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Here's a look at your Coin Street headlines.
Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Paul Atkins has released a regulatory agenda containing proposed rules that could significantly affect how the agency handles digital assets.
The SEC released about 20 proposed rules as part of its spring 2025 agenda.
Now through each proposal, it varies in terms of the potential impact on the crypto industry, many suggesting that the would continue to soften its enforcement approach, establishing safe harbors and restructuring existing regulations to benefit projects.
Well, this year, tokenization has emerged as one of blockchain's biggest growth areas with the total value of on-chain assets rising to $28 billion from $15 billion over the course of this year.
As venture firms grow more selective with their capital allocations, tokenized assets have stood.
As an area of opportunity, so far, much of the activity is centered on private credit and US Treasury bonds, but the scope is steadily widening to include equities and energy assets.
Stripe and Paradigm are incubating a new blockchain called Tempo for stablecoin payments.
Tempo aims to power global payments, payroll, remittances, tokenized deposits, and other financial flows.
Tempo will include features such as memo fields, batch transfer.
Predictable low fees and built-in privacy protections, and Bitline chair Tom Lee said he still expects Ether to eventually reach $60,000 as his firm bought another $65 million in Ethereum on Thursday.
Coin Telegraph reports there was no leverage to make the purchase.
It was all cash.
Lee calls this a 1971 moment for Ethereum, referring to the Nixon shock that took the US off the gold standard, and that's the latest Coin Street headlines.
