Crypto News Roundup –
By the SmallCap Network Editorial Team
Fed Rate Cut Triggers Global Crypto Volatility
Cryptocurrency markets swung sharply on Wednesday after the U.S. Federal Reserve delivered a widely expected 0.25% interest rate cut – the second of 2025 – and Chair Jerome Powell struck a surprisingly hawkish tone. Bitcoin (BTC) fell about 5% over the past 24 hours to dip below $110,000coindesk.com, surrendering most of its early-week gains. Powell cautioned that a further rate reduction in December is “far from a foregone conclusion,” catching traders off guard after markets had priced in a 90% chance of another cutcoindesk.com. The Fed’s policy statement did note one dovish shift – an end to its balance sheet runoff (quantitative tightening) effective Dec. 1tradingview.com – but that did little to appease risk sentiment. Major stock indices flipped from mild gains to losses, and crypto assets likewise slumped amid the post-meeting press conferencecoindesk.comcoindesk.com.
Bitcoin and Ether Markets: BTC initially rallied earlier in the week to about $116,000 on anticipation of the rate cut, but sellers hit the market ahead of the Fed decision, driving it down to $109,200 intradaytradingview.com. By Wednesday evening, Bitcoin stabilized around the mid-$110K range on high trading volumes. Ether (ETH) similarly saw heavy activity – trading volumes jumped roughly 35% above weekly averages as bulls defended the $4,000 support levelcoindesk.com. Ether briefly pulled back from highs near $4,100 to about $3,950, but ultimately closed around $4,023on the day, up nearly 1% as dip-buyers stepped incoindesk.com. Analysts noted that large players like BitMine have been “buying the dip,” with one crypto treasury disclosing recent purchases of over 77,000 ETH to bring its holdings to 3.31 million ETH (about 2.8% of total supply)coindesk.comcoindesk.com. Still, market sentiment has turned cautious (“fear” on the Crypto Fear & Greed Index), as traders weigh macro headwinds – from a weakening U.S. jobs outlook to unresolved government budget battles – that could continue to inject volatility into crypto pricestradingview.comcoindesk.com.
Broader Altcoin Moves: Most major altcoins mirrored Bitcoin’s pullback. Solana (SOL) slid roughly 3% to trade around $195, and Binance Coin (BNB) fell to about $1,110, both paring recent gainscrypto.newscrypto.news. XRPhovered near $2.60 after a 2% daily dipcrypto.news, while Cardano (ADA) and Tron (TRX) each shed about 1–3%. One standout was Stellar (XLM), which edged 1.5% higher to break $0.32 amid signs of institutional accumulationcoindesk.com. Meanwhile, the Chainlink (LINK) token saw a surge in trading activity during the Fed turmoil – LINK dropped to about $17.96 Wednesday afternoon but quickly bounced 4% off lows, as volume spiked 26% above average and buyers emerged around the $17.60 levelcoindesk.com. Stablecoins also saw notable flows; exchanges reported an uptick in USDT/USDC inflows ahead of the Fed decision as traders positioned for volatilitycoindesk.com. In the derivatives arena, crypto futures and options reflected the uncertainty: some $17 billion in BTC and ETH options were set to expire heading into month-endcoindesk.com, adding another layer of short-term volatility to an already jittery market.
Regulatory Roundup: U.S. Platforms, Europe’s Stance, and Asia-Pacific Oversight
Regulators around the world introduced or clarified rules for digital assets, underscoring a global push to bring crypto into compliance with financial frameworks. In Washington, the first U.S. trading platform with on-chain settlement received a green light: Ironlight Markets, a FINRA-registered broker-dealer, won approval to operate an alternative trading system (ATS) for tokenized securities that clear and settle instantly on blockchaincoindesk.comcoindesk.com. This marks the first U.S.-regulated ATS to enable atomic (simultaneous) on-chain settlement, allowing trades of digital asset securities to finalize in seconds rather than the standard two-day cycle. Ironlight’s CEO Robert McGrath hailed FINRA’s approval as confirmation of the firm’s “leadership in building the first open-access, institutional-grade marketplace for tokenized assets,” aiming to connect traditional finance with blockchain efficiencycoindesk.com. The platform will launch with institutional participants in private credit, venture capital and other alternative assets – a pilot test of whether U.S. institutions will embrace tokenized markets under full regulatory oversight.
In Australia, the securities regulator ASIC signaled a tougher approach to crypto products ahead of new licensing laws. This week ASIC released guidance asserting that many digital asset offerings already qualify as financial products under existing law, meaning crypto exchanges and service providers must ensure compliance and licensing nowcoindesk.comcoindesk.com. The regulator’s revised rules (expanding terminology from “crypto assets” to “digital assets”) include practical examples confirming that activities like token staking programs or fiat-backed stablecoins likely fall under securities or payments regulationscoindesk.comcoindesk.com. ASIC also outlined strict custody standards, such as requiring exchanges to hold up to A$10 million (~US$6.5M) in net tangible assets if they custody client fundscoindesk.com. Notably, the Australian commission warned offshore and DeFi platforms that they cannot evade oversight – any service targeting Australian users must comply with Australian law, regardless of jurisdictioncoindesk.comcoindesk.com. These moves come as Australia’s Parliament finalizes a Digital Asset Platform bill to formally license crypto exchanges, custodians and stablecoin issuers. The clear message is that even ahead of new legislation, Australian authorities expect the crypto industry to play by the same rules as traditional finance.
Europe is likewise firming up its crypto framework. Earlier in October, the European Commission stated that the EU’s new Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulations, which begin phasing in, will adequately address risks from stablecoins and other digital assetsreuters.com. EU officials indicated no additional stablecoin-specific laws are needed at this time, signaling confidence that MiCA’s stringent reserve and supervision requirements (taking full effect in 2024–2025) are sufficient to keep euro-pegged tokens in checkreuters.com. Meanwhile, the European Systemic Risk Board published a report urging close monitoring of crypto markets and recommending limits on stablecoins in paymentsesrb.europa.eu – highlighting that even with MiCA, regulators remain vigilant about systemic risks. Across the Channel, the UK and other European jurisdictions continue to refine licensing regimes for crypto firms, aiming to balance innovation with investor protection. Global cooperation on enforcement was also evident: the EU’s latest sanctions package even targeted certain Russian crypto exchanges and brokers as part of financial sanctionsconsilium.europa.eu, reflecting how digital assets are now squarely on the geopolitical agenda.
In the Americas, regulatory scrutiny extends to novel crypto ventures by high-profile figures. Trump Media & Technology Group, the company of former U.S. President Donald Trump, announced plans to introduce federally-regulated prediction markets on its social network Truth Social in partnership with Crypto.com’s derivatives affiliate. The new “Truth Predict” platform will let users wager cryptocurrency on real-world events – from U.S. election outcomes to Federal Reserve rate moves – via an exchange registered with the Commodity Futures Trading Commissioncoindesk.comcoindesk.com. This tie-up means Truth Social will become the first social media app with native prediction market betting, but notably it’s doing so by working within U.S. regulations: Crypto.com’s CFTC-registered marketplace will handle the contracts to ensure compliance. Truth Social users in permitted jurisdictions will be able to convert in-app reward points into Crypto.com’s CRO token to place bets on the outcome of elections, sports games, and economic indicatorscoindesk.comcoindesk.com. By embracing a regulated framework, the Trump-linked venture aims to avoid legal pitfalls that some decentralized prediction markets have faced. The move puts Truth Social in competition with established prediction platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi, and indicates that even politically affiliated companies see opportunity in regulated crypto derivatives for the mainstream audiencecoindesk.comcoindesk.com.
Major Corporate Moves: IPOs, Investments and Partnerships
Despite the market volatility, crypto companies are pressing ahead with major business initiatives, from public listings to big-ticket acquisitions and partnerships:
Consensys Eyes IPO: Consensys, the Brooklyn-based blockchain software firm best known as the creator of the MetaMask wallet, is preparing for a potential initial public offering (IPO) on U.S. markets. According to a report by Axios, Consensys has enlisted Wall Street banks JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs as lead underwriters for an upcoming IPOcoindesk.comcoindesk.com. The offering would mark one of the highest-profile public debuts by an Ethereum-focused company, underscoring the maturation of the sector. Consensys, founded by Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin, said it had “nothing to announce at this time” regarding any listing plans but confirmed it continually explores opportunities for growthcoindesk.com. If it proceeds, Consensys would join a wave of crypto firms going public this year – including stablecoin issuer Circle, exchange Gemini, and trading platform Bullish – a trend enabled by improving regulatory clarity in the U.S.coindesk.com. The company has recently been expanding its product suite (for example, backing a $200 million on-chain treasury deployment on its Linea Layer-2 networkcoindesk.com), and an IPO would provide fresh capital to build out Ethereum infrastructure for its millions of users.
Mastercard’s $2B Stablecoin Bet: In a sign of legacy finance doubling down on crypto, Mastercard (MA) is reportedly in late-stage talks to acquire blockchain startup Zero Hash for $1.5–$2 billioncoindesk.com. Zero Hash specializes in stablecoin payment infrastructure, helping companies integrate digital assets into consumer payments. A Fortune report cited sources that Mastercard is eager to bolster its capabilities in stablecoins – cryptocurrencies pegged to fiat currencies – amid fierce competition in the sectorcoindesk.com. Stablecoins have emerged as the next frontier for global payments, promising near-instant, low-cost transactions across borders. Industry studies project stablecoin payment volumes could reach $1 trillion by 2030 as adoption grows in remittances, foreign exchange, and institutional settlementscoindesk.com. Rival payment giants are making moves as well: Visa recently unveiled a platform to help banks issue stablecoins, and fintech Stripe acquired a stablecoin startup for $1+ billion while building its own blockchain-based payment railcoindesk.com. Mastercard’s pursuit of Zero Hash – which processed $2B in tokenized transactions in early 2025 and counts Morgan Stanley among its investorscoindesk.com – signals that incumbents don’t want to be left behind. By potentially spending nearly $2B, Mastercard would be making one of its largest crypto acquisitions to date, aiming to integrate stablecoin support for merchants and banks in its vast network. Neither company has publicly commented on the deal yet.
Hong Kong’s HashKey Plans IPO: In Asia, Hong Kong’s push to become a crypto finance hub hit a milestone as HashKey Exchange – one of the city’s first licensed digital asset exchanges – is reportedly planning an IPO to raise roughly $500 millionreuters.com. Sources told Bloomberg that HashKey has been gauging interest for a Hong Kong stock market listing, which would make it one of the first fully regulated crypto exchanges in Asia to go public. HashKey’s growth reflects Hong Kong’s “cautious but supportive” regulatory approach since introducing a new licensing regime in 2023reuters.com. With daily trading volumes topping $100 million and a recent $500M digital treasury initiative under its belt, HashKey’s leadership believes compliance and transparency are competitive advantages in the post-FTX landscapereuters.comreuters.com. A successful public debut would bolster Hong Kong’s status as a regional gateway for institutional crypto investing, especially at a time when mainland China’s ban on crypto trading has pushed activity to friendlier jurisdictions like Hong Kong. The planned IPO underscores how far the crypto industry has evolved – from offshore, unregulated venues toward exchanges that meet the standards of traditional capital markets. Analysts say investor appetite for a HashKey IPO will be a key test of whether public markets are ready to back regulated crypto businesses in Asiareuters.com.
Wall Street–Crypto Alliance: Traditional banks are also deepening ties with crypto service providers. Citigroup revealed this week a partnership with Coinbase to develop digital asset payment solutions for Citi’s institutional clientscoindesk.com. The collaboration will focus on improving fiat on/off ramps and 24/7 stablecoin settlementfor corporate banking, aiming to bridge crypto and traditional payment networkscoindesk.comcoindesk.com. Citi, which operates in 90+ countries, said the move aligns with its strategy of being a “network of networks” for global paymentscoindesk.com. Future phases may involve letting Citi clients send money via stablecoins at any hour, not limited by normal banking hourscoindesk.comcoindesk.com. The bank has already been experimenting with tokenized deposits and even plans to offer crypto custody by 2026coindesk.com. For Coinbase, this tie-up expands its institutional reach and could drive volume through its treasury and custody services. The deal illustrates how major financial institutions are no longer shying away from crypto but actively integrating it – using established exchanges as partners rather than building from scratch. It comes on the heels of other banking giants’ forays into digital assets; for example, Nasdaq and NYSE just this week listed new spot crypto ETFs (for Solana, Hedera and Litecoin) after U.S. regulators signaled tacit approvalcoindesk.com. As banks, payment companies, and exchanges collaborate, the lines between crypto and conventional finance continue to blur.
Tech and DeFi Developments: Upgrades, Launches, and Token Sales
Amid the market and regulatory news, the crypto ecosystem saw significant technical advancements and project launches on October 29:
Ethereum’s Fusaka Upgrade Nears Mainnet: Ethereum developers completed the final test run for the “Fusaka” network upgrade on the Hoodi testnet, clearing the way for a mainnet launch in late November or early Decembercoindesk.comcoindesk.com. Fusaka – the latest in a series of Ethereum hard forks – is focused on improving scalability and reducing costs for running the blockchain. Its flagship feature, called PeerDAS, will let Ethereum validators verify only small data “segments” instead of entire large data blobs, dramatically cutting bandwidth and storage needs for nodescoindesk.com. This change should lower operating costs for both validators and Layer-2 networks, helping Ethereum handle more transactions at lower fees. With test deployments on Sepolia and Holesky networks already successfulcoindesk.com, the Hoodi test completion is the last dress rehearsal. Developers are now targeting December 3, 2025 for Fusaka’s activation on Ethereum’s mainnet (pending final confirmation in the next core dev call)coindesk.com. If all goes smoothly, Fusaka will follow just six months after Ethereum’s previous Pectra upgrade, reflecting the rapid pace of innovation. Attention will then turn to Ethereum’s next planned upgrade, nicknamed “Glamsterdam,” which is set to include further changes such as proposer-builder separation enhancementscoindesk.com. For Ethereum’s community and its millions of users, these protocol improvements aim to bolster the network’s throughput and efficiency as competition from high-speed alternative chains grows.
Solana Aims for Greater Decentralization: The Solana ecosystem is preparing for an “Alpenglow” network upgrade slated by year-end, which could lower barriers to running validator nodes. In an interview with SCN, Michael Repetny, CEO of Marinade Labs (the team behind Solana’s largest liquid staking pool), explained that Alpenglow will overhaul Solana’s staking economics to encourage more participants to operate validatorscoindesk.com. While Solana saw its validator count surge to ~2,000 at one point, that number has fallen below 1,000 active validators, raising centralization concernscoindesk.com. Higher hardware requirements have made it challenging for small operators. The Alpenglow upgrade aims to make validating more accessible and sustainable, which Repetny believes will improve network resilience and decentralization even as Solana continues to require high-performance infrastructurecoindesk.comcoindesk.com. The Solana Foundation has indicated the upgrade will introduce changes to stake distribution and possibly incentives that favor smaller or new validators. If successful, Solana could reduce its reliance on a few big validators (currently, as few as ~20 entities control a third of stake, by some measurescoindesk.com). This aligns with broader community efforts post-2022 to ensure Solana remains “too decentralized to fail.” The Alpenglow changes, expected to roll out by early 2026, will be closely watched as a model for other proof-of-stake networks grappling with similar centralization pressures.
DeFi Funding Bonanza – $450M for MegaETH: Investor appetite for the next generation of blockchain technology was on display as MegaETH, a new ultra-fast Ethereum Layer-2 network, raised $450 million in a token auction that smashed its initial funding targetcoindesk.com. Within hours of launch, the sale attracted over 14,490 participants, with 819 whale wallets maxing out their allocation at $186,000 eachcoindesk.com. MegaETH is an ambitious project backed by Ethereum co-founders Vitalik Buterin and Joseph Lubin (through their venture, MegaLabs) that promises to achieve 100,000 transactions per second with sub-millisecond latencycoindesk.comcoindesk.com. Essentially, it aims to bring web-like speed and responsiveness to blockchain while remaining compatible with the Ethereum ecosystem. The oversubscribed sale (nearly 9× the intended raise) highlights the fervor for scaling solutions – investors don’t want to miss what could be a breakthrough in on-chain performance. Brian Q., an analyst at Santiment, noted the rush into MegaETH reflects strong demand for “ultra-fast Ethereum expansions,” calling it the closest yet to web-level performance on-chaincoindesk.com. However, he cautioned that such synchronized buying can be a double-edged sword – a frenzy of speculators might amplify volatility once the token begins tradingcoindesk.com. Indeed, crypto history has examples like Plasma, another hyped blockchain launch, whose token price collapsed by 80% within weeks after an initial surgecoindesk.com. MegaETH plans to distribute its MEGA tokens using a weighted system favoring long-term community members, and the tokens will officially launch on exchanges in January 2026coindesk.com. The project’s success could mark a turning point in the Layer-2 race, but how the market handles that $450M influx of tokens will be an early test of its valuation.
Real-World Assets Go On-Chain: Tokenization of traditional assets took a leap forward as Securitize, a leader in blockchain-based securities, rolled out a tokenized credit fund on Ethereum in partnership with banking giant BNY Mellon. The new fund, called STAC (Securitize Tokenized AAA CLO Fund), offers investors exposure to collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) – a $1 trillion market of bundled corporate loans – by issuing fund shares as digital tokenscoindesk.comcoindesk.com. BNY Mellon, America’s oldest bank, will serve as custodian and fund administrator, while an on-chain asset manager (Grove) has committed a $100 million anchor investment, pending governance approvalcoindesk.comcoindesk.com. By tokenizing a traditionally illiquid, institutional credit product, Securitize aims to enable faster settlement and fractional ownership for CLO investmentscoindesk.com. Investors will be able to buy small tokenized slices of the fund, lowering entry barriers to an asset class usually accessible only to large institutions. Securitize CEO Carlos Domingo said the move provides yield-seeking clients “a high-quality credit product in an efficient and transparent instrument” via blockchaincoindesk.com. Notably, Securitize itself also announced it plans to go public, riding the momentum in the real-world asset (RWA) tokenization spacecoindesk.com. Analysts project the tokenized RWA market could swell from ~$35 billion today to $18.9 trillion by 2033 as more stocks, bonds, and funds adopt blockchain railscoindesk.com. The launch of a tokenized CLO fund in collaboration with a $57 trillion megabank like BNY Mellon is a strong signal that TradFi and DeFi are converging. It follows other RWA initiatives this year, including private equity tokens, real estate on blockchains, and even experiments with tokenized Treasury bills. For retail and institutional crypto investors alike, these products blur the line between crypto assets and traditional finance by bringing familiar financial instruments on-chain.
Global Adoption: Latin America Leads and New Use-Cases Emerge
Finally, beyond the headlines of markets and institutions, cryptocurrency adoption trends worldwide continue to evolve:
Latin America – Fastest Growing Market: A new report by Coinchange highlighted Latin America as the world’s fastest-expanding crypto region in 2025, with usage soaring 63% year-over-year from mid-2024 to mid-2025markets.financialcontent.com. Economic realities have made Latin America a proving ground for crypto’s real-world utility. Citizens are increasingly turning to digital assets as hedges against inflation and tools for remittances, rather than pure speculation. The report notes that stablecoins – essentially digital dollars – form the backbone of this boom. In inflation-hit countries, USD-pegged tokens like USDT and USDC dominate transaction volumes: for example, in Brazil stablecoins account for up to 90% of crypto trading flows, and in Venezuela they make up 34% of retail crypto paymentsmarkets.financialcontent.com. These “digital dollars” offer a lifeline for storing value and transacting in economies where local currencies are volatilemarkets.financialcontent.commarkets.financialcontent.com. Across Latin America, monthly crypto transaction volumes have climbed to around $3 billion in 2025 – approaching levels last seen in the 2021 bull run – indicating a robust base of everyday usersmarkets.financialcontent.com. It’s not just individuals; governments and banks in the region are paying attention. Countries like El Salvador (which famously adopted Bitcoin as legal tender in 2021) pioneered the movement, and now others such as Argentina, Colombia, and Brazil are exploring regulatory frameworks to integrate crypto into their financial systems. The Coinchange study emphasizes that Latin America’s surge is utility-driven: stablecoins for payments and savings, Bitcoin as a store of value, and emerging DeFi lending services to provide credit in places where banking access is limitedmarkets.financialcontent.commarkets.financialcontent.com. This organic growth, born from necessity, is seen as a blueprint for how crypto can achieve mainstream penetration in emerging markets. As one example of innovation, fintech startups are partnering with blockchain protocols to enable crypto-backed loans via conventional Visa cards, letting users borrow against crypto assets without selling themmarkets.financialcontent.com. With the region’s on-chain volume exceeding $1.5 trillion over the past three yearsmarkets.financialcontent.com, Latin America has effectively become a living laboratory for crypto’s promise of financial inclusion.
Mainstream Uptake and Innovation: Elsewhere, subtle signs of cryptocurrency blending into everyday life are appearing. In Asia and Europe, some retailers in major cities like Tokyo and Zurich now accept crypto payments at checkoutreuters.com, and popular consumer apps are testing blockchain-based settlement for faster money transfers. In the U.S., the sports and entertainment world is experimenting with crypto tokens for fan engagement, and brands are launching loyalty programs on blockchain. Even social media and gaming have jumped in: beyond Trump’s Truth Social betting venture, platforms like Reddit have issued community tokens, and global game publishers are exploring in-game assets on-chain. Each of these developments points to a future where users may interact with blockchain tech without even realizing it – whether it’s sending money across borders via a stablecoin in a banking app, earning crypto rewards for streaming content, or buying event tickets tokenized as NFTs. Notably, prediction markets are gaining traction as a form of participatory finance (with the Truth Social example bringing it into the political mainstream)coindesk.comcoindesk.com. And with several countries (like Hong Kong and the UAE) establishing clear rules for crypto service providers, more companies are rolling out offerings that connect crypto with traditional services. For instance, Hong Kong’s new stablecoin rules took effect in August, requiring licenses for HKD-pegged coin issuers and spurring interest from major fintech firmsphemex.commexc.com. All of this suggests that while prices will ebb and flow, crypto technology continues to quietly weave itself into the fabric of global finance and commerce.
Conclusion: The date October 29, 2025 encapsulated the multifaceted nature of today’s crypto landscape – from macroeconomic events rattling token prices, to landmark regulatory approvals and corporate bets on blockchain’s future, to technical breakthroughs and grassroots adoption around the world. Bitcoin and its peers showed they are not immune to central bank policies, yet the industry’s steady march toward mainstream legitimacy was evident in moves like Consensys’ and HashKey’s IPO plans, and Mastercard’s foray into stablecoins. Regulatory regimes are tightening, but also providing clarity that is allowing innovation to flourish under supervision from New York to Hong Kong to São Paulo. For retail investors with a moderate understanding of crypto, the message is to stay informed: volatility and opportunity often come hand in hand in this fast-evolving market. Every day brings new data points – whether it’s an official statement from the Fed or EU, a startup raising hundreds of millions in minutes, or a developing nation embracing digital assets – that together are writing the next chapter of the crypto story. As October 2025 draws to a close, the crypto market enters the final stretch of the year with heightened attention on macro trends and an optimistic eye on technological progress, albeit tempered by lessons from a turbulent month. The SmallCap Network editorial team will continue monitoring these developments to keep you updated with clear, factual analysis as we head into November.
Sources:
U.S. Federal Reserve rate cut and market reactioncoindesk.comcoindesk.comcoindesk.com
Bitcoin and crypto price movementstradingview.comcoindesk.comcoindesk.com
Chainlink volatility during FOMC eventcoindesk.com; Stellar accumulationcoindesk.com
Stablecoin inflows and market sentimentcoindesk.com
FINRA approval of Ironlight on-chain ATScoindesk.comcoindesk.com
Australian ASIC’s crypto guidancecoindesk.comcoindesk.com
European Commission on stablecoin regulationreuters.com
Trump Media’s Truth Social prediction markets dealcoindesk.comcoindesk.com
Consensys IPO plans (via Axios)coindesk.comcoindesk.com
Wave of crypto firms going public in 2025coindesk.com
Mastercard’s talks to buy Zero Hashcoindesk.comcoindesk.com
Visa/Stripe moves in stablecoin paymentscoindesk.com
HashKey exchange $500M IPO plan (Hong Kong)reuters.comreuters.com
Citi and Coinbase partnership on paymentscoindesk.comcoindesk.com
NYSE/Nasdaq listing of spot crypto ETFscoindesk.com
Ethereum “Fusaka” upgrade testing completecoindesk.comcoindesk.com
Solana “Alpenglow” and decentralization goalscoindesk.comcoindesk.com
MegaETH Layer-2 raises $450Mcoindesk.comcoindesk.com
Santiment analyst on MegaETH demandcoindesk.com
Securitize & BNY Mellon launch tokenized CLO fundcoindesk.comcoindesk.com
Tokenized RWA market projectionscoindesk.com
Latin America crypto adoption reportmarkets.financialcontent.commarkets.financialcontent.com
Stablecoin usage in Brazil and Venezuelamarkets.financialcontent.com
Latin America crypto volumes and use-casesmarkets.financialcontent.commarkets.financialcontent.com
Mainstream crypto payments in Tokyo/Zurichreuters.com
Sources
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