Michelle Keegan shared an adorable snap of her daughter, Palma, on her Instagram yesterday (Monday, June 22).
The Netflix star, 39, welcomed Palma with partner Mark Wright in March last year.
Michelle shared an adorable snap (Credit: Instagram)
Michelle Keegan shares adorable snap of Palma
Taking to her Instagram yesterday, Michelle shared a rare glimpse of baby Palma with her 7.3 million followers.
In the snap, only the back of Palma’s head can be seen.
Adorably, the one-year-old has a little clip in her hair, holding it up.
“She’s a hair icon,” Michelle captioned the heartwarming post.
Michelle’s other pics of her daughter
Michelle rarely shares pictures of her daughter on her Instagram, opting to keep her largely out of the spotlight.
Last month, she did however share some pictures of Palma during a trip to Disneyland.
In the pictures, Palma can be seen waving to Cinderella, leaning against a painting of Mickey Mouse, and even walking!
“Pure magic,” Michelle captioned the post.
Fans went wild in the comment section. “Aw she’s walking already goes so fast,” one fan commented.
“So magical,” another said. “O-my-god! Your little beauty walking!! Where does the time go! You have an amazing family,” a third wrote.
“Oh-my-god! Just look at her! Checking out the gorgeous outfit… just like her mum…, another added.
Michelle launched her new range recently (Credit: Cover Images)
Michelle’s new range features touching nod to Palma
The star’s trip to Disneyland came after she launched her latest collection with online retailer Very, which includes a very sweet nod to Palma.
Last month, she headed back to Majorca – the place that inspired Palma’s name – to shoot her latest Very collection.
And, launching it, she said that the island holds a very ‘special place in her heart’.
Baby Palma was named after the island’s capital, and Michelle decided to announce that she was pregnant with her daughter with a photoshoot on a Majorcan beach.
Read more: Michelle Keegan takes on role of fearless policewoman as she stars opposite hunky actor Douglas Booth in The Blame
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Morgan Stanley has moved to claim the lowest fee position in two crypto ETF categories simultaneously, filing second-amended S-1 registration statements with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for spot Ethereum and Solana funds that each carry a 0.14% annual sponsor fee. The filings, submitted on June 18, 2026, set 0.14% sponsor fees on the proposed spot Ethereum and Solana ETFs — the lowest disclosed rate in each US market. Both funds will trade on NYSE Arca under tickers MSSE and MSOL.
The move extends a consistent pricing playbook Morgan Stanley has applied across its crypto product lineup and puts direct fee pressure on incumbents in both markets.
What the Filings Contain
The two products — the Morgan Stanley Ethereum Trust (MSSE) and the Morgan Stanley Solana Trust (MSOL) — are structured as grantor trusts that hold spot ETH and SOL directly. The 0.14% sponsor fee is calculated on net asset value (NAV), accrues daily, and is paid monthly from trust assets. Investors see the fee reflected in the fund’s tracking performance rather than as a separate line-item charge.
These are the second round of amendments for both filings, which were originally submitted in January 2026. The June 18 filing marks the first time a specific fee was confirmed for either product; prior amendments in March and May added structural details like the proposed MSOL ticker and the staking component, but left the fee blank. Additional amendments typically indicate active dialogue between an issuer and the SEC and generally signal that a launch is approaching.
Staking Built Into Both Products
Beyond spot price exposure, both ETFs include staking provisions that make them yield-generating instruments rather than passive tracking vehicles. Morgan Stanley’s filings direct 95% of staking rewards back to fund shareholders, with the remaining 5% allocated to named infrastructure providers: Figment Inc., Galaxy Blockchain Infrastructure LLC, and Coinbase Canada Inc. This structure effectively provides both ETFs with yield-enhanced spot exposure, which is particularly significant for Solana, where native on-chain staking yields are meaningfully higher than Ethereum’s.
The filing also noted that staked ether remains exposed to slashing — the network penalty for validator faults — a risk disclosure regulators have been closely scrutinizing as staking mechanics become more common in ETF structures.
Fee Comparison: Below Every Existing Rival
Grayscale’s Mini Ethereum Trust currently holds the lowest fee among Ethereum ETFs at 0.15%, while Franklin Templeton’s Solana ETF carries the lowest Solana fee at 0.19%. Morgan Stanley’s proposed 0.14% undercuts Grayscale by one basis point on Ethereum and Franklin Templeton by five basis points on Solana. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas described the pricing as the cheapest available for both asset classes in the US and globally.
One basis point may appear insignificant in isolation, but in the institutional ETF market it carries real weight. Fee-sensitive allocators operating under return mandates or cost caps systematically favour the cheapest equivalent product, and a global fee record creates a marketing anchor that draws assets regardless of the magnitude of the difference.
Existing US spot Ethereum ETF products from issuers including BlackRock and Fidelity have generally proposed fees in the 0.20–0.30% range, meaning Morgan Stanley’s MSSE would undercut the broader Ethereum ETF field by a wider margin still.
The Bitcoin Playbook, Applied Again
Morgan Stanley’s MSBT launched on April 8, 2026, as the first spot Bitcoin ETF from a major US bank, pulling in over $100 million in its first eight days entirely from self-directed clients. MSBT charges 0.14% annually, the lowest fee of any Bitcoin ETF on the market, undercutting BlackRock’s IBIT at 0.25%, Grayscale’s Bitcoin Mini Trust at 0.15%, and Bitwise at 0.20%.
Within its first month, MSBT attracted $193.6 million in total inflows with zero outflows during that entire period. The early performance validated the pricing strategy: late market entry offset by aggressive fee positioning captured meaningful share from incumbents. Morgan Stanley is applying that same logic to Ethereum and Solana, entering each market after other issuers have established products but doing so at a fee level no existing fund matches.
Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust Price Performance (Source: Morgan Stanley)
Market Position and Approval Outlook
If approved, MSSE would become a new entrant in an established Ethereum ETF market, and MSOL would join the Solana ETF category. The second amendment status of both filings is a meaningful procedural signal. S-1 amendments at this stage typically reflect an issuer and the SEC working through final structural questions — in this case, primarily around staking mechanics, the 5% provider fee allocation, and custody arrangements.
Morgan Stanley oversees $9.3 trillion in total client assets across 16,000 financial advisors, a distribution network that no pure asset manager can replicate. If MSSE and MSOL receive approval and are made available to advisors on Morgan Stanley’s wealth management platform — something MSBT was not during its initial weeks — the potential inflow base expands substantially beyond what fee leadership alone would drive.
Broader Context: Fee Competition Intensifies
The MSSE and MSOL filings arrive as the crypto ETF market continues to expand rapidly. The fee war that began in the Bitcoin ETF category following the January 2024 spot BTC approvals is now playing out on a second front across Ethereum and Solana simultaneously. Issuers that entered the Ethereum ETF market in mid-2024 and the Solana ETF market more recently now face direct pressure to either cut fees or differentiate on other dimensions — staking yield, liquidity, or brand.
For investors, Morgan Stanley’s filings represent two products that combine the lowest available fee in each category with built-in staking yield, delivered through a regulated brokerage account wrapper. Approval timelines remain subject to SEC review, but the structural direction is clear: the cost of crypto ETF exposure is continuing to fall, and Morgan Stanley is leading that compression.
I’ll admit that when I first saw gameplay of Meccha Chameleon, I didn’t think much of it. It seemed like yet one more janky prop hunt–inspired hide-and-seek multiplayer game. But anything that reached over 300,000 concurrent players on Steam in the middle of a random afternoon is worth checking out, and I’m happy I did because this odd painting game is far more exciting and clever than I expected, even if it is also very, very janky.
Meccha Chameleon is a new online multiplayer game (created, seemingly, by two developers) that pits a group of hunters with shotguns against a larger group of players tasked with hiding around different maps and using a painting tool to camouflage their bodies with the environment. The hunters have a limited amount of time to find and shoot all of the hiding players. And when I first heard this, I assumed that like prop hunt, Meccha Chamelon would be about hiding somewhere out of sight and not moving for a few minutes, which is boring and the main reason I rarely play prop hunt modes. But that’s not how Meccha Chamelon works at all.
Instead, hiding in this new popular Steam online game isn’t how you win. Instead, you need to hide in a spot where you will be visible to the hunters (though hopefully unnoticed by them), as you only get points for being in those players’ direct line of sight. Once I realized this, my goal in Meccha Chamelon was to hide in the most out in the open spots, like against a box in the middle of a room, and to use paint to mask my location. If nobody saw me for a bit, I’d use the taunt button to whistle and bring them over to where I was to get more points. Risky, but extremely exciting. Watching a group of players run by my hidden little guy, painted like a wall or something, over and over again never got dull.
And that’s the other big difference between Meccha Chameleon and other prop hunt games. In those games, you’re simply searching for a prop to turn into. In Meccha Chameleon, you have to take the time to actually paint your character to help them blend into the environment. The painting controls in the game are simple enough that within a few minutes, I understood what I could do, but to truly master it, you’ll need to work fast and carefully, as there is no undo. And brilliantly, once the hunters enter the map and start looking for hiding players, you can still keep painting and moving. I often would keep adding details and texture to my character to make them blend in even better with a woodgrain wall or brick floor.
The painting controls are a bit janky and wonky, like a lot of Meccha Chamelon. I frequently encountered matches that didn’t move forward because the game just got stuck in the lobby. I had a match in which players fell into a void, with one player typing in chat, “LOL again.” I also saw some players hiding inside of level geometry, which the game tries to stop, but no system is perfect. I also imagine there’s some cheating going on as I saw some hunters who seemed a bit too good at finding hidden players in seconds.
I’m not sure I’ll play 200 hours of Meccha Chamelon, but I’m happy to have it installed on my PC right now as it’s a cheap, fun, low-stakes multiplayer game that, despite some janky edges, offers up an exciting experience. Plus, it’s nice to finally have all my years of using MS Paint and Photoshop with a mouse finally pay off. And I mean, how many games let you become a set of horse testicles?
Given its reflection of contemporary culture and reliance on special effects, science fiction is one of those genres that can age like fine wine or bad milk. Shows that looked amazing when they were first broadcast can look laughably dated within a matter of years. Sci-fi stories that may have seemed innovative or boundary-pushing at the time could become glaringly out of touch for modern audiences. Like any other medium, sci-fi television can fail to measure up and endure over the passage of time.
Fortunately, we’re not focusing on sci-fi shows that have aged poorly but ones that have held up in the decades since their debut. For the purposes of this article, we’re focusing on series that aired the majority of their respective episodes before the year 2000. These are the shows that still entertain modern audiences through timeless storytelling and enduring iconography.
These are 10 classic sci-fi shows that are still worth watching today, each standing the test of time in their own way.
The Twilight Zone (1959)
CBS
Not every episode of “The Twilight Zone” was one within the sci-fi genre, with the 1959 anthology series occasionally venturing into overt fantasy instead. But some of the best and scariest “Twilight Zone” episodes were within the realm of science fiction, as creator Rod Serling continued his exploration of the creative possibilities of imagination. This ranges from aliens disguising their voracious plans within a cookbook to an unassuming man embarking on a time travel story to his own childhood. As with the rest of the series, these stories varied in tone and stakes, but each furthered the wondrous legacy of Serling’s creation in their own way.
“The Twilight Zone” is one of those classic shows whose impact on the medium and lasting quality can’t be understated. Serling ushered in a more sophisticated level of television storytelling and did so with a rotating cast across standalone stories each week. As a testament to its expansive influence, several movies have been inspired by “The Twilight Zone,” reinterpreting and streamlining its themes. The ultimate anthology show, “The Twilight Zone” has spawned imitators and revivals, but the original 1959 series is still the one to revisit.
The Outer Limits (1963)
ABC
While “The Twilight Zone” touched on sci-fi and horror often, the 1963 anthology series “The Outer Limits” delved more readily into those genres. Airing for two seasons, the show featured rotating casts and standalone stories but placed a greater emphasis on sinister and bleaker storytelling. Among the show’s more overtly memorable sci-fi stories include “The Zanti Misfits” and “Corpus Earthling,” both revolving around alien invasions. These episodes are also markedly more violent than many “Twilight Zone” tales, highlighting the difference in tone and narrative approach despite sharing similar genres and formats.
There is a more distinctly pulp quality to the types of stories told by “The Outer Limits” compared to the more imaginative “Twilight Zone.” This isn’t to denigrate the 1963 series, but it was often more focused on delivering chilling tales than building a story around a major plot twist. To that point, Stephen King thinks “The Outer Limits” is scarier than “The Twilight Zone” and he’s right, though he’s likely to acknowledge that Serling wasn’t always trying to terrify his audience either. An eerie and darker alternative to Serling’s anthology series, “The Outer Limits” explores the creepier side of sci-fi to great effect.
Doctor Who
BBC
With a history dating all the way back to 1963, “Doctor Who” is one of the most expansive sci-fi franchises in television. The series follows an extraterrestrial, known simply as the Doctor, who travels through space and time but has a special affinity for Earth and humanity. Teaming up with a whole line of companions in their exploration of the cosmos, the Doctor contends with frightening enemies, including the merciless Daleks and nightmarish Weeping Angels. The Doctor regularly regenerates their physical form, not only facilitating a recasting of the character behind-the-scenes but providing the show with a fresh shot in the arm.
With a legacy spanning over six decades, it can be tough to know where to start watching “Doctor Who,” but the series offers plenty of jumping-on points. However, even if you start with episodes from the 21st century, the lore from 1963 remains intact and ripe for a revisit. As the show gradually modernized, it didn’t shy away from its campier elements but, instead, embraced them while subtly repositioning them. “Doctor Who” is a television institution and its recognition of its varied mythos only adds to its enduring appeal.
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
20th Television
As underwater photography improved significantly, many movies in the ’50s and ’60s began to more readily showcase underwater cinematography, like the 1958 show “Sea Hunt” or the 1965 film “Thunderball.” One quirky sci-fi show from the ’60s that offered its own aquatic spin to the genre was 1964’s “Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea.” Created by disaster movie virtuoso Irwin Allen, the series was a spin-off to the 1961 film of the same name, following the adventures of a futuristic submarine. The crew encountered all sorts of paranormal phenomena as it cruised the globe, including extraterrestrials and supernatural monsters, while dealing with Cold War intrigue.
Like many shows of its era, “Voyage of the Bottom of the Sea” gets more fantastical as it progresses, particularly in its two final seasons. But even as weird as the series gets, the show’s lead actors, Richard Basehart and David Hedison, provide it with its solid grounding. If you’re looking for moody international realpolitik reflecting the Cold War, those first two seasons deliver it, while the latter two have fun with the overarching premise. Allen’s most consistently solid ’60s series, “Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea” is a lot of watery fun.
Star Trek: The Original Series
CBS Studios
It’d be easy to list all the pre-“Star Trek: Enterprise” series here, but we’re keeping it to the show that started it all, “Star Trek: The Original Series.” Premiering in 1966, the show follows humanity’s growing role in the galaxy during the 23rd century. Captain James T. Kirk (William Shatner) commands the starship Enterprise on a five-year exploratory mission across the stars while accomplishing missions on behalf of the Starfleet. Kirk is joined by an absolutely iconic crew, most notably the starship’s first officer, half-Vulcan scientist Spock (Leonard Nimoy).
“Star Trek” is the greatest sci-fi franchise of all time and “The Original Series” cemented that distinction early on. With imaginative storytelling, memorable characters, and philosophical and social themes, the show rose above its genre contemporaries significantly. Though some of the effects and stories seem a bit dated now, overall, the show holds up as a foundational piece of television sci-fi. There’s an argument that “The Original Series” is the best “Star Trek” show and, in introducing the universe that legions of fans know and love, it’s easy to see why.
Battlestar Galactica (1978)
Universal Television
While the 2000s saw a critically acclaimed reimagining of “Battlestar Galactica,” the original 1978 series doesn’t get enough love today. The show features a group of human refugees fleeing from the Cylons, a group of sentient machines out to eradicate humanity for good. Leading the spacefaring flotilla from the titular flagship, the Galactica, is Commander Adama (Lorne Greene) as they search for Earth to establish a new home. The Cylons continue to pursue the Galactica and surrounding human refugees, joined by the human traitor Baltar (John Colicos).
While bringing plenty of space opera escapism, with noticeable similarities to “Star Wars,” the original “Battlestar Galactica” set the template for the franchise to follow. For a ’70s network television show, the special effects hold up fairly well and were certainly impressive for their time. The show also dove into stories about religion, albeit not nearly at the same level as Ronald D. Moore’s revival 25 years later. A more overtly swashbuckling take on the space opera genre, the original “Battlestar Galactica” is breezy fun with a timeless conflict at its core.
Quantum Leap (1989)
NBC
Bridging the gap between ’80s and ’90s, “Quantum Leap” made a star out of its lead actor Scott Bakula and kept things fresh thanks to its premise. Bakula plays Sam Beckett, a scientist who tests out an experimental time travel machine that he designed. Instead, Beckett finds himself temporarily possessing different people throughout history with each leap that he takes. Guided by a hologram of his friend Al Calavicci (Dean Stockwell), Beckett uses every leap as an opportunity to help his host body fulfill their respective destiny.
Thanks to its body-hopping structure, “Quantum Leap” gently reinvents itself with every episode, changing up time periods and supporting casts. Bakula and Stockwell provide the show with a strong constant, with Bakula particularly good in subtly shifting his performance with every leap. The series features an ending that fans still argue about today, regarding Beckett’s final fate, but that just underscores how much the show gets us to care about its protagonist. Time-traveling sci-fi with a body-swapping twist, “Quantum Leap” keeps things fresh with its reliable narrative setup.
Babylon 5
Warner Bros. Television
As a reminder that critics don’t always get it right, “Babylon 5” is a ’90s sci-fi show with awful reviews that’s actually worth watching. Set during the 23rd century, the show takes place a decade after humanity was nearly destroyed by an extraterrestrial race known as the Minbari. After the conflict’s conclusion, the Earth Alliance takes a greater role in the galaxy, with the story centered on a titular strategic space station. As the cosmos descends into war once again, the crew of Babylon 5 plays a pivotal role in the galaxy’s future.
With its increasingly complex interstellar politics and intrigue driven by strong, intertwining character arcs, “Babylon 5” was ahead of its time. The show was powered by ambitiously scaled storytelling without losing its human focus years before the “Battlestar Galactica” revival similarly leveled up the genre on television. Each season advances the overarching story in a meaningful way, upping the ante and moral complexity when interstellar war inevitably breaks out. A mature meditation on political intrigue and conflict on a galactic scale, “Babylon 5” is one of the best sci-fi shows of all time.
The X-Files (1993)
Fox
When it comes to ’90s sci-fi, there are few shows that capture the decade’s distinct vibe better than “The X-Files.” Premiering in 1993, the show is named for a special branch within the FBI dedicated to investigating paranormal cases around the country. This unit includes Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson), with Scully initially skeptical of the existence of the supernatural. By contrast, Mulder is a devoted believer in the paranormal and is convinced that the government is covering up the existence of aliens, a suspicion that proves true.
Right from its stylized opening title sequence, “The X-Files” brings a clear ’90s aesthetic to the proceedings that evokes the eerie mood that the show is all about. But debuting just a couple years into the modern procedural boom led by “Law & Order” in 1990, Fox’s sci-fi horror series mixed that formula with an effective monster-of-the-week structure. Much of the show’s charm is built around the chemistry between Duchovny and Anderson, and after Duchovny walked away from “The X-Files” after seven seasons, it was never the same. One of the defining network sci-fi shows of the late 20th century, “The X-Files” is a sterling franchise that endures middling movies and revivals.
Cowboy Bebop (1998)
Sunrise
There’s a lot of great ’80s and ’90s sci-fi anime that could’ve very easily made this list, like “Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam” and “Neon Genesis Evangelion.” But honestly, the one that we keep coming back to is 1998’s “Cowboy Bebop,” which feels better than ever decades after its run. The show is set in a future where humanity has colonized most of the solar system, with bounty hunters helping rein in notorious crooks from lawless areas. Among the most prolific bounty hunters in the cosmos is Spike Spiegel and the crew of the Bebop, with Spike’s violent past gradually coming to light.
True to its title, there is a jazzy energy that permeates throughout “Cowboy Bebop” as it places Spike and his friends on atmospheric adventures across the system. This, coupled with the fact that every “Cowboy Bebop” episode feels unique, really makes the show a singular experience in the medium. Some stories in the series feel like neo-noir, neo-Western, psychological horror, and even slapstick comedy in their tonal delivery. An absolute masterclass in anime storytelling, “Cowboy Bebop” is a show that’s stood the test of time incredibly well.
Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), the Fortune 500 company that owns the New York Stock Exchange, and OKX, one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, have announced the formation of a landmark 50-50 joint venture aimed at building next-generation infrastructure for tokenized and digitally native financial products. The venture, to be called OKXICE, will be co-chaired by former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and ICE Senior Vice President of Futures Markets Trabue Bland. The announcement, made on June 22, 2026, marks one of the most significant convergences of traditional finance and blockchain technology to date.
A New Architecture for Global Markets
The joint venture, subject to regulatory approvals, will operate as a U.S.-registered broker-dealer and futures commission merchant (FCM), with its primary function being to give OKX’s 120 million customers access to ICE futures markets and NYSE tokenized equities. In plain terms, the deal is designed to bring the full weight of Wall Street’s most trusted infrastructure into crypto-native trading environments — at a scale the industry has not seen before.
For crypto traders accustomed to digital assets, the appeal is obvious. Tokenized equities could offer fractional ownership, near-instant settlement, and broader market access without leaving the platform they already use. Former Governor Cuomo put it more vividly: “You can virtually walk through the front door of the New York Stock Exchange through your smartphone, and you can do that seven days a week in a way you never could before.”
Beyond the core broker-dealer and FCM structure, the joint venture will explore what the announcement describes as “adjacent opportunities for regulatory-compliant blockchain-enabled markets” — language that leaves the door open for tokenized bonds, commodities, and other asset classes to follow equities onto the shared infrastructure.
ICE and OKX Launch Joint Venture for Tokenized Markets
The Relationship’s Origins
Monday’s announcement did not emerge out of thin air. The groundwork was laid on March 5, 2026, when ICE announced an approximately $200 million minority investment in OKX at a valuation of roughly $25 billion, a deal that came with a board seat for ICE and a framework for commercial collaboration, particularly around tokenized equities distributed through OKX’s platform.
Earlier in May 2026, OKX launched perpetual futures linked to ICE’s Brent and WTI crude oil benchmarks, offering an early glimpse of how the relationship could evolve. Oil futures products are already in active development at the new venture, with securing the FCM license and broker-dealer registration topping the near-term priority list.
The arrangement also runs in both directions. ICE plans to license OKX’s spot price data for use in its U.S.-regulated futures products. This bidirectional data and market access agreement underscores the depth of integration the two companies are pursuing.
High-Profile Leadership
Few elements of this deal have drawn more attention than the appointment of former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo as co-chair. Cuomo, who also served as New York State Attorney General and U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, began working with OKX in 2023 and is expected to spend the majority of his time overseeing the joint venture’s operations.
Cuomo has framed the venture in broad societal terms. “The next chapter of financial markets will be defined by how well innovation and government regulation can move forward together,” he said. “I am personally excited by the prospect of the societal impact that blockchain technology can lead to: the democratization of finance, bringing basic financial services to underserved populations.”
Trabue Bland echoed the ambition from ICE’s side. “ICE’s global benchmarks and regulated market technology have earned the trust of institutions and traders everywhere and now, through our partnership with OKX, we are working towards extending that reach to OKX’s 120 million retail traders,” he said.
Regulatory Footprint and Compliance
Regulatory credibility is central to the venture’s value proposition. OKX holds licenses across the U.S., UAE, European Economic Area, Singapore, and Australia, giving the joint venture a regulatory footprint that most crypto-native firms lack. ICE, meanwhile, operates some of the most critical clearing and settlement infrastructure in global finance, including ICE Clear Credit and ICE Clear Europe.
That said, OKX’s U.S. history carries weight. A federal investigation into OKX was settled in 2025 for more than $500 million, with the underlying company admitting guilt to charges that it had operated illegally in the U.S. market. The exchange subsequently relaunched its U.S. operations. The joint venture structure, operating under ICE’s regulated umbrella, appears to be a deliberate effort to ground OKX’s expanded U.S. ambitions firmly within the compliance framework regulators demand.
Operating as a U.S.-based broker-dealer and futures commission merchant, the venture is expected to comply with strict financial oversight requirements — a regulatory foundation seen as essential for attracting institutional investors, many of whom have been cautious about entering digital asset markets due to concerns around compliance, custody, and market integrity.
ICE’s Broader Digital Asset Push
The initiative extends ICE’s broader push into digital assets, which includes backing Bakkt and a multibillion-dollar investment in prediction market Polymarket. The OKXICE joint venture is the most operationally ambitious move yet in that strategy, positioning ICE not merely as a financial backer of crypto firms but as an active builder of blockchain-enabled market infrastructure.
Both companies have also outlined plans for broader work on clearing, risk management, and multi-chain custody — signaling that the venture’s scope extends well beyond a simple trading access agreement.
What Comes Next
The planned product rollout is targeted for the second half of 2026, pending regulatory approvals. Until broker-dealer and FCM registrations are secured, the venture remains a future roadmap rather than a live product. Both companies appear committed, however, to executing what could become the defining institutional framework for how tokenized financial products are built, regulated, and distributed globally.
The U.S. Senate passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act 85-5 on Monday night, sending the bipartisan bill toward a quick House vote.
Tucked inside is a provision barring the Federal Reserve from issuing a central bank digital currency through the end of 2030, with a carve-out for private stablecoins.
There is no active U.S. CBDC project, and both Fed Chair Kevin Warsh and President Trump have come out against one.
A U.S. freeze on a government-run digital dollar is suddenly close to becoming law, carried there by an unrelated housing bill.
The U.S. Senate on Monday night passed the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act in an 85-5 vote, a bipartisan package meant to boost housing supply and stop large investors from snapping up single-family homes. Tucked away in the bill is a provision that would bar the Federal Reserve from issuing a central bank digital currency through the end of 2030.
The measure says the Fed “may not issue or create a central bank digital currency or any digital asset that is substantially similar” to one, “directly or indirectly through a financial institution or other intermediary.” Even after the ban lapses in 2030, the central bank would need explicit authorization from Congress to pursue a digital dollar.
The language carves out private stablecoins, exempting any “dollar-denominated currency that is open, permissionless, and private,” and leaving issuers like Circle and Tether, now governed by last year’s GENIUS Act, untouched.
The U.S. and CBDCs
There is no active federal effort to build a CBDC. The Fed never moved past the research stage, and both Chair Kevin Warsh and President Donald Trump have publicly opposed a digital dollar, which conservative critics cast as a financial-surveillance tool. Trump signed an executive order in January 2025 directing his administration not to pursue one.
Senators framed the vote as a rare bipartisan win, with Banking Committee Chair Tim Scott (R-SC), who wrote the bill with Ranking Member Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), telling the floor that “housing prices are too darn high and housing supply is too low.”
Ahead of the bill’s passage, Warren said the result proved “that bipartisan legislation doesn’t have to be the weakest, most milquetoast agreement,” and has called it the most significant housing package in three decades, while Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said it “shows Americans how we should govern.”
The floor speeches focused on housing supply and corporate landlords, rather than the digital-dollar ban traveling with the bill.
That ban was attached as a political sweetener to win over House Republicans and hurry the package along. The Senate first added it in March, passing that version 89-10, and negotiators struck a deal last week on reconciled text after months of wrangling with the House.
Some House conservatives have argued the freeze should be permanent rather than temporary, with Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) saying “CBDCs are bad for everyone.” House leaders are nonetheless expected to take up the bill quickly, possibly as soon as Tuesday, before it reaches Trump’s desk.
The U.S. retreat from a CBDC flies in the face of global trends. The European Central Bank is preparing a digital euro, with a pilot expected next year and a full launch targeted for 2029, and China has been expanding cross-border use of its e-CNY, signing up 26 financial institutions this month, per Reuters. Three countries have launched a CBDC and dozens more are piloting or developing one, according to the Atlantic Council.
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On June 22, five former senior Ethereum Foundation researchers announced Ethlabs, an independent nonprofit R&D lab with a mission to make Ethereum the settlement layer of the global economy.
The co-founders, Ansgar Dietrichs, Barnabé Monnot, Caspar Schwarz-Schilling, Josh Rudolf, and Julian Ma, framed the launch around Ethereum, the protocol, and ETH, the asset.
Their announcement names ETH “the most valuable, programmable store of value” and lists research into ETH monetary properties among Ethlabs’ early work areas, a posture the Foundation, in its traditional credible-neutrality framing, avoided taking directly.
The backer list includes BitMine and SharpLink, two ETH treasury companies whose public-market narratives depend on ETH being treated as institutional-grade capital, and lists them as supporters alongside Joseph Lubin, Anchorage, Octant, and SNZ.
Funders will have accountability but not control over the research agenda, with final direction resting with Ethlabs leadership, quarterly reporting, and independent annual audits.
Ethlabs componentWhat it showsWhy it mattersFoundersFive former senior Ethereum Foundation researchersGives the lab protocol credibility and makes it part of the EF succession storyMissionMake Ethereum the settlement layer of the global economyFrames Ethlabs around adoption, not just public-goods maintenanceETH languageCalls ETH a programmable store of value and includes ETH monetary researchMakes ETH value capture explicit in a way the EF has historically avoidedBackersBitMine, SharpLink, Joe Lubin, Anchorage, Octant, SNZShows support from ETH-aligned capital, institutions, and ecosystem power centersGovernance guardrailsFunders get accountability but not control; Ethlabs sets the research agendaAddresses the key legitimacy risk: capital-backed stewardship without sponsor capture
The vacuum Ethlabs is walking into
Trent Van Epps, a former EF contributor, published an essay arguing that the Foundation succeeded in communicating that it should not be Ethereum’s sole center of power, but has not clearly defined who inherits responsibility when it steps back.
He warned of a potential core protocol funding crisis within three to nine months, estimating that core capacity requires around $30 million annually across client teams, research, and coordination.
Van Epps noted that the EF needs a full reset of the social, political, and economic contracts between stakeholders, extending well beyond reducing its own footprint.
That matches what became visible through individual departures before the Ethlabs announcement. Several co-founders posted directly that they were leaving the EF to join the new lab.
Yuga Cohler said he was sad to see dysfunction at the Foundation and that it was losing leaders faster than it could replace them. Dankrad Feist said the people leaving still believe in the EF’s stated strategy, placing the failure squarely in management execution.
Ethlabs is one answer to the funding and legitimacy gap Van Epps described: an independent lab formed by former EF researchers, targeting the specific areas that the EF’s narrowing mandate leaves exposed.
ETH value capture becomes a protocol goal
ETH treasury companies are now funding Ethereum R&D, and their business models create explicit alignment between the protocol’s success and the ETH price.
BitMine disclosed annualized ETH staking revenue of approximately $258 million in a June 2026 SEC-filed release. If firms like BitMine directed even a fraction of their staking revenue toward public-goods research, the math would cover a meaningful share of the $30 million annual core-dev figure Van Epps cited.
Funding Ethereum R&D turns ETH treasury firms into actors in Ethereum’s political economy, with incentives to push the protocol toward outcomes that increase ETH’s institutional utility via settlement finality, monetary clarity, and DeFi liquidity depth.
Marc Zeller responded that Ethereum will be fine even if the EF hits a wall, because others will pick up the work.
Haseeb Qureshi framed it from the venture side as EF builders spinning out while the Foundation narrows its mandate. Joe Lubin described the emerging structure as a network of “steward nodes,” a multi-node future, which is exactly the language in Ethlabs’ own announcement.
Ethereum carries roughly $157 billion in stablecoin market cap and about $14.9 billion in active RWA market cap, per DefiLlama data. Stablecoins, tokenized assets, DeFi, and eventually AI-agent commerce all require neutral settlement infrastructure.
Ethereum’s ETH-aligned funders are backing Ethlabs because their holdings gain value if Ethereum wins institutional settlement and their preferred base layer holds that position against competing L1s or L2s.
BitMine’s $258 million in annualized ETH staking revenue is more than eight times Ethereum’s estimated $30 million annual core-dev funding need.
What the bull and bear cases look like
The bull case holds that Ethlabs represents the first real institutional answer to Van Epps’ succession problem.
Former EF researchers bring protocol credibility, ETH-aligned capital brings funding and urgency, and the nonprofit structure with independent governance keeps the research agenda from being captured by any single sponsor.
If the multi-node stewardship model produces coordinated R&D without roadmap capture, Ethereum gains execution capacity while preserving the credible neutrality that makes it defensible as a global settlement infrastructure.
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ETH becomes easier to underwrite as institutional collateral because the protocol now has explicit, funded advocates for its monetary properties, researchers doing the work the EF declined to name as its own.
The bear case is that legitimacy follows funding, and once ETH treasury companies, DeFi founders, L2s, investors, and former EF researchers are all funding different parts of Ethereum’s roadmap, who decides what counts as “Ethereum work” has no clean answer.
The EF’s soft power provided a focal point, and Ethlabs may solve a funding gap while opening a governance disconnect: Ethereum moves from one soft power center to many, which is more decentralized in form but harder to coordinate when roadmap disputes arise.
Observers will ask whether Ethereum has replaced the Foundation’s influence with a more distributed network of capital-backed stewardship nodes, while still organized around ETH value capture as a shared goal.
Its chief strategy advisor published a framework for evaluating and funding spinouts on the same day Ethlabs announced its plans, suggesting the Foundation is actively managing a transition, with Ethlabs occupying a sanctioned role in a deliberate handoff.
If the EF and Ethlabs-type organizations end up competing for legitimacy over the same protocol decisions, the risk of governance fragmentation compounds faster than the funding gap closes.
What comes next
Ethereum’s public discourse is already moving toward openly pro-ETH framing in a way the Foundation rarely practiced.
Ethlabs names ETH as a programmable store of value and lists ETH monetary research as core work. This language would have been unusual coming from the EF in its traditional posture.
Expect that posture to produce friction as the broader Ethereum community debates whether optimizing for ETH value capture and optimizing for credible neutrality are compatible objectives or competing ones.
The conditions that created Ethlabs, such as a narrowing EF, a funding gap, and institutional capital looking for protocol-adjacent returns, will produce more organizations like it.
Ethereum’s stewardship is moving from a Foundation-centered hub-and-spoke model to a distributed network where multiple actors hold equal standing.
The test for Ethereum’s multi-node stewardship model is whether those nodes can coordinate without re-centralizing around a new set of funders who happen to hold large ETH positions.
Van Epps identified that the problem of subtraction without succession creates a vacuum, and Ethlabs is the first serious attempt to fill it. How it navigates the tension between ETH investability and Ethereum neutrality will define whether the model holds.
As one of the world’s major textile and garment exporters, Vietnam has emerged with a powerful voice in fashion. The “Made in Vietnam” label — once a stamp of mass production — has recently become a creative sanctuary for independent fashion designers. The bustling lanes of Ho Chi Minh City have become a gripping stage for fashion, where foreign shoppers now travel to visit. It is now, proudly, becoming a creative hub that rivals any in Southeast Asia.
This new identity is being amplified on some of pop culture’s most coveted stages. Brands like Fancì Club and LSOUL infused their fiery identity in seams and silhouettes. Their designs—a harmonious blend of ardent local youth culture and strong femininity—have now become a fixture on the K-pop stage. The Blackpink members, for example, wore custom-made LSOUL pieces for their “Deadline” World Tour. These Vietnamese names have also gained popularity in the global market, where celebrities such as Adele stunned the crowd at one of her concerts in 2024 with a sparkling gown designed by Cong Tri.
The crescendo of this movement finds its recognition and far-reaching influence in the high fashion realm. The invitation of Phan Huy to Paris Haute Couture Week as the youngest and first Vietnamese designer honoured by the Fédération de la Haute Couture marked a definitive milestone. Meanwhile, the diaspora has been weaving its own impactful verse, from Peter Do‘s achievement with his eponymous brand to Linh Tran, whose essential role as co-artistic director at Lemaire shapes minimalist elegance worldwide and has become a cult favourite with its modular approach. Author Ocean Vuong, too, lent his pen, collaborating on the narrative for Helmut Lang’s Spring 2024 collection, proving that Vietnamese creativity is an unstoppable tide across all arts.
From these fertile grounds, a lush garden of talent continues to blossom, each designer a flowering prospect. The story is still being written, stitch by stitch.
Fancì Club
From running a secondhand store to dressing an extensive list of celebrities, Fancì Club has carved a remarkable path. The brand became a favourite among fashion bellwethers like Hailey Bieber, Dua Lipa, Davikah, and Anok Yai. The influence of Fancì Club is extended to the stage, with Blackpink members like Jennie wearing the designs for their onstage performances. And before the year wraps up, Lisa was also seen wearing a custom look that is unmistakably “fancì” for the festive celebration.
Founded by designer Duy Tran in 2018, the brand has been knocking it out of the park while remaining firmly grounded in its homeland, with all the magic happening within the walls of its first brick-and-mortar store located in vibrant Ho Chi Minh City. The brightly lit space—adorned with black furniture and reflective elements—has become a pit stop for tourists and fashion enthusiasts eager to lay their hands on these pieces.
From the Fall/Winter 2024 collection named “Roaring” to the latest “Renaked” for Spring/Summer 2026, Fancì Club’s designs are deeply intertwined with youth culture in Vietnam. The brand’s meteoric rise has created a window for the world to peek into the dynamic younger generation of Saigon.
LSOUL
At LSOUL, romanticism is reframed through an edgy lens. Much like the spirit of its homeland, the brand’s designs serve as a tribute to Vietnam’s beauty tempered with tenacity. It crafts a world where fragile lace, satin roses, and sheer drapes are put side by side with boning, sculpted seams, and bold silhouettes, presenting femininity as a form of tenderness that is equally impactful.
Founded by Nguyễn Trọng Lâm, LSOUL began not as a design house but as a curated store following the designer’s earlier ventures in menswear. This foundational chapter honed an acute understanding of the market’s desires, paving the way for a pivotal evolution in 2022. It was then that LSOUL became a full-fledged label, shifting from curation to creation.
This refined vision quickly resonated beyond borders, dressing an international cadre of style icons such as Katy Perry, Ling Ling Kwong, and K-pop luminaries including CL, I-DLE’s Miyeon, and more. LSoul’s decisive moment arrived at the Shanghai Fashion Week for Fall/Winter 2025, where its debut showcase marked a stunning breakthrough. As the final look graced the runway, the roaring applause signified more than a successful show—it heralded LSOUL as a compelling new voice from Ho Chi Minh City, one that is weighted with indisputable influence.
Gia Studios
For those who cherish traditional fashion as much as the nuances of the contemporary, Gia Studios, founded in 2018 by designer Lâm Gia Khang, is a revelation. The name itself holds a dual poetry: “Gia” is the founder’s middle name, yet in Vietnamese, it resonates with the deeper meaning of “family” and “belonging”. For the fourth-generation garment maker, Gia Studios means more than a design language. Surrounded by threads, fabric, and clothesmaking, his craft is an inherited heirloom, a family affair that is laced into every seam.
Growing up with a family of tailors granted Lâm an early education in construction and fashion design. It instilled in him a profound appreciation for traditional techniques and garments that existed before Western influences reshaped the landscape. While many came to know him through Project Runway Vietnam 2013, our admiration began later, in a frenzied showroom at Shanghai Fashion Week. There, his vision became tangible: the graceful Áo dài was transformed into a knitted dress with a plunging neckline, and the Nón lá conical hat was reimagined as a fedora. In his hands, tradition is not preserved as a relic but translated into a new dialect.
With a palette of earth-toned neutrals, Gia Studios endorses the language of simplicity, but the designs are anything but monotonous. Cultural touchstones are woven into silhouettes that speak to women from all walks of life. After all, who could resist the allure of thoughtful pieces, especially when they are rendered in top-notch materials like Vietnamese silk?
Latui Atelier
Latui Atelier emerges from the Vietnamese creative scene not just as a fashion label but also as a manifesto for a raw and punk-inflected romance, worn on the sleeve—or rather, torn from it. Founded on the principle of exploring the imperfection and complexity of beings, Latui’s designs thrive in the electric space between street, stage, and loud rebellion. This magnetic energy has made it a go-to for global performers, from Blackpink’s Rosé, J Balvin, and Billkin to also the members from Cortis and Daniela from Katseye. What makes these pieces wearable both on and off stage lies in their designs that speak through the utilitarian elements, often existing with an unexpected slash through leather, lace, and, of course, defiance.
This creative direction finds its purest expression in collections such as the Tui 11, titled “Shameless: Archive of the Self”. Here, the brand’s ethos crystallises into uniforms for this community. Key pieces, such as heavy leather, distressed fabrics that pile, or ankle-grazing dresses, are crafted with intentionally frayed edges and torn seams; every piece is emotionally charged as it is visually striking.
What truly distinguishes Latui Atelier is its deep-seated understanding that revolutionary fashion requires an equally revolutionary community. More than garments, its campaigns are subculture excavations, tapping into a vibrant ecosystem of local photographers, models, and artists to create visuals that capture the complexity, layered emotions, and vibrant underground energy that belongs to, and only to, the Vietnamese. In doing so, Latui Atelier cultivates its own following, a collective heartbeat for those with similar preferences.
Aah Midnight Club
As the name suggests, Aah Midnight Club operates like a nocturnal gathering for the like-minded, a conceptual space where subcultures converge under the cover of night. Founded by Bin Pos, the label draws inspiration from a rich tapestry of street cultures, music, and cinematic aesthetics. Each collection functions as an open invitation, offering a lineup that serves as an insider code for those who find resonance between the after-six life and the raw authenticity of street style.
The brand’s genius lies in its strategic balance, navigating between edgy designer pieces and statement-driven merchandise. It acknowledges and leverages the demand for brand-centric identity among younger audiences, where a well-crafted slogan tee is both a fashion staple and a token of belonging.
Despite its moniker as “The Hidden Store”, Aah Midnight Club captured the attention of the new-gen fashion disruptors. K-pop idols like James and Juhoon of Cortis—celebrated for their spunky, punk-tinged styles—have been turning heads wearing the brand. What truly sets Aah Midnight Club apart is how it finds its way back to the root of fashion, a foundational commitment to wearability. It demystifies its subcultural references to create pieces that feel accessible, whether one is deep within the inner circle or simply seeking a touch of that rebellious spirit, fully living up to the inclusive ideology at the heart of a true streetwear label.
Bruce Willis, a name synonymous with action-packed cinema and memorable television performances, has captivated audiences for decades. His journey from the small screen of Moonlighting to becoming a bankable superstar in Hollywood blockbusters raises a lot of curiosity, particularly when discussing his financial standing. The question of “what is Bruce Willis net worth?” has sparked numerous discussions and debates among fans and financial analysts alike.
As of now, Bruce Willis net worth is estimated to be around $250 million, a figure reflective of his extensive career in the entertainment industry. However, this figure has garnered increased attention recently, partly due to health challenges that have impacted his professional endeavors. Reports of his aphasia diagnosis have stirred public interest, prompting a closer examination of both his assets and the legacy he has built throughout his career.
Unraveling Bruce Willis’s Financial Journey
The Height of a Stardom Career
Bruce Willis entered the public’s consciousness through his charismatic performance in the hit series Moonlighting, where he showcased his unique blend of humor and dramatic talent. Following this initial success, he transitioned into film, making a significant impact with memorable roles in action classics like Die Hard, Pulp Fiction, and The Sixth Sense. These films cemented his status as Hollywood’s A-list, not only enhancing his fame but also significantly boosting Bruce Willis net worth through lucrative salaries and back-end deals.
His rise was not merely a stroke of luck; it was the result of strategic career moves and a commitment to diversifying his roles. Over the years, Willis has often demanded a percentage of a film’s box-office gross, contributing to his robust financial standing. For example, his salary for the Die Hard franchise not only included upfront payments but also backend participation, amplifying his earnings as the films became box office successes.
Explore Bruce Willis’s Diverse Income Streams
While Bruce Willis net worth primarily stems from his film career, that’s not the entirety of his financial arena. The actor has taken various routes beyond acting that contribute meaningfully to his wealth:
Real Estate Investments: Often cited as one of Willis’s most lucrative choices, his real estate portfolio spans several prime locations, including properties in Beverly Hills and Idaho. Real estate has provided him with stability and consistent income, particularly in an unpredictable industry like Hollywood.
Endorsements and Partnerships: Over the years, Bruce has ventured into endorsements, agreements that have undoubtedly supplemented his income. His association with brands has brought in significant revenue, allowing him to leverage his star power beyond the silver screen.
Film Production and Rights Ownership: Willis has explored producing his own projects. This move allows him not just to earn directly from acting fees but also from the profits generated upon a film’s release. Ownership of specific film rights further entitles him to revenue streams long after initial earnings.
Collaborations and Ventures: Bruce has been active in businesses such as co-owning Planet Hollywood with other celebrities, a venture that aimed to blend dining with Hollywood flair. Although the brand has seen fluctuations in popularity, it remains a recognized name in themed dining.
Potential Impact of Health Issues on Bruce Willis Net Worth
Given the revelation of Bruce Willis’s health issues stemming from an aphasia diagnosis, it is essential to assess the broader implications this may hold for his financial legacy. As he steps away from consistent acting roles, discussions about his wealth management and assets gain a new lens.
His steady income from past films and ventures will likely continue, but the transition away from acting could prompt a recalibration of strategies to protect and grow the wealth accumulated over decades. The public sentiment surrounding his career reflects an overriding desire to see him thrive not just as a star, but as an individual facing personal challenges.
Financial Planning Amid Personal Struggles
While some may view Bruce Willis net worth merely through the lens of cold, hard figures, it encompasses much more—a testament to resilience, adaptability, and forward-thinking. In light of his health hurdles, it’s crucial for Willis and his family to engage in astute financial planning, ensuring that assets are shielded and sustained over the long term.
The mixed emotions surrounding his career’s potential decline invite both admiration and concern. Financial analysts are assessing how his family can maintain the legacy of their loved one while ensuring his interests are secured. Now, discussions pertaining to estate planning, insurance policies, and diversification of remaining assets are likely in focus.
The Influence of Bruce Willis on Hollywood and Financial Circles
An Enduring Legacy
Bruce Willis stands as a formidable figure in the entertainment industry. His movies have grossed billions worldwide, and he has consistently been a part of many pop culture phenomena. Even in the twilight of his acting career, discussions surrounding Bruce Willis net worth remain vibrant, accentuating his lasting impact.
While the traditional Hollywood narrative often runs parallel to the financial narratives, Willis’s story showcases a different pathway—one that intertwines celebrity influence with a consciousness of financial growth. His strategic decisions resonate beyond sheer fortune; they demonstrate the art of balancing celebrity status with savvy investment tactics.
The Evolution of a Financial Narrative
From blockbuster heroics to introspective narratives stemming from health concerns, the trajectory of Bruce Willis’s financial narrative highlights how personal and professional challenges bend and shape outcomes. This evolution plays a vital role in how fans and analysts discuss his Bruce Willis net worth.
Audiences observe not just the glittering wealth but the reality of managing a career that demands agility amid significant life changes. This complexity echoes throughout Hollywood, where many stars face similar turns, influencing discussions on how to cultivate wealth while navigating the emotional landscape of fame and health.
The Magnetism of Bruce Willis’s Financial Legacy
How Personal Choices Shape Public Perception
The intrigue surrounding Bruce Willis net worth doesn’t rest on numbers alone. It is about transforming his storied career into a narrative that inspires. Countless fans are drawn to the dynamic aspects of his life — not just his movies, but his investments, properties, and philanthropic efforts.
As fans dissect his journey, they recognize how each choice contributes to the tapestry of his financial success. Understanding this interaction between personal choices and public perception allows for a broader appreciation of star power. Bruce Willis’s story illustrates the relationship between celebrity status and financial acumen, showing that both can coexist gracefully, even amid challenges.
Maintaining Interest in Financial Discussions
The continuous interest in Bruce Willis net worth signals a thirst for knowledge about more than just financial growth; it speaks to broader themes of resilience and legacy in the face of adversity. Fans often explore his history—how he has arrived at his present financial condition and how dialogue surrounding these moments builds excitement.
Engagement with his financial journey persists, even while stepping back from screens. This reflects the understanding that celebrities serve as mirrors for societal values and aspirations—intriguing conversations simmer beneath the surface of wealth accumulation, touching on personal growth, risk-taking, and the cyclical nature of fame.
Conclusion: The Unfolding Story Behind Bruce Willis Net Worth
Ultimately, Bruce Willis’s net worth serves both as a reflection of a celebrated Hollywood career and a learning experience in personal resilience. As he navigates the complexities of life, his financial decisions resonate with audiences, drawing attention to the profound connection between wealth and personal journey.
Willis’s enduring legacy as an actor and businessperson intertwines with narratives about overcoming challenges and maintaining a stable financial future. As fans and analysts continue to explore the components of Bruce Willis net worth, one thing remains clear: this is more than just a story about money; it is a compelling saga about a man who has fought hard for his success and whose impact goes far beyond the screen.
As Bruce Willis sets forth into the future, the conversations around his financial landscape will only intensify, with an ever-growing audience eager to unpack what his story means for the world of entertainment—and indeed, for life itself. Fans remain dedicated to unraveling the layers of Bruce Willis net worth, ensuring that the legacy he builds transcends well beyond the cinematic universe, grounded in principles of resilience and commitment to family and legacy. The ongoing journey of Bruce Willis challenges norms, inspires admiration, and illustrates how personal stories are entangled with financial wisdom.
MONACO, June 22, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Crypto news today is turning toward AlphaPepe as buyers watch speculation around a possible third CEX partnership after the project announced Azbit and BiFinance. The presale has now raised $1.73 million, passed 9,600 holders, and reached $0.01973 while Stage 18 moves closer to selling out.
The exchange speculation gives AlphaPepe a fresh company catalyst as Ethereum price prediction headlines return to the $7,000 target. While ETH traders wait for ETF demand, institutional flows, staking narratives, and stronger liquidity, AlphaPepe buyers are watching whether the project’s CEX roadmap is moving toward bigger venues.
AlphaPepe Nears Third CEX Partnership Speculation
AlphaPepe has already announced two CEX partnerships, with Azbit revealed first and BiFinance announced second. Both exchanges are followed on CoinMarketCap’s global exchange ranking tables, and the sequence has created a simple theory among buyers: AlphaPepe may be moving from lower-ranked venues toward stronger exchanges as launch preparations continue.
The theory remains speculative, but the pattern is easy to understand. Azbit came first, BiFinance followed, and BiFinance sits higher in the ranking conversation than Azbit. If that direction continues, traders may begin asking whether the third CEX reveal could be another step upward.
That is where the Tier 1 speculation begins. No Tier 1 exchange has been confirmed, and names like OKX remain only community theory unless officially announced. Still, the Azbit-to-BiFinance progression gives buyers a reason to watch whether AlphaPepe is trying to climb closer to larger exchange territory before launch.
Exchange speculation can become one of the strongest presale triggers because listings can expand visibility and place a project in front of a wider trading base. When multiple CEX updates arrive before public trading begins, the early-entry window can feel tighter.
AlphaPepe’s presale numbers are also moving with the story. The project has raised $1.73 million, passed 9,600 holders, and reached $0.01973. Stage 18 is nearing sell out, adding another countdown as buyers watch for the next price step and exchange update.
The Bear Market Discount promo codes will also end in less than 10 days. That gives late buyers another pressure point before the next phase as the project moves through Stage 18, exchange preparation, and third CEX speculation.
Product development remains part of the broader readiness story. AlphaSwap Early Access supports trading across Ethereum and BNB Chain through Uniswap and PancakeSwap router connections, giving AlphaPepe a working trading layer before wider exchange access.
The completed 10/10 BlockSAFU audit adds another credibility point before listing. Combined with Azbit, BiFinance, $1.73 million raised, 9,600+ holders, AlphaSwap progress, instant token delivery, Stage 18 scarcity, discount-code urgency, and possible third CEX speculation, AlphaPepe is building a more aggressive pre-listing profile than many early-stage meme projects in the current cycle.
Ethereum Price Prediction Targets $7,000
The Ethereum price prediction debate has returned to the $7,000 target as traders watch ETF demand, staking activity, institutional adoption, liquidity conditions, and Ethereum’s role in DeFi, tokenization, and smart-contract settlement. Bullish cases usually depend on stronger inflows, improving risk appetite, and renewed demand for ETH as a core crypto asset.
The $7,000 Ethereum price prediction remains a forecast scenario, not a guaranteed outcome. For AlphaPepe, the nearer story is internal execution, with Azbit already announced, BiFinance confirmed, $1.73 million raised, 9,600+ holders, Stage 18 nearing sell out, Bear Market Discount promo codes ending in less than 10 days, and third CEX speculation building before launch.
Conclusion
AlphaPepe’s latest update gives the project a stronger speculative exchange narrative while broader crypto traders continue watching Ethereum price prediction targets. Azbit has already been announced, BiFinance has now been added, and buyers are debating whether the third CEX partnership could continue the pattern toward higher-ranked venues.
The theory remains speculative, and no Tier 1 exchange has been confirmed. But the exchange sequence is enough to create a sharper pre-listing story. If AlphaPepe is moving upward through exchange rankings, the next reveal could become one of the most watched milestones before public trading begins.
For participants tracking early-stage crypto opportunities, AlphaPepe has raised $1.73 million, passed 9,600 holders, reached $0.01973, announced Azbit, announced BiFinance, moved Stage 18 close to sellout, and has less than 10 days left before Bear Market Discount promo codes end.
CLICK TO VISIT ALPHAPEPE OFFICIAL WEBSITE
FAQs
What is Ethereum Price Prediction?Ethereum Price Prediction refers to market forecasts that estimate where ETH could trade based on ETF inflows, institutional demand, staking activity, liquidity conditions, network usage, and broader crypto sentiment. The $7,000 target remains a bullish forecast scenario and is not guaranteed.
What is the Best Crypto Presale?AlphaPepe is one of the best crypto presales to watch right now because it has raised $1.73 million, passed 9,600 holders, reached $0.01973, announced Azbit, announced BiFinance, and is seeing speculation build around a possible third CEX partnership.
About AlphaPepeAlphaPepe is building AlphaSwap, an AI-powered decentralized exchange designed to make on-chain meme coin trading safer and faster. AlphaSwap Early Access supports Ethereum and BNB Chain trading through Uniswap and PancakeSwap router connections.
AlphaPepe has raised $1.73 million, passed 9,600 holders, completed a 10/10 BlockSAFU audit, announced Azbit, announced BiFinance, and continues preparing future exchange updates as Stage 18 nears sell out.
Contact:Jack Duffycontact@alphapepe.io
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