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Crypto is having a breakout summer and bitcoin isn't the reason.

crypto :: 2025-08-13 :: source - yahoo finance

By Hamza Shaban

This is The Takeaway from today's Morning Brief, which you can sign up to receive in your inbox every morning along with:

  • The Chart of the Day

  • What we're watching

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Riding high from a series of legislative wins and a wave of new financial initiatives, crypto investors are on the up and up. Another blast of positive catalysts has given the crypto world even more room to run this week.

And most notably, the big news items don't really involve bitcoin.

Circle (CRCL), the issuer of the second-largest stablecoin, posted better-than-expected quarterly revenue for the first time since going public.

Bitmine (BMNR), an Ethereum treasury company, announced plans to sell up to another $20 billion worth of stock to boost its holdings of the cryptocurrency.

And an array of popular altcoins are gaining ground.

The moves collectively reflect the warm embrace of the Trump administration, which has championed the crypto industry and shifted the regulatory environment long seen as an obstacle to the adoption and growth of digital currency.

But the success of Wall Street's crypto hedges also underscores rising institutional interest. Despite the risks, and perhaps because of them, more investors are growing comfortable with crypto exposure. And companies are chasing the returns of amassing tokens in a feedback loop that, however fleeting and precarious, seems to be paying off.

Home to the fastest-growing major stablecoin over the past year, Circle shares are up more than 400% from its IPO price of $31 per share. As our colleague Ines Ferré reported, the company has been at the center of optimism over the stablecoin market following the passage of the GENIUS Act, legislation that creates a framework for digital tokens backed by assets such as the US dollar.

Circle makes much of its money from interest income, specifically from short-term Treasury bills backing its stablecoin, USDC. After announcing a new blockchain network for stablecoin finance on Tuesday, shares rose another 3%. It's a play that could deliver some of crypto's promise for innovation to the financial services industry, and Wall Street and investors are paying attention — and making sure they're involved.

Bitmine's surge highlights another pillar of crypto's ascendance in the financial world: the rise of crypto treasury companies. Riffing off the playbook of Strategy (MSTR), which sells new shares and debt to buy and hold more bitcoin, other players are finding success by accumulating other currencies, like ethereum.

Bitmine, whose board is led by investor Tom Lee, announced this week that its holdings of ETH now account for roughly 1% of all tokens in circulation, sending the stock up more than 14%. The company's goal is to eventually reach 5% of the world's outstanding ETH tokens. Shares have surged over 600% this year.

As this newsletter has written recently, the crypto accumulation strategy isn't working for every imitator, but it does work, as bitcoin continues to climb.

But it's not just the dominant tokens that are gaining steam. Over the past week, the 10 largest digital currencies, according to data from CoinMarketCap, have gained. As our colleague Jake Conley reported, Ripple (RIPL.PVT) and Chainlink (LINK-USD) are among the altcoins rallying, fueled by an acquisition of a payment platform and the launch of a token reserve, respectively.

The heady action seems far removed from the crypto winters of the past. But if this is the dawn of a new financial system, as crypto bulls like to profess, this summer is making it a lot easier to make that case.

Hamza Shaban is a reporter for Yahoo Finance covering markets and the economy. Follow Hamza on X @hshaban.


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