Trump's crypto dinner cost over $1 million per seat
Digest more
Top News
Overview
Criticism
2hon MSN
It seems like a triumph for a cryptocurrency industry that’s sought mainstream acceptance: Top investors in one of President Donald Trump’s crypto projects invited to dine with him at his luxury golf
Explore the cutting-edge of what may be crypto’s most important innovation: the rapidly growing $230 billion market for blockchain-based substitutes for real-world currencies like the dollar and euro,
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt says it's "absurd" to suggest President Donald Trump is enriching himself from the presidency.
The crypto company misled investors and overstated value of real-estate assets that it said backed its tokens, the agency said.
Explore more
The Senate voted 66-32 Monday evening to advance first-of-its-kind legislation to regulate “stablecoins,” a kind of cryptocurrency. Democrats had initially voted to block the bill earlier this month amid concerns over President Donald Trump’s cryptocurrency deals.
The vote on the GENIUS Act, which would set up a regulatory framework for stablecoins, came two weeks after Senate Democrats blocked the measure.
The platform will offer overseas customers tokenized versions of more than 50 stocks and ETFs.
The GENIUS Act concerns the issuance and exchange of stablecoins, a form of digital currency backed by another form of currency like the U.S. dollar or a commodity like gold.
The Senate took a key procedural vote Monday evening on a first-of-its-kind crypto regulation bill after Democrats tanked it earlier this month.
Price move gives renewed hope that the digital token can achieve a kind of escape velocity against almost any economic backdrop.