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Here’s what happened in crypto today

Need to know what happened in crypto today? Here is the latest news on daily trends and events impacting Bitcoin price, blockchain, DeFi, NFTs, Web3 and crypto regulation.

Here’s what happened in crypto today
News

Today in Crypto: The White House is considering withdrawing its support for crypto market structure bill following a similar move from Coinbase, crypto bank Anchorage Digital eyes a $400 million raise and potential IPO next year. Meanwhiel, shares of Riot Platforms climbed after the Bitcoin miner said it sold BTC to fund a Texas expansion.

White House threatens to pull support for crypto bill after Coinbase standoff: Report

The White House is considering withdrawing its support for crypto market structure bill following a similar move from crypto exchange Coinbase, according to Fox Business reporter Eleanor Terrett, citing a source close to the Trump administration.

In a Sunday post on X, Terrett reported that the White House is furious over Coinbase’s decision to pull its backing for the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, describing the move as a “unilateral” action that blindsided administration officials.

“The White House is said to be furious with Coinbase’s “unilateral” action on Wednesday, which it apparently was not notified of in advance, calling it a “rug pull” against the White House and the rest of the industry,” she wrote.

The source added that the administration may fully abandon the bill unless Coinbase returns to negotiations and agrees to a compromise on stablecoin yield provisions that would satisfy banking interests. “This is President Trump’s bill at the end of the day, not Brian Armstrong’s,” the source said, according to Terrett.

Banks, Europe, Belgium, Senate, SEC, Legislation, United States, Digital Asset Management, Stablecoin, Trading, MiCA, Policy
White House considers pulling support for crypto bill. Source: Eleanor Terrett

Crypto bank Anchorage Digital eyes $400M raise, potential IPO: Report

Institutional crypto platform Anchorage Digital is looking to raise hundreds of millions of dollars of fresh capital as it eyes a potential Initial Public Offering.

The raise would be in the $200 million to $400 million range, while a possible IPO is slated for sometime next year, according to a Bloomberg report on Friday, citing people familiar with the matter who asked to remain anonymous.

Anchorage’s affiliate, Anchorage Digital Bank National Association, became the first federally chartered crypto bank in 2021 and is now well-positioned to lead stablecoin issuance and related services following the passage of the GENIUS Act in July.

Anchorage CEO Nathan McCauley said in September that he planned to double the company’s stablecoin team over the next year to accommodate the expected boom in digital dollars.

Source: Bloomber

“2025 was our year of scale. We made a series of acquisitions, inked major partnerships, and launched new business lines like stablecoin issuance to solidify our lead in institutional crypto,” an Anchorage spokesperson told Bloomberg.

One of those partnerships included Tether, the issuer behind the largest stablecoin, USDT, with the two companies announcing plans in September to launch a USAT token in the US.

Riot Platforms shares jump 11% after Bitcoin sale funds Texas deal

Shares of Riot Platforms jumped more than 11% after the crypto miner said it sold Bitcoin to help finance a land acquisition in Texas.

In a Friday notice, Riot said the $96 million deal for 200 acres of land in Rockdale, Texas was funded entirely by the sale of about 1,080 Bitcoin (BTC). The miner also signed a data center lease and services agreement with semiconductor company Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), initially deploying 25 megawatts (MW) of “critical IT load capacity.”

“These results mark a pivotal moment that cements Riot’s position as a leading data center developer, less than twelve months since the launch of our formal process to evaluate our assets for AI/HPC use,” said Riot CEO Jason Les.

Riot said the agreement for an initial 10-year term could generate about $311 million in revenue for the company, with the potential for $1 billion if three five-year extensions were exercised. The company’s shares on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol RIOT surged to $18.80 amid the announcement, marking an 11% increase in early trading Friday.

The Texas deal followed Riot announcing last week that it had sold 1,818 BTC in December as part of a strategy shift from mining the cryptocurrency to using its data center infrastructure for other applications, including artificial intelligence. The company reported holding 18,005 BTC as of Dec. 31, worth more than $17 billion at the time of publication.

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