After a month that looked like a disaster for digital-asset funds, capital has finally begun creeping back into the spot ETF market.
Robert Kiyosaki Warns of Historic Crash – Says BTC and ETH Will Create the Next Wave of Millionaires
A new warning has surfaced from one of the loudest financial commentators of the past decade, and it has nothing to do with stocks or real estate.
A contrasting pattern is emerging inside Ethereum’s investor base: one of the project’s earliest backers is steadily reducing exposure after more than a decade of gains, while the largest wallets on the network have been quietly increasing their ETH holdings.
Ethereum has entered a pivotal stretch in both its technical development and its market performance. While developers prepare the network for a major capacity boost, traders are watching price charts for signs of a breakout — and both timelines are beginning to converge.
A development that would have sounded experimental only a few years ago has now become reality: Europe’s largest asset manager has placed part of its traditional portfolio directly onto a blockchain.
While most market participants spent the week debating ETF inflows and expiry risk, one publicly listed firm has been building an Ethereum reserve on a scale that now rivals major custodians.
As digital assets continue to play a growing role in Washington, members of the Trump family are becoming increasingly vocal supporters of cryptocurrencies.
The turbulence in the crypto market over the last week has been costly for many high-profile investors, and Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin is no exception.
A wave of selling has pushed crypto markets into deep volatility over the past month, but one company seems determined to move in the opposite direction.
The most striking development at Bit Digital this year has nothing to do with Bitcoin mining.
Ethereum has entered one of its most difficult phases of the year, sliding to the $2,700 zone after another round of heavy selling.
Coinbase’s newest feature isn’t really the story. The company now lets U.S. users borrow USDC against their ETH - yes - but that’s only one tile in a much bigger mosaic.



