Gemini Expands in Europe with Malta Derivatives License

TheCryptoTimes2025-05-09 tarihinde yayınlandı2025-05-09 tarihinde güncellendi

Gemini has received regulatory approval from the Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA). This allows it to offer crypto derivatives products across the European Union (EU).

This approval came through the acquisition of a Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II (MiFID II) license. For context, MiFID II is a comprehensive EU regulation that governs investment services across all EU and European Economic Area (EEA) countries. With this license, Gemini can now “passport” its services into other EU member states without needing separate approvals in each country.

Gemini’s Head of Europe, Mark Jennings, confirmed the development and said that the company will now begin offering perpetual futures and other crypto derivatives to both retail and institutional users across Europe. This expansion allows users in the EU to access advanced trading products directly through Gemini’s platform.

The announcement follows a significant move by Coinbase, which just acquired Deribit, a leading crypto derivatives exchange, in a $2.9 billion deal. This highlights the increasing competition among major exchanges to dominate the growing crypto derivatives market.

Coinbase had earlier obtained its own MiFID II license by acquiring the Cyprus-based investment firm BUX and rebranding it as Coinbase Financial Services Europe Ltd. Kraken and Crypto.com have also made similar moves, securing regional licenses to offer derivatives or Contract-for-Difference (CFD) products in Europe.

These strategic moves are in response to the rapid growth of the crypto derivatives market. According to data from Coinglass, over $240 billion in derivatives were traded in the past 24 hours alone, marking a 4.16% increase from the previous day. In the first quarter of 2024, total crypto derivatives trading volume reached $21 trillion, with an average daily volume of $233 billion.

With the latest license from Malta, Gemini has positioned itself as a strong competitor in this fast-growing sector. It now joins the ranks of Coinbase, Kraken, and others racing to serve European traders in the expanding crypto derivatives space.

Also Read: Gemini Lists Ripple’s RLUSD Stablecoin for Trading



İlgili Okumalar

Zuckerberg Begins Betting on Prediction Markets, While Asian Countries Still View Them as Gambling

Mark Zuckerberg is backing prediction markets, with Meta developing its own app "Arena," signaling major tech validation. This industry now sees over $14 billion in monthly volume. These markets function as binary contracts (payout $1 if an event occurs, $0 if not), with trading prices reflecting real-time event probabilities. Results are settled by oracles. Prediction markets originated from informal political betting and academic experiments like the Iowa Electronic Markets. Their core mechanism relies on "skin in the game"—participants risk their own money, making aggregated information more reliable than polls or expert opinions. They have proven accurate in forecasting areas like monetary policy, elections, and market events. While Western markets are integrating them into regulated financial systems, many Asian jurisdictions still classify them as gambling, leading to regulatory divergence. This stance creates three major issues for Asia: regulatory arbitrage and capital outflow, loss of informational sovereignty as valuable social data accumulates offshore, and a lack of user protection within a formal framework. The article argues that Asia's focus should shift from blocking these markets to responsibly harnessing the data they generate within a regulated system. The current avoidance of discussion cedes leadership and advantages to foreign entities.

Foresight News7 dk önce

Zuckerberg Begins Betting on Prediction Markets, While Asian Countries Still View Them as Gambling

Foresight News7 dk önce

Beyond Private Keys: From Wallets and L2 to Supply Chains, How to Guard the Security Perimeter of Web3?

Beyond Private Keys: Securing Web3's Expanding Attack Surface from Wallets to L2s and Supply Chains The crypto space faced a wave of security incidents in June, with over $75 million lost across 40 major attacks. These breaches highlighted risks beyond private key theft, exposing vulnerabilities across the entire user interaction chain. Wallet security was compromised not through stolen seed phrases, but via a critical flaw in the Cardano wallet SecondFi's signing implementation. This bug allowed attackers to potentially derive private keys from publicly visible signature data, emphasizing that wallet security depends on correct cryptographic implementation, ideally in open-source, auditable code. Layer-2 networks also revealed complex trust chain risks. Attacks on legacy Aztec deployments exploited inconsistencies in proof systems, showing that a valid zero-knowledge proof is only as secure as its underlying rules. Another attack on Taiko's SGX-based prover stemmed from a leaked signing key and inadequate verification checks. Furthermore, a technical glitch halted Base's block production, underscoring that L2 security encompasses network availability and reliable user exit paths as much as asset safety. Finally, the Polymarket incident demonstrated that even audited smart contracts are not immune. A compromised third-party supplier led to a malicious script being injected into the platform's frontend, resulting in user fund losses. This "supply chain attack" shows that the security of the entire interaction path—from the webpage to the wallet signature—is critical. The conclusion is clear: Web3 security now involves safeguarding the entire journey from transaction intent to on-chain settlement. Users must adopt layered security habits: isolating long-term holdings, using dedicated wallets for daily interactions, scrutinizing transaction details before signing, and managing authorizations cautiously. Defense must evolve from protecting a single point (the private key) to securing a complete chain of interactions.

marsbit1 saat önce

Beyond Private Keys: From Wallets and L2 to Supply Chains, How to Guard the Security Perimeter of Web3?

marsbit1 saat önce

Robinhood Chain Goes Viral in One Week: Memes Drive Traffic, Stablecoins Support TVL

Robinhood Chain, an Arbitrum-based Layer 2 network launched on July 1st, experienced explosive growth in its first week. While meme coin hype drove user activity, stablecoin deposits fueled its surge in Total Value Locked (TVL). The chain's rapid adoption was driven by multiple factors. CEO Vlad Tenev reversed his initial stance, endorsing the chain for meme coins despite its original focus on Real-World Assets (RWA). The integration of the popular Solana-based launchpad Pump.fun significantly lowered the barrier for meme trading. Furthermore, the prediction market application World announced a migration from Solana to Robinhood Chain. Meme coin mania, led by tokens like CASHCAT, generated massive trading volume, with daily active addresses skyrocketing from near zero to hundreds of thousands. However, the primary driver of the chain's TVL, which soared past $234 million, was a major institutional deposit. Ethena injected approximately $50 million in stablecoins into the Morpho lending protocol, which underpins Robinhood's Earn product, accounting for the bulk of locked value. This highlights two concurrent narratives: retail-driven meme speculation boosting transactions, and institutional stablecoin deposits building foundational liquidity. In contrast, the chain's flagship RWA offerings, like tokenized stocks, remain a minor part of the ecosystem at around $12.8 million. The first week demonstrates a path where speculative trading and yield-seeking capital provide initial momentum, while the core RWA vision is still in early development.

Foresight News1 saat önce

Robinhood Chain Goes Viral in One Week: Memes Drive Traffic, Stablecoins Support TVL

Foresight News1 saat önce

The Illusion of a Prodigy

The Illusion of the "Genius Youth" The article discusses the recent interview incident involving Li Bojie, a former "Huawei Genius Youth," and AI company DeepSeek. It highlights the core conflict not as a simple case of suspected cheating during a coding test, but as a profound mismatch in expectations. Li, with an impressive background including entrepreneurship, a role at Huawei, and a position as a chief scientist, was deeply affected by a standard remote interview where the interviewer questioned his actions. The key point is his stated view of DeepSeek as the "pinnacle of the Chinese tech world." For him, the interview was a quest for identity validation—proof he belonged at the center of the new AI era. For DeepSeek, it was a routine skills assessment. The article argues that Li, while publicly rejecting the "genius" label, subconsciously expected to be treated as a peer for discussion, a courtesy extended by other companies like MiniMax and Xiaomi. DeepSeek, however, adhered strictly to its standardized process, prioritizing consistent, merit-based evaluation over individual prestige. This clash symbolizes a larger shift in the tech industry. The core thesis is that the AI era is dismantling the old system where past titles, companies, and accumulated experience guaranteed status. Now, with rapid knowledge obsolescence, "excellence is calculated in real-time." Li's anxiety—waiting weeks for the DeepSeek interview despite other offers—stems from the fear that rejection means being left behind by technological progress. The article concludes that this incident is a harbinger; soon, everyone will face a constant, implicit "interview" with the AI age itself, asking: "You were excellent yesterday. What about today?"

marsbit1 saat önce

The Illusion of a Prodigy

marsbit1 saat önce

İşlemler

Spot
活动图片