Key Highlights
This week’s activity in crypto had little to do with price swings and far more to do with how institutions and regulators positioned themselves.
While the broader market stayed relatively steady, some of the biggest moves came from institutions, regulators, and companies quietly stacking assets or drawing clear lines around how crypto will be treated going forward. From BitGo’s long-awaited NYSE debut to MicroStrategy and Bitmine aggressively moving into their treasuries, the week reflected a market that is slowly but steadily maturing.
Here’s a look at what actually mattered.
After years of operating behind the scenes as one of crypto’s most important custodians, BitGo made its public market debut this week.
The company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker BTGO, pricing its IPO at $18 per share and raising $212.8 million. Shares moved higher soon after listing, signalling solid demand from public market investors.
The timing is notable. Custody has quietly become one of the most critical parts of crypto infrastructure, especially as institutions demand clearer regulatory oversight. BitGo now safeguards more than $90 billion in digital assets, and its listing comes as traditional finance increasingly looks for compliant, US-based crypto exposure.
Adding to the momentum, YZi Labs disclosed a strategic investment in BitGo, reinforcing the view that regulated custody is becoming a core pillar of the industry rather than a side business.
If there was any doubt that corporate crypto accumulation was slowing down, this week put it to rest.
MicroStrategy announced another major Bitcoin purchase, spending $2.13 billion to increase its holdings to 709,715 BTC. The company continues to treat Bitcoin as a long-term treasury asset rather than a trade, a strategy it has stuck with through multiple market cycles.
On the Ethereum side, Bitmine Immersion Technologies revealed it had added 35,000 ETH, bringing its total holdings to roughly 4.2 million ETH. The move puts Bitmine among the largest known ETH holders in the public markets.
Together, the purchases underline a shift that has been quietly building: some public companies are no longer “testing” crypto exposure. They are committing to it.
The week also brought a rare bit of good news out of DeFi.
Following a flash loan exploit that drained 1,299 ETH, Makina Finance confirmed it has recovered around 83% of the stolen funds. The recovery came after an MEV builder front-ran the attacker and later returned the funds under the SEAL White Hat Safe Harbor process.
After a 10% bounty, about 1,023 ETH was returned to a recovery wallet.
Makina has since announced that its v1.1 upgrade will go live on Monday, introducing stronger Oracle protections and updated security checks. While the exploit initially sent the token sharply lower, the recovery helped stabilize sentiment toward the end of the week.
Regulation was another major theme — and this week highlighted just how fragmented the global approach still is.
In Europe, Portugal ordered Polymarket to shut down operations within 48 hours, citing laws banning political betting. The move was one of the strongest actions yet taken against prediction markets and signals tighter enforcement across the region.
In contrast, the US saw a more crypto-friendly development. Kansas introduced a bill proposing a state Bitcoin reserve, funded through unclaimed digital assets. If passed, it would mark one of the first instances of a US state formally holding Bitcoin as part of its public financial strategy.
Meanwhile, Binance filed for a MiCA license in Greece, positioning itself to operate legally across the European Union once the framework comes fully into force.
Infrastructure and investment products continued to expand quietly in the background.
Chainlink rolled out 24/5 data streams for US stocks and ETFs, enabling near real-time pricing for traditional assets on-chain. The move is aimed squarely at institutions experimenting with tokenized finance.
At the same time, Grayscale filed an S-1 for a spot BNB ETF and moved to convert its NEAR Trust into a spot ETF listed on NYSE Arca. Reports also suggest the firm is exploring products tied to Avalanche, Hedera, and Hyperliquid.
The message is clear: ETF expansion is no longer limited to Bitcoin and Ethereum.
The coming week will likely hinge on three things:
For now, the trend is clear: institutions are leaning in, regulators are drawing clearer boundaries, and crypto is increasingly behaving like a structured financial market rather than a speculative frontier.
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