By Tyler Warner
6 min read
Morning Minute is a daily newsletter written by Tyler Warner. The analysis and opinions expressed are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of Decrypt. And check out our new daily news show covering all of the top stories in 5 minutes, downloadable on Apple Pod or Spotify.
GM!
Today’s top news:
Two major macro events landed on Tuesday impacting crypto and broader markets.
A US Army Apache went down near the Strait of Hormuz, which Trump blamed on Iran and said the US “must respond,” and AP and CBC report the military has already begun striking back. Both crew members were rescued and are safe. The crash lands a day after Trump brokered a renewed Iran-Israel ceasefire and in the middle of active US-Iran talks, with Axios reporting the working theory is an Iranian drone of undetermined intent. The US has already begun retaliatory “defensive” strikes.
The same afternoon, Anthropic shipped Claude Fable 5, the public version of the Mythos model it had kept behind a restricted security program since April. It scores 78% on a vulnerability-discovery benchmark and is purpose-built to find software bugs, exactly the capability that should spook a market still bleeding from hacks. Requests touching cybersecurity, biology, or chemistry get bounced to the older Opus 4.8, a guardrail Anthropic says fires in under 5% of sessions. The uncapped Mythos 5 stays with vetted firms only.
Crypto didn’t really flinch on these headlines, but it did sell off overnight ahead of this morning’s CPI print which many believe will be hot. Shrugging off the Iran escalation isn’t a surprise given how markets have responded over the past several weeks. But Mythos was expected to be a bigger deal. And now that users are reporting it won’t even review smart contracts and that it usually kicks them back to Opus 4.8, this vaunted Mythos release may be a nothingburger for crypto. As for CPI, we will find out soon…
The House Ways and Means hearing that was supposed to advance crypto tax reform instead exposed the cracks.
The committee brought seven discussion drafts to the table, each tackling a separate piece of the code. The headliners:
Other drafts cover stablecoin transactions and folding digital assets into existing securities tax treatment.
Then the politics got in the way. Pro-crypto Democrats questioned the staking and mining exemptions, and party leadership floated punting the whole package until after the midterms. For an industry that has notched real legislative wins lately, this is a reminder that tax is the harder fight. The bills still have life—but their timeline just got longer…
Lending protocol Morpho closed a $175M round co-led by a16z crypto, Paradigm, and Ribbit Capital, with a big roster of strategic backers including Apollo, VanEck, Circle Ventures, Ledger, SBI Group, and France’s Bpifrance among them.
The deal values Morpho at up to $2 billion and ranks as one of the largest funding rounds DeFi has ever seen.
The Morpho protocol runs an open credit network that lets banks, fintechs, and asset managers build their own lending markets onchain, each with its own risk parameters, without standing up the rails from scratch. It already carries more than $11 billion in deposits and counts Coinbase, Kraken, Binance, Galaxy, Bitwise, and Anchorage among its users. Cofounder Paul Frambot, who started the project in Paris at 20, originally built it on top of Aave and now pitches it as a way for anyone to build their own Aave.
The fresh capital goes toward technical development and deeper integrations with those institutional clients, the aim being to make Morpho the default credit layer as more of finance moves onto blockchain rails.
The takeaway is clear—the demand for institutional crypto products is still strong…
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