If Bitcoin can sit near $65,000 while ZachXBT is telling users hardware wallets are “complete garbage,” what exactly is the market trusting right now?
That is the thread running through today’s crypto tape. The ZachXBT hardware wallets fight hits the custody layer, while BTC’s steady trade near $65,000 after South Korea’s rate hike tests the market’s tolerance for tighter policy, according to CoinDesk. One story is about private keys. The other is about macro pressure. Together, they turn a quiet trading day into a confidence check.
The price action looks calm. The debate underneath does not.
Can self-custody survive if trusted devices start looking too complicated?
ZachXBT, one of crypto’s most followed blockchain investigators, attacked the hardware-wallet model directly. In a Telegram post cited by related coverage, he wrote:
“All hardware wallets are complete garbage”
He described the view as a “hot take” and recommended a separate iPhone used only as a crypto wallet, with no normal browsing, social media, or unrelated apps. The criticism landed because hardware wallets are sold as the retail self-custody gold standard. They keep keys off internet-connected machines and require physical confirmation before signing.
But ZachXBT’s point is not that a new universal device flaw has been found. The supplied material says he did not identify a new hardware vulnerability or claim every device shares the same technical weakness. His attack focused more on the operational layer around devices, especially Ledger and its companion software, Ledger Live, now branded Ledger Wallet.
That distinction matters. Hardware wallets can protect private keys inside a secure device, but they don’t magically fix fake apps, malicious approvals, bad recovery habits, compromised companion software, or users typing seed phrases into the wrong screen. A device can be technically sound while the full custody workflow remains fragile.
XOOMAR analysis: this is why the ZachXBT hardware wallets argument has force even if users reject his conclusion. The crypto industry pushed “not your keys, not your coins” for years, but it still asks ordinary users to manage seed phrases, verify signing prompts, detect fake updates, and understand wallet-draining approvals. That is a narrow path with expensive consequences.
Is the iPhone alternative really safer, or just a different risk stack?
ZachXBT’s proposed alternative is a dedicated iPhone for crypto use only. The logic is clear: reduce exposure by separating wallet activity from the user’s daily device habits. Fewer apps. Fewer links. Fewer random prompts.
That does not turn a phone into cold storage. A dedicated iPhone is still an internet-connected general-purpose computer. Its safety depends on the operating system, wallet app quality, backups, account recovery settings, and signing behavior. The user remains the failure point.
| Custody setup | Strength in the supplied material | Weak point in the supplied material |
|---|---|---|
| Hardware wallet | Keeps recovery material tied to a physical signing device | Companion apps, fake updates, phishing, and bad signing choices still create risk |
| Dedicated iPhone | Can reduce exposure if isolated from normal activity | Still connected, still dependent on apps, OS settings, and user behavior |
Ledger’s own security guidance, cited in related material, tells users to enter recovery phrases only on the physical device during setup or restoration, and to verify transaction details on the hardware screen rather than relying only on the connected phone or computer.
The practical takeaway is not “throw away every device.” It is harsher than that. Users need to audit the full custody chain: where the device came from, where the recovery phrase is stored, what app is building the transaction, what approval is being signed, and whether a prompt is real.
This is where the ZachXBT hardware wallets debate becomes more useful than the insult. It forces wallet makers and users to answer the same question: is the security model understandable enough to survive real-world behavior?
Why does Bitcoin near $65,000 look steadier than the demand data behind it?
BTC traded near $65,000, but Bitfinex analysts warned that the move looks more like a macro trade than native Bitcoin demand. Their argument is specific. The soft June inflation print cut the odds of a July rate hike to about 12% from 42%, and the two-year Treasury yield fell 14 basis points. Bitcoin rose with equities and other risk assets.
That fits our prior coverage of how cooling June CPI gave the Fed cover to avoid a rate-hike fight and why Fed rate-hike bets collapsed as Bitcoin neared $65,000. The issue is what was missing underneath the move.
Bitfinex pointed to three weak spots:
- ETF flows: U.S. spot ETFs sold about $425 million on July 13, the day before the inflation print.
- Strategy buying: Strategy bought nothing, according to the supplied CoinDesk excerpt.
- Coinbase premium: The premium remained negative, which Bitfinex reads as a weak sign for U.S. institutional demand.
That is why the analysts called the rally “borrowed strength.” In their view, Bitcoin repriced because macro conditions improved, not because spot buyers suddenly returned with conviction.
XOOMAR analysis: a market can rise for the “wrong” reason and still reward traders. But if the bid depends on falling rate expectations, the setup is fragile. The lender can call back borrowed strength when yields, inflation expectations, or central-bank signals turn the other way.
Did South Korea’s rate hike matter, or did traders look past it?
The CoinDesk roundup says BTC stayed near $65,000 after South Korea’s rate hike. That is the clean fact. The supplied material does not give the size of the hike, the central bank’s statement, or detailed local exchange data, so the market read has to stay narrow.
The immediate read is simple: traders did not treat the move as a reason to dump BTC on sight. That matters because rate hikes usually tighten financial conditions and can pressure speculative assets. But one central-bank move does not define the full macro path for Bitcoin, especially when the same tape is also digesting U.S. inflation data, Treasury yields, ETF flows, and institutional demand proxies.
There is a tension here. Holding near a major level can signal resilience. It can also signal hesitation. Without a stronger spot bid, a flat price near $65,000 may say less about confidence and more about traders waiting for the next macro catalyst.
That makes South Korea part of the same story as ZachXBT’s custody attack. In both cases, crypto is being asked to prove durability outside the hype cycle: can users trust the tools, and can traders trust the bid?
The bigger picture: can Bitcoin stay calm if custody and rates keep testing it?
Today’s roundup shows a market that looks stable on price but unsettled in structure. Bitcoin near $65,000 is the surface. Underneath, the custody debate is getting sharper, and the macro bid is being questioned by analysts watching ETF selling, a negative Coinbase premium, and absent Strategy buying.
Investors will tolerate volatility. They have less patience for systems that feel unsafe or rallies that depend too heavily on easier rate expectations. That is the real overlap between the ZachXBT hardware wallets controversy and the BTC near $65,000 trade.
The next phase will not be judged by price alone. The watch items are clearer custody workflows, fewer user traps around wallet software, stronger evidence of spot Bitcoin demand, and a market that can hold up when rate expectations stop doing the heavy lifting. Calm is useful. Proof is better.
Disclaimer: This XOOMAR analysis is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial, investment, legal, tax, or professional advice. It does not provide buy, sell, hold, price-target, portfolio, or personalized recommendations. Verify information independently and consult qualified professionals before making decisions.
The Bottom Line
- Bitcoin holding near $65,000 suggests traders are not yet panicking over custody concerns or tighter policy.
- ZachXBT’s criticism challenges the idea that hardware wallets are automatically the safest retail self-custody option.
- The debate highlights that user behavior, approvals, recovery practices, and companion software can matter as much as the device itself.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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