Crypto.com sues SEC, challenging its jurisdiction over digital assets
The bold move gained the support of the crypto community, which has long railed against the federal agency's "regulation by enforcement."
The bold move gained the support of the crypto community, which has long railed against the federal agency's "regulation by enforcement."
-- Australian consumer sentiment worsened in early-September, a private survey showed on Tuesday, as consumers grew more concerned over a potentially harder landing...
Traditional risk assets like stocks surged while gold and oil tumbled, but cryptos didn't get the memo.
Trump promised not to sell seized bitcoin, but the Supreme Court's decision leaves the door open for the government to sell it.
The American Petroleum Institute (API) reported a significant increase in its weekly crude stock, reflecting a possible weakening in demand for petroleum products. The actual...
S&P changes aim to better balance weights of large companies in ETFs.
American rap legend Nasir Jones, known professionally as Nas, has been one of the early adopters of cryptocurrency and even used his art to market the industry to the masses. What happened: On Apr. 30, 2021, a track titled "Sorry Not Sorry" was dropped, featuring Nas along with DJ Khaled, Jay-Z, James Fauntleroy, and Beyoncé. The song showed Nas rapping the lines, "I'm coin-based, basically crypto-currency scarface. Join us, there's gotta be more of us," in what was a clear reference to his stak
According to Odaily, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand has reduced its interest rate by 50 basis points to 4.75%. This move aligns with market expectations and marks the second consecutive rate cut.
The crypto trading platform said its move follows the receipt of a "Wells notice" from the top U.S. markets regulator on the grounds that tokens traded on its platform qualified as securities. A Wells notice is a formal declaration that the regulator's staff intend to recommend an enforcement action. The SEC declined to comment.
Today’s prevailing token distribution model is fundamentally broken, says Christopher Goes, co-creator of Anoma and Namada.