1, The scale of U.S. Treasury bonds held by China has fallen to its lowest level since the 2008 financial crisis.
The scale of U.S. Treasury bonds held by China has fallen to its lowest level since the 2008 financial crisis.
2, The first batch of compliant stablecoin licenses in Hong Kong is expected to be issued by the end of March.
The first batch of compliant stablecoin licenses in Hong Kong is expected to be issued by the end of March, with HSBC and Standard Chartered likely to be the first approved institutions. Sources indicate that after the first batch of licenses is issued, the approval process for the second batch will also be expedited and is expected to be announced soon.
3, U.S. Treasury Secretary Yellen criticizes Coinbase's resistance to the CLARITY Act, calling it 'stubborn participants'
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessen recently harshly criticized Coinbase on Fox for being a 'stubborn participant,' as Coinbase opposes the (CLARITY Act). Bessen emphasized the importance of passing the act multiple times during a Senate Banking Committee hearing and took a hard stance against its opponents. It is understood that the (CLARITY Act) aims to clarify the regulatory division of cryptocurrency assets, with separate management by the SEC and CFTC, but Coinbase is concerned that the act could limit business models such as stablecoin rewards, leading to divisions within the industry.
4. The White House will hold a closed-door meeting to discuss the future of the U.S. cryptocurrency market structure bill.
The White House will hold a closed-door meeting tomorrow to discuss the future direction of the U.S. cryptocurrency market structure bill.
5. The U.S. reduced 108,000 jobs last month, marking the worst record for January since 2009.
The U.S. reduced 108,000 jobs last month, the worst employment data for January since the global financial crisis in 2009.
6. The Federal Reserve plans to launch a 'streamlined master account' within the year, advancing limited access against the backdrop of stalled cryptocurrency legislation.
Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller stated that the Fed plans to launch a 'streamlined master account' before the end of the year. As legislative efforts for comprehensive cryptocurrency market regulation at the congressional level stall, the Fed is committed to advancing limited access to the payment system. Traditional master accounts allow institutions to directly access the federal payment system and the U.S. monetary system, while the 'streamlined master account' will come with restrictions, including no interest payments and a prohibition on discount borrowing. Although public feedback revealed discrepancies between the cryptocurrency industry and community banks, Waller expressed hope that a plan can be realized this year. Waller also mentioned that as the initial excitement in the cryptocurrency market under the Trump administration fades, the prices of major crypto assets have significantly declined, with Bitcoin dropping from a historical high of about $126,000 to around $70,000, indicating that market fluctuations are the norm.
7. The U.S. government may face another partial shutdown this week.
The U.S. federal government has just ended a 4-day brief shutdown, but another shutdown crisis seems to be forming. Democrats and Republicans in Washington are at odds over immigration enforcement reforms under the Trump administration, leading to potential funding shortfalls for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Previously, both parties had passed a two-week stopgap spending plan to temporarily fund the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), but that plan will expire on Friday. Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman anticipates a potential partial shutdown, stating that while Democrats have proposed a 10-point plan, it has not received Republican support. Fetterman candidly admitted on Fox News that he believes the government will inevitably shut down again.
8. South Korean regulators have launched a comprehensive investigation into Bithumb for mistakenly issuing Bitcoin worth approximately $43 billion.
The South Korean Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) has launched a comprehensive investigation into the Bithumb cryptocurrency exchange, as the exchange mistakenly distributed Bitcoin worth approximately $43 billion (totaling 620,000 BTC) in a promotion. The error was due to staff mistakenly setting the reward unit as BTC instead of Korean won. Bithumb has recovered 99.7% of the mistakenly issued Bitcoin and 93% of the 1,788 BTC sold by users, and has promised to compensate affected users at a rate of 110%. Additionally, the exchange plans to establish a user protection fund of 100 billion won (approximately $68 million).
9. Bitcoin has fallen below the $69,000 mark.
Bitcoin price has fallen below $69,000. In the past 4 hours, long positions worth $80 million have been liquidated.
10. A certain on-chain bot targeted meme coins related to He Yi's tweet keywords, earning $27,000 in one and a half minutes.
On-chain analyst Ember (@EmberCN) discovered that by monitoring He Yi's tweet keywords 'Six Major Factions Attack the Bright Summit,' an on-chain opening bot quickly created a meme coin of the same name. The token's market value once reached $1.9 million. The token creator achieved a profit of $27,000 in just one and a half minutes. He created the token at 16:47:42 and purchased 41% of the tokens with $2,400 worth of BNB, then gradually sold all from 16:47:53 to 16:49:01, realizing a profit of $27,000.
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