Crypto News Today — 23 June 2026: Bitcoin, Ethereum & Market Moves
· By DTC India Team
Crypto News · Bitcoin · Ethereum
The biggest crypto headlines today, 23 June 2026 — Bitcoin, Ethereum, regulation and what it means.
Top headlines
- Ripple targets EU, wins preliminary MiCA approval from Luxembourg financial regulator — The license will enable Ripple to offer its stablecoin payment systems to European companies and expand into broader crypto functions.
- Hut 8 to pay $2.35 million to settle investor suit over U.S. Bitcoin merger — The former bitcoin miner denied any wrongdoing related to its 2023 merger with U.S. Bitcoin Corp.
- Bitcoin price has limited downside, likely near bottom, contrarian indicator suggests — The bitcoin price's long-term moving averages are set to flash a bearish signal soon. That's good news for the bulls.
- Live updates: An 'altcoin season' signal flashed, but bitcoin's slide is what set it off — After nearly two years of declines, alts have run out of sellers and steadied, while bitcoin has dropped hard, sliding back toward $63,600.
- XRP drifts toward $1.10 support as traders await break from three-week range — Weak volume and fading momentum kept XRP pinned near the bottom of its recent range, with the $1.05-$1.10 area emerging as the market's key line in the sand.
- SpaceX’s $600 billion plunge erased equivalent of nearly half of bitcoin’s market cap in 3 days — The newly public company shed close to half of bitcoin's entire market value in three sessions after announcing its first bond sale. Bitcoin, absorbing the same backdrop, fell less than 1%.
- Bitcoin falls under $63,000 as a tech selloff drags risk assets lower — A rotation out of this year's best AI and chip stocks sank Asian markets, with South Korea's Kospi down 6%, and crypto fell with them. Bitcoin is down more than 3% on the week.
DTC India take
Use the news for context, not signals. Confirm with charts before acting. See live data on our crypto page.
For information/education only. Not investment advice. Markets are risky.
Headlines are aggregated from public RSS feeds and link to the original publishers.