Here’s what happened in crypto today
21 März 2025 - 10:52PM
Cointelegraph


Today in crypto, the US Treasury Department has officially
removed crypto mixer Tornado Cash from its sanctions list.
Meanwhile, crypto investors' appetite for speculation is cooling,
as rising scams and global geopolitical tensions dampen sentiment.
In Australia, the government has pledged to tackle crypto
debanking, unveiling plans for a new regulatory framework focused
on digital asset exchanges.
Tornado mixer dropped from US blacklist
The US Treasury Department
has dropped cryptocurrency mixer Tornado Cash from its
sanctions list, the agency said on March 21.
The removal follows a January ruling by a US
appeals court, which said the Treasury’s Office of Foreign
Assets Control (OFAC) cannot sanction Tornado’s smart contracts
because they are not the property of any foreign national.
According to the January court ruling, “Tornado Cash’s immutable
smart contracts (the lines of privacy-enabling software code) are
not the ‘property’ of a foreign national or entity, meaning […]
OFAC overstepped its congressionally defined authority.”
In a March 21 statement, the Treasury
said OFAC removed several dozen Tornado-affiliated smart contract
addresses on the Ethereum blockchain network from its sanctions
list.
Tornado’s native token, Tornado Cash (TORN), was up around 60%
on the news, according to data from CoinMarketCap. As of
March 21, TORN has a market capitalization of around $73 million
and a fully diluted value (FDV) of nearly $140 million, the data
shows.
TORN is up around 60% on the news. Source:
CoinMarketCap
Bitcoin speculative appetite declines as investors seek
safety
Speculative appetite is vanishing from the crypto markets, as
investors are looking for safer digital asset investments following
the recent wave of memecoin scams and macroeconomic
uncertainty.
Bitcoin’s hot supply metric, which measures the Bitcoin (BTC)
aged one week or less, is down over 50%, from 5.9% at the end of
November to just 2.3% on March 20, Glassnode data shows.
Bitcoin hot supply metric. Source:
Glassnode
The metric’s decline signals an investor shift to safer
investment positioning amid the recent market volatility, according
to Ryan Lee, chief analyst at Bitget Research.
Australia outlines crypto regulation plan, promises action on
debanking
Australia’s government, under its ruling center-left Labor
Party, has proposed a new
crypto framework regulating exchanges under existing financial
services laws and has promised to tackle debanking.
It comes ahead of a federal election slated to be held on or
before May 17, which current polling shows is shaping up to a dead
heat between Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labor and the
opposing Coalition led by Peter Dutton.
Source: Kate
Cooper
The Treasury Department said in a
March 21 statement that crypto exchanges, custody services and some
brokerage firms that trade or store crypto will come under the new
laws.
The regime imposes similar compliance requirements as other
financial services in the country, such as following rules
safeguarding customer assets, obtaining an Australian Financial
Services Licence and meeting minimum capital requirements.
Albanese’s government intends to release a draft of the
legislation for public consultation. However, a change of
government could be on the horizon with a looming federal election,
a date for which is yet to be called.
...
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