link, a standardized interface intended to make it easier for staking providers to connect validator infrastructure with Fireblocks’ institutional platform. The company framed the launch as part of a broader push to make staking operations more consistent for asset managers, custodians, exchanges and other professional crypto firms.
The numbers behind the shift are substantial. Fireblocks said more than 36 million ETH is now staked, representing roughly 30% of Ethereum’s circulating supply, with around 1 million active validators securing the network.
That scale has changed how institutions approach staking. For smaller users, staking can look like a simple yield mechanism. For large platforms and custodians, it becomes an operational system involving validator selection, slashing controls, key management, liquidity planning, reporting and client-level permissions.
Fireblocks said staking volume on its own platform has more than doubled over the last six months. While that is a platform-specific figure, it fits the broader trend of staking becoming part of institutional Ethereum exposure rather than a niche technical feature.
The company said ETH Staking Link expands support to Blockdaemon, P2P.org and MAVAN, while existing providers Figment and Kiln remain available. Fireblocks described the interface as a way to reduce friction for providers and institutions that need consistent integration standards across staking infrastructure.
Blockdaemon is described in the post as securing more than $110 billion across blockchain infrastructure, while P2P.org is described as supporting more than $10 billion. MAVAN is presented as the largest single staking operation globally.
The main point for Ethereum is not simply the number of providers. It is that staking is becoming modular infrastructure, with custody, validator operations and institutional controls increasingly handled through standardized rails.
Fireblocks also pointed to the post-Pectra validator environment. Ethereum’s Pectra upgrade, activated on mainnet in May 2025, introduced support for compounding validators, sometimes referred to as 0x02 validators.
Under the original staking model, validator balances were built around a 32 ETH structure. The newer compounding validator design can support balances up to 2,048 ETH, making it easier for larger operators to manage staking positions without splitting capital across as many separate validator units.
For institutions, that can simplify operations and reduce fragmentation. It can also make staking more attractive to larger ETH holders that want yield exposure but need cleaner infrastructure and reporting.
Ethereum staking is now a core part of the network’s economics. As more ETH is committed to validators, staking infrastructure becomes increasingly important for both security and institutional market access.
Fireblocks’ update does not change Ethereum’s protocol by itself. But it does show how service providers are building the operational layer around the network. For institutions, the next stage of staking may be less about whether they can stake ETH at all, and more about whether they can do it with the controls, integrations and risk standards expected in professional finance.
The primary source for this article is Fireblocks Blog
TL;DR
Aave Labs has opened a governance proposal to add Circle Wrapped Bitcoin, known as cirBTC, as collateral across Aave V3 Core and Aave V4 Core on Ethereum, putting one of DeFi’s largest lending markets directly into the growing debate over institutional Bitcoin wrappers.
The proposal, posted to the Aave governance forum on June 10, asks the community to consider onboarding cirBTC after Circle launched the ERC-20 token on Ethereum mainnet on June 8. According to the proposal, cirBTC represents native Bitcoin and is backed 1:1 by BTC held with a regulated Circle entity, with reserves segregated from Circle’s corporate assets.
The pitch is straightforward: if Aave approves the listing, users would gain a new Bitcoin-backed collateral asset inside the protocol’s core Ethereum deployments. That would put cirBTC into the same broader conversation as other wrapped Bitcoin products used across lending, liquidity and structured DeFi strategies.
Aave Labs said in the governance post that it has no financial relationship with Circle and is not being compensated for the proposal. That detail matters because collateral onboarding proposals can carry obvious commercial implications, especially when they involve assets backed by major centralized issuers.
The proposal is also not an immediate listing. It is currently at the ARFC stage, which is designed for community review and risk discussion. If the community broadly supports the move, the process would still need to proceed through a Snapshot vote and then a formal Aave Improvement Proposal before implementation.
Wrapped Bitcoin has long been one of the main bridges between Bitcoin liquidity and Ethereum-based DeFi. Traders and lenders use BTC wrappers to borrow stablecoins, earn yield, route collateral and build strategies without selling Bitcoin exposure.
Circle’s entry into this category adds a new institutional wrapper with a familiar issuer behind it. That does not automatically mean users will prefer cirBTC over existing alternatives, but it does create another option for protocols looking for regulated-custody-backed Bitcoin collateral.
For Aave, the question is less about branding and more about risk. Governance participants will likely want clarity around reserve transparency, redemption mechanics, liquidity, oracle support, counterparty risk and how quickly cirBTC can build reliable market depth.
The proposal’s early stage means the market should not treat the listing as complete. Aave’s collateral decisions typically involve risk parameters, supply caps, liquidation thresholds and oracle configuration, all of which can shape whether an asset becomes widely used or remains a limited listing.
Still, the timing is notable. Circle launched cirBTC on Ethereum only days before the Aave proposal appeared, suggesting that major DeFi integrations could become an early battleground for the new asset.
If approved, cirBTC would give Aave another route for Bitcoin-backed borrowing and could add pressure to the wider wrapped Bitcoin market. For now, it is a governance proposal rather than a finished deployment, but it is one worth watching as institutional issuers move deeper into DeFi collateral markets.
The primary source for this article is the Aave Governance Forum at Aave Governance Forum