BlackRock IBIT Ranks 6th in 2025 ETF Inflows

BlackRock’s IBIT ranked sixth in 2025 ETF inflows despite negative returns, highlighting long-term institutional demand for Bitcoin exposure.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust ranked sixth among all ETFs by net inflows in 2025, despite being the only fund in the top cohort to post a negative return for the year. Data cited by Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas shows IBIT attracted about $25 billion in inflows, outperforming several higher-returning equity, bond, and gold-backed ETFs in capital raised.

The performance highlights sustained investor interest in Bitcoin exposure through regulated vehicles, even during periods of price weakness. Analysts noted that inflows reflect longer-term allocation decisions rather than short-term trading behavior, particularly among institutional and older investors focused on holding strategies.

At the same time, broader crypto ETF markets showed signs of pressure. US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded net outflows late in the year, while spot Ether ETFs extended a multi-day outflow streak. Market participants suggested Bitcoin’s more mature market structure, combined with profit-taking after strong prior-year gains, may help explain muted price action despite continued ETF demand.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Bitcoin, Markets & Trading, News

JPMorgan Sees Stablecoin Market Reaching $600B by 2028

JPMorgan projects stablecoin supply could reach up to $600 billion by 2028, citing steady growth driven mainly by crypto trading rather than payments adoption.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

JPMorgan Chase said the global stablecoin market could grow to between $500 billion and $600 billion by 2028, well below the most optimistic projections circulating in the digital asset industry. In a research note, the bank said total stablecoin supply has increased by about $100 billion this year to roughly $308 billion, led by Tether’s USDT and Circle’s USDC.

Analysts said demand remains concentrated within crypto markets, particularly for trading, derivatives, and decentralized finance activity. Derivatives platforms alone added an estimated $20 billion in stablecoin holdings amid increased perpetual futures volumes. The bank described stablecoins primarily as collateral and liquidity tools rather than mainstream payment instruments.

JPMorgan noted that while payments-related adoption may expand over time, broader usage is more likely to increase transaction velocity than overall supply. The report also highlighted competition from tokenized bank deposits and potential central bank digital currencies, which could limit long-term stablecoin expansion.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Altcoins, DeFi & FinTech, News

Polish Parliament Revives Crypto Bill, Sends to Senate

Poland’s lower house has approved a revived crypto bill aligned with the EU’s MiCA framework, sending the unchanged legislation to the Senate for review.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

Poland’s lower house of parliament, the Sejm, has approved a revived crypto bill that could impose stricter rules on the domestic digital asset market. Lawmakers voted 241 to 183 in favor of the Crypto-Assets Market Act, which had previously been vetoed by President Karol Nawrocki, and sent the legislation to the Senate for further consideration.

The bill is intended to align Poland’s regulatory framework with the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation, which member states are expected to implement by mid-2026. Critics within the crypto industry and parliament have argued that the legislation is overly restrictive and could undermine Poland’s position as a regional hub for digital asset activity. Lawmakers reintroduced the bill without amendments, despite earlier objections.

The Senate will now review the proposal before it potentially returns to the president. The renewed vote underscores ongoing tensions between regulatory alignment with EU standards and concerns over the impact on innovation and market development.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Altcoins, Bitcoin, DeFi & FinTech, Ethereum, News

ECB Plans Onchain Settlement as Digital Euro Debate Continues

The European Central Bank plans to enable blockchain-based settlement in central bank money in 2026, as EU lawmakers continue debating privacy rules for the digital euro.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

The European Central Bank plans to allow blockchain-based settlement of transactions in central bank money next year, as it prepares the infrastructure for a future digital euro. ECB executive board member Piero Cipollone said the initiative will enable distributed ledger technology-based transactions and support cross-border settlement with other central bank digital currencies.

Cipollone said the digital euro would include holding limits and offer no interest, measures intended to preserve banks’ role in credit intermediation and monetary transmission. While the ECB has completed its technical design, key decisions on privacy and data protection remain with EU lawmakers. ECB President Christine Lagarde has said the institution’s role is finished pending legislative approval.

The ECB argues a digital euro is needed to address fragmented retail payments and slow cross-border transfers while limiting risks from stablecoins, particularly dollar-denominated ones. Initial digital euro transactions could begin after legislative approval in 2026, with broader readiness later in the decade, depending on political consensus.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

DeFi & FinTech, News, Regulation & Policy

SEC Seeks Multi-Year Executive Bans in FTX Case

The SEC is seeking multi-year officer and director bans against former Alameda Research CEO Caroline Ellison and former FTX executives Gary Wang and Nishad Singh.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

The US Securities and Exchange Commission said it is seeking to ban former Alameda Research CEO Caroline Ellison and former FTX executives Gary Wang and Nishad Singh from serving as officers or directors of public companies for several years. The proposed sanctions are part of the final consent judgments filed in the Southern District of New York.

According to the SEC, Ellison agreed to a 10-year officer-and-director bar, while Wang, FTX’s former chief technology officer, and Singh, its former co-lead engineer, agreed to eight-year bans. All three consented to permanent injunctions against future violations of federal antifraud laws, without admitting or denying the agency’s allegations.

The action stems from the collapse of FTX and affiliated trading firm Alameda Research in November 2022. Regulators have said Wang and Singh helped develop software that enabled the misuse of customer funds, which Ellison directed for Alameda’s trading activities. The case underscores ongoing regulatory scrutiny of executive conduct in crypto markets.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

DeFi & FinTech, Markets & Trading, News, Regulation & Policy, Technology & Security

DraftKings Launches Predictions App under CFTC Oversight

DraftKings has launched a standalone predictions app regulated by the CFTC, expanding into federally supervised event contracts and intensifying competition in prediction markets.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

DraftKings said it has launched a standalone predictions app, formally entering federally regulated prediction markets under oversight from the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The product, DraftKings Predictions, allows eligible users to trade event contracts tied to real-world outcomes, including sports and financial markets. The app operates separately from DraftKings’ core sportsbook offering.

By operating under federal commodities rules, DraftKings can offer event-based contracts in states where online sports betting remains prohibited, including California and Texas. Company executives have previously described prediction markets as a way to expand reach without altering state gaming laws or replacing existing sportsbook operations.

The launch places DraftKings in more direct competition with platforms such as Kalshi and Polymarket, which have seen rapid growth in sports-related trading volumes. DraftKings said trades will initially route through CME Group infrastructure, with plans to expand liquidity and offerings. The move underscores rising institutional interest in prediction markets as a regulated alternative to traditional wagering.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Altcoins, DeFi & FinTech, Markets & Trading, News

Fetch.ai Prepares AI Agent Payments with Cards and Stablecoins

Fetch.ai says its AI agents will soon be able to complete online purchases using card payments and stablecoins, addressing a key limitation in agent-based commerce.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

Fetch.ai said it will roll out a payment system in January that allows its AI agents to complete transactions on behalf of users, including bookings and deposits. The system uses existing Visa infrastructure and issues single-use card credentials tied to specific purchases, aiming to address security and liability concerns that have limited autonomous payments.

The functionality will be hosted on Fetch.ai’s ASI:ONE platform and supports credit cards, stablecoins such as USDC, and the network’s native FET token. The company said it is working with established financial providers rather than building proprietary payment rails, with Mastercard support expected later, following additional reviews.

The move comes as retailers and platforms scrutinize automated shopping tools more closely. By incorporating identity verification, KYC checks, and transaction-level controls, Fetch.ai positions its agents as transparent and compliant, reflecting growing efforts to align agentic AI systems with financial and regulatory expectations.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Altcoins, DeFi & FinTech, News, Technology & Security

Bitwise Files for SUI ETF as Competition Builds

Bitwise has filed with the SEC to launch an ETF tracking SUI, joining a growing group of asset managers seeking regulated exposure to newer layer 1 tokens.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

Crypto asset manager Bitwise has filed a registration statement with the US Securities and Exchange Commission to launch the Bitwise SUI ETF. The proposed fund would seek to track the value of SUI tokens held by the trust, net of expenses, with Coinbase Custody named as custodian.

The filing places Bitwise alongside other firms pursuing regulated exposure to SUI. Canary Capital and 21Shares previously submitted applications for similar products, though none have yet received approval. Interest in SUI-linked products has increased as issuers expand beyond ETFs tied to Bitcoin and Ether into newer layer 1 assets.

The application comes amid a broader shift in the US regulatory environment for crypto investment products. Under current SEC leadership, the agency has moved toward clearer listing standards, enabling a wider range of digital asset ETFs to seek market approval as institutional demand continues to evolve.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Altcoins, Markets & Trading, News

SoFi Launches Dollar Stablecoin Issued by Bank Unit

SoFi Technologies has introduced SoFiUSD, a fully reserved US dollar stablecoin issued by its regulated banking subsidiary to support payments and settlement use cases.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

SoFi Technologies has rolled out SoFiUSD, a US dollar stablecoin issued by its banking subsidiary, SoFi Bank. The token is backed one-to-one by cash held at the nationally chartered and insured bank and is redeemable on demand, according to the company.

SoFi said the stablecoin is designed for low-cost payments and settlement across banks, fintech firms, and enterprise platforms. Initially issued on Ethereum, SoFiUSD is expected to expand to additional blockchains over time. Early use cases include internal settlement, card networks, remittances via SoFi Pay, and transactions on the company’s Galileo financial infrastructure platform.

The launch follows growing regulatory clarity for stablecoins in the United States after the passage of the GENIUS Act. As large financial institutions explore tokenized dollars for payments efficiency, SoFi’s move positions it among regulated firms testing stablecoins within traditional banking frameworks.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Altcoins, DeFi & FinTech, News

Intuit to Integrate Circle’s USDC Across Financial Platforms

Intuit announced a multi-year partnership with Circle to integrate USDC and stablecoin infrastructure into its financial platforms to support faster and lower-cost payments.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

Intuit, the financial software firm behind TurboTax, QuickBooks, Credit Karma, and Mailchimp, has entered a multi-year strategic partnership with stablecoin issuer Circle. The agreement will integrate Circle’s stablecoin infrastructure and the USDC token into Intuit’s platforms, supporting payments tied to business transactions, tax refunds, and marketing services.

According to Intuit, the integration is designed to enable faster and lower-cost transactions across its ecosystem. Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire said the partnership aims to extend the efficiency of USDC into everyday financial use cases. USDC is currently the second-largest stablecoin by market capitalization, with a supply exceeding $77 billion.

The move comes as regulatory clarity around stablecoins improves in the United States following recent legislation. Industry participants view embedded stablecoin payments as a potential efficiency upgrade for large-scale financial platforms, particularly those serving small businesses and consumers.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

DeFi & FinTech, News

World Liberty Proposes Treasury Allocation to Boost USD1

World Liberty Financial has proposed allocating 5% of its WLFI treasury to expand adoption of its USD1 stablecoin through partnerships and ecosystem incentives.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

World Liberty Financial has submitted a governance proposal to allocate 5% of its WLFI token treasury to support growth of its USD1 stablecoin. The proposal outlines plans to use the funds for strategic partnerships, liquidity incentives, and ecosystem programs designed to expand USD1 supply and usage. If approved, the allocation would represent roughly $120 million based on current token prices.

The project argues that broader USD1 adoption would strengthen demand for WLFI-governed services and integrations. USD1 currently ranks as the seventh-largest US dollar-pegged stablecoin, competing with dominant issuers such as Tether and Circle in an increasingly crowded market. The team said targeted CeFi and DeFi partnerships could help USD1 maintain relevance amid rising institutional and retail stablecoin activity.

The proposal comes as USD1 continues expanding across multiple blockchains and exploring consumer-facing products. However, the stablecoin has also drawn scrutiny over transparency and its political associations, adding regulatory and reputational considerations for governance participants reviewing the plan.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Altcoins, DeFi & FinTech, News

Coinbase Deepens India Push with CoinDCX Stake Approval

India’s competition regulator has approved Coinbase’s minority investment in CoinDCX, reinforcing the US exchange’s renewed focus on the Indian market.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

India’s Competition Commission has approved Coinbase’s acquisition of a minority stake in DCX Global Limited, the parent company of crypto exchange CoinDCX. The decision allows the US-based exchange to deepen its presence in one of the world’s largest retail crypto markets under regulatory oversight. Coinbase has been an investor in CoinDCX since 2020, and the approval formalizes a renewed commitment after a period of limited activity.

The clearance follows a turbulent year for CoinDCX, which disclosed a $44.2 million security breach in July involving a single wallet. The company said customer funds were not impacted, and operations continued without disruption, an important factor for institutional and regulatory confidence.

Coinbase’s move comes as it resumes user onboarding in India and plans to introduce a rupee on-ramp in 2026. Despite high transaction taxes and regulatory uncertainty, the approval signals measured openness to global crypto firms operating within defined boundaries.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Altcoins, Bitcoin, DeFi & FinTech, Ethereum, News

SBI Ripple Asia Signs RWA Tokenization MOU

SBI Ripple Asia has signed an MoU with Doppler Finance to explore real-world asset tokenization and XRP-based yield infrastructure on the XRP Ledger.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

SBI Ripple Asia has signed a memorandum of understanding with Doppler Finance to explore collaboration on real-world asset tokenization and XRP-based yield infrastructure built on the XRP Ledger. The non-binding agreement focuses on developing transparent, institution-ready yield mechanisms that could expand XRP’s role beyond payments.

The initiative will target institutional clients and regulated environments, with Doppler providing XRP-native infrastructure designed to align with traditional financial standards. SBI Digital Markets, a Monetary Authority of Singapore-regulated entity, has been appointed as institutional custodian, offering segregated custody and governance controls intended to mitigate counterparty risk.

The partnership reflects broader industry efforts to bring tokenized assets and on-chain yield products into regulated financial markets. For the XRP ecosystem, the collaboration underscores growing interest in positioning the ledger as a platform for compliant financial use cases, particularly in Asia’s closely supervised digital asset landscape.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Altcoins, DeFi & FinTech, News

Tether Unveils PearPass Peer-to-Peer Password Manager

Tether has launched PearPass, a peer-to-peer password manager designed to eliminate cloud storage risks by keeping credentials locally encrypted on user devices.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

Tether has introduced PearPass, a peer-to-peer password manager that stores credentials directly on users’ devices rather than in centralized cloud servers. The company said the design removes common attack vectors associated with server-based password vaults and limits exposure to large-scale data breaches.

PearPass uses device-level encryption and peer-to-peer synchronization to share credentials only across a user’s own devices. Tether stated that passwords never leave local hardware except through encrypted channels, positioning the product as resilient during outages or in high-risk digital environments. The app relies on open-source cryptographic libraries and has undergone an independent security audit.

The launch reflects Tether’s broader expansion beyond stablecoins into decentralized consumer technology focused on privacy and digital sovereignty. As scrutiny of centralized data storage grows, PearPass signals how established crypto firms are applying decentralization principles to adjacent technology markets.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

DeFi & FinTech, News, Technology & Security

Hut 8 Shares Jump on AI Data Center Deal

Hut 8 shares surged after the Bitcoin miner announced a large-scale AI infrastructure partnership and a long-term data center lease tied to hyperscale demand.

By Julia Sakovich Updated 1 min read

Shares of Nasdaq-listed Hut 8 rose sharply after the company announced a major expansion into AI data center infrastructure through a partnership with Anthropic and Fluidstack. The agreement positions Hut 8 to develop between 245 and 2,295 megawatts of AI-focused capacity, beginning at its River Bend campus in Louisiana.

Alongside the partnership, Hut 8 disclosed a 15-year, $7 billion triple-net lease with Fluidstack covering the initial phase of development. Google will provide a financial backstop for lease obligations, while the project is expected to be financed primarily through debt led by JPMorgan, with Goldman Sachs also participating.

The move highlights a broader industry trend as Bitcoin miners seek to repurpose power and data center assets for AI workloads amid rising demand for compute. For Hut 8, the deal diversifies revenue beyond crypto mining and aligns the company with institutional AI infrastructure spending.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: CoinScreamer is an independent media brand owned by NuvexMedia LLC, providing news, research, and market insights. NuvexMedia LLC invests in and collaborates with various companies across the digital asset and technology industries. Despite these partnerships, CoinScreamer operates with full editorial independence to deliver accurate, timely, and objective information about the crypto market. Below are our current financial and business disclosures. © 2025 NuvexMedia LLC. All Rights Reserved. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, tax, investment, financial, or any other form of professional advice.

Bitcoin, News, Technology & Security