Ethereum Lending Just Hit $28 Billion. Aave’s Weekend Crash Test Proved Why
Ethereum’s on-chain lending markets crossed $28 billion in January 2026. That’s not just growth—it’s a tenfold jump from early 2023 lows.
Ethereum’s on-chain lending markets crossed $28 billion in January 2026. That’s not just growth—it’s a tenfold jump from early 2023 lows.
Markets don’t usually sell off like this. Crypto dropped. Gold fell. Silver tanked. Stocks cratered. All at once. This wasn’t rotation into safer assets. This was panic
The crypto market just lost $128 billion in 24 hours. Bitcoin is testing $70,000 support, and Zcash crashed 20% in a single day.
Markets don’t usually crash in unison. But this week proved different. Bitcoin dropped alongside gold, silver, and equities in a synchronized sell-off that caught everyone off
Bitcoin’s brutal 40% plunge from its October peak has traders asking one question: Is this a full-blown crypto winter? Michael Burry thinks so. The investor who predicted the
BitMine’s bold Ethereum accumulation strategy isn’t winning over shareholders. The stock crashed 25% in just five days, extending its monthly loss past 33%. Now trading around
Tether just walked back a massive fundraising plan. That’s putting its long-hyped IPO dreams on ice. The stablecoin giant originally sought $15-20 billion at a jaw-dropping $500
The crypto market just hemorrhaged $115 billion in 24 hours. Bitcoin’s plunge toward $72,900 triggered the kind of cascade that wipes out overleveraged traders in minutes.
Zcash holders are heading for the exits. Fast. The privacy coin just shed nearly 70% of its trading volume in three weeks. Worse, technical indicators confirm the breakdown isn’t
Ethereum bounced 4.6% off its recent low near $2,160. On the surface, that looks like relief after a brutal 37% crash since mid-January.