Senate Crypto Showdown: Dems Meet as a16z Pushes CLARITY Act
Democratic senators are meeting to figure out how to move forward with a proposed bill regulating cryptocurrencies, as the White House pushes for action by March 1st.
Democratic senators are meeting to figure out how to move forward with a proposed bill regulating cryptocurrencies, as the White House pushes for action by March 1st.

Behold! The spot Bitcoin ETFs, after five weeks of fiscal hemorrhage-$4 billion, one might whisper-suddenly inhaled $257.7 million in a single day. Fidelity, that old fox, pocketed $83 million, while BlackRock’s iShares danced off with $79 million. What a farce of confidence!

STS Digital, a trading firm specializing in crypto options, said it raised $30 million in a strategic round backed by CMT Digital, crypto exchange Kraken’s parent company Payward, and other investors. (Because who wouldn’t want to throw money at a sector where the only thing more volatile than the prices is the investors’ confidence?)

One particular whale – let’s call them “Whale 0x2bd7” for fun – recently swapped 240 BTC (that’s about $16 million, by the way) for ETH. I mean, sure, just casually moving that much Bitcoin around. Not a big deal, right? Then they decided to borrow $36 million in USDT from Aave. Yeah, that’s right. They didn’t just buy more ETH; they borrowed a small country’s worth of USDT to get even more. Because why not?
It was like a movie thriller when Kalshi caught the bad guys. The platform predicts future events, but Kalshi wasn’t predicting this insider shenanigan! On Feb. 25, Kalshi announced that it had blocked the California politician and the MrBeast editor for engaging in something that’s as old as time – insider trading. After freezing their accounts, Kalshi reported them to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). That’s right, the government is now in on this Hollywood-style drama.

February’s closing act sees BTC trapped in a range that’s been its home since early February. Let’s just say it’s not exactly breaking up with the range. More like… cohabiting.
This so‑called “milestone” cements Gate’s place among the few crypto‑native firms that, by some measure of cleverness, managed to tip their hats to regulators and yet keep their bootlaces fastened on the cutting edge. In other words, they’re trying to blend the reedy old world of ledgers and iron hoops with the wild, unbridled Web3, all while looking dapper enough to please the overseers.
On February 23, 2026, Oobit proudly announced the birth of its Wallet-to-Bank feature, a magical device that crushes the cumbersome “banking wall” known to delay crypto-to-fiat conversions. Forget the slow and expensive bureaucratic mess of correspondent banking (the oh-so-sturdy SWIFT system). Oobit has decided to channel transactions through local, real-time payment rails-names you may recognize, such as SEPA (Europe), ACH (USA), SPEI (Mexico), PIX (Brazil), and INSTAPAY (Philippines). Yes, the future is now, and it moves fast.
Beneath the glittery surface of crypto’s favorite money-tree VC lies a proper kerfuffle. Imagine a room full of grown-ups throwing tantrums because no one can agree who gets the golden star for “Best Dragonfly Inventor.”
Circle Internet Group, trading under NYSE: CRCL, has delivered a performance so robust that even the darker corners of St. Petersburg’s taverns would raise a glass. The heart of this triumph lies in the USDC stablecoin, which scrawls its name across the world’s blockchain ledger like a cruel poem about freedom and dread.