The Zcash protocol remains unaffected despite the governance clash and restructuring with Bootstrap.
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Nexo has launched a zero-interest crypto lending product that allows Bitcoin and Ether holders to borrow against their assets through fixed-term loans.
According to a company announcement, the product, called Zero-interest Credit, offers fixed-term loans for users who hold Bitcoin (BTC) and ETH (ETH), with repayment conditions set in advance. Loans are settled at maturity and can be repaid using either stablecoins or collateral, depending on market conditions.
The offering expands a structured lending model that had previously been available only through Nexo’s private and OTC channels, where it facilitated more than $140 million in borrowing during 2025, according to the company.
Borrowers choose the loan size and duration up front, with terms that prevent liquidation before maturity and define the repayment range. At the end of the term, loans can be settled using either stablecoins or collateral, with the option to renew under new terms.
Nexo is a crypto financial services company founded in 2018 that offers crypto-backed loans, trading and savings services to users across 150 jurisdictions.
In April 2025, the company said that it would reenter the US market after withdrawing in late 2022 and settling a case with the Securities and Exchange Commission for $45 million in early 2023.
Related: Babylon receives $15M from a16z Crypto to expand Bitcoin-native lending
Defi lending grows in 2025
Crypto lending has evolved significantly since 2022, when companies such as Celsius and BlockFi were widely blamed for amplifying market contagion and deepening the fallout from the FTX collapse.
In 2025, centralized lenders including Nexo, Ledn, Xapo Bank and Coinbase expanded their crypto lending offerings under more conservative, fully collateralized structures, while decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols also recorded strong growth.
According to DefiLlama data, DeFi lending products grew from about $48.15 billion in total value locked (TVL) on Jan. 1, 2025, to a peak of $91.98 billion on Oct. 7, 2025.
Although the market trended lower following the Oct. 10 crypto liquidation event, activity stabilized in November and total value locked (TVL) currently stands at around $66 billion.
The DeFi lending market is led by Aave, with more than $22 billion in outstanding loans backed by over $55 billion in deposited assets, according to DefiLlama data.
Morpho ranks second, supporting roughly $3.6 billion in outstanding loans backed by about $10 billion in supplied liquidity.
Magazine: How crypto laws changed in 2025 — and how they’ll change in 2026
World Liberty Financial (WLFI) became the latest firm on Wednesday to apply for a national trust bank charter. It joined digital asset companies like Circle, Ripple, Fidelity Digital Assets, BitGo, and Paxos in a move that would allow it to expand stablecoin services.
However, the announcement caused significant concern. Established banks argue that it represents an effort to secure federal recognition while sidestepping the stricter regulatory and supervisory requirements that apply to fully licensed national banks.
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Trump-Backed WLFI Applies for Trust Charter
The Trump-backed crypto venture WLFI announced that its affiliate, WLTC Holdings LLC, has submitted a de novo application to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) to establish the World Liberty Trust Company, National Association (WLTC).
The planned institution would function as a national trust bank with a primary focus on stablecoin-related activities. Such charters allow firms to operate across the US under a single federal framework, eliminating the need for individual state licenses.
Looks like the Trump family’s @worldlibertyfi is joining the conga line of crypto firms applying for U.S. bank charters (as @CaitlinLong_ would say).
Interesting timing with market structure markup right around the corner + ongoing ethics controversy…
Nice scoop from… pic.twitter.com/d97OLFrVYU
— Eleanor Terrett (@EleanorTerrett) January 7, 2026
Trust banks differ from full banks in that they generally can’t take deposits or make loans.
In anticipation of an approval, WLFI stated that WLTC will operate under full federal supervision and comply with the GENIUS Act, implementing strict AML, sanctions screening, and cybersecurity standards.
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Customer assets will be segregated, with reserves independently managed, and operations subject to regular examinations. Mack McCain, General Counsel of World Liberty Financial, is set to serve as Trust Officer.
Banking industry groups have pushed back, warning that issuing trust charters in this way could increase systemic risk while eroding the integrity and original purpose of the charter framework.
Banking Groups Challenge OCC Trust Charters
One of the most contentious aspects surrounding the riskiness of these actions focuses on regulatory and supervisory gaps.
While crypto firms may receive bank-like status, they are not subject to the full suite of prudential regulations that traditional banks face. These include comprehensive capital, liquidity, and risk-management standards.
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Given the increasing popularity of crypto firms seeking these licenses, banks have started to raise alarms.
“The conditional approvals of five national trust bank charters from the OCC further stretches the national trust bank charter beyond its statutory and historical purpose, endangers consumers, and creates institutions the OCC is not equipped to resolve in an orderly way,” said Rebeca Romero Rainey, the president and CEO of the Independent Community Bankers of America, in a December statement.
Traditional banks have also warned that this could create regulatory arbitrage, where crypto firms benefit from federal oversight without the same safeguards. In turn, consumer protection and financial stability become points of weakness.
We oppose the OCC’s conditional approval of five national trust bank charter applications from nonbank fintechs. We have repeatedly said the OCC lacks statutory authority to expand trust powers and that the sudden influx of applications threatens consumers and the financial…
— Independent Community Bankers of America (@ICBA) December 12, 2025
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Meanwhile, national trust charters do not automatically include Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insurance for customer assets in the same way retail banks do.
If a crypto-chartered bank fails, customers might not have the same insurance protections, potentially leading to losses for individuals and institutions that misunderstand the risk.
This could undermine trust in the broader financial system if widely used crypto-bank services experience stress or failure.
The OCC typically requires 12 to 18 months to evaluate applications for national trust bank charters, meaning WLFI is unlikely to receive a final decision before 2027.
Polymarket Sparks Outrage, Settling $10.5M Venezuela Invasion Market as ‘No’
Ambiguous resolution criteria resulted in a controversial market settlement, upsetting several Polymarket traders.
When is an invasion not an invasion? Irate traders on Polymarket want to know.
The leading global blockchain-based prediction market platform found itself mired in controversy over its “Will the U.S. invade Venezuela by Dec. 31?” trading market.
Polymarket determined that the United States’ Jan. 3 military operation, where U.S. forces captured Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, at their home in Caracas, did not qualify as an “invasion.”
In the lead-up to the raid, the exchange had accrued more than $10.5 million in trading volume, with “by January 31” attracting the highest trading volume. MarketWatch, which first reported Polymarket’s decision not to resolve the exchange, notes that at least one trader would have scored a huge payday, with “positions on that contract worth nearly half a million dollars.”
Ambiguous resolution criteria strikes another Polymarket
Many traders thought that Maduro’s capture would qualify as an “invasion,” especially since one trader netted over $400k over predicting the timing of his capture (which sparked controversy of its own in the form of allegations of insider trading). However, Polymarket clarified that the contract will be resolved as Yes only if the U.S. “commences a military offensive intended to establish control over any portion of Venezuela.”
Polymarket also stated that the resolution source for the market will be “a consensus of credible sources,” most likely mainstream news sources (or if U.S. President Donald Trump announces a full-scale invasion of the South American country). They further clarified by adding an Additional Context note:
This market refers to U.S. military operations intended to establish control. President Trump’s statement that they will “run” Venezuela while referencing ongoing talks with the Venezuelan government does not alone qualify the snatch-and-extract mission to capture Maduro as an invasion.
Traders irate over handling of Venezuela invasion market
The decision didn’t go over well with many of Polymarket’s traders, who vented their frustrations on social media:
- “This is effectively going to zero since it seems the US is no longer interested in doing more military operations. They are already in the process of making oil deals. Thanks, polyscam.”
- “Sue Polymarket. Class action lawsuit. Financial fraud. Make a new market called ‘Will Polymarket get sued by…?’”
- “Polymarket has descended into sheer arbitrariness. Words are redefined at will, detached from any recognized meaning, and facts are simply ignored. That a military incursion, the kidnapping of a head of state, and the takeover of a country are not classified as an invasion is plainly absurd.”
- “Snatching the leader away and saying they will ‘run’ Venezuela should qualify as an “invasion.”
The “Will the U.S. invade Venezuela by…?” market is closing in on $11 million in volume, with $6.24M just on a January 31 deadline. Previously, $2.7M was traded on whether it would happen by Dec. 31, 2025.
While most Polymarket markets have more clear-cut resolutions (like those over the next Fed interest rate decision or the 2028 U.S. presidential election winner), this recent exchange fracas shows that nuance (and ambiguity) can prevent a market from going a trader’s way.
Venezuela causing more headaches for Polymarket
This is not Polymarket’s first controversy surrounding the Venezuela raid. Chatter of “insider trading” arose when an anonymous user created an account on Dec. 26 and placed a series of wagers on four markets related to the U.S.’s actions in Venezuela.
This user bet more than $32k that Maduro would be removed from power by the end of January. At the time, the “yes” position was trading at an average of 7 cents, implying a 7% likelihood. It was, essentially, a long shot, but one that paid off. After Maduro’s capture, Polymarket paid out the trader more than $400k profit.
The timing of the bet raised some eyebrows, including those of New York Representative Ritchie Torres, who introduced a bill on Jan. 5 titled the Public Integrity in Financial Prediction Markets Act of 2026. The legislation would ban government employees from using prediction markets when they have access to nonpublic information.
Polymarket doesn’t have restrictions against insider trading; CEO Shayne Coplan has argued that the platform “creates this financial incentive for people to go and divulge the information” to the public and that any restrictions against it would do more harm than good. However, Polymarket’s biggest competitor, Kalshi, does list insider trading prohibitions on a per-market basis.
Crypto comes in waves. Every year, narratives change—be it scaling, DeFi, gaming, physical-world asset-related things, or perhaps AI-based technologies. When there is suddenly some momentum in any of the aforementioned fields, people naturally start scrambling to take a look at new cryptocurrencies to invest in, which indeed offer greater upside in the early stage compared to more mature coins. At the same time, early investors must also accept more risks. Most of the time, new tokens are with minimal background, demand is uncertain, and the tokenomics can either lead to long-term growth or result in heavy sell pressure.
The wisest approach is not about rushing toward any new coin launched, but rather, how soundly you can research new projects. That should provide you with a perspective to get real, long-lasting innovation as compared to just marketing hype.
What indicates “new” in crypto, though?
Why can a token be termed as “new”? A token may be a part of a just-launched project that is new in the public sale. It may be from a team with experience creating a new token for a completely different product. Sometimes a project is out there for a while without any attention and suddenly gets a lot of it, mainly because of entering the parentheses due to a listing, a partnership, or great market hype. Either way, “new” indicates less available data. You can’t depend on very long charts or years of performance when dealing with a new project. Instead, you have to look at their fundamentals: the team, the product, the token model, and how those tokens can really get used.
When people talk about a new cryptocurrency in which they contemplate investing, they are usually referring to “something early enough to make tender options for significant gains but good enough to have arguably seen some survival.” That sweet spot is what they would want to find amidst their new venture.
Types of New Cryptocurrency Projects
New projects generally tend to be categorized into risk and growth profiles. Infrastructure projects form the core technology for blockchains, bridges, data layers, wallets, and interoperability solutions. These can potentially be good long-term plays. Provided pressure is applied on the side of regulators and industry standards to avoid penalizing the technology when onboard, adoption might also take some time. DeFi projects, on the other hand, encompass trading, lending, staking, and liquidity, which can grow quickly when the market is active, but they are also liable to security and incentive issues.
In terms of user engagement, gaming and consumer apps are very retention-dependent. They can ride the wave of a spike of interest, but they will need genuine engagement in order to last. AI-crypto projects have been very popular because they make these two big narratives mix together incredibly well, although it just doesn’t mean that out-and-out AI is what they claim. Real-world asset projects are giving an eye to the look of connecting the on-chain value to the off-chain markets, which can probably be very promising until regulated and may have complex onboarding.
A DeFi spectrum is not the same as a wallet, yet it is not the same as a token; any pair of these cannot stand as similar entities for evaluation purposes.
A Reality-First Questionnaire for Spotting a New Cryptocurrency to Invest In
A strict, simple early investment-attributes checklist is your prerequisite. First, upon the project definition. Out of those presale teams or groups that raise money for the project during it, are there any public members with relevant experience behind the project, and will there be actions from the quarantine community? Of course, you might see the value of hiring anonymous teams in the crypto sphere, but when everything is still ambiguous and slippery, when potential deal-breakers are looming, transparency is a weapon against uncertainty.
The product can now be your second area of testing. A demo, a test net, a working app—do they have any of these? Is there evidence of real users or at least some trial item being manufactured for a few users? Trying something else, like the potential brighter future and the working product, at least?
The count of tokens, their supplies, emissions, when they are locked, and who owns bigger chunks are important. If people invested heavily and insiders accepted unlocks and then dumped large amounts, the possibility of substantial selling pressure emerges. It is high time that the project published a timetable to put those tokens out to the open market. Is the token used for any more than just speculation? Is it going to be for fees, governance, staking, or granting market access?
A coin that does nothing but pump does not retain its gains when all the hype runs dry.
Security and credibility are also major considerations. Audits can be helpful, though they are by no means a panacea. A project that gives weight to security-clear documentation, responsible disclosure, and transparent development may be a better indicator of responsibility than one that turns a blind eye to these risks.
Community is the last thing you may want to check, but it should not be diluted with its hype; its strength is its strength. A strong community paves the way for adoption, but the main game is when usage, partnerships that make sense, and a decent flow of updates are there for you.
Token Utility: The Question That Filters Most Hype
One of the fastest ways to test whether a token is worth attention is to ask: What does the token actually do? If the only answer is “it will go up,” that’s not utility. Utility can include paying for services, securing the network, participating in governance, staking for rewards tied to real demand, or unlocking features in a product people actually use.
A new cryptocurrency to invest in can be easily justified, especially when the token’s value is based on active usage rather than sheer speculation. Whereas speculation is seen as a short-term driver, utility and adoption are seen by many as essential for long-term survival.
Liquidity and Launch Strategy: The Hidden Risk
Most people concentrate just on the concept without giving attention to the launch mechanics. Liquidity is a significant point of buying and selling; due to this, liquidity is the paramount issue. Thin liquidity can lead to severe price fluctuations, which is slippage, along with high volatility. A well-prepared launch should focus on how it deals with listing, market-making, and community expectations. A messy launch could jeopardize a project even with a great idea.
Also, another important aspect to watch is timing. Even solid projects collapse when the market is weak after the launch due to low liquidity and lack of attention. However, weaker projects can automatically pump in stable markets due to market-wide movement. Your strategy needs to change according to market conditions rather than follow the same path in every cycle.
Major warning signs you should pay heed to are given below:
You may confront an over-the-top advertising FAQ if searching for the most recent cryptocurrency to invest in. Uncertain particulars about the promised returns, guaranteed returns, unclear token allocations, unknown or loosely defined technical specifications, perpetual hype without delivery, and bizarre dependence on the referral scheme constitute red flags. Look out for fake partnerships, as this could imply joint logos on project websites that did not give any real-time integration or acknowledgment.
Another valid point that is easier to remember is pretty much self-explanatory. If it becomes evident that the tokenomics are ever-changing, can you trust any long-term planning here?
The most crucial point is to worry about urgency. The message that you must purchase now or forever lose your chance could impel you straight into a technological blind spot. Another deal on sale will again come tomorrow. Your edge is patience, then.
Tracking Upcoming Crypto Projects with CoinLaunch
It is always most overwhelming to keep up with launches because information is spread, and the noise levels leak out. Smaller in terms of the biggest problem it tries to solve—the issue of noisy launch spaces. This includes new token sales, listings, every early opportunity—and it gives you an easy way to flip through, one after another.
So if you’re making a foray into a new young cryptocurrency, following these launches and comparing projects would reduce the reliance on random social hype and save a lot of time.
However, the coolest CoinLaunch feature out there is its consistency. Being able to check up on what is coming available regularly allows one to discover patterns (!), research more slowly, and choose wisely as opposed to quick decision-making solely in the final hour. Thus, CoinLaunch will complement that workflow, making it easy to follow the timeline for launches.
Long-term excitement over short-term hype.
Authenticity is paramount in the articulation of a goal. Are you trading on momentum, or rather investing in long-term adoption? The former considers launch dynamics, liquidity, and attention, while the latter respects product execution, user growth, and token utility. Although each approach stands on its own, the combination of the two usually causes investment whales to make mistakes, say, buying long-term but panic-selling short-term volatility.
The first thing, therefore, is always to sensibly work out your investment strategy before choosing what kind of cryptocurrency to throw in the towel with.
In the end, if combined with discipline, curiosity generally bears fruit in cryptocurrency.
New cryptocurrency projects are exciting due to their innovation and early-bird opportunities. Yet they are also subject to falling into the realm of impulse. Hence, the best approach would be to use a mix of curiosity with discipline: judge the team, judge the product, understand tokenomics, see the liquidity, and respect the security.
For best results, try CoinLaunch and keep in mind its efficiencies in tracking launches, having regard to their own decision-making frameworks. What happens if you focus on building that strong foundation and running rigorous, repeatable research processes is that you start to give yourself a competitive edge in selecting investments that may just very well last as long as possible, while other projects get the dreaded limelight and vanish as fast as the hype does.
The reiteration of the payment company‘s plans not to pursue a public offering followed a $500 million fundraise in November, leading to a $40 billion valuation for Ripple.
Ripple Labs president Monica Long has ruled out an IPO for the company, saying it was in a “really healthy position” without going public.
In a Tuesday interview with Bloomberg, Long addressed rumors that Ripple was planning to go public after the company reached a $40 billion valuation in November. The Ripple president said the company was focused on growth following the $500 million fundraise headed by Citadel Securities and Fortress Investment Group that led to its valuation.
“Currently, we still plan to remain private,” said Long, expanding on her comments in November after the fundraise. “Often the strategy driving an IPO is to get the access to the investors and the liquidity of the public markets […] We’re in a really healthy position to continue to fund and invest in our company’s growth without going public.”
The comments from Long going into 2026 came months after the US Securities and Exchange Commission announced it would wind down its enforcement actions against Ripple, fueling speculation about an IPO. Long has repeatedly denied reports that Ripple was pursuing a public offering.
Related: SEC now fully Republican, set for pro-crypto rulemaking in 2026
At the time of writing, the price of XRP (XRP) was $2.20, having dropped by about 6% in the previous 24 hours. The token is the fourth largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization.
OCC grants US bank trust approval for Ripple and others
In December, the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) conditionally approved applications from Circle and Ripple for national trust bank charters. BitGo, Fidelity Digital Assets and Paxos also received conditional approval to convert their existing state-level trust companies into federally chartered national trust banks.
Ripple’s application said its charter would “not be a stablecoin issuer” for its US dollar-pegged coin, Ripple USD (RLUSD), while the other companies will provide a variety of digital asset custody services to users. Of the applicants, BitGo has announced plans to go public, and Circle launched an IPO in May.
Magazine: How crypto laws changed in 2025 — and how they’ll change in 2026
The cryptocurrency trading app for trading can either set a structure around the trade so it does not have to be nerve-racking or turn it into some vicious circle in which you would be checking prices, double-guessing your decisions, and either coming to a late or dreadful finish. As markets are on 24/7, volatility can pop up, bringing with it high-variance heartache, and waiting for a few milliseconds to order something can translate into a loss. Thus, looking for the best app for cryptocurrency trading is more about finding an app where communication becomes clear and works well enough for modeling discipline and consistency, and not just pretty, crisp screenshots.
What a Crypto Trading App Should Help You Do.
A trader’s full-day trading app should help with the routine so that you can easily discover the price, decision, and execution orders without switching tools. What is most important is speed, the right prices, and a summary of holdings. However, a superb app goes further in time: there have to be easy steps for quickly analyzing the coin, placing an order correctly, monitoring it, and inspecting what happened afterward for self-improvement.
The best cryptocurrency app for trading should assist in decreasing friction exactly in such places where traders tend to make mistakes. When things happen quickly with the price movements, there should be nothing for you to go hunting for in menus. When you are about to place a trade, the app may not make you question the buttons. When you are already in profit or loss, you should be able to see the position clearly and what kind of risk control is in place.
Security and Dependability: That foundation is mandatory.
Instead of figuring out whether your app can handle sophisticated features, make sure that security is at a well-guarded priority level. A very strong protective account should have two-factor authentication, login notifications, and permission to manage devices. Plus, you are supposed to provide information about how the app moves your funds around. Some apps are essentially full exchanges, in the sense that you deposit crypto and actually do the trading through the app. Others connect directly to the exchange they are trading through via the exchange’s Application Protocol Interface—this could help in managing your complete commercial activity in a single interface. But, in any of those cases, you need to understand what permission you are granting; you definitely do not want any of your accounts to be transferred away from you because of the app.
Another part of confidence is reliability; the crypto market simply doesn’t wait for slow-loading apps and is heavily driven by outages during intense volatility. The best cryptocurrency trading app will work stably in spots where the market is in commotion, allowing for continued charting, placing of orders, and account update capabilities while the bulk of the traders are engaged in trading.
Order types and risk controls that protect your capital
Trading doesn’t mean just being correct about the direction. It means controlling all the outcomes. With good risk management, the Brownfield app makes this task simple and obvious, hence enabling it to offer some great loss mitigation against a bad decision. Ideally, you should at least be able to make market and limit orders behind the scenes or, alternatively, hit a checkbox to activate easy stop-loss and take-profit settings.
At a cost, other more advanced features could be worth a look, depending on trading style; however, usability is the pivotal factor. It is not acceptable to view risk controls as being an extra step. Risk management is supposed to be effortless in actual trade execution. The better crypto trading app should enforce discipline by making sure one can apply protective order settings swiftly and easily for confirmation before one places a trade.
Fees, spreads, and execution quality
Fee schedules are important, but they’re not the entire picture. Some platforms advertise low fees and then charge through spreads, conversion markups, or poor execution when a volatile market hits. When you trade a lot, those hidden costs can matter more than a small variation in maker-taker fees.
An app that is decent for trading displays the fee upfront before the trading confirmation and has a consistent way of charging as regards pricing. You can trust the kind of app where you know, before you click confirm, what is done financially.
Charts and analysis that help you decide, not overthink
A chart is the interpretation of markets useful in decision-making. And you don’t need a complicated professional trading terminal to be a good trader, but you need to assure yourself of smooth, multiple-timeframe charting and have a handy set of charting tools that fit your way of trading. Apathetic charts make novice traders busy with noise and filter out the important elements that keep them from graceful trading positions in response to their doubts.
The most useful trading platforms seamlessly check color, place volume, and a modest array of basic indicators without turning into visual noise. The best crypto trading app is the flawless brochure for making definitive decisions as well as ensuring that one will always read complex but legible charts, which are permanently linked to spine-tingling executions.
Portfolio Tracking and Review of Performance
Many traders focus on what coin to buy next and do not concentrate on the most important factor: reviewing what they have done. Through portfolio tracking and some insight into performance, you will be able to see patterns in your results. Then, see if certain strategies give you an advantage over others, or if your biggest losses are tied to certain habits.
A good app allows the user to see his/her allocations and their trading history, as well as their long history of outcomes over time. It only allows traders to keep a level playing field. So, cryptocurrency trading apps embody the chance to learn from one’s own behavior, not just from market news.
Why Multichange Management Is Important
It happens everywhere, and it is no different with crypto trading projects. A tool to ensure you obtain notifications when a script or coin meets the necessary criteria for trading is a necessity. Traders swear by alerts—especially their push notifications—because they are unbiased and untiring.
The peak exposure for a trader comes when he or she wants to have a shortcut for pressuring market makers regarding the price they want to set. Signals enable traders to remain disciplined throughout, no matter what the chaotic environment may be. Discipline is very important, as it ensures the trader is buying at the lowest price and selling at a decent one.
An alert is every piece of important information regarding a shift in a coin. If the trader receives an alert through the push button, he or she can get rid of the victim feeling that many traders face due to the very thing the alert is providing for them: to buy or sell.
Tools to enable a trader to respond faster to these price action trends cannot be put out altogether. Cryptocurrency trading is something that governments worldwide find difficult to regulate, like everything from international payment systems to politics in other countries. Things like exchanges represent a significant element. These are the so-called ‘Distributed Ledger Technology’ and ‘Decentralized Finance behind the mentioned cryptocurrency world.’
A good alert system would help in knowing about the development going on even if you are not watching it all the time. An alert should serve to guide you on decisions when an event related to what they focus on occurs, rather than bother you with nonstop notifications. Being able to define and use alerts according to your own perspective is a plus, compared to an application that gets the job done for an average Joe, not an efficient hedge fund pro.
The best cryptocurrency trading app out there can help you trade with the focus of a hawk. Now, instead of reacting to every knee-jerk of price, you wait for deserving levels or setups. This helps to reduce instigated trades and continue trading according to a solid trading plan.
Usability and speed—the invisible edge
The slower and more confusing an app gets, the more chances of mistakes being made. Entering the wrong size, buying instead of selling or vice versa, misunderstanding the meaning of the order, or hesitating long enough for the market to move away—these are just a few examples. The best pro apps effectively minimize these risks by making the important data clearly visible—without having you plod along crane-neck till you find what you seek: just looking in for the entry price, the position size should be nice. The unrealized profit or loss, and you should be able to quickly see what orders are out.
Even though speed also matters—in disembodied milliseconds—it is less a direct concern of perceived value than how quickly one can transition from a signal to a decision and back into action while still holding on to due technicals. For example, the best app for trading cryptocurrencies should aid the trader in doing the right things even when the market is just about to explode.
Choosing an app that fits your trading style
The choice of applications is made based on how you trade. Beginners would be well-served by simplicity, being informed about fees, and security. Active traders might require speed of execution, order types, and stable charts. Those juggling multiple accounts across numerous exchanges may appreciate an app that centralizes monitoring and standardized interfaces, passing complexity. There is no perfect solution for all people, but there is a best fit for the method of trading you practice.
Concluding Remarks
The best cryptocurrency trading app is one that promotes the maintenance of a calm and disciplined mindset when decisions have to be repeated. Security you can rely on, risk management policies easy to apply, as well as transparent cost structures, and charting that stays clear whenever the heat is on, all easily take on a new importance…navigating several exchanges or attempting to integrate your workflow has you thinking, If only GoodCrypto were organized and consistent. You can affect your knowledge in your field, most often by your sense of organization and discipline; being useful to remind the right app can help it to uplift that sense.
MSTR’s perpetual preferred STRC returns to $100, allowing share issuance to buy more BTC
Stretch (STRC), the perpetual preferred equity issued by Strategy (MSTR), the largest corporate holder of bitcoin BTC
STRC last traded at that level between Nov. 4 and Nov. 13, before falling to a low near $90. The return to par allows Strategy to issue shares through at-the-market (ATM) offerings tied to the product.
The equity is branded as short-duration, high-yield credit. It currently pays an 11% annual dividend, distributed monthly in cash. The dividend rate is reset monthly to encourage trading around the $100 par value and to help reduce price volatility.
Since inception, STRC has risen 16% and offers an effective yield of roughly 11%. The annualized yield is calculated as the current dividend divided by the STRC share price.
MSTR raised the dividend rate on STRC to 11% at the start of the year, marking the fifth dividend increase since the product was introduced in July. The company’s common stock is up 4% in pre market trading to $165, while STRC is up 0.03% at $100.
Ubyx provides a global clearing system for tokenised deposits and stablecoins.
LONDON and NEW YORK, Jan. 7, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Barclays has announced a strategic investment in Ubyx Inc., a U.S. based clearing system for digital money including tokenised deposits and regulated stablecoins.
“Interoperability is essential to unlock the full potential of digital assets. As the landscape of tokens, blockchains and wallets evolves, specialist technology will play a pivotal role in delivering connectivity and infrastructure to enable regulated financial institutions to interact seamlessly. We are pleased to be joining Ubyx on their journey as we drive forward our shared ambition to accelerate and shape innovation across our industry,” said Ryan Hayward, Head of Digital Assets and Strategic Investments at Barclays.
Tony McLaughlin, CEO of Ubyx said, “Our mission is to build a common globalised acceptance network for regulated digital money including tokenised deposits and regulated stablecoins. Bank participation is vital to provide par value redemption through regulated channels. We are entering a world in which every regulated firm offers digital wallets in addition to traditional bank accounts.”
This investment comes at a time of growing interest in new forms of digital money based on tokens transacted on public blockchain infrastructures. Regulatory clarity is moving forward in several jurisdictions, and evidence of growing adoption outside of cryptocurrency use-cases is emerging. Barclays and Ubyx are committed to the responsible development of tokenised money within the regulatory perimeter.
About Barclays:
Our vision is to be the UK-centred leader in global finance. We are a diversified bank with comprehensive UK consumer, corporate and wealth and private banking franchises, a leading investment bank and a strong, specialist US consumer bank. Through these five divisions, we are working together for a better financial future for our customers, clients and communities.
For further information about Barclays, please visit our website home.barclays
About Ubyx:
Ubyx was founded to facilitate tokenised money ubiquity, connecting multiple issuers with multiple receiving institutions in a common settlement environment that allows redemption of digital money at par value, supporting the singleness of money.
For more information visit https://ubyx.xyz
Cango Inc. Announces December 2025 Bitcoin Production And Mining Operations Update
DALLAS, Jan. 5, 2026 /PRNewswire/ – Cango Inc. (NYSE: CANG) (“Cango” or the “Company”), a leading Bitcoin miner leveraging its global operations to develop an integrated energy and AI compute platform, today published its Bitcoin production and mining operations update for December 2025.
Note: Cango holds Bitcoin for the long term and does not currently intend to sell any of its Bitcoin holdings.
Paul Yu, CEO and Director of Cango, commented, “Throughout 2025, Cango delivered strong and consistent operational growth. In December, due to favorable network difficulty adjustments, we maintained stable operating hashrate levels and achieved higher daily Bitcoin production, bringing our total Bitcoin holdings to 7,528.3 BTC. Additionally, in late December, a major shareholder decided to increase its investment in Cango with a US$10.5 million commitment, which expected to close in January 2026, representing a powerful vote of confidence in our strategic roadmap. This commitment will enable us to drive greater Bitcoin mining efficiency, and accelerate the parallel development of our energy and AI compute platform in 2026.”
About Cango Inc.
Cango Inc. (NYSE: CANG) is a Bitcoin mining company with a vision to establish an integrated, global infrastructure platform capable of powering the future digital economy. The Company’s mining operations span over 40 sites across North America, the Middle East, South America, and East Africa.
Since entering the digital asset space in November 2024, Cango has activated pilot projects in both integrated energy solutions and distributed AI computing. In parallel, Cango continues to operate an online international used car export business through AutoCango.com.
For more information, please visit: www.cangoonline.com.
Investor Relations Contact
Juliet Ye, Head of Communications
Cango Inc.
Email: ir@cangoonline.com
Christensen Advisory
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