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Dogecoin, Ether Slump 9% as Bitcoin Tumble Leads to $700M in Bullish Liquidations

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Dogecoin (DOGE) and ether (ETH) cratered 9% in the past 24 hours as bitcoin (BTC) stumbled 4.5%, dipping below $80,000 and leading a brutal sell-off that wiped out $700 million in long positions.

Leveraged traders betting on a rally got torched with $420 million in BTC longs and $150 million in ETH longs being liquidated, alongside $30 million in DOGE long losses. Solana (SOL) shed 8%, and XRP slipped 7%, with the broader CoinDesk 20 (CD20) falling more than 6.5%.

Open interest in BTC futures dropped 7% to $45 billion, signaling forced exits as margin calls hit.

“Investors are taking a risk-off approach as the chances for a Federal Reserve interest rate cut diminished after a stable jobs report and anticipation that February’s CPI report will follow similarly to January’s reading,” Nick Ruck, director at LVRG Research, told CoinDesk in a Telegram message.

“Traders may sideline and offset risk in their portfolios until the US economic situation becomes clearer and the need for a rate cut becomes stronger, which may not happen until later this year,” Ruck added.

Monday’s losses extended a two-week downward spiral exacerbated by shaky global sentiment, with the S&P 500 down 2% and the Nasdaq off 3% at the start of the week. The sell-off was driven by renewed fears of the impact of U.S. trade tariffs that are set to kick in next month and renewed fears of a recession after a Donald Trump interview on Sunday.

That was the biggest one-day drop in U.S. equities since September 2022, with the so-called ‘Magnificent 7’ cohort losing $830 billion in market capitalization.

Besides, a stronger U.S. dollar, and a hawkish Federal Reserve signal in late February — with plans of fewer rate cuts in 2025 — and a flight to safe-haven assets gold and Japanese yen have further dented hopes of a recovery in the short term.

One contrarian sentiment indicator, however, presents limited hope for bulls looking for short-term relief. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index is hovering at 15 — deep in “extreme fear” territory — suggesting that capitulation could set the stage for a relief rally.

Singapore-based QCP Capital said watching Treasury yields and dollar strength present cues for further positioning.

“Despite the market turmoil, not all signals are bearish. This wave of risk-off sentiment has driven 10-year Treasury yields down by around 60 bps and weakened the U.S. dollar — a historically positive factor for USD-denominated risk assets like U.S. equities and crypto,” QCP said in a market broadcast on Tuesday.

“Lower yields also provide a reprieve for the U.S. government, easing borrowing costs at a time when refinancing needs are massive. This comes at a critical moment as Trump’s policy roadmap, particularly proposed tax cuts and a more expansionary fiscal stance, takes shape,” the firm added.

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ORQO Debuts in Abu Dhabi With $370M in AUM, Sets Sight on Ripple USD Yield

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ORQO Group, a new institutional asset manager with $370 million in assets under management, has launched on Tuesday with plans to build out a yield platform for Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin.

The group, headquartered in Abu Dhabi, consolidates four entities from both traditional finance and digital assets: Mount TFI, a private debt specialist and licensed fund manager in Poland, Monterra Capital, a multi-strategy digital hedge fund in Malta, blockchain engineering studio Nextrope and decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Soil compliant with MiCA, the EU’s crypto framework.

Already licensed in Poland and Malta, the group is seeking approval from the Financial Services Regulatory Authority at Abu Dhabi Global Market to expand services in the Middle East, a region it sees as a hub for regulated digital asset growth.

«It’s an opportunity to become a global on-chain asset manager,» ORQO CEO Nicholas Motz said in an interview with CoinDesk. «We have all the pieces: the off-chain asset management, and on-chain, too.»

ORQO’s effort is part of a larger trend that’s been reshaping crypto markets: moving traditional financial instruments like private credit, U.S. Treasuries, or trade finance deals onto blockchain networks. The process is also known as tokenization of real-world assets (RWAs). Data from rwa.xyz shows that the RWA market has grown into a nearly $30 billion sector, though it remains tiny compared to traditional finance markets such as the $2 trillion private credit sector. Still, the growth potential is immense: the tokenized RWA market could reach $18.9 trillion by 2033, a joint report by Ripple and BCG projected.

Yield platform Soil is a key piece in ORQO’s gameplan, connecting the firm’s RWA access with crypto capital capital. It aims to provide returns on stablecoins deposits from tokenized private credit, real estate and hedge fund strategies.

As part of the next stage, the firm plans to open several credit pools targeting holders of Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin in the near future, allowing investors such as institutional treasuries or protocol reserves to earn a yield on their holdings.

Read more: Tokenization of Real-World Assets is Gaining Momentum, Says Bank of America

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Coinbase Policy Chief Pushes Back on Bank Warnings That Stablecoins Threaten Deposits

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Contrary to claims from the U.S. banking industry, stablecoins do not pose a risk to the financial system, according to the chief policy officer at crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN), Faryar Shirzad. Banks’ claims that they do are are myths crafted to defend their revenues, he wrote in a Tueday blog post.

«The central claim — that stablecoins will cause a mass outflow of bank deposits — simply doesn’t hold up,» Shirzad wrote. «Recent analysis shows no meaningful link between stablecoin adoption and deposit flight for community banks and there’s no reason to believe big banks would fare any worse.»

Larger lenders still hold trillions of dollars at the Federal Reserve and if deposits were really at risk, he argued, they would be competing harder for customer funds by offering higher interest rates rather than parking cash at the central bank

According to Shirzad, the real reason for banks’ opposition is the payments business. Stablecoins, digital tokens whose value is pegged to a real-life asset such as the dollar, offer faster and cheaper ways to move money, threatening an estimated $187 billion in annual swipe-fee revenue for traditional card networks and banks.

He compared the current pushback to earlier battles against ATMs and online banking, when incumbents warned of systemic dangers but, he said, were ultimately trying to protect entrenched profits.

Shirzad also dismissed reports predicting trillions in potential outflows from deposits into stablecoins, whose total market cap is around $290 billion, according to data from CoinGecko. He stressed that stablecoins are primarily used as payment tools — for trading digital assets or sending funds abroad — not as long-term savings products.

Someone purchasing stablecoins to settle with an overseas supplier, he argued, is opting for a more efficient transaction method the going through their bank, not pulling money from a savings account.

He urged banks to embrace the technology instead of resisting it, saying stablecoin rails could cut settlement times, lower correspondent banking costs and provide round-the-clock payments. Those institutions willing to adapt, he wrote, stand to benefit from the shift.

The U.K., too, faces concerns about the effect of stablecoins on the financial industry.

The Financial Times reported Monday that the Bank of England is considering setting limits on how many «systemic» stablecoins people and companies can hold — setting thresholds as low as 10,000 pounds ($13,600) for individuals and about 10 million pounds for businesses.

Officials define systemic stablecoins as those already widely used for U.K. payments or expected to become so, and say the caps are needed to prevent sudden deposit outflows that could weaken lending and financial stability.

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Deutsche Börse’s Crypto Finance Unveils Connected Custody Settlement for Digital Assets

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Crypto Finance, a subsidiary of Deutsche Börse Group, unveiled AnchorNote, a system designed for institutional clients who want to trade digital assets without moving them out of regulated custody.

The system integrates BridgePort, a network of crypto exchanges and custodians, enabling off-exchange settlement and connectivity to multiple trading venues. By keeping assets in custody while allowing real-time collateral movement, AnchorNote aims to improve capital efficiency and reduce counterparty risk, according to a press release.

The service allows clients to set up dedicated trading lines, with BridgePort handling messaging between venues and Crypto Finance acting as collateral custodian, the press release said. Institutions can manage collateral through a dashboard or integrate the service directly into their existing infrastructure using APIs, it said. APIs, or application programming interfaces, allow software programs to communicate directly with one another.

“Institutional clients face a constant tradeoff between security and capital efficiency,” said Philipp E. Dettwiler, head of custody and settlement at Crypto Finance. “AnchorNote is designed to bridge that gap.”

For traders, the setup eliminates the need for pre-funding exchanges while providing immediate access to liquidity across platforms. In practice, a Swiss bank could pledge bitcoin held in custody and deploy it instantly across multiple trading venues without moving the coins on-chain.

The rollout begins in Switzerland, with Crypto Finance planning to expand across Europe.

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