Good Morning Lions,
Circle just got the rug pulled out from under them, and it's the kind of move that tells you everything about where stablecoin power is shifting in crypto. More than 140 companies — Coinbase, Visa, Mastercard, BlackRock — just announced Open USD, a new stablecoin coalition. Circle's stock tanked 16% on the news, extending their monthly slide to 39%. To me this reads as a clear signal: the incumbents aren't waiting for Circle to figure out their next move. They're building around them.
What's interesting is the timing. Circle's been the go-to stablecoin play for years, but when you've got Coinbase's distribution, Visa's rails, and BlackRock's capital all moving in the same direction, the narrative flips fast. I'm not saying Circle's dead — but I am saying the competitive moat just got a lot smaller. The real question now is whether Circle pivots to being infrastructure, or whether they try to compete head-on with a coalition that's got way more firepower. Either way, the market's already voting.
Circle's CRCL down 16% on Open USD coalition news. Crypto fear hits 11 — extreme anxiety territory. EU backs Ukraine with €6.6B, targets Russian crypto. Supreme Court shields Fed independence. Tesla pivots Fremont to Optimus robots. Trump family reports $1.4B crypto income.
TL;DR: Coinbase, BlackRock, Visa, and 137 other firms just announced Open USD, a new stablecoin backed by major institutional players. Circle's CRCL stock fell 16% on the news, down 39% for the month. The coalition move signals a major shift in stablecoin power dynamics — incumbents are building around the old guard, not waiting for them.
TL;DR: The EU confirmed €6.6 billion in military funding for Ukraine after Hungary dropped its veto, and simultaneously proposed its 21st sanctions package targeting Russian banks and crypto platforms. The move underscores how crypto's become a front-line tool in geopolitical conflict — and how regulators are tightening the screws on sanctions evasion.
TL;DR: The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 on June 29 that President Trump cannot remove Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, reinforcing the central bank's independence from presidential pressure. The decision carves out special protections for the Fed and signals the judiciary's commitment to insulating monetary policy from political whiplash.
TL;DR: Tesla converted its Fremont factory's Model S and X production line to manufacture Gen 3 Optimus robots, with footage showing the assembly operation live as of July 1. The company's targeting 1 million units annually. This is a massive capital reallocation bet on robotics over traditional auto production.
TL;DR: Trump's family collected over $1.4 billion from crypto projects in 2025, per financial filings submitted in June 2026. The bulk came from World Liberty Financial token sales and meme coin royalties. The disclosure raises hard questions about regulatory conflicts of interest when a sitting president has direct financial exposure to the space he's regulating.
TL;DR: The Magyar Nemzeti Bank lowered its benchmark rate to 6% on June 24, aiming to stimulate economic activity and reduce borrowing costs. The move hints at a broader European pivot toward easing, though economists warn of inflation risks. For crypto, rate cuts usually mean more liquidity hunting for yield — and that's traditionally bullish.
The fear reading is real, but I've seen these bottoms before — and they don't always hold. I'm watching the next 72 hours. — Khal
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More crypto news, daily, at news.leodex.io. The Daily LEO · Written by the LEO Team, Edited by Khal.