The Future of Stablecoins: Are We Heading Towards Offshore Havens?
As regulators eye stablecoin yields, investors may turn to offshore alternatives, raising questions about the effectiveness of crypto regulation.
With Bitcoin and Ether under pressure, is this a temporary setback or a sign of deeper issues in the crypto ecosystem?
As regulators eye stablecoin yields, investors may turn to offshore alternatives, raising questions about the effectiveness of crypto regulation.
With Bitcoin's reputation as a digital gold under scrutiny, it's crucial to question whether it can truly fulfill its promise as a safe haven.
As Coinbase eyes a stake in Coinone, the question arises: is this a bold expansion strategy or a sign of desperation in a competitive market?
Japan's move towards crypto ETFs could redefine retail investment opportunities, but is it a step in the right direction?
The SEC's decision to drop its lawsuit against Gemini raises questions about regulatory oversight and what this means for the future of crypto exchanges.
PENGUIN's 564% surge post-White House mention sparks debate on the role of political influence in crypto markets.
Current tax policies are hampering Bitcoin's potential as a payment method. Is it time for reform?
Changpeng Zhao is floating a familiar AI-era idea: fewer jobs, more automation. The problem isn’t the provocation—it’s how quickly “future talk” becomes a policy dodge.
A $40 million airdrop sounds like harmless user incentives—until the token’s tied to a Trump-linked project and the distribution pipe is Binance. The question isn’t whether airdrops are legal. It’s whether they’re becoming a cleaner way to buy legitimacy.
World Liberty Financial’s tie-up with Spacecoin sounds like DeFi infrastructure meets satellite internet. The problem: the public details are thin, the token mechanics are vague, and the politics are doing a lot of the heavy lifting.
The SEC and CFTC are suddenly talking like teammates. That could mean long-overdue clarity — or just a cleaner way to decide who gets to call your token a security, a commodity, or a target.
Coinbase’s last-minute withdrawal from a Senate crypto market structure bill exposes an uncomfortable truth: the industry wants rules, but it can’t agree on whose rules—or how bipartisan they need to be to survive.