The notorious Ethereum maximal extractable value (MEV) bot known as Jaredfromsubway.eth was drained of more than $7.5 million this past Saturday. The incident followed a sophisticated attack that had been in development for several weeks. According to security firm Blockaid, the exploit involved attacker-controlled contracts that tricked the bot’s automated systems into granting token approvals, which were subsequently used to empty its funds.
Raz Niv, Chief Technology Officer at Blockaid, described the event as a “counter-MEV honeypot attack.” It specifically targeted the trust-minimized logic that MEV bots use to operate autonomously. While these bots typically thrive on increased Ethereum network activity, they remain vulnerable to exploits that turn their own profit-seeking algorithms against them.
Cointelegraph Research previously noted that Jaredfromsubway.eth was responsible for roughly 70% of sandwich attacks on Ethereum between late 2024 and late 2025.
Philippines SEC signals readiness for asset tokenization
This $7.5 million loss marks a significant setback for the bot, which has historically generated hundreds of millions in profits. MEV bots operate as an “invisible tax” on decentralized finance (DeFi) users by manipulating transaction orders. While they are highly efficient, this latest breach highlights the persistent risks within automated trading environments.
The attack comes at a time when other sectors, such as top crypto casinos, are also facing increased scrutiny regarding transparency and automated security protocols.
In the regulatory sphere, Commissioner Rogelio Quevedo of the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced that the agency is ready to adopt real-world asset (RWA) tokenization. Speaking at the Philippine Blockchain Week 2026, Commissioner Rogelio Quevedo stated that the commission is convinced it possesses the proper regulatory background to accept these innovations.
He suggested that tokenization could eventually “revolutionize” local stock exchanges and capital markets.
The move is partly designed to protect overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) from widespread investment scams. Commissioner Rogelio Quevedo noted that many OFWs have capital but lack legitimate avenues to grow their earnings. By providing a regulated framework for tokenized assets, the SEC aims to offer safer alternatives.
Additionally, the agency is collaborating with platforms like Google and TikTok, utilizing artificial intelligence to track and remove illegal investment offerings targeting Philippine citizens.
This shift toward transparency and regulation mirrors broader trends where Bitcoin exchange supply remains at multi-year lows. As investors move assets into long-term storage or regulated products, government bodies are sensing a need to provide formal structures. The SEC’s proactive stance represents a transition from its previous focus on issuing warnings against unregistered offshore trading platforms.
Market performance and the rise of altcoin volatility
Market data from June 21, 2026, shows a mixed performance across the digital asset landscape. Bitcoin (BTC) was trading at $64,168.33, representing a 1.29% rise over 24 hours but remaining down from its May high of $81,000. Whale wallets continue to exert significant influence, currently controlling 35.82% of the available supply.
Long-term holders have also been active, absorbing 125,000 BTC throughout the month of June alone.
Ethereum (ETH) saw its price reach $1,735.16, up 1.84% in 24 hours. Despite the slight recovery, technical sentiment remains bearish as the asset trades below its 60-day and 200-day moving averages. Ethereum ETFs have seen substantial weekly inflows of $2.
85 billion, yet the NFT market correlation has weakened, with the total NFT market cap falling 12% to $8.1 billion alongside recent dips in the Ether price.
In the altcoin sector, Solana (SOL) surged 5.06% to $73.12, while Jupiter (JUP) recorded the largest gain among top 100 coins, rising 13.79%. Conversely, XLM dropped 9% amid a broader deleveraging phase in the market. Other notable movements included a 10% jump for Aerodrome Finance (AERO) and a 3.85% decline for LayerZero (ZRO), the latter influenced by significant whale deposits to the Binance exchange.
Regulatory shifts and the future of stablecoin oversight
The US Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) has proposed a rule that would classify stablecoin issuers as financial institutions. This would require them to maintain formal customer identification programs under the Bank Secrecy Act. The move signals a tightening of anti-money laundering and identity verification requirements that could impact liquidity across major DeFi protocols in the coming years.
Elsewhere, the CME Group has filed a lawsuit against the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). The dispute involves the authorization of “crypto-style” perpetual futures for prediction markets like Kalshi. The CME Group argues that these products allow highly leveraged derivatives to bypass federal rules. Legal analysts from TD Cowen currently suggest the CME Group holds the upper hand in this challenge against the regulator.
Looking ahead, major financial institutions remain optimistic about long-term valuations. Standard Chartered has projected an Ethereum price of $7,500 by the end of 2026 and $25,000 by 2028. For Bitcoin, analysts at Bernstein and Bitwise maintain price targets of $225,000 and $200,000, respectively. As the industry grapples with security exploits and evolving laws, the focus is increasingly shifting toward regulated institutional infrastructure.
