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Charbone Hydrogen Corporation

Brossard, Quebec, le 7 octobre 2025 TheNewswire – CORPORATION CHARBONE HYDROGÈNE (TSXV: CH,OTC:CHHYF; OTCQB: CHHYF; FSE: K47) (« CHARBONE » ou la « Société »), une compagnie vouée au déploiement d’un premier réseau de production et de distribution d’hydrogène propre à Ultra Haute Pureté (« UHP ») en Amérique du Nord, est heureuse d’annoncer qu’elle a officiellement pris possession des actifs de production et de ravitaillement en hydrogène de Harnois Énergies Inc. (‘ Harnois ‘).

Cette transaction stratégique permettra à CHARBONE de relocaliser et de réutiliser rapidement des équipements de production d’hydrogène éprouvés à son usine phare de Sorel-Tracy , permettant ainsi la première production d’hydrogène propre à UHP d’ici le début du T4 2025 . En utilisant des actifs déjà opérationnels et éprouvés, CHARBONE prévoit réduire considérablement les coûts d’installation des immobilisations et accélérer la mise sur le marché par rapport au déploiement de nouveaux systèmes.

À la suite de l’annonce de CHARBONE faite le 5 septembre 2025, selon les termes de l’entente, CHARBONE a émis 13 333 334 actions ordinaires à 0,075 $ l’action, soit une contrepartie en actions de 1 million de dollars à Harnois. Des paiements supplémentaires en espèces seront effectués par tranches échelonnées sur deux ans, préservant ainsi le capital pour les initiatives de croissance.

Il est important de noter que Harnois a choisi de recevoir une part importante de la contrepartie en actions de CHARBONE à la valeur du marché. Cette décision souligne la reconnaissance par Harnois des avantages stratégiques à long terme d’une intégration avec CHARBONE , premier fournisseur d’hydrogène propre à UHP au Québec, tout en continuant de se concentrer sur ses activités principales de distribution d’énergie.

« C’est un moment de transformation pour CHARBONE, » dit Dave B. Gagnon, CEO of CHARBONE . « Grâce à ces actifs, nous commencerons la production d’hydrogène propre à UHP à Sorel-Tracy beaucoup plus tôt que prévu, tout en optimisant l’efficacité de nos investissements. Nous sommes fiers de souhaiter la bienvenue à Harnois comme actionnaire au capital de CHARBONE. »

À propos de CORPORATION CHARBONE HYDROGÈNE

CHARBONE est une entreprise intégrée spécialisée dans l’hydrogène propre à Ultra Haute Pureté (UHP) et la distribution stratégique de gaz industriels en Amérique du Nord et en Asie-Pacifique. Elle développe un réseau modulaire de production d’hydrogène vert tout en s’associant à des partenaires de l’industrie pour offrir de l’hélium et d’autres gaz spécialisés sans avoir à construire de nouvelles usines coûteuses. Cette stratégie disciplinée diversifie les revenus, réduit les risques et augmente sa flexibilité. Le groupe Charbone est coté en bourse en Amérique du Nord et en Europe sur la bourse de croissance TSX (TSXV: CH,OTC:CHHYF) ; sur les marchés OTC (OTCQB: CHHYF) ; et à la Bourse de Francfort (FSE: K47) . Pour plus d’informations, visiter www.charbone.com .

Énoncés prospectifs

Le présent communiqué de presse contient des énoncés qui constituent de « l’information prospective » au sens des lois canadiennes sur les valeurs mobilières (« déclarations prospectives »). Ces déclarations prospectives sont souvent identifiées par des mots tels que « a l’intention », « anticipe », « s’attend à », « croit », « planifie », « probable », ou des mots similaires. Les déclarations prospectives reflètent les attentes, estimations ou projections respectives de la direction de Charbone concernant les résultats ou événements futurs, sur la base des opinions, hypothèses et estimations considérées comme raisonnables par la direction à la date à laquelle les déclarations sont faites. Bien que Charbone estime que les attentes exprimées dans les déclarations prospectives sont raisonnables, les déclarations prospectives comportent des risques et des incertitudes, et il ne faut pas se fier indûment aux déclarations prospectives, car des facteurs inconnus ou imprévisibles pourraient faire en sorte que les résultats réels soient sensiblement différents de ceux exprimés dans les déclarations prospectives. Des risques et des incertitudes liés aux activités de Charbone peuvent avoir une incidence sur les déclarations prospectives. Ces risques, incertitudes et hypothèses comprennent, sans s’y limiter, ceux décrits à la rubrique « Facteurs de risque » dans la déclaration de changement à l’inscription de la Société datée du 31 mars 2022, qui peut être consultée sur SEDAR à l’adresse www.sedar.com; ils pourraient faire en sorte que les événements ou les résultats réels diffèrent sensiblement de ceux prévus dans les déclarations prospectives.

Sauf si les lois sur les valeurs mobilières applicables l’exigent, Charbone ne s’engage pas à mettre à jour ni à réviser les déclarations prospectives.

Ni la Bourse de croissance TSX ni son fournisseur de services de réglementation (tel que ce terme est défini dans les politiques de la Bourse de croissance TSX) n’acceptent de responsabilité quant à la pertinence ou à l’exactitude du présent communiqué.

Pour contacter Corporation Charbone Hydrogène :

Téléphone bureau: +1 450 678 7171

Courriel: ir@charbone.com

Benoit Veilleux

Chef de la direction financière et secrétaire corporatif

Copyright (c) 2025 TheNewswire – All rights reserved.

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(TheNewswire)

Charbone Hydrogen Corporation

Brossard, Quebec, October 7, 2025 TheNewswire – Charbone Hydrogen Corporation (TSXV: CH,OTC:CHHYF; OTCQB: CHHYF; FSE: K47) (‘ CHARBONE ‘ or the ‘ Company ‘), a company dedicated to building a North America’s first clean Ultra High Purity (‘ UHP ‘) hydrogen production and distribution network, is pleased to announce that it has officially taken possession of hydrogen production and refuelling assets from Harnois Énergies Inc. (‘ Harnois ‘).

This strategic transaction will enable CHARBONE to rapidly relocate and repurpose proven hydrogen production equipment at its flagship Sorel-Tracy facility , allowing for the first production of clean UHP hydrogen by early Q4 2025 . By utilizing proven, already operational assets, CHARBONE expects to significantly reduce capital installation costs and accelerate time-to-market compared to deploying new systems.

Further to CHARBONE’s announcement made on September 5, 2025, under the terms of the agreement, CHARBONE has issued 13,333,334 common shares at $0.075 per share, representing $1 million in equity consideration to Harnois. Additional cash payments will be made in staged tranches over two years, preserving capital for growth initiatives.

Importantly, Harnois elected to receive a substantial portion of the consideration in CHARBONE equity at market value. This decision underscores Harnois’ recognition of the strategic long-term benefits of aligning with CHARBONE as Quebec’s leading clean UHP hydrogen supplier, while Harnois continues to focus on its core energy distribution businesses.

‘This is a transformative moment for CHARBONE,’ said Dave B. Gagnon, CEO of CHARBONE . ‘With these assets, we will begin producing clean UHP hydrogen in Sorel-Tracy much sooner than anticipated, while optimizing capital efficiency. We are proud to welcome Harnois as a shareholder in the capital of CHARBONE.’

About Charbone Hydrogen Corporation

CHARBONE is an integrated company specializing in clean Ultra High Purity (UHP) hydrogen and the strategic distribution of industrial gases in North America and Asia-Pacific. Through a modular approach, the Company is building a distributed network of green hydrogen production plants while diversifying revenues via helium and specialty gas partnerships. This disciplined model reduces risk, enhances flexibility, and positions CHARBONE as a leader in the transition to a low-carbon future. CHARBONE is listed on the TSX Venture Exchange (TSXV: CH,OTC:CHHYF) , the OTC Markets (OTCQB: CHHYF) , and the Frankfurt Stock Exchange (FSE: K47) . Visit www.charbone.com .

Forward-Looking Statements

This news release contains statements that are ‘forward-looking information’ as defined under Canadian securities laws (‘forward-looking statements’). These forward-looking statements are often identified by words such as ‘intends’, ‘anticipates’, ‘expects’, ‘believes’, ‘plans’, ‘likely’, or similar words. The forward-looking statements reflect management’s expectations, estimates, or projections concerning future results or events, based on the opinions, assumptions and estimates considered reasonable by management at the date the statements are made. Although Charbone believes that the expectations reflected in the forward-looking statements are reasonable, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, and undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements, as unknown or unpredictable factors could cause actual results to be materially different from those reflected in the forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements may be affected by risks and uncertainties in the business of Charbone. These risks, uncertainties and assumptions include, but are not limited to, those described under ‘Risk Factors’ in the Corporation’s Filing Statement dated March 31, 2022, which is available on SEDAR at www.sedar.com; they could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those projected in any forward-looking statements.

Except as required under applicable securities legislation, Charbone undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise forward-looking information.

Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release .

Contact Charbone Hydrogen Corporation

Telephone: +1 450 678 7171

Email: ir@charbone.com

Benoit Veilleux

CFO and Corporate Secretary

Copyright (c) 2025 TheNewswire – All rights reserved.

News Provided by TheNewsWire via QuoteMedia

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Then-Vice President Joe Biden in 2015 told the CIA he would ‘strongly prefer’ an intelligence report documenting Ukrainian officials’ concerns with his family’s ties to ‘corrupt’ business deals in the country ‘not be disseminated’ — and so it wasn’t, according to a newly-declassified email and records made public by the agency. 

CIA Director John Ratcliffe declassified the heavily redacted records, which he said he believes is an example of ‘politicization of intelligence.’

Fox News Digital obtained the declassified documents, which were discovered during a CIA review of historical agency records.

A senior CIA official briefed Fox News Digital on the declassified documents and intelligence report, stating that the intelligence was discovered along with an email showing that Biden ‘expressed a preference to not share the report.’

Representatives for Biden did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

CIA officials discovered and declassified an email dated February 10, 2016, with the subject line stating: ‘RE: OVP query regarding draft [REDACTED].’ The email was sent to the CIA.

The classification of the email was listed, and crossed out, as ‘SECRET.’

‘Good morning, I just spoke with VP/ NSA and he would strongly prefer the report not/not be disseminated. Thanks for understanding,’ the email states, signed by a redacted name, but with the title of ‘PDB Briefer.’ The ‘PDB’ is the presidential daily brief.

The report in question included intelligence revealing that Ukrainian officials viewed the Biden family’s alleged ties to corrupt business practices in Ukraine ‘as evidence of a double-standard within the United States Government towards matters of corruption and political power.’

‘Intelligence officials agreed that, at the time of collection, it would have met the threshold [for dissemination], but based on the Office of the Vice President’s preference, the information was never shared outside of the CIA,’ the official said.

The CIA, during its review, confirmed that Biden’s request was granted and that the intelligence report ‘had not been disseminated.’

The senior CIA official told Fox News Digital that it was ‘extremely rare and unusual’ and ‘inappropriate to go outside of the intelligence community and inquire with the White House on the dissemination of a particular report for what appears to be political reasons.’

The newly declassified intelligence report, which Biden sought to keep private, had a subject line of: ‘NON-DISSEMINATED INTEL INFORMATION: Reactions of [REDACTED] Ukrainian Government Officials to the Early December Visit of Senior United States Government Official.’

The document states the date of the information came in December 2015. The document was created in 2016.

At the time, Biden was vice president and was running U.S.-Ukraine relations and policy for the Obama administration.

The intelligence document stated that ‘officials within the administration of Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko expressed bewilderment and disappointment at the 7-8 December 2015 visit of the Vice President of the United States to Kiev, Ukraine.’

‘These officials highlighted that, prior to the visit, the Poroshenko administration and other [REDACTED] Ukrainian officials expected the U.S. Vice President to discuss personnel matters with Poroshenko during the visit, and had assumed that the U.S. Vice President would advocate in support of or against specific officials within the Ukrainian Government,’ the intelligence states.

‘After the visit, these officials assessed that the U.S. Vice President had come to Kiev almost exclusively to give a generic public speech, and had not had any intention of discussing substantive matters with Poroshenko or other officials within the Ukrainian government,’ the intelligence states.

‘Following the visit of the U.S. Vice President, [REDACTED] officials within the Poroshenko administration privately mused at the U.S. media scrutiny of the alleged ties of the U.S. Vice President’s family to corrupt business practices in Ukraine,’ the intelligence states. ‘These officials viewed the alleged ties of the U.S. Vice President’s family to corruption in Ukraine as evidence of a double-standard within the United States Government towards matters of corruption and political power.’

Biden, on Dec. 9, 2015, gave a speech in Ukraine, in which he discussed corruption in the country.

‘And it’s not enough to set up a new anti-corruption bureau and establish a special prosecutor fighting corruption,’ Biden said in the speech. ‘The Office of the General Prosecutor desperately needs reform.’

In that speech, Biden also said Ukraine’s ‘energy sector needs to be competitive, ruled by market principles — not sweetheart deals.’

‘It’s not enough to push through laws to increase transparency with regard to official sources of income,’ he said. ‘Senior elected officials have to remove all conflicts between their business interest and their government responsibilities.  Every other democracy in the world — that system pertains.’

At the time, Ukrainian prosecutor Viktor Shokin was investigating Ukrainian natural gas firm Burisma Holdings. Several months later, in March 2016, Biden successfully pressured Ukraine to remove Shokin. At the time Shokin was investigating Burisma Holdings, Hunter Biden had a highly lucrative role on the board, receiving tens of thousands of dollars per month.

Biden, at the time, threatened to withhold $1 billion of critical U.S. aid if Shokin was not fired.

‘I said, ‘You’re not getting the billion.’ … I looked at them and said, ‘I’m leaving in six hours. If the prosecutor is not fired, you’re not getting the money,’’ Biden recalled telling then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko. 

Biden recollected the conversation during an event for the Council on Foreign Relations in 2018.

But during his first term, President Donald Trump was impeached after a July 2019 phone call in which he pressed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to launch investigations into the Biden family’s actions and business dealings in Ukraine, specifically Hunter Biden’s ventures with Burisma and Joe Biden’s successful effort to have former Ukrainian Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin ousted.

At the same time as that call, Hunter Biden was under federal investigation, prompted by his suspicious foreign transactions. 

Trump was acquitted in Feb. 2020 on both articles of impeachment against him — abuse of power and obstruction of Congress — after being impeached by the House of Representatives in December 2019. 

Meanwhile, the declassified intelligence report had a ‘warning,’ noting that ‘due to the extreme sensitivity, this report should be distributed only to the renamed recipients. No further distribution is authorized without prior approval of the originating agency. Violation of established handling procedures are subject to penalty, including termination of access to this reporting channel.’

It added that ‘any discussion of or reference to information in this report [REDACTED] is strictly prohibited. Any references to this report in derived or finished intelligence should include this warning.’

A senior CIA official told Fox News Digital that Ratcliffe believes the suppression of this intelligence is an example of ‘politicization of intelligence.’

‘Director Ratcliffe believes this is an example of politicization of intelligence that we need to work to eliminate and for what we have zero tolerance,’ a senior CIA official told Fox News Digital. ‘We believe transparency is important. We will release information and avoid any future weaponization of the intelligence community.’

As for the heavily redacted nature of the intelligence report, the senior CIA official told Fox News Digital that the agency was ‘careful about protecting CIA sources and methods with redactions.’

The official stressed that Ratcliffe believes in ‘maximum transparency’ and said he will continue to declassify CIA information and intelligence ‘when it serves the public’s interest.’

Meanwhile, the House of Representatives launched an impeachment inquiry against Biden during his presidency, and found, after years of investigating, that he engaged in ‘impeachable conduct,’ ‘abused his office,’ and ‘defrauded the United States to enrich his family.’ 


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Two years since the horrific events of Oct. 7, 2023 when Hamas terrorists attacked Israel and killed 1,200 men, women and children, before they took 251 others into the Gaza Strip, there is still no hostage deal and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is facing possible collapse. 

Netanyahu has found an unlikely ally in former Prime Minister and leader of the opposition, Yair Lapid, who extended a ‘security net’ to the conservative leader this week in a move to secure the government as negotiations with Hamas remain ongoing. 

‘Nothing is more important than making this deal, bringing our hostages back home,’ Lapid said in an interview with Fox News Digital. 

The need for Lapid’s political backing comes as right-wing leaders in Netanyahu’s coalition, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, have repeatedly criticized Netanyahu’s acceptance of President Donald Trump’s peace plan with Hamas and threatened to leave the coalition at numerous points over the last year. 

Netanyahu’s coalition lost its majority in the Israeli parliament in July when two ultra-Orthodox parties left their ministerial posts after an exemption that granted religious students a pass for military conscription expired. 

The move left Netanyahu’s coalition in control of just 50 of the 120 seats in the Knesset.

‘Now he’s totally dependent on the extreme alt-right within his government that says no to any deal [with Hamas],’ Lapid explained. 

When asked how likely he thought it was that special elections would be triggered once parliament returns from its Autumn break on Oct. 19, Lapid said, ‘very likely.’

A special election is unlikely to happen sooner than February or March 2026, Lapid explained, pointing to a designated time frame that allows for campaigning in Israel, should the Knesset trigger an early election cycle by November – just seven months sooner than the previously scheduled October 2026 elections. 

Lapid believes the Israeli public will favor a more centrist government that would encompass both the right and left, a move that would still prioritize Israeli security, but also ensure there is an end to the war in Gaza and repairs are made to Jerusalem’s international standing.

‘If there’s one thing I’m sorry about, [it] is the fact that nobody in the government has the political courage to stand up and say…this is a just war, we are doing what needs to be done in order to protect ourselves, but we are sorry for every child that loses his life,’ Lapid said. ‘Children should not die in grownups’ wars.’

‘As Jews, as human beings, as people who believe in Judeo-Christian traditions and morality, it’s heartbreaking,’ he added. 

Lapid said this failure of the current government not only led to ambiguity when it came to Israel’s strategy in countering Hamas, it fueled what he said is media bias and false reporting, and it cost Israel dearly in terms of international support, even among ‘groups that traditionally supported Israel.’

The opposition leader described a meeting he had with Netanyahu on Oct. 7, 2023, in which he said the prime minister appeared ‘gray and tired and old all of a sudden.’

 ‘I said something at that meeting that later on became a cliché – I said, ‘Prime Minister, this is the worst day for the Jewish people since the Holocaust. 

‘What we need to do, is form a unity government,’ he said. ‘You have to get rid of the extremists in your government, and we can create a unity of government because we have opposite us, a challenge that is unparalleled to anything you, or I, have ever seen.’

Lapid said Netanyahu was ‘reluctant’ to pursue this route. 

‘Until this day, I’m sorry about this. I thought it was the right thing to do, and I still think it was the right thing to do,’ he added. 

Netanyahu has spent 15 years as Israel’s prime minister, first serving from March 2009 to June 2021, before retaking the top job in December 2022. 

Lapid described his lengthy tenure as ‘admirable’ and emblematic of his ‘resilience.’

‘But in other ways, I can see now, to say politely, the benefits of the two-term limits that you have in the United States,’ he added.

The opposition leader said he thinks Israelis are ready for a ‘unity government’ in response to Netanyahu’s hard-right coalition, noting that he thinks the upcoming elections will be ‘interesting.’

‘It’s going to cross political lines, and it’s going to be based on hope,’ he added in reference to the bloc he is building. ‘I know it sounds like big words, but I’m telling you, it is what we need right now. 

‘It’s been the hardest two years of everybody’s lifetime. And the first time in a long, long time, the fragility of the Israeli society was tangible to us. And we need to rebuild,’ Lapid added. 

Netanyahu’s office did not respond to Fox News Digital’s questions by the time this report was published.


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The reported death of US dollar dominance has been greatly exaggerated. The dollar’s demise has been repeatedly prophesied, supposedly threatened by any number of currencies including the euro, the yuan, and recent hints of a gold-backed currency from the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and China).

Will the US dollar maintain its global dominance? Is there a role for bitcoin in US policy?

In a recent paper titled “The Treasury Standard: Causes and Consequences,” which was published in an edited volume of articles related to bitcoin, economist and AIER SMP Senior Fellow Joshua R. Hendrickson explores the historical relationship between central banking and national security. He finds that the US dollar dominance of the international monetary system and associated demand for US Treasury bonds helps reinforce America’s global military regime. 

Further, the paper demonstrates how American officials and policies have actively contributed to expanding this system. 

Hendrickson dubs this system “The Treasury Standard.” His paper has important implications for the future of bitcoin and how it might be treated by governments.  

Read ‘The Treasury Standard’ 

There is much to like in “The Treasury Standard.” First, Hendrickson devotes two full sections to the government’s historical role in money. Section 2 starts with theories of commodity money and coinage before moving to bills of exchange and banknotes. The evolutionary process he describes fits the historical evidence.

Alternative theories emphasize the role of the state in creating money and determining the type of money used. As Hendrickson correctly notes, however, governments did not create money. Rather, they have continuously intervened in the monetary system to benefit themselves through “debasement, devaluation, and currency issuance,” often at the expense of the public. Despite such abuses, emergency spending powers are vital to the preservation of the nation itself. These costs and benefits must balance in order to minimize harm to the public and maximize long-run stability.

In the case of the United States, the ascendance of the Treasury Standard strengthened the growing relationship between national security and the monetary system. It solidified the Treasury’s international influence by making foreign powers reliant on US policy. However, persistent deficits, as experienced in recent decades, could destabilize this equilibrium.

Second, Hendrickson addresses an issue that is often avoided by economists: the role of policy in creating the Treasury Standard. Economists like simple stories about the effect of price controls and other policies, which might include capital controls or exchange rate manipulations in international finance. In contrast to the usual economic approach, Hendrickson describes the Treasury Standard as a mix of coordinated policies and political pressure to achieve a stated end: dollar dominance.

Policy Implications

While Hendrickson does not discuss bitcoin directly in the paper, he nonetheless provides some insight for thinking about bitcoin-related policies. Should the US government encourage bitcoin adoption? Should it hold bitcoin as a reserve asset? How would such pro-bitcoin policies affect its fiscal and monetary policy?

International Bitcoin Adoption

On the surface, greater bitcoin adoption would seem to undermine the Treasury Standard. But that only holds if one assumes those adopting bitcoin would have otherwise used the dollar. If, instead, one expects bitcoin to displace other major currencies, then its ascension might bolster the Treasury Standard by functioning as a neutral dollar alternative. 

The Treasury’s decision to weaponize the dollar through sanctions and exclusions from the SWIFT bank routing network has made the dollar less attractive to foreign governments. Foreigners are already starting to turn away from the dollar, and foreign governments are actively developing dollar alternatives. In this context, the US benefits—that is, suffers less—from the adoption of a neutral alternative like bitcoin. Ideally, the Treasury would like foreigners to continue using the dollar, but if they do move away from the dollar, the Treasury would prefer them to switch to bitcoin rather than to the yuan, ruble, or some other currency controlled by one or more rival governments. 

Of course, bitcoin is only useful to the US in this context if foreigners prefer it to the available alternatives. The success of the Swiss franc suggests they might use bitcoin as a reserve asset or for use in international trade. Due to its well-known stable long-term value, the Swiss franc is widely used in international trade as a vehicle currency–that is, between parties in non-Swiss nations, not with the country of Switzerland itself. As I have discussed elsewhere, “despite Switzerland having only the 19th-largest economy in terms of GDP, the Swiss franc is the 4th most commonly used currency in international trade and the 6th most widely held foreign reserve currency.” Thus, there seems to be strong demand for a stable currency in international trade, and bitcoin offers even more security against the risk of monetary expansions than the Swiss franc. 

Government Bitcoin ‘Hodling’

What if the Treasury itself were to hold (or “hodl” in crypto lingo) bitcoin, as in proposals such as the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve? As Hendrickson has elsewhere explained, holding bitcoin would provide stability through diversification of the government’s assets, creating an option that could be exercised if the Treasury’s fiscal position deteriorates. The government’s commitment to bitcoin could have some self-reinforcing value of stabilizing the price, setting expectations and quelling complaints of the asset being intrinsically worthless.

Despite these benefits, it is not clear what effects “hodling” bitcoin would have on the federal government’s fiscal position. A higher bitcoin price (which most Bitcoiners take for granted, but many others question) would enable a bitcoin-holding government to pay down some of its debt. But it would not require it. In fact, politicians might respond to a higher bitcoin price—or, even an expected higher bitcoin price—by spending even more! Thus, a bitcoin reserve may not have the effects many Bitcoiners expect unless it is coupled with other policies that constrain spending.

BitBonds

Another proposal would see the government issue Treasury bonds that are at least partly backed by bitcoin, with any profits realized from the bitcoin backing shared between investors and the government. These “BitBonds,” proponents argue, would allow the government to take advantage of the risk reduction associated with diversification and, in doing so, lower the government’s cost of borrowing. Some private companies are already taking a similar approach in order to finance real estate loans. The BitBonds proposal is also similar to a proposal by Judy Shelton, which would see the US Treasury issue bonds backed by gold. 

As with the bitcoin reserve proposal, it is not clear that issuing BitBonds would do much to improve the government’s financial position. Such proposals, on their own, do not constrain federal spending. Indeed, they relax the existing constraints on spending, which might encourage politicians to spend even more.

Bitcoin and the Fed

While the fiscal benefits of a bitcoin reserve or BitBonds are unclear, some point to potential monetary benefits. Would the establishment of a bitcoin reserve or the issuance of BitBonds provide an effective constraint on the actions of the Fed? Maybe. The answer depends on how such efforts were implemented.

Holding bitcoin as a reserve asset does not directly constrain the Fed. Domestic holders of Federal Reserve notes have not been able to redeem those notes for any asset since we went off the gold standard in 1933. Even if the Fed still owned gold today (which it does not), it would not be required to redeem dollars for gold. Similarly, if the Fed were to hold bitcoin reserves, it would be under no obligation to redeem its notes for bitcoin. It might sell its bitcoin to protect the purchasing power of the dollar, should the demand for dollars decline. But it would not be required to do so. Hence, holding bitcoin—on its own—would not constrain the Fed. It would merely give the Fed an option similar to that provided by other assets the Fed holds. 

Although holding bitcoin would not constrain the Fed, the existence of bitcoin might. If bitcoin were to provide a neutral dollar alternative in international finance, as previously discussed, it would provide an alternative for dollar users concerned about higher inflation. The Fed would have to take that exit option into account when setting policy. Hence, the Fed’s ability to devalue the dollar might be limited if bitcoin provides dollar users with an attractive alternative. To be clear: I do not believe bitcoin represents a serious threat to the dollar in the near future. However, all changes are marginal, and marginally higher inflation would encourage some dollar users to rely more heavily on alternatives, including bitcoin.

The prospect of widespread switching to bitcoin is especially pertinent when considering extreme scenarios. Consider, for example, what would happen if the Treasury’s fiscal imbalances continue to the point of near default. Many assume the Fed would intervene to support the economy, lowering interest rates and inflating the dollar to avoid fiscal default. However, bitcoin—and, indeed, any credible dollar alternative—would limit the Fed’s ability to do so. Moreover, a general understanding that the Fed will be limited in its ability to mitigate the damage of default raises the expected costs of default. Hence, the existence of bitcoin might encourage politicians to rein in excessive spending or raise additional revenue in order to avoid approaching default in the first place.

Conclusion

Hendrickson takes history and politics seriously. In “The Treasury Standard,” he provides a theory of dollar dominance in the post-Bretton Woods monetary system based on the needs of emergency war financing while minimizing economic disruptions and explains how this balance may be destabilized by unsustainable US debt. While he focuses on the historical and political forces that established the current regime in the paper, he also provides a valuable starting point for thinking about the future role and potential consequences of bitcoin in the international monetary system.

This article is based on comments presented at the Satoshi Papers Symposium at the University of Austin (UATX), April 16, 2025.

In 1961, with global politics chilled by the looming Cold War, President Dwight D. Eisenhower delivered his farewell address, warning the nation of a military-industrial complex.

“In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence,” Eisenhower said. “The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.” That is true of great corporate influence over policy, combined with political power, whether the buying branch is the military or some other federal power. 

More than 60 years later, those words ring prophetic. A new industrial complex is taking shape, not in arms and artillery, but in silicon and circuitry.

In 2020, governments worldwide locked down businesses and citizens in an attempt to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Mandated shutdowns brought supply chains to a standstill, leaving goods stranded and consumers waiting. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, TSMC, produces more than 50 percent of the world’s semiconductors, the miniscule computer chips found in nearly all electronic devices.

In 2022, The Daily Economy published contemporary coverage of the phenomenon: 

If you’ve tried to make a purchase recently, anything from a new car to a laptop to a washing machine, you’ve likely felt the pinch of the supply shortfall. Any product relying on semiconductor chips is likely to be delayed, limited, or just plain unavailable. General Motors earnings slid 40 percent earlier this year, as nearly 95,000 vehicles languished for want of this or that semiconductor chip. Semiconductor shortages delayed the production of as many as eight million vehicles. While carmakers were hit by the shortage first, Goldman Sachs estimates 169 industries have been impacted. Sony couldn’t produce enough PlayStation 5 consoles to meet day-one demand. Apple and Samsung scrambled to find the chips suitable for LED backlighting in their tablets and laptops.

Firms that embed chips in their products kept around a 40-day supply on hand in 2019. That inventory crashed to less than five days in 2021, according to a Commerce Department report.

The market shock motivated Washington, DC to embrace a protectionist path, passing the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act, intended to re-shore semiconductor production. The Act’s cheerful backronym “for the Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors (CHIPS)” optimistically focuses on the intent, rather than the impact, of meddling such complex manufacturing.

Similar subsidy programs have since been launched in Europe, Japan, and South Korea, placing semiconductors at the center of a global industrial-policy arms race. The CHIPS and Science Act was designed to reduce dependence on Asian manufacturing and bring semiconductor production back to US soil. Well before the massive subsidies were introduced, Intel, Samsung, and Micron began construction of manufacturing centers in the US. TSMC from Taiwan, Samsung from South Korea, and Micron Technologies based in Boise, Idaho, are recognized as the “Big Three” in advanced semiconductor chip production. Their accelerating US expansion has also brought the industry into deeper entanglement with government.

Washington’s appetite for power knows no bounds. Not content to maintain his predecessor’s subsidies, US President Donald Trump is exploring options to take a direct government-owned share in not just Intel, but defense firms such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Palantir. This continues an outlandish precedent where the US government owns a “golden share” of US Steel and most recently acquired an $11 billion or 10 percent stake in Intel. 

Intel’s stock has halved since 2021, and remains a struggling firm despite $7.86B in CHIPS Act subsidies. Rather than allowing Schumpeterian creative destruction to take its course, policymakers decided to restore Intel’s position as the “national champion.” The government’s direct stake and subsidies ensured Intel’s survival and renewed its relevance. Washington now expects a quid pro quo from firms that took subsidies. In addition to this, Nvidia’s $5 billion, four-percent stake in Intel completed a triangle linking Silicon Valley’s crown jewel, Washington’s chosen national champion firm, and federal policymakers. By buying into a failing firm propped up by public funds, Nvidia bought itself a seat alongside Washington bureaucrats, outside the usual regulatory channels. That’s access its rivals can’t match.

When Washington subsidizes, invests in, and regulates the same industry, it stops being a neutral umpire and becomes an active player on the field. Policy decisions soon skew toward protecting the government’s investment and interests, rather than fostering true competition and innovation. Firms like TSMC, AMD, and Samsung will face a moral hazard, and replicate it to their competitors: it will now be much more cost effective to court politicians than to invest in R&D or compete on innovation — creating things buyers want. 

James Buchanan, Nobel laureate and author of Politics without Romance, claimed we should never assume policymakers act as benevolent social planners, “Politicians do, in many cases, try to further what they think is the interest of the whole group, but in a sense, they’re just like the rest of us. Sometimes they’re motivated in terms of their own private interest, just like a businessman.” In this case, tying Washington’s interest directly to Intel’s success will shape semiconductor research and development, regulation, and global markets for years to come. Political and corporate incentives align to promote the interests of those who broker the deals — not the constituents or customers. 

Reflecting upon recent financial disclosures, President Trump personally owns shares of Nvidia and Intel worth between $500,000 to $1,000,000. Coincidentally, in true Art of the Deal fashion,  Intel’s stock rose 23 percent from the new partnership with Nvidia, while Nvidia’s own stock rose roughly 4 percent. The public is left wondering whether policy is being crafted to serve national security or private portfolios. Ultimately, the price of this alliance will be borne by consumers, who face higher costs and slower innovation, and by taxpayers, forced to fund the rescue of a company the market had already written off.

The line between policymaker and producer has all but vanished; the businessman and the bureaucrat are now one and the same. This is no longer a free market but a semiconductor cartel, where government, regulators, and industry titans coordinate the future of computing power. By combining subsidies, ownership stakes, and regulation, Washington leaves little room for genuine competition. This “tech industrial complex” locks in incumbents, crowds out rivals, and turns policy into corporate protection. 

National economic policy of the favor-buying and rent-seeking kind will only accelerate, as other industries seek to garner favor and funding from buyable bureaucrats. The innovation engine that made Silicon Valley great risks becoming a state-sponsored utility. As Milton Friedman famously quipped, “If the federal government were put in charge of the Sahara Desert, within five years there would be a shortage of sand.”

To avoid turning the semiconductor industry into a barren desert, Washington must step back and let market signals and free investment irrigate innovation.

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development’s (OECD) latest economic outlook should serve as a wake-up call for Washington. While the organization upgraded global growth to 3.2 percent in 2025 after surprising resilience in the first half of the year, the US economy is still forecast to slow sharply — from 2.8 percent growth in 2024 to just 1.8 percent in 2025, before sliding to 1.5 percent in 2026. That’s barely half our historic post-war average of 3.5 percent. At that pace, America’s economy will take more than three decades to double in size — condemning a generation to slower wage gains, fewer opportunities, and diminished prosperity.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the OECD now believes the US will “slow less sharply” in the near term, but warns that tariffs will hit hard in 2026 as protectionist measures take full effect. And as CNBC reports, global growth was bolstered by emerging markets like Brazil, Indonesia, and India, along with AI-driven investment in the US and heavy fiscal stimulus in China. But these are temporary boosts. The real risks — soaring tariffs, policy uncertainty, and Washington’s fiscal excesses — remain firmly in place.

A Short-Term Lift, a Long-Term Drag

The OECD noted that “global growth was more resilient than anticipated in the first half of 2025,” partly because companies rushed production and trade ahead of the August tariff hikes. In the US, investment tied to artificial intelligence delivered a short-term bump, just as Beijing’s stimulus propped up Chinese output. But these front-loaded gains do not change the trajectory. As the OECD warned, “the full effects of tariff increases have yet to be felt” and are already becoming visible in consumer spending, labor markets, and prices.

The numbers confirm it. Effective US tariff rates jumped to 19.5 percent by August, the highest since 1933. That level of trade restriction is not just a policy tweak; it is a historic reversal of America’s pro-growth, pro-trade legacy. For now, firms are absorbing some of the added costs in margins, but the OECD expects the price impacts to cascade into higher consumer costs and tighter labor markets. Even with a small downward revision in the inflation forecast — US prices are now projected to rise 2.7 percent in 2025, down from the prior 3.2 percent — the warning is clear: tariffs are an inflationary tax that hurts both households and businesses.

Why This Matters for Families

For ordinary Americans, these projections are not just numbers on a page. A 1.5 percent growth economy means real wages stagnate, homeownership drifts further out of reach, and retirement savings erode in value. It means college graduates take longer to find stable, good-paying jobs. It means debt loads grow heavier as Washington’s national debt passes $37 trillion with fewer resources left to sustain it. Slow growth is the silent thief of the American dream.

Washington’s Hand in the Slowdown

The OECD’s language about “weak productivity growth” is a polite way of saying America’s government is strangling its own economy. Federal outlays have soared 88 percent since 2015, growing more than three times faster than the combined pace of population and inflation. That kind of fiscal explosion crowds out private investment and leaves fewer resources for innovators and families.

At the same time, regulation has piled up in every corner of the economy. From energy permitting delays to healthcare mandates to financial compliance, the bureaucratic state has made it harder to start businesses, expand production, or hire workers.

And then there’s industrial policy. Programs like the CHIPS Act pour billions into companies already investing heavily, distorting markets and rewarding political connections rather than productivity. The OECD cautions that these interventions may further weaken long-run growth prospects, and history agrees. Cronyism doesn’t create prosperity; it squanders it.

The Free-Market Path Forward

The solutions are not complicated, but they require political courage. Federal spending must be cut, then capped to grow less than population growth plus inflation — called sustainable budgeting. Tax policy should reward work and savings by flattening the code to eliminate distortions. Red tape should be slashed so that entrepreneurs can innovate without years of bureaucratic delay. And the Federal Reserve’s $6.6 trillion balance sheet should be reduced to restore honest price signals and control inflation.

Other nations prove this works. Ireland, Estonia, and Singapore consistently outperform larger economies by keeping taxes low, regulation light, and markets open. Their success is not an accident — it is the fruit of freedom. America can lead again, but not by doubling down on the failed policies of big spending and protectionism.

Conclusion: A Warning, Not Destiny

The OECD’s projections are a flashing red light, not a prophecy. America’s growth slowdown is not inevitable; it is the direct result of choices made in Washington. Tariffs, runaway spending, and regulatory excess are self-inflicted wounds. If left unchecked, they will make 1.5 percent growth the new normal, robbing a generation of prosperity.

But it doesn’t have to be this way. The fix is clear: spend less, regulate less, and trust people more. That’s how America doubled its economy in 20 years during its golden decades of growth, and it’s how it can do so again. The OECD has raised the alarm. Now it’s up to us to change course — before decline becomes destiny.

Freegold Ventures Limited ( TSX : FVL,OTC:FGOVF ) (OTCQX: FGOVF ) is pleased to provide a project update. Drilling at Golden Summit is advancing steadily, with five drill rigs currently active on site. The focus for this year has been directed at infill drilling to upgrade inferred resources to indicated status—an essential step for the upcoming Pre-Feasibility Study (PFS). As inferred resources cannot be included in the PFS, this work is critical for the project’s advancement.

Freegold Logo (CNW Group/Freegold Ventures Limited)

2025 PROGRAM

  • Drilling is continuing with five drill rigs
  • Conversion of inferred resources into indicated & further exploration drilling and geotechnical drilling.

  • 37 holes (~24,000m completed to date: 5 holes reported (~3030m)
  • Ongoing metallurgical work, focusing on flowsheet optionality with sulphide oxidation, is a key part of our strategy to maximize the potential of the resource.
  • Commencement of Pre-Feasibility Study (PFS)

Focus is also on defining the limits of mineralization in the Dolphin/Cleary area, as well as conducting further exploration drilling and completing essential geotechnical drill holes.

Drilling Progress and Timeline

To date, a total of 37 drill holes, amounting to ~24,000 meters, have been completed. Additionally, five more drill holes are currently in progress. Assay results are pending for a significant number of holes. Drilling activities are scheduled to continue through mid-December, after which the program will pause for the winter and resume in February 2026 . The results from the 2025 drilling will be incorporated into a revised mineral resource estimate, which will be utilized for the upcoming Pre-Feasibility Study (PFS).

Resource Enhancement and Pre-Feasibility Study Preparation

In addition to efforts to upgrade the resource base through a combination of infill and geotechnical drilling, additional geochemical and metallurgical testing is also being undertaken. Preparatory work for the PFS also encompasses:

  • Installation of vibrating wire piezometers (VWPs) in drill holes for groundwater monitoring
  • Collection of surface water samples
  • Organising mammal and habitat surveys to establish baseline environmental data
  • Conducting cultural resource assessments, including paleontological studies, for review by the State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) and federal agencies, and developing mitigation plans as needed
  • Mapping of wetlands, with mitigation strategies being formulated where required
  • Continuing geological mapping and sampling to identify new exploration targets for future development

Metallurgical Test Work
Metallurgical testing is currently underway at BaseMet Labs in Kamloops, BC . A master composite sample, weighing over 1,500 kilograms and derived from twelve drill holes, forms the basis for this work. As part of the PFS, several trade-off studies are planned, including a comparison of the added benefits of further sulphide oxidation with a simpler Gravity-CIL flowsheet.

Oxidation Process Optimization
During the current phase of metallurgical testing, a sulphide concentrate is being produced to enable optimization of oxidation processes. Three commercially available oxidation methods, all of which have demonstrated effectiveness with Golden Summit materials, are under evaluation:

  • Pressure Oxidation (POX): Achieved over 92% total gold recovery in testwork to date.
  • BIOX: Achieved over 91% total gold recovery in testwork to date.
  • Albion Process™: Achieved over 93% total gold recovery in testwork to date.

Solid residues resulting from these oxidation processes have been subjected to environmental characterization and waste testing in accordance with EPA guidelines. The Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure (TCLP) was applied to all residues, with leachate levels for metals remaining below regulatory limits.

Flotation Test Results and Environmental Assessment
Flotation testing continues for the master composite. Initial locked-cycle tests have shown gold recovery rates exceeding 95%, utilizing gravity and cleaner flotation with the sulphide concentrate accounting for less than 5% of the total mass, thereby minimizing the volume that needs further oxidation. These results support building a small pilot plant at BaseMet to produce a substantial amount of concentrate for upcoming oxidation optimisation studies. These studies will be ongoing over the next several months.

Flotation tailings from this process have also passed the EPA TCLP procedure 1311, with all leachate concentrations for metals falling below maximum allowable limits, confirming environmental compliance. Further investigations are ongoing to understand better and characterize the environmental impact of all flowsheet products and tailings.

Additional Project Information
Golden Summit currently hosts an Indicated Primary Mineral Resource: 17.2 Moz at 1.24 g/t Au and an Inferred Primary Mineral Resource: 11.9 Moz at 1.04 g/t Au, using a 0.5 cut-off grade and a gold price of $2,490 .

A plan map detailing the locations of drill holes—both completed and in progress can be found here:

https://freegoldventures.com/site/assets/files/6287/nr_2025_drilling_v2_20251003.png

The qualified person responsible for the scientific and technical information in this update is Alvin Jackson , P.Geo., Vice President of Exploration and Development for Freegold.

About Freegold Ventures Limited
Freegold Ventures Limited is a TSX-listed company focused on mineral exploration in Alaska .

Caution Regarding Forward-Looking Statements
This update contains forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to, information regarding planned expenditures, exploration programs, potential mineralization and resources, exploration results, the completion of an updated NI 43-101 technical report, and other future plans. Such statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. These factors include, but are not limited to, the completion of planned expenditures, the ability to complete exploration programs on schedule, and the success of those programs. For a comprehensive discussion of risk factors, refer to Freegold’s Annual Information Form for the year ended 2024-12-31, available at www.sedar.com .

SOURCE Freegold Ventures Limited

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Here’s a quick recap of the crypto landscape for Monday (October 6) as of 9:00 p.m. UTC.

Get the latest insights on Bitcoin, Ether and altcoins, along with a round-up of key cryptocurrency market news.

Bitcoin and Ether price update

Bitcoin (BTC) was priced at US$125,434, up by 2.3 percent in 24 hours. Its lowest valuation of the day was US$124,565, and its highest was US$126,080. Bitcoin achieved its strongest weekly close at US$123,400 on October 3, affirming entry into a new price discovery phase, before hitting new highs on Monday.

Bitcoin price performance, October 6, 2025.

Bitcoin price performance, October 6, 2025.

Chart via TradingView.

Bitcoin’s market cap briefly surpassed US$2.5 trillion, driving a record US$5.95 billion into digital assets.

Bitcoin dominance in the crypto market now stands at 54.49 percent.

On-chain data indicates that Bitcoin is entering a renewed accumulation phase, marked by reduced selling pressure from long-term holders and stabilization among short-term investors. Strong institutional exchange-traded fund (ETF) inflows, increased on-chain transfer volumes and healthy derivatives market indicators form a strong structural base for potential further gains, but tight Bollinger Bands point to impending short-term volatility and price consolidation.

Bitcoin researcher Axel Adler Jr. highlights that Bitcoin is trading near the upper boundary of the 21 day Donchian channel. The Bitcoin futures flow index reading of 96 percent signals sustained bull pressure.

Adler also points out that the short-term holder MVRV ratio is nearing resistance around US$133,000, indicating potential near-term profit taking. Scenarios include momentum-driven consolidation between US$122,000 and US$124,000, or a mean reversion pullback to US$118,500 to US$120,000, supported by key moving averages.

Ether (ETH) has exceeded Bitcoin’s upward price movement, rising by roughly 5.2 percent in the last 24 hours to US$4,725.31, its highest valuation of the day. Its lowest valuation was US$4,589.41.

Ether continues to hold firm above its US$4,500 support, with market watcher Ted Pillows highlighting US$4,750 as the next major resistance level for the cryptocurrency. However, he also warned that a drop below the US$4,250 to US$4,060 zone would shift momentum back to the bears.

Altcoin price update

  • Solana (SOL) was priced at US$235.40, an increase of 3.7 percent over the last 24 hours. Its lowest valuation on Monday was US$233.70, and its highest was US$237.29.
  • XRP was trading for US$3.03, up by 2.5 percent over the last 24 hours. Its lowest valuation of the day was US$2.99, and its highest was US$3.05.

ETF data and derivatives trends

The Fear & Greed Index currently reads 59, remaining firmly in neutral territory since the tail end of last week.

Last week, the cumulative net flow for spot Bitcoin ETFs was predominantly positive, with several days of inflows. According to data from the week of September 29 to October 3, spot Bitcoin ETFs had inflows on all five days, with October 3 recording the highest inflows at US$985.08 million. The inflows were led by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (NASDAQ:IBIT) and the Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (BATS:FBTC).

Cumulative total inflows for spot Bitcoin ETFs stood at US$60.05 billion as of October 3.

The derivatives landscape reflects cautiously bullish sentiment, with the perpetual funding rate holding steady at 0.01, indicating balanced positioning between longs and shorts in the perpetual swap markets.

The session saw US$27.76 million in liquidations over the last four hours, predominantly impacting short positions, a signal of aggressive short covering as price momentum accelerated. Open interest retreated by 0.44 percent in the same span, to US$94.83 billion, suggesting some deleveraging or profit-taking after the day’s strong rally.

Despite the slight pullback in open interest, the notional value in major futures and options contracts remains near record levels, underscoring persistent institutional and speculative engagement. Implied volatility stands at 40.9, reflecting a moderate risk premium amid heightened spot activity and brisk rotation across both futures and options venues. With options open interest surging to historic highs and spot/volatility correlations positive, traders are leaning on structured call spreads rather than outright longs to manage term premiums and risk.

Today’s crypto news to know

Grayscale launches first US spot crypto ETPs with staking

Grayscale Investments has launched the first US-listed spot crypto exchange-traded products (ETPs), enabling staking for its Grayscale Ethereum Trust ETF (ARCA:ETHE), Grayscale Ethereum Mini Trust ETF (ARCA:ETH) and Grayscale Solana Trust (OTCQX:GSOL), the last of which is awaiting regulatory approval to uplist as an ETP.

Traditional brokerage investors can now earn passive staking rewards, which have been limited to native crypto platforms, through regulated funds, providing exposure to the Ethereum and Solana networks.

“Staking in our spot Ethereum and Solana funds is exactly the kind of first mover innovation Grayscale was built to deliver,” said Grayscale CEO Peter Mintzberg in a press release.

“As the #1 digital asset-focused ETF issuer in the world by AUM, we believe our trusted and scaled platform uniquely positions us to turn new opportunities like staking into tangible value potential for investors.”

Grayscale will manage staking via institutional custodians and diversified validator networks to reduce risks. The launch represents a milestone in crypto product sophistication and regulatory acceptance, and is expected to attract institutional capital and deepen investor participation in staking rewards.

Morgan Stanley endorses Bitcoin allocation for client portfolios

Morgan Stanley’s (NYSE:MS) Global Investment Committee has formally advised clients to include digital assets in their portfolios, marking a significant policy shift for one of Wall Street’s most established banks.

In a note dated Sunday (October 5), the firm recommends up to 4 percent crypto exposure in “opportunistic growth” portfolios and up to 2 percent for “balanced growth” accounts. The report also emphasizes Bitcoin’s role as a “scarce, digitally native asset” with increasing institutional relevance.

While many investors view the move as validation of Bitcoin’s maturing status and the formal ushering of crypto’s ‘mainstream era,’ some traders called it “too late” given prior gains.

Morgan Stanley also confirmed that its E*Trade platform will soon allow trading in Bitcoin, Ether and Solana via a partnership with ZeroHash.

Coinbase seeks national trust charter to expand payment services

Coinbase Global (NASDAQ:COIN) has applied for a national trust company charter from the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, a move designed to expand its payments and custody operations under unified federal oversight.

In an October 3 blog post, Vice President Greg Tusar clarified that Coinbase “has no intention of becoming a bank,” but aims to streamline regulation for new financial products.

Approval would enable Coinbase to scale its recently launched Coinbase Payments platform, which facilitates stablecoin transactions for merchants on Shopify (NYSE:SHOP) and eBay (NASDAQ:EBAY).

Coinbase has also deepened partnerships with JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), enabling direct account links between Chase customers and Coinbase wallets through API integration.

Similar Office of the Comptroller of the Currency charter applications have been filed by other platforms as digital payment infrastructure moves further into mainstream finance.

Plume Network registers as transfer agent

Plume Network, a layer-2 blockchain focused on tokenizing real-world assets (RWAs), announced it has registered as a transfer agent with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

The move allows Plume to manage tokenized securities under US law, automating traditional transfer agent functions like shareholder registry management and corporate action reporting onchain.

This development comes amid efforts to integrate traditional finance with blockchain technology, specifically through the issuance and management of tokenized securities. Institutional involvement in the RWA market is still in its early stages, primarily focusing on low-risk instruments like US treasury bills.

Potential exists for expanding into new fundraising and investor engagement methods.

Securities Disclosure: I, Meagen Seatter, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

Securities Disclosure: I, Giann Liguid, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

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Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., tore into Special Counsel Jack Smith, accusing him of ‘spying on political opponents’ during the Jan. 6 probe and calling the alleged surveillance ‘an abuse of power beyond Watergate.’

The FBI, working under Smith’s direction, obtained call logs and metadata tied to nearly a dozen GOP senators, including Hawley, as part of its investigation into the Capitol riot, Fox News reported. The tracking involved call records and timestamps, not the content of the conversations.

Hawley told Fox News Digital on Monday that the newly released documents suggest that Biden’s administration was ‘spying on the president’s political opponents,’ which he called ‘a profound violation of the separation of powers.’

He said the activity fits what he views as part of a broader pattern of executive overreach under Biden, citing alleged surveillance of Catholic churches, parents at school board meetings and social media censorship.

‘The truth comes out. Biden’s Stasi who claimed to be saving ‘our sacred democracy’ in fact worked overtime to destroy it — all for power. They spied on Catholic churches, prosecuted pro-lifers, deployed the FBI against parents at school board meetings — and tried to tap the phones of their political enemies. Including mine,’ Hawley wrote on X.

‘This is an abuse of power beyond Watergate, beyond J. Edgar Hoover, one that directly strikes at the Constitution, the separation of powers, and the First Amendment,’ he continued. ‘We need a full investigation of all involved: who knew about it, who ordered it, and who approved it. Anyone and everyone who violated the law must be prosecuted. The way to save the country is to restore the rule of law.’

Hawley said he was targeted because he is a conservative Republican who vocally opposed Biden and ‘his lawlessness.’

‘It’s obviously totally partisan,’ the senator said, adding that he’s proud to have called out what he described as the abuse of power by the FBI. He also said the alleged conduct was ‘dangerous, very, very dangerous’ for the country.

Hawley said the scope of the alleged surveillance was even greater than Watergate.

‘This is worse than Watergate,’ he said, arguing that Biden ‘activated the entire government to go after anybody who dared to oppose him.’ He accused the administration of using agencies such as the FBI, DOJ and DHS to silence critics and monitor private citizens.

Hawley called for a full Justice Department investigation and said appointing a special counsel ‘who will devote their full attention to it’ would be appropriate.

‘We’ve got to have a total accountability, total transparency and a full accounting of everybody who was involved in this — everybody who knew about it, signed off on it, and had any part in it, and I just can’t imagine that this is legal… and anybody who committed legal violations needs to be prosecuted,’ he said.

Hawley has framed the controversy as a test of constitutional limits, saying the government must be held accountable when power is used to pursue political opponents instead of upholding the rule of law.

Fox News Digital’s Brooke Singman contributed to this report.


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