Category: Business

  • Citi Downgrades Crypto Exchange Gemini After Cutting Bitcoin, Ethereum Price Targets

    Citi Downgrades Crypto Exchange Gemini After Cutting Bitcoin, Ethereum Price Targets

    In brief

    • Citi downgraded Gemini from Neutral to Sell, saying it’ll be years before the exchange achieves profitability.
    • GEMI stock was recently down more than 16% on the day, outpacing other major crypto stock losses.
    • The bank also cut its Bitcoin and Ethereum price targets this week.

    Crypto exchange and custodian Gemini’s stock dropped more than 16% after Citigroup analysts downgraded the company Wednesday morning, suggesting that it’ll be years before the firm is profitable.

    The company, which trades on the Nasdaq under the GEMI symbol, saw its rating fall from Neutral to Sell, and Citi lowered its price target from $13 to $5.50, according to a note published Wednesday morning. At the time of writing, GEMI was changing hands for $5.95 per share after having dropped more than 16% since markets opened.

    Gemini was founded in 2014 by Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss and went live the following year. The firm was initially focused on Bitcoin trading, before it expanded to offer a broader suite of crypto products and services. Now the platform caters to both retail and institutional clients with its spot trading, derivatives, staking, institutional-grade custody, an over-the-counter desk, a stablecoin, and a crypto rewards credit card.

    The company went public on the Nasdaq Global Select Market last September, pricing its IPO at $28 per share and raising $425 million—valuing Gemini at roughly $3.3 billion. Capital.com The Winklevoss twins had considered going public as early as 2021, around the time of Coinbase’s debut, but delayed those plans amid the 2022–23 crypto downturn and regulatory uncertainty.

    Wednesday’s Citi downgrade puts the stock well below that offering price.

    The company is scheduled to release its fourth quarter and full-year 2025 report on Thursday, followed by a conference call to discuss the results before the bell on Friday.

    The company has been taking steps to cut costs. In early February, the firm said it had approved a plan to exit and wind down operations in the U.K., European Union, and other European jurisdictions, and Australia, “as part of a broader initiative to reduce operating expenses and support the company’s path to profitability.”

    The wind down gave users in those regions two months to withdraw funds before their accounts are forced to close on April 6. At the same time, Gemini slashed its head count by 25% and said it would lean more on AI to drive efficiency gains.

    “We expect this will help reduce our total expenses in line with our headcount reduction and meaningfully accelerate our path to profitability even in the backdrop of the current crypto market,” the Winklevoss twins wrote in a joint blog post at the time. “Simplify, consolidate, then accelerate. Onward!”

    Citi also lowered its price targets for Bitcoin and Ethereum earlier this week, adjusting its 12-month forecast for BTC from $143,000 to $112,000 and for ETH from $4,304 to $3,175.

    Bitcoin was recently trading for about $71,250 with Ethereum priced at $2,175. Both were down Wednesday following worse-than-expected U.S. inflation data and growing investor concerns over the ongoing conflict in Iran.

    Citi strategist Alex Saunders wrote that while previously regulatory developments helped foster greater adoption and inflows, the opportunity for significant U.S. legislative action this year is diminishing.

    The upcoming midterm elections in November could complicate the legislative landscape for crypto-focused regulation.

    The odds for the crypto market structure bill, or CLARITY Act, could shift dramatically if Democrats gain additional seats in Congress. The bill can’t advance without support from at least seven Senate Democrats.

    Despite the falling price and bearish perspective from analysts, users on Myriad—a prediction market platform operated by Decrypt‘s parent company, Dastan—remained slightly bullish on Bitcoin’s near-term prospects, penciling in a nearly 55% chance that the coin’s next stop will be rising to $84,000 rather than falling to $55,000.

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  • Stripe-Backed Tempo Network Launches With Focus on AI Agent Payments

    Stripe-Backed Tempo Network Launches With Focus on AI Agent Payments

    In brief

    • Tempo, incubated by crypto VC Paradigm and private payments firm Stripe, launched its mainnet on Wednesday.
    • The network is purpose-built for payments, but also launched a new open standard focused on transactions for AI agents.
    • The standard, Machine Payments Protocol, has already been bolstered by Visa and others.

    Tempo, the payments-focused layer-1 blockchain from Stripe and Paradigm, launched its mainnet on Wednesday, providing key infrastructure for the agentic economy in the process. 

    Alongside the network’s launch, Tempo unveiled a new open standard for agentic payments—the Machine Payments Protocol (MPP). The protocol, co-authored by Stripe and the Tempo team, circumvents the “limitations of existing payment rails,” allowing agents to transact seamlessly. 

    “MPP provides a standard way for agents and services to coordinate payments programmatically,” the network wrote. “Instead of each service inventing its own billing flow, MPP defines a simple protocol for requesting, authorizing, and settling payments between machines.” 

    The open standard has already been enhanced by a pair of the network’s early launch partners, including global payments giant Visa, which extended MPP to support card-based payments, and Lightspark, which did so for Bitcoin payments on the Lightning Network. Stripe too added on functionality, creating support for “cards, wallets, and other payment methods.” 

    “MPP lets an agent pay for services autonomously: An agent can request a resource from a service, and the service responds with a payment request,” the announcement reads. “The agent then authorizes payment from its wallet, the transaction settles instantly, and the service delivers the requested resource to the agent.”

    According to the network, the functionality is possible thanks to its introduction of “sessions,” which allows for a stream of payments to be made programmatically based on existing, defined limits. The network has already released a directory of compatible services with which agents can interact with and pay for, including those from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google. 

    In addition to its agentic enhancements, Tempo says it “architected the infrastructure” to combat traditional, arcane solutions related to global payments, cross-border remittances, and more. 

    The network’s focus on the agentic economy amplifies a crescendoing trend among blockchain companies. In September, the Ethereum Foundation created its own artificial intelligence team, signaling the importance of the technology and its potential interplay with blockchain and cryptocurrencies. 

    The foundation’s initial focus was on ERC-8004, an Ethereum Improvement Proposal that similarly enables agents to transact seamlessly across the Ethereum blockchain. It also backed an open-source protocol from Google that tackles the same issue. Crypto exchange Coinbase has also been focused on enabling agentic payments, launching a wallet with built-in guardrails in February.

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  • Bitcoin Exchange Bithumb Announces Listing of This Altcoin on its Spot Trading Platform! Here Are the Details

    Bitcoin Exchange Bithumb Announces Listing of This Altcoin on its Spot Trading Platform! Here Are the Details

    South Korea-based cryptocurrency exchange Bithumb is preparing to add another digital asset to its platform. According to the announcement from the exchange, the Fabric Protocol ($ROBO) token will be listed with a trading pair against the Korean won (KRW).

    According to the announcement, deposit and withdrawal operations for the $ROBO token will open within one hour of the announcement’s publication. The scheduled start date for transactions is March 18, 2026, at 2 PM. The initial listing price of the token is set at 44.90 won, and the required number of confirmations for deposits is 33.

    Fabric Protocol stands out as a decentralized infrastructure project aiming to bring together robotic systems and artificial intelligence applications. Through an open-source runtime environment called OM1, the project enables the same AI agents to run on both physical robots and web-based systems. This system is designed to be compatible with different types of hardware, including quadruped robots, wheeled devices, and humanoid robots.

    The $ROBO token has various use cases within the ecosystem. It will be used by network operators as staking collateral, a payment method for data trading and computational tasks, and in governance mechanisms and reward distribution.

    Bithumb also highlighted the trading restrictions applicable to newly listed assets. Accordingly, buy orders will be limited for the first 5 minutes after trading begins. Furthermore, sell orders that are more than 10% below or 100% above the designated reference price will not be allowed within the first 5 minutes. Only limit orders will be accepted for the first two hours.

    The exchange warned investors that crypto assets involve high risks and emphasized the need for thorough research before making any transactions.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • Extraordinary Data Revealed for XRP! Seen for the First Time in XRP History!

    Cryptocurrency analytics company Santiment has announced that the $XRP Ledger has recently shown significant growth signals. According to the company’s data, interest in $XRP is rapidly increasing, both in terms of usage and among key users.

    Santiment reported that the number of addresses holding $XRP reached a record high of 7.7 million, and the number of daily active addresses also rose to its highest level in five weeks.

    According to Santiment data, the number of daily active addresses on the $XRP Ledger (XRPL) rose to 46,767, its highest level in five weeks. This increase in network activity coincided with the $XRP price reaching a four-week high of $1.60.

    At the same time, the number of non-empty addresses in XRPL reached 7.7 million for the first time.

    “With its usage continuing to grow, the $XRP Ledger has reached over 7.7 million holders (non-empty wallets) for the first time in its more than 13-year history.”

    In addition, the daily number of active addresses closed at 46,767, the highest level in 5 weeks.

    This means that $XRP usage continues to increase even during periods of market downturns.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • XRP hovers near $14 million options battleground that could sway trading

    XRP hovers near $14 million options battleground that could sway trading

    $XRP ($XRP) is trading just above a level heavily targeted by derivative traders, making it a critical zone for near-term price action.

    The payments-focused cryptocurrency changed hands at around $1.50 at press time, placing just above a notable concentration of options activity at $1.40 on crypto exchange Deribit. $XRP is used by Ripple to facilitate cross-border transactions.

    Options are derivatives contracts whose value is derived from an underlying asset, in this case $XRP. They give traders the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell $XRP at a specific price (known as the strike) before a set expiry date. Call options are typically used to bet on upside, while put options are used to hedge or speculate on downside.

    As of writing, about $6.95 million worth of call option positions were open at the $1.40 strike, alongside $7.69 million in put positions at the same level. In total, that brings the value of outstanding or “open” contracts at this strike to roughly $14.6 million, or nearly 25% of all $XRP options open on the exchange. Most of this open interest in concentrated in the March 27 expiry.

    CoinDesk reached out to Deribit for a comment on the same.

    This kind of clustering at a single strike is unusual and typically signals that the market is approaching a key inflection point.

    $XRP options: Distribution of open interest. (Deribit Metrics)

    As expiry approaches, this level may act as a magnet or gravitational price zone. Market makers, and traders who sold options at $1.40 and are “short gamma” could dynamically hedge their exposure, potentially pulling the price toward the strike. This phenomenon is widely referred to as “pinning.”

    This concept is common in currency markets, where major currency pairs like EUR/USD often gravitate toward large strikes as expiry nears.

    Traders, therefore, need to watch $1.40 level closely in the days ahead. A sustained move above it could leave much of the put-side open interest to expire worthless, while a drop below it could trigger hedging flows that amplify selling pressure.

    Either way, the heavy concentration of options at this strike suggests that $XRP’s short-term price action could be heavily influenced by how this open interest unwinds or gets settled.

  • Harsh Criticism from Arca’s CIO: “Other Altcoins Can’t Gain Ground Because of Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP”

    Harsh Criticism from Arca’s CIO: “Other Altcoins Can’t Gain Ground Because of Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP”

    Jeff Dorman, Chief Investment Officer (CIO) of crypto asset management company Arca, argued in a comprehensive assessment that Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Solana (SOL), and $XRP are among the key factors limiting the overall performance of the crypto market.

    According to Dorman, while adoption of crypto and blockchain technologies is rapidly increasing, the fact that this growth is not reflected in prices to the same extent points to a notable divergence in the sector.

    Dorman noted that digital assets have shown relatively strong performance against gold, stocks, and bonds in the past week. He stated that Bitcoin has been particularly supported by institutional demand and ETF inflows, and that Ethereum’s outperforming Bitcoin has boosted short-term optimism. However, he added that while the double-digit increases seen in projects like Hyperliquid (HYPE) and Bittensor (TAO) are noteworthy, these movements remain limited given the historical volatility of the crypto market.

    Dorman noted that while adoption in the cryptocurrency ecosystem is increasing at a record pace, this growth isn’t sufficiently reflected in token prices. He explained that this could be partly due to prices lagging behind developments, and partly because much of the adoption doesn’t directly translate into value for token holders. According to the analyst, the main problem is that some cryptocurrencies, among the largest assets by market capitalization, fail to offer a strong and sustainable investment thesis.

    Addressing Bitcoin specifically, Dorman argued that the asset has lost many of the trends it was built upon over the years. He stated that Bitcoin no longer behaves like “digital gold,” its inflation hedging function has weakened, and it lags behind stablecoins as a means of payment. He also noted that the impact of the 21 million supply limit has diminished with the rise of derivative products. While acknowledging that Bitcoin has become a more regulated asset, Dorman argued that it still lacks a strong narrative to support long-term value appreciation.

    Dorman, who also leveled similar criticisms against Ethereum and Solana, argued that while these two networks are technically successful Layer-1 projects, they fall short in directly delivering value to token holders. High inflation rates, the increasing commodification of block space, and weak value capture mechanisms are among the main criticisms. According to Dorman, these networks need to achieve much larger-scale adoption to justify their current valuations.

    Dorman took a harsher tone regarding $XRP, arguing that there is no meaningful connection between the token and the Ripple company. He stated that $XRP has limited use cases and that the token economy is not investor-friendly, adding that Ripple’s regular sales put pressure on the market.

    In his overall assessment, Dorman argued that the crypto sector’s reliance heavily on these four assets hinders healthy market growth. He stated that this situation has transformed the market into one dominated by short-term traders, leaving little room for long-term and fundamentally focused investors.

    According to Dorman, the real growth in the crypto ecosystem is happening in areas such as stablecoins and payment systems, decentralized finance (DeFi), and the tokenization of real-world assets (RWA). However, Dorman stated that this growth doesn’t directly add value to major crypto assets, and that if the sector shifts its focus to these areas, prices could become more aligned with adoption.

    *This is not investment advice.

  • SEC Declares ‘Most Crypto Assets’ Not Securities, Including Staking, Airdrops and Bitcoin Mining

    SEC Declares ‘Most Crypto Assets’ Not Securities, Including Staking, Airdrops and Bitcoin Mining

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission issued broad guidance towards the crypto industry on Tuesday, with SEC Chair Paul Atkins declaring that “most crypto assets” would not be considered securities.

    The guidance provides distinctions between which types of assets do not meet the definition of securities and what would make an asset meet that definition as an investment contract.

    It also notes that protocol mining (as on Bitcoin) and staking, along with crypto airdrops—or tokens sent to a protocol’s users and contributors—do not meet that definition.

    “After more than a decade of uncertainty, this interpretation will provide market participants with a clear understanding of how the Commission treats crypto assets under federal securities laws. This is what regulatory agencies are supposed to do: draw clear lines in clear terms,” said Atkins, in a statement.

    “It also acknowledges what the former administration refused to recognize—that most crypto assets are not themselves securities,” he continued. “And it reflects the reality that investment contracts can come to an end. This effort serves as an important bridge for entrepreneurs and investors as Congress works to advance bipartisan market structure legislation, which I look forward to implementing with [CFTC] Chairman Selig in the near future.”

    In a statement released soon after the SEC’s own, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) said that it would “administer the Commodity Exchange Act consistent with the SEC’s interpretation.”

    “This is a major step in the agencies’ efforts to provide greater clarity regarding the treatment of crypto assets, and complements Congressional endeavors to codify a comprehensive market structure framework into statute,” the CFTC added.

    Although lawmakers’ progress on the CLARITY Act has stalled in recent months, the SEC’s implementation shows that the regulator isn’t waiting for laws pertaining to the crypto market’s structure to be enacted before it establishes clearer rules for the industry.

    Under the SEC’s prior leadership, the regulator focused on the classification of digital assets within the context of the Howey Test. The framework stemming from a Supreme Court case was cited frequently in enforcement actions against many crypto-native firms.

    Atkins indicated that the SEC’s reliance on the Howey Test for assessing the classification of digital assets amounted to a “persistent failure to provide clarity on this question” of whether certain cryptocurrencies should be regulated by different agencies.

    “We’re not the Securities and Everything Commission,” Atkins said Tuesday afternoon, prompting a burst of applause from the audience of crypto industry professionals gathered at the DC Blockchain Summit.

    The taxonomy included in the SEC’s implementation divides digital assets into five groups: digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, stablecoins, and digital securities.

    Digital securities are the only type of digital asset that the SEC says fall squarely within its regulatory remit, according to a fact sheet. That includes tokenized securities, which are digital representations of traditional investments, including stocks and U.S. Treasuries.

    In order to be classified as a digital commodity, the SEC and CFTC plan to assess whether a digital asset derives its value from the programmatic operation of a “crypto system,” as opposed to an expectation of profit that stems from the essential managerial efforts of others.

    Within the context of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum, which are broadly considered to be digital commodities, those assets play a foundational role in securing their respective networks across a decentralized group of market participants.

    The SEC says digital collectibles are linked to creative works like music and artwork, but they can also represent in-game items or references to internet memes. The definition suggests that most NFTs and meme coins would fall under that umbrella. Those are distinct from digital tools, which can function as a membership or event ticket, along with a virtual identity.

    The SEC’s implementation says “non-security crypto assets” may be classified as investment contracts under certain circumstances, depending on representations that issuers make. Still, the existence of an investment contract does not make the digital asset a security during transactions that take place on a secondary market like an exchange.

    On top of that, non-security crypto assets that are tied to investment contracts may not be subject to federal securities laws if there’s no longer a reasonable expectation from a purchaser that the issuer’s representations and promises are connected to the digital asset.

    On Tuesday, Atkins also previewed a potential safe harbor exemption for certain crypto projects, which the SEC has teased for some months. 

    The SEC chair said such exemptions could soon apply to startups worth up to $5 million seeking to experiment with crypto assets in their first four years; to entrepreneurs raising up to $75 million via investment contracts involving certain crypto assets; and to certain crypto assets once their creators have ceased all essential managerial efforts.

    Atkins said he expects the SEC to release such proposed rules for public comment in “the coming weeks.”

    Additional reporting by Sander Lutz

    Editor’s note: This story was updated after publication with additional details and comments.

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  • CFTC Clears Phantom to Connect Users to Regulated Derivatives Markets

    CFTC Clears Phantom to Connect Users to Regulated Derivatives Markets

    In brief

    • The CFTC’s Market Participants Division issued no-action relief to Phantom Technologies, letting it connect users to regulated futures markets without registering as an introducing broker.
    • The decision does not extend to DeFi derivatives or tokenized prediction markets.
    • The CFTC said it may issue formal rulemaking that supersedes the letter.

    In a move that could shape how self-custodial cryptocurrency wallets interact with regulated markets in the United States, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission has allowed Phantom Technologies to offer derivatives access without registering as an intermediary.

    The CFTC’s Market Participants Division issued the “no-action” letter on Tuesday, effectively promising not to pursue enforcement action against Phantom for failing to register as an introducing broker. The decision specifically covers the Phantom software wallet, which acts as a bridge connecting individual users to registered futures commission merchants, brokers, and designated contract markets.

    “As America cements its position as the crypto capital of the world, clear rules of the road for software developers are critical,” CFTC chair Mike Selig wrote on X. “Today’s staff no-action letter delivers long overdue clarity for non-custodial digital wallet software providers.”

    While the relief provides a significant tailwind for the firm, it is not a blanket pass. The CFTC’s position is contingent on a specific set of conditions designed to maintain market integrity and consumer safety.

    “The process that led to Phantom’s no action relief is how the regulatory process should work,” Phantom Technologies General Counsel Kevin Jacobs said in a statement. “With thanks to the CFTC’s willingness to open their doors to facilitate innovation, we proactively engaged with the CFTC to seek clarity on how a non-custodial interface like Phantom could offer access to regulated markets through a registered partner, without acting as an intermediary that needs its own registration.”

    While he praised the ruling, Jacobs acknowledged its limits, saying it does not cover DeFi derivatives—price-based trading contracts offered through blockchain apps—or tokenized prediction markets, like Polymarket.

    The decision arrives as crypto firms increasingly seek clarity on how self-custodial tools fit into legacy financial frameworks. In January, a bipartisan Senate bill was introduced to clarify that crypto developers who write or maintain blockchain code shouldn’t be treated as money transmitters—unless they actually control users’ funds.

    “Phantom never touches customer funds,” Jacobs wrote.

    While the CFTC did not name any other wallet developers, Phantom—which primarily serves users on the Solana blockchain network—suggested that this outcome could serve as a viable model for other wallet providers looking to integrate with regulated markets while maintaining a non-custodial structure.

    “A critical part of making crypto safe and easy to use is building financial products that are governed by clear, common-sense regulations,” Phantom CEO Brandon Millman said in a statement. “When warranted, engaging regulators early to find compliant pathways for these new products produces better outcomes for our users, for the industry, and for regulators themselves. This letter is proof of that.”

    Despite the immediate relief, the CFTC maintained its prerogative to shift course. The agency noted that this no-action position is an administrative shortcut that could eventually be superseded by formal rulemaking or broader industry guidance.

    Still, Jacobs said the decision reflects the company’s focus on building compliant, user-focused products.

    “Phantom was built on the belief that crypto should be safe and easy to use,” Jacobs wrote. “We’re committed to continuing to lead the way on developing products that are innovative, compliant, and put the user first.”

    The CFTC did not immediately respond to Decrypt‘s request for comment.

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