World Liberty Financial is no longer positioning itself as just another stablecoin issuer. The Miami-based crypto company, which lists US President Donald Trump as co-founder emeritus, is now taking a broader step into decentralized finance by launching a peer-to-peer lending and borrowing venue called World Liberty Markets.
Latest articles by Editorial Team
The first week of 2026 delivered a reality check for U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs. After an explosive opening that pulled in more than a billion dollars, flows briefly flipped direction, showing that institutional demand is not a straight line upward.
Crypto media in New Zealand walks a cautious line when mentioning gambling, putting the spotlight on technical progress, transparency, and public awareness rather than directly promoting games.
Bitcoin spent most of December trading under pressure, drifting lower toward the mid-$87,000 zone as momentum faded and market participation thinned.
Northern Data’s exit from Bitcoin mining has taken a far more intricate turn than initially disclosed, following revelations about who ultimately acquired its Peak Mining unit.
Bhutan is moving to formalize Bitcoin as a sovereign financial resource, with plans to dedicate up to 10,000 BTC to support a flagship national development initiative.
Japan’s monetary era defined by emergency stimulus and zero-rate policy is quietly being replaced by something far more restrictive, even as global uncertainty clouds the outlook.
Pyth Network is changing how it treats its own token, moving it from a passive governance asset into something closer to a balance-sheet instrument.
Ripple has taken a major regulatory step in the United States after receiving conditional approval from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to establish Ripple National Trust Bank.
A fresh legal complaint targeting the Pi Network has triggered pushback from parts of the crypto community, with researcher Dr. Altcoin arguing that the case relies on assumptions that do not align with how the project has actually operated.
CoreWeave is looking to financial markets to fuel its next phase of growth, announcing a large private fundraising that could reach $2.3 billion.
Rumors circulating in Washington suggest Nvidia could soon receive permission to ship one of its most advanced AI processors to China, marking what would be another sharp turn in U.S. technology policy.