What Happened In Crypto Today

Today in crypto, US spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) drove crypto fund gains last week, posting four consecutive weeks of inflows totaling $3.9 billion, Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek denied that the exchange kept a 2023 user data leak secret from regulators, and the first regulated China stablecoin launched as the global stablecoin race heats up.
Crypto funds see $1.9 billion inflows as Bitcoin ETFs extend streak
Cryptocurrency funds recorded a second consecutive week of inflows last week, extending the $3.3 billion in gains recorded the week before.
Crypto exchange-traded products (ETPs) logged $1.9 billion in inflows last week, data from CoinShares showed Monday.
Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) led the way with inflows of $977 million and $772 million, respectively, while Solana (SOL) and XRP (XRP) also saw strong demand with $127 million and $69 million of inflows.
With the new gains, the total assets under management (AUM) in global crypto ETPs surged to a new high of $40.4 billion year-to-date, CoinShares’ head of research, James Butterfill, said.
Bitcoin funds maintained momentum last week, attracting the largest share of inflows after topping the gains with $2.4 billion in inflows the previous week.
The latest inflows marked the fourth straight week of gains for Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs), bringing the four-week total to $3.9 billion, according to SoSoValue.
In contrast, short-Bitcoin ETPs continued to struggle, with $3.5 billion in outflows and total AUM dropping to a multiyear low of $83 million.
Ether ETPs also saw strong investor demand last week, with fresh inflows pushing year-to-date totals to a record $12.6 billion, according to CoinShares data.
The fresh inflows in crypto funds came amid the US Federal Reserve slashing the key US interest rate by 0.25 points last Wednesday, marking its first cut of the year.
Crypto.com says report of undisclosed user data leak “unfounded”
Crypto exchange Crypto.com has denied that it kept a 2023 data leak of user details a secret from authorities.
Bloomberg reported on Friday that Noah Urban, a member of the hacking group Scattered Spider, said the group had phished their way into gaining access to a Crypto.com employee’s account sometime before early 2023, which exposed the personal information of some users.
Blockchain investigator ZachXBT then claimed on X that Crypto.com had “covered up a breach that impacted the personal information of your users,” adding that Crypto.com had been “breached several times.”
However, a Crypto.com spokesperson told Cointelegraph that the company made a “Notice of Data Security incident filing” in the US-based Nationwide Multistate Licensing System and in “additional reports with the relevant jurisdictional regulators.”
The incident “included exposure of limited PII [Personally Identifiable Information] data affecting a very small number of individuals,” they added. “The incident was contained within hours of detection, and no customer funds were accessed or ever at risk.”
The first regulated CNH-pegged stablecoin launches as the global competition heats up
The first stablecoin pegged to the Chinese yuan (CNH) launched this week, as competition from sovereign governments to claim a piece of the stablecoin market mounts.
Financial technology company AnchorX debuted its AxCNH yuan-pegged stablecoin on Wednesday at the Belt and Road Summit in Hong Kong. The token is meant for international transactions and not for domestic use on the Chinese mainland.
BDACS, a digital asset infrastructure company, also launched an overcollateralized Korean won-pegged stablecoin on Thursday, dubbed KRW1.
The developments come amid a push from China to challenge the US dollar’s dominance in digital currency markets and to establish land and maritime trade routes around the world.




