Written on 2026-01-01: 2025 was the year of “Comprehensive Financialization of Crypto Assets”—regulations began to be implemented into law, ETFs moved toward mass adoption, on-chain finance (RWA/DeFi) increasingly resembled the “new trading layer” of traditional markets, while security incidents and macro shocks pushed “risk management” to the forefront.
A quick overview table (9 items)
Time (2025) Event Key Point in One Sentence
Feb 21 Bybit遭遇约15亿美元盗窃 State-level hackers turn “exchange security” into a geopolitical issue
May 7 Ethereum Pectra upgrade launched Ethereum continues to bet on a “more user-friendly + more scalable” path
Jun 17 → Jul 18 US “GENIUS Act” stablecoin legislation passed and signed Stablecoins gain their first systemic federal framework in the US
Sep 18 (Key milestone) SEC introduces new rules for spot crypto ETFs “One-by-one approval” becomes “rule-based mass listing”
Oct 6 Bitcoin hits new high (historic high > $125,000) Institutional and policy expectations drive a “peak moment”
Oct 10–11 Largest liquidation waterfall in history (>$19 billion) Leverage + macro news crush bullish sentiment within hours
Oct–Dec Bitcoin shifts to a full-year retracement: first annual decline (since 2022) BTC increasingly resembles “macro risk assets” rather than independent markets
Oct–Dec RWA/tokenization reaches institutional scale: BUIDL assets surpass $2 billion, “on-chain government bond yields” become a replicable product paradigm
Nov Europe discusses “Euro stablecoin” and MiCA risk boundaries Stablecoins start being viewed as tools for “currency competition/financial sovereignty”
February: Bybit’s approximately $1.5 billion theft—security enters the “state-level confrontation” era
What happened
On Feb 21, Bybit disclosed its Ethereum wallet was attacked, with about $1.5 billion assets transferred out; subsequently, law enforcement and research agencies pointed fingers at North Korea-linked hacker groups.
Why it matters
Scale shatters history: Such incidents are no longer “single-point accidents” but systemic shocks that can alter market risk appetite and regulatory attitudes.
Attack methods become professionalized: Not just vulnerabilities, but more often social engineering, supply chain, signature/permission chain vulnerabilities, and process-level weaknesses.
Spillover effects: Exchanges, custody, wallet signing strategies, risk control, and insurance systems are forced to align with bank-level standards.
Implications for 2026
Exchange users: Prioritize storing large assets in more controllable custody/cold storage; view “withdrawal peaks” as liquidity stress tests.
Projects/Institutions: Treat permission management, signing strategies, and emergency drills as “core product capabilities,” not just compliance add-ons.
What happened
On May 7, Ethereum advanced Pectra as a key network upgrade for the next phase.
Why it matters
User experience focus: Continued iteration on account abstraction, transaction experience, developer toolchains, making “on-chain operations as smooth as app use.”
Scalability/cost: Ongoing enhancements in rollups and data availability, providing Layer 2 with lower costs and more stability.
Ecosystem signals: Ethereum’s competitiveness is no longer solely based on “decentralization,” but on a comprehensive mix of “performance, cost, experience, and regulatory friendliness.”
Implications for 2026
“L2 + account abstraction + compliance gateways” will continue to be the explosive combo;
ETH’s narrative more resembles “global settlement layer + financial infrastructure” rather than just a “public chain token.”
June–July: US stablecoin legislation (GENIUS Act)—from “gray area” to “public infrastructure”
What happened
On June 17, the US Senate passed a bill establishing a regulatory framework for dollar stablecoins; on July 17, the House approved it and sent it to the President; on July 18, the President signed it into law.
Why it matters
First clear federal framework: More explicit institutional arrangements for “reserve assets, compliance obligations, issuing entities.”
Accelerated payments and clearing: Stablecoins begin to be treated by mainstream finance as “cross-border, 24/7, programmable” payment/settlement tools.
Industry shift: Exchanges, payment firms, banks, tech companies will develop new product combinations around stablecoins (wallets, payments, settlement, yield cash management).
Implications for 2026
Stablecoins enter “scale competition”: whoever obtains compliance licenses and channels may benefit from network effects.
“Stablecoin + government bond yields + institutional custody” will form a standardized product stack.
September: SEC’s new rules for spot crypto ETF listing—“Approval mode” begins to operate like “listing rules”
What happened
On Sep 18, the SEC adopted new listing standards, significantly lowering the barriers for case-by-case review of spot crypto ETFs; market expectations shift from “single assets” to “multi-asset parallel listings.”
Why it matters
More institutionalized capital entry: ETFs are the “default channel” for traditional funds; clear rules mean replicable product supply.
Asset selection logic shifts: Assets included in ETF discussions will prioritize liquidity, transparency, market manipulation risks, and compliance narratives.
Reshaping competition: Institutional issuers, exchanges, market makers, custodians will form new industry chain divisions and bargaining structures.
Implications for 2026
“Spot + staking yields + indexation” will be the main battleground for product innovation;
But ETFs do not eliminate “risks,” they just package risks in more familiar formats.
October 6: Bitcoin hits a new all-time high—narrative shifts from “halving cycle” to “institutional funds + policy expectations”
What happened
In early October, Bitcoin’s price broke new highs, reaching above the $125,000 range.
Why it matters
Institutional pricing becomes stronger: Capital flows, policy expectations, macro risk appetite influence BTC more like US stocks.
Market structure changes: Increased derivatives and leverage lead to more “sharp rises and falls” and liquidations.
Narrative switch: From “pure crypto-native cycle” to “part of global asset allocation.”
October 10–11: Largest liquidation event in history (>$19 billion)—macro shock, leverage explodes
What happened
Around October 10–11, macro events like tariffs and export controls triggered a series of declines and liquidations in crypto markets, totaling over $19 billion (record).
Why it matters
“Macro–crypto” linkage confirmed: BTC increasingly acts as a risk asset, macro shocks penetrate on-chain and exchange positions.
Leverage as amplifier: Liquidation cascades turn “seemingly reasonable retracements” into “nonlinear collapses.”
Risk management paradigm upgrades: Options hedging, layered positions, liquidity management shift from “professional skills” to “survival skills.”
Implications for 2026
Any “structural bull market” should assume a “leverage wipeout day” will happen;
You are not fighting the market, but fighting the market structure (leverage, liquidity, risk rules).
Full year: Bitcoin ends the year with a retracement—“cost of becoming a risk asset”
What happened
Despite reaching new highs in October, Bitcoin shifted to a yearly decline by year-end (first annual decline since 2022).
Why it matters
Higher macro sensitivity: When policy and liquidity change marginally, BTC’s volatility is no longer “self-contained.”
Increased correlation: Stronger linkage with traditional risk assets, weakening “diversification” effects temporarily.
Investor structure change: Dominance of institutions and derivatives makes volatility patterns more like mature markets (but with larger swings).
RWA/tokenization: From concept to scale—BUIDL surpasses $2 billion, on-chain dividends exceed $100 million
What happened
By December, BlackRock’s tokenized liquidity fund BUIDL’s assets exceeded $2 billion, distributing over $100 million in returns; industry debates regulatory and investor protection issues around “tokenized stocks.”
Why it matters
Product paradigm established: Using blockchain to hold “cash management/government bond yields”—assets with the highest traditional financial demand—moved on-chain.
Driven by institutions, not DeFi takeover: More like banks/asset managers using blockchain for “faster settlement, better back-office,” rather than complete disintermediation.
Clearer risk boundaries: Tokenized stocks may lack traditional shareholder rights and protections, raising regulatory concerns—“tradeable ≠ equivalent to securities rights.”
Implications for 2026
RWA’s main theme is not “more cool,” but “more cost-effective, faster, compliant”;
Future growth points: tokenized cash management → tokenized bills/funds → more complex capital market products.
Europe: Euro stablecoin and MiCA risk discussions—stablecoins increasingly viewed as “monetary sovereignty” issues
What happened
In late 2025, EU finance ministers discussed how to promote euro stablecoin issuance; European regulators also debated cross-border issuance models, liquidity, and financial stability risks, emphasizing the need to clarify MiCA boundaries.
Why it matters
Stablecoins as “US dollar influence carriers”: The larger the dollar stablecoin scale, the more direct the challenge to the financial sovereignty of other currency zones.
Balance of regulation and innovation: Europe aims to prevent risks while avoiding “payment and settlement tracks” being locked by dollar stablecoins.
Potential for deeper global split: Divergent rules on stablecoins, custody, KYC, cross-border flows may cause market segmentation.
In 2025, these three main threads connect:
From “verbal” to “legal” regulation: Stablecoin legislation + ETF rules push the industry from gray areas into institutionalization.
BTC fully enters the macro asset track: New highs and crashes driven by policy and liquidity, leverage amplifies volatility.
On-chain finance “adopted” by institutions: RWA/tokenization not to replace banks but to enable more efficient banking/asset management.
Looking toward 2026: 6 variables to watch
Stablecoin penetration: Who will scale first in payments, cross-border, exchange settlement, on-chain yield products?
ETF expansion speed: Which assets will enter mainstream pools? How will rules evolve?
Security “arms race”: Will exchanges/custody/wallets see “bank-grade insurance + mandatory standards”?
Next RWA step: After government bonds, how will the compliance paths for bills, funds, credit assets develop?
DeFi compliance: How will decentralized exchanges enter the US and major regulatory regions?
Macro shocks and leverage cycles: Where will the next “liquidation day” come from? Tariffs, interest rates, USD liquidity?
Finally:
Happy New Year! Wishing everyone in the crypto space a smooth 2026—avoid pitfalls, seize opportunities, keep positions steady, maintain a calm mindset, and operate with stability; may your gains soar and wealth flow abundantly!
Sources (by event)
Reuters: Bybit theft disclosure (2025-02-21), FBI attribution (2025-02-27), etc.
Consensys / Industry announcements: Ethereum Pectra upgrade timeline and details (2025-05-07)
Reuters: US stablecoin legislation passed by Senate (2025-06-17), House approval (2025-07-17), President signing (2025-07-18)
Reuters: SEC spot crypto ETF listing rules (2025-09-18) and ETF progress (2025-10–11)
Reuters: Bitcoin hitting new highs report (2025-10-06), year-end retracement and liquidation data (2025-12)
CoinDesk: BlackRock BUIDL assets and on-chain dividend milestones (2025-12-30)
Reuters: Investor protection debates on tokenized stocks (2025-10-08) and tokenization trend commentary (2025-12-30)
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2025 Cryptocurrency Industry Major Events Annual Review
Written on 2026-01-01: 2025 was the year of “Comprehensive Financialization of Crypto Assets”—regulations began to be implemented into law, ETFs moved toward mass adoption, on-chain finance (RWA/DeFi) increasingly resembled the “new trading layer” of traditional markets, while security incidents and macro shocks pushed “risk management” to the forefront.
A quick overview table (9 items)
Time (2025) Event Key Point in One Sentence Feb 21 Bybit遭遇约15亿美元盗窃 State-level hackers turn “exchange security” into a geopolitical issue May 7 Ethereum Pectra upgrade launched Ethereum continues to bet on a “more user-friendly + more scalable” path Jun 17 → Jul 18 US “GENIUS Act” stablecoin legislation passed and signed Stablecoins gain their first systemic federal framework in the US Sep 18 (Key milestone) SEC introduces new rules for spot crypto ETFs “One-by-one approval” becomes “rule-based mass listing” Oct 6 Bitcoin hits new high (historic high > $125,000) Institutional and policy expectations drive a “peak moment” Oct 10–11 Largest liquidation waterfall in history (>$19 billion) Leverage + macro news crush bullish sentiment within hours Oct–Dec Bitcoin shifts to a full-year retracement: first annual decline (since 2022) BTC increasingly resembles “macro risk assets” rather than independent markets Oct–Dec RWA/tokenization reaches institutional scale: BUIDL assets surpass $2 billion, “on-chain government bond yields” become a replicable product paradigm Nov Europe discusses “Euro stablecoin” and MiCA risk boundaries Stablecoins start being viewed as tools for “currency competition/financial sovereignty”
What happened On Feb 21, Bybit disclosed its Ethereum wallet was attacked, with about $1.5 billion assets transferred out; subsequently, law enforcement and research agencies pointed fingers at North Korea-linked hacker groups.
Why it matters
Implications for 2026
What happened On May 7, Ethereum advanced Pectra as a key network upgrade for the next phase.
Why it matters
Implications for 2026
What happened On June 17, the US Senate passed a bill establishing a regulatory framework for dollar stablecoins; on July 17, the House approved it and sent it to the President; on July 18, the President signed it into law.
Why it matters
Implications for 2026
What happened On Sep 18, the SEC adopted new listing standards, significantly lowering the barriers for case-by-case review of spot crypto ETFs; market expectations shift from “single assets” to “multi-asset parallel listings.”
Why it matters
Implications for 2026
What happened In early October, Bitcoin’s price broke new highs, reaching above the $125,000 range.
Why it matters
What happened Around October 10–11, macro events like tariffs and export controls triggered a series of declines and liquidations in crypto markets, totaling over $19 billion (record).
Why it matters
Implications for 2026
What happened Despite reaching new highs in October, Bitcoin shifted to a yearly decline by year-end (first annual decline since 2022).
Why it matters
What happened By December, BlackRock’s tokenized liquidity fund BUIDL’s assets exceeded $2 billion, distributing over $100 million in returns; industry debates regulatory and investor protection issues around “tokenized stocks.”
Why it matters
Implications for 2026
What happened In late 2025, EU finance ministers discussed how to promote euro stablecoin issuance; European regulators also debated cross-border issuance models, liquidity, and financial stability risks, emphasizing the need to clarify MiCA boundaries.
Why it matters
In 2025, these three main threads connect:
Looking toward 2026: 6 variables to watch
Finally:
Happy New Year! Wishing everyone in the crypto space a smooth 2026—avoid pitfalls, seize opportunities, keep positions steady, maintain a calm mindset, and operate with stability; may your gains soar and wealth flow abundantly!
Sources (by event) Reuters: Bybit theft disclosure (2025-02-21), FBI attribution (2025-02-27), etc. Consensys / Industry announcements: Ethereum Pectra upgrade timeline and details (2025-05-07) Reuters: US stablecoin legislation passed by Senate (2025-06-17), House approval (2025-07-17), President signing (2025-07-18) Reuters: SEC spot crypto ETF listing rules (2025-09-18) and ETF progress (2025-10–11) Reuters: Bitcoin hitting new highs report (2025-10-06), year-end retracement and liquidation data (2025-12) CoinDesk: BlackRock BUIDL assets and on-chain dividend milestones (2025-12-30) Reuters: Investor protection debates on tokenized stocks (2025-10-08) and tokenization trend commentary (2025-12-30)