On March 23rd, the global cryptocurrency market experienced "Black Monday", with mainstream currencies plummeting across the board due to the escalation of the US Israel Iran conflict.
By 2025, stablecoins will officially enter the mainstream application category and become the first cryptocurrency product to achieve large-scale implementation and penetrate the real economy.
The cryptocurrency market is receiving a turning signal, and in the fourth quarter of 2025, global 13F reporting institutions are showing an overall trend of reducing their holdings of Bitcoin ETFs.
Since the official approval of the first batch of spot Bitcoin ETFs for listing, this cryptocurrency investment tool has gradually gained widespread recognition from institutional investors. Entering 2025.
The global financial market has experienced an epic "black collapse", and no asset can escape unscathed - Bitcoin led cryptocurrency has staged a crash like plunge, the three major US stock indexes have collectively fallen sharply.
In February 2026, the cryptocurrency market experienced severe volatility. As an industry barometer, the price of Bitcoin suddenly plummeted, falling below the $72000 mark and hitting a low of $71739, the lowest level in 15 months.
Global financial markets are experiencing heightened risk aversion, with the cryptocurrency market bearing the brunt of severe turbulence. As a core target, Bitcoin has recently experienced a significant rebound in its gains.
The cryptocurrency market has been in a state of shock for 24 hours, with a sudden large-scale sell-off sweeping across the entire market. Bitcoin led the way with a sharp drop, causing most mainstream tokens to fall simultaneously.
The global cryptocurrency market is accelerating its departure from wild growth and entering a new stage of compliant and mainstream development. The pace of ETF globalization layout continues to accelerate.
On January 1, 2026, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority officially implemented new regulations for cryptocurrency capital based on the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) standards.