1. Brazilian Central Bank Prohibits Fintech Companies from Using Cryptocurrencies for Cross-Border Payments
The Brazilian Central Bank announced that starting from October 1, it prohibits electronic foreign exchange service providers from using stablecoins and other cryptocurrencies (such as Bitcoin) to settle cross-border remittances. This ban applies to fintech companies and payment institutions, but individual investors are still allowed to purchase and hold crypto assets. Electronic foreign exchange payments must be conducted through foreign exchange trading or non-resident real accounts, and unauthorized companies must apply for Brazilian Central Bank approval by May 2027. -Original
2. Trump Criticizes Banks for Obstructing Cryptocurrency Legislation, Claims Cryptocurrency Has Become Mainstream
President Trump criticized banks for obstructing cryptocurrency legislation at an event at Mar-a-Lago, stating that cryptocurrencies have become mainstream, and the U.S. is leading in artificial intelligence and cryptocurrency over China. -Original
3. BlackRock Opposes OCC's 20% Cap on Tokenized Reserve Assets
BlackRock submitted a comment letter to the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, opposing the 20% cap on tokenized reserve assets, arguing that this limitation is unrelated to the objectives and emphasizing that risk depends on credit quality, duration, and liquidity, rather than whether assets are held or transferred on a distributed ledger. -Original
4. Iran Responds to U.S. Proposal with 14 Conditions, Including Asset Unfreezing, Troop Withdrawal, and War Reparations
According to Tasnim News Agency, Iran responded to the nine-point U.S. proposal with fourteen conditions, key among them: guarantees against military aggression, withdrawal of U.S. troops from the region, ending maritime blockade, unfreezing frozen assets, payment of war reparations, lifting sanctions, ending hostilities, and establishing a new mechanism in the Hormuz Strait. The U.S. proposed a two-month ceasefire, while Iran demanded all issues be resolved within 30 days, focusing on a complete end to the war. -Original
5. Coinbase: Lawmakers Reach Agreement on Stablecoin Yield Provisions, Clearing Path for Clarity Act
According to Coinbase, Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Osmond finalized the text of a compromise on stablecoin yields, clearing the path for the consideration of the Clarity Act. Section 404 of the bill prohibits crypto firms from paying interest similar to bank deposits but allows activity-based rewards. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong urged the Senate Banking Committee to consider the bill. -Original
6. Arbitrum Votes to Unfreeze $71 Million ETH to Address Kelp DAO Vulnerability
Arbitrum voted to unfreeze $71 million in ETH to respond to the impact of a $290 million vulnerability in Kelp DAO. -Original
7. Kelp DAO Hit by $292 Million Attack Shakes DeFi Market, Apollo and BlackRock Continue Pushing On-Chain Finance
According to CoinDesk, Kelp DAO suffered a $292 million attack, shaking the crypto lending market. Industry insiders believe this is only a temporary setback and will not hinder institutional adoption of DeFi. Wall Street firms like Apollo Global Management and BlackRock continue to advance on-chain finance, urging DeFi protocols to enhance security and governance. Experts recommend adopting zero-trust architectures, robust collateral frameworks, and auditable smart contracts as institutional-grade standards to support larger capital inflows into the sector. -Original
8. CryptoQuant Analyst: Bitcoin Must Fall to $59,000 to Potentially Bottom, May Take 6 Months
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