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1Announcement on the Strategic Partnership between Bitget and the Morph Chain and the Upgrade of BGB’s Positioning2Starknet Network Problems Resolved, Operations Back on Track3Whale Leverage for Ethereum Purchases May Increase Volatility as On-Chain ETH Inflows Slow

BGB token price explodes, $6 in view as Bitget partners with Morph Chain
Coinjournal·2025/09/02 21:05

Altcoins today: WLFI dips after debut, BGB rallies on new utility, MemeCore enters top 100
Coinjournal·2025/09/02 21:05

Bitcoin Slides as Altcoins Struggle, Market Eyes Cyclical Floor
DeFi Planet·2025/09/02 21:05

Mastercard Deepens Crypto Push With Stablecoin Payments Initiative
DeFi Planet·2025/09/02 21:05

Metaplanet Secures Shareholder Backing for Multi-Billion Bitcoin Fundraising Drive
DeFi Planet·2025/09/02 21:05

Bitcoin Whale Selling Pauses Trigger Price Surge Predictions, Sparking Optimism for $250K by Year-End
DeFi Planet·2025/09/02 21:05

European Watchdog Warns Investors About Tokenized Stocks
Cointribune·2025/09/02 21:00

Japan Post Bank to Launch Tokenized Asset Network with DCJPY by 2026
Cointribune·2025/09/02 21:00

French Debt Pile Could Push the ECB to Print More Money
Cointribune·2025/09/02 21:00
Flash
- 20:47Google Online Search Monopoly Case Verdict Announced: No Need to Separate Chrome and Android SystemsJinse Finance reported that a judge in Washington, D.C., ruled on Tuesday that Alphabet's Google (GOOGL.O) must share data with competitors and open up competition in the online search market, while rejecting prosecutors' request for Google to sell its Chrome browser. In addition, Google is not required to divest its Android operating system. Google also plans to go to trial in September to respond to another lawsuit from the U.S. Department of Justice, in which the judge has already ruled that Google holds an illegal monopoly in the online advertising technology sector, and remedies will be determined at that time. The two lawsuits filed by the U.S. Department of Justice against Google are part of a broad bipartisan crackdown on major tech companies in the U.S., which began during President Trump's first term and involves Meta Platforms, Amazon, and Apple. After the ruling was announced, Google's U.S. shares rose 6% after hours, and Apple rose 4%.
- 20:26The US SEC and CFTC issued a joint statement: US-registered exchanges are not prohibited from offering trading of certain spot cryptocurrencies.Jinse Finance reported that staff from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) have just issued a joint statement, clearly stating that exchanges registered with the SEC and CFTC are not prohibited from offering trading of certain spot crypto asset products. SEC Chairman Paul Atkins said: "Market participants should have the freedom to choose where to trade spot crypto assets." CFTC Acting Chair Caroline Pham stated: "During the previous administration, our agencies sent confusing signals regarding regulation and compliance in the digital asset markets, but the message was clear: innovation was unwelcome. That chapter is now over." This move marks an important step forward for the two agencies' 'Project Crypto' and 'Crypto Sprint' initiatives, aiming to coordinate regulation while expanding the choices and flexibility of trading venues for U.S. market participants.
- 20:23All three major U.S. stock indexes closed lower.Jinse Finance reported that all three major U.S. stock indexes closed lower, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 0.55%, the S&P 500 down 0.69%, and the Nasdaq Composite down 0.82%. Major technology stocks generally fell, with Nvidia down nearly 2%, and Amazon and Apple both down more than 1%.