# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Regulation

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Regulation", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Wall Street's 'Compliance Hunt': The Great Stablecoin Reserve Migration

In a concentrated move over the past week, several Wall Street giants have advanced their tokenized money market fund initiatives, signaling a strategic shift driven by impending U.S. stablecoin regulations. JPMorgan Chase launched its second such fund, JLTXX, on Ethereum, explicitly targeting future stablecoin issuer reserve needs. Concurrently, Franklin Templeton partnered with Kraken to integrate its BENJI tokenized funds onto the exchange platform for use as collateral and cash management tools. BlackRock further solidified its position by filing for two new tokenized funds with the SEC, aiming to convert its massive traditional stablecoin custody business into a tokenized model. These parallel developments represent a multi-pronged institutional "compliance hunt" to capture future crypto liquidity. BlackRock and JPMorgan are focusing on the backend, preparing to serve as the core reserve and settlement infrastructure for compliant stablecoins as outlined by the GENIUS Act. This act defines strict "qualified reserve asset" requirements for stablecoin backing while prohibiting interest payments to holders. Franklin Templeton and Kraken, however, are exploiting a potential regulatory gap. By offering a tokenized fund (BENJI) that is not a stablecoin, they aim to provide yield-bearing, collateralizable digital cash instruments, circumventing GENIUS Act's ban on stablecoin yield. The impending CLARITY Act, which will delineate digital asset market structure, is seen as a complementary piece to GENIUS. Its treatment of passive income could solidify the niche for instruments like BENJI. With conservative market size estimates for tokenized money market funds reaching hundreds of billions by 2030, Wall Street institutions are positioning themselves early, using on-chain settlement as a key competitive differentiator to offer superior liquidity and composability for the next generation of dollar reserves.

marsbit05/13 05:15

Wall Street's 'Compliance Hunt': The Great Stablecoin Reserve Migration

marsbit05/13 05:15

UBS Enters the Fray, 20 Swiss Banks Now Offer Crypto Trading, Covering 2.5 Million Accounts

Global wealth management giant UBS has entered the cryptocurrency market, offering Bitcoin and Ethereum trading to select private banking clients in Switzerland as of January 2026. This move is part of a broader trend in Switzerland, where approximately 20 banks now provide crypto services, collectively covering over 2.5 million accounts. Client data from Zurich Cantonal Bank (ZKB) challenges the stereotype of crypto being solely for the young, revealing that the average buyer is aged 30-50 and predominantly male. Notably, over 40% of these clients previously held no investment portfolio, indicating crypto is activating dormant capital. The business case is proving substantial. For several Swiss banks, crypto-related activities already contribute a significant and disproportionate share of profits, with unit economics often outperforming traditional banking services. This institutional adoption in Switzerland reflects a global trend, with a recent survey showing 73% of institutional investors planning to increase crypto allocations in 2026. Switzerland's early regulatory clarity through its DLT Act and established custody infrastructure have provided a foundation for this growth. However, upcoming challenges include the implementation of the OECD's Crypto Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) in 2027 and ongoing reforms by Swiss regulator FINMA. The final shape of these regulations will be crucial in determining whether Switzerland can maintain its leading position in the global banking crypto sector.

marsbit05/13 02:40

UBS Enters the Fray, 20 Swiss Banks Now Offer Crypto Trading, Covering 2.5 Million Accounts

marsbit05/13 02:40

TechFlow Intelligence: Trump-Linked Companies Transfer $12 Million in Assets Before China Visit, 'The Big Short' Protagonist Warns of Stock Market Bubble Again

The article reports multiple developments across tech, crypto, and finance. In AI, Mozilla used AI for large-scale code review, Google confirmed hackers used AI to find zero-day exploits, and OpenAI deployed GPT-5.5 to find errors in math benchmarks. A court ruled Anthropic's scanning and destroying books for AI training as fair use, while its Claude platform launched on AWS. Google's new video model 'Omni' was leaked. In crypto/Web3, Trump-linked companies transferred $12M in crypto assets before a China visit. BlackRock chose Ethereum for tokenized funds, and a hacker stole $174k via a malicious NFT that tricked an AI. Jack Dorsey's first tweet NFT plummeted from $2.9M to under $5. In chips/hardware, TSMC approved an additional $20B for its Arizona plant. Apple's Tim Cook and Elon Musk will accompany Trump to China, while Nvidia's Jensen Huang is notably absent. For markets, Michael Burry warned of parabolic stock rises and suggested near-total sell-offs, with online discussions comparing current sentiment to the 1999 bubble. Other notes include WTI oil surpassing $100, a 20% price hike for Beijing-Shanghai high-speed rail, and new products like Unitree's $26.9k humanoid robot. The underlying theme suggests AI is becoming infrastructure, creating pressure on old systems while a new order is not yet ready, leaving investors anxious.

marsbit05/12 12:52

TechFlow Intelligence: Trump-Linked Companies Transfer $12 Million in Assets Before China Visit, 'The Big Short' Protagonist Warns of Stock Market Bubble Again

marsbit05/12 12:52

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