NEWS DIGEST – 29.09.2025 🚀
1) 🇨🇳 China launches offshore yuan-stablecoin in Kazakhstan
China has rolled out AxCNH, the first regulated offshore yuan-linked stablecoin, in Kazakhstan, via fintech AnchorX on Conflux’s infrastructure. It’s a move designed to extend China’s blockchain and currency influence abroad.
Why it matters: While China bans crypto domestically, this shows they are experimenting with cross-border digital currency tools. It’s a strategic play—weakening dollar dominance, embedding yuan into trade corridors, and testing digital money infrastructure in allied nations.
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2) 🖥️ CBI adds 180 Bitcoin S21 Hydro servers to mining fleet
Crypto Blockchain Industries (Paris-listed) just commissioned 180 new S21 Hydro miners (335 TH/s each). The deployment cost ~$1.6M, projected revenue ~$1.1M/year, with profits over $500K assuming BTC ~ $110K.
Why it matters: Expanding mining capacity is a bet on sustained BTC price and favorable energy/efficiency regime. CBI’s “Acquire, Create, Earn (ACE)” strategy is showing real execution—worth watching how they manage operational costs and difficulty shifts.
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3) 💥 Massive leveraged unwind forces BTC, ETH, XRP down
A giant $1.7B liquidation event in futures markets drove sharp falls: Bitcoin dipped ~0.2%, Ethereum ~0.3%, XRP ~0.5%. Overleveraged longs across altcoins got squeezed.
Why it matters: These types of volatility flushes shake weak hands, reset support levels, and force re-evaluation of leverage risk. Also a warning: macro or policy surprise can trigger outsized moves when risk is crowded.
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4) 🇦🇺 Australia proposes crypto rules under existing financial licences
The Australian government introduced draft crypto regulation using its current AFSL (Australian Financial Services Licence) regime. It would impose conduct, governance, and penalties (up to AU$16.5M or 10% of turnover) on crypto service providers. Exemptions exist for small-scale operators.
Why it matters: Aligning crypto with existing financial licenses brings clarity (and constraints). Australia could become a more stable, regulated market; those entering late may face steep compliance bars. The exemptions show an attempt to balance innovation & oversight.