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Crypto Weekly Recap: Bitcoin ETF Inflows, Regulation Push, and North Korean Hacks

TLDR

  • U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs pulled in $1.97 billion in April, their best monthly inflow of 2026
  • Coinbase said a deal was reached on a key provision in a major U.S. crypto bill
  • The CLARITY Act could reach a presidential signature by summer 2026
  • North Korean hackers were behind 76% of all crypto hack losses in 2026 through April
  • Stablecoin rules in the CLARITY Act could allow some rewards while limiting bank-like yield products

This week’s crypto news was driven by policy, institutional money, and security. Prices took a back seat to bigger structural stories shaping how the market works.

Bitcoin ETF Inflows Hit 2026 High

U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded about $1.97 billion in April inflows, their strongest monthly total of 2026, according to SoSoValue data.

That number matters because ETF flows are one of the clearest signals of institutional demand. It shows larger investors are still buying Bitcoin exposure through regulated products.

Inflows had been weaker earlier in the year. April’s figures suggest institutional interest has picked back up.

ETF flow data is now watched closely by the market, much like earnings reports. Strong months can lift sentiment across the broader crypto space.

U.S. Crypto Regulation Moves Forward

Coinbase said a deal was reached on a key provision in a major U.S. crypto bill. Reuters reported the agreement could help the legislation advance in the Senate.

The bill, known as the CLARITY Act, is being pushed by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott. Yahoo Finance reported he is targeting a presidential signature by summer 2026.



If passed, the bill would affect how crypto exchanges operate and how tokens are classified. It would also clarify how the SEC and CFTC divide oversight of digital assets.

For the market, the bill represents one of the most concrete chances at a clear regulatory framework in years.

Stablecoin Rules Draw Attention

Fresh CLARITY Act text also addressed stablecoins. CoinDesk reported the latest version would allow some crypto firms to offer stablecoin rewards while limiting yield products seen as too close to bank deposits.

Stablecoins sit at the center of the crypto economy. They are used for trading, payments, DeFi activity, and cross-border transfers.

The key debate is whether crypto firms can offer rewards without being treated like banks. The outcome could reshape how money flows through crypto markets.

If rules are workable, stablecoin issuers and exchanges could benefit. If they are too restrictive, some business models may need to change.

North Korean Hackers Behind Most 2026 Crypto Losses

TRM Labs reported that North Korean hacking groups were responsible for 76% of all crypto hack losses in 2026 through April.

Two attacks drove most of that figure. The Drift Protocol breach and the KelpDAO bridge exploit together accounted for $577 million in stolen funds.

The data points to a shift in how hacks happen. Instead of many smaller attacks, a few large, targeted exploits now dominate the yearly loss total.

Bridges and DeFi platforms remain the most exposed parts of the ecosystem. For retail investors, security remains one of the most direct risks in crypto.

TRM Labs’ report covers losses through the end of April 2026.

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