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SEC Officially Removes Crypto from its List of Primary Targets...

SEC Crypto regulation

For the first time in years, the SEC’s official priorities list doesn’t treat crypto like its own separate fire to put out. In the agency’s 2026 exam and enforcement roadmap, digital assets are no longer called out as a standalone “special focus” area, and that small wording change says a lot about where the mood in DC has drifted.

This doesn’t mean enforcement is over. Existing lawsuits, token cases, and exchange investigations still move forward, and the SEC hasn’t suddenly decided every token is fine. What has changed is the optics: crypto risk is now folded into broader categories like market integrity, conflicts of interest, and retail protection instead of being highlighted as a dedicated threat silo on its own page.

The timing isn't random - Washington is in the middle of trying to build a more coherent framework that splits responsibility between the SEC, CFTC, banking regulators, and whatever Congress finally passes. Pulling crypto off the front of the hit list looks like an attempt to cool the temperature while those bigger structural decisions get hammered out.

For the industry, the move feels like an unofficial pivot from “Operation Choke Point, but make it blockchains” to something closer to normalization. If you are a US exchange, broker, or stablecoin issuer, you’re still dealing with lawyers and audits - but you are no longer starring in the agency’s annual villain montage. That alone changes how banks, venture funds, and public companies talk about touching this stuff.

The other side of the coin is that a lower-profile SEC doesn’t guarantee friendlier rules. If Congress actually passes comprehensive crypto legislation and the CFTC leans in harder on spot markets and derivatives, the net level of oversight could stay the same or even rise. The difference is that it would be happening inside a clearer playbook instead of via one-off press releases and surprise lawsuits.

Crypto dropping off the SEC’s 2026 priority headline doesn’t necessary end the crackdown, but it’s a clear signal that Washington is shifting from “kill it with fire” toward “file it under normal finance,” and markets are treating that as permission to exhale - at least a little.

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- Miles Monroe
Washington DC Newsroom
GlobalCryptoPress.com

Why Commodity Traders are Rushing to CRYPTO Exchanges to Play the Oil Market...

crypto oil futures

While traditional traders wait for CME to open, crypto is already YOLOing crude. Around-the-clock oil perpetual futures are quickly becoming one of the hottest new trades on crypto exchanges, turning West Texas Intermediate into just another thing you can lever up on from your phone.

On platforms like Hyperliquid, a perpetual contract tied to a barrel of WTI trades 24/7 and behaves like any other degen perp: no expiry, floating funding rate, and margin in crypto or stablecoins. In the last week, that single oil contract has clocked well over a billion dollars in daily volume, briefly becoming the second most traded market on the exchange after Bitcoin as prices spiked on Middle East headlines.

The pitch is obvious. Instead of opening a brokerage account, wiring dollars, and learning how roll dates work, retail traders can tap the same volatility global energy desks care about with one click. Position sizes are smaller, the UX is familiar to anyone who has traded BTC perps, and there is no such thing as “market closed” when OPEC surprises the world on a Sunday.

The risk is obvious too - oil is already one of the most macro-sensitive assets on earth, and now you can hit it with high leverage on an exchange that settles in minutes, not days. If you pair that with the usual perp dynamics - funding rate whipsaws, thin liquidity during news spikes, and auto-liquidations- you end up with a product that can wipe out newcomers even faster than Bitcoin did in 2021.

For regulators and traditional commodity desks, the rise of oil perps on crypto rails is a little unnerving. You’ve suddenly got a growing pool of cross-border, lightly regulated leverage riding on a benchmark that touches everything from airline tickets to food prices. Even if these contracts are small next to CME volumes, the feedback loop between “crypto oil” and real-world sentiment is getting tighter.

Oil perps are turning one of the most important commodities in the world into a weekend playground for crypto traders, and as volumes grow, it’s going to be harder for regulators and old-school energy desks to pretend this corner of the market doesn’t matter.

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Author: Mark Pippen
London Newsroom
GlobalCryptoPress | Breaking 

How Iran's Citizens and Government have Moved Crypto Since the Bombs Began to Fall...

Iran crypto

Crypto's public ledgers give us a rare look in to how a nation at war moves money when the missiles start falling. 

Within minutes of the first reports of U.S./Israeli strikes, money began pouring out of Iranian crypto exchanges. By the time the dust settled a few days later, roughly 10.3 million dollars in crypto had left local platforms, a sudden spike that sat on top of months of steadily rising activity.

This was not a one-off panic move. It was the latest flare-up in a parallel financial system Iran has quietly built on public blockchains. That on-chain economy moved an estimated 7.8 to 11 billion dollars’ worth of crypto in 2025, and it reacts to war headlines, protests, and sanctions the way traditional markets react to interest-rate cuts.

An Entire Shadow Economy On-Chain

Chainalysis estimates that Iran’s digital asset ecosystem handled over 7.78 billion dollars in 2025, growing faster than the year before despite inflation, sanctions, and periodic crackdowns at home. Other researchers put the total range closer to 8–11 billion when they include activity routed through offshore exchanges and mixers.

What stands out is how tightly this activity tracks political shocks. Spikes in volume have shown up around anti-regime protests, cyberattacks on banks, and flare-ups in the long-running shadow conflict with Israel. In each case, Iranians who can move money into crypto seem to do it when they worry the rial or the banking system is about to take another hit.

The February Airstrikes And A 700% Outflow Surge

The latest wave began on February 28, when joint U.S./Israeli strikes hit targets in and around Tehran, including military and nuclear sites. As reports of the attacks spread, blockchain analysts watched outflows from Iranian exchanges explode. Hourly withdrawals jumped to as much as eight times their usual level, with one major exchange seeing outflows surge by roughly 700% percent in the hour after the first missiles landed.

Across the country’s main platforms, about 10.3 million dollars in crypto left between Saturday and Monday. In the initial hours, single-hour outflows topped 2 million dollars, a huge jump compared with typical volumes. Most of that money flowed into foreign exchanges that have long handled a disproportionate share of Iranian traffic, suggesting at least part of it was simple capital flight.

Who’s Using Crypto: Ordinary People, And The IRGC

For everyday Iranians, crypto is a way to escape 40–50 percent annual inflation, banking sanctions, and the constant risk that capital controls tighten without warning. During previous waves of protests, analysts saw similar patterns: people moved funds off centralized exchanges into self-custody wallets when they feared internet shutdowns or new crackdowns, then resumed more normal trading when things calmed down.

But this is not just a grassroots phenomenon. Addresses linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and its networks are estimated to handle more than half of the value flowing into Iran’s crypto ecosystem. Investigations have tied IRGC-linked facilitators to at least a billion dollars moved through foreign exchanges since 2023, with digital assets used to route money around traditional banking restrictions and fund proxy groups across the region.

Bitcoin, Stablecoins, And Mining As A Sanctions Workaround

Inside Iran, the crypto mix is heavy on Bitcoin and dollar-pegged stablecoins. Bitcoin plays two roles: a speculative asset for those willing to stomach volatility, and an export product via mining. By leaning on subsidized energy and mining operations, Iran can effectively turn electricity into BTC and then into hard currency or goods via offshore markets, bypassing parts of the dollar system.

Stablecoins, especially Tether’s USDT, act as the digital cash layer. Local exchanges and OTC desks use them to settle trades, move value across borders, and give users something that behaves more like dollars than the collapsing rial. When outflows spike after events like the February strikes or major protests, a lot of what leaves exchanges are stablecoins headed for wallets and venues outside the country’s direct reach.

Sanctions, Hacks, And An Arms Race In Compliance

Regulators have not been watching this from the sidelines. In late January, the U.S. Treasury sanctioned several Iran-linked exchanges, accusing them of facilitating money flows for sanctioned entities and the IRGC. Earlier, pro-Israel hackers claimed to have drained tens of millions of dollars from Nobitex, Iran’s largest exchange, in a politically motivated attack.

Those moves pushed Iranian platforms to change how they operate, moving funds to new wallets and experimenting with more complex on-chain routing. At the same time, analytics firms have stepped up their own tracking, arguing that public ledgers actually make it easier to spot large facilitators and sanction evasion over time, even if some money still slips through.

What The War Has Changed—And What It Hasn’t

The current conflict has clearly accelerated crypto’s role as a pressure valve. Outflows after the February strikes show how quickly people will move when they fear fresh sanctions, retaliation, or financial chaos. The same tools that helped Iranians escape earlier currency shocks are now being used to hedge against the risks of full-blown war.

What has not changed is the double-edged nature of that shift. For citizens, crypto is a lifeline that offers some degree of financial autonomy in a system that keeps letting them down. For the state and its security apparatus, it is a parallel channel to move money in the dark. For everyone else watching from the outside, it is a real-time case study in how digital assets behave when a country is under maximum pressure.

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Author: Mark Pippen
London Newsroom
GlobalCryptoPress | Breaking Crypto News

We Are On The Verge of 2 Major Crypto Laws Going Into Effect...

crypto regulations

CLARITY, GENIUS, And Hong Kong: The Next Round Of Crypto Rules Is Finally Showing Up.

After years of living with “regulation by vibes,” crypto is staring at an actual calendar. In the U.S., two major frameworks are lining up for Q2: the Digital Asset Market Clarity (CLARITY) Act and the GENIUS Act, a stablecoin‑focused bill that would lock in what “good behavior” looks like for dollar‑backed tokens. At the same time, Hong Kong is about to hand out its first formal stablecoin licenses.

None of this makes the space simple overnight, but it does mean lawyers will have more to point at than court cases and agency tweets. For a market that has priced in legal uncertainty as a permanent feature, that alone is a big shift.

What CLARITY Tries To Fix

The CLARITY Act is aimed at the core headache: what is a security, what is a commodity, and who gets to regulate which token lives in which bucket. The proposal would make it easier for sufficiently decentralized projects to be treated as digital commodities under the CFTC, while keeping genuine investment contracts under SEC oversight.

It would also streamline the path for new exchange‑traded products by giving clearer guidance on when a token is eligible for spot ETPs and how market surveillance between venues should work. The hope is to replace endless case‑by‑case fights with something closer to a checklist.

Where GENIUS Fits In

The GENIUS Act focuses on stablecoins, especially fiat‑backed ones that want to market themselves as safe parking spots for cash‑like balances. It leans into one‑to‑one reserve requirements, regular attestations, and clear supervision by banking or payments regulators rather than letting issuers float in a grey zone.

For issuers that can meet those standards, the payoff is regulatory legitimacy and access to bigger pools of capital that need comfort before holding billions in tokenized dollars. For everyone else, it is a nudge to either level up or stay in the unregulated corner of the market with a smaller addressable audience.

Why Markets Care About The Timing

Analysts looking at Q2 keep coming back to the same point: rules on paper can be worth more than a dozen enforcement headlines when it comes to unlocking new demand. If CLARITY and GENIUS land in roughly their current form, they give asset managers, pensions, and corporates something concrete to plug into internal risk frameworks.

That does not guarantee a wall of money, but it lowers the regulatory risk premium that has kept some large allocators sitting on the sidelines. Instead of “we have no idea how this will be treated in three years,” the conversation becomes “we may not love every rule, but at least we know the playbook.”

Meanwhile, Hong Kong Is Moving On Stablecoins

While U.S. bills inch forward, Hong Kong is about to issue its first stablecoin licenses starting in March, under a regime that spells out who can issue, how reserves must be held, and what disclosure looks like. The aim is to position the city as a regional hub for compliant fiat‑backed tokens, especially for Asia‑focused trading and payments.

That creates an interesting split. U.S. and European regulators are still hammering out final details in committee rooms, while Hong Kong can point to licensed issuers and a clear supervision model. For global firms, it is one more data point in the ongoing “where do we base our regulated crypto business?” spreadsheet.

The Direction Of Travel Is Getting Clearer

Put together, these moves suggest the wild west phase is slowly giving way to something more like a patchwork of national regimes that at least rhyme with each other. There will still be gaps, contradictions, and turf battles, but the direction of travel is toward classification, licensing, and supervised plumbing instead of pure improvisation.

For builders and investors, that means one uncomfortable but useful truth: the days of pretending regulation might never show up are over. The real question now is how to design products and portfolios that work in a world where the rules finally exist.

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- Miles Monroe
Washington DC Newsroom 
Breaking Crypto News

Finance Giant Morgan Stanley Wants Its Own Crypto Trust Bank - A VERY Bullish Indication...

morgan stanley crypto

Morgan Stanley Wants A Crypto Trust Bank. Wall Street Just Took Another Step On‑Chain.

For years, big banks flirted with digital assets at arm’s length: a research note here, a structured note there, maybe a quiet pilot with a friendly regulator. Morgan Stanley looks ready to move past the “situationship” phase. The firm is pursuing a national trust bank charter tailored for crypto custody, staking, and infrastructure, and that is a different level of commitment.

If it goes through, this would plant a regulated Wall Street logo squarely in a part of the stack that has mostly belonged to specialist custodians and exchanges. The message to large clients is simple: you can get your on‑chain exposure without handing private keys to a startup you heard about last year.

What Morgan Stanley Is Actually Building

The proposed entity would be a de novo national trust bank focused on digital assets, rather than a bolt‑on to an existing retail franchise. That structure gives it room to hold spot crypto, run staking programs, and offer settlement rails without dragging in every piece of traditional banking regulation that applies to deposits and lending.

On the service side, the plan is to cover the usual wish list for big institutions: cold and warm custody, staking for eligible proof‑of‑stake assets, and white‑label infrastructure for asset managers that want to launch crypto products without becoming infrastructure companies overnight. Think “prime broker meets vault,” just with validators and signing policies instead of paper certificates.

Why A Trust Charter Matters

Going the trust bank route is not just a branding choice. It is a way to sit under the federal banking umbrella while focusing on safekeeping and fiduciary services rather than taking deposits and making loans. For risk‑averse institutions, that combination of bank‑style oversight and a narrow, defined business model is a lot easier to pitch to committees than a loose collection of third‑party service providers.

It also lines up with where regulation is heading. As frameworks like the CLARITY and GENIUS Acts move closer, the separation between trading venues, custodians, and issuers becomes more formal. A dedicated trust bank fits neatly into that architecture as the “safe hands” layer that holds the assets while other entities handle markets and product design.

What This Means For Existing Crypto Custodians

Specialist firms that built their brands on being “the crypto custodian the banks will eventually use” just got a clearer view of who the competition might be. A Morgan Stanley trust bank would not replace them overnight, but it would give large asset managers and pensions a familiar name to call first. Relationship equity counts when you are dealing with committees that still remember 2022’s blow‑ups.

At the same time, there is room for partnership. Building and maintaining top‑tier key management, governance controls, and staking infrastructure is not trivial, even for a big bank. Some of the current players could end up as technology providers or sub‑custodians sitting behind a Morgan Stanley front door.

The Bigger Signal To The Market

Beyond the plumbing details, the move sends a pretty loud signal: crypto is graduating from the side pocket to the main stack in traditional finance. When a bank of this size is willing to put its name on a dedicated trust entity, it is betting that digital assets are not going away in the next cycle or two.

For regulators, it is a chance to pull more of the ecosystem into supervised, well‑capitalized entities instead of watching everything happen offshore. For the rest of the market, it is another step toward a world where “buying crypto” can mean sending instructions to your usual custodian instead of opening yet another new account on a platform you hope will still exist in five years.

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Author: Mark Pippen
London Newsroom
GlobalCryptoPress | Breaking Crypto News

First 48 Hours of War Brings Bitcoin Selloff, Followed by a Quick Recovery - and Now Confusion...

Bitcoin iran war reaction
From Selloff To “Never mind” In 24 Hours..

February already did a decent job beating up crypto, and then geopolitics showed up to make sure nobody got comfortable. Over the weekend, reports of U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran pushed risk assets lower, and Bitcoin sagged toward the low 60,000s before bouncing more than 4% as dip‑buyers decided this, too, was a buying opportunity.

It all landed on top of a month that had already seen a 20% drawdown from the highs, plenty of ETF outflows, and a steady drip of macro anxiety around tariffs and growth. By the time March rolled around, the chart looked less like a clean trend and more like a cardiogram.

A Messy February Set The Stage

The backdrop for this latest move was not exactly calm. Bitcoin had already slid from the mid‑70,000s into the 60,000s through February on a mix of whale selling, tariff worries tied to Trump’s trade posture, and the usual round of “is this the top?” hand‑wringing. Some desks framed it as an “orderly deleveraging,” which is a polite way of saying “people actually read their risk limits this time.”

Technical analysts spent most of the month pointing out that BTC remained in a broader downtrend on daily charts, with lower highs and lower lows stacking up since early January. Every intraday bounce turned into yet another chance for someone to tweet a chart and call it “just a retest” of resistance.

Then Geopolitics Kicked The Market Again

News of coordinated strikes in the Middle East hit markets that were already tired. Overnight, Bitcoin dipped toward the lower end of its recent range as traders pulled risk back and some leveraged longs finally gave up. For a few hours it looked like the start of another leg lower rather than a blip.

But the selling did not snowball. As headlines clarified and no fresh escalation followed, buyers started leaning in, and BTC reversed to log a roughly 4% gain on the day. It was not a heroic rally, but it did underline a pattern: crypto reacting hard to scary news, then settling into “maybe that was too much” mode once the initial panic fades.

ETF Flows Are Still Nervous, Not Broken

Under the surface, ETF data tells a less dramatic but still uneasy story. One recent trading day saw about 27.5 million dollars of net outflows from U.S. Bitcoin ETFs and roughly 43 million from Ethereum funds, as some institutions trimmed exposure instead of riding out the noise. Other days flipped back to small net inflows, suggesting allocators are adjusting, not abandoning the trade.

For now, those flows are more of a headwind than a brick wall. The big “everyone out at once” moment has not shown up, but neither has the carefree buying that defined the first wave of spot ETF launches. Price action reflects that tug‑of‑war, with sharp intraday swings but no clear resolution yet.

What This Round Tells Us About Bitcoin In 2026

The latest episode reinforces a familiar theme: Bitcoin likes to advertise itself as uncorrelated and macro‑agnostic, then lurches around when the headlines get loud. When things calm down, the long‑term narratives come back out of the drawer, but the path in between is still very much tied to the same global jitters that move everything else.

It also shows that this market now trades on three layers at once: geopolitics, ETF flows, and old‑fashioned whale behavior. Any one of those can drive a big move; when they sync up in the same direction, you get the kind of February we just lived through.

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Author: Oliver Redding
Seattle Newsdesk  / Breaking Crypto News

So, Bitcoin Has Dropped By 50%... Again. What History Tells Us About When It Will Rise Again...

Bitcoin recovery, bitcoin price

Bitcoin has spent the last few months reminding everyone that “number go up” comes with a fine print. After topping out around 126,000 dollars in October 2025, it has slid to the mid‑60,000s, a drawdown of roughly 50% that wiped out a lot of late‑cycle bravado. If you feel like this movie has played before, you are not wrong.

The question now is not just whether Bitcoin recovers, but how long that usually takes when the drop is this deep. Nobody can time it cleanly, but prior cycles do leave a rough playbook that traders keep pulling out every time the charts start to look like a ski slope.

What A 50% Drawdown Looks Like In Context

The current slide sits in the “serious but not unprecedented” range. In earlier cycles, Bitcoin saw multiple 40–50% corrections even while it was still in what later looked like a larger bull trend. Those were the moments where people argued on X all day about whether this was “the top” or just “healthy volatility,” as if either label made the red candles smaller.

Recent breakdowns of the last three big drawdowns show that once Bitcoin dropped around 40–50%, it usually took somewhere between 9 and 14 months to claw back to prior highs.That is fast compared with the multi‑year winters after the 2013 and 2017 manias, where the market had to digest an entire bubble rather than a brutal mid‑cycle reset.

Why This Cycle Is Not A Copy‑Paste Of The Last Ones

One big difference this time is the ETF layer. Spot Bitcoin funds now sit on millions of coins, and their flows matter as much as offshore futures positioning when it comes to price action. When U.S. and European ETFs see heavy redemptions, that selling pressure can drag on for days instead of vanishing in a short squeeze.

At the same time, miners are adjusting too. Hashrate has eased off recent highs and difficulty dropped by more than 11% over the last adjustment, showing that some operators are stepping back as margins compress. In past cycles, miner capitulation plus patient spot buyers often marked the messy middle of a recovery, not the end of the story.

The Macro Ceiling Problem

Even if you ignore on‑chain data and ETF flows, there is the small matter of macro. Rate cut timing is still fuzzy, growth wobbles show up in every other economic release, and risk assets are trading like they are not totally sure whether to celebrate or hide under the desk. Bitcoin sits right in the crossfire between “digital gold” narrative and “high beta tech” behavior.

Research from ETF issuers this year has framed it as a tug‑of‑war between “ETF gravity” and a “macro ceiling.” On one side, there are steady inflows from long‑only allocators that set a structural bid. On the other, higher real yields and tighter financial conditions can cap how far speculative assets can run before someone starts asking if they are paying 2021 prices in a very different world.

So How Long Until It Recovers?

If you only look at the last three 40–50% drawdowns and average the climb back to prior highs, you land in that 9–14 month window. Reality will almost certainly wander outside that range a bit, but it gives a useful sanity check when people throw out either “we’re going to zero” or “new all‑time high next week” with equal confidence.

The more interesting question is how the path feels this time. With ETFs in the mix, miner behavior shifting, and macro still unsettled, the ride might look less like a smooth V‑shaped recovery and more like a slow grind where boredom, doubt, and occasional panic share the calendar. In other words, classic Bitcoin, just with bigger numbers and more suits watching.

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Author: Mark Pippen
London Newsroom
GlobalCryptoPress | Breaking Crypto News

Wall Street May Soon Have 4X Leveraged ETF's for Bitcoin and Ethereum...

ProShares 4x Leveraged BTC/ETH ETFs

Wall Street Looked At Bitcoin Volatility And Said: “Needs More.” Enter The 4x ETFs...

The SEC hasn’t even finished digesting the first wave of spot crypto ETFs, and ProShares is already back with a fresh dare: new funds that aim to deliver four times the daily move of Bitcoin and Ethereum. If spot ETFs are training wheels for TradFi, these are the downhill racing bike with questionable brakes.

In early February, ProShares filed for a set of 4x leveraged products that would track daily moves in BTC and ETH futures. The idea is simple on paper and chaotic in practice: if Bitcoin goes up 5% in a day, the ETF tries to go up around 20%. If Bitcoin drops 5%, you do not need a calculator to know it hurts.

How A 4x Crypto ETF Actually Works

These funds do not hold Bitcoin or Ethereum directly. Instead, they use futures, swaps, and other derivatives so the portfolio can target a specific daily multiple of the underlying index. That means lots of rebalancing, which traders love to front‑run and long‑term investors usually regret.

Because the target is a daily multiple, returns compound over time in weird ways. In a choppy market, you can get “volatility decay,” where repeated up‑and‑down moves eat away at the fund’s value even if the underlying asset ends up roughly flat. Retail holders who treat these like long‑term HODL vehicles are basically paying to learn path‑dependency the hard way.

Why ProShares Smells Opportunity Here

ProShares already launched the first U.S. Bitcoin futures ETF back in 2021, so it knows there is demand for packaged speculation. The pitch this time is that if traders are already using offshore perpetuals with 10x or 20x leverage, giving them a 4x product inside U.S. brokerages is almost a harm‑reduction move.

There is also a fee story hiding in the background. Spot ETFs are turning into a fee war with razor‑thin margins, while exotic products and leveraged funds usually charge more and have higher turnover. If you run an ETF business and your plain‑vanilla funds slowly become a commodity, you look for edges where complexity justifies a fatter fee.

Who Uses This Stuff Without Blowing Up?

Used carefully, 4x ETFs are tools for short‑term positioning. Day traders and some funds can use them to express tactical views without moving collateral back and forth to a derivatives exchange.You can crank up exposure for a few hours, then flatten out before funding costs or volatility decay chew through your gains.

The trouble starts when people stretch that use case. The history of leveraged equity ETFs is full of stories where retail investors held them for weeks or months, then wondered why their “4x bull” fund went nowhere while the index marched up. Apply that dynamic to Bitcoin and Ethereum, which already swing double‑digit percentages in a week, and you get a product that can vaporize badly timed conviction.

The Bigger Picture For Crypto And ETFs

On one side, this is a pretty strong signal that crypto is now part of the regular Wall Street product cycle. First you get spot exposure, then futures, then options, then leverage, then income funds, and eventually some late‑cycle monstrosity that shows up in a Senate hearing. Crypto has officially reached the “high‑octane ETF” stage.

On the other side, regulators and risk teams are going to have a lot of questions. When you stack spot ETFs, futures‑based products, options markets, and now 4x leverage on top of the same underlying asset, stress events can move faster than most people are used to.

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Author: Oliver Redding
Seattle Newsdesk  / Breaking Crypto News

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