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Cover image for Bitcoin Price Teeters Near $69,000 Despite Market Volatility and Oil Price Swings

Bitcoin Price Teeters Near $69,000 Despite Market Volatility and Oil Price Swings

Bitcoin Magazine Bitcoin Price Teeters Near $69,000 Despite Market Volatility and Oil Price Swings Bitcoin price traded near $69,000 on Monday, stabilizing after last week’s brief rally and then sell-off into the weekend. The cryptocurrency has remained resilient even as traditional equities and oil markets experience sharp swings. Bitcoin price remains confined to the $62,500–$72,000 range following February’s sharp decline, with repeated attempts to break above $72,000 failing, according to Bitfinex analysts. A high of $74,047 on March 4 marked a brief breakout for the bitcoin price, but momentum could not be sustained, and the move was quickly reversed. The March 6 spike in negative realized profits of around $900 million shows that many investors exited positions at a loss during the failed rally. Passive sell orders and late-entry leveraged longs absorbed buying pressure, keeping the price trapped within its established range. Since the February low, dip buyers have supported a 20.5% recovery, helping stabilize the market. Realized losses have now sharply compressed, suggesting that forced selling has largely subsided, but upside remains capped until $72,000 is decisively cleared, according to Bitfinex. Bitcoin price weathers macro turbulence The surge in volatility comes alongside dramatic movements in energy markets, where West Texas Intermediate crude briefly rose above $110 per barrel before easing back. Supply concerns driven by geopolitical tensions in the Middle East have weighed on global equities and safe-haven assets such as gold, while pushing demand toward the U.S. dollar. Bitcoin’s own volatility measures suggest the crypto market may have already experienced its most stressful phase. The Bitcoin Volmex Implied Volatility Index (BVIV) spiked earlier this year when bitcoin price briefly fell to $60,000, indicating heightened market stress. Since then, volatility has eased, suggesting that crypto markets front-ran some of the turbulence now affecting traditional assets. Despite macro uncertainty, bitcoin’s price has held above $66,000, recovering from minor pullbacks that followed attempts to break through resistance near $74,000. The market has seen a consolidation phase, with buyers defending levels around $66,000 to $69,000, according to Bitcoin Magazine Pro data. The ongoing conflict in the Middle East and disruptions to shipping routes have contributed to sharp spikes in oil prices. The Strait of Hormuz closure and recent strikes on regional depots tightened supply, adding upward pressure on crude and fueling concerns about global inflation. Rising energy costs ripple through industries worldwide, potentially increasing borrowing costs and putting pressure on risk-sensitive assets, including bitcoin. On top of this, underlying financial pressures that could influence Bitcoin’s appeal. “While chaotic global events are getting most of the attention and are often credited for bitcoin’s price moves, there may be deeper stresses forming beneath the surface,” Timot Lamarre, director of market research at Unchained Pressure, wrote to Bitcoin Magazine. “In the private credit market, including unusually high withdrawal requests from large funds, suggests liquidity in parts of the financial system may be tightening. Markets tend to anticipate the policy response to financial stress before it happens, and if investors begin expecting another round of monetary expansion, the incentive to hold bitcoin only grows stronger.” Global equities have reflected these pressures. Japan’s Nikkei and South Korea’s KOSPI both dropped more than 7% after market openings, while China and Hong Kong’s indices recorded smaller declines. The strength of the U.S. dollar, coupled with elevated yields, has reinforced its role as a primary defensive asset in the current environment, leaving bitcoin price and other risk assets to navigate a more complex landscape. Within this context, bitcoin price has maintained relative stability. Its market capitalization has remained above $1.3 trillion, and trading activity shows continued interest across spot and derivatives markets. Bitcoin’s mined supply also surpassed 20 million BTC today — over 95 % of the 21 million cap — leaving just about 1 million coins left to be mined over the next century. This post Bitcoin Price Teeters Near $69,000 Despite Market Volatility and Oil Price Swings first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Public Bitcoin Miners are Dumping Bitcoin for AI, a Historic Mistake

Public Bitcoin Miners are Dumping Bitcoin for AI, a Historic Mistake

Bitcoin Magazine Public Bitcoin Miners are Dumping Bitcoin for AI, a Historic Mistake There is no doubt about it, this is the age of AI. Corporations are cutting their workforces in half to invest cash flow into hardware, while the stock market remains near all-time highs, mostly thanks to FAANG. OpenClaw, a self-hosted AI agent, has more stars on GitHub than Linux and React, while even Jack Dorsey is taking harsh measures to restructure Block in the face of digital, artificial intelligence. But how much of this AI wave is hype, and how many of the companies that build its infrastructure will actually capture the profits? Public Bitcoin miners in the United States have made their choice, a variety of them committing capital to building out AI datacenters, and some even making full rebrands, distancing themselves from the orange coin. While there’s a full range of AI-related pivots and statements made by public Bitcoin miners on the matter, a couple stand out as the most radical. Cypher Mining, estimated to be worth around six billion dollars — placing it among the biggest in the country – announced a full rebrand away from Bitcoin and on to the AI hype train. In their most recent investment report titled “Rebrands to Cipher Digital to Reflect Strategic Shift Toward HPC,” the company explained why they “Divested 49% Stake in Alborz, Bear, and Chief Mining Sites”. Bitfarms Ltd, another large public miner valued at over a billion dollars, also made a full pivot to AI. The CEO, Ben Gagnon, went as far as saying “We are no longer a Bitcoin company,” as reported by Coindesk, though they did keep the ‘Bit’ in the name. Some of these public companies are expecting more dollar returns from digital intelligence than those they get from Bitcoin, at least in the short to mid term, while other are others might consider it a diversification or an opportunity too large to miss. Kent Halliburton — Co-Founder & CEO of Sazminingexplained to Bitcoin Magazine in an exclusive interview that “The average cost to mine a bitcoin right now is about $87,000. The spot price of bitcoin is about $70,000. So most of the industry is underwater, and the public miners are using that as their excuse to pivot.” Sazmining is a private Bitcoin miner that specializes in frontier energy sources, with operations mostly outside of the United States. Halliburtonalso noted that “$87,000 is an industry average — it includes guys running old-gen rigs on grid power in Texas. At our sites in Paraguay and Ethiopia, our clients are producing bitcoin on an energy cost basis of $50,000 to $64,000, on 100% renewable energy. That’s a 10 to 30 percent discount to spot. The profitability is right there.” It just requires a longer investment horizon or cheaper energy, neither of which appears to be actionable for American public miners who have dollar-denominated quarterly reports to target. On the topic of cheaper energy, however, Halliburton suggests that public U.S. miners had the chance to be competitive but have failed to take advantage of their resources. He minced no words on the topic, saying that these public companies “had the power contracts, the land, the infrastructure — everything you need to mine bitcoin cheaply — and they’re handing it to Microsoft and Google in exchange for lease checks. They went from securing the Bitcoin network to securing rack space for hyperscalers, and they’re calling it a strategy. Meanwhile, they’ve dumped over 15,000 bitcoin off their balance sheets to fund the transition”. Of the biggest public Bitcoin miners, IREN Limited began its pivot to AI cloud services in April 2025, announcing a$9.7 billion, five-year agreement with Microsoft for 200 MW of critical IT load using NVIDIA GB300 GPUs. TeraWulf has executed multiple Google-backed HPC expansions through Fluidstack, securing 10 year agreements for over 200 MW. Cipher Digital completed its full rebrand to an HPC landlord with 600 MW of contracted capacity, including a 15-year, 300 MW lease with AWS and a 10-year, 300 MW lease with Fluidstack backed by Google. Hut 8 signed a 15-year, 245 MW lease with Fluidstack, also backed by Google, eyeing future possible extensions and a right of first offer for over 1,000 MW. Core Scientific has expanded its HPC focus to 270 MW through partnerships with CoreWeave, which serves Microsoft and OpenAI workloads. Riot Platforms is strategically evaluating an AI hosting expansion by partnering with AMD on an operational 10-year, 25 MW lease and assessments for 600 MW of AI/HPC at its Corsicana site, though no hyperscaler agreements have been announced. MARA Holdings is diversifying into AI through a joint venture with Starwood Capital’s Starwood Digital Ventures, targeting 1 GW of near-term IT capacity expandable to over 2.5 GW for hyperscale and AI workloads, with Starwood leading financing and tenant sourcing, but without named hyperscaler contracts yet. CleanSpark is pursuing a pivot to AI by acquiring Texas land and power for AI/HPC, including 447 acres in Brazoria County for 300–600 MW potential and an Austin County site contributing to 890 MW aggregate, funded by Bitcoin sales, with tenant discussions ongoing but no hyperscaler leases disclosed. So the AI gold rush is here, there’s no doubt about it, many of these public miners apparently see an opportunity to build out the infrastructure of — what is without a doubt— a profound technological trend. But history has not been kind to those who build the infrastructure of a new era, not in the long term anyway. It tends to be a very high-risk, medium-reward kind of bet. How many of the companies that built the railroads — for example — are still around today? Or, without going back that far, can you name any company that built out internet fiber lines in the late 90’s and 2000’s? There is a long list of railroad bankruptcies from the late 1800’s, which even led to a financial crisis in what’s called the Panic of 1873, many overleveraged in debt to fund build-outs for which there was not enough demand yet. After the panic, J.P. Morgan led a consolidation of bankrupt railroad companies, resolving debt disputes and bringing their real estate assets under new ownership. It was they who ended up capturing the upside of the railway build-out. And just around the corner of the century, the dot com bubble of the 2000’s left a graveyard of fiber line infrastructure companies that were also, in the end, bought out by hyper scalers like Google and Meta during the post crash consolidation, for pennies on the dollar. While both the railway and fiber line build-outs overall helped scale commerce for the world in incredible ways — demonstrating the overall wisdom of the markets — most individual companies involved did not survive the process, and venture capitalists looking at the AI boom today are aware of this dynamic. The Capex vs Revenue AI Gap Various investor groups are starting to question where the returns on this massive infrastructure spending will come from. In an October 2025 report titled “AI: In a bubble?”, GoldmanSachs took a argued that, while the investments so far could be supported by big tech revenue, the valuations of some of these companies were starting to get “frothy”. David Chan at Sequoia has been pointing out the growing gap between AI-driven revenue and capital expenditures (Capex) since 2023, leading to a widely reported number of a $600 billion gap between them. Capex spending commitments in 2026 are north of $700 for the hyper scalers, but where are the returns? OpenAI’s $20 billion annual recurring revenue (ARR) is impressive for a new company, but that represents “roughly 3% of the projected 2026 hyperscaler capex total” as reported by FuturumGroup, who noted that “Anthropic’s $9 billion run rate, while showing 9x year-over-year growth, occupies a similar position. The entire cohort of pure-play AI vendors – including Cohere ($150 million ARR), Mistral (~$400 million), Perplexity ($148 million annualized), and others – likely accounts for less than $35 billion in projected combined 2026 revenue.” Skepticism about where the value of AI will actually be captured has also been aired by VC’s like Chamath Palihapitiya. He was a prominent investor in Groq, a company building custom silicon for the AI age, which was licensed by NVIDIA in a $20 billion deal last year, and was a Facebook insider through the company’s rise to become a hyperscaler. If he has his doubts about the profitability of building the railroads of artificial intelligence, then perhaps there’s something worth giving a very close look at. Palihapitiya also argued in a recent All In Podcast that corporations might soon start to realize they are exposing their trade secrets to cloud AI, preferring instead to self-host. Building out in-house GPU farms might seem like a bit of a side quest, but can you really risk your trade secrets with AI providers who train on user data? After all, new versions of models trained on that data will have it in their knowledge base, exposed to the world. And even if corporate agreements not to train on corporate data become the norm, a very high trust relationship would be formed, posing a systemic risk to certain corporations, a risk that the data might get leaked or seen by the wrong insiders inside the cloud AI provider companies. There are also questions about whether the market fundamentally wants cloud AI for the same reasons. Would you hire a personal assistant if you knew the data you share with them would end up on the internet? Probably not, but that’s what’s happening with AI. In fact, the U.S. Southern District of New York recently ruled that users do not have client-attorney privilege when getting legal help from AI chatbots, and thus, sensitive discussions with AI could be legally subpoenaed and used against the clients in a court of law, a sign of the risks involved with trusting AI blindly. Some speculate that new kinds of terms and agreements will need to be formed to support this use case. But the legal case points to a fundamental element of the demand for AI: people want humanoid intelligence, digital or otherwise, that they can trust. AI Loyalty and Trust Ah, “Trust”, that ubiquitous, almost supernatural word that does so much work to carry the weight of the world. But what is trust? Fundamentally, it is predictability, one person’s confidence that another human, system, or AI will behave in a certain way, in a reliable, predictable, and positive way towards one’s interests. AI, when hosted in the cloud, however, can not give such assurances; the data is fundamentally leaving the user’s machine to be processed by “the cloud,” and what happens up there is beyond us mortals. In fact, “the cloud” has legal risks that might prevent it from being loyal to you as a user in certain scenarios. Hence, perhaps the public’s fascination with OpenClaw. In recent weeks, a new open source project in the AI world has taken the tech industry by storm. 289,000 stars on GitHub, more than Linux has gotten despite supporting the software infrastructure of the world, more than React, one of the most popular web development languages in the world. And it’s only been live for what, weeks? How could this be? Why do people like it so much? Well, arguably two reasons. It feels more like a human assistant than a chatbot; it updates itself, remembers what you are interested in, journals, and develops around your preferences. But most important of all, you can host it on your machine. People were buyingMac minis in droves to run OpenClaw, pairing it up with Claude Max API token plans of about $200 a month. Some argue this is a revolution in self-hosting, even though the above setup is still dependent on the cloud. But what’s actually happening here is that OpenClaw appears loyal, it remembers you, it is “in your home” in your PC. It’s not a chat interface whose context window will eventually become too much for it to manage, ending in a small death, replaced by a new chat tab. OpenClaw is not a chatbot; it’s an AI entity of sorts that users create a relationship with. And good relationships are built on trust. So what does all of this have to do with public Bitcoin Miners? Well, perhaps self-hosted AI is the future, Chinese AI models are increasingly leaner and can run on machines far from the cutting edge, arguably pressured into innovation by sanctions on specialized AI hardware like high-end Nvidia chips. Open source tools of all kinds that manage and host models locally are regularly launched and improved, and if history is any guide, the mass production of AI hardware will lead to the commoditization of powerful computers that will make it to end users’ homes, and can handle AI. In fact, Apple, the FAANG that has had the worst AI products deployed to date, may end up becoming one of the biggest winners of the AI race. Why? Because their user hardware is excellent. Recent Macs don’t have a distinction between RAM and VRAM, an issue all other computers dependent on GPUs, such as Nvidia, have. This limits the size and speed of models that can be self-hosted. Instead, all RAM is unified in the latest Mac machines, letting users run powerful models locally that don’t easily run on non-Apple hardware. Self-hosted AI is the future. And thus, public Bitcoin miners, in the pursuit of mid-term fiat gains, might have just fallen for a trap. The same trap the giants of the dot-com bubble fell for. The same trap that the titans of the industrial era, who built the railroads, fell for. The infrastructure that runs the future does not necessarily capture the gains. This post Public Bitcoin Miners are Dumping Bitcoin for AI, a Historic Mistake first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Juan Galt.

Cover image for Bitcoin Hits 20 Million: Less Than 1 Million Coins Left

Bitcoin Hits 20 Million: Less Than 1 Million Coins Left

Bitcoin Magazine Bitcoin Hits 20 Million: Less Than 1 Million Coins Left Bitcoin has just crossed a major milestone: more than 20 million of its 21 million coins have now been mined. That means over 95% of the cryptocurrency’s total supply is out in the world, leaving less than one million coins yet to be created. But don’t expect them to appear anytime soon — the last fractions of Bitcoin, called satoshis, are projected to be mined around the year 2140. Bitcoin’s supply is built into its code, making it very different from traditional money like dollars or euros. When Satoshi Nakamoto launched the network in 2009, the system was designed to release coins gradually. Miners earn new bitcoins as rewards for validating transactions and adding them to the blockchain. These rewards started at 50 BTC per block and are cut in half roughly every four years in an event called a “halving.” The latest halving in 2024 reduced the reward to 3.125 BTC per block, slowing the pace of new BTC entering circulation. This means the early years saw a faster creation of coins, while the final million will trickle out extremely slowly. Right now, miners produce about 450 BTC per day, half of what they did before the 2024 halving. BREAKING: Over 20 million of Bitcoin's 21 million supply cap has officially been mined. Less than 1 million left. pic.twitter.com/35p6dphJEL — Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) March 9, 2026 As the rewards continue to shrink, miners will increasingly rely on transaction fees rather than new coins to sustain their operations. Another factor affecting BTC’s supply is that some coins are effectively lost. Some early coins were sent to addresses with no private keys, and estimates suggest between 2 and 3.5 million BTC may never be recovered. In addition to lost keys, some BTC are unspendable by design — for example, the 50 BTC from Bitcoin’s very first block cannot be spent — taking them permanently out of circulation. That reduces the number of coins actually available to trade, increasing scarcity and reinforcing BTC’s “hard money” characteristics. Bitcoin price fluctuations Despite the slowing issuance, Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies still move with global markets, investor sentiment, and economic news. Prices can swing daily, showing that even though the supply is predictable, demand and market conditions still drive short-term value. At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading in between $69,000 and $70,000. Over the long term, however, Bitcoin’s fixed supply and transparent issuance schedule are expected to give it a unique edge compared to traditional currencies. Analysts say that predictability and scarcity are features that people tend to value in money, especially in a world of unpredictable central bank policies and inflation risks. Looking ahead, the final BTC isn’t just a theoretical number. By 2140, miners will rely entirely on transaction fees to secure the network, which could make sending Bitcoin more expensive but also ensures the system remains operational without new coins. In short, BTC is moving from a fast-growing experiment to a rare, hard-to-get digital asset. While daily prices will keep bouncing with the world’s economy, its ultimate scarcity is now hard-coded into its DNA, making it a long-term experiment in digital money that no one can change. This post Bitcoin Hits 20 Million: Less Than 1 Million Coins Left first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for U.S. Treasury Recognizes Legitimate Uses for Crypto Mixers, Proposes “Hold Law” for Suspicious Assets

U.S. Treasury Recognizes Legitimate Uses for Crypto Mixers, Proposes “Hold Law” for Suspicious Assets

Bitcoin Magazine U.S. Treasury Recognizes Legitimate Uses for Crypto Mixers, Proposes “Hold Law” for Suspicious Assets The U.S. Treasury Department told Congress that bitcoin or crypto mixers can serve legitimate financial privacy purposes, signaling a shift in the government’s approach to blockchain privacy tools. The 32-page report, submitted under the GENIUS Act, also proposes new legislative tools to combat illicit finance, including a “hold law” that would give financial institutions temporary safe harbor to freeze suspicious digital assets. The report acknowledges that lawful users may employ mixers to protect sensitive information on personal wealth, business payments, or charitable donations. This represents a recalibration from Treasury’s earlier stance, which included sanctioning Tornado Cash in 2022 and designating international mixers as money-laundering hubs in 2023. At the same time, Treasury data shows that criminal actors, particularly those linked to North Korea, continue to exploit mixers. The report cites DPRK-affiliated cybercriminals who stole at least $2.8 billion in digital assets between January 2024 and September 2025, including a $1.5 billion hack of the Bybit exchange. In these operations, mixers are commonly used to break tracing links, often in combination with stablecoin swaps and cross-chain bridges. JUST IN: US Treasury reports to Congress that using Bitcoin and crypto privacy mixers are NOT unlawful: "Lawful users of digital assets may leverage mixers to enable financial privacy when transacting through public blockchains." Big win for privacy! pic.twitter.com/l4kAMCAlhI — Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) March 9, 2026 New data on crypto laundering The report provides original Treasury analysis of mixing activity involving stablecoins and bridges. Since May 2020, more than $37.4 billion in withdrawals from over 50 bridges were denominated in the two largest stablecoins by market capitalization. Of that total, approximately $1.6 billion flowed from mixing services, with over $900 million concentrated in a single bridge scrutinized for DPRK-linked activity. The Treasury noted in the report that direct stablecoin deposits into crypto mixers for illicit purposes are relatively low, but criminals frequently convert other digital assets through mixers before swapping into stablecoins to obscure the source. The report distinguishes between custodial and non-custodial crypto mixers. Custodial services, which must register with FinCEN as money services businesses, can provide identity data, off-chain transaction information, and behavioral patterns. The Treasury does not recommend new restrictions on non-custodial mixers and refrains from finalizing FinCEN’s 2023 proposed recordkeeping rule, instead citing a 2025 Presidential Working Group report recommending careful evaluation of privacy and illicit finance risks. ‘Hold law’ to crack down on illicit activity Treasury also urged Congress to enact a digital asset–specific “hold law,” creating a temporary safe harbor for freezing suspicious assets during brief investigations. The department described such a law as particularly useful for countering illicit finance involving permitted stablecoins. On decentralized finance, the report recommends Congress specify which actors should face anti-money laundering (AML) and countering the financing of terrorism (CFT) obligations based on their roles and associated risks. It also proposes expanding Section 311 of the USA PATRIOT Act to authorize the Treasury to impose conditions on certain digital asset transfers that fall outside correspondent banking relationships. These proposals align with concerns raised by industry groups, including Galaxy Research, which in January warned that the Senate Banking Committee’s CLARITY Act could represent the largest expansion of financial surveillance authority since the Patriot Act. The report comes at somewhat of an inflection point for crypto regulation. Treasury lifted Tornado Cash sanctions in March 2025 after a federal appeals court found OFAC had exceeded its authority, though a Manhattan jury later convicted co-founder Roman Storm of operating an unlicensed money transmitter. The Department of Justice has indicated a narrower approach to prosecuting developers, suggesting that coding privacy tools without criminal intent should not constitute a violation. The U.S. Treasury framed the report within a broader effort to study “innovative or novel” tools for detecting illicit activity in crypto, as mandated by the 2025 GENIUS Act. The report draws on more than 220 public comments and consultations with financial institutions, blockchain analytics firms, crypto firms, law enforcement, and recent national risk assessments. This post U.S. Treasury Recognizes Legitimate Uses for Crypto Mixers, Proposes “Hold Law” for Suspicious Assets first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Strategy (MSTR) Spends $1.28 Billion to Buy More Bitcoin, Holdings Reach 738,731 BTC

Strategy (MSTR) Spends $1.28 Billion to Buy More Bitcoin, Holdings Reach 738,731 BTC

Bitcoin Magazine Strategy (MSTR) Spends $1.28 Billion to Buy More Bitcoin, Holdings Reach 738,731 BTC Strategy, the bitcoin treasury company led by executive chairman Michael Saylor, purchased another 17,994 bitcoin for about $1.28 billion last week, continuing one of the largest corporate accumulation strategies in the digital asset market. The company disclosed in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that the purchases took place between March 2 and March 8 at an average price of $70,946 per coin. The acquisition brings the firm’s total holdings to 738,731 bitcoin. Strategy has now spent roughly $56.04 billion to build its bitcoin position, with an average purchase price of $75,862 per coin. At the current price near $68,000, the company’s holdings carry a market value close to $50 billion. The stash represents more than 3.4% of the fixed 21 million supply of Bitcoin, reinforcing MSTR’s status as the largest corporate holder of the asset. BREAKING: Michael Saylor's Strategy purchased 17,994 Bitcoin for $1.28 BILLION pic.twitter.com/YmY1sBr4Hn — Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) March 9, 2026 Last week, Strategy purchased 3,015 bitcoin for about $204.1 million at an average price of $67,700 per coin, bringing its total holdings to 720,737 BTC at the time. Strategy’s stock sales and stock issuance The latest purchases were financed through a mix of equity sales and preferred stock issuance. The company sold 6,327,541 shares of its Class A common stock for about $899.5 million through an at-the-market program. The company also raised roughly $377.1 million from the sale of 3,776,205 shares of its STRC perpetual preferred stock. Strategy said about $6.71 billion in common stock remains available for issuance under its existing program. Another $3.16 billion in STRC preferred stock capacity remains available for sale. The purchases form part of Strategy’s broader capital strategy designed to fund continued bitcoin accumulation. The company operates several perpetual preferred stock programs, including STRK, STRC, STRF and STRD, which together provide access to billions in potential financing. Those offerings support the firm’s long-term “42/42” capital plan, which targets $84 billion in capital raises through equity offerings and convertible notes by 2027. The proceeds are intended to support continued purchases of bitcoin. Saylor hinted at the acquisition before the official disclosure in a post on social media that referenced Strategy’s bitcoin tracker. The message stated that “the second century begins,” a reference to the firm surpassing 100 separate bitcoin purchases since launching its accumulation plans in 2020. At the time, Strategy’s stock (MSTR) is trading up half a percent in pre-market. Bitcoin is trading slightly shy of $69,000. This post Strategy (MSTR) Spends $1.28 Billion to Buy More Bitcoin, Holdings Reach 738,731 BTC first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Nigel Farage Acquires 6% Stake in Bitcoin Firm Stack BTC

Nigel Farage Acquires 6% Stake in Bitcoin Firm Stack BTC

Bitcoin Magazine Nigel Farage Acquires 6% Stake in Bitcoin Firm Stack BTC Nigel Farage has taken a stake in a bitcoin treasury company led by former UK chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng, deepening links between the crypto sector and the populist political movement led by Nigel Farage. Farage invested £215,000 in Stack BTC through his media company Thorn In The Side Ltd, according to disclosures tied to a fundraising round for the London-listed firm. The purchase gives the leader of Reform UK a stake of about 6.3% in the company. The investment forms part of a £260,000 capital raise that also included participation from Blockchain.com. Stack issued 5.2 million new shares at 5 pence each, with the shares set to trade on the Aquis Growth Market. Farage’s Bitcoin advocacy Nigel Farage’s investment aligns with his long-term vision to integrate Bitcoin into the U.K.’s financial landscape. “I have long been one of the UK’s few political advocates for bitcoin,” Farage said. “London and the UK have served as a center of global finance, and the country should aim to serve as a global hub for the crypto industry.” In May 2025, during the Bitcoin 2025 conference in Las Vegas, he pledged to create a Bitcoin reserve at the Bank of England and introduce legislation that would favor the adoption of Bitcoin if he were to become Prime Minister. Farage’s pledge includes fostering a regulatory environment that encourages Bitcoin integration into traditional financial systems. Reform UK also became the first European party to accept Bitcoin donations. Partnering with UK-based payment firm Radom, the party aims to modernize fundraising and engage supporters interested in Bitcoin, reinforcing Farage’s role in crypto politics. Nigel Farage has argued that the state could hold bitcoin as part of a sovereign wealth structure tied to technology and financial infrastructure. The party also counts major crypto investor Christopher Harborne among its financial backers. Harborne, a businessman with ties to digital asset trading and venture investment, has contributed large sums to the party over the past several years. Stack BTC’s role in Bitcoin treasury management Stack BTC plays a pivotal role in helping corporations and institutions manage their Bitcoin holdings effectively. The firm specializes in secure storage solutions, risk management strategies, and advisory services to help businesses integrate Bitcoin into their treasury operations. By acquiring a stake in Stack BTC, Farage aims to enhance the firm’s capabilities, facilitating the adoption of Bitcoin among UK businesses as a viable treasury asset. This post Nigel Farage Acquires 6% Stake in Bitcoin Firm Stack BTC first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Kazakhstan’s Central Bank to Channel $350 Million of Reserves into Crypto and Bitcoin  Investments

Kazakhstan’s Central Bank to Channel $350 Million of Reserves into Crypto and Bitcoin  Investments

Bitcoin Magazine Kazakhstan’s Central Bank to Channel $350 Million of Reserves into Crypto and Bitcoin Investments The National Bank of Kazakhstan plans to allocate up to $350 million from the country’s gold and foreign exchange reserves toward investments tied to digital assets, marking one of the most significant steps by a central bank to gain exposure to the crypto sector. Governor Timur Suleimenov said the initiative will focus on companies and financial instruments connected to cryptocurrency markets rather than direct purchases of assets like Bitcoin. The investments are expected to include shares of technology firms involved in digital asset infrastructure as well as index funds whose performance tracks crypto-related markets. The allocation represents a small portion of Kazakhstan’s overall reserves. As of February, the country held roughly $69.4 billion in gold and foreign exchange reserves, according to data from the central bank. Deputy chair Aliya Moldabekova said the investment program is scheduled to begin in April and May as the bank finalizes a list of eligible companies and financial instruments. “We are not talking about any large investment in cryptocurrencies,” Moldabekova said, noting that officials are concentrating on firms involved in digital asset infrastructure and related technologies. Kazakhstan already plays a prominent role in the global crypto ecosystem. Following China’s sweeping ban on crypto mining in 2021, many mining operations relocated to the Central Asian country due to its energy resources and permissive regulatory environment. As a result, Kazakhstan emerged as one of the world’s leading centers for industrial-scale bitcoin mining. NEW: Kazakhstan's central bank to invest up to $350 million in Bitcoin and crypto assets — Reuters pic.twitter.com/HHN5lV3Iig — Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) March 6, 2026 Bitcoin-fiat facing services Financial institutions in Kazakhstan are also experimenting with consumer-facing crypto services. Suleimenov said two banks have already launched crypto-fiat payment cards that allow users to transact between traditional currencies and digital assets. Two additional banks are preparing to introduce similar products. These initiatives are currently operating in a regulatory sandbox while authorities finalize broader legislation governing digital financial assets. The central bank is also pushing to create a licensing framework for cryptocurrency exchanges operating in the country. Under the proposal, exchanges would be required to comply with anti-money laundering rules, tax regulations and other financial oversight measures. Officials say the broader regulatory push aims to integrate digital asset services into Kazakhstan’s financial system while maintaining oversight of the sector. Suleimenov has framed the effort as part of a broader transformation of financial markets driven by technology. According to the governor, innovations such as tokenized assets, digital bonds and crypto-linked payment rails are creating entirely new categories of financial instruments. “In essence, a completely new sector of the financial market is emerging,” he said. The central bank believes digital financial assets could expand access to funding for businesses and investors. For example, real estate developers could tokenize property holdings and sell fractional ownership through digital tokens, offering an alternative to traditional bank financing. This post Kazakhstan’s Central Bank to Channel $350 Million of Reserves into Crypto and Bitcoin Investments first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Utexo Raises $7.5M to Launch Bitcoin-Native USDT Settlement Infrastructure

Utexo Raises $7.5M to Launch Bitcoin-Native USDT Settlement Infrastructure

Bitcoin Magazine Utexo Raises $7.5M to Launch Bitcoin-Native USDT Settlement Infrastructure Utexo, a startup building Bitcoin-native stablecoin settlement infrastructure, announced a $7.5 million seed round co-led by Tether, Big Brain Holdings, and Portal Ventures. The round also included participation from Franklin Templeton, Maven11 Capital, Fulgur Ventures, Alchemy VC, Ethereal Ventures, Auros Ventures, Arcanum Capital, Paper Ventures, Axia8, FlowTraders, Plan B, Gate Ventures, Sats Ventures, and strategic angels including operators from Ledger, Hyperion, BTC Turk, Echo, Legion, and SOLV. The company was founded to address a longstanding gap in the cryptocurrency ecosystem: enabling USDT to settle natively on Bitcoin with robust, production-ready payment rails. Tether’s CEO, Paolo Ardoino, said that Bitcoin has been central to the stablecoin issuer’s long-term vision for USDT. “Market cycles come and go, but the need for open and resilient settlement infrastructure remains constant,” Ardoino said. He added that Utexo provides a layer that makes Bitcoin-native USDT settlement viable at scale, strengthening Bitcoin’s role as a global settlement rail for real-world dollar transactions. Historically, the Lightning Network and RGB protocols have offered technical capabilities for Bitcoin-based payments, but their complexity limited adoption in production environments. Utexo abstracts these complexities behind a single API layer, allowing payment operators to route USDT settlement over Bitcoin-native rails without modifying custody, compliance workflows, or user experiences. Chris Hutchinson, co-founder of Utexo, explained the system’s value proposition: “We built Utexo so that USDT could move on Bitcoin the way money is supposed to move: instantly, privately, with no surprises on costs. Our partners integrate our API once and can route USDT on the most resilient open network ever built, with full control over cost structure.” Viktor Ihnatiuk, co-founder, added that the infrastructure allows wallets to offer free USDT transactions while boosting adoption of Bitcoin-native stablecoins. The infrastructure supports atomic settlement, privacy-preserving execution, and predictable fees for every transaction, independent of network congestion. Settlement occurs in USDT and is anchored to Bitcoin’s security model, completing in under one second. Utexo encrypts all on-chain transactions, preventing disclosure of counterparties and wallet addresses, distinguishing it from public transaction graphs on other networks. Tether and Bitcoin By providing a reliable, predictable settlement layer, the company enables Bitcoin to serve as a viable rail for dollar-denominated payments, advancing Tether’s vision of native USDT on Bitcoin. In February, Tether open-sourced MiningOS (MOS), a modular operating system for managing and automating bitcoin mining operations, unveiled at the 2026 Plan ₿ Forum in San Salvador. The system provides unified control over hardware, energy, and site infrastructure using a peer-to-peer architecture, reducing reliance on proprietary or centralized software. Targeted at exchanges, wallets, payment service providers, high-frequency trading firms, and platforms handling large volumes of USDT, Utexo focuses on routing existing stablecoin flows over Bitcoin rather than launching speculative L2 solutions. This post Utexo Raises $7.5M to Launch Bitcoin-Native USDT Settlement Infrastructure first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Russia Considers Simplified Licensing Path for Bank-Run Crypto Exchanges

Russia Considers Simplified Licensing Path for Bank-Run Crypto Exchanges

Bitcoin Magazine Russia Considers Simplified Licensing Path for Bank-Run Crypto Exchanges Russia’s central bank is weighing a plan that would allow banks and brokerage firms to operate cryptocurrency exchanges through a simplified licensing pathway tied to their existing financial permits, according to remarks from Governor Elvira Nabiullina. Under the proposal, financial institutions could obtain authorization to run crypto trading platforms through a “notification process,” rather than applying for a new standalone license. The approach would allow firms that already hold banking or brokerage licenses to expand into digital asset services using their current regulatory status. Back in January, Anatoly Aksakov, head of the State Duma Committee on the Financial Market, made comments that Russia was preparing to introduce its first comprehensive regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, with lawmakers aiming to finalize the draft for a parliamentary vote by the end of June. Nabiullina presented the idea during a meeting between the central bank and Russian lending institutions, according to reports from the Interfax news agency. The governor framed the proposal as an effort to integrate cryptocurrency activity into Russia’s existing financial infrastructure. She argued that banks already maintain compliance systems designed to meet anti–money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism requirements, which could provide a foundation for supervising digital asset markets. “We have proposed allowing banks and brokers to obtain crypto exchange licenses through a notification process and to act as intermediaries based on their current banking licenses,” Nabiullina said, adding that the sector’s existing compliance frameworks could help protect customers entering the crypto market. The central bank also outlined limits designed to manage financial risk during the early stages of integration. Under the proposal, banks’ exposure to cryptocurrency activities would be capped at 1% of their capital. Nabiullina said regulators plan to monitor how institutions operate within that threshold before considering any expansion. “Let’s start by seeing how banks operate within the one percent cap, and then see whether we need to move forward,” she said. The licensing proposal forms part of a broader effort by the Central Bank of Russia and the Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation to establish a clearer legal framework for digital assets in the country. In late 2025, the central bank submitted a regulatory concept to the Russian government that would formally recognize cryptocurrencies and stablecoins as currency assets that can be bought and sold through regulated intermediaries. The framework would allow trading through exchanges, brokers and trustees operating under existing financial licenses. Crypto for domestic payments At the same time, the proposal maintains a strict ban on the use of cryptocurrencies for domestic payments, a position the central bank has held for years. Digital assets would function as investment instruments rather than alternatives to the national currency. Draft legislation reflecting the concept is expected to reach the State Duma during the spring legislative session. Deputy Finance Minister Ivan Chebeskov has indicated that lawmakers could review the bill as early as March, with the main regulatory framework scheduled to take effect on July 1, 2026. The proposed rules would also introduce a tiered system governing who can access crypto markets. Qualified investors would face no limits on purchases. Non-qualified investors would be restricted to buying up to 300,000 rubles, or roughly $3,800, in crypto assets each year through a single intermediary. Russia updated the definition of “qualified investor” last year. Individuals may now qualify based on several criteria, including a master’s degree in finance, annual income of at least 20 million rubles, or meeting property ownership thresholds set by regulators. Those wealth requirements are scheduled to rise in 2026, when the property threshold increases from 12 million rubles to 24 million rubles. This post Russia Considers Simplified Licensing Path for Bank-Run Crypto Exchanges first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Strike Secures New York BitLicense, Opening Bitcoin Financial Services to State Residents

Strike Secures New York BitLicense, Opening Bitcoin Financial Services to State Residents

Bitcoin Magazine Strike Secures New York BitLicense, Opening Bitcoin Financial Services to State Residents Strike, a Bitcoin financial services firm founded by Jack Mallers, has received both a BitLicense and a money transmitter license from the New York State Department of Financial Services, allowing the company to operate in one of the most tightly regulated digital asset markets in the United States. The approval allows Strike to offer its Bitcoin brokerage, payments, and custody services to individuals and businesses across New York. The state’s regulatory framework requires firms to meet standards for capital reserves, cybersecurity, and operational transparency. New York’s BitLicense regime has long served as a gatekeeper for digital asset companies seeking access to the state’s financial markets. Several crypto firms have opted not to pursue the license because of the compliance requirements and ongoing regulatory oversight. Mallers described the license as a major step in the company’s effort to build a Bitcoin-focused financial platform. “Receiving our BitLicense is a defining milestone for Strike,” Mallers said in a statement. “Strike is building the leading Bitcoin financial institution. With our BitLicense, we can now bring that mission to New York, the global center of finance.” Strike’s bitcoin services With the approval, New York users will gain access to Strike’s suite of Bitcoin services. The platform allows customers to buy and sell bitcoin through linked bank accounts, debit cards, or wire transfers. Users can also directly deposit their paychecks and convert a portion, or all, of their wages into bitcoin. The platform includes automated trading tools such as recurring purchases and price-triggered orders. Recurring buys allow customers to schedule bitcoin purchases on a set interval, while target orders execute trades when bitcoin reaches a specific price. Strike also allows users to pay bills from a bitcoin balance, including utility payments, credit card balances, and mortgage bills. The feature reflects the company’s effort to position bitcoin as a tool for daily financial activity rather than only as an investment asset. According to the company, customer bitcoin and cash balances are held one-to-one and are not lent or used for company operations. Strike said users can withdraw bitcoin to personal wallets at no cost, with the firm covering on-chain transaction fees. The license also places Strike under the supervision of the New York State Department of Financial Services, which requires periodic audits, cybersecurity reviews, and capital reserve compliance. Strike’s expansion into New York comes as the company outlines broader growth plans for its platform. In late 2025, Mallers said the firm intends to add bitcoin-backed lending, which would allow customers to borrow fiat currency while holding their bitcoin. This post Strike Secures New York BitLicense, Opening Bitcoin Financial Services to State Residents first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Solo Satoshi Launches Bitaxe Turbo Touch, an Open-Source Touchscreen Bitcoin Miner

Solo Satoshi Launches Bitaxe Turbo Touch, an Open-Source Touchscreen Bitcoin Miner

Bitcoin Magazine Solo Satoshi Launches Bitaxe Turbo Touch, an Open-Source Touchscreen Bitcoin Miner A small Texas mining hardware company is releasing what it says is the most powerful open-source touchscreen bitcoin miner currently available to home users. Houston-based Solo Satoshi announced the launch of the Bitaxe Turbo Touch, a compact device designed for hobbyists and home miners that delivers more than double the hashrate of other touchscreen miners in its category. According to a note shared with Bitcoin Magazine, the unit produces about 2.15 terahashes per second (TH/s). The product builds on the open-source Bitaxe GT 801 platform and is powered by dual BM1370 ASIC chips, the same chips used in the industrial-scale Bitmain Antminer S21 Pro. The chips allow the device to achieve efficiency of roughly 18 joules per terahash, according to the company. During testing, the device reportedly reached over 3 TH/s when overclocked. The miner includes a 4.3-inch capacitive touchscreen that displays real-time network and mining data. Eight rotating displays show metrics such as hashrate performance, bitcoin price, current block height and recently mined blocks. Network information is pulled from mempool.space, a widely used blockchain data explorer. Matt Howard, founder and chief executive of Solo Satoshi, said the company prioritized transparency when building the device. “We built this because we believe the tools people use to interact with Bitcoin should be fully verifiable,” Howard said in a statement. “Every line of code between the ASIC chips and the pixels on the touchscreen is open source.” Open source bitcoin mining The miner runs two open-source firmware layers: AxeOS, which manages the mining operations, and BAP‑GT‑TOUCH, which powers the touchscreen interface. Both software repositories, along with hardware schematics and board layouts, are publicly available under an open hardware license. The device consumes about 43 watts of power and produces roughly 35 decibels of noise, placing it closer to the sound level of a quiet room than traditional industrial mining rigs. At typical U.S. residential electricity rates, Solo Satoshi estimates the miner would cost about $3.70 per month to operate. The Bitaxe Turbo Touch connects through a 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi module using an ESP32-S3 microcontroller, and configuration is handled through a browser-based dashboard. Each unit is assembled in the United States and tested for hashing performance before shipping, the company said. Solo Satoshi is positioning the device against other compact touchscreen miners such as the Braiins BMM 101. The company says its model delivers significantly lower cost per terahash — about $151 per TH compared with roughly $299 per TH for the Braiins device. The launch also highlights a growing niche within the bitcoin mining industry focused on open-source hardware. While most large mining operations rely on proprietary equipment from major manufacturers, smaller developers and hobbyist communities have pushed for transparent designs that can be modified and audited. Solo Satoshi said it worked with the Open Source Miners United community to develop parts of the device, including an accessory communication protocol that allows developers to build additional displays and hardware integrations. The company traces its involvement in touchscreen miners to late 2024, when it collaborated on the early concept of the Bitaxe Touch. When later versions of the device shipped with closed-source firmware, Solo Satoshi decided to create its own fully open-source alternative. According to the company, open-source bitcoin miners have collectively produced more than $1 million in verifiable block rewards, including several widely publicized solo mining successes in recent years. This post Solo Satoshi Launches Bitaxe Turbo Touch, an Open-Source Touchscreen Bitcoin Miner first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Mike Selig Confirmed As A Bitcoin 2026 Speaker

Mike Selig Confirmed As A Bitcoin 2026 Speaker

Bitcoin Magazine Mike Selig Confirmed As A Bitcoin 2026 Speaker Mike Selig, Chairman of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and one of the most consequential figures in American crypto regulation, has been officially confirmed as a speaker at Bitcoin 2026 — bringing the voice of Washington’s most Bitcoin-forward regulatory agency to the world’s largest Bitcoin conference in Las Vegas. Confirmed by the U.S. Senate in December 2025 as the 16th Chairman of the CFTC, Selig began his career as a law clerk for then-CFTC Commissioner J. Christopher Giancarlo, before moving into private practice advising financial institutions, trading platforms, and digital asset developers on compliance with securities and commodities laws. He returned to government in 2025 as chief counsel for the SEC’s Crypto Task Force, serving as senior advisor to SEC Chairman Paul Atkins, before taking the helm at the CFTC. Since taking office, Selig has moved fast. He launched the “Future-Proof” initiative — a sweeping review of existing CFTC regulations, many written for agricultural futures markets, to determine what needs to be rebuilt from the ground up to accommodate blockchain-native markets, digital assets, and AI-driven trading platforms. In late January 2026, he and SEC Chairman Paul Atkins jointly launched Project Crypto, an initiative to harmonize oversight between the two agencies and encourage compliant onshore trading. Throughout, Selig has been explicit about his governing philosophy: sharply criticizing the prior regime’s regulation-by-enforcement approach, and instead arguing for bespoke rulebooks, pathways to registration, and regulatory guidance that meets the industry where it actually operates — globally, transparently, and on-chain. At a moment when U.S. crypto policy is being written in real time, Selig’s presence at Bitcoin 2026 carries significant weight. His appearance will give attendees a direct, unfiltered look at how the regulatory future of Bitcoin is being shaped — and what it means for the next era of American financial markets. WE'RE EXCITED TO ANNOUNCE CFTC CHAIR MIKE SELIG AS A BITCOIN 2026 SPEAKER AMERICA IS EMBRACING BITCOIN! pic.twitter.com/hIIQ2GbhKP — The Bitcoin Conference (@TheBitcoinConf) February 2, 2026 Bitcoin 2026 Returns to Las Vegas Bigger Than Ever Bitcoin 2026 will take place April 27–29 at The Venetian, Las Vegas, and is expected to be the biggest Bitcoin event of the year. Focused on the future of money, Bitcoin 2026 will bring together Bitcoin builders, investors, miners, policymakers, technologists, and newcomers from around the world. The event will feature a wide range of pass types, including general admission passes designed specifically for those new to Bitcoin, alongside premium passes for professionals, enterprises, and institutions. With multiple stages, immersive experiences, technical workshops, and headline keynotes, Bitcoin 2026 is designed to serve both first-time attendees and long-time Bitcoiners shaping the next era of global adoption. Past Bitcoin Conferences in the U.S. Bitcoin’s flagship conference has scaled dramatically over the past five years: 2021 – Miami: 11,000 attendees 2022 – Miami: 26,000 attendees 2023 – Miami: 15,000 attendees 2024 – Nashville: 22,000 attendees 2025 – Las Vegas: 35,000 attendees Get Your Bitcoin 2026 Pass Bitcoin Magazine readers can save 10% on Bitcoin 2026 tickets for a limited time. Stay at The official hotel of Bitcoin 2026, The Venetian, and get a guaranteed low rate (saving $437) plus 15% off your pass. Be in the middle of where the fun is all happening, and where the networking never ends. Bring your whole team to Bitcoin 2026 and get 20% off your entire order, bring more than six in a group and get 25% off for a limited time. Volunteer at Bitcoin 2026 and get Pro Pass access plus exclusive perks. Location: The Venetian, Las Vegas Dates: April 27–29, 2026 With tens of thousands of attendees expected and hundreds of major speakers like Arthur Hayes already confirmed, now is the time to lock in your ticket. Buy Bitcoin 2026 Tickets — Save 10% Why Attend Bitcoin 2026? Bitcoin 2026 is the definitive gathering for anyone serious about the future of money. With 500+ speakers, multiple world-class stages, and programming spanning Bitcoin fundamentals, open-source development, enterprise adoption, mining, energy, AI, policy, and culture, the conference brings every corner of the Bitcoin ecosystem together under one roof. From headline keynotes on the Nakamoto Stage to deep technical sessions for builders, institutional strategy discussions for enterprises, and beginner-friendly Bitcoin 101 education, Bitcoin 2026 is designed for everyone—from first-time attendees to the leaders shaping Bitcoin’s global adoption. Whether you’re looking to learn, build, invest, network, or influence, Bitcoin 2026 is where Bitcoin’s next chapter is written. Bitcoin 2026 Pass Types: Something for Everyone Bitcoin 2026 offers a range of pass options designed to meet the needs of newcomers, professionals, enterprises, and high-net-worth Bitcoiners alike. Bitcoin 2026 General Admission Pass Ideal for newcomers and those looking to experience the heart of the conference. Limited access on Days 2 & 3 Entry to Main Stage Access to Genesis Stage Full access to the Expo Hall Bitcoin 2026 Pro Pass Designed for professionals, operators, and serious Bitcoin participants. Includes all General Admission features, plus: Full 3-day access, including Pro Day Entry to the Pro Pass Reception Access to Enterprise Hall, Enterprise Stage, and Networking Lounge Conference App networking features Access to the Bitcoin For Corporations Symposium Entry to Compute Village and Energy Stage Complimentary lunch, coffee, tea, and snacks Dedicated registration and check-in Reserved seating at Main Stage Huge savings when you bundle your hotel and Pro Pass Bitcoin 2026 Whale Pass The all-inclusive, premium Bitcoin 2026 experience. Includes all Pro Pass features, plus: Reserved seating at Main Stage All-inclusive gourmet food and beverages Entry to Whale Night and Whale Reception Access to all official after-parties Networking app access to connect with other Whales Premium access to The Deep — an exclusive networking lounge with intimate speaker sessions Complimentary stay at The Venetian when you bundle your whale pass and hotel (use promo code ‘WHALEHOTEL’ here) This is the most immersive way to experience Bitcoin 2026. Bitcoin 2026 After Hours Pass Your ticket to the night. Most deals are done with a drink in your hand. Get exclusive access to 3 official Bitcoin 2026 after-parties across Las Vegas — each with a 2-hour open bar — where the real conversations happen and the best connections are made. Access to 3 official Bitcoin 2026 after-parties 2-hour open bar at each event Evening events across Las Vegas, April 27–29 Network with Bitcoiners, builders, and industry leaders after hours More headline speaker announcements are coming soon. Don’t miss Bitcoin 2026. This post Mike Selig Confirmed As A Bitcoin 2026 Speaker first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Jenna Montgomery.

Cover image for Crypto Legislation Stalls in Washington as Banks, White House Clash Over Stablecoin Yields

Crypto Legislation Stalls in Washington as Banks, White House Clash Over Stablecoin Yields

Bitcoin Magazine Crypto Legislation Stalls in Washington as Banks, White House Clash Over Stablecoin Yields Talks over landmark U.S. cryptocurrency legislation have hit a fresh impasse after major banks rejected a compromise brokered by the White House, casting uncertainty over whether the bill will pass this year. The stalemate has drawn criticism from President Donald Trump, who accused financial institutions of trying to undermine the effort. Trump, whose family is well invested in digital assets and bitcoin, posted on Truth Social: “We are not going to allow them to undermine our powerful Crypto Agenda.” He added that banks “need to make a good deal with the Crypto Industry” to advance legislation that he says is in the public interest. The stalled legislation, known as the CLARITY Act, follows last year’s GENIUS Act, which created the first federal framework for stablecoin issuers. Supporters of the CLARITY Act argue it is needed to provide clarity for cryptocurrency firms, which have been operating in a regulatory gray area that executives say has stymied growth and innovation. The bill would give a defined regulatory framework over digital assets, potentially accelerating adoption across the financial system. The core dispute involves whether crypto exchanges should be allowed to offer yield-bearing rewards on stablecoins, digital tokens designed to maintain a $1 value. Banks warn that allowing such yields could siphon deposits from traditional bank accounts, threatening lending operations that are central to the economy. Financial institutions are pushing for a ban on stablecoin yield payments as part of the legislation, citing risks to financial stability. Crypto firms, including Coinbase, counter that restrictions on rewards programs would be anticompetitive and stifle innovation. Stablecoins are at the root of the crypto conflict Stablecoins, they argue, must be able to offer incentives to attract customers. Analysts estimate that by 2028, stablecoins could divert up to $500 billion in deposits away from U.S. banks. In January, the Senate Banking Committee postponed a scheduled markup of the bill after amendments limiting stablecoin rewards were introduced, leaving the legislation stalled. The White House has attempted to mediate the conflict. Sources say its compromise would permit stablecoin rewards in limited circumstances, such as peer-to-peer payments, but not on idle holdings. Crypto companies have signaled willingness to accept this compromise, while banks have maintained opposition, arguing that even these limited rewards could trigger deposit flight. Some senators support the banks’ position, believing it could strengthen their negotiating leverage. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon has called for stablecoin yield programs to be regulated under bank-like rules to ensure a level playing field. Meanwhile, President Trump has framed the issue as one of fairness for consumers, writing that “Americans should earn more money on their money” and describing the CLARITY Act as essential to maintaining the U.S.’s global leadership in cryptocurrency. Trump’s engagement with the crypto sector extends beyond social media. He met privately on Tuesday with Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, aligning publicly with Coinbase’s position against the banking industry’s restrictions. It remains unclear whether the meeting was a formal sit-down or part of broader discussions with industry representatives. Lawmakers continue to debate broader elements of the CLARITY Act, including ethics and anti-money-laundering provisions, while Senate floor time before the summer recess is limited. Analysts say the chances of passing a crypto bill may shrink further if Democrats gain seats in November, given the party’s more divided stance on federal crypto regulation. JUST IN: Senator Lummis says, “The CLARITY Act locks in protections anti-digital asset leaders like Elizabeth Warren can’t undo.” “Let’s get this done before it’s too late” pic.twitter.com/kQlsAxr6Yy — Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) January 23, 2026 Senator Cynthia Lummis echoed the president’s urgency, stating, “America can’t afford to wait. Congress must move quickly to pass the CLARITY Act.” Republican Congressman French Hill, speaking on Fox News, stressed that stablecoins should not be treated as banks, arguing that rulemaking should ensure parity between bank and non-bank issuers regarding sales practices and incentives. “I think we can find a solution here,” Hill said, emphasizing that a balanced framework is achievable if regulators act judiciously. This post Crypto Legislation Stalls in Washington as Banks, White House Clash Over Stablecoin Yields first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for American Bitcoin Expands Treasury to 6,500 BTC as Eric Trump Accuses Big Banks of Lobbying Against Crypto

American Bitcoin Expands Treasury to 6,500 BTC as Eric Trump Accuses Big Banks of Lobbying Against Crypto

Bitcoin Magazine American Bitcoin Expands Treasury to 6,500 BTC as Eric Trump Accuses Big Banks of Lobbying Against Crypto American Bitcoin, a bitcoin mining company backed by the Trump family, has expanded its corporate treasury to more than 6,500 bitcoin, placing the firm among the largest publicly traded holders of the digital asset as it continues to scale its mining operations. The company disclosed the updated holdings this week, with co-founder and chief strategy officer Eric Trump stating that the firm accumulated over 500 BTC during the past 21 days. At current market prices, the treasury stands near $470 million. Data from Bitcoin Treasuries shows the miner now ranks about 17th among public companies that hold BTC on their balance sheets. The firm sits behind companies including Galaxy Digital as the number of publicly traded companies adopting bitcoin treasury strategies continues to grow. American Bitcoin trades under the ticker ABTC and carries a market capitalization near $1.4 billion. Shares traded today at $1.21, rising about 6% during the session. Despite the recent move higher, the stock remains down more than 30% since the start of the year following a sharp decline from post-listing highs. Yesterday, Eric Trump took to X to say that major U.S. banks including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Wells Fargo are lobbying in Washington, D.C. to block higher-yield crypto and stablecoin products. He said banks pay depositors near-zero interest while earning higher rates from the Federal Reserve and claimed lobbyists are backing legislation such as the CLARITY Act to limit crypto yields and protect traditional banks from competition. Bitcoin mining expansion drives accumulation The increase in holdings follows a series of infrastructure investments aimed at boosting the company’s BTC production capacity. Earlier this week, American Bitcoin announced the purchase of 11,298 application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) mining machines. The equipment is expected to add roughly 3.05 exahash per second of computing power to the company’s operations. Once deployed, the company expects its fleet to reach about 89,242 machines with a combined hashrate near 28.1 EH/s. The new hardware is scheduled for installation at the company’s mining facility in Drumheller, Alberta. The expansion forms part of a strategy centered on acquiring BTC through large-scale self-mining rather than purchasing the asset on the open market. Company executives have argued that scaled operations allow the firm to produce bitcoin at costs below prevailing spot prices. President Matt Prusak said the company’s operational decisions focus on increasing the amount of BTC held on its balance sheet. American Bitcoin reported mining BTC at a gross margin of about 53% during the fourth quarter of 2025. Insider purchases disclosed The company also reported insider share purchases following the release of its latest earnings report. Board member Justin Mateen acquired roughly 1.3 million shares of American Bitcoin stock in open-market purchases at an average price near $1 per share. Mateen co-founded the dating app Tinder and joined American Bitcoin’s board in 2025. Another director, Richard Busch, purchased about 330,000 shares over two days of trading, according to filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The purchases took place after the company’s trading window reopened following the disclosure of its fourth-quarter earnings. American Bitcoin reported a fourth-quarter loss of roughly $59 million, while its full-year 2025 results showed a net loss exceeding $150 million. The losses stem in part from accounting rules that require companies to mark BTC holdings to market, which can create large paper losses during periods of price declines. Despite those results, the company generated more than $185 million in revenue during its first year as a public firm. This post American Bitcoin Expands Treasury to 6,500 BTC as Eric Trump Accuses Big Banks of Lobbying Against Crypto first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for U.S. Federal Contractor’s Son Arrested in $46 Million Theft of Seized Government Crypto

U.S. Federal Contractor’s Son Arrested in $46 Million Theft of Seized Government Crypto

Bitcoin Magazine U.S. Federal Contractor’s Son Arrested in $46 Million Theft of Seized Government Crypto John Daghita, an alleged U.S. government contractor accused of stealing more than $46 million in cryptocurrency from the U.S. Marshals Service (USMS), was arrested last night on the island of Saint Martin in a coordinated operation between the FBI and French authorities. The arrest, confirmed via tweet by FBI Director Kash Patel, involved the French Gendarmerie’s elite tactical unit and the International Cooperation Team Serious Crime Unit. “Thanks to the International Cooperation Team Serious Crime Unit of the French Gendarmerie National in Saint Martin, and the Groupe d’intervention de la Gendarmerie nationale of Guadeloupe for the outstanding coordination,” Patel wrote. “The FBI will continue working 24/7 with our international partners to track down, apprehend, and bring to justice those who attempt to defraud American taxpayers—no matter where they try to hide.” The case centers on allegations that Daghita, identified online by blockchain investigator ZachXBT as “Lick,” exploited insider access to siphon digital assets from government-linked wallets. Daghita is the son of Dean Daghita, president and CEO of Command Services & Support (CMDSS), a Virginia-based technology firm contracted by the USMS to manage and dispose of certain categories of seized cryptocurrency. CMDSS was awarded the contract in October 2024 to handle digital assets not supported by major exchanges, including funds tied to complex criminal cases and high-profile seizures, such as the 2016 Bitfinex hack. Daghita had access to millions in crypto According to ZachXBT, Daghita demonstrated the ability to move millions of dollars in real time during a dispute recorded in a private Telegram chat. Subsequent on-chain analysis linked those wallets to addresses known to hold government-seized assets. ZachXBT reported that one wallet allegedly controlled by Daghita held 12,540 ether, valued at roughly $36 million at current prices. Other transaction trails suggest approximately $20 million was removed from USMS-linked wallets in October 2024, most of which was returned within a day, though roughly $700,000 routed through instant exchanges was not recovered. Estimates of total suspected thefts may exceed $90 million when accounting for activity observed in late 2025. U.S. officials have not publicly detailed how Daghita allegedly accessed the crypto or the wallets, nor whether CMDSS’s internal controls were bypassed or exploited. The case follows heightened scrutiny of the U.S. Marshals Service’s cryptocurrency holdings, which some analysts estimate at over 198,000 BTC, worth tens of billions of dollars. Allegations of insider theft and improper management have intensified calls for reform in how federal agencies secure and track digital assets, especially those seized from criminal cases. This post U.S. Federal Contractor’s Son Arrested in $46 Million Theft of Seized Government Crypto first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for NYSE Parent Company ICE Invests in Crypto Exchange OKX at $25 Billion Valuation

NYSE Parent Company ICE Invests in Crypto Exchange OKX at $25 Billion Valuation

Bitcoin Magazine NYSE Parent Company ICE Invests in Crypto Exchange OKX at $25 Billion Valuation Intercontinental Exchange, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, has made a strategic investment in crypto exchange OKX, valuing the platform at $25 billion, marking one of the most significant partnerships between a global exchange operator and a crypto trading firm. The investment, announced Thursday, forms part of a broader collaboration between Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) and OKX aimed at connecting traditional financial markets with blockchain-based infrastructure. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, though ICE will take a seat on OKX’s board as part of the arrangement. The partnership reflects a growing effort by established market operators to adapt to a financial landscape shaped by digital assets and tokenization. ICE, which operates derivatives markets and clearing houses alongside the NYSE, plans to integrate elements of OKX’s crypto market infrastructure into its own offerings. One component of the agreement will see ICE license spot cryptocurrency price data from OKX. The exchange operator intends to use that data to develop U.S.-regulated crypto futures products, giving institutional investors access to digital asset exposure through established regulatory frameworks. JUST IN: New York Stock Exchange parent company ICE invests in Bitcoin exchange OKX at a $25 BILLION valuation pic.twitter.com/cSr3Z9MpbI — Bitcoin Magazine (@BitcoinMagazine) March 5, 2026 TradFi entering crypto-native environments At the same time, the collaboration could extend the reach of ICE’s traditional markets into crypto-native trading environments. Subject to regulatory approval, OKX plans to provide its global user base access to tokenized equities and derivatives tied to markets operated by ICE, including securities listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Tokenization refers to the process of representing traditional financial assets on blockchain networks. Advocates argue that blockchain-based securities can improve settlement speed, expand access to global investors and lower operational costs tied to clearing and recordkeeping. ICE Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey C. Sprecher said the relationship aligns with the company’s long-term effort to build blockchain-based infrastructure across trading, settlement and custody functions. “Star has created a highly successful company with enormous distribution,” Sprecher said in a statement, referring to OKX founder and CEO Star Xu. “Connecting ICE and NYSE markets to OKX’s customer base opens the door to a new stage of financial market integration.” OKX, which says it serves more than 120 million users worldwide, has built trading and custody infrastructure across centralized exchanges and on-chain applications. The company operates in multiple jurisdictions, including the United States, Europe, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates and Australia. For OKX, the investment comes as the firm attempts to deepen its presence in the U.S. and reposition itself as a regulated global market operator rather than an offshore crypto exchange. The collaboration also highlights a broader trend in which traditional financial institutions form partnerships with crypto firms rather than compete with them. Many large market operators are studying tokenized securities, which could reshape how equities and derivatives are issued, traded and settled. ICE has explored several initiatives tied to blockchain-based markets. Earlier this year the company said it was building infrastructure designed to support tokenized assets and on-chain settlement for capital markets. The new relationship with OKX is expected to complement those efforts. This post NYSE Parent Company ICE Invests in Crypto Exchange OKX at $25 Billion Valuation first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Crypto Firm Zerohash is Seeking US National Trust Bank Charter

Crypto Firm Zerohash is Seeking US National Trust Bank Charter

Bitcoin Magazine Crypto Firm Zerohash is Seeking US National Trust Bank Charter Digital asset infrastructure firm Zero Hash has applied for a national trust bank charter with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, seeking approval to expand its role in digital asset custody and settlement services. The Chicago-based firm, which operates under the brand Zerohash, provides crypto infrastructure for banks, brokerages and fintech platforms. Clients listed on its website include prediction markets platform Kalshi and asset manager BlackRock. According to a report from Bloomberg, the proposed national trust bank would provide custody for digital assets, fiat currency and other assets. The entity would also offer custodial staking, transfer agent services and stablecoin management. Zerohash chief legal officer Stephen Gardner is listed as the proposed chief executive officer of the trust bank. The filing places Zerohash among a growing group of crypto and fintech firms seeking federal trust charters during the second administration of Donald Trump. In December, the OCC granted conditional approval for trust charters requested by Circle Internet Group Inc., Ripple, BitGo Inc., Fidelity Digital Assets and Paxos. Trust banks differ from traditional banks. They cannot take deposits or issue loans but can hold assets in custody. Earlier this year, Mastercard considered acquiring blockchain infrastructure firm Zerohash for up to $2 billion but the company chose to remain independent, rejecting an outright purchase. The two are now reportedly discussing a strategic investment, allowing Mastercard exposure to Zerohash’s technology and client base while preserving the company’s autonomy. Kraken secures Federal Reserve master account Earlier today, Kraken announced that they secured a Federal Reserve master account, gaining direct access to the U.S. central bank’s core payment infrastructure. Kraken Financial, the company’s banking arm, received approval from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, allowing it to settle U.S. dollar transactions directly through Fedwire, bypassing intermediary banks. While the master account grants direct payment access, Kraken will not receive the full benefits of a traditional bank, such as earning interest on reserves or borrowing from the Fed’s lending facilities. The approval marks a significant milestone for the crypto industry, long denied access to the Fed’s payment system. Sen. Cynthia Lummis called it a “watershed milestone.” Other firms, including Ripple and Custodia Bank, have sought similar access, but regulatory approval remains selective. Kraken’s approval aligns with discussions on “skinny” master accounts, allowing limited Fed access without full bank privileges. This post Crypto Firm Zerohash is Seeking US National Trust Bank Charter first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Satlantis Emerges as Bitcoin-Native Alternative to Luma for Real-World Events

Satlantis Emerges as Bitcoin-Native Alternative to Luma for Real-World Events

Bitcoin Magazine Satlantis Emerges as Bitcoin-Native Alternative to Luma for Real-World Events Built on Bitcoin’s ethos and technology, Satlantis is an event organizing platform designed for “real-world maxxing”, a Gen Z term for enjoying the real world with real people. As AI fills social media, confusing and distorting whatever signal it once had, an exodus to real-world experiences has begun to take place. Some statistics show that social media usage peaked in 2022, a saturation induced by the COVID lockdowns that accelerated digital adoption of everything, only to remove its shine. Being online all the time is now ‘passé’. Jordi Llonch, Head of Growth at Satlantis, told Bitcoin Magazine in an exclusive interview that the app is “a tool to promote commerce in real life,” adding that “AI has broken the internet, people are tired of online everything, people want events in real life.” This emerging trend back to analogue social dynamics — if you will — won’t necessarily be led by Luddites; on the contrary, new social media tools and business models are emerging to facilitate quality time offline, rather than time online. Satlantis is just that, a tool that lets users discover, follow, and create real-world events of all kinds, bringing all the tools they need to access, market, and host events under one roof. Satlantis serves as a Bitcoin-only alternative to Luma, the popular event page that is rumored to have an exclusive agreement with the Solana blockchain. You will find no memecoins on Satlantis; its goal is not to keep you online hooked on the roulette wheel of gamification. It’s the opposite, to get you out there in the real world, gathering with real people and seeding the use of sound money while you are at it. Create, Host, Follow, and Share Events Satlantis lets you create and customize events, which you can share with a permanent link. You can include images, identify the venue, sell tickets to attendees or host them for free. Hosts can create their own organization of personal Calendars, which their friends and fans can follow for future events. Satlantis also comes with a sophisticated yet easy-to-use Customer Relationship Management (CRM) tool kit. Hosts can upload a CSV file with names, emails, and nostr pubs, and mass notify their contacts, friends, and followers about future events. Hosts can also target attendees of previous events, or fans who have confirmed attendance or are on the fence. Emails are sent from the Satlantis domain, avoiding spam filters. Satlantis is deeply integrated with Nostr, a Bitcoin native social network protocol that lets users own their data, such as followers and posts, and migrate it across sites, rather than be locked into a specific social media platform. As such, when hosts create a calendar to list future events, users automatically follow their nostr accounts, creating online connections that last and can be migrated to other Bitcoin social apps like Primal. Users can log in with their existing Nostr keys or with their Google, Apple, or other email accounts. Sell Tickets in Bitcoin and Fiat Users can host events for free or sell tickets for bitcoin and local fiat currencies. A one click stripe integration solves the fiat payments problem, unlocking events like Bitcoin conferences that draw in new users. While the Bitcoin integration supports active communities and Bitcoin meetups. As a Bitcoin native app, every user of Satlantis has a bitcoin wallet built into their account by default, unlocking a wide range of possibilities. For example, hosts can enable fiat payment for tickets, but offer 20% of the value back in sats to attendees. Hosts can manage ticket types, to offer VIP experiences, and of course, send targeted messages to specific groups of attendees via the CRM. The Satlantis mobile app has a fully featured Bitcoin wallet that lets users send and receive sats, track ticket purchases to events, and payments earned from hosting them. Every venue also gets a Bitcoin wallet, which attendees can tip, creating an incentive for venue owners to join the Bitcoin economy by creating a Satlantis account and claiming their Bitcoin tips. A sophisticated system is in active development to make sure only the owners of a venue can claim such wallets, likely via integration with Google Maps. The Satlantis wallet is fully custodial and only supports Bitcoin’s Lightning Network and gives every user a Lightning URL address, such as Satoshi@satlantis.io. This design decision is highly intentional.1 Satlantis puts a hard cap of 1 million satoshis per account, forcing users to withdraw to their own wallets, minimizing the amount of value held by the platform in custody, but also keeping transaction speeds high and the user experience quick and snappy. Users can withdraw bitcoin to their wallets at any time with no questions asked. Satlantis only charges 2% for ticket sales processing, as opposed to competitors that can charge up to 10%, though Stripe adds another 2.9% on top for fiat payments. Llonch will be hosting a quick webinar to showcase the full capabilities of Satlantis soon, which might be a good excuse to try out the app. This post Satlantis Emerges as Bitcoin-Native Alternative to Luma for Real-World Events first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Juan Galt.

Cover image for Standard Chartered Named Custodian for TP ICAP’s Fusion Digital Assets

Standard Chartered Named Custodian for TP ICAP’s Fusion Digital Assets

Bitcoin Magazine Standard Chartered Named Custodian for TP ICAP’s Fusion Digital Assets Standard Chartered has been appointed as the digital asset custodian and settlement agent for TP ICAP’s Fusion Digital Assets platform, deepening the collaboration first announced in October 2024. The move supports TP ICAP as it expands matched-principal trading in spot crypto assets, marking a major operational step for both firms. Fusion Digital Assets, operated by TP ICAP E&C Limited and registered with the Financial Conduct Authority for crypto-asset activities, allows institutional clients to trade digital assets on a UK-regulated exchange. Through the new arrangement, shared clients can access Standard Chartered’s regulated digital asset custody services alongside Fusion Digital Assets’ trading infrastructure. The timing of the appointment coincides with Fusion Digital Assets’ transition to a matched-principal model. Under this structure, TP ICAP acts as counterparty to both sides of every trade, requiring robust internal settlement and custody capabilities. The model eliminates prefunding requirements for clients, allows settlement post-execution, and uses multilateral netting to reduce gross settlement volumes, improving operational efficiency. The custody arrangement is agnostic on the client side, enabling counterparties to deliver assets from their preferred custodian rather than mandating Standard Chartered. Margaret Harwood-Jones, Global Head of Financing & Securities Services at Standard Chartered, said: “We are pleased to deepen our collaboration with TP ICAP, reinforcing our shared vision of bridging traditional and digital finance. Our custody and settlement solutions will enable TP ICAP to scale its matched principal activity securely and efficiently, meeting growing institutional demand.” Duncan Trenholme, Managing Director and Global Co-Head of Digital Assets at TP ICAP, described the milestone as a key step in the firm’s digital asset strategy. “With Standard Chartered’s support, we will be able to settle blockchain-based assets through our own accounts for the first time and offer a broader array of on-chain assets and execution services to clients,” he said. Standard Chartered and B2C2 partner Earlier this year, Standard Chartered and B2C2 announced a strategic partnership to enhance institutional access to crypto markets. The collaboration combines Standard Chartered’s global banking infrastructure with B2C2’s liquidity across spot and options trading, allowing asset managers, hedge funds, corporates, and family offices direct connectivity to regulated banking and settlement services. The partnership is to streamline fiat-to-crypto transactions, offering faster, more reliable settlement while enabling institutions to trade and manage both fiat and digital assets efficiently. The move reflects growing institutional adoption of digital assets, particularly in Asia, and builds on Standard Chartered’s recent expansion of regulated crypto services, including spot Bitcoin trading through its UK branch. This post Standard Chartered Named Custodian for TP ICAP’s Fusion Digital Assets first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.

Cover image for Bitwise to Donate $233,000 to Bitcoin Open-Source Developers

Bitwise to Donate $233,000 to Bitcoin Open-Source Developers

Bitcoin Magazine Bitwise to Donate $233,000 to Bitcoin Open-Source Developers Bitwise Asset Management announced its second annual donation to Bitcoin open-source developers, contributing $233,000 to support the programmers who maintain and secure the Bitcoin network. The gift comes as part of Bitwise’s pledge to allocate 10% of gross profits from the Bitwise Bitcoin ETF (BITB) each year to support the ecosystem. The funds will be distributed to three non-profit organizations: Brink, OpenSats, and the Human Rights Foundation’s Bitcoin Development Fund. Each organization was selected for its track record in funding critical Bitcoin open-source projects and advancing the technology’s long-term development. “Developers are the unsung heroes of the Bitcoin network,” said Hong Kim, Bitwise co-founder and chief technology officer. “When we launched BITB, we wanted to ensure that as interest in crypto grew, the developers who maintain and secure the network would be supported. No matter where we are in the market cycle, developers continue to build and maintain. We’re proud to continue our support of this important work with our second annual donation to these great organizations.” Bitwise’s Bitcoin ETF The donation is tied to the growth of the Bitwise Bitcoin ETF. Since its inception in January 2024, BITB has amassed over $2.5 billion in inflows, the company said. Bitwise noted that as the ETF grows, future contributions to the open-source community will also increase. Bitwise manages more than $15 billion in client assets through a suite of over 40 crypto investment products, the company said. These products include ETFs, private funds, hedge fund strategies, and staking. The firm serves more than 5,000 clients all over the world, ranging from private wealth teams and family offices to banks and broker-dealers, with offices in San Francisco, New York, and London. Funding from firms like Bitwise allows developers to focus on protocol upgrades, security improvements, and other projects essential to the network’s stability. “Investors who chose this journey with us made this possible,” Bitwise stated. “We are grateful for their trust and proud to stand alongside them in sustaining the open-source heart of Bitcoin.” Bitwise emphasized that the donation is not a one-time commitment but part of a continuing effort to support the community that underpins the world’s largest cryptocurrency. As BITB grows, so too will the firm’s contributions to open-source development initiatives, the company said. This post Bitwise to Donate $233,000 to Bitcoin Open-Source Developers first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.