The U.S. Federal Reserve delivered its third interest rate cut of the year, trimming rates by 0.25% to a target range of 3.50%–3.75%. This move was widely expected (markets had essentially priced it in), so it barely moved crypto prices. Fed Chair Jerome Powell struck a cautious tone, calling the outlook “challenging” with no “risk-free path” ahead. $Bitcoin initially ticked up on the news, then dumped back down as traders realized nothing fundamentally changed. In short, the crypto market yawned at the rate cut.
U.S. regulators crossed a major line this week by letting several big crypto players effectively become banks. The OCC (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency) gave conditional national trust bank charters to five crypto firms: Ripple, Circle, Paxos, BitGo, and Fidelity Digital Assets. These companies collectively issue major stablecoins (think Circle’s USDC and Paxos with PayPal’s PYUSD), so plugging them directly into the Federal Reserve’s system is a huge step. Backed by the new GENIUS Act law, the move enables 24/7 stablecoin settlement via the Fed and cuts reliance on traditional banks. Not everyone’s thrilled, though – some banking experts warn this could blur the lines of what it means to be a bank.
Do Kwon – the cryptocurrency mogul behind the infamous TerraUSD (UST) stablecoin and Luna token collapse – is headed to prison. A U.S. federal judge slapped Kwon with 15 years behind bars for fraud, even more time than prosecutors requested. The judge didn’t mince words, calling it a “fraud of epic, generational scale” that wiped out investors and helped trigger 2022’s crypto winter. Kwon’s Terra empire vaporized $40 billion in value when UST and Luna imploded, so this sentencing brings a sense of justice to many burned investors. (Kwon also agreed to forfeit about $19 million in ill-gotten gains as part of his plea deal.)
In a win for crypto integration, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) launched a Digital Assets Pilot Program to let certain cryptocurrencies serve as collateral in regulated derivatives markets. For the first time ever, traders will be able to post Bitcoin, Ethereum, or USDC stablecoin as margin for futures and swaps under this tightly supervised pilot. Announced on Dec. 8, the program introduces strict guardrails and reporting, but it’s a big signal: crypto assets are getting baked into mainstream finance. The change promises more efficient 24/7 margin management and deeper integration of digital assets into U.S. markets – basically bringing crypto closer to prime time on Wall Street.
Ripple’s XRP just notched a major milestone in the investment world. New $XRP spot ETFs have surged past $1 billion in assets under management in under four weeks, making XRP the fastest crypto ETF to hit the $1B mark since Ethereum’s ETF. Several funds (from Canary, Grayscale, Bitwise, and Franklin Templeton) launched XRP ETFs last month, and heavy inflows from institutional desks pushed them over the billion mark in a flash.
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse applauded the milestone, saying it reflects “pent-up demand” for regulated crypto exposure. In other words, many investors were waiting for an easy, legit way to invest in XRP – and once they got it, the money poured in. This rapid success shows crypto is inching further into mainstream portfolios.


