Crypto ETF flows showed a fragmented institutional landscape on March 25, with Bitcoin stabilizing, Ethereum extending losses, and corporate accumulation becoming increasingly concentrated amid broader market uncertainty.
Crypto prices are falling across the board this morning and the reason maybe has nothing to do with on-chain data or technical levels.
In the past few weeks, Bittensor has been building one of the strongest altcoin rallies of the cycle. It does not look like a random pump. The supply data, the institutional interest, and the ecosystem numbers all point in the same direction, and they did not all arrive at once.
Bitmine is pivoting from crypto accumulation to infrastructure, launching its MAVAN platform to position itself as a leading institutional player in Ethereum staking.
Britain has moved to shut down one of the least regulated entry points for foreign money into its political system.
The wall between traditional finance and blockchain is coming down - and Franklin Templeton, managing $1.7 trillion in assets, just announced a major move, while tokenized stock AUM hits $951 million.
The stablecoin bill that Washington thought was close to the finish line has hit another wall, and once again, Coinbase is the one standing in the way.
Bhutan is accelerating Bitcoin outflows while Thailand signals growing institutional interest in crypto, highlighting diverging strategies across Asia.
Solana's price has been under pressure for months. The chart shows a downtrend. What it does not show is that while traders were selling, the network underneath was doing something that has never happened at this scale - AI agents paying other AI agents, in real time, for fractions of a cent, millions of times over.
The race to tokenize traditional assets is accelerating as asset managers, fintechs and crypto firms build competing platforms to bring stocks, funds and bonds onto blockchain infrastructure.
The Bitcoin supply, sitting on crypto exchanges, has dropped to levels not seen in eight years - and the outflows are accelerating.
The European Central Bank is accelerating plans for a digital euro, aiming to set technical standards by summer as it prepares for a pilot and broader rollout later this decade.



