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PayPal Crypto Head Says Banks Are Needed to Unlock Full Stablecoin Potential

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Banks need to be part of crypto for stablecoins to succeed—that was the message from Jose Fernandez da Ponte, PayPal’s senior vice president of digital currencies, during a panel discussion at Consensus 2025 in Toronto.

«It might sound counterintuitive, but you do want the banks in this space,» Fernandez da Ponte said, adding that their infrastructure—from custody to providing fiat rails—will be essential if stablecoins are to scale beyond crypto-native circles. «You want that connectivity and that fabric to work.»

His remarks came amid efforts to bring regulatory clarity for digital assets in the U.S., with lawmakers inching closer to pass stablecoin legislation that could redefine the market and allow banks to enter the space.

Read more: U.S. Senate’s Stablecoin Push Still Alive as Bill May Return to Floor: Sources

«This is going to be a big unlock,» said Anthony Soohoo, chairman and CEO of MoneyGram, a cross-border money transfer service. «There’s always hesitation: Can I trust this? [The stablecoin legislation] is going to answer a lot of those questions.»

Both executives said they expect a wave of new issuers to enter the market once regulation is in place, followed by a period of consolidation. “It’s not going to be 300 stablecoins, and it’s not going to be just two,” Fernandez da Ponte said.

Currently, Tether’s USDT USDT and Circle’s USDC USDC dominate the market, representing nearly 90% of the $230 billion asset class. PayPal’s PYUSD PYUSD, launched in 2023, lags far behind with $900 million supply. Fernandez da Ponte pushed back on market cap as the primary metric for success. «We look at velocity, active wallets, number of transactions,” he said. “Those are what drive real usage.»

In countries with high inflation and volatile currencies, consumers are seeking out dollar-backed stablecoins as stores of value and tools for cross-border payments. Soohoo said MoneyGram, which operates in over 200 countries with nearly half a million cash-access locations, is helping facilitate that access.

«We see ourselves between physical finance and digital finance,» Soohoo said. «A lot of consumers in local economies want to hold value in dollars but still need to access it as cash to spend in places that don’t take digital currency.»

Stablecoin adoption in developed countries, meanwhile, has been slower. With clear regulation in place, stablecoins can streamline corporate treasury operations and cross-border disbursement, Fernandez da Ponte noted.

«We used to have this mad rush on Friday to make sure money was in the right places before the weekend,» he said. «Now we’re sending money to the Philippines and Africa in ten minutes with stablecoins.»

Both executives noted that real-world use cases, not hype, will determine if stablecoins could reach the trillion-dollar scale in the next years that’s been projected.

«Consumers don’t care about stablecoins. They care about solving problems.» Fernandez da Ponte said. «We’re five years into a ten-year journey, and regulation will define the next half.»

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XRP Slides 4% as Bitcoin Traders Cautious of $105K Price Resistance

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XRP fell over 4% in the past 24 hours, leading losses among major cryptocurrencies as the broader market stalls after last week’s sharp rally.

Bitcoin continues to hover above $104,000, with traders predicting a steady rise past $105,000, a level now acting as both psychological and technical resistance.

The crypto market’s total capitalization declined 2% to $3.3 trillion, according to CoinGecko, with majors such as Ethereum (ETH) and Solana (SOL) also pausing near their 200-day moving averages — a region that may either signal consolidation or the start of a short-term pullback.

“Bitcoin has been smoothly forming a top for the past seven days,” said Alex Kuptsikevich, chief market analyst at FxPro. “This kind of setup typically signals a correction is due, especially when paired with slippage in equities and profit-taking in gold.”

The Crypto Fear & Greed Index dipped slightly from 73 to 70, still in “greed” territory but suggesting momentum has faded.

SignalPlus’s Augustine Fan said markets may continue to grind higher unless equities roll over, but warned that BTC is likely to struggle against interim resistance at $105,000. He noted Ethereum may benefit more in the near term as part of a broader crypto uptrend, especially with improving inflows and relative strength in altcoins.

Fan also reiterated a macro shift in capital allocation that favors crypto. “We think the ‘anti-dollar’ ledge is more structural this time around,” he said. “Investors are increasingly rotating into emerging markets, precious metals, and crypto as a way to hedge geopolitical and currency risk.”

BTC’s recent rally appears to be fueled by spot market demand, not excessive leverage, according to K33 Research. That undercurrent of buying, especially from retail and Asia-based wealth managers, could help sustain bullish sentiment, even if near-term price action remains range-bound.

Nick Ruck of LVRG Research added that the lull in price may stem from caution ahead of upcoming macroeconomic data and concerns about the longer-term impact of recent U.S. trade deals.

«The lull in activity may stem from anticipated volatility ahead of future macroeconomic and policy reports, along with investor reactions to inflation fears from American consumers that drove less spending in the country last month,» Ruck said.

«Traders are cautiously bullish as the US trade deals push prices higher, but concerns remain about the long-term impact from tariffs after the deals with major trading partners have been finalized,» he added.

For now, markets are holding their breath just below key breakout levels, with the next decisive move likely to reset direction across the board.

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DOJ Will Still Pursue Roman Storm Case Despite Blanche Memo, Prosecutors Say

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The U.S. Department of Justice will drop part of one count of its case against Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm due to a recent policy memo, the agency said Thursday.

The DOJ will not go to trial on a charge alleging Storm failed to comply with money transmitter business registration rules, but still plans to go to trial in July over allegations he knowingly transmitted funds tied to crimes, conspired to commit money laundering and conspired to violate sanctions law, the DOJ said in a letter filed to the judge overseeing its case.

«The Government writes to update the Court regarding this case, which is scheduled for trial on July 14, 2025,» the letter said. «After review of this case, this Office and the Office of the Deputy Attorney General have determined that this prosecution is consistent with the letter and spirit of the April 7, 2025 Memorandum from the Deputy Attorney General.»

The April 7 memo, authored by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, directed prosecutors not to pursue cases where regulations may be unclear, or did not meet certain criteria, specifically saying the DOJ should end «regulation by prosecution.» Prosecutors in another case against the developers of crypto mixer Samourai Wallet have already asked a judge overseeing that case to pause it while they consider the memo.

In a statement, Brian Klein of Waymaker LLP told CoinDesk that his firm, which represents Storm, believes «that this case should never have been brought.»

«Its dismissal would be consistent with the policies of the Trump Administration and the principles outlined by the Department of Justice in its recent cryptocurrency guidance memo,» he said. «Roman’s prosecution is a threat to the entire crypto industry and the interests of justice will be best served by its swift dismissal. We will not cease to fight for Roman and that result.»

Klein spoke at CoinDesk’s Consensus 2025 conference in Toronto on Wednesday, where he also shared his view that the case should not have been brought.

«One of the defenses we’ve raised, which is recognized in the U.S., is that coding — literally typing out code — you are given free speech protections for coding,» he said. «It’s just as if you wrote a book or you did some other type of expressive activity.»

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Dave Portnoy Says Meme Coins Are ‘Gambling’ and Not Built to Last

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“I don’t think it’s here to stay,” Dave Portnoy said, referring to meme coins—the same corner of crypto he’s often poured fuel on through his social media antics.

Speaking on stage at Consensus 2025 with Tom Farley, CEO of crypto exchange Bullish, the Barstool Sports founder peeled back the layers of his short, chaotic stint in the meme coin world. With his usual brash candor, Portnoy described a journey of sudden windfalls, legal landmines, and the kind of public backlash that might make even the most hardened internet provocateur think twice.

“I love the rush, I’m a gambler at heart,” he admitted. “But then the smart part of me is like, is it worth the hate?” The conversation was part of a broader discussion about crypto’s culture of speculation and hype, where meme coins — tokens created more for jokes than utility — have captured the imagination of young, risk-hungry traders. Portnoy, who built Barstool into a media empire on viral content and sports gambling, found himself swept into the same digital fever.

It started with SafeMoon, one of the earliest viral tokens of the COVID-era crypto boom. Portnoy saw social media posts about traders making “9,000,000,000%” gains, bought in, made a video mocking its lack of real value — and got sued anyway.

“They basically said SafeMoon paid me to promote them. Total lie. Cost me $20k to get out of the lawsuit.” he said.

Undeterred, he pushed further. Inspired by the idea of launching a Barstool coin and skipping the hassle of going public, Portnoy began researching how meme coins are made. That led him to a developer who pitched a token called Libra, allegedly backed by the president of Argentina.

Portnoy bought $4.5 million worth.

“I was at SNL with Lady Gaga. I was just typing. I’m like, what the hell is going on here?” he said. The developer had told him Elon Musk would tweet about it. Instead, the president disavowed any involvement. “I lost all my money.”

Portnoy says he got lucky — the developer later reimbursed him in full, though he isn’t sure why. “I’m one of the lucky ones, but you know, I’m not going to not take that money back.”

Despite the losses, Portnoy kept dabbling. He launched coins called Greed and Greed 2, leaning into the satire. Another coin, JailStool, emerged from public outrage at his meme coin experiments. Someone else created the token, but Portnoy embraced the name and posted about it. At one point, he claims, a $1,000 investment ballooned to $7 million — within an hour.

“It took me 13 years to make that kind of money at Barstool,” he said.

But what goes up almost always crashes back down. Portnoy says he’s lost track of how many times he’s been accused of “rug pulls,” a term for when insiders dump a coin and leave latecomers with worthless tokens.

He described meme coins as a rigged game, dominated by a core group of early buyers with trading bots and algorithms who know when to exit. “It’s the same group of winners and it’s the same group of losers.”

That realization seems to have changed his appetite. While he teased the possible launch of Greed 3, he admitted the backlash is harder to stomach in real life. One man confronted him in a Las Vegas casino, claiming he lost $200,000. “It’s all fun and games behind the computer but that reinforces people are losing and making real money, and they’re not always taking responsibility for the risk, even though I think they should.”

Despite the money and the memes, he says the meme coin scene is ultimately unsustainable.

“I get why people like it,” he said. “It’s a form of gambling, it’s a Ponzi scheme, I don’t mean that in a negative way.”

Portnoy doesn’t claim to have the answers. But if he’s a weathervane for where meme coin mania might be heading, the forecast looks grim. “I can’t imagine it’s here to stay. I think it’s here to stay for the next four years. What happens after that? I don’t know.”

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