Bitcoin ETF Assets Fall Below $100 Billion
US spot Bitcoin ETFs slipped below $100 billion in assets after $272 million in daily outflows, extending year-to-date losses amid market volatility.
The Briefs section compiles short, high-importance updates across cryptocurrency, blockchain, digital asset markets, regulation, venture activity, exchanges, and product launches. It is built for readers who want fast access to material developments without the length or structure of full reported features. This page serves as a running editorial feed for time-sensitive items that can affect sentiment, pricing, policy, or sector direction. It complements longer news and analysis by offering a condensed format for tracking the pace of change across the crypto industry.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs slipped below $100 billion in assets after $272 million in daily outflows, extending year-to-date losses amid market volatility.
Bitwise is set to acquire staking provider Chorus One, signaling growing institutional demand for onchain yield as Ethereum staking reaches record levels.
Aave is dissolving its Avara umbrella brand and winding down the Family wallet as it sharpens focus on its core DeFi products under Aave Labs.
Crypto.com has launched OG, a standalone prediction market app for U.S. users, separating the business after rapid growth in event-based trading.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded their largest inflows in weeks as investors added exposure despite Bitcoin trading well below recent highs.
AI dominates investment priorities for global family offices, while cryptocurrencies remain largely absent from portfolios, according to JPMorgan data.
Arizona’s attorney general issued a public warning as losses from crypto ATM scams surged, with older adults accounting for a large share of victims.
Michael Saylor’s Strategy bought $75.3 million worth of Bitcoin as prices briefly fell below $75,000, marking a rare dip under its average cost basis.
Kevin Warsh’s nomination as Federal Reserve chair has raised concerns over U.S. liquidity, offering conflicting signals for Bitcoin and broader crypto markets.
Hong Kong regulators are preparing to grant the city’s first stablecoin issuer licenses, with approvals expected to be limited in the initial rollout.