Tag: crypto

  • Why the UAE is a better crypto hub than Hong Kong

    Why the UAE is a better crypto hub than Hong Kong

    We still remember clearly when Hong Kong abruptly decided it wanted to be a cryptocurrency hub. It was late 2022, and the city, reeling from Covid-19 restrictions, needed to get its mojo back as quickly as possible. The timing was almost comical, coinciding neatly with FTX’s dramatic implosion.

     Almost 3 ½ years later, Hong Kong’s crypto industry has made important strides, mostly in the regulatory space. These include launching a mandatory licensing regime for exchanges (VATP) via the Securities and Futures Commission, approving Bitcoin and Ether ETFs, establishing stablecoin regulations, and allowing regulated retail trading. Overall, these moves have fostered a secure environment for institutional and retail capital.

    While Hong Kong is often compared to Singapore because of geographic proximity and some historic rivalry, it is the United Arab Emirates (UAE) that has emerged as a superior digital asset hub. On the one hand, licensing in the UAE can be faster and more tailored to startups than in Hong Kong, and its 0% tax on crypto trading and mining is attractive. Additionally, the UAE provides direct access to significant Middle Eastern capital, including sovereign wealth funds and family offices.

     Digital assets research firm Chainalysis notes that in the 2024 to 2025 reporting window, the UAE economy received upward of $56 billion in crypto value, growing at 33% annually. While this growth rate is slower than the 86.4% growth rate in the previous period-over-period cycle, it still demonstrates steady continuity in the country’s crypto economy. “The robust expansion of merchant services across smaller transaction sizes indicates that crypto is transitioning from a primarily speculative or investment vehicle to a practical payment solution with real-world utility for UAE consumers and businesses,” Chainalysis said.

    Perhaps most important of all, the UAE seems sure of its crypto ambitions in a way Hong Kong does not. This is not only reflected in the favorable regulatory regime and the broader pro-crypto stance of Abu Dhabi and Dubai; it can also be seen in the high local crypto adoption rate. In fact, at 30%, it is well above Hong Kong’s 3% and the global average of 7%. By the estimates of stablecoin solutions provider Triple-A, the UAE’s crypto adoption rate is the world’s highest.

    In contrast, Hong Kong continues to grapple with mainland China’s tight restrictions on digital assets. Following a Nov. 28 meeting, the People’s Bank of China reiterated that digital assets do not share the legal status of fiat currency and are not permitted as a means of payment in commercial transactions. The PBOC emphasized that under Chinese law, crypto-linked business activity constitutes illegal financial activity.

    Of particular note was the PBOC’s denunciation of stablecoins, which are seeing rapid adoption globally and are on the cusp of mainstream acceptance in many countries and regions—including Hong Kong. “Stablecoins, a form of virtual currency, currently fail to effectively meet requirements for customer identification and anti-money laundering, posing a risk of being used for money laundering, fundraising fraud, and illegal cross-border fund transfers,” the PBOC said in a statement.

    China’s leadership has never been comfortable with decentralized virtual currencies and has instead sought to develop central bank-controlled digital money, the e-CNY. But compared to dollar-backed stablecoins, the digital yuan has much narrower appeal.

    Beijing’s antipathy towards cryptocurrency on the mainland inevitably influences investor perceptions of Hong Kong’s attractiveness as a digital asset hub. While those in the know understand that Hong Kong has plenty of room to experiment with crypto because of the One Country, Two Systems governance model, concerns remain about how the mainland’s restrictions could affect broader crypto market growth.This tension between Hong Kong’s crypto ambitions and mainland China’s restrictions on digital assets is likely to persist, which in the long run could put it at a significant disadvantage compared to the UAE.

  • TRM Labs hits $1 billion valuation

    TRM Labs hits $1 billion valuation

    Crypto crime fighting has become a big business out of necessity. In 2025, over $3.4 billion in cryptocurrency was stolen. About $1.5 billion was attributed to the February 2025 hack of the Bybit exchange, while hacks targeting individuals also rose to over $700 million. North Korea is responsible for the majority of stolen crypto funds.

    One of the biggest crypto crime-fighting businesses is TRM Labs, which announced on Feb. 4 it had reached unicorn status after raising US$70 million in a Series C funding round. Investors in the round included Galaxy Ventures and a group of existing shareholders, such as Goldman Sachs, Bessemer Venture Partners, DRW Venture Capital (DRW VC), Y Combinator, and Citi Ventures. TRM Labs will use the funding to hire AI researchers and engineers while building out its compliance and investigation tools.

    The San Francisco-based company provides software that tracks cryptocurrency transactions to help financial institutions, law enforcement agencies, and governments detect illicit activities. The startup is known for its blockchain forensics, tools for law enforcement to trace illicit funds, analyze digital asset flow, and link wallet addresses to real-world identities. TRM Labs also maintains a large database of over 2.4 billion labeled addresses tied to illicit activities like ransomware, terrorist financing, and darknet markets.

    TRM Labs has posted 150% annual revenue growth over the past five years. Demand for tools to fight digital asset crime has surged as governments increase oversight of cryptocurrencies.

    Unlike competitors that initially focused only on Bitcoin, TRM Labs made an early strategic decision to track multiple blockchains. This provided a significant advantage as criminal networks expanded their use of diverse tokens and emerging networks.

    An example of TRM Labs’ prowess is its expertise on North Korea’s crypto crime. The company calculates that in 2025, North Korea was linked to more than half of the US$2.7 billion stolen in crypto hacks. Instead of directly cashing out, North Korea has effectively outsourced this process to what investigators refer to as the “Chinese Laundromat,” a sprawling, opaque network of underground bankers, OTC brokers, money transmitters, and trade-based laundering intermediaries. These professional money launderers are mainly Chinese shadow-banking brokers who operate across Southeast Asia, buy hacked crypto at a discount, and offer off-chain settlement—often in Chinese yuan. TRM Labs says they “function as high-volume liquidity engines for North Korea.”

    TRM has also formed partnerships with Tron and Tether to combat illicit activities. This cooperation includes establishing the T3 Financial Crime Unit task force that has frozen over $300 million in tainted assets.

    Roughly 40% of TRM’s clientele is in the private sector, a segment growing as banks and payment firms explore tokenized deposits and assets. Its private sector clients include digital asset heavyweights like USDC issuer Circle and Coinbase, as well as PayPal, Robinhood, Stripe, and Visa.

    In the public sector, clients include the FBI, IRS, and U.S. Secret Service, as well as law enforcement in over 50 countries. TRM’s team also includes former federal investigators.

    While TRM has strong capabilities and a solid client list, it does seem to be leaning a bit hard into AI—perhaps to justify its unicorn status and excite investors. “At TRM, we’re building AI for problems that have real consequences for public safety, financial integrity, and national security,” CEO and co-founder Esteban Castaño said in a news release.

    Just about every financial crime-focused startup out there is either using AI in some way or claiming to do so. That isn’t what makes TRM Labs distinct. Rather, it is the company’s ability to trace illicit crypto activity across 100+ blockchains and turn those insights into actionable intelligence.

    At the same time, we will keep an eye on how TRM Labs’ valuation evolves. One of its chief competitors, Chainalysis, was valued at a whopping US$8.6 billion in 2022 but has since fallen to $1.55 billion.