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Tag: Cryptocurrency

  • Don’t Trust, Verify: Surviving the AI Misinformation Age

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    The crypto mantra “don’t trust, verify” now applies to all digital life. Practical filters for surviving deepfakes, bots, and AI-generated content.

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    dragos@dragosroua.com (Dragos Roua)

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  • Turkmenistan, one of the world’s most closed nations, legalizes crypto mining and exchanges

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    ASHGABAT, Turkmenistan — ASHGABAT, Turkmenistan (AP) — Turkmenistan, one of the world’s most isolated nations, officially legalized mining and exchanging cryptocurrency on Thursday in a major shift for the country’s tightly controlled, gas-dependent economy.

    Signed by President Serdar Berdimuhamedov, the legislation regulating virtual assets brings cryptocurrencies under civil law and establishes a licensing scheme for cryptocurrency exchanges overseen by the country’s central bank.

    However, digital currencies will still not be recognized as a means of payment, currency, or security. Turkmenistan’s internet also remains tightly regulated and controlled by the government.

    Turkmenistan, a former Soviet country in Central Asia, relies heavily on the export of its vast natural gas reserves to support its economy. China is the country’s main importer of gas, and Turkmenistan is currently working on a pipeline to supply gas to Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India.

    Turkmenistan also adopted a law introducing electronic visas in April last year, aimed at simplifying entry for foreigners. After gaining independence in 1991, the autocratic nation typically placed strict entry requirements on would-be visitors, with many visa applications turned down for unclear reasons.

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  • The 11 big trades of 2025: Bubbles, cockroaches and a 367% jump

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    It was another year of high-conviction bets — and fast reversals.

    From bond desks in Tokyo and credit committees in New York to currency traders in Istanbul, markets delivered both windfalls and whiplash. Gold hit records. Staid mortgage behemoths gyrated like meme stocks. A textbook carry trade blew up in a flash.

    Investors bet big on shifting politics, bloated balance sheets and fragile narratives, fueling outsized stock rallies, crowded yield trades, and crypto strategies built on leverage, hope, and not much else. Donald Trump’s White House return quickly sank — and then revived — financial markets across the world, lit a fire under European defense stocks, and emboldened speculators fanning mania after mania. Some positions paid off spectacularly. Others misfired when momentum reversed, financing dried up or leverage cut the wrong way.

    As the year draws to a close, Bloomberg highlights some of the most eye-catching wagers of 2025 — the wins, the wipeouts and the positions that defined the era. Many of those bets leave investors fretting over all-too-familiar fault lines as they prepare for 2026: shaky companies, stretched valuations, and trend-chasing trades that work, until they don’t.

    Crypto: Trumped

    It looked like one of crypto’s more compelling momentum bets: load up on anything and everything tied to the Trump brand. During his presidential campaign and after he took office, Trump went all-in on digital assets — pushing sweeping reforms and installing industry allies across powerful agencies. His family leaned in, championing coins and crypto firms that traders treated as political rocket fuel.

    The franchise came together fast. Hours before the inauguration, Trump launched a memecoin and promoted it on social media. First Lady Melania Trump soon followed with her own token. Later in the year, Trump family–affiliated World Liberty Financial made its WLFI token tradable and available to retail investors. A set of Trump-adjacent trades followed. Eric Trump co-founded American Bitcoin, a publicly traded miner that went public via a merger in September.

    Each debut sparked a rally. Each proved ephemeral. As of Dec. 23, Trump’s memecoin was floundering, off more than 80% from its January high. Melania’s was down nearly 99%, according to CoinGecko. American Bitcoin had sunk about 80% from its September peak.

    Politics gave the trades a push. The laws of speculation pulled them back down. Even with a friend in the White House, these trades couldn’t escape crypto’s core pattern: prices rise, leverage floods in, and liquidity dries up. Bitcoin, still the bellwether, is on track for an annual loss after slumping from its October peak. For Trump-linked assets, politics offered momentum, but no protection. — Olga Kharif

    AI Trade: The Next Big Short?

    The trade was revealed in a routine filing, yet its impact was anything but routine. Scion Asset Management disclosed on Nov. 3 that it held protective put options in Nvidia Corp. and Palantir Technologies Inc. — stocks at the center of the artificial intelligence trade that’s powered the market’s rally for three years. While not a whale-sized hedge fund, Scion commands attention due to the person who runs it: Michael Burry, who earned fame as a market prophet in The Big Short book and movie about the mortgage bubble that led to the 2008 crisis.

    The strike prices were startling: Nvidia’s was 47% below where the stock had just closed, while Palantir’s was 76% below. But some mystery lingered: Due to limited reporting requirements, it was unclear if the puts — contracts that give an investor the right to sell a stock at a certain price by a certain date — were part of a more complicated trade. And the filing offered just a snapshot of Scion’s books on Sept. 30, leaving open the possibility that Burry had since trimmed or exited the positions. Yet skepticism about the lofty valuations and massive spending plans of major AI players had been building like a pile of dry kindling. Burry’s disclosure landed like a freshly struck match.

    Nvidia, the largest stock in the world, tumbled in reaction, as did Palantir, though they later regained ground. The Nasdaq also dipped.

    It’s impossible to know exactly how much Burry made. One bread crumb he left was a post on X saying he paid $1.84 for the Palantir puts; those options went on to gain as much as 101% in less than three weeks. The filing crystallized doubts simmering beneath a market dominated by a narrow group of AI-linked stocks, heavy passive inflows and subdued volatility. Whether the trade proves prescient or premature, it underscored how quickly even the most dominant market narratives can turn once belief begins to crack. — Michael P. Regan

    Defense Stocks: New World Order

    A geopolitical shift has led to huge gains in a sector once deemed toxic by asset managers: European defense. Trump’s plans to take a step back from funding Ukraine’s military sent European governments into a spending spree, giving a huge lift to shares of regional defense firms — from the roughly 150% year-to-date rally in Germany’s Rheinmetall AG as of Dec. 23, to Italy’s Leonardo SpA more than 90% ascent during the period.

    Money managers who once saw the sector as too controversial to touch amid environmental, social and governance concerns changed their tune and a number of funds even redefined their mandates.

    “We had taken defense out of our ESG funds until the beginning of this year,” said Pierre Alexis Dumont, chief investment officer at Sycomore Asset Management. “There was a change of paradigm, and when there is a change of paradigm, one has to be responsible and also defend one’s values. So we’re focusing on defensive weapons.”

    From goggle makers to chemicals producers, and even a printing company, stocks were snapped up in a mad rush. A Bloomberg basket of European defense stocks was up more than 70% for the year as of Dec. 23. The boom spilled into credit markets as well, with firms only tangentially linked to defense attracting hordes of prospective lenders. Banks even started selling “European Defence Bonds,” modeled on green bonds except in this case ringfenced for borrowers like weapons manufacturers. It marked a repricing of defense as a public good rather than a reputational liability — and a reminder that when geopolitics shifts, capital tends to follow faster than ideology. — Isolde MacDonogh

    Debasement Trade: Fact or Fiction? 

    Heavy debt loads in major economies such as the US, France and Japan — and a lack of political appetite to confront them — pushed some investors in 2025 to tout gold and alternative assets like crypto, while cooling enthusiasm for government bonds and the US dollar. The idea gained traction under a bearish label: the “debasement trade,” a nod to historic episodes when rulers such as Nero diluted the value of money to cope with fiscal strain.

    The narrative reached a crescendo in October, when concerns over the US fiscal outlook collided with the longest government shutdown on record. Investors searched for shelter beyond the dollar. That month, gold and Bitcoin both rose to records — a rare moment for assets often cast as rivals.

    As a story, debasement offered a clean explanation for a messy macro backdrop. As a trade, it proved more complicated. Bitcoin has since slumped amid a broader retreat in cryptocurrencies. The dollar stabilized somewhat. Treasuries, far from collapsing, are on track for their best year since 2020 — a reminder that fears of fiscal erosion can coexist with powerful demand for safe assets, particularly when growth slows and policy rates peak.

    Elsewhere, price action told a different story. Swings in metals from copper to aluminum, and even silver, were driven at least as much by Donald Trump’s tariff policies and macro forces as by concerns about currency debasement, blurring the line between inflation hedging and old-fashioned supply shocks. Gold, meanwhile, has kept powering ahead, reaching new all-time highs. In that corner of the market, the debasement trade endured — less as a sweeping judgment on fiat, more as a focused bet on rates, policy and protection. — Richard Henderson

    Korean Stocks: K-Pop

    Move over, K-drama. When it comes to plot twists and thrills, it’s hard to beat this year’s action in South Korea’s stock market. Fueled by President Lee Jae Myung’s efforts to boost the country’s capital markets, the benchmark equity index rocketed more than 70% in 2025 through Dec. 22, headed toward his aspirational goal of 5000 and handily topping the charts among major stock gauges worldwide.

    It’s rare to see a political leader publicly set an index level as a goal, and Lee’s “Kospi 5000” campaign drew little attention when it was first announced. Now, more and more Wall Street banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. think it’s achievable in 2026, helped in part by the global AI boom, which has increased demand for South Korean stocks as Asia’s go-to artificial intelligence trade.

    There is one notable absence from the Kospi’s world-beating rally: local retail investors. While Lee often reminds voters that he was once a retail investor himself before entering public office, his reform agenda has yet to persuade domestic investors that the market is a durable buy-and-hold proposition. Even as foreign money has poured into Korean equities, local mom-and-pop investors have been net sellers, channeling a record $33 billion into US stocks and chasing higher-risk bets ranging from crypto to leveraged exchange-traded funds overseas.

    One side effect has been pressure on the currency. As capital flowed outward, the won weakened, a reminder that even blockbuster equity rallies can mask lingering skepticism at home. — Youkyung Lee

    Bitcoin Showdown: Chanos v Saylor

    There are two sides to every story. In the case of short-seller Jim Chanos’s arbitrage play involving Bitcoin hoarder Michael Saylor’s Strategy Inc., there were also two big personalities, and a trade that was fast becoming a referendum on crypto-era capitalism.

    In early 2025, as Bitcoin soared and Strategy’s shares went through the roof, Chanos saw an opportunity. The rally in Strategy had stretched the premium the company’s shares enjoyed relative to its Bitcoin holdings, something the legendary investor saw as unsustainable. So he decided to short Strategy and go long Bitcoin, announcing the move in May when the premium was still wide.

    Chanos and Saylor started publicly trading barbs. “I don’t think he understands what our business model is,” Saylor told Bloomberg TV in June about Chanos, who in turn, called Saylor’s explanations “complete financial gibberish” in an X post.

    Strategy’s shares hit a record in July, marking a 57% year-to-date gain, but as the number of so-called digital asset treasury firms exploded and crypto token prices fell from their highs, Strategy shares — and those of its copycats — began to suffer and the company’s premium to Bitcoin shrank. Chanos’s wager was paying off.

    From the time Chanos made his short call on Strategy public through Nov. 7, the date he said he exited from the position, Strategy shares dropped 42%. Beyond the P&L, it illustrated a recurring crypto boom-and-bust pattern: balance sheets inflated by confidence, and confidence sustained by rising prices and financial engineering. It works until belief falters — at which point the premium stops being a feature and starts being the problem. — Monique Mulima

    Japanese Bonds: Widowmaker to Rainmaker

    If there was one bet that repeatedly burned macro investors in the past few decades, it’s the infamous “widowmaker” wager against Japanese bonds. The reasoning behind the trade always seemed simple. Japan carried a vast public debt, and so the thinking was that interest rates just had to rise sooner or later to lure in enough buyers. Investors, therefore, borrowed bonds and sold them, expecting prices to fall once reality asserted itself. For years, however, that logic proved premature and expensive, as the central bank’s loose policies kept borrowing costs low and punished anyone who tried to rush the outcome. No longer.

    In 2025, the widowmaker turned rainmaker as yields on benchmark government bonds surged across the board, making the $7.4 trillion Japan debt market a short-seller’s dream. The triggers spanned everything from interest rate hikes to Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi unleashing the country’s biggest burst of spending since pandemic restrictions eased. Yields on benchmark 10-year JGBs soared past 2% to reach levels not seen in decades, while those on 30-year paper advanced more than a full percentage point to an all-time high. A Bloomberg gauge of Japanese government bond returns fell more than 6% this year through Dec. 23, the worst-performing major market in the world.

    Fund managers from Schroders to Jupiter Asset Management to RBC BlueBay Asset Management discussed selling JGBs in some form during the year and investors and strategists are betting the trade has room to run, as benchmark policy rates edge higher. On top of that, the Bank of Japan is trimming its bond purchases, pressuring yields. And with the nation boasting the highest government debt-to-GDP ratio in the developed world by a wide margin, bearishness to JGBs is likely to persist. — Cormac Mullen

    Credit Scraps: Playing Hardball Pays

    Some of 2025’s richest credit payoffs didn’t come from turnaround bets, but from turning on fellow investors. The dynamic, known as “creditor-on-creditor violence,” paid off big for funds like Pacific Investment Management Co. and King Street Capital Management, who waged a calculated campaign around KKR-backed Envision Healthcare.

    When Envision, a hospital staffing company, ran aground after the Covid-19 pandemic, it needed a loan from new investors. But raising new debt meant pledging assets already spoken for. While many debt holders formed a group to oppose the new financing, Pimco, King Street and Partners Group broke ranks. Their support enabled a vote to allow the collateral — a stake in Envision’s valuable ambulatory-surgery business Amsurg — to be released by the old lenders and used to back the new debt.

    The funds became holders of Amsurg-backed debt that eventually converted into Amsurg equity. Then Amsurg sold to Ascension Health this year for $4 billion. The funds who spurned their peers generated returns of around 90%, by one measure, demonstrating the payoff from waging such internecine battles. The lesson: in today’s credit markets, governed by loose documentation and fragmented creditor groups, cooperation is optional. Being right is not always enough. The bigger risk is being outflanked. —Eliza Ronalds-Hannon

    Fannie-Freddie: Revenge of the “Toxic Twins”

    Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage-finance giants that have been under Washington’s control since the financial crisis, have long been the subject of speculation over when and how they would be released from the government’s grip. Boosters such as hedge fund manager Bill Ackman loaded up on the two in the hopes of scoring a windfall on any privatization plan, but the shares languished for years in over-the-counter trading as the status quo prevailed.

    Then came Donald Trump’s re-election, which catapulted the stocks into a meme-like zeal on optimism the new administration would take steps to free up the companies. In 2025, the excitement ratcheted up even more: The shares soared 367% from the start of the year to their high in September — 388% on an intraday basis — and remain big winners for 2025.

    Driving the momentum to its peak this year was word in August that the administration was contemplating an IPO that could value the enterprises at around $500 billion or more, involving selling 5% to 15% of their stock to raise about $30 billion. While the shares have wavered from their September high amid skepticism about when, and whether, an IPO will actually materialize, many remain confident in the story.

    Ackman in November unveiled a proposal he pitched to the White House, which calls for relisting Fannie and Freddie on the New York Stock Exchange, writing down the Treasury’s senior-preferred stake and exercising the government’s option to acquire nearly 80% of the common stock. Even Michael Burry joined the party, announcing a bullish position in early December and musing in a 6,000-word blog post that the companies which once needed the government to save them from insolvency may be “toxic twins no more.” — Felice Maranz

    Turkey Carry Trade: Cooked

    The Turkish carry trade was a consensus favorite for emerging-market investors after a stellar 2024. With local bond yields above 40% and a central bank backing a stable dollar peg, traders piled in — borrowing cheaply abroad to buy high-yield Turkish assets. That drew billions from firms like Deutsche Bank, Millennium Partners and Gramercy — some of them on the ground in Turkey on March 19, the day the trade blew up in minutes.

    It was on that morning that Turkish police raided the home of Istanbul’s popular opposition mayor and took him into custody, sparking protests — and a frenzied selloff in the lira that the central bank was unable to contain. “People got caught very much by surprise and won’t go back in a hurry,” Kit Juckes, head of FX strategy at Societe Generale SA in Paris, said at the time.

    By the end of the day, outflows from Turkish lira-denominated assets were estimated at around $10 billion, and the market never really recovered. As of Dec. 23, the lira was some 17% weaker against the dollar for the year, one of the world’s worst performers. The episode served as a reminder that high interest rates can reward risk-takers, but they offer no protection against sudden political shocks. — Kerim Karakaya

    Debt Markets: Cockroach Alert

    Credit markets in 2025 were unsettled not by a single spectacular collapse, but by a series of smaller ones that exposed uncomfortable habits. Companies once considered routine borrowers ran into trouble, leaving lenders nursing steep losses.

    Saks Global restructured $2.2 billion in bonds after making only a single interest payment, and the restructured debt is itself now trading at less than 60 cents on the dollar. New Fortress Energy’s newly-exchanged bonds lost more than half their value in the span of a year. The bankruptcies of Tricolor and then First Brands wiped out billions in debt holdings in a matter of weeks. In some cases, sophisticated fraud was at the root of the collapse. In others, rosy projections failed to materialize. In every case, investors were left to answer for how they justified taking large credit gambles on companies with little to no proof they’d be able to repay the debt.

    Years of low defaults and loose money eroded standards, from lender protections to basic underwriting. Lenders to both First Brands and Tricolor had failed to discover the borrowers were allegedly double-pledging assets and co-mingling collateral that backed various loans.

    Those lenders included JPMorgan, whose chief executive Jamie Dimon put the market on alert in October when he colorfully warned of more trouble to come, saying, “When you see one cockroach, there are probably more.” A theme for 2026. — Eliza Ronalds-Hannon

    –With assistance from Benjamin Harvey, Kerim Karakaya, Youkyung Lee, Cormac Mullen, Michael P. Regan, Isolde MacDonogh, Eliza Ronalds-Hannon, Yvonne Yue Li and Matt Turner.

    More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

    ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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    Bloomberg

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  • Kraken Could Be Next Crypto Broker to Enter Prediction Markets

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    Posted on: December 26, 2025, 02:38h. 

    Last updated on: December 26, 2025, 02:38h.

    • The cyrptocurrency brokerage house is planning a 2026 prediction markets push.
    • It obtained the related licensing via an October acquisition.
    • Kraken would join several rivals in prediction markets space.

    Industry observers positioning 2026 prediction markets bingo cards ought to ensure they’ve got Kraken on their lists because it appears likely the cryptocurrency brokerage firm will enter the space in the new year.

    Kraken
    A Kraken logo. The company will enter the prediction markets industry in 2026. (Image: Business Wire)

    Mark Greenberg, Kraken’s global head of consumer, made comments to that effect in a Wednesday interview with CNBC, noting prediction markets enjoyed a big year in 2025 and next year could bring further expansion of that trend.

    (Prediction markets are) a way to take information and alpha and your opinions on what’s going to change in the world and be able to prove that end,” Greenberg told CNBC.

    He said Kraken is looking forward to bringing prediction markets to its customers in the new year, calling it a “fantastic opportunity” for the firm’s clients to trade more and have greater access to new trading vehicles.

    Kraken Prediction Market Entry Well-Telegraphed

    It’s not surprising Kraken is targeting prediction markets. In October, the company acquired Small Exchange from IG Group for $100 million, providing the buyer with the licensing needed to offer event contracts in the US.

    Several Kraken leveraged similar acquisitions to pave their ways into the prediction markets industry because those deals are often more efficient than waiting on regulatory approval for the related permits. Small Exchange is a designated contract market (DCM) licensed by the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) — designations necessary for companies to offer exchange-listed derivatives, including yes/no event contracts, in the US.

    Greenberg told CNBC Kraken is optimistic on the “connections between prediction markets and traditional markets over the year to come.”

    The executive didn’t comment on whether Kraken will partner with an established event contracts platform as rival Coinbase is doing with Kalshi or if it will offer an in-house prediction market platform as does competitor Crypto.com.

    Crypto, Prediction Markets Continue Intersecting

    With Kraken joining the party in 2026, that company will be the latest cryptocurrency broker in the prediction markets arena joining rivals Coinbase, Crypto.com, and Gemini Space Station. Not to mention Robinhood Markets, which is a traditional brokerage platform with significant digital currency exposure.

    The cryptocurrency/prediction markets union, which many experts believe as in the early innings of its growth spurt, is considered by some to be natural and practical. The growth of blockchain technology and the expansion of stablecoins are among the factors driving the onchain use cases for the crypto/prediction markets relationship.

    Another way of looking at that scenario is that prediction markets bring a new use case for cryptocurrency forward, potentially providing important validation to an asset class that like prediction markets is still young.

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    Todd Shriber

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  • Etheruem Founder Buterin Says Prediction Markets ‘Healthier’

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    Posted on: December 26, 2025, 06:00h. 

    Last updated on: December 25, 2025, 08:05h.

    • Ethereum co-founder says prediction markets have risks comparable to equity markets.
    • Says prediction markets are “healthier” to take part in than traditional markets.
    • Adds prediction markets should be compared to social media.

    Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin believes prediction markets expose traders to levels of risk comparable to what’s found in equity markets and that event contract exchanges are healthier options for participants.

    Ethereum
    Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin. He believes prediction markets display similar risk traits as the stock market. (Image: YouTube)

    In a recent social media post, the co-founder of the second-largest cryptocurrency, extolled the truth-seeking potential of prediction markets — something long touted by the industry and its supporters — while noting that form of market participation is less prone to the various forms of manipulation that appear in traditional financial markets.

    I actually find prediction markets to be healthier to participate in than regular markets,” observes Buterin. “A key reason why is that prices are bounded between 0 and 1, so they are much less dominated by reflexivity effects, ‘greater fool theory,, pump-and-dumps, etc.”

    His comments arrived amid increasing criticism of insider trading on prediction markets, which is far more difficult to police than nefarious trades on standard financial markets because related guidelines and laws haven’t been established.

    Buterin Says Prediction, Equity Markets Have Comparable Risk

    Buterin believes the worst-case scenario in prediction markets (PMs) is the possibility participants will be incentivized to cause negative events in the name of profit, but he adds that’s a theoretical assumption. He also theorizes yes/no exchanges display similar risk profiles to equity markets.

    “Many of the downsides of PMs are replicated by regular stock markets, eg. if you are a political actor with a ‘CAUSE DISASTER’ button, then you could be motivated to press it simply by shorting all the stocks, which have far higher volume than the PMs,” he said.

    The comparison to traditional investing could heighten concern among critics asserting the lines between investing and wagering are increasingly blurred with prediction markets playing a substantial role in that scenario.

    In a recent post on X, Coinbase Global CEO Brian Armstrong said prediction markets are tools that can help Americans “get ahead” — a comment that garnered its share of replies mocking the notion that event contracts will enhance participants’ financial profiles.

    Social Media Is the Comp, Says Buterin

    Buterin believes prediction markets are tools for unveiling truth and that as more traders get involved, the evolution will result in probabilities that better reflect market participants’ uncertainty around certain events along with enhanced truth-seeking capabilities. He also sees social media as the more relevant comparison for event contract platforms.

    “The thing to compare them to is social media. In social media, lots of people talk about ‘THIS WAR WILL DEFINITELY HAPPEN’ and scare people, and there’s no real accountability: you gain clout in the moment (and that clout is often very monetizable clout!), and no accountability after the fact,” concludes the Ethereum co-founder.

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    Todd Shriber

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  • Philly man’s bitcoin mining scheme allegedly defrauded investors of $48.5 million

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    Danh C. Vo, the founder of the former VBit Technologies Corp., is accused of defrauding thousands of investors in the bitcoin mining company in a scheme that promised them profits, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission says.

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    Michael Tanenbaum

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  • Coinbase Latest Big Brokerage Name to Enter Prediction Markets

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    Posted on: December 17, 2025, 09:35h. 

    Last updated on: December 17, 2025, 09:35h.

    • Widely expected announcement arrived Wednesday.
    • Cryptocurrency brokerage firm said it’s partnering with Kalshi.
    • Coinbase is also adding stocks and tokenized assets to its platform.

    As was widely expected, cryptocurrency broker Coinbase Global (NASDAQ: COIN) announced Wednesday it’s pushing into prediction markets via a partnership with Kalshi.

    Coinbase
    Coinbase confirmed its prediction markets plans and a partnership with Kalshi. (Image: Getty Images)

    Talk of Coinbase’s prediction plans has percolated for some time, accelerating last week in advance of an event held earlier today. Event contracts are part of the company’s broader plans, which include tokenized stocks, to expand beyond cryptocurrency and become a one-stop financial shop for investors.

    Today, we’re taking a major new step toward becoming the Everything Exchange – dramatically expanding the assets available to trade on Coinbase, including novel cryptocurrencies, stocks¹, perpetual futures, and prediction markets,” said the California-based company.

    With its prediction markets entry, Coinbase joins cryptocurrency brokerage rivals Crypto.com and Gemini Space Station (NASDAQ: GEMI), among others, as well as Robinhood Markets (NASDAQ: HOOD) — a major digital currency trading platform in its own right — in the yes/no derivatives arena.

    Coinbase a Logical Prediction Markets Player

    Owing in part to its popularity among retail crypto traders, Coinbase makes for a logical prediction markets entrant as many of its clients are likely already trading yes/no contracts, betting on sports, or both. The company said its event contracts menu will include culture, finance, politics, and sports, among other options.

    Those contracts will be powered by Kalshi, which benefits from the relationship, too, as it attempts to bolster its ties to the cryptocurrency universe. In addition to Coinbase, Kalshi has partnerships with major brokerage platforms including Robinhood and Webull.

    In unveiling its expand asset lineup and prediction market plans, Coinbase emphasized convenience, telling customers they’ll be able to invest in political outcomes and athletic events in the same place they trade crypto and stocks. Prediction markets expansion by the company is to be expected, too.

    “A wider marketplace for predictions creates an avenue for more informed trading activity, and we plan to support contracts from additional prediction market platforms in the coming months,” notes Coinbase.

    Analysts See Robinhood as a Winner

    With both moving into prediction markets, Coinbase and Robinhood are extending their rivalry. In fact, Coinbase’s announcement arrived a day after its competitor revealed a significant event contracts expansion — one featuring football parlays and player props. Some analysts believe Robinhood will be the winner.

    “We expect a bigger percentage revenue benefit to HOOD vs. COIN given that the survey showed that users on that platform are more inclined to fund prediction markets portfolio with fresh money,” observe Mizuho analysts Dan Dolev and Alexander Jenkins.

    They cite data from a Mizuho survey indicating 50% of Robinhood clients are likely to invest fresh capital into prediction markets while just 37% of Coinbase customers are expected to liquidate cryptocurrency positions to fund purchases of event contracts.

    Interestingly, the survey revealed users of the trading apps are more likely to trade event contracts on economic events (81%) and politics (49%) than sports (47%). That runs counter to an array of data points confirming sports event contracts are the most frequently trade on exchanges on platforms such as Kalshi.

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    Todd Shriber

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  • Crypto Markets Face Volatility as Key Inflation and Jobs Data Loom This Week

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    Mohammedia – Crypto markets started the week on shaky ground as investors prepared for a wave of economic data that could shake prices in the days ahead. Bitcoin fell again late yesterday, briefly dropping below $88,000 in what has become a familiar end-of-week dip.

    It later recovered slightly to around $89,000 by this morning in Asia, but the move did little to calm nerves, with the asset still sitting near its lowest level of the week.

    The timing is not random. After weeks of delays linked to the U.S. government shutdown, a large batch of economic figures is finally set to be released.

    Traders are now trying to digest everything at once — from jobs and consumer spending to inflation — making markets more sensitive than usual. Analysts say this sudden flood of information increases the risk of sharp price swings, especially for volatile assets like cryptocurrencies.

    Early in the week, the focus will be on retail sales and employment data from the U.S. These numbers will help show whether consumers are still spending and whether the labor market remains strong.

    Solid results could support the Federal Reserve’s cautious approach to interest rates, while weaker data may revive fears that the economy is losing momentum.

    Read also: AMMC Trains Regulators on Crypto Supervision as Morocco Prepares New Legal Framework

    Inflation data later in the week is expected to carry the most weight. Investors will closely watch the Consumer Price Index and the Core PCE Price Index for signs that price pressures are finally easing.

    If inflation remains stubbornly high, expectations for future rate cuts could be pushed further out, which often puts pressure on riskier markets such as crypto.

    Outside the U.S., global developments are also adding to uncertainty. Japan’s central bank is widely expected to cut interest rates later this week.

    Some analysts believe this move could trigger volatility across global markets, while others argue that investors have already priced it in.

    There were a few positive signals for the crypto industry. Several major crypto companies recently received conditional approval to operate as national trust banks in the U.S., a step seen as supportive for the broader use of stablecoins. Still, the news was not enough to offset macroeconomic concerns.

    Ethereum has held up better than many other cryptocurrencies, staying above $3,000, but most altcoins remain under pressure.

    With major economic data releases and several Federal Reserve officials scheduled to speak this week, traders are bracing for more ups and downs as crypto markets react to the bigger economic picture.

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  • Reasons Why XRP’s Technical Structure Favors Upside Than Down Over Next 6 Months

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    XRP’s recent pullback to $2 has not changed the broader technical picture, according to a new analysis shared on X by crypto analyst Egrag Crypto. Despite the lack of bullish price action in recent weeks, the technical analysis proposes that the market structure continues to favor an upside continuation rather than the trend ending. 

    This outlook places the next three to six months in a constructive zone for XRP’s price action, where the probability of further upside is higher than the risk of a downward move.

    Related Reading

    XRP Currently In Consolidation, Not Distribution

    The assessment of Egrag’s technical analysis is based on XRP’s price action currently ticking a list of boxes that points to the next move being up. The first of these boxes is what the analyst referred to as a regime shift, which occurred after the XRP price made a decisive breakout from a multi-year base around $0.5 last year.

    This decisive breakout shifted the market from accumulation to expansion. Pullbacks in this phase are usually corrective, not trend-ending. In that context, the current price action can be viewed as part of a natural pause rather than a signal that the larger bullish move has failed.

    Another central argument in the analysis is that the current price behavior represents consolidation rather than distribution. Egrag Crypto describes the market as being in a compression phase following an impulse, and this is a pause, not a top. Although XRP has spent about 13 months ranging within this structure, the analyst interpreted this as extended consolidation instead of a distribution process.

    Chart Image From X. Source: @egragcrypto On X

    EMA Structure Keeps Bullish Bias Intact

    Another reason as to why the trend is more likely bullish is because XRP is still trading in alignment with its long-term exponential moving average, which remains above the 21 EMA. That relationship preserves the bullish bias, even though price currently sits below the faster 9 EMA, but this only reflects short-term weakness rather than a structural breakdown.

    XRPUSD currently trading at $2.013. Chart: TradingView

    Beyond pure chart structure, fundamental developments have added weight to the case for longer-term appreciation. XRP is currently holding $2 as an important support zone, and recent developments have emerged that could increase bullish sentiment.

    An example is Ripple’s conditional approval alongside other crypto firms for a national trust bank charter from the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

    Related Reading

    Although the outlook is much more bullish, there is always the possibility of turning bearish within the next six months. According to Egrag, this outlook can only turn bearish if XRP records a sustained monthly close below the $1.80 to $1.60 region. 

    Taken together, the analysis concludes that XRP is more likely to resolve higher than lower over the next three to six months, even if there is price volatility along the way.

    Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView

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    Scott Matherson

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  • The Future of Crypto Trading Is Hybrid: CeFi and DeFi Unite

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    Hybrid trading ecosystems allow users to access traditional and crypto-native assets seamlessly, with deeper liquidity and fewer risks. Unsplash+

    Despite its rocky start, the crypto industry has firmly transitioned from niche communities to the core of global finance. In early December, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded nearly a full week of net inflows, totaling around $288 million, as BTC continues its recovery. At the same time, traditional asset managers are increasingly embracing digital assets: Vanguard, for example, recently began offering clients exposure to BTC, ETH, XRP and other crypto ETFs. What once was a fringe corner of finance is knowing seeing significant capital flows, and, naturally, traders’ expectations have evolved alongside it.

    Today’s users want simplicity above all else. They want a market structure that feels seamless and doesn’t force them to jump between five different platforms to engage with all the services they need. They don’t want to sacrifice liquidity for self-custody, transparency for better execution or choose between crypto-native assets and traditional financial instruments. 

    This is where hybrid CeFi-DeFi (centralized-decentralized finance) models enter the scene, designed to bridge these gaps. By merging centralized and decentralized rails, hybrid platforms aim to eliminate compromise and deliver better results for traders.  

    Establishing a new market backbone

    Historically, traders had to choose between two camps. CeFi offered deep liquidity, institutional-grade execution and predictable user experience. DeFi, meanwhile, provided open access, transparency and blockchain-native liquidity. Each side had its strengths and weaknesses, which users inevitably had to navigate.

    Now, these gaps are gradually closing. Tokenized real-world assets (RWA) have surged to $24 billion as of the late third quarter of this year, driven largely by tokenized U.S. treasuries, among the most liquid RWAs today. By 2028, the market could exceed $2 trillion, achieving an almost 82-fold increase. 

     On the DeFi side, decentralized perpetual-futures trading surpassed $1 trillion in monthly volume in October 2025, putting DeFi platforms on par with many centralized exchanges. In short, more traditional financial instruments are moving on-chain, while crypto-native assets demand deep liquidity. No single model—pure CeFi or pure DeFi—can meet all of these conditions simultaneously. Hybrid models, however, can.

     The world increasingly needs an environment that allows users to move between asset types without forcing them to move platforms as well. Or split their margins, for that matter. Hybrid architecture enables users to move freely between tokenized U.S. stock futures, high-leverage crypto derivatives and on-chain liquidity pools, all from a single account and interface. What used to take multiple logins is now made into a single workflow. 

    Why does this matter? CeFi rarely touches newly emerging DeFi assets; DeFi often lacks the institutional-level liquidity needed for serious capital; and traditional products remain on altogether different rails from crypto as a whole. By connecting historically siloed markets, hybrid systems unlock efficiency, scale and accessibility at unprecedented levels. 

    There is also the fact that hybrid models lower counterparty risk by reducing the number of hand-offs: fewer transfers between platforms, fewer intermediaries, fewer points of failure. And with shared liquidity pools, traders get better pricing and faster execution across multiple instrument types. This is the prime example of infrastructure finally catching up with user expectations.

    Why all-in-one ecosystems are winning

    The push toward unified trading platforms did not happen by accident. It is being driven by four key forces, all existing in tandem.

    1. User expectations. Users want simplicity when managing their finances. One account, seamless experience—this desire sets the standard for the industry to reach.
    2. Technological progress. Advances in asset tokenization, real-time settlements and blockchain rails all contribute to a market state where unified platforms can actually be built successfully. Just a couple of years ago, this wouldn’t have been very feasible.
    3. Institutional participation. As this class of investors grows more proactive about entering the crypto space, seamlessness becomes that much more necessary. Institutions need access to multiple asset classes without fragmented custody, inconsistent execution or operational gaps in order to feel confident.
    4. Regulatory maturity. Clearer frameworks support multi-asset ecosystems, which means that platforms in this sector can build with greater confidence and without fearing unexpected backlash. Europe’s MiCA and the GENIUNS Act in the U.S. are prime examples of this shift. The first created a legal base for cross-asset and cross-service platforms, while the latter introduced a comprehensive framework for stablecoins and the classification of digital asset payments. These steps lay the groundwork for platforms offering a wide range of hybrid services, and for unified CeFi-DeFi ecosystems; this legal clarity is an absolute must.

    With all of these factors aligning, consolidation stops looking like a simple “trend” and appears instead as what it truly is—the natural next stage in the development of this market.

    There are many tangible benefits that this transition brings to traders, but arguably the greatest one is the growth in user trust. Now market participants can see and understand the full lifecycle of their assets in one coherent system. This makes participation smoother, safer and aligned with how people actually want to trade.

    The hybrid future is already here

    The next market cycle will not be defined by any single asset class. Instead, it will be defined by interoperability: CeFi and DeFi instruments will mix seamlessly, traditional markets will connect with on-chain liquidity and A.I. will increasingly augment human decision-making.

    For traders, this means smoother workflows, deeper liquidity and fewer risks. For the industry, it means the next step in maturity and infrastructure that finally matches user expectations. The future of crypto trading is hybrid, and more importantly, it’s not a distant vision. That future is already here, developing around us in real time.

    The Future of Crypto Trading Is Hybrid: CeFi and DeFi Unite

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    Ignacio Aguirre Franco

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  • Crypto mogul Do Kwon sentenced to 15 years in prison for $40 billion stablecoin fraud

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Onetime cryptocurrency mogul Do Kwon was sentenced Thursday to 15 years in prison after a $40 billion crash revealed his crypto ecosystem to be a fraud. Victims said the 34-year-old financial technology whiz weaponized their trust to convince them that the investment — secretly propped up by cash infusions — was safe.

    Kwon, a Stanford graduate known by some as “the cryptocurrency king,” apologized after listening as victims — one in court and others by telephone — described the scam’s toll: wiping out nest eggs, depleting charities and wrecking lives. One told the judge in a letter that he contemplated suicide after his father lost his retirement money in the scheme.

    Judge Paul A. Engelmayer said at a daylong sentencing hearing in Manhattan federal court that the government’s recommendation of 12 years in prison was “unreasonably lenient” and that the defense’s request for five years was “utterly unthinkable and wildly unreasonable.” Kwon faced a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison.

    “Your offense caused real people to lose $40 billion in real money, not some paper loss,” Engelmayer told Kwon, who sat at the defense table in a yellow jail suit. The judge called it “a fraud on an epic, generational scale” and said Kwon had an “almost mystical hold” on investors and caused incalculable “human wreckage.”

    More than the combined losses in FTX and OneCoin cases

    Kwon pleaded guilty in August to fraud charges stemming from the collapse of Terraform Labs, the Singapore-based firm he co-founded in 2018. The loss exceeded the combined losses from FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried and OneCoin co-founder Karl Sebastian Greenwood’s frauds, prosecutors said. Engelmayer estimated there may have been a million victims.

    Terraform Labs had touted its TerraUSD as a reliable “stablecoin” — a kind of currency typically pegged to stable assets to prevent drastic fluctuations in prices. But prosecutors say it was an illusion backed by outside cash infusions that came crumbling down after it plunged far below its $1 peg. The crash devastated investors in TerraUSD and its floating sister currency, Luna, triggering “a cascade of crises that swept through cryptocurrency markets.”

    Kwon tried to rebuild Terraform Labs in Singapore before fleeing to the Balkans on a false passport, prosecutors said. He’s been locked up since his March 2023 arrest in Montenegro. He was credited for 17 months he spent in jail there before being extradited to the U.S.

    Kwon agreed to forfeit over $19 million as part of his plea deal. His lawyers argued his conduct stemmed not from greed, but hubris and desperation. Engelmayer rejected his request to serve his sentence in his native South Korea, where he also faces prosecution and where his wife and 4-year-old daughter live.

    “I have spent almost every waking moment of the last few years thinking of what I could have done different and what I can do now to make things right,” Kwon told Engelmayer. Hearing from victims, he said, was “harrowing and reminded me again of the great losses that I have caused.”

    Victims say losses ruined their lives, harmed charities

    One victim, speaking by telephone, said his wife divorced him, his sons had to skip college, and he had to move back to Croatia to live with his parents after TerraUSD’s crash evaporated his family’s life savings. Another said he has to “live with the guilt” of persuading his in-laws and hundreds of nonprofit organizations to invest.

    Stanislav Trofimchuk said his family’s investment plummeted from $190,000 to $13,000 — “17 years of our life, gone” during what he described as “two weeks of sheer terror.”

    Chauncey St. John, speaking in court, said some nonprofits he worked with lost more than $2 million and a church group lost about $900,000. He and his wife are saddled with debt and his in-laws have been forced to work well past their planned retirement, he said.

    Nevertheless, St. John said, he forgives Kwon and “I pray to God to have mercy on his soul.”

    A prosecutor read excerpts from some of more than 300 letters submitted by victims, including a person identified only by initials who lost nearly $11,400 while juggling bills and trying to complete college. Kwon had made Terra seem like a safe place to stash savings, the person said.

    “To some that is just a number on a page, but to me it was years of effort,” the person wrote. “Watching it evaporate, literally overnight, was one of the most terrifying experiences of my life.”

    “What happened was not an accident. It was not a market event. It was deception,” the person added, imploring the judge to “consider the human cost of this tragedy.”

    Kwon created an “illusion of resilience while covering up systemic failure,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Mortazavi told Engelmayer. “This was fraud executed with arrogance, manipulation and total disregard for people.”

    ___

    Associated Press reporter Anthony Izaguirre contributed to this report.

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  • World launches its ‘super app,’ including crypto pay and encrypted chat features | TechCrunch

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    World, the biometric ID verification project co-founded by Sam Altman, released the newest version of its app today, debuting several new features, including an encrypted chat integration and an expanded, Venmo-like capability for sending and requesting crypto. 

    World was created by the startup Tools for Humanity in 2019, and originally launched its app in 2023. The company says that, in a world roiled by AI-generated digital fakery, it hopes to create digital “proof of human” tools that can help separate the humans from the bots.

    During a small gathering at World’s headquarters in San Francisco on Thursday, Altman and World’s co-founder and CEO, Alex Blania, briefly introduced the new version of the app (which developers have termed a “super app”) before the product team took over to explain the new features. During his remarks, Altman said that the concept for World grew out of conversations he and Blania had had about the need to create a new kind of economic model. That model, based around web3 principles, is what World has been trying to accomplish through its verification network. “It’s really hard to both identify unique people and do that in a privacy-preserving way,” said Altman.

    World Chat, the app’s new messenger, seems designed to do just that. It uses end-to-end encryption to keep users’ conversations safe (this encryption is described as being equivalent to Signal, the privacy-focused messenger), and also leverages color-coded speech bubbles to alert users to whether the person they’re talking to has been verified by World’s system or not, the company said. The idea is to incentivize verification, giving people the power to know whether the person they’re talking to is who they say they are. Chat was originally launched in beta in March.

    The other big feature reveal on Thursday was an expanded digital payment system that allows app users to send and receive cryptocurrency. World app has functioned as a digital wallet for some time, but the newest version of the app includes broader capabilities. Using virtual bank accounts, users can also receive paychecks directly into World App and make deposits from their bank accounts, both of which can then be converted into crypto. You don’t have be verified by World’s authentication system to use these features.

    Tiago Sada, World’s chief product officer, told TechCrunch that part of the reason chat was added was to create a more interactive experience for users. “What we kept hearing from people is that they wanted a more social World app,” Sada said. World Chat is designed to fill that need, creating what Sada says is a secure way to communicate. “It took a lot of work to make this feature-rich messenger that is similar to a WhatsApp or a Telegram, but with encryption and security of something that is a lot closer to Signal,” Sada said.

    World (which was originally called Worldcoin) deploys a unique authentication process: interested humans get their eyes scanned at one of the company’s offices, where the Orb—a large verification device—converts the person’s iris into a unique and encrypted digital code. That code, the verified World ID, can then be used by the person to interact with World’s ecosystem of services, which are available through its app.

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    The addition of more social-friendly features is clearly meant to drive broader adoption of the app, which makes sense since scaling verification is the company’s main challenge. Altman has said that he would like the project to scan a billion people’s eyes, but Tools for Humanity claims to have scanned less than 20 million people.  

    Since standing in long lines at a corporate office to have your eyeballs scanned by a giant metallic ball may seem slightly less than enticing to some users, the company has already sought to make its verification process less cumbersome. In April, Tools for Humanity announced its Orb Minis—hand-held, phone-like devices—that allow users to scan their own eyes from the comfort of their homes. Blania previously told TechCrunch that, eventually, the company would like to turn the Orb Minis into a mobile point-of-sale device or sell its ID sensor tech to device manufacturers. If the company takes such steps, it would drop the barrier to verification significantly, potentially inspiring much more widespread adoption.

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    Lucas Ropek

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  • Crypto mogul Do Kwon to be sentenced for misleading investors who lost billions

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    NEW YORK — Cryptocurrency mogul Do Kwon is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday for misleading investors who lost billions when his company’s crypto ecosystem collapsed in 2022.

    Kwon, known by some as “the cryptocurrency king,” pleaded guilty in Manhattan federal court in August to fraud charges stemming from Terraform Labs’ $40 billion crash.

    The company had touted its TerraUSD as a reliable “stablecoin” — a kind of currency typically pegged to stable assets to prevent drastic fluctuations in prices. But prosecutors say it was all an illusion that came crumbling down, devastating investors and triggering “a cascade of crises that swept through cryptocurrency markets.”

    Kwon, who hails from South Korea, has agreed to forfeit over $19 million as part of the plea deal.

    While federal sentencing guidelines would recommend a prison term of about 25 years, prosecutors have asked the court to sentence Kwon to 12 years. They cited his guilty plea, the fact that he faces further prosecution in Korea and that he has already served time in Montenegro while awaiting extradition.

    “Kwon’s fraud was colossal in scope, permeating virtually every facet of Terraform’s purported business,” prosecutors wrote in a recent memo to the judge. “His rampant lies left a trail of financial destruction in their wake.”

    Kwon’s attorneys asked that the sentence not exceed five years, arguing in their own memo that his conduct stemmed not from greed, but hubris and desperation.

    In a letter to the judge, Kwon wrote, “I alone am responsible for everyone’s pain. The community looked to me to know the path, and I in my hubris led them astray,” while adding, “I made misrepresentations that came from a brashness that is now a source of deep regret.”

    Authorities said investors worldwide lost money in the downfall of the Singapore crypto firm, which Kwon co-founded in 2018. Around $40 billion in market value was erased for the holders of TerraUSD and its floating sister currency, Luna, after the stablecoin plunged far below its $1 peg.

    Kwon was extradited to the U.S. from Montenegro after his March 23, 2023, arrest while traveling on a false passport in Europe.

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  • Crypto Mogul Do Kwon to Be Sentenced for Misleading Investors Who Lost Billions in Stablecoin Crash

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Cryptocurrency mogul Do Kwon is scheduled to be sentenced Thursday for misleading investors who lost billions when his company’s crypto ecosystem collapsed in 2022.

    Kwon, known by some as “the cryptocurrency king,” pleaded guilty in Manhattan federal court in August to fraud charges stemming from Terraform Labs’ $40 billion crash.

    The company had touted its TerraUSD as a reliable “stablecoin” — a kind of currency typically pegged to stable assets to prevent drastic fluctuations in prices. But prosecutors say it was all an illusion that came crumbling down, devastating investors and triggering “a cascade of crises that swept through cryptocurrency markets.”

    Kwon, who hails from South Korea, has agreed to forfeit over $19 million as part of the plea deal.

    While federal sentencing guidelines would recommend a prison term of about 25 years, prosecutors have asked the court to sentence Kwon to 12 years. They cited his guilty plea, the fact that he faces further prosecution in Korea and that he has already served time in Montenegro while awaiting extradition.

    “Kwon’s fraud was colossal in scope, permeating virtually every facet of Terraform’s purported business,” prosecutors wrote in a recent memo to the judge. “His rampant lies left a trail of financial destruction in their wake.”

    Kwon’s attorneys asked that the sentence not exceed five years, arguing in their own memo that his conduct stemmed not from greed, but hubris and desperation.

    In a letter to the judge, Kwon wrote, “I alone am responsible for everyone’s pain. The community looked to me to know the path, and I in my hubris led them astray,” while adding, “I made misrepresentations that came from a brashness that is now a source of deep regret.”

    Authorities said investors worldwide lost money in the downfall of the Singapore crypto firm, which Kwon co-founded in 2018. Around $40 billion in market value was erased for the holders of TerraUSD and its floating sister currency, Luna, after the stablecoin plunged far below its $1 peg.

    Kwon was extradited to the U.S. from Montenegro after his March 23, 2023, arrest while traveling on a false passport in Europe.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

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    Associated Press

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  • What Happens When an “Infinite-Money Machine” Unravels

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    The price of bitcoin, which more than doubled last year in a trend that many attributed to the “Trump trade,” obviously played a big role in this alchemy, but there was also another factor—one that did seem a little magical, or insane, depending on your viewpoint. As MicroStrategy expanded its purchases, eventually accumulating more than three per cent of all the bitcoins in existence, its purchases helped drive the price of the digital currency higher. But—and this is the magical bit—its stock price went up even faster than bitcoin did. Toward the end of last year, investors were valuing MicroStrategy at more than two times what its bitcoins were worth, which meant that, for every dollar the company invested in bitcoin, it was creating more than two dollars in value. Some observers labelled Saylor’s bitcoin strategy as an “infinite-money machine,” or an “infinite-money glitch.”

    Whatever you called it, the gap between MicroStrategy’s market value and the value of its bitcoins couldn’t be explained by the company’s non-digital assets, namely its original software businesses. Saylor’s supporters offered two explanations for why MicroStrategy was still a worthy investment. First, the price of Bitcoin could rise a lot further; Saylor claimed that, by 2045, it would reach thirteen million dollars. Second, MicroStrategy had found clever ways to amplify gains for regular shareholders. By issuing preferred stock and debt that could be converted into shares at a later date, and then using the proceeds to buy more bitcoins, MicroStrategy said it could give holders of its common stock “amplified exposure” to the cryptocurrency. Another term for this was leverage—using borrowed money to boost returns. Some skeptics, including the professional short seller Jim Chanos, questioned whether this strategy could last, but his warnings didn’t catch on at the time. This past February, MicroStrategy unveiled its latest financial results, and a rebrand. “Earlier today, we announced that we are now Strategy, a new name that powerfully and succinctly conveys the universal and global appeal of our company.”

    Hubris precedes the fall. After Strategy’s stock peaked above $450 in mid-July, it went into an extended nosedive and ended November trading at $177.18. That wasn’t the only bad news for Saylor and his believers. As Strategy’s stock fell by sixty per cent, the price of bitcoin fell by only twenty-five per cent. This meant that the spread between Strategy’s market capitalization and the value of the bitcoins that it owned was closing. By the end of last month, that premium had all but disappeared, and at one point last week the market value of Strategy dipped below the value of its bitcoins (after accounting for its debt). In the words of a columnist at Bloomberg, Saylor’s infinite money machine was “glitching out.”

    Recognizing the severity of the situation and hoping to reassure investors, Strategy announced that it had built up, by selling even more stock, a “dollar reserve” of $1.4 billion. It could use this to make required dividend payments to holders of its preferred stock over the next twelve months. (Regular shareholders don’t get a dividend.) But it also said that, if its value continued to sink below the value of bitcoin, it might sell some of its coins—a previously unthinkable move for an evangelist like Saylor, who in February of this year tweeted, “Never sell your Bitcoin.” If Strategy was forced to unload some of its bitcoins, that could conceivably send the cryptocurrency, and the firm’s stock, into another dive.

    Strategy is now facing another challenge: the possibility that its stock could be removed from a major stock index, the MSCI Index, which analysts at JPMorgan estimated could lead to outflows of billions of dollars. On a more hopeful note, the price of bitcoin has risen over the past couple of weeks on expectations that the Federal Reserve is about to cut interest rates and pump more money into the financial system. In the past, some analysts noted, there has been a correlation between the Fed’s monetary interventions and rallies in bitcoin. So it seems at least possible that Jerome Powell and his colleagues, who are focussed on preventing a recession, will inadvertently bail out the crypto bros, Saylor included.

    Even if this happens, though, Strategy may well struggle to repeat its earlier success. The market opening that Saylor spotted back in 2020 has been largely filled. Dozens of other public companies, including MARA Holdings, a bitcoin-mining company, and Trump Media & Technology Group have acquired substantial holdings of bitcoin. And, for investors wanting direct exposure to bitcoin through their brokerage accounts, there are now more than a dozen Bitcoin E.T.F.s, including BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust, which trades under the symbol IBIT and owns even more coins than Strategy does—around seven hundred and seventy-five thousand coins compared with Strategy’s six hundred and fifty thousand.

    In the crypto world, you can never say never, but for now the longtime skeptics of Strategy have been vindicated. They include Chanos, who said he has made money by shorting the firm’s stock and buying bitcoins in what is known as a paired trade. Last week, he told Sherwood, an in-house news site for the online trading platform Robinhood, “Our core thesis from the beginning—and it’s still our core thesis—is don’t pay more than $1 for something worth $1.” If investors follow this advice, Saylor and Strategy will still benefit from any sustained rebound in Bitcoin. But, alas, they won’t be able to reboot their infinite-money machine. ♦

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    John Cassidy

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  • Insider Trading Suspicions and Shafted Token Holders at the Heart of Latest Coinbase Controversy

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    Coinbase is betting big on fixing one of crypto’s oldest headaches: the initial coin offerings (ICOs) that fueled the 2017 boom and left a trail of rug pulls in their wake. However, the exchange’s latest acquisition has illustrated some of the underlying issues that still plague this aspect of the crypto market.

    Coinbase has agreed to snatch up Vector, which is a Solana-based trading platform cooked up by the team behind the Tensor NFT marketplace. The deal is intended to improve Coinbase’s integration with Solana, and the exchange described Vector as a platform that “gives traders access to one of the most active, high-velocity trading ecosystems in crypto.”

    At the core of both controversies associated with this latest acquisition announcement by Coinbase is the TNSR token, which is associated with the team behind Vector.

    For one, observers see obvious insider trading around the announcement, with suspicious buys piling into TNSR right before the news hit. The TNSR price surged from around $0.04 to over $0.30 in the days prior to the announcement of the deal. And this was at a time when the crypto market was doing poorly more generally, with bitcoin dropping below $90,000.

    Additionally, Coinbase grabbed the Vector tech and the team behind it but left TNSR token holders out of the deal. Whether practical or not, TNSR holders assumed they would benefit from this sort of acquisition, according to Messari research analyst Sam Ruskin.

     

    Coinbase isn’t pretending it didn’t notice the price action. The exchange is digging into the trades and price movement that took place prior to the announcement, a probe that dredges up ghosts from its own insider trading scandal, where an employee got slapped with federal charges for leaking token listing plans to his brother.

    “We’re aware of this and investigating + will take any necessary action based on our findings,” Head of Corporate Development Aklil Ibssa wrote on X.

    Coinbase’s agreement to acquire Vector brings up existential questions around what crypto market participants are really purchasing when they buy these sorts of tokens. There are many instances where crypto projects have both a token and a formalized company with shareholders associated with it, and the legal ambiguity around what crypto tokens actually represent can leave those holding crypto instead of equity out in the cold.

    “TNSR token holders just had their best asset stripped and got ~$0 in return,” said Dragonfly Partner Omar Kanji. “If this continues, people will just stop buying tokens.”

    The lack of true connection between crypto tokens and the projects and development teams associated with them has been an area of dispute since crypto’s earliest days, and the lack of ownership over anything real has made some wonder if the more technically-innovative aspects of crypto aren’t much different from the often-mocked memecoins.

     

    Notably, this controversy popped up at the same time Coinbase was undertaking the first token offering associated with their new launchpad, which they say is intended to avoid many of the issues and outright fraud associated with the previous ICO bubble of 2017. For many, the Vector deal does not bode well for Coinbase’s reputation as a fair platform for such token launches.

    “Harder for Coinbase to sell their new ICO platform when they set the precedent of tokenholders getting rugged on CB’s own acquisitions,” Jon Charbonneau, who is a co-founder of crypto investment firm DBA, posted on X.

    At the same time, Coinbase is also looking at potentially launching their own crypto token for its Base network, which operates as a layer-two Ethereum network protocol, even though the platform is functioning well today without a token.

     

    Of course, how much blame can be placed on token creators if people are willing to purchase these assets that don’t have much clarity in terms of what exactly is being purchased or if there is any real use case?

    “Funny that crypto waged a war on securities laws and now is about to learn most of them exist to prevent investors from getting ripped off,” said NYU Professor Austin Campbell.

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    Mike Pearl

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  • Movie Review: ‘Now You See Me: Now You Don’t’ brings back the magic with new faces and tricks

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    Ten years or so between installments of a successful Hollywood franchise is a lifetime. When it comes to the third “Now You See Me” movie — poof! — time doesn’t matter. These magicians still got it.

    “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t” does what sequels apparently must do these days — load up the characters, return to favorite bits and go global — but nails the trick, a crowd-pleasing return that already has a fourth in the works.

    “It is very good to be back,” says Jesse Eisenberg as the egotistical, perfectionist J. Daniel Atlas, the brains behind the magician-robber outfit. It’s hard to argue with that sentiment on the strength of this outing, directed with assurance by Ruben Fleischer.

    “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t” acts as a sort of pivot, bringing back the veterans — all of them, in various forms — as well as introducing three Gen Z eat-the-rich magicians played by Dominic Sessa, Justice Smith and Ariana Greenblatt. They’re clearly the future. It’s in good (sleight of) hands.

    The movie starts off with a clever rip-off of nasty crypto bros in Brooklyn and expands to scenes in Belgium, the United Arab Emirates, France and South Africa. It’s got Nazis, “Harry Potter” vibes and some Louvre museum heist energy. We didn’t need the F1 chase through Abu Dhabi, but no one’s complaining.

    The original Four Horsemen — Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Dave Franco and Isla Fisher — are supplemented by Lizzy Caplan, who had replaced Fisher in the second installment. Morgan Freeman returns as the gravel-voiced mentor.

    The prize at the movie’s heart is a diamond — but no mere bauble. It’s the Heart Diamond, the largest ever discovered, with a price tag of half a billion dollars. It’s the size of a smoked turkey leg.

    The diamond is owned by a particularly vile South African diamond mine scion who uses her ultra-wealth to launder money for warlords and arms dealers. She is played deliciously by Rosamund Pike with a snide disdain and a nifty Afrikaner accent.

    The secretive magic society known as The Eye unites the old Horsemen and the new trio (the Three Ponies?) to steal the diamond, stored in one of those multilevel, biometric “Mission: Impossible”-style bunkers.

    Capturing it won’t enhance their bank statements. Remember, they’re all really anti-capitalist, share-the-wealth magicians — most likely democratic socialists, in vogue right now. “This is a chance to drive a stake through the devil herself,” Eisenberg’s character says.

    Hollywood is funny that way, creating a multimillion-dollar franchise on the back of heroic left-wing activist characters and convincing the UAE to set it on their streets.

    At first, it’s hard, with eight heroes rushing around, to figure out the primary dynamics. The older Horsemen are strangely muted here — except for Caplan, a hoot — and the young need some seasoning. Intergenerational bickering keeps the movie alive.

    There’s a quick stop at a French chateau where some real magic takes place, literally. The last two “Now You See Me” installments got very green-screen and CGI when it came to effects, but the third very refreshingly steps back into old-fashioned trickery. In a single take, we see each of the heroes try to top the others with a card trick, misdirection or illusion.

    There’s also a hall of mirrors, an upside-down room, an infinity staircase, a perspective-warping room and a nifty escape from a chamber filling with sand. Kudos to the filmmakers for embracing physical tricks over digital trickery. Also, cute use of Lady Gaga’s “Abracadabra.”

    All this leads to a huge showdown between the diamond princess and our motley magicians. You won’t guess who’s been pulling the strings all this time. Seriously, you won’t. And a new generation of magician-thieves are minted. That was a hard trick to pull off.

    “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t,” a Lionsgate release in theaters Friday, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association for some strong language, violence and suggestive references. Running time: 112 minutes. Three stars out of four.

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  • Bitcoin has shed almost $800 billion since its October peak. What’s behind the plunge?

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    Bitcoin continued to slide on Friday, extending a weeks-long slump that has wiped out nearly $800 billion in value since the cryptocurrency hit its 2025 peak last month. The downturn has stripped away all of bitcoin’s gains this year — and raised questions about where it might go from here.

    Since closing at almost $125,000 on Oct. 6, its highest price this year, bitcoin has shed about one-third of its value. On Friday, bitcoin sank below $82,000 before rebounding slightly to $83,509 before noon EDT, according to CoinGecko, a cryptocurrency data aggregator. 

    The cryptocurrency, which is trading at its lowest level since April, is now on track for its worst monthly performance since 2022, when a spate of corporate collapses sparked turbulence in the crypto sector, Bloomberg reported Friday. 

    The precipitous drop comes as Wall Street grapples with unease over whether there’s a bubble in artificial technology and tech stocks, prompting a shift away from assets that are viewed as carrying more risk, analysts say. Investors are also cautious given signs of weakness in the labor market, and the outlook for the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision next month, with more economists now expecting the Fed to hold off on cutting rates.

    “The future is uncertain. It almost feels like it’s moving back to the question: do I even want to hold [bitcoin] in this environment?” said Thomas Chen, the CEO of cryptocurrency company Function, in an email.

    Why is Bitcoin falling?

    Concerns about an AI bubble can translate into turbulence for cryptocurrencies because tech stocks tend to move in tandem with bitcoin, experts noted.  

    “When tech sneezes, it’s natural to expect Bitcoin to catch a cold,” noted Nic Puckrin, investment analyst and co-founder of The Coin Bureau, in an email.

    Aside from pulling back from riskier assets, some investors may be selling bitcoin to cover margin calls. Coinbase, for example, now offers “perpetual futures,” a product that lets traders use up to 10-to-1 leverage on bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.

    Leveraged positions can force investors to sell because borrowing amplifies every price move — for both gains and losses. Even a small drop in the underlying asset can lead to an outsized loss on a leveraged trade. But if an asset tumbles and the investor can’t meet the margin requirements, the trading platform may automatically liquidate the position, which leads to more selling and downward pressure on its price.

    “When traders borrow heavily to magnify positions, any reversal triggers liquidations that accelerate the move,” Nigel Green, CEO of deVere Group, a financial advisory organization, said in an email.

    Large declines in bitcoin’s price aren’t unusual, and the cryptocurrency has always rebounded, experts noted. 

    Brian Vieten, a research analyst at Siebert Financial, said in a Tuesday email that bitcoin has historically experienced around five corrections of 20-30% or more during bull markets, adding that the issues may represent “temporary headwinds” as some investors could view lower crypto prices as a buying opportunity.

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  • Cryptocurrency kiosks banned in St. Paul beginning next month

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    The St. Paul City Council has voted to ban cryptocurrency kiosks in the city beginning Dec. 21.

    St. Paul city council members in support of the ban said scams involving cryptocurrency kiosks/ATMs particularly impact seniors and those with low incomes.

    “A lot of them are along Ford Parkway, where we know that there is a concentration of seniors and older folk,” said St. Paul Council member Saura Jost.

    According to the FBI, last year, there were nearly 11,000 complaints of cryptocurrency ATM fraud, resulting in more than $240 million in losses. 

    Ethan McClelland is the director of government relations at Bitcoin Depot, which the city said has 10 locations in St. Paul.

    “Placing a reactionary ban on an industry that is already licensed and regulated by the state, which serves a legitimate financial purpose for many St. Paul residents, is unnecessary and will deprive many customers, particularly those who choose to transact in cash, of their only way to participate in the growing digital economy,” McClelland said.

    “Part of the reason they’re becoming so popular is that the people making them have a giant income stream, and the store is putting them in, well, they get a cut of that too,” said Bryce Austin, a Lakeville-based cybersecurity expert with TCE Strategy.

    According to Austin, fraud is high because cryptocurrency allows anonymity.

    “If they can convince you to go to one of these crypto ATMs and put your cash in there, and send them the Bitcoin, it’s much, much harder to be traced, and it’s almost impossible for you to get your money back,” Austin said.

    If anyone asks you for money via your phone, email or text, assume it’s malicious, he said. For those looking to invest in cryptocurrency, Austin said you can do that with large online banks, while avoiding the five to 25% service fees for those who use the ATMs.

    “These machines are not a good way to do legitimate cryptocurrency transfers, unless you are in a real hurry for something and are willing to pay that exorbitant fee,” Austin said.

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    Jason Rantala

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  • WIRED Roundup: Fandom in Politics, Zuckerberg’s Illegal School, and Nepal’s Discord Revolution

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    Leah Feiger: Zoë, I am obsessed with this story. Before you continue, I think that it’s really important to say that Caroline, the lovely reporter of this story on your business desk, obtained 1,665 pages of documents about the dispute about Zuckerberg’s house. This story is canon now.

    Zoë Schiffer: Caroline Haskins is a complete star. Our fact-checking team literally cried when I asked them. They were like, “Wait, sorry, how many documents are we looking through?” I was like, “Yes.”

    Leah Feiger: Shout out to the WIRED research team.

    Zoë Schiffer: Absolutely. The school, I think we just have to say, is named after one of the Zuckerberg family chickens. It’s called the Bicken Ben School.

    Leah Feiger: I mean, hearing you say this, it’s, I know you’re being serious, but again.

    Zoë Schiffer: So, the Crescent City neighborhood in Palo Alto, where the Zuckerbergs live, as you can imagine, is some of the best real estate in the entire country. It’s filled with these gorgeous homes, a ton of greenery. Mark Zuckerberg has been expanding his presence throughout the years in this ultra fancy neighborhood. The plot of land that the Zuckerbergs live on has expanded to include 11 previously separate properties. This is so funny and just such a nightmare. If you’re living on the street, you paid whatever, $5 million for your house, and suddenly all of your neighbors are Mark Zuckerberg.

    Leah Feiger: Important to note that not all of them are connecting either. I don’t totally understand what that means. Do they walk through a neighbor’s porch to get to their horse’s pool? What does this entail?

    Zoë Schiffer: We have more questions. We have to Google Earth this. I think there’s some holes in this story that we need to fill in. The expansion first became a concern for Mark Zuckerberg’s neighbors, back in 2016, due to fears that his purchases were driving up the market pretty dramatically. But then, about five years later, neighbors started noticing that a school appeared to be operating out of the Zuckerberg compound. So, this is illegal to do without a permit, at least under the area’s residential zoning code. And so, naturally, the neighbors started to alert the city. Caroline Haskins, the reporter on the story, obtained over a thousand documents, like you said, outlining the resulting fight between the neighbors and the city authorities, basically arguing that, it felt to them like the Zuckerbergs were getting special treatment.

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    Zoë Schiffer, Leah Feiger

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