Web3 Weekly — June 29–July 6, 2026
2026/7/6 · 9:30

Web3 Weekly — June 29–July 6, 2026

MiCA moved from deadline to enforcement this week, narrowing EU crypto access around licensed CASPs while Binance limited EU services and USDT exited regulated venues. The US remained slower-moving, with CLARITY missing its July 4 target, while funding concentrated around Venice AI, onchain derivatives, AI infrastructure, and reported mining/public-market activity. Infrastructure signals centered on Starknet v0.14.3, Taiko’s bridge reopening, Loopring’s shutdown, Ethereum Institutional, and Strategy’s first reported BTC sale.

MiCA is no longer a deadline story. It is now the operating constraint for European crypto access. In the coverage window from June 29, 2026 09:31 to July 6, 2026 09:00 UTC-5, the EU moved from transition to enforcement, Binance began limiting EU services, USDT disappeared from regulated EU venues, and the authorized CASP market narrowed to a few hundred firms. 1 2
The practical read-through is direct: EU liquidity, stablecoin access, and customer migration now depend on licensing status, not on pre-MiCA registration. The US track stayed less decisive. The CFTC and SEC kept moving on enforcement and coordination, but the CLARITY Act missed the July 4 target and Galaxy Research cut 2026 passage odds to 50%. 3
Funding remained selective rather than broad. Venice AI raised the standout venture round, while Q2 data showed crypto investor participation falling to a six-year low. 4 5 Infrastructure news had the same split: Starknet shipped a mainnet upgrade, Taiko reopened its bridge after an exploit, Loopring shut down, and Ethereum added an institutional front door while the Foundation reduced headcount and budget. 6 7 8 9 10

Regulation and market structure

MiCA’s first week: fewer venues, more compliance gravity

MiCA’s transition period ended on July 1, 2026, with no extension. ESMA’s late-June statement told unauthorized crypto-asset service providers to wind down EU activity in an orderly way, stop onboarding and marketing, and restrict existing customers to selling, transferring, reallocating, or closing positions. 1 11 ESMA also narrowed the path for non-EU firms by warning that reverse solicitation cannot be used as a replacement for authorization. 11
The authorized market is much smaller than the pre-MiCA market. ESMA’s provisional late-June register showed 244 authorized CASPs, while CASPTracker.eu showed 283 authorized CASPs by July 6 as post-deadline entries continued to appear. 1 12 Germany led with 57 authorizations, followed by France and the Netherlands with 26 each, and Malta with 17. 1 Only 14 entities held the full order-book trading platform license, the strictest operating tier for exchange-style venues. 13
Binance is the most visible test case. Binance withdrew its Greek MiCA application on June 24, then stopped EU spot trading, margin trading, new registrations, Earn, and staking from July 1 while keeping withdrawals open. 2 France accounted for roughly 2 million affected Binance users, and Italy, Poland, and Spain also received restriction notices. 14 Binance saw $1.23 billion of net outflows in the week from June 29, its largest weekly outflow in more than three years, after roughly $3.2 billion of June net outflows. 15
The company’s public line is that the EU route has changed, not ended. Gillian Lynch, Binance’s head of Europe, told CoinDesk, "Binance is not leaving Europe. We may just have a different pathway to being authorized." 2 For customers and counterparties, that still leaves a near-term operational gap: access depends on which entity has the license, in which member state, and for which service category.
Stablecoins changed faster than exchange licensing. USDT was delisted from regulated EU venues including Bitstamp, Kraken, and OKX after Tether chose not to seek MiCA authorization. 1 Revolut said it would disable USDT deposits by the end of July and convert remaining USDT balances to fiat by August 31. 16 Visa data showed USDC transfer volume at $1.21 trillion in June, about twice USDT’s volume, and USDC volume was three times USDT volume in the first week of July. 16
Spain and Poland show how uneven implementation can be inside a single regime. Spain’s CNMV chair said there would be "no exceptions or extensions," and BitBase suspended operations on June 30 while awaiting a licensing decision. BitBase operated more than 30 stores and more than 200 crypto ATMs. 17 18 Poland remained the outlier: President Karol Nawrocki vetoed the national Crypto-Asset Market Act three times, leaving the KNF unable to process CASP applications and about 1,298 old-register VASPs frozen without a domestic licensing route. 19
The new regime is already being reopened for review. The European Commission’s MiCA 2.0 consultation runs through August 31, 2026, with stablecoin rules, DeFi treatment, real-world asset tokenization, and staking among the review areas. 1 The near-term compliance result is narrower access. The medium-term regulatory result is another rulemaking cycle around the parts of the market MiCA still handles awkwardly.

US policy: enforcement moved, Congress did not

The CFTC ordered Netrios LP Ltd. to pay $1.75 million and Red Acre Ltd. to pay $750,000 on June 29 for illegal off-exchange leveraged or margined retail commodity transactions with US customers who were not eligible contract participants. 20 The SEC filed parallel charges against both firms based on the same conduct, giving the action a cross-agency read-through for offshore platforms that solicit US retail users. 20
The OCC gave Morgan Stanley preliminary conditional approval to charter a New York-based national trust bank for digital asset services, including custody, fiduciary staking for custody customers, and collateral administration for an affiliate’s digital asset lending. 21 Final OCC approval is still required before operations can begin. 22
Congress supplied less closure. The CLARITY Act missed the White House’s July 4 signing target, and the Senate is in recess until July 13. Galaxy Research cut 2026 passage odds to 50%, down from 60% in early June and 75% in May, citing the Senate calendar as the main risk. 3 The open issues remain familiar: conflict-of-interest language, developer protections, and stablecoin-yield treatment. 23
SEC Chair Paul Atkins used a June 30 Economic Club of New York speech to frame the SEC’s "ACT strategy" around clearer digital asset rules, SEC/CFTC coordination, and capital-market modernization. 24 The speech did not announce a new rule proposal or enforcement action, so the practical next signal remains procedural: committee text, floor timing, or a visible compromise that can get to 60 Senate votes.

Funding and deal signals

This week’s funding tape had one breakout venture round, several smaller infrastructure and market-structure bets, and a reported mining placement before a planned public listing. The broader market stayed concentrated: Q2 2026 had 651 unique crypto investors, the lowest quarterly count since 2020 and far below the 2,564 peak in 2022. 5 Cryip reported $7.73 billion of Q2 Web3 and crypto fundraising across 252 deals, down from $9.27 billion in Q1. 25
Project / companyAmountRound / typeLead or major investorsSector and read-through
Venice AI$65MSeries ADragonfly led; North Island Ventures, Coinbase Ventures, F-Prime, Archetype, Liquid2 Ventures, and Morgan Creek participatedPrivacy-focused AI and crypto-token-linked consumer app. Venice reported 3M+ monthly active users, more than $70M annualized revenue, and profitability. 4
Extended$12.5MStrategic roundeToro led; Jump Crypto and Amber Blanc participatedOnchain perpetuals. eToro plans to integrate Extended’s perpetual futures engine into Zengo, its self-custody wallet. 26
THEA$8MVenture roundMaven11 Capital and Spartan Group led; ManifoldTrading, HackVC, and Fisher8 Capital participatedSolana-linked AI coordination layer for risk-market inference. THEA said it serves 3,000+ enterprise customers and processes 400M+ monthly queries. 27
Ionic Digital~$400MPrivate placementAttestor, Oaktree Capital Management, and Sachem Head Capital Management ledBitcoin mining and public-market preparation. The placement was reported ahead of a planned Nasdaq listing under ticker IOND. 28
Techdollar$3MPre-seedNoLimit Holdings, Reforge VC, and individual investorsBlockchain private credit. The platform uses stablecoin-style issuance for loans backed by equity in private tech companies. 28
Adjacent$2.5MPre-seedVanEck, Night Capital, Digital Currency Group, UFO Holdings, and Maven11Prediction-market indices. Adjacent launched RED and BLUE US election index series during the week. 29
Venice AI is the funding item with the most differentiated structure. Series A investors received an 8.98% equity stake, a vesting grant of 1.5 million VVV tokens, and warrants for 5 million more VVV tokens exercisable over eight years. 4 Erik Voorhees said Venice wanted to launch product and token before selling to VCs, saying, "We wanted to do the opposite." 4
The funding mix points to a narrower investable map: AI-token hybrids, onchain derivatives, prediction-market infrastructure, stablecoin-style credit, and mining balance sheets still attracted checks, while public token sales fell to $58 million in Q2, down 85% quarter over quarter. 25 For VC readers, that is a sourcing filter: rounds with distribution, compliance rails, or institutional workflows are getting more attention than generic token launches.

Infrastructure, protocols, and operating risk

Network / protocolDateUpgrade, launch, or eventUser or builder impact
StarknetJuly 6v0.14.3 mainnet activation, with planned downtime around 8:10 a.m. UTC. The release adds Keccak support for client-side proving, a Blake-based SNOS hash replacing Pedersen, 1.5-second blocks, and dynamic L2 gas base fees tied to STRK price. 6Builders face breaking changes, including RPC v0.8 deprecation, while users get faster blocks and groundwork for EVM-key private transactions. 6
Upbit / STRKJuly 5Upbit suspended STRK withdrawals at 2:00 p.m. UTC because of Starknet network issues. 30The suspension created centralized-exchange withdrawal friction around the upgrade window, with no resumption timeline reported by July 6. 30
LoopringJuly 2Loopring fully shut down its DEX and operations; the official site states, "Loopring Has Shut Down." 8The closure ends one of Ethereum’s earliest zk-rollup projects after TVL fell from roughly $250M at peak to about $8M before shutdown. 8
TaikoJuly 2Taiko reopened its bridge after an approximately $1.7M exploit traced to an exposed SGX enclave attestation key in a public GitHub repository. 31The bridge reopened with 1:1 backing restored and affected users made whole; withdrawal quotas were added after the recovery. 7
Ethereum InstitutionalJuly 2Ethereum Institutional launched as an independent nonprofit backed by Joseph Lubin, BitMine Immersion Technologies, and SharpLink Gaming. 9The group gives banks, asset managers, and enterprises a dedicated Ethereum contact point outside the Ethereum Foundation. 9
The Starknet upgrade is the week’s clearest builder-facing release. Keccak support matters because it brings EVM-signature workflows closer to Starknet’s proving environment, while the hash change and shorter block times change both security posture and application latency. 6 The operational caveat is that a major exchange paused withdrawals one day before activation, so teams relying on STRK liquidity should reconcile exchange status before assuming normal flows. 30
Taiko’s recovery is a different lesson. PyramidLedger described the incident as "a single committed credential collapsing an otherwise sophisticated cryptographic trust model," because the exposed SGX key allowed malicious prover enrollment. 31 That makes the reopened bridge useful as a risk marker, not just a recovery note: credential handling remains part of L2 security, even when the cryptography is sound.
Ethereum’s institutional track also moved while the Foundation was shrinking. The Ethereum Foundation eliminated 54 positions, about 20% of its workforce, and cut its annual budget by 40% from $130 million to about $78 million. 10 Ethereum Institutional’s launch on July 2 therefore reads as an ecosystem capacity shift: protocol stewardship, enterprise access, and R&D funding are being distributed across more organizations. 9
Base Beryl stays background for this issue because the hard fork and launch-day outage fell in the prior window. During the current window, no further instability was reported after the June 25 outage and June 27 B20 activation. 32

Market and treasury signals

Strategy Inc. sold 3,588 BTC between June 29 and July 5, at an average sale price of about $60,773 per BTC versus a cost basis of about $75,476 per BTC. 33 The sale generated about $135.2 million of proceeds for preferred stock dividends and dollar reserves, while Strategy reported a Q2 digital-asset loss of $8.32 billion and reduced total holdings to 843,775 BTC. 33 For traders, the change is not the percentage of holdings sold. It is the break in the prior no-sale narrative and the introduction of balance-sheet two-way risk.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs offered a short-term counter-signal. Farside data showed +$223.5 million of net inflows on July 2, ending a ten-day outflow streak. Fidelity’s FBTC took in $166.0 million, ARK 21Shares’ ARKB took in $91.8 million, VanEck’s HODL took in $4.4 million, and Franklin’s EZBC took in $1.7 million, while BlackRock’s IBIT saw a $40.4 million outflow that day. 34
One positive ETF day does not reverse June’s flow problem. Reuters reported that Citi cut its 12-month bitcoin target from $112,000 to $82,000 and reduced its 12-month net ETF inflow assumption from $10 billion to zero, citing negative ETF flows, weaker investor appetite, and slow progress on US crypto legislation. 35 The next useful signal is whether July 2 becomes the start of several inflow sessions or stays a single rotation day inside a weaker ETF tape.

What to monitor next

  • EU operators should verify whether each venue is authorized for the exact MiCA service category they use, because only 14 entities held full order-book trading platform licenses by the post-deadline count. 13
  • Stablecoin users in Europe should reconcile USDT exposure before platform conversion deadlines, especially Revolut’s August 31 auto-conversion date. 16
  • US policy watchers should focus on Senate floor timing after July 13, because the CLARITY Act’s problem is now procedural capacity as much as policy text. 3
  • L2 teams should treat upgrade windows as liquidity events as well as engineering events, because Starknet’s activation coincided with a major exchange withdrawal pause. 30
Cover image: image from The Block

参考来源

  1. 1The Block: Europe's MiCA crypto regime is fully in force: Here's who wins and loses
  2. 2CoinDesk: Binance says MiCA should be judged by who it licenses, not who it excludes
  3. 3Crypto Briefing: Galaxy Research cuts CLARITY Act passing odds to 50% amid Senate calendar constraints
  4. 4The Block: Venice AI raises $65 million Series A at $1 billion equity valuation led by Dragonfly
  5. 5CryptoNews / CryptoPotato: Crypto venture activity narrows as investor participation hits 6-year low
  6. 6StarkWare on X: Starknet v0.14.3 mainnet launch thread
  7. 7TradingView / Cointelegraph: Taiko reopens bridge after $1.7M exploit, says users made whole
  8. 8Loopring Official Blog: Loopring Has Shut Down
  9. 9Unchained: Ethereum Institutional Launches as Wall Street Front Door
  10. 10The Motley Fool: Is Ethereum in Trouble or Not? EF Changes Are Bullish For ETH
  11. 11Zyphe: Binance MiCA licence: locked out of the EU
  12. 12CASP Tracker: MiCA license list 2026
  13. 13Stack & Story: Survival of the Licensed
  14. 14Yahoo Finance / CCN: Binance halts crypto trading in France
  15. 15NorriWire: Crypto exchanges 05.07: $1.23B leaves Binance
  16. 16Kryptocasinos: Revolut drops USDT under EU MiCA rules
  17. 17CoinGeek: For whom the MiCA bell tolls
  18. 18CoinGabbar: Spain's BitBase Exchange Suspension Under MiCA Rules
  19. 19NorriWire: Poland - the only EU state with no CASP regime
  20. 20CFTC: CFTC Orders Two Foreign Firms to Pay $2.5 Million for Illegal Off-Exchange Transactions with U.S. Customers
  21. 21Paul Hastings: Senate Market Structure Draft Expected in July, OCC Clears a Wall Street Bank's Digital Asset Trust Charter and CFTC Sues Kentucky Over Prediction Markets
  22. 22Yahoo Finance / Simply Wall St: Morgan Stanley wins conditional OCC approval for a national digital asset trust bank
  23. 23Tech Times: Senate Crypto Bill Misses July 4: Three Unresolved Fights, Three Weeks Left
  24. 24SEC: Remarks at the Economic Club of New York
  25. 25Cryip: Web3 and Crypto Fundraising Report for Q2 2026
  26. 26CoinDesk: eToro invests in onchain derivatives platform Extended as brokers race into DeFi
  27. 27Crypto Briefing: THEA raises $8M to build Solana-based coordination layer for predictive AI network
  28. 28KuCoin: Crypto Weekly Funding Report: 9 Deals, Venice AI Raises $65M in Series A
  29. 29Incrypted: Follow the Money — June 2026
  30. 30CryptoRank / BitcoinWorld: Upbit temporarily halts Starknet STRK withdrawals July 5
  31. 31PyramidLedger: Taiko Bridge $1.7M Exploit: Exposed SGX Key on GitHub
  32. 32MEXC: Major Blockchain Upgrades Still Scheduled for 2026
  33. 33BlockTempo: Strategy Inc. sells 3,588 BTC at a loss, Q2 $8.3B deficit
  34. 34Farside Investors: Bitcoin ETF Flow (US$m)
  35. 35Reuters: Citi cuts bitcoin, ether forecasts as ETF flows turn negative

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