# Cryptocurrency Related Articles

HTX News Center provides the latest articles and in-depth analysis on "Cryptocurrency", covering market trends, project updates, tech developments, and regulatory policies in the crypto industry.

Bitcoin as 'Digital Gold': What an Investor Should Know

Bitcoin, conceived as an internet-native currency, and gold, a historical store of value, are analyzed as parallel instruments for wealth preservation. The article explains that Bitcoin was created as an engineering solution to the lack of a decentralized, trustless medium of exchange online, moving trust from central institutions to open protocol and cryptographic proof. Similarly, gold emerged naturally over millennia as a universal store of value due to its scarcity, durability, and portability, facilitating trade between strangers. While both assets were intended as money, they have largely lost their functions as a medium of exchange and unit of account, primarily serving as a store of value today. This role is supported by their limited and predictable supply, which contrasts with inflationary fiat currencies. Economic principles like the Equation of Exchange, Gresham’s Law, and the Labor Theory of Value are cited to explain why investors hoard these "good" assets and spend "bad" fiat money. The article highlights that the value of both is underpinned by a global societal consensus and a massive market. However, each faces unique risks: gold's value could be undermined by future extraction technologies accessing vast untapped reserves, while Bitcoin is vulnerable to quantum computing and long-term network security challenges stemming from its fixed emission schedule. For the private investor, the piece concludes that Bitcoin is increasingly treated like digital gold within a diversified strategy. Major financial institutions recommend a 1-5% portfolio allocation, viewing it as an asymmetric bet on its future adoption and a hedge against fiat currency instability and inflation.

RBK-crypto01/02 10:00

Bitcoin as 'Digital Gold': What an Investor Should Know

RBK-crypto01/02 10:00

Trump's Year of Embracing Cryptocurrency

Under the Trump administration's pro-crypto policies, the cryptocurrency industry has rapidly expanded into traditional finance and public policy. This period, dubbed "DAT Summer," saw the emergence of Digital Asset Treasury (DAT) companies—public firms accumulating cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Dogecoin to attract investors. Over 250 companies adopted this strategy, often using significant leverage, with plans to borrow over $20 billion for crypto purchases. However, a market crash in October, triggered by new tariff announcements and amplified by high leverage, led to massive liquidations—$19 billion in leveraged bets were wiped out, affecting 1.6 million traders. The administration’s supportive regulatory shift, including the SEC’s new crypto task force, facilitated innovations like tokenized stocks and high-leverage trading products. Companies like Coinbase introduced 10x leverage options, while firms like Plume sought to tokenize real-world assets, blurring lines between crypto and traditional markets. Critics, including former regulators, warn of systemic risks, such as contagion to the broader economy and excessive speculation. Trump-linked entities, such as World Liberty Financial, played a role in this expansion, though some ventures, like ALT5 Sigma, faced significant declines and governance issues. Despite the volatility, industry leaders argue these developments modernize finance, offering higher returns and accessibility. The ongoing experiment highlights the tension between innovation and financial stability, with regulatory oversight struggling to keep pace.

marsbit01/02 02:42

Trump's Year of Embracing Cryptocurrency

marsbit01/02 02:42

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