Written by: Liu Honglin I don't know why, but lately, conference documents related to the crypto industry seem to be released on Fridays. Just now, a message suddenly circulated on lawyer Honglin's WeChat Moments: a joint risk warning issued by seven financial industry associations regarding the prevention of illegal activities involving virtual currencies. The China Internet Finance Association, China Banking Association, China Securities Association, China Asset Management Association, China Futures Association, China Association of Listed Companies, and China Payment and Clearing Association all signed the warning. After reading the document, Attorney Honglin was completely bewildered. This is no ordinary statement from an industry association; it's a blatant cross-industry, cross-regulatory "unified messaging" operation. Similar association collaborations often occur at critical junctures in the prevention and control of systemic financial risks. One can't help but wonder, could RWA really be that destructive? The most notable aspect of this document is its first explicit mention of RWA (Real-World Asset Tokenization), along with a qualitative assessment. Throughout the document, RWA is listed alongside stablecoins, worthless cryptocurrencies, and cryptocurrency mining as a primary manifestation of "illegal activities related to virtual currencies," effectively drawing criticism from the outset. This wording itself sends a strong signal: RWA is no longer a "new technology" awaiting regulatory clarification, but a "risky business" directly included in the regulatory crackdown list. Specifically, the document describes RWA as follows: "Real-world asset tokenization involves financing and trading activities through the issuance of tokens or other rights and debt instruments with token characteristics. This carries multiple risks, including the risk of fictitious assets, the risk of business failure, and the risk of speculation. Currently, my country's financial regulatory authorities have not approved any real-world asset tokenization activities." This statement clearly outlines three bottom lines: First, RWA is explicitly defined as a "financing and trading activity." This means that regardless of whether it is backed by real-world assets or uses blockchain technology, it is essentially a fundraising mechanism. As long as it involves token issuance, asset trading, and profit distribution, it naturally falls under the regulatory scope of the existing financial legal framework, especially the areas prohibited by relevant laws such as the Securities Law and the Measures for the Prohibition of Illegal Financial Institutions and Illegal Financial Business Activities. Second, regulators emphasize the risks of "fake assets," "business failure," and "speculative manipulation." This is not only a characterization of fraudulent projects but also a denial of the potential market risks of so-called "normal projects." Even if the project team believes that its assets are genuine, its technology is transparent, and its structure is compliant, the regulator's judgment remains: such a token structure cannot guarantee the legal ownership and liquidation capabilities of the underlying assets, and the extent of its risk spillover is uncontrollable. Third, and more crucially, is the statement: "my country's financial regulatory authorities have not approved any real-world asset tokenization activities." This is tantamount to a direct declaration that all tokenized assets, services, matching platforms, and trading platforms currently operating under the name RWA lack a legal basis for operation. There is no room for explanation that it is "in the regulatory exploration stage," nor is there any possibility of it "awaiting registration." In fact, RWA has been regarded as an "alternative token path" within the industry for some time. Especially after stablecoins were officially included in the cryptocurrency regulatory framework, many teams chose to turn to RWA, attempting to circumvent regulations by using terms such as "real-world asset anchoring," "overseas compliance path," and "technology service output." This document has refuted these claims one by one. The document explicitly states that RWA's activities pose legal risks such as "illegal fundraising, unauthorized public offering of securities, and illegal operation of futures business." These statements are not generalities but rather direct characterizations based on explicit provisions in the Criminal Law and the Securities Law. If you issue RWA tokens to the general public and raise funds, you are suspected of illegal fundraising. If you facilitate transactions or distribute tokens without permission, you may be committing an illegal securities offering. If your token trading involves leverage or betting mechanisms, it may constitute illegal operation of a futures business. These charges are already very clear in terms of legal application, and in recent years, many court judgments have been made based on similar logic. RWA is not a new species existing outside the law, but rather a "familiar target" that regulators have categorized as part of the existing financial enforcement toolbox. The timing of this risk warning is closely related to the frequent occurrence of fraudulent activities operating under the "RWA name" in recent times. Previously, lawyer Hong Lin was invited to participate in a program on Shanghai People's Radio, the topic of which was "Preventing RWA Financial Scams." Unexpectedly, this topic has risen to the national level. The first paragraph of the document from the seven associations mentions that "criminals are taking advantage of this to promote related trading and speculation activities, using stablecoins, worthless coins (such as π coin), Real-World Asset (RWA) tokens, and 'mining' as a guise to carry out illegal fundraising, pyramid schemes, and other illegal activities." It seems that regulatory authorities are judging RWA on the same level as worthless coins, pyramid schemes, and other high-risk fraudulent methods, reflecting the actual frequency of cases and social harm observed by law enforcement. More importantly, this notice specifically emphasizes the joint liability of service providers and intermediaries. The original text states: "Domestic staff of relevant overseas virtual currency and real-world asset token service providers, as well as domestic institutions and individuals who knowingly or should have known that they are engaged in virtual currency-related businesses and still provide services to them, will be held accountable according to law." This statement has a profound impact and deserves our special attention. First, it targets not only project owners but also service providers within the ecosystem, including project planners, technology outsourcing providers, marketing agents, KOL promoters, and payment interface providers. Second, "knowing or should have known" is a legal presumption of liability, no longer limited to subjective intent; as long as there is a reasonable objective basis for judgment, liability can be established. Third, it explicitly negates the common "overseas entity + domestic personnel" operating model in the Web3 industry. Even if your company is registered overseas but your team operates in mainland China, you cannot escape the classification of "providing services within China." In other words, there's no such thing as "pure technology companies are fine" or "I'm just providing infrastructure" that absolves you of liability. If you know this project is implementing RWA in mainland China and still choose to provide services, you could be held accountable. This also means that the entire Web3 service chain built around RWA has almost completely ceased within China. Not only are projects no longer viable, but the supporting services also lack a viable business model. Teams wanting to develop RWA in the future have only one option: to "go completely overseas." From legal structure, asset custody, user access, compliance auditing, and financial services, every link must be detached from the Chinese market, with no remaining foothold or connection. Otherwise, even simply hiring an operations person in China could trigger legal risks. Currently, many projects are still attempting to secure policy space for RWA from the perspective of "technological innovation." They emphasize the efficiency of on-chain clearing, the transparency of asset transfers, or propose "technical solutions" such as integrating KYC and building multi-layered audit structures. However, the signal released by regulators this time is very clear: it's not a technical issue, nor a mechanism issue, but rather that the real-world financial risks far outweigh these technological benefits. The entire risk warning document contains no phrases like "technology pilot," "categorized regulation," or "prudent development," indicating that the regulatory goal is not to optimize the operation of RWA, but to explicitly exclude it from legal boundaries. This isn't just a tightening of policy; it's a complete rejection of the underlying direction. It ends the very foundation of the RWA model—regardless of whether you distribute tokens using an SPV architecture or manage underlying equity with on-chain contracts, as long as the final structure possesses the attributes of "financing + trading," it cannot escape the regulatory definition of illegal financial activity. Projects still expanding their market on WeChat groups, Telegram groups, and Twitter under the guise of "node partners" or "regional representatives" are no longer considered fringe explorations from a regulatory perspective; they are directly categorized as participating in illegal activities. For teams within China, this also means that the entire narrative surrounding RWA—from asset providers, technology development, and market matchmaking to the accompanying consulting, outsourcing, and promotional services—no longer possesses any sustainable business logic. As long as there are Chinese nodes in the chain, it poses a potential risk. For overseas projects, the situation isn't much better. The Chinese mainland market is no longer a region "waiting for regulatory clarification," but rather a region that has clearly expressed its rejection—not a suspension, not a wait-and-see approach, not a postponement, but a clear exclusion. In this context, the choices left to practitioners are very clear: either completely relocate their business systems to a compliance system that has no overlap with Chinese regulations, or completely abandon RWA.Written by: Liu Honglin I don't know why, but lately, conference documents related to the crypto industry seem to be released on Fridays. Just now, a message suddenly circulated on lawyer Honglin's WeChat Moments: a joint risk warning issued by seven financial industry associations regarding the prevention of illegal activities involving virtual currencies. The China Internet Finance Association, China Banking Association, China Securities Association, China Asset Management Association, China Futures Association, China Association of Listed Companies, and China Payment and Clearing Association all signed the warning. After reading the document, Attorney Honglin was completely bewildered. This is no ordinary statement from an industry association; it's a blatant cross-industry, cross-regulatory "unified messaging" operation. Similar association collaborations often occur at critical junctures in the prevention and control of systemic financial risks. One can't help but wonder, could RWA really be that destructive? The most notable aspect of this document is its first explicit mention of RWA (Real-World Asset Tokenization), along with a qualitative assessment. Throughout the document, RWA is listed alongside stablecoins, worthless cryptocurrencies, and cryptocurrency mining as a primary manifestation of "illegal activities related to virtual currencies," effectively drawing criticism from the outset. This wording itself sends a strong signal: RWA is no longer a "new technology" awaiting regulatory clarification, but a "risky business" directly included in the regulatory crackdown list. Specifically, the document describes RWA as follows: "Real-world asset tokenization involves financing and trading activities through the issuance of tokens or other rights and debt instruments with token characteristics. This carries multiple risks, including the risk of fictitious assets, the risk of business failure, and the risk of speculation. Currently, my country's financial regulatory authorities have not approved any real-world asset tokenization activities." This statement clearly outlines three bottom lines: First, RWA is explicitly defined as a "financing and trading activity." This means that regardless of whether it is backed by real-world assets or uses blockchain technology, it is essentially a fundraising mechanism. As long as it involves token issuance, asset trading, and profit distribution, it naturally falls under the regulatory scope of the existing financial legal framework, especially the areas prohibited by relevant laws such as the Securities Law and the Measures for the Prohibition of Illegal Financial Institutions and Illegal Financial Business Activities. Second, regulators emphasize the risks of "fake assets," "business failure," and "speculative manipulation." This is not only a characterization of fraudulent projects but also a denial of the potential market risks of so-called "normal projects." Even if the project team believes that its assets are genuine, its technology is transparent, and its structure is compliant, the regulator's judgment remains: such a token structure cannot guarantee the legal ownership and liquidation capabilities of the underlying assets, and the extent of its risk spillover is uncontrollable. Third, and more crucially, is the statement: "my country's financial regulatory authorities have not approved any real-world asset tokenization activities." This is tantamount to a direct declaration that all tokenized assets, services, matching platforms, and trading platforms currently operating under the name RWA lack a legal basis for operation. There is no room for explanation that it is "in the regulatory exploration stage," nor is there any possibility of it "awaiting registration." In fact, RWA has been regarded as an "alternative token path" within the industry for some time. Especially after stablecoins were officially included in the cryptocurrency regulatory framework, many teams chose to turn to RWA, attempting to circumvent regulations by using terms such as "real-world asset anchoring," "overseas compliance path," and "technology service output." This document has refuted these claims one by one. The document explicitly states that RWA's activities pose legal risks such as "illegal fundraising, unauthorized public offering of securities, and illegal operation of futures business." These statements are not generalities but rather direct characterizations based on explicit provisions in the Criminal Law and the Securities Law. If you issue RWA tokens to the general public and raise funds, you are suspected of illegal fundraising. If you facilitate transactions or distribute tokens without permission, you may be committing an illegal securities offering. If your token trading involves leverage or betting mechanisms, it may constitute illegal operation of a futures business. These charges are already very clear in terms of legal application, and in recent years, many court judgments have been made based on similar logic. RWA is not a new species existing outside the law, but rather a "familiar target" that regulators have categorized as part of the existing financial enforcement toolbox. The timing of this risk warning is closely related to the frequent occurrence of fraudulent activities operating under the "RWA name" in recent times. Previously, lawyer Hong Lin was invited to participate in a program on Shanghai People's Radio, the topic of which was "Preventing RWA Financial Scams." Unexpectedly, this topic has risen to the national level. The first paragraph of the document from the seven associations mentions that "criminals are taking advantage of this to promote related trading and speculation activities, using stablecoins, worthless coins (such as π coin), Real-World Asset (RWA) tokens, and 'mining' as a guise to carry out illegal fundraising, pyramid schemes, and other illegal activities." It seems that regulatory authorities are judging RWA on the same level as worthless coins, pyramid schemes, and other high-risk fraudulent methods, reflecting the actual frequency of cases and social harm observed by law enforcement. More importantly, this notice specifically emphasizes the joint liability of service providers and intermediaries. The original text states: "Domestic staff of relevant overseas virtual currency and real-world asset token service providers, as well as domestic institutions and individuals who knowingly or should have known that they are engaged in virtual currency-related businesses and still provide services to them, will be held accountable according to law." This statement has a profound impact and deserves our special attention. First, it targets not only project owners but also service providers within the ecosystem, including project planners, technology outsourcing providers, marketing agents, KOL promoters, and payment interface providers. Second, "knowing or should have known" is a legal presumption of liability, no longer limited to subjective intent; as long as there is a reasonable objective basis for judgment, liability can be established. Third, it explicitly negates the common "overseas entity + domestic personnel" operating model in the Web3 industry. Even if your company is registered overseas but your team operates in mainland China, you cannot escape the classification of "providing services within China." In other words, there's no such thing as "pure technology companies are fine" or "I'm just providing infrastructure" that absolves you of liability. If you know this project is implementing RWA in mainland China and still choose to provide services, you could be held accountable. This also means that the entire Web3 service chain built around RWA has almost completely ceased within China. Not only are projects no longer viable, but the supporting services also lack a viable business model. Teams wanting to develop RWA in the future have only one option: to "go completely overseas." From legal structure, asset custody, user access, compliance auditing, and financial services, every link must be detached from the Chinese market, with no remaining foothold or connection. Otherwise, even simply hiring an operations person in China could trigger legal risks. Currently, many projects are still attempting to secure policy space for RWA from the perspective of "technological innovation." They emphasize the efficiency of on-chain clearing, the transparency of asset transfers, or propose "technical solutions" such as integrating KYC and building multi-layered audit structures. However, the signal released by regulators this time is very clear: it's not a technical issue, nor a mechanism issue, but rather that the real-world financial risks far outweigh these technological benefits. The entire risk warning document contains no phrases like "technology pilot," "categorized regulation," or "prudent development," indicating that the regulatory goal is not to optimize the operation of RWA, but to explicitly exclude it from legal boundaries. This isn't just a tightening of policy; it's a complete rejection of the underlying direction. It ends the very foundation of the RWA model—regardless of whether you distribute tokens using an SPV architecture or manage underlying equity with on-chain contracts, as long as the final structure possesses the attributes of "financing + trading," it cannot escape the regulatory definition of illegal financial activity. Projects still expanding their market on WeChat groups, Telegram groups, and Twitter under the guise of "node partners" or "regional representatives" are no longer considered fringe explorations from a regulatory perspective; they are directly categorized as participating in illegal activities. For teams within China, this also means that the entire narrative surrounding RWA—from asset providers, technology development, and market matchmaking to the accompanying consulting, outsourcing, and promotional services—no longer possesses any sustainable business logic. As long as there are Chinese nodes in the chain, it poses a potential risk. For overseas projects, the situation isn't much better. The Chinese mainland market is no longer a region "waiting for regulatory clarification," but rather a region that has clearly expressed its rejection—not a suspension, not a wait-and-see approach, not a postponement, but a clear exclusion. In this context, the choices left to practitioners are very clear: either completely relocate their business systems to a compliance system that has no overlap with Chinese regulations, or completely abandon RWA.

Seven financial associations jointly issued a statement: What is the impact of RWA being an illegal financial activity?

2025/12/06 08:21
8 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at [email protected]

Written by: Liu Honglin

I don't know why, but lately, conference documents related to the crypto industry seem to be released on Fridays.

Just now, a message suddenly circulated on lawyer Honglin's WeChat Moments: a joint risk warning issued by seven financial industry associations regarding the prevention of illegal activities involving virtual currencies. The China Internet Finance Association, China Banking Association, China Securities Association, China Asset Management Association, China Futures Association, China Association of Listed Companies, and China Payment and Clearing Association all signed the warning.

After reading the document, Attorney Honglin was completely bewildered.

This is no ordinary statement from an industry association; it's a blatant cross-industry, cross-regulatory "unified messaging" operation. Similar association collaborations often occur at critical junctures in the prevention and control of systemic financial risks.

One can't help but wonder, could RWA really be that destructive?

The most notable aspect of this document is its first explicit mention of RWA (Real-World Asset Tokenization), along with a qualitative assessment. Throughout the document, RWA is listed alongside stablecoins, worthless cryptocurrencies, and cryptocurrency mining as a primary manifestation of "illegal activities related to virtual currencies," effectively drawing criticism from the outset.

This wording itself sends a strong signal: RWA is no longer a "new technology" awaiting regulatory clarification, but a "risky business" directly included in the regulatory crackdown list.

Specifically, the document describes RWA as follows: "Real-world asset tokenization involves financing and trading activities through the issuance of tokens or other rights and debt instruments with token characteristics. This carries multiple risks, including the risk of fictitious assets, the risk of business failure, and the risk of speculation. Currently, my country's financial regulatory authorities have not approved any real-world asset tokenization activities."

This statement clearly outlines three bottom lines:

First, RWA is explicitly defined as a "financing and trading activity." This means that regardless of whether it is backed by real-world assets or uses blockchain technology, it is essentially a fundraising mechanism. As long as it involves token issuance, asset trading, and profit distribution, it naturally falls under the regulatory scope of the existing financial legal framework, especially the areas prohibited by relevant laws such as the Securities Law and the Measures for the Prohibition of Illegal Financial Institutions and Illegal Financial Business Activities.

Second, regulators emphasize the risks of "fake assets," "business failure," and "speculative manipulation." This is not only a characterization of fraudulent projects but also a denial of the potential market risks of so-called "normal projects." Even if the project team believes that its assets are genuine, its technology is transparent, and its structure is compliant, the regulator's judgment remains: such a token structure cannot guarantee the legal ownership and liquidation capabilities of the underlying assets, and the extent of its risk spillover is uncontrollable.

Third, and more crucially, is the statement: "my country's financial regulatory authorities have not approved any real-world asset tokenization activities." This is tantamount to a direct declaration that all tokenized assets, services, matching platforms, and trading platforms currently operating under the name RWA lack a legal basis for operation. There is no room for explanation that it is "in the regulatory exploration stage," nor is there any possibility of it "awaiting registration."

In fact, RWA has been regarded as an "alternative token path" within the industry for some time. Especially after stablecoins were officially included in the cryptocurrency regulatory framework, many teams chose to turn to RWA, attempting to circumvent regulations by using terms such as "real-world asset anchoring," "overseas compliance path," and "technology service output." This document has refuted these claims one by one.

The document explicitly states that RWA's activities pose legal risks such as "illegal fundraising, unauthorized public offering of securities, and illegal operation of futures business." These statements are not generalities but rather direct characterizations based on explicit provisions in the Criminal Law and the Securities Law.

  • If you issue RWA tokens to the general public and raise funds, you are suspected of illegal fundraising.
  • If you facilitate transactions or distribute tokens without permission, you may be committing an illegal securities offering.
  • If your token trading involves leverage or betting mechanisms, it may constitute illegal operation of a futures business.

These charges are already very clear in terms of legal application, and in recent years, many court judgments have been made based on similar logic. RWA is not a new species existing outside the law, but rather a "familiar target" that regulators have categorized as part of the existing financial enforcement toolbox.

The timing of this risk warning is closely related to the frequent occurrence of fraudulent activities operating under the "RWA name" in recent times. Previously, lawyer Hong Lin was invited to participate in a program on Shanghai People's Radio, the topic of which was "Preventing RWA Financial Scams." Unexpectedly, this topic has risen to the national level.

The first paragraph of the document from the seven associations mentions that "criminals are taking advantage of this to promote related trading and speculation activities, using stablecoins, worthless coins (such as π coin), Real-World Asset (RWA) tokens, and 'mining' as a guise to carry out illegal fundraising, pyramid schemes, and other illegal activities." It seems that regulatory authorities are judging RWA on the same level as worthless coins, pyramid schemes, and other high-risk fraudulent methods, reflecting the actual frequency of cases and social harm observed by law enforcement.

More importantly, this notice specifically emphasizes the joint liability of service providers and intermediaries. The original text states: "Domestic staff of relevant overseas virtual currency and real-world asset token service providers, as well as domestic institutions and individuals who knowingly or should have known that they are engaged in virtual currency-related businesses and still provide services to them, will be held accountable according to law."

This statement has a profound impact and deserves our special attention.

First, it targets not only project owners but also service providers within the ecosystem, including project planners, technology outsourcing providers, marketing agents, KOL promoters, and payment interface providers. Second, "knowing or should have known" is a legal presumption of liability, no longer limited to subjective intent; as long as there is a reasonable objective basis for judgment, liability can be established. Third, it explicitly negates the common "overseas entity + domestic personnel" operating model in the Web3 industry. Even if your company is registered overseas but your team operates in mainland China, you cannot escape the classification of "providing services within China."

In other words, there's no such thing as "pure technology companies are fine" or "I'm just providing infrastructure" that absolves you of liability. If you know this project is implementing RWA in mainland China and still choose to provide services, you could be held accountable.

This also means that the entire Web3 service chain built around RWA has almost completely ceased within China. Not only are projects no longer viable, but the supporting services also lack a viable business model. Teams wanting to develop RWA in the future have only one option: to "go completely overseas." From legal structure, asset custody, user access, compliance auditing, and financial services, every link must be detached from the Chinese market, with no remaining foothold or connection. Otherwise, even simply hiring an operations person in China could trigger legal risks.

Currently, many projects are still attempting to secure policy space for RWA from the perspective of "technological innovation." They emphasize the efficiency of on-chain clearing, the transparency of asset transfers, or propose "technical solutions" such as integrating KYC and building multi-layered audit structures. However, the signal released by regulators this time is very clear: it's not a technical issue, nor a mechanism issue, but rather that the real-world financial risks far outweigh these technological benefits. The entire risk warning document contains no phrases like "technology pilot," "categorized regulation," or "prudent development," indicating that the regulatory goal is not to optimize the operation of RWA, but to explicitly exclude it from legal boundaries.

This isn't just a tightening of policy; it's a complete rejection of the underlying direction. It ends the very foundation of the RWA model—regardless of whether you distribute tokens using an SPV architecture or manage underlying equity with on-chain contracts, as long as the final structure possesses the attributes of "financing + trading," it cannot escape the regulatory definition of illegal financial activity. Projects still expanding their market on WeChat groups, Telegram groups, and Twitter under the guise of "node partners" or "regional representatives" are no longer considered fringe explorations from a regulatory perspective; they are directly categorized as participating in illegal activities.

For teams within China, this also means that the entire narrative surrounding RWA—from asset providers, technology development, and market matchmaking to the accompanying consulting, outsourcing, and promotional services—no longer possesses any sustainable business logic. As long as there are Chinese nodes in the chain, it poses a potential risk.

For overseas projects, the situation isn't much better. The Chinese mainland market is no longer a region "waiting for regulatory clarification," but rather a region that has clearly expressed its rejection—not a suspension, not a wait-and-see approach, not a postponement, but a clear exclusion.

In this context, the choices left to practitioners are very clear: either completely relocate their business systems to a compliance system that has no overlap with Chinese regulations, or completely abandon RWA.

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Ethereum koers toont zeldzaam dubbel koopsignaal en richt zich op $4.550

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Connect met Like-minded Crypto Enthusiasts! Connect op Discord! Check onze Discord   Ethereum laat op de uurgrafiek twee opeenvolgende TD Sequential koopsignalen zien. Deze indicator meet uitputting in een trend en geeft vaak een signaal dat de verkoopdruk kan afnemen. Dit dubbele signaal verschijnt rond het niveau van $4.516, waar de ETH prijs kortstondig steun vindt. Dit type formatie komt zelden voor en wordt daarom extra nauwlettend gevolgd. Wat gaat de Ethereum koers hiermee doen? Ethereum koers test steun rond $4.516 De scherpe daling van de Ethereum koers vanaf de prijszone rond $4.800 bracht de ETH prijs in korte tijd naar ongeveer $4.516. Op dit niveau trad duidelijke koopactiviteit op, waardoor de neerwaartse beweging tijdelijk werd gestopt. Het dubbele signaal dat door de TD Sequential indicator is gegenereerd, viel precies samen met dit prijspunt. De TD Sequential is opgebouwd uit negen candles die een trend meetellen. Wanneer de negende candle verschijnt, kan dit duiden op een trendomslag. In dit geval verschenen zelfs twee signalen kort na elkaar, wat aangeeft dat de verkoopdruk mogelijk uitgeput is. Het feit dat dit gebeurde in een zone waar ETH kopers actief bleven, maakt het patroon extra opvallend. TD Sequential just flashed two buy signals for Ethereum $ETH! pic.twitter.com/JPO8EhiEPi — Ali (@ali_charts) September 16, 2025 Welke crypto nu kopen?Lees onze uitgebreide gids en leer welke crypto nu kopen verstandig kan zijn! Welke crypto nu kopen? Fed-voorzitter Jerome Powell heeft aangekondigd dat de rentes binnenkort zomaar eens omlaag zouden kunnen gaan, en tegelijkertijd blijft BlackRock volop crypto kopen, en dus lijkt de markt klaar om te gaan stijgen. Eén vraag komt telkens terug: welke crypto moet je nu kopen? 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Als deze opwaartse beweging doorzet, liggen de eerste weerstanden rond $4.550. Daarboven wacht een sterkere zone rond $4.650. Deze niveaus zijn in eerdere Ethereum sessies al meerdere keren getest. Een doorbraak zou ruimte openen richting de all-time high van ETH rond $4.953. Wanneer de prijs toch opnieuw onder $4.516 zakt, liggen er zones rond $4.500 en $4.450 waar grotere kooporders worden verwacht. Deze niveaus kunnen als een vangnet fungeren, mocht de druk opnieuw toenemen. Marktdynamiek bevestigt technische indicatoren De huidige situatie volgt op een bredere correctie in de cryptomarkt. Verschillende vooraanstaande crypto tokens zagen scherpe koersdalingen, waarna traders op zoek gingen naar signalen voor een mogelijke ommekeer. Dat juist Ethereum nu een dubbel TD Sequential signaal toont, versterkt de interesse in dit scenario. Fundamenteel blijft Ethereum sterk. Het aantal ETH tokens dat via staking is vastgezet, blijft groeien. Dat verkleint de vrije circulatie en vermindert verkoopdruk. Tegelijk blijft het netwerk intensief gebruikt voor DeFi, NFT’s en stablecoins. Deze activiteiten zorgen voor een stabiele vraag naar ETH, ook wanneer de prijs tijdelijk onder druk staat. Fundamentele drijfveren achter de Ethereum koers De Ethereum koers wordt echter niet alleen bepaald door candles en patronen, maar ook door bredere factoren. Een stijgend percentage van de totale ETH supply staat vast in staking contracten. Hierdoor neemt de liquiditeit op exchanges af. Dit kan prijsschommelingen versterken wanneer er plotseling meer koopdruk ontstaat. Daarnaast is Ethereum nog steeds het grootste smart contract platform. Nieuwe standaarden zoals ERC-8004 en ontwikkelingen rond layer-2 oplossingen houden de activiteit hoog. Deze technologische vooruitgang kan de waardepropositie ondersteunen en zo indirect bijdragen aan een ETH prijsherstel. Het belang van de korte termijn dynamiek De komende handelsdagen zullen duidelijk maken of de bulls genoeg kracht hebben om door de weerstandszone rond $4.550 te breken. Voor de bears ligt de focus juist op het verdedigen van de prijsregio rond $4.516. De whales, die met grote handelsorders opereren, kunnen hierin een beslissende rol spelen. Het dubbele TD Sequential signaal blijft hoe dan ook een zeldzame gebeurtenis. Voor cryptoanalisten vormt het een objectief aanknopingspunt om de kracht van de huidige Ethereum trend te toetsen. Vooruitblik op de ETH koers Ethereum liet twee opeenvolgende TD Sequential signalen zien op de uurgrafiek, iets wat zelden voorkomt. Deze formatie viel samen met steun rond $4.516, waar de bulls actief werden. Als de Ethereum koers boven dit niveau blijft, kan er ruimte ontstaan richting $4.550 en mogelijk $4.650. Zakt de prijs toch opnieuw onder $4.516, dan komen $4.500 en $4.450 in beeld als nieuwe steunzones. De combinatie van zeldzame indicatoren en een sterke fundamentele basis maakt Ethereum interessant voor zowel technische als fundamentele analyses. Of de bulls het momentum echt kunnen overnemen, zal blijken zodra de Ethereum koers de eerstvolgende weerstanden opnieuw test. Koop je crypto via Best Wallet Best wallet is een topklasse crypto wallet waarmee je anoniem crypto kan kopen. Met meer dan 60 chains gesupport kan je al je main crypto coins aanschaffen via Best Wallet. Best wallet - betrouwbare en anonieme wallet Best wallet - betrouwbare en anonieme wallet Meer dan 60 chains beschikbaar voor alle crypto Vroege toegang tot nieuwe projecten Hoge staking belongingen Lage transactiekosten Best wallet review Koop nu via Best Wallet Let op: cryptocurrency is een zeer volatiele en ongereguleerde investering. Doe je eigen onderzoek. Het bericht Ethereum koers toont zeldzaam dubbel koopsignaal en richt zich op $4.550 is geschreven door Dirk van Haaster en verscheen als eerst op Bitcoinmagazine.nl.
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Coinstats2025/09/17 23:31
Next-Gen Payments, Prediction Markets, and the Future of US iGaming Infrastructure

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Payments infrastructure is quietly becoming one of the most important battlegrounds in digital finance.  It rarely gets the same attention as user interfaces or
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