Bitcoin and Ether are trying to rise from their respective lows, indicating strong buying on the dips. Key points: Bitcoin’s drop has resulted in net outflows from BTC ETFs on Tuesday, but buyers are likely to step in and arrest the decline near $110,530. Ether bulls are trying to flip the $4,094 level into support, indicating a positive sentiment. Read more
US Bitcoin miners face mounting costs and regulatory pressure as the trade war reshapes the industry. The US-led trade war is having major repercussions for the Bitcoin mining industry, with looming disputes with Customs and Border Protection (CBP) potentially exposing American companies to massive liabilities. That was a key takeaway from The Miner Mag’s latest Bitcoin Mining Update, which examined how mining firms are navigating a complex tariff environment shaped by ongoing US-China trade tensions. With the White House modifying tariff rates on several Asian countries, the effective duty now stands at 57.6% on China-origin mining machines and 21.6% on those from Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, according to the report. Read more
The Wyoming lawmaker is one of the Republicans taking the lead to pass market structure in the US Senate. Wyoming Senator Cynthia Lummis, one of the Republicans leading the charge in support of legislation for digital asset market structure, has said a bill will end up on US President Donald Trump’s desk “before the end of the year.” Speaking at the Wyoming Blockchain Symposium in Jackson Hole on Wednesday, Lummis said Republicans’ goals included having a market structure bill passed through the Senate Banking Committee by the end of September, followed by consideration in the Senate Agriculture Committee in October. Both committees will address how the US financial regulators, the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission, handle digital assets. Read more
Nearly half of UK crypto investors face blocked or delayed payments from their banks, raising concerns that Britain is falling behind global rivals in digital assets. A growing share of the United Kingdom’s cryptocurrency investors are struggling to fund their accounts, highlighting the regulatory and banking hurdles facing the digital asset sector. An IG Group survey of 500 UK crypto investors and a broader sample of 2,000 adults found that 40% of users said their bank had either blocked or delayed payments to a crypto provider. Among those affected, 29% lodged complaints with their banks, while 35% said they switched lenders in response. When the broader sample was asked about banks intervening in crypto transactions, 42% said they opposed such measures, while 33% expressed support. Read more