1. Looking Back at 2025: 18 Milestones in the Crypto Industry
As 2025 draws to a close, Jinse Finance presents the "Looking Back at 2025" series of articles to mark the New Year. This review summarizes the progress of the crypto industry throughout the year, and we wish the industry a bright future in the coming year. 2025 saw many milestones in the crypto industry, with increasingly clear policies driving large-scale institutional entry, while also experiencing hacker attacks and market volatility. Below is a chronological list of the most noteworthy industry events of the year. Click to Read
2. Ethereum Foundation: Ethereum State Evolution Path and Future Challenges
Ethereum has grown from a small, experimental network into a key component of global infrastructure.
It settles billions of dollars daily, coordinates thousands of applications, and underpins the entire Layer 2 (L2) network ecosystem. [Click to read more] 3. Post-Election: How Prediction Markets Will Accelerate Again in 2025 During the 2024 US presidential election, prediction markets successfully entered the mainstream—election odds from platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi appeared alongside traditional polling data, becoming alternative indicators of election sentiment. Ultimately, the accuracy of these prediction markets' forecasts of election results far exceeded that of traditional polls.
Click to Read4. Former SEC Legal Counsel Analyzes Key Elements of RWA Compliance
The SEC's shift in attitude towards cryptocurrencies is boosting the development of RWAs, but jurisdiction and revenue restrictions still constrain compliance models. Ashley Ebersole, Chief Legal Officer of Sologenic, points out that the main constraint on real-world assets (RWAs) has always been regulatory involvement rather than technology, and this dynamic is changing significantly in the United States.
Click to Read5. On the Eve of a Major Dollar Depreciation, Bitcoin Awaits the Final Trigger
Last week, the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates to a target range of 3.50%–3.75%—a move that was fully priced in by the market and largely expected. What truly surprised the market was the Fed's announcement that it would purchase $40 billion in short-term Treasury bills (T-bills) per month, which was quickly labeled by some as a "lightweight version of quantitative easing (QE-lite)".