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EU watchdog wants insurers’ crypto holdings 100% covered, citing volatility

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The European Union’s insurance authority has proposed a blanket rule that would mandate insurance firms to maintain capital equal to the value of their crypto holdings as part of a measure to mitigate risks for policyholders.

The new proposal — made by the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority in a Technical Advice report to the European Commission on March 27 — would set a far stricter standard than other asset classes, such as stocks and real estate, which don’t even need to be half-backed.

“EIOPA considers a 100% haircut in the standard formula prudent and appropriate for these assets in view of their inherent risks and high volatility,” it said in a separate statement.

Such a measure would fill a regulatory gap between the Capital Requirements Regulation and Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), EIOPA said, noting that the European Union’s regulatory framework for insurers currently lacks specific provisions on crypto assets.

Circle argued in January that a blanket 100% stress factor on crypto assets didn’t account for lower-risk stablecoins. Source: Circle

EIOPA outlined four options for the European Commission to consider — one: make no changes; two: mandate an 80% “stress level” to crypto assets; and three: mandate a 100% stress level to crypto asset.

The stress level percentages determine how much capital firms need to hold to stay solvent.

The fourth option called on the European Commission to consider the risks of tokenized assets more broadly.

EIOPA said option three would be the most appropriate option.

“An 80% stress to the value of crypto-asset exposures does not appear sufficiently prudent,” whereas “a 100% stress is more appropriate and aligns with one of the approaches to the transitional treatment of crypto-assets under CRR,” EIOPA said.

The 100% stress refers to the assumption that the crypto asset prices could fall by 100% and that diversification — spreading the risk across different assets — wouldn’t not reduce this stress. EIOPA pointed out that Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) have fallen 82% and 91%, respectively, in the past.

A 100% capital charge for crypto assets would reflect a far stricter approach compared to stocks, which range between 39% and 49%, and real estate, which incurs a 25% capital charge, according to solvency capital requirements laid out in the Commission Delegated Regulation 2015/35.

EIOPA said a 100% capital charge for crypto asset-related (re)insurance undertakings shouldn’t be “overly burdensome” and that there would be no material costs for policyholders.

“The capital requirements would fully capture the risk of crypto-asset with a positive impact on policyholder protection in case there are material exposures in the future.”

Related: Tabit offers USD insurance policies backed by Bitcoin regulatory capital

EIOPA acknowledged that the share of crypto-asset (re)insurance undertakings accounts for just 655 million euros or 0.0068% of all undertakings in Europe — even referring to it as “immaterial.”

“At the same time crypto assets are high risk investments which may result in total loss of value,” EIOPA said, explaining why it recommends option three.

Luxembourg and Sweden could be hit hardest by the proposed rule

Insurers in Luxembourg and Sweden are likely to be the most affected, according to a Q4 2023 report cited by EIOPA, which found that these two countries accounted for 69% and 21% of all crypto asset-related exposures among (re)insurance undertakings.

Ireland, Denmark and Liechtenstein also accounted for 3.4%, 1.4% and 1.2% of the undertakings. 

Most of these undertakings are structured within funds, such as exchange-traded funds, and held on behalf of unit-linked policyholders, EIOPA noted.

Split of crypto-asset exposure proxy per European country in Q4 2023. Source: EIOPA

EIOPA, however, acknowledged that a broader adoption of crypto assets in the future may require a more “differentiated approach.”

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

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Coin Market

Trump sons back new Bitcoin mining venture with Hut 8

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Several members of US President Donald Trump’s family are backing a new venture to launch what aims to become the world’s largest Bitcoin mining firm.

Hut 8, a digital asset mining and infrastructure company, announced on March 31 that it is acquiring a majority stake in American Bitcoin, formerly known as American Data Center. The firm was founded by a group of investors, including Trump’s sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump.

Related: Bitcoin miner Hut 8 argues to toss ‘short and distort’ shareholder suit

As part of the deal, American Bitcoin will take ownership of Hut 8’s Bitcoin (BTC) mining hardware. Donald Trump Jr. said that the entrepreneurs behind American Data Centers have backed their conviction in Bitcoin personally and through their businesses.

The new venture “aims to become the world’s largest, most efficient pure-play Bitcoin miner while building a robust strategic Bitcoin reserve,” the announcement said. Mining operations will remain under Hut 8’s compute segment but will operate through the American Bitcoin brand. Donald Trump Jr. added:

“Mining it on favorable economics opens an even bigger opportunity. We’re excited to bring investors into that equation through a platform engineered to execute on this thesis and deliver real, tangible participation in Bitcoin’s growth.”

Trump family deepens involvement in crypto

President Trump continues to promote pro-crypto policy as his family and affiliated companies expand their presence in the digital asset space.

On March 28, he pardoned three co-founders of crypto exchange BitMEX who previously pleaded guilty to federal money laundering charges, according to a CNBC report.

On March 21, the US Treasury dropped the decentralized crypto mixer Tornado Cash from its sanction lists, invalidating related legal proceedings. Additionally, the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Division of Corporation Finance recently stated that memecoins do not qualify as securities under US law. Progress is underway on the creation of a national Bitcoin strategic reserve.

On the commercial front, Trump launched his Official Trump (TRUMP) memecoin. His Trump Technology Group also announced a partnership with Crypto.com, which is expected to support a new suite of crypto exchange-traded funds.

The Trump family has been involved in launching a decentralized finance protocol on Aave called World Liberty Financial (WLFI), as well as introducing a new stablecoin named USD1.

Related: Hut 8 tips 66% hashrate boost after deal to buy 31K Bitcoin miners

Strategic shift for Hut 8

Hut 8 CEO Asher Genoot recognized the launch of American Bitcoin as a “pivotal evolution” in the firm‘s strategy. He said that separating the mining business from the rest of the corporate activities would allow it to raise its own capital and “align each segment of the business with its respective cost of capital.” He added:

“It evolves Hut 8 toward more predictable, financeable, lower-cost-of-capital segments and establishes American Bitcoin as a pure-play mining platform built for exahash growth, Bitcoin production, and operating leverage.”

The report follows Hut 8 surpassing $1 billion worth of Bitcoin holdings after acquiring 990 BTC for $100 million at the end of 2024. At the time, the company’s total Bitcoin mining stood at 10,096 BTC acquired at an average price of $24,484 per Bitcoin.

Bitcoin mining revenue approached $3.6 billion in Q1 2025 as industry income stabilized after the last halving. Recent data also shows that miners’ daily revenue per unit of hash power remained constant at around $48 per petahash per second, despite the mining difficulty increasing.

Magazine: Bitcoin ATH sooner than expected? XRP may drop 40%, and more: Hodler’s Digest, March 23 – 29

This is a developing story, and further information will be added as it becomes available.

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Crypto funds see $226M of inflows, but asset values slump — CoinShares

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Cryptocurrency exchange-traded products (ETPs) continued to see modest inflows last week, extending a reversal from a record-breaking streak of outflows.

Global crypto ETPs posted $226 million in inflows in the last trading week, adding to the prior week’s $644 million inflows, CoinShares reported on March 31.

Despite the two-week positive trend after a five-week outflow streak, total assets under management (AUM) continued to decline, dropping below $134 million by March 28.

Weekly crypto ETP flows since late 2024. Source: CoinShares

Last week’s inflows suggest positive but cautious investor behavior amid core Personal Consumption Expenditures in the US coming in above expectations, CoinShares’ head of research James Butterfill said.

Bitcoin leads weekly inflows

Bitcoin (BTC) investment products attracted the majority of inflows, totaling $195 million for the week, while short-BTC investment products saw outflows for the fourth consecutive week, totaling $2.5 million.

Altcoins, in aggregate, saw a first week of inflows totaling $33 million, following four consecutive weeks of outflows totaling $1.7 billion.

Flows by asset (in millions of US dollars). Source: CoinShares

Among individual altcoins, Ether (ETH) saw $14.5 million in inflows. Solana (SOL), XRP (XRP) and Sui (SUI) followed with $7.8 million, $4.8 million and $4 million, respectively.

AUM drops to lowest level in 2025 amid price slump

Despite recent inflows, crypto ETPs have failed to trigger a reversal in terms of total AUM.

Since March 10, the total crypto ETP AUM dropped 5.7% from 142 billion, amounting to 133.9 billion as of March 28, the lowest level in 2025.

Related: BlackRock to launch Bitcoin ETP in Europe — Report

According to CoinShares’ Butterfill, the AUM decline could be attributed to a slump in cryptocurrency prices.

“Recent price falls have pushed Bitcoin global ETPs’ total assets under management to their lowest level since just after the US election at $114 billion,” Butterfill wrote.

Bitcoin price chart since Jan. 1, 2025. Source: CoinGecko

Since Jan. 1, 2025, the BTC price has dropped 13.6%, while the total market capitalization has tumbled nearly 20%, according to data from CoinGecko. 

Magazine: Bitcoin ATH sooner than expected? XRP may drop 40%, and more: Hodler’s Digest, March 23 – 29

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Stablecoins, tokenized assets gain as Trump tariffs loom

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Cryptocurrency investors are increasingly moving capital into stablecoins and tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) in a bid to avoid volatility ahead of US President Donald Trump’s widely anticipated tariff announcement on April 2.

Increasingly more capital is flowing into stablecoins and the real-world asset (RWA) tokenization sector, which refers to financial products and tangible assets such as real estate and fine art minted on the blockchain.

“Stablecoins and RWAs continue to see steady inflows of capital as safe havens in the current uncertain market,” crypto intelligence platform IntoTheBlock wrote in a March 31 X post.

“However, because these assets reside on-chain, even slight shifts in sentiment can trigger significant price movements, driven by the lower barriers to reallocating capital in real time,” the firm noted.

Stablecoins, total market cap. Source: IntoTheBlock

The flight to safety is mainly attributed to geopolitical tensions and global trade concerns, according to Juan Pellicer, senior research analyst at IntoTheBlock:

“Many investors were expecting economic tailwinds following Trump’s inauguration as president, but increased geopolitical tensions, tariffs and general political uncertainty are making investors more cautious.”

“This is not unreasonable, as even though global growth forecasts remain positive, growth expectations have decreased globally in recent months,” he added.

Related: Bitcoin ‘more likely’ to hit $110K before $76.5K — Arthur Hayes

The prospect of a global trade war has heightened inflation-related concerns, causing a significant decline in both cryptocurrency and traditional equity markets.

S&P 500, BTC/USD, 1-day chart. Source: TradingView 

Bitcoin (BTC) has fallen 19% and the S&P 500 (SPX) index has fallen over 7% in the two months since Trump first announced import tariffs on Chinese goods on Jan. 20, the day of his inauguration as president.

The April 2 announcement is expected to detail reciprocal trade tariffs targeting top US trading partners. The measures aim to reduce the country’s estimated $1.2 trillion goods trade deficit and boost domestic manufacturing.

Related: Stablecoin rules needed in US before crypto tax reform, experts say

Investor sentiment pressured by April 2 Trump tariff announcement

Global tariff fears and uncertainty around the upcoming announcement continue to pressure investor sentiment in global markets.

“Risk appetite remains muted amid tariff threats from President Trump and ongoing macro uncertainty,” Iliya Kalchev, dispatch analyst at digital asset investment platform Nexo, told Cointelegraph.

Meanwhile, RWAs reached a new cumulative all-time high of over $17 billion on Feb. 3, and are currently less than 0.5% away from surpassing the $20 billion milestone, according to data from RWA.xyz.

RWA global market dashboard. Source: RWA.xyz

Some industry watchers believe that Bitcoin’s lack of upside momentum may drive RWAs to an over $50 billion all-time high before the end of 2025, as their increased liquidity will help RWAs attract a significant share of the $450 trillion global asset market.

Magazine: SCB tips $500K BTC, SEC delays Ether ETF options, and more: Hodler’s Digest, Feb. 23 – March 1

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