News
Stay up to date on the latest crypto trends with our expert, in-depth coverage.

- OSL Group reported 58% YoY revenue growth to HK$195.4M in H1 2025, despite operating losses doubling to HK$20.3M driven by 225% headcount expansion. - Strategic acquisitions of Japan's CoinBest and Indonesia's Evergreen Crest, plus OSL Pay's 29% revenue contribution, fueled Asian market expansion. - A $300M equity raise supports regulated stablecoin infrastructure and compliance with Hong Kong's evolving digital asset policies. - Despite losses, shares rose 6.6% post-earnings, reflecting investor confide

- Gryphon shareholders approved a $1.2B merger with Trump-linked American Bitcoin, creating ABTC for Nasdaq listing. - The reverse merger combines Gryphon's 130,000+ Bitcoin miners with American Bitcoin's SPAC structure to bypass traditional IPO. - ABTC aims to leverage Gryphon's low-cost energy agreements and expand mining capacity by 50,000 machines in 18 months. - Analysts highlight institutional Bitcoin interest potential, but success depends on U.S. regulatory clarity and market conditions.

- LineKong’s $7.85M investment in BTC, ETH, and SOL marks Hong Kong’s institutional crypto adoption turning point. - Hong Kong’s Stablecoins Ordinance and LEAP Framework create regulatory clarity, bridging China and global crypto markets. - The move signals digital assets as strategic hedges against inflation and geopolitical risks in Asia’s fragmented markets. - Solana’s allocation highlights institutional diversification trends, with 59% of global firms planning crypto allocations in 2025. - Hong Kong’s

Hong Kong dollar stablecoins may have greater potential than US dollar stablecoins.

- BullZilla (BZIL) launches a presale at $0.00000575 with a 1,000x projected price increase via 24 progressive 48-hour stages. - It introduces 70% APY staking (HODL Furnace) and dynamic token burns, contrasting traditional meme coins like Dogecoin lacking structured economics. - Built on Ethereum with Solana scalability integration, it targets speculative investors seeking scarcity-driven returns over community-driven narratives. - The "mutant bull" mythic branding and $100M+ whitelist demand position it a

- Canadian firm Luxxfolio raises $73M to accumulate 1 million LTC by 2026, challenging Bitcoin's corporate reserve dominance. - Litecoin's 2.4-minute confirmations, low fees, and CFTC commodity status attract institutions like MEI Pharma, which holds $110.4M LTC. - Despite technical advantages, Bitcoin retains first-mover edge via ETFs and market cap, while Luxxfolio faces $197K Q2 losses and regulatory uncertainties. - Institutional adoption hinges on liquidity solutions and real-world use cases, testing

- Solana’s DeFi TVL surged to $11.7B in 2025, narrowing its gap with Ethereum’s $91.59B, driven by 65,000 TPS speed and $0.00025 fees. - Solana outperformed Ethereum and BSC in capital efficiency, generating $562M in Q2 2025 revenue via high APRs (14% stablecoin pools vs. Ethereum’s 3%). - Ethereum retains institutional dominance via protocols like Aave, while Solana’s growth relies on retail adoption and memecoin-driven trading volumes. - Critics warn Solana’s TVL may be inflated by speculative inflows, w

- Nigeria’s cashless economy accelerates via fintech innovation, with Paystack and FAAN’s NFC cards driving financial inclusion and infrastructure efficiency. - Paystack, acquired by Stripe in 2020, processes 50%+ of Nigeria’s online transactions and integrates real-time payments, boosting settlement speeds and merchant adoption. - FAAN’s tap-and-pay NFC cards at airports reduce cash reliance, aligning with Nigeria’s 22%+ CAGR growth in digital payments and $28B market projection by 2031. - Fintech investm

- BlackRock’s ETHA ETF recorded $262M in single-day inflows, contributing to $1.83B in 5-day net inflows (85% of daily flow). - Institutional investors purchased 4.9% of Ethereum’s supply, including $89.2M by BlackRock and $21.2M by BitMine. - Ethereum’s 4.5–5.2% staking yields, PoS upgrades, and regulatory clarity (CLARITY/GENIUS Acts) drove institutional adoption. - Dencun/Pectra hard forks reduced gas fees by 90%, while Ethereum’s deflationary model and $5B in tokenized RWAs reinforced its appeal. - ETH

- Bitcoin fell below $109,000, facing key resistance at $113,600 and support near $108,000. - Bitcoin ETFs saw $1.5B outflows, contrasting with Ethereum ETFs' $307M inflows as investors shift capital. - Fed policy uncertainty and technical indicators signal bearish pressure, though long-term bullish fundamentals remain intact.
- 21:57U.S. Treasury: Total value of foreign securities held by the end of 2024 is $15.8 trillionJinse Finance reported that the U.S. Department of the Treasury has released preliminary data from its annual survey of U.S. holdings of foreign securities portfolios as of the end of 2024. The survey shows that as of the end of 2024, the total value of U.S. holdings of foreign securities was approximately $15.8 trillion, including $12.1 trillion in foreign equities, $3.3 trillion in foreign long-term bonds (original maturity over one year), and $0.4 trillion in foreign short-term bonds. In the previous survey as of the end of 2023, the total value of U.S. holdings of foreign securities was $15.3 trillion, including $11.5 trillion in foreign equities, $3.4 trillion in foreign long-term bonds, and $0.4 trillion in foreign short-term bonds.
- 20:57Circle has no plans to issue a Korean won stablecoin.According to Jinse Finance, over the past week, Circle President Heath Tarbert visited South Korea and held meetings with the Bank of Korea as well as the country's four major commercial banks (KB Kookmin Bank, Shinhan Bank, Hana Bank, and Woori Bank). Multiple media outlets reported that Circle has no intention of participating in the issuance of a Korean won stablecoin. Mr. Tarbert's goal was to explore how banks can utilize their USDC token.
- 20:36The Federal Reserve finalizes new capital requirements for major banks, Morgan Stanley files for reconsiderationJinse Finance reported that the Federal Reserve announced on Friday that it has finalized new capital levels for the largest U.S. banks following June's stress tests, but added that Morgan Stanley (MS.N) is seeking a reassessment of its soon-to-be-effective capital level. The new capital requirements will take effect on October 1. If the Federal Reserve adopts a proposal currently under review, which would average the results of two years of stress tests, the requirements will be updated. Based on the annual large bank financial stress tests, the Federal Reserve assesses how banks would perform under hypothetical adverse economic scenarios and sets their capital buffer levels accordingly. Morgan Stanley is requesting a reconsideration of its results, and the Federal Reserve will announce its decision by the end of September.