The Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) Court has upheld a worldwide freezing injunction against Aria Commodities DMCC over $456 million linked to a stablecoin reserve fraud. Great response by Justin Sun - "This serves a strong notice to all persons knowingly involved in global scam operations of ARIA. You can run but you cannot hide; we will come after you wherever you are!" Justin's company remains committed to restitution for all public holders affected by the $TUSD related fraud.
Coinbase says it is leaving Delaware and will reincorporate in Texas. Texas has become an increasingly attractive hub for companies like Coinbase. Elon Musk sparked an exodus from Delaware last year after a court ruled against his pay package. Series of Delaware court rulings has made some companies question just how hospitable the state really is for the big corporations.
In the past one hour, $10.93 Million got liquidated in comparison to $1.55 Million short. So crypto doesn't care about the reopening of US Government. Let's wait for the stock market to open in 4 hours.
Taiwan Weighs Adding Bitcoin to National Reserves in Major Policy Shift. Dr. Ko has been vocal about the risks of overreliance on the USD and the country’s need for diversified financial safeguards. He urged the central bank to consider Bitcoin’s inclusion in national reserves, citing global inflation, rising geopolitical tension, and the volatility of the New Taiwan Dollar. The local currency has fluctuated as much as 5% in a single trading day, prompting calls for alternative hedging mechanisms. Taiwan currently holds approximately 423 metric tonnes of gold and $577 billion in foreign exchange reserves, with around 92% invested in US Treasury bonds. Dr. Ko clarified that Bitcoin would not replace these traditional holdings but serve as a complementary asset to strengthen the country’s financial resilience through diversification. “Bitcoin offers a unique hedge due to its decentralized and fixed-supply nature."
‘Dog that hasn’t barked.......’: Epstein claims in private emails Trump ‘knew about the girls', says US President Donald Trump 'spent hours at my house' Epstein claimed that the then friend of his "knew about the girls". The emails released showed that the alleged sex offender claimed Trump spent time with one of his victims. “These latest emails and correspondence raise glaring questions about what else the White House is hiding and the nature of the relationship between Epstein and the president.” - Representative Robert Garcia of California The emails were from after Epstein’s 2008 plea deal in Florida on state charges of soliciting prostitution. Trump has always denied the claims right from the start, some says, Elon Musk removal from DOGE was due to revelation that he knew $TRUMP name is included in the Epstein files.
Japan Exchange looks at ways to curb crypto hoarding firms. Since September, three listed Japanese companies have put plans to start buying cryptocurrencies on hold due to pushback from JPX. Those companies have been told their fundraising abilities will be restricted if they pursue buying crypto as a business strategy. There are many nation whose stock exchanges doesn't want traders to go for crypto.
Binance CEO, @Richard Teng at SFF2025 on future of stablecoins. "Here’s my key takeaway: There’s a lot of good work happening, with players within and beyond crypto investing heavily in this space. But there’s still room to broaden use cases so even more people can benefit."
In the past 24 hours, 143,437 traders were liquidated, the total liquidations comes in at $585.36 million. The largest single liquidation order happened on Hyperliquid - POPCAT-USD value $21.29 Million. However, post US government reopening news, only $724.31K Long got liquidated comparison to $6.83M short.
A judge in Dubai has ordered a worldwide FREEZE on $456 million in assets linked to a bailout of the stablecoin TUSD, placing Justin Sun and his network under renewed scrutiny. Despite this, Justin said he is trying to recover the assets attempting to impact the negative market. Watch out your $TRX because Justin is full of controversies.
While the 2019 reopening of US Government led to a massive bull run for Bitcoin, 2025 is a different market, and positive news doesn't necessarily trigger immediate price surges. Be careful with your long and short. This time game is different. Sell-the-news event: Investors may have already factored in the reopening into asset prices, leading to a sell-off as the news became official. Now it's a more mature market: Unlike the 2019 reopening, the crypto market is now more regulated, institutionalized, and influenced by a wider range of macroeconomic factors. Large investors and spot ETFs now play a significant role, potentially muting the impact of a single event like reopening. Broader market headwinds: Overall capital inflows into the crypto market have declined, and macroeconomic uncertainties, such as impending Federal Reserve interest rate decisions, are weighing heavily on investor risk appetite.
President Donald Trump signed legislation to end the longest government shutdown in US history, marking the official conclusion to a 43 day struggle that halted food aid to millions of households, canceled thousands of flights and forced federal workers to go unpaid for more than a month. This shutdown is ending in the same way past clashes have since shutdowns became common in the late 1970s: the party seeking to leverage a shutdown for a particular policy wins has backed down in the face of public pressure and backdown of their own senators. Anyway, crypto market is still yet to react sharply as top two legends, $BTC and $ETH are still fluctuating.
Protesters force their way into COP30 summit venue to Put their POV. Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has highlighted Indigenous communities as key players in this year's COP30 negotiations. Earlier this week, dozens of Indigenous leaders arrived by boat to participate in the talks and demand more say in how forests are being managed. In a separate interview, a prominent Indigenous leader told that many from the Indigenous communities were upset with ongoing industry and development projects in the forest.
Not enough talented Americans: Trump's rare endorsement of H-1B visa. US President Donald Trump appeared to defend the H-1B visa programme, whose majority of beneficiaries are Indians and Chinese, saying the country needed to bring in talent from abroad to address a shortage of domestic workers for available jobs. During an appearance on Fox News, Trump was asked whether his administration would prioritize the H-1B visa programme over fears that it could suppress wages for American workers. "I agree, but you do also have to bring in talent," he replied. When the interviewer replied, "We have plenty of talented workers," the President said - "No, you don't." "You don't have certain talents. People have to learn. You can’t take people off an unemployment line and say, ‘I’m going to put you into a factory where we’re going to make missiles." Trump further cited an example from the state of Georgia, where, the removal of skilled foreign workers from South Korea created difficulties in manufacturing complex products. “They had people from South Korea that had made batteries all their life. Making batteries is very complicated and very dangerous, a lot of explosions, a lot of problems. They had like 500 or 600 people in the early stages to make batteries and to teach people how to do it." Trump was referring to the raids conducted by the US ICE officials at an Hyundai plant in the state of Georgia, during which hundreds of South Korean workers were arrested and deported. He also said specialized expertise cannot be immediately filled by untrained workers. “You can’t just say a country is coming in, going to invest USD 10 billion to build a plant, and take people off the unemployment line who haven’t worked in five years and they’re going to start making missiles. It doesn’t work that way." Recently, $TRUMP signed a proclamation that triggered a major overhaul of the H-1B visa petition. According to the proclamation, there will now be a USD 100,000 fee for new H-1B visa applications, a sharp increase from the previous level of about USD 1,500.