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Two key security practices for Web3 startups from Israel Crypto Conference

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Shahar Madar, the head of security products at Fireblocks, says Web3 startups need to think from the “attacker’s perspective” when planning security protocols.

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Tesla holds onto Bitcoin as Musk says time at DOGE to ‘drop significantly’

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Tesla has held onto its Bitcoin during the first quarter of 2025 as CEO Elon Musk promised shareholders that he would scale back his time working as the Trump administration’s cost-cutting czar.

Musk’s comment appears to have been the main catalyst behind Tesla’s (TSLA) 5.4% price jump in after-hours trading on April 22 to $250.80 after closing the trading day up 4.6%, according to Google Finance. 

It comes as the automaker’s Q1 results released the same day show revenues hit $19.34 billion, missing Wall Street estimates by 7.85% and marking a 9.2% fall from the same period last year.

Tesla’s net income of $409 million also marked an 80.8% quarter-on-quarter drop and a 70.5% fall from Q1 2024.

Source: Tesla

Tesla’s digital asset holdings dropped 11.61% in value from $1.076 billion to $951 million in Q1, alongside Bitcoin’s (BTC) 11.56% price fall to $82,514 over the same time, according to CoinGecko data.

A new rule from the Financial Accounting Standards Board allows public companies to report their crypto holdings at market value. Before, only losses were recorded — unless the crypto was sold. 

Tesla’s 11,509 Bitcoin stash is now worth over $1.07 billion as a result of the market rebound over the last week, according to Bitcoin Treasuries data. Tesla’s Bitcoin holdings haven’t changed since June 30, 2022.

Musk to ease up on DOGE duties

In an April 22 earnings call, Musk promised that he would scale back his time working at the Trump administration’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, to focus more on Tesla.

“Starting probably next month, May, my time allocation to DOGE will drop significantly,” Musk said. 

“I’ll be allocating far more of my time to Tesla now that the major work of establishing the Department of Government Efficiency is done.”

Musk said he’ll continue to spend “a day or two per week” on DOGE-related matters for as long as US President Donald Trump needs to ensure the “waste and fraud that we stop does not come roaring back.”

Related: Peirce signals SEC ‘reorientation’ under new chair Paul Atkins

Tesla’s 5.4% rise in after-hours came on the back of a 4.6% increase to nearly $237 during the April 22 trading day as the broader market clawed back some losses from earlier in the week.

Tesla shares are still down over 37% year-to-date, driven partially by declining sales, Musk’s increased political presence and economic uncertainty stemming from Trump’s tariffs.

Magazine: Crypto fans are obsessed with longevity and biohacking: Here’s why

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SEC says it won’t re-file fraud case against Hex’s Richard Heart

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The US Securities and Exchange Commission has said it doesn’t intend to refile its securities fraud complaint against Hex founder Richard Schueler, who goes by Richard Heart.

“Plaintiff Securities and Exchange Commission provides this notice that it does not intend to file an amended complaint in this matter,” the regulator’s lawyer, Matthew Gulde, stated in an April 21 letter to New York District Court Judge Carol Bagley Amon. 

The court had previously dismissed the SEC’s original complaint on Feb. 28 as Judge Amon said the regulator failed to establish that it had jurisdiction over Heart’s activities, which she said were not specifically targeted at US investors.

She granted leave for the SEC to file an amended complaint by March 20, later extending the deadline to April 21.

Heart posted to X on April 22 that “Richard Heart, PulseChain, PulseX, and HEX have defeated the SEC completely and have achieved regulatory clarity that nearly no other coins have.”

Letter from the SEC to Judge Amon. Source: PACER

Heart added that the SEC walked away from some of its other cryptocurrency cases voluntarily, but claimed his was the only case where “the SEC lost and crypto won across the board, with a dismissal in court of every single claim the SEC brought.”

Heart said it was a victory for open-source software, cryptocurrency and free speech because the SEC “actually sued software code itself in this case.” 

SEC hunted Heart in Finland

The SEC sued Heart in July 2023 for alleged unregistered securities offerings of three tokens, HEX, PulseChain (PLS), and PulseX (PSLX), claiming he made more than $1 billion by touting the tokens as a “pathway to grandiose wealth for investors.”

In April 2024, Heart tried to have the suit tossed, claiming the regulator “has no sway over him,” because he didn’t reside in the United States. 

Related: Finnish police seize watches worth $2.6M from Hex founder Richard Heart: Report

The SEC opposed this in August, claiming he touted the tokens at a Las Vegas event. In December 2024, Interpol issued a Red Notice for Heart, seeking his arrest in Finland, where he was also suspected of tax evasion

The PulseChain native token (HEX) hit an all-time high of $0.031 in December 2024 but has since tanked 76% as most altcoins have failed to follow Bitcoin’s momentum this year. 

The SEC has dropped or suspended several cases against crypto firms so far this year under the Trump administration.

Magazine: Altcoin season to hit in Q2? Mantra’s plan to win trust: Hodler’s Digest

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Cantor plans $3B crypto venture with SoftBank, Bitfinex and Tether: Report

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Brandon Lutnick, chair of investment banking firm Cantor Fitzgerald, is reportedly partnering with SoftBank, Tether and Bitfinex to create a $3 billion crypto acquisition company.

Lutnick and the consortium hope to create a publicly listed crypto acquisition company to capitalize on the market under crypto-friendly US President Donald Trump, and replicate Michael Saylor’s company Strategy, the Financial Times reported on April 23, citing three people who have been briefed on the plan.

Cantor Equity Partners raised $200 million in January for the new firm called 21 Capital. At the same time, stablecoin issuer Tether will fork out $1.5 billion in Bitcoin (BTC), Japanese investment holding firm Softbank Group will contribute $900 million, and the crypto exchange Bitfinex will add $600 million.

Lutnick’s new venture hopes to raise another $350 million in convertible bonds and a separate $200 million private equity placement to buy additional Bitcoin.

Eventually, Tether, Bitfinex, and SoftBank’s Bitcoin investments will be converted into 21 Capital shares, with the value of the Bitcoin locked in at $85,000 per coin and shares costing $10 a pop.

However, the deal hasn’t been finalized yet, and some details could change before it’s officially announced. Brandon Lutnick was named chair of Cantor Fitzgerald when his father, Howard Lutnick, stepped down to become the US Secretary of Commerce.

Brandon Lutnick was named chair of Cantor Fitzgerald when his father, Howard Lutnick (right), became the US Secretary of Commerce. Source: White House

Cantor Fitzgerald, SoftBank, Tether and Bitfinex didn’t immediately respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment.

Cantor already well versed in crypto market 

Cantor Fitzgerald has managed Tether’s Treasury portfolio and $134 billion of reserves, mainly in US Treasury bills, since 2021. The firm also owns a 5% stake in the stablecoin issuer.

Previously, Cantor acted in an advisory role for Tether’s $775 million investment in YouTube alternative Rumble in December last year.

Related: Commerce Secretary Lutnick walks back tariff relief on electronics

Meanwhile, on March 11, Cantor Fitzgerald said it was rolling out a Bitcoin financing business with $2 billion in initial capital to help institutional investors borrow against their crypto holdings. Anchorage Digital and Copper were selected as Bitcoin custodians and collateral managers.

Cantor Fitzgerald currently holds over $5 billion worth of assets across 275 total holdings, according to Fintel data.

Magazine: XRP win leaves Ripple and industry with no crypto legal precedent set

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