Hong Kong’s ambition to become the region’s digital asset gateway is entering a new phase — one shaped as much by oversight as by openness.
The U.S. securities regulator is preparing for a major recalibration in how it deals with digital assets.
A new regulatory signal from Washington is reshaping how banks can interact with digital assets.
The United Arab Emirates is tightening its grip on the global crypto stage, and a new entrant has just joined its regulated landscape.
Britain’s financial regulator has quietly taken a step that would have been unthinkable a few years ago: it wants input from crypto companies before rewriting how financial products are sold and categorized in the country.
A long-awaited overhaul of U.S. digital asset rules is drifting past its hoped-for finish line, with Senator Mark Warner cautioning that Congress will almost certainly miss its Christmas target.
Argentina’s financial authorities are quietly evaluating a policy shift that could bring cryptocurrency directly into the country’s regulated banking sector — an idea that was once politically and economically off-limits.
South Korea’s regulators are signaling a dramatic shift in how digital-asset platforms will be treated under the law.
Poland’s digital-asset industry is expanding rapidly — but its legal foundation just collapsed again.
Italy is preparing to overhaul how digital-asset companies operate within its borders, setting a firm deadline that will push crypto platforms to either adopt the European Union’s MiCA regime or shut down their services entirely.
A major shift in U.S. market policy has arrived: spot cryptocurrency products are being permitted onto America’s federally regulated futures exchanges for the first time.
The European Union is considering one of its most significant financial governance shifts in years: giving the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) sweeping new supervisory powers over crypto companies and key market infrastructure.



