
Crypto boom creates 69,000 new millionaires in the past 12 months
The number of ultra-wealthy crypto individuals is rising sharply, thanks in large part to the surge in Bitcoin, a new report from Henley & Partners has revealed.
The number of ultra-wealthy crypto individuals is rising sharply, thanks in large part to the surge in Bitcoin, a new report from Henley & Partners has revealed.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency appeared to be hit by poor inflation data and cooled government interest.
First Vlad Tenev blew up the brokerage industry’s fee model. Now, thanks in part to his full-on crypto embrace, he has increased his fortune sixfold to $6 billion as he embarks on a global financial services takeover with tokenized stocks, AI-powered investing and a bid to own the rails of the looming $124 trillion generational wealth transfer.
The price of the world’s most valuable cryptocurrency has surged more than 28% this year.
Bitcoin rallied Thursday to a new all-time high above $116,000, the latest milestone for the cryptocurrency in recent months as House Republicans appeared to stoke regulatory optimism among crypto investors.
Crypto is riding high once again, but investors still need to be careful about where they put their money.
Sydney startup Relume is the AI website creator behind www.gettrumpmemes.com, the official domain for President Trump’s controversial $Trump meme coin.
The tech companies have delisted apps developed by a Cambodian company accused of running a multi-billion dollar market for illicit fraud services on Telegram.
The cryptocurrency is the latest move by Haliey Welch to capitalize on her “hawk tuah” meme, following her “Talk Tuah” podcast and AI-powered dating app.
Most in traditional finance have long considered cryptocurrency a joke. Now legions of young meme coin traders are leaning into the absurdity, translating their financial nihilism into a booming—if perilous—$100 billion market.