
The UK’s top bank says it will roll out stablecoin rules “just as quickly as the US” amid concerns that it’s lagging behind global allies.
You can add some category description here.

The UK’s top bank says it will roll out stablecoin rules “just as quickly as the US” amid concerns that it’s lagging behind global allies.

The company updated its terms to prohibit the purchase or sale of weapons “in contravention of applicable laws,” suggesting that legally permissible transactions were possible.

With the right workflow, data feeds and prompts, ChatGPT can generate structured market summaries, flag risk clusters and support smarter decision-making.

Bitcoin unrealized losses reached nearly one-third of the supply, even before BTC price fell to multimonth lows below $100,000.

The loan comes shortly after Metaplanet launched a $500 million Bitcoin-backed share buyback program after its market-based net asset value fell below one.
Opinion by: Thomas Chen, CEO of Function
Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have solved the access issue but remain passive. What is needed now are credible, auditable, institutional-grade pathways to convert Bitcoin exposure into scalable yield.
Bitcoin is evolving from a digital store of value into a form of productive capital. Continuing to treat Bitcoin (BTC) like digital gold — storing it for appreciation over the long term — misses its true opportunity as a reserve asset for the digital age.
Bitcoin isn’t simply a store of value; it is programmable collateral. It is productive capital. It is the base layer for institutional participation in onchain finance.
The liquidation event of Oct. 10 occurred due to the inability to execute a core risk-management function efficiently. On the other hand, this event also proved that Bitcoin yield projects emphasizing security and simplicity will win through. As volatility increased, Bitcoin yield projects saw an increase in arbitrage opportunities in the market as spreads widened. Market-neutral strategies that didn’t take on a lot of leverage were able to weather and actually outperform as they profited on the market dislocation.
Composable, capital-efficient infrastructure has evolved, and transparent and auditable yield pathways now exist. Institutional deployment frameworks have matured, both in technical and legal ways. Yet most of the Bitcoin held by institutions has the potential to offer far higher yields.
Strategy’s management team has been able to financially engineer BTC acquisition with finesse. The same may not hold for other BTC digital asset treasuries. Copytrading Strategy is not a strategy. Eventually, the BTC accumulation phase will come to an end, and the BTC deployment phase will begin.
In traditional finance (TradFi) markets, allocators don’t park up their assets indefinitely. They rotate, hedge, optimize and continually adjust them to maximize yield (risk-adjusted). With Bitcoin, however, allocators are still in the accumulation phase, but eventually, like any other asset, they’ll need to start putting their Bitcoin to work.
What does that mean for allocators? It’s making Bitcoin work like productive capital with known and reliable frameworks. Think short-term lending that’s backed by substantial collateral. Furthermore, market-neutral basis strategies that are not dependent on Bitcoin’s price appreciation, supplying liquidity on vetted and compliant institutional platforms, and conservative or low-risk covered call programs with clear, preset risk limits.
Each pathway should be transparent and easy to audit. It should be configured for duration, counterparty quality and liquidity. The goal isn’t to maximize yield; it’s to optimize it to hedge volatility within the mandate. If the yield is too low relative to the risk profile, the risk/reward of deploying capital isn’t worth it for many, so some liquidity providers (LPs) hold.
What we need is an operating model that allows us to use it without violating compliance standards, all while keeping it simple. Once yield is safe and standardized, the bar shifts, averting the liability that capital becomes when idle.
By Q4 2024, over 36 million mobile crypto wallets were active globally. That’s a record high and a sign of a broader ecosystem engagement where retail is learning to transact, lend, stake and earn. A similar scenario is possible for institutions that hold significantly more capital and run under strict mandates. Many still regard Bitcoin only as a store of value, having not yet fully deployed its potential — and by doing so, in a fully compliant manner.
There are plans to increase crypto allocations among institutional investors, specifically 83%, according to a 2025 survey. The allocation growth can only reach its full potential, however, if operational requirements are met with a solid infrastructure to support it.
The gears are already turning. Arab Bank Switzerland and XBTO are introducing a Bitcoin yield product as some centralized exchanges prepare to launch their own yield-bearing Bitcoin fund for institutional clients, granting access to structured BTC income.
These are early signals, not endorsements. What matters is the direction of travel: whether yield is delivered through creditworthy routes, with segregated assets and clear downside frameworks. Institutions want low-volatility income sourced from onchain mechanics, but wrapped in controls they already understand.
What’s happening here isn’t speculative; it’s foundational. Bitcoin is being built into a programmable infrastructure, adding further yield routes beyond its already strong reputation as “digital gold.” It’s no longer a niche interest and is being actively pursued by institutions seeking liquidity and low-volatility income strategies — only this time, they’re onchain.
A visible maturation of Bitcoin is taking place. It’s indeed a major structural trend where productive assets are winning allocation. What the market needs now is not more access; it’s more ways to use Bitcoin productively.
Upgrading the standard to performance means defining success in terms that are measurable and quantifiable. Think in terms of realized versus implied yield, slippage and target drawdown tolerance — also, financing costs, collateral health and time to liquidity under stress.
When the tools exist to deploy BTC productively, adhering to institutional custody, risk management and compliance, the standard will upgrade and shift to performance. As doing nothing becomes the exception, Bitcoin’s role in the economy moves from passive allocation to productive, yield-bearing capital. Allocators will no longer be able to afford to sit idle.
Institutions that are quick to implement these changes in standards will secure the lion’s share of liquidity, structure and transparency that composable infrastructure offers.
The window to define best practice is already open.
It’s now time to formalize policy, launch small, auditable programs that scale and create more than just access. It’s time to turn exposure into deployment in a productive, transparent and fully compliant manner, and seize the full potential of Bitcoin.
Opinion by: Thomas Chen, CEO of Function.
This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.
Crypto exchange Gemini Space Station Inc. is reportedly preparing to enter the prediction markets arena, following similar moves by the likes of Coinbase and MetaMask in recent months.
Gemini is looking to enter the prediction markets space “as soon as possible,” Bloomberg reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter, noting that it filed with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to operate a derivatives exchange.
Gemini executives had reportedly discussed using the exchange license to allow the trading of event contracts, which allow traders to bet on the outcome of real-world events.
It comes as brothers and Gemini co-founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoos took the company public in September, raising $433 million in an upsized initial public offering and being marked at a $4.4 billion valuation.
Trading volume on predictions platform Kalshi has been seeing new highs almost every week since mid-October, with the latest $1.2 billion across Oct. 27 and Nov. 2 topping the previous record of nearly $1.01 billion the week before.
Kalshi’s biggest competitor, Polymarket, has also crossed the $1 billion mark in weekly trading volume before.
Related: Why Zcash and privacy tokens are back in the conversation
Gemini joins the likes of MetaMask, Coinbase, DraftKings, and Sam Altman’s identity-focused World, which in recent months have integrated prediction markets, or are planning to do so.
Meanwhile, the New York Stock Exchange’s parent, Intercontinental Exchange, made a $2 billion investment in Polymarket at a $9 billion valuation, while Kalshi has also received a multibillion-dollar valuation.
Magazine: Grokipedia: ‘Far right talking points’ or much-needed antidote to Wikipedia?
Shares in Sequans dropped by over 16% after selling 30% of its Bitcoin to redeem half of its convertible debt, a move the semiconductor company described as a “strategic asset reallocation.”
“Our Bitcoin treasury strategy and our deep conviction in Bitcoin remain unchanged,” Sequans CEO Georges Karam said on Tuesday. “This transaction was a tactical decision aimed at unlocking shareholder value given current market conditions.”
The sale cut the chip developer’s Bitcoin (BTC) stash from 3,234 BTC to 2,264 BTC, backsliding from its goal to accumulate 100,000 BTC over the next five years. Proceeds from the sale were used to cut its outstanding debt from $189 million to $94.5 million.
“It strengthens our financial foundation and removes certain debt covenant constraints, enabling us to pursue a wider set of strategic initiatives to prudently develop and grow our treasury, with Bitcoin as a long-term strategic reserve asset,” Karam added.
The move was not well received by investors, with shares in Sequans (SQNS) falling 16.6% to $5.92 on Tuesday. It is now 89% off its 2025 high of $53.90, which was reached about a week after Sequans unveiled its Bitcoin plans in late June.
More than 200 publicly traded companies now hold Bitcoin on their balance sheets, continuing the trend of institutional Bitcoin adoption after spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds launched in the US last year.
Related: Why Zcash and privacy tokens are back in the conversation
Many crypto treasury companies have seen their stocks rally on announcing the new strategy, but many have now plunged after the initial hype faded.
The declines in many firms have led analysts to cast doubt on the sustainability of Bitcoin treasury strategies, particularly those of firms that aren’t already in a strong financial position
Sequans’ sale comes a week after crypto analysts flagged a 2,264 BTC transfer on Oct. 29, making it one of the most notable Bitcoin sales among publicly traded companies to date.
Sequans is now the 33rd largest corporate Bitcoin holder, falling four places after making its Bitcoin purchase in mid-July.
Magazine: Bitcoin OG Kyle Chassé is one strike away from a YouTube permaban
Key takeaways:
The spot Solana ETFs start strong by drawing over $400 million in weekly inflows.
SOL broke its 211-day uptrend, slipping below key moving averages.
Failure to hold $155 could send SOL price into the $120–$100 range.
Spot Solana (SOL) exchange-traded funds (ETFs) start their trading journey with strength, posting record positive inflows that underscored institutional demand for the network’s native asset.
On Monday, spot SOL ETFs recorded a daily high of $70 million in inflows, the strongest since launch, taking the total spot ETF inflows to $269 million since its debut on Oct. 28.
Data from Bitwise indicated that two Solana ETFs, Bitwise’s BSOL US Equity and Grayscale’s GSOL US Equity, collectively attracted $199.2 million in net inflows (excluding seed capital) during their first week.
Bitwise’s BSOL ETF led the charge, amassing $401 million in assets under management (AUM) by Oct. 31. That figure represented over 9% of total global SOL ETP AUM and 91% of global SOL ETP flows last week. In contrast, Grayscale’s GSOL US Equity drew only $2.18 million, accounting for roughly 1% of total ETP flows.
Globally, weekly net inflows into Solana ETPs surpassed $400 million, marking the second-highest weekly inflow on record. Bitwise’s Solana Staking ETF (BSOL) was also the top-performing crypto ETP globally, ranking 16th among all ETPs across asset classes for the week.
Currently, the total Solana ETP AUM stands at $4.37 billion, with US-listed products accounting for the majority of new investment. According to Bitwise’s estimates, a $1 billion net inflow could correspond to a potential 34% increase in SOL’s price, assuming a beta sensitivity of 1.5.
Related: Solana treasury Forward Industries authorizes $1B share repurchase
Despite the record inflows, SOL’s price action turned sharply bearish this week, falling over 16%, dropping to $148.11 on Tuesday, its lowest level since July 9. The correction also broke a 211-day uptrend that began on April 7, with the $95 level serving as the yearly low.
Solana is currently testing a daily order block between $170 and $156, an area with limited support. The downturn has pushed the price below the 50-day, 100-day, and 200-day EMAs, signaling potential bearish confirmation on the daily chart.
With liquidity lows around $155 now being tested, SOL could stage a mean reversion recovery if buyers defend this zone, especially as the relative strength index (RSI) hits its lowest level since March 2025.
However, acceptance below $160 and a failure to hold $155 could expose the next downside target between $120 and $100, marking a deeper correction phase unless a short-term rebound materializes soon.
Related: Hawkish Fed triggers $360M in crypto outflows as Solana ETFs buck trend
This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

In an exclusive interview with Cointelegraph, veteran economist and gold advocate Peter Schiff issued one of his starkest warnings yet about Bitcoin’s future, and the powerful forces he believes have inflated it.
Schiff argues that the latest Bitcoin (BTC) bull market isn’t organic, but rather propped up by political influence in Washington, DC and Wall Street’s self-interest. Despite being proven wrong multiple times in the past, Schiff is doubling down on his statement that Bitcoin is a “bubble” and will eventually “go to zero.”
The economist challenges the mainstream narrative that Bitcoin protects investors from inflation or dollar weakness, warning instead that the same institutions Bitcoin was meant to disrupt are now the ones keeping it alive.
That support, Schiff suggests, may soon disappear.
Is Bitcoin’s rise a result of political influence and therefore destined to collapse? And could gold reclaim its role as the true store of value in a time of financial instability?
Watch the full exclusive interview on Cointelegraph’s YouTube channel to hear Peter Schiff’s unfiltered take on Bitcoin, gold, and why he believes the “Bitcoin bubble” is nearing its end.
Related: Bitcoin falls under $101K: Analysts say BTC is ‘underpriced’ based on fundamentals