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The cascading events of the 2008 global recession, and a bipartisan $700 billion bailout of US banks, sparked a cultural backlash known as the Tea Party movement. This grassroots affiliation then swelled in opposition to more large‑scale government intervention, most notably the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare.

Two years later, the 2010 midterm elections proved a turning point: Republicans, branded as Tea Party supporters, won back 63 House seats and six Senate seats, the largest shift in Congress since 1948. By 2016, then‑presidential candidate Donald Trump was praising the movement: “The tea party people are incredible people. These are people who work hard and love the country.” 

Roughly a decade later, the Republican Party no longer champions small government or a laissez‑faire economy. Once the self‑proclaimed guardians of limited government, today’s GOP embraces state control across multiple fronts: steering corporate investment, micromanaging trade, spending without restraint, and ignoring entitlement insolvency. It is no isolated drift — it is a wholesale realignment toward big‑government nationalism. As Star Wars warned: “So this is how liberty dies…with thunderous applause.”

Nowhere is the GOP’s break with small‑government ideals more visible than in its willingness to dictate where and how America’s largest companies invest. Apple announced plans to invest $500 billion to expand manufacturing and AI server production across the United States. The firm originally desired to expand its footprint in India, avoiding the geopolitical squeeze of US–China tensions. The President responded to this news: “I had a little problem with Tim Cook yesterday. ‘You’re coming here with $500 billion, but now I hear you’re building all over India. I don’t want you building in India.’”

Apple isn’t alone; Google and Nvidia are making similar US‑focused investments. Alongside these investments came the AI Action Plan, declaring, “Winning the AI race will demand a new spirit of patriotism and national loyalty in Silicon Valley and long beyond Silicon Valley.” But does AI truly need a patriotism push?

As high‑tech firms show they can be corralled into government‑approved investment, the same heavy hand is now reaching into America’s old‑line industries. Last year, the proposed US Steel–Nippon Steel merger became a political flashpoint not because it threatened consumers or competition, but because the buyer was foreign. Instead of letting the merger proceed, the government prohibited the action and only let Nippon invest in US Steel. Nippon also granted the US government a “golden share” in the firm. As the Cato Institute’s Scott Lincicome argues, “The Trump administration’s ‘golden share’ control of a wide array of US Steel’s domestic business activities should be seen as a de facto nationalization of the company, given what we know about the new relationship and the very standards pushed by the US government in related contexts.” The loser in acquiring US Steel, Cleveland Cliffs, applauded Donald Trump’s June 4 decision to raise steel tariffs from 25 percent to 50 percent, as their stock rose 33 percent that same day. 

Rather than trust markets to allocate capital, Washington now treats investment and ownership as matters for political control. It is one more example of the right abandoning free‑market principles in favor of economic nationalism.

The same instinct to manage markets from Washington now drives US trade policy, with results just as costly and counter‑productive. The US government slapped a sweeping 50-percent tariff on semi‑finished copper items, such as pipes, wires, rods, sheets, and high‑copper derivative goods like electrical cables, while cathodes, scrap, ores, and concentrates were explicitly exempted. This policy, justified under national security provisions, immediately roiled the copper market: US copper futures plunged over 20 percent in a single day, erasing prior arbitrage premiums and revealing that approximately 45 percent of US copper needs now fall under the new levy. 

Tariff threats first targeted steel and automobiles; however since “Liberation Day,” imports have plunged nearly 20 percent. Deutsche Bank concluded that some American firms were eating the tariff costs and accepting smaller margins. But global head of FX research, George Saravelos, told Bloomberg, ‘The top-down macro evidence seems clear: Americans are mostly paying for the tariffs.’

In the classic pattern of political hubris — the government breaks your legs, then sells you crutches — lawmakers now want to hand you a check to offset these self‑inflicted costs. 

Republican Senator Hawley, the architect behind the American Worker Rebate Act, desires to redistribute tariff revenues to taxpayers, a true fiscal mess in which government extracts money from consumers in order to give it back to them.  Have we forgotten the failed Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) experiment that flooded households with stimulus checks during the draconian COVID‑19 lockdowns? According to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, inflation in consumer prices rose from 1.23 in 2020 to 8.0 percent in 2022, with government spending responsible for 42 percent of this inflation. The Tax Foundation suggests:

While tariffs have undoubtedly raised costs for American firms and consumers — since Americans and not foreigners ultimately pay the tariff — rebating the revenue to consumers would be fiscally irresponsible and also risk increasing inflation. Tariffs are a poor way to raise revenue generally, but the revenue that is collected should be used for deficit reduction rather than rebates.

This appetite for intervention is matched only by the willingness to spend without restraint. At the turn of the millennium, America carried about $5.5 trillion in federal debt. By mid‑2025, that figure has exploded to roughly $37 trillion, more than a sixfold increase in just 25 years. Interest on that debt now swallows over $1 trillion annually, about 17 percent of all federal spending, and the government spends roughly 20 percent more than it collects in revenue. The recently enacted One Big Beautiful Bill will only add fuel to the fire: the Congressional Budget Office projects $2.4 trillion in new deficits over the next decade, or $3.1 trillion once interest is factored in. At this pace, the United States will celebrate its 250th birthday burdened by a national debt exceeding $40 trillion. This is not just a failure of governance, it is the abandonment of the very fiscal discipline Republicans once claimed as their defining principle. 

Rather than confront this reality, Republican leaders preside over some of the largest peacetime budgets in US history. On the military side, the Pentagon’s budget alone is $820 billion, more than the next ten countries combined, and climbs to $1.2 trillion when veterans’ benefits are included. In real terms, America spends more on defense today than it did during the height of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

On the welfare side, Social Security and Medicare already consume more than eight percent of GDP and their combined costs are projected to soar from $1.4 trillion in 2023 to nearly $3 trillion by 2033. The Social Security trust fund is expected to be depleted by 2033, after which incoming payroll taxes will cover only about 77 percent of promised benefits. Medicare’s Hospital Insurance trust fund faces insolvency by 2036, triggering automatic cuts unless Congress intervenes. 

The Republican Party once sold itself as the last line of defense against an overreaching federal government. Today, it champions state control over private enterprise, embraces protectionist tariffs that raise consumer prices, and presides over record‑shattering spending that will burden future generations with mountains of debt. What began as a movement to curb Washington’s reach has morphed into a governing philosophy that wields government power to direct markets, pick winners, and paper over self‑inflicted economic wounds. In forsaking the creed of limited government, the GOP has not merely drifted from its roots, it has become the very Leviathan it once vowed to oppose.

Washington, DC’s subsidization of the renovation of RFK Stadium  — the once and future home of the Washington Commanders — “is a BFD,” Mayor Muriel Bowser said on Wednesday, verging on an expletive to convey her enthusiasm for the proposal, to which the DC Council assented on Friday by a vote of 9 to 3. Another, final vote to approve the stadium will occur in September.

“Big” is, indeed, an apt adjective for the affaire d’RFK. The public funds to be spent — $1.7 billion in direct subsidies and $2.7 billion in indirect subsidies — are prodigious. The scope of the development plan transcends the mere renovation of an old sports venue. The stadium campus is set to include (besides the stadium) multiple parking structures, bars and restaurants, retail stores, an $89 million indoor sportsplex, a planned grocery store, a pharmacy, daycare facilities, a hotel, 6,000 or more housing units, and a “30-acre stretch of riverfront community commons.” An extension of Washington’s metro system also may be undertaken. In Bowser’s phrase: “180 acres of vacant land, activated.” In short, the deal amounts to a wholesale bid to transform a languishing portion of eastern Washington DC into a vital and bustling hub. An ambitious central-planning gambit, if not a hubristic one.

As I sat in the Council chamber on the Tuesday before the vote, waiting to testify against the subsidy package, the bigness of the moment struck me in a different sense. I was the 350th witness on a list of 503, and the hearing sprawled over 13 hours. But the hopes of the stadium-subsidy advocates were similarly expansive. In their minds, a stadium deal will yield prosperity, upward mobility, the stimulation of local business, civic pride, community engagement, youth development, affordable housing, and much else. All good things to be wished for will result from RFK’s revival; all good things will materialize together, in unity. As I recall, nobody supporting subsidies noted either the other uses to which that land could be put or the benefits likely to flow therefrom.

I heard roughly 10 hours of testimony. In the ample time for reflection afforded me, two facts became vibrantly apparent: Mayor Bowser and the DC Council have become fixated on the sort of flashy infrastructure project that has tantalized politicians dating back to Vespasian and Pericles and the pharaohs of Egypt, and they have managed to disperse perks among various of the District’s interest groups in order to obtain the needed political backing. Great municipal works require the enthusiasm of many constituencies that DC elected officials — not to mention the Commanders organization itself — have masterfully cultivated.

First, as always, is the cultivation of votes. Commanders fans, of course, wish to see their team play once again within the District. But, as was made clear during Tuesday’s hearing, many have credulously internalized the notion that a new RFK Stadium will uniquely invigorate economic activity. “The stadium redevelopment represents far more than the return of a major sports franchise or a new entertainment venue,” one witness declared, capturing the starry-eyed optimism of the proposal’s advocates. “Its capacity to shift the trajectory of underserved families…cannot be overemphasized.” Local business representatives also testified in favor of subsidization, anticipating the chance for business partnerships with the Commanders.

This confidence, although perhaps bolstered by a methodologically discredited report commissioned by Bowser, finds no grounding in the corpus of economic research on the topic. The “literature contains near-universal consensus evidence that sports venues do not generate large positive effects on local economies,” academics John Charles Bradbury, Dennis Coates, and Brad R. Humphreys report. The trio further notes that “the consensus…of economic studies” find that “the benefits of hosting professional sports franchises are not sufficient to justify large public subsidies.” Instead of spawning economic activity, new stadiums merely redistribute it. As put in a 2016 Brookings study, “any economic activity generated while attending a game, will largely if not entirely be offset by reduced spending on other local leisure activities.” Stadiums are not invested with any special magical facility for economic development, particularly when contrasted with other business enterprises that could occupy the same land. Indeed, a city report from the Office of the Budget Director indicates that higher tax revenues would flow from the businesses that would occupy a mixed-use development (sans stadium) on the RFK site than from a redevelopment of the stadium itself. Nonetheless, promises of bread, circuses, and coliseums seem once again to have proven themselves politically potent.

The proposed subsidy deal is profligate in its gift-giving to interest groups. For one, the District’s unions are assured that organized labor will man the construction sites of the stadium and its parking lots. Even that, however, has failed to satisfy all DC lawmakers. Some lawmakers — and several witnesses who testified Tuesday on behalf of labor interests — found this unsatisfactory, seeking to secure union-contract guarantees for the businesses that will operate across the developed stadium district. Nonetheless, the Commanders agreed to so-called “labor peace agreements” for many workers in the forthcoming development, securing the assent of several unions — among them the AFL-CIO — shortly before Friday’s vote.

Of course, privileging organized labor disadvantages free labor. One witness at the hearing, a CPA, noted this explicitly. By restricting contracts to unionized firms, he argued, the government “would be excluding [non-unionized] DC companies and DC residents from doing work on this project, which is a great opportunity [for them].” Moreover, in his judgment, the District will find it lacks a sufficient number of union workers to meet the forthcoming demand (just 10 percent of construction workers are union members), necessitating the hiring of out-of-towners.

Washington, DC’s political proclivities being what they are, the interest groups that local officials and the Commanders thought necessary to placate were ideological as well as economic. One witness touted “retail space for local needs with opportunity for grocery stores and small minority-owned businesses.” According to another, “Food equity is key.”

For council members and activists, another ideologically salient condition was the 1,800 affordable housing units — a full third of the anticipated new housing. The gentleman seated beside me at the dais during my testimony, a criminal-justice advocate, urged the Council to “set aside” housing units specifically for ex-convicts. This demand was not met. Even so, on Wednesday the Commanders, seeking to cinch the deal, pledged “to hire justice-involved individuals” — or, in the verbiage of my dais-mate, “our justice-impacted neighbors” —  “for 15 percent of available construction and permanent jobs.”

Then there were the environmentalists. Myriad witnesses on Tuesday called on the Council to enforce a net-zero mandate on the stadium campus. And although the green activists failed to secure that whole kit and caboodle they sought, they did not depart empty-handed. “The Club will build and operate the Stadium to a LEED O+M Platinum standard and commits to achieving a minimum of LEED O+M Gold for the mixed-use development across all its projects constructed on the RFK Campus,” the Commanders said on Wednesday. The team also committed to investigate further clean-energy technologies. What costs this will impose upon the development area and upon the businesses that will operate within it remains to be seen.

To market its subsidization of a private business owned by a billionaire whose net worth exceeds $10 billion, the DC government and the Commanders shrouded the cronyism afoot in promises of an economic revolution. With the deal, everyone will receive just what he wants — everyone, that is, besides the taxpayers whose hard-earned money will fund a quixotic project with scant chance of success. As I said in my testimony, “There is nothing I would like better than for these benefits to materialize, and for these neighborhoods to be revitalized, but I fear that they are nothing more than a mirage.” 

Mayor Bowser was not mistaken that the RFK Stadium project is a “BFD.” But big is not always beautiful.

Here’s a quick recap of the crypto landscape for Monday (August 11) as of 9:00 p.m. UTC.

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

Bitcoin and Ethereum price update

Bitcoin (BTC) was priced at US$118,815, down by 0.1 percent over the last 24 hours and its lowest valuation on Monday. Its highest price for the day was US$120,693.

Bitcoin price performance, August 11, 2025.

Bitcoin price performance, August 11, 2025.

Chart via TradingView.

Analyst Omkar Godbole offered a cautious outlook, pointing to lower trading volumes for Bitcoin despite similar prices in July and a Coinbase Global (NASDAQ:COIN) discount suggesting weak US institutional demand.

Ethereum (ETH) has outperformed after a weekend rally.

Ethereum broke past US$4,300 on Monday as FG Nexus announced the acquisition of 47,331 ETH, worth about US$200 million. Meanwhile, data from Etherscan shows rising daily transaction counts over the past several weeks.

Creator coins like ZRO and PUMP also saw gains after announcements like Coinbase’s new DEX feature and LayerZero’s acquisition. Bondex CEO Ignacio Palomera called these developments an evolution in how creators can monetize their content. US consumer price index data on Tuesday (August 12) could fuel or dampen the crypto rally.

Altcoin price update

  • Solana (SOL) was priced at US$176.39, down by 3.6 percent over 24 hours and its lowest valuation for the day. Its highest price was US$180.86.
  • XRP was trading for US$3.16, down 1.7 percent in the past 24 hours and at its lowest valuation of the day. Its highest was US$3.22.
  • Sui (SUI) was trading at US$3.69, down by 5 percent over the past 24 hours, and its lowest valuation of the day. Its highest level was US$3.77.
  • Cardano (ADA) was trading at US$0.783, down by 3 percent over 24 hours and its lowest valuation on Monday. Its highest was US$0.8008.

Today’s crypto news to know

Bullish aims for US$4.82 billion valuation in upsized IPO

Bullish has increased the size of its planned initial public offering (IPO), targeting a valuation of up to US$4.82 billion. It plans to raise as much as US$990 million by selling 30 million shares priced between US$32 and US$33 each, a higher range than its previous filing, but still below its US$9 billion target in a failed 2021 SPAC merger.

The cryptocurrency exchange said it will convert a significant portion of its IPO proceeds into US-dollar-backed stablecoins through partnerships with token issuers. BlackRock-managed funds and Cathie Wood’s ARK Investment have shown interest in purchasing up to US$200 million worth of shares.

Bullish is expected to price the offering on Tuesday and debut on the NYSE under the ticker “FLY” the next day.

Tether and Rumble propose joint acquisition of Northern Data

Tether and Rumble (NASDAQ:RUM) have proposed to jointly acquire all shares of artificial intelligence infrastructure company Northern Data, according to a press release issued on Monday.

According to the proposed terms, USDt issuer Tether, already Northern Data’s largest shareholder, would support the transaction, which would see each Northern Data shareholder receive 2.319 newly issued Class A Rumble shares for each Northern Data share offered, leading to roughly 33.3 percent of Rumble ownership being transferred to Northern Data shareholders. The final exchange ratio may be adjusted for the potential sale of Peak Mining and a related debt reduction, which would increase the exchange ratio.

Subject to definitive documentation, Tether would also significantly increase its investment in Rumble, becoming a key customer with a multi-year GPU purchase commitment.

Chainlink to partner with ICE

Blockchain oracle platform Chainlink announced a partnership with US-based Fortune 500 company Intercontinental Exchange (NYSE:ICE) on Monday to bring foreign exchange and precious metals data onchain.

The collaboration will unite Intercontinental’s consolidated feed, an aggregator of market data from over 300 global exchanges and marketplaces, with Chainlink Data Streams’ derived data sets, which provide market information to power tokenization for over 2,000 decentralized applications and major financial institutions.

This partnership is the latest move to further integrate traditional market infrastructure with blockchain systems.

El Salvador targets wealthy investors with new Bitcoin banking law

El Salvador has approved a new investment banking law designed to attract institutional and high-net-worth crypto investors. Licensed investment banks with at least US$50 million in capital will be able to provide Bitcoin and other digital asset services, but only to clients meeting “sophisticated investor” criteria.

Requirements include at least US$250,000 in liquid assets and advanced financial knowledge.

The banks will be allowed to issue bonds, structure public-private projects and offer digital asset products. Lawmakers say the changes aim to position the country as a regional financial hub and draw in foreign private capital.

The move comes as President Nayib Bukele consolidates political power through constitutional reforms extending presidential terms and removing term limits.

Blue Origin to accept crypto payments for space flights

According to a Monday press release, Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin has partnered with payment processing company Shift4 Payments (NYSE:FOUR) to allow customers to buy tickets to outer space using crypto and stablecoins.

Trips will take place on Blue Origin’s New Shepard reusable rockets, and direct payments will now be accepted from popular wallets from the likes of MetaMask and Coinbase.

“Our mission has always been to revolutionize commerce by simplifying the transaction process, and we’re thrilled to now extend that vision beyond Earth,” said Taylor Lauber, CEO of Shift4.

“This partnership will enable adventurous travelers to book the adventure of a lifetime, no matter their preferred payment method — all with a simple, frictionless experience,’ he added. Blue Origin has flown more than 75 passengers past the Kármán Line, the boundary separating Earth’s atmosphere and space.

“We believe crypto and stablecoins are going to become an increasingly popular way for consumers to pay, particularly for high-end purchases, as both the consumer and merchant benefit financially from these transactions,” commented Alex Wilson, head of crypto at Shift4.

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

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

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Lithium, a naturally occurring trace element in the brain, may be able to unlock a key medical mystery: why some people develop Alzheimer’s disease and others don’t, despite similar brain changes.

In a recently published study, scientists at Harvard Medical School state that lithium not only exists in the human brain at biologically meaningful levels, but also appears to protect against neurodegeneration.

Additionally, their work shows that lithium supports the function of all major brain cell types.

The decade-long study drew on mouse experiments and analyses of human brain and blood samples across the spectrum of cognitive health. The Harvard team discovered that as amyloid beta, the sticky protein associated with Alzheimer’s, begins to accumulate, it binds to lithium and depletes its availability in the brain. This drop in lithium impairs neurons, glial cells and other brain structures, accelerating memory loss and disease progression.

“The idea that lithium deficiency could be a cause of Alzheimer’s disease is new and suggests a different therapeutic approach,” said Bruce Yankner, who is the senior author of the study.

Yankner, a professor of genetics and neurology at Harvard Medical School who in the 1990s was the first to show that amyloid beta is toxic to nerve cells, said the new findings open the door to treatments that address the disease in its entirety, rather than targeting single features like amyloid plaques or tau tangles.

To explore this possibility, researchers screened for lithium compounds that could evade capture by amyloid beta.

They identified lithium orotate as the most promising candidate. In mice, the compound reversed Alzheimer’s-like brain changes, prevented cell damage and restored memory, even in animals with advanced disease.

Crucially, the effective dose was about one-thousandth of that used in psychiatric treatments, avoiding the toxicity risk that has hampered lithium’s clinical use in older patients.

“You have to be careful about extrapolating from mouse models, and you never know until you try it in a controlled human clinical trial,” Yankner cautioned. “But so far the results are very encouraging.”

The path to these findings began with access to an unusually rich source of brain tissue.

Working with the Rush Memory and Aging Project in Chicago, the team examined postmortem samples from thousands of donors, from cognitively healthy individuals to those with mild cognitive impairment and full-blown Alzheimer’s.

Using advanced mass spectrometry, they measured trace levels of about 30 metals. Lithium stood out as the only one whose levels dropped sharply at the earliest stages of memory loss.

The pattern matched earlier population studies linking higher environmental lithium levels, including in drinking water, to lower dementia rates. But unlike those correlations, the Harvard team directly measured brain lithium and established a normal range for healthy individuals who had never taken lithium as medication.

“Lithium turns out to be like other nutrients we get from the environment, such as iron and vitamin C,” Yankner said. “It’s the first time anyone’s shown that lithium exists at a natural level that’s biologically meaningful without giving it as a drug.”

To test whether this deficiency was more than an association, the researchers fed healthy mice a lithium-restricted diet, lowering brain lithium to levels seen in Alzheimer’s patients.

The animals developed brain inflammation, lost connections between neurons and showed cognitive decline; however, replenishing them with lithium orotate reversed these changes. What’s more, mice given the compound from early adulthood were protected from developing Alzheimer’s-like symptoms altogether.

The findings raise several possibilities. Measuring lithium levels in blood could become a tool for early screening, identifying people at risk before symptoms emerge. Furthermore, amyloid-evading lithium compounds could be tested as preventive or therapeutic agents, potentially altering the disease course more fundamentally than existing drugs.

For now, researchers stress that no one should self-medicate with lithium supplements.

The team emphasized that the safety and efficacy of lithium orotate in humans remain unproven, and clinical trials will be needed to determine whether the dramatic benefits seen in mice translate to people.

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

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

A Democratic whistleblower told the FBI that Adam Schiff approved leaking classified information in order to discredit President Donald Trump, according to newly-released documents.

The documents, which were obtained by Just The News, were recently handed over to Congress by FBI Director Kash Patel. 

The whistleblower reportedly worked for Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee for over ten years, and reported Schiff’s alleged behavior to the FBI in 2017.

According to the report, the intelligence staffer called the leaking ‘treasonous’ and ‘illegal,’ in addition to being unethical. He was most recently interviewed by the FBI in 2023.

The staffer also said that he personally attended a meeting where Schiff greenlit the leak.

‘When working in this capacity, [redacted staffer’s name] was called to an all-staff meeting by SCHIFF,’ the documents state, per Just The News. 

‘In this meeting, SCHIFF stated the group would leak classified information which was derogatory to President of the United States DONALD J. TRUMP. SCHIFF stated the information would be used to indict President TRUMP.’

‘[The whistleblower] stated this would be illegal and, upon hearing his concerns, unnamed members of the meeting reassured that they would not be caught leaking classified information,’ the report added.

John Solomon, who co-authored the piece with Just The News’ Jerry Dunleavy, appeared on Fox News Channel’s ‘Hannity’ to discuss the report.

‘This is the first of several major leak investigations we’re going to see over the next several days,’ Solomon said. ‘You’re going to see other major people that were clearly identified by the FBI, having leaked classified secrets.’

‘Their own staff turned them in when interviewed by the FBI. Nothing, again, happened,’ he added. ‘It’s a common pattern. The question now is, in Donald Trump’s Justice Department, does that dynamic change?’

Soon after the report was published, Patel shared it on X, saying that the FBI ‘found it [and] declassified it.’

‘Now Congress can see how classified info was leaked to shape political narratives – and decide if our institutions were weaponized against the American people,’ Patel’s post read.

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


This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

While directly holding cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum is a popular option, investors looking for alternatives are clamoring for financial products such as crypto exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

Canada first launched Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs in 2021. These Canadian Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs allow investors to place returns in tax-sheltered accounts like tax-free savings accounts or registered retirement savings plans.

“There is a high demand for a Bitcoin product that has all the features that people love about ETFs — that they trade on an exchange, that they’re liquid,” Ross Mayfield, investment strategy analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co., told Bloomberg in mid-2021.

Interest has only increased since then. In the US, Bitcoin ETFs’ net assets surpassed US$100 billion in November 2024, gaining ground on US gold ETFs. Sean Farrell, head of digital asset strategy at Fundstrat, wrote in mid-2023 that the Bitcoin ETF category at large has the potential to surpass the precious metals ETF market in terms of asset value.

‘Bitcoin ETF eventually could become >$300 billion category,’ he said in the note.

Ethereum ETFs have also become a major talking point. Ethereum is the most widely used blockchain technology, and Ether, the digital currency of this platform, is the second largest cryptocurrency after Bitcoin.

In Q2 2025, Canadian ETF firms officially launched North America’s first Solana and XRP spot ETFs, offering investors exposure to the significant altcoins. The launch of XRP ETFs by Canadian firms comes amid increased clarity regarding XRP’s regulatory status in the US.

With that in mind, it’s worth taking a look at the currently available Canadian cryptocurrency ETFs.

The list below includes the biggest 15 crypto ETFs available on the Canadian market sorted by assets under management, and all data presented is current as of July 29, 2025.

1. Purpose Bitcoin ETF (TSX:BTCC)

Assets under management: C$1.66 billion

Billed as the world’s first physically settled Bitcoin ETF, the Purpose Bitcoin ETF launched in February 2021 and is backed by Bitcoin in cold storage. This means the fund allows investors to add and sell Bitcoin with no digital wallet required.

Hosted by Canadian investment company Purpose Investments, the Purpose Bitcoin ETF is backed by 21101.367791 Bitcoins and has a management expense ratio of 1.5 percent.

2. CI Galaxy Bitcoin ETF (TSX:BTCX.B)

Assets under management: C$1.44 billion

Launched in March 2021, the CI Galaxy Bitcoin ETF was born out of a partnership between cryptocurrency leaders Galaxy Fund Management and CI Global Asset Management. Galaxy Fund Management is part of Galaxy Digital, a diversified financial services firm with a focus on digital assets and the blockchain technology sector.

The ETF’s objective is to give investors exposure to Bitcoin via an institutional-quality fund platform, as its holdings are wholly Bitcoin and are kept in cold storage. At 0.4 percent, this fund boasts one of the lowest management fees of all the crypto funds on the market.

3. Fidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF (TSX:FBTC)

Assets under management: C$1.43 billion

The Fidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF, launched in November 2021. It offers the security of Fidelity’s in-house cold storage services for its holdings.

While it previously had a management fee of 0.39 percent, the Fidelity Advantage Bitcoin ETF lowered it in January 2025 to an ultra-low management fee of 0.32 percent.

4. CI Galaxy Ethereum ETF (TSX:ETHX.U)

Assets under management: C$693.52 million

The CI Galaxy Ethereum ETF, another collaboration between CI and Galaxy, offers investors exposure to the spot Ethereum price through Ether holdings in cold storage.

The fund launched on April 20, 2021, the same day as two of the other Ether ETFs on this list.

At the time, CI Global Asset Management suggested that “owning Ether is similar to owning a basket of early-stage, high-growth technology stocks.”

The CI Galaxy Ethereum ETF also has a notably low management fee of just 0.4 percent.

5. Evolve Bitcoin ETF (TSX:EBIT)

Assets under management: C$267.64 million

Evolve ETFs partnered with cryptocurrency experts, including Gemini Trust Company, CF Benchmarks, Cidel Bank & Trust and CIBC Mellon Global Services, to launch the Evolve Bitcoin ETF. The fund, which holds its own Bitcoin, has a management fee of 0.75 percent.

Launched a week after the Purpose Bitcoin ETF, its holdings of Bitcoin are priced based on the CME CF Bitcoin Reference Rate, a once-a-day benchmark index price for Bitcoin denominated in US dollars.

6. Purpose Ether ETF (TSX:ETHH)

Assets under management: C$235.71 million

The Purpose Ether ETF is a direct-custody Ether ETF that launched on April 20, 2021. This fund holds 95349.491491 Ether, which it stores in cold storage.

The Purpose Ether ETF offers investors exposure to the daily price movements of physically settled Ether tokens with a management fee of 1 percent.

7. 3iQ Solana Staking ETF (TSX:SOLQ)

Assets under management: C$203.25 million

The 3iQ Solana Staking ETF is designed to provide investors with a user-friendly and secure way to gain exposure to SOL and earn passive rewards through staking. Its launch quickly garnered significant assets under management and attracted investments from SkyBridge Capital and two of ARK Invest’s ETFs.

For the first 12 months after its April 16, 2025, launch, the ETF features a 0 percent management fee. After this initial period, the management fee will be 0.15 percent.

8. Purpose Bitcoin Yield ETF (TSX:BTCY)

Assets under management: C$130.48 million

The Purpose Bitcoin Yield ETF uses a covered call strategy to generate yield for investors, which involves writing call options on Bitcoin. Call options give the buyer an option to purchase an asset at a specific price on or before a specific date.

Its structure allows the fund to earn income from option premiums while providing investors with exposure to Bitcoin’s price movements. Its distributions are paid monthly.

9. Evolve Ether ETF (TSX:ETHR)

Assets under management: C$96.58 million

The Evolve Ether ETF offers investors an easier route to investing in Ether. The fund’s holdings of Ether are priced based on the CME CF Ether-Dollar Reference Rate, a once-a-day benchmark index price for Ether denominated in US dollars.

As with the Evolve Bitcoin ETF, the Evolve Ether ETF has a management fee of 0.75 percent.

10. Evolve Cryptocurrencies ETF (TSX:ETC)

Assets under management: C$86.15 million

The Evolve Cryptocurrencies ETF launched in September 2021 as the first multi-cryptocurrency ETF, providing combined exposure to both Bitcoin and Ether. Its holdings have since expanded to include XRP and Solana.

This product from Evolve ETFs allows investors to diversify their crypto portfolios and provides indirect exposure to the four coins, weighing them by market capitalization and rebalancing its holdings on a monthly basis. Bitcoin makes up the majority of its portfolio.

While this ETF has no management fee, the underlying funds that hold both Bitcoin and Ether have management fees of 0.75 percent plus applicable taxes.

11. Purpose Ether Yield ETF (TSX:ETHY)

Assets under management: C$78.98 million

Like the Purpose Bitcoin Yield ETF, the Purpose Ether Yield ETF offers investors an opportunity to invest in Ether while also generating yield. Purpose Investments lends a portion of its Ether holdings to institutional borrowers and earns interest on those loans.

Investors who purchase shares of this ETF receive a portion of the interest earned in monthly distributions.

12. Purpose XRP ETF (TSX:XRPP)

Assets under management: C$72.12 million

The Purpose XRP ETF started trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange on June 18, 2025, as part of the launch of Canada’s first XRP ETFs. The fund invests directly in XRP, offering investors access to the XRP spot price.

The new asset is offering a 0 percent management fee through February 2026, after which time it will have a management fee of 0.69 percent.

13. Fidelity Advantage Ether ETF (TSX:FETH)

Assets under management: C$71.59 million

Following the successful launch of its Bitcoin fund, Fidelity brought its Advantage Ether ETF to market in September 2022, making this the newest Ether ETF in Canada. Its holdings are stored in Fidelity’s in-house cold storage.

The Fidelity Advantage Ether ETF has a management fee of 0.4 percent.

14. Evolve XRP ETF (TSX:XRP)

Assets under management: C$50.28 million

The Evolve XRP ETF is passively managed, aiming to track the price of XRP without engaging in active trading strategies or derivatives overlays such as covered calls. Its goal is to provide straightforward exposure to XRP’s price movements.

The management fee for the Evolve XRP ETF is 0.75 percent. This was reduced from an initial 1.00 percent effective June 18, 2025, to make it more competitive.

15. Ninepoint Crypto and AI Leaders ETF (TSX:TKN)

Assets under management: C$34.73 million

Previously named the Ninepoint Web3 Innovators Fund, the Ninepoint Crypto and AI Leaders ETF aims to provide a more diversified exposure to the digital asset and emerging tech space compared to holding a single cryptocurrency.

Instead of investing directly in crypto assets like the other ETFs on this list, the fund invests in a diversified portfolio primarily focused on AI and crypto companies and crypto ETFs. Among its crypto ETF holdings, which make up 25 percent of its portfolio, are several of the Bitcoin, Ether and Solana ETFs on this list.

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

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Alkane Resources (ASX:ALK,TSX:ALK) said on August 5 that it has closed its merger with gold- and antimony-focused Mandalay Resources. The all-share transaction was valued at AU$559.1 million.

First announced in April, the deal creates a combined company that is projected to produce about 160,000 gold equivalent ounces in the 2025 fiscal year, with the potential to rise to 180,000 ounces the following year.

Alkane has acquired all of Mandalay’s issued and outstanding common shares, with former Mandalay shareholders and existing Alkane shareholders respectively owning approximately 55 percent and 45 percent of the new entity.

“This merger represents a significant step forward for both companies. By combining our complementary portfolios, we have created a stronger, more resilient platform with the scale and financial flexibility to pursue long-term growth,” said Alkane Managing Director and CEO Nic Earner in a press release.

Alkane began pursuing a TSX listing following the merger announcement. The company began trading on the TSX under the symbol ‘ALK’ on August 7, with the ASX remaining as its primary listing.

Mandalay shares officially delisted from the TSX on August 6, the day after the merger closed.

Australia remains Alkane’s focus, with its Tomingley gold project in New South Wales holding the potential to produce 70,100 ounces of gold this year, forming a substantial part of the company’s projected output.

According to Alkane’s recent Diggers & Dealers presentation, Mandalay’s Costerfield gold-antimony mine, located in Victoria, Australia, is also central to the combined entity’s current focus.

The company said Costerfield is one of the world’s richest gold and antimony mines. It is expected to produce 49,400 gold equivalent ounces during the 2025 fiscal year. Björkal, an open-cut gold mine in Sweden owned by Mandalay, also forms part of the transaction. Its output is projected at 41,400 ounces of gold for 2025.

“With a diversified production base, broader exploration pipeline and enhanced trading liquidity, (we are) well positioned for a market re-rating,” added former Mandalay President and CEO and Frazer Bourchier.

Bourchier is now a non-executive director at Alkane.

The combined company will operate as Alkane and remain headquartered in Perth.

Securities Disclosure: I, Gabrielle de la Cruz, hold no direct investment interest in any company mentioned in this article.

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President Donald Trump took aim at Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in a press event on Monday over his frustration with the Ukrainian leader’s objection to ‘land swapping.’

‘I get along with Zelenskyy, but, you know, I disagree with what he’s done, very, very severely, disagree. This is a war that should have never happened,’ Trump said, reiterating his belief that the Ukrainian president is in part at fault for Russia’s illegal 2022 invasion.

‘I was a little bothered by the fact that Zelensky was saying, ‘Well, I have to get constitutional approval’,’ Trump said. ‘I mean, he’s got approval to go into war and kill everybody, but he needs approval to do a land swap, because there’ll be some land swapping going on.’

‘I know that through Russia and through conversations with everybody,’ Trump added, noting it was ‘for the good of Ukraine.’

Zelenskyy – who did not declare war on Russia, as Moscow had already invaded, did declare Martial Law on Feb. 24, 2022 with the approval of Ukraine’s parliament, which gave him presidential powers to mobilize a military response — made clear over the weekend that he objected to Trump’s ‘land swapping’ proposal and has repeatedly said it would require a national referendum under the nation’s constitution, not a unilateral decision by him. 

Trump wouldn’t detail what exactly he hopes to get out of the meeting with Putin and described it as a ‘feel-out meeting,’ saying within ‘the first two minutes [he’ll] know exactly whether or not a deal can be made.’

‘I’m going in to speak to Vladimir Putin, and I’m going to be telling him, you got to end this war, you got to end it,’ Trump said, reiterating his belief that if he had won the 2020 election, Putin wouldn’t have invaded Ukraine, saying ‘he wasn’t going to mess with me.’

‘I go into that thing fully loaded right up there, and we’re going to see what happens,’ he continued. ‘It could be a good meeting, and we’ll go a step further. We’ll get it done. 

‘I’d like to see a ceasefire very, very quickly, very quick,’ he continued. ‘And, we’re going to be dealing with the European leaders and, we’re going to be dealing with President Zelensky and hopefully we’re going to have a great success.’


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President Donald Trump has renewed his call for Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, to undergo a cognitive test. 

”Congresswoman’ Jasmine Crockett is a Low (Very!!!) I.Q. Individual, much in the mold of the AOC Plus Three Gang of Country Destroying Morons – Only slightly dumber,’ Trump wrote on TRUTH Social on Monday. 

‘Each of these political hacks should be forced to take a Cognitive Exam, much like the one I recently took while getting my ‘physical’ at our GREAT Washington, D.C., Military Hospital (WR!),’ Trump said. ‘As the doctors said, ‘President Trump ACED it, something that is rarely seen!’ These Radical Left Lunatics would all fail this test in a spectacular show of stupidity and incompetence. TAKE THE TEST!!!

Trump previously said Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., should take a cognitive test in June when the progressive ‘Squad’ leader demanded his impeachment over the U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. 

Meanwhile, as the White House pushes Republican states to redistrict mid-cycle ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, Crockett has accused Trump of pushing a ‘white supremacy agenda’ and ‘diluting the voices of people of color.’ The Trump administration asserts that Democratic states have engaged in ‘gerrymandering’ for years and encouraged illegal immigration to boost their congressional influence. 

In Texas, Democratic state lawmakers fled the state in an effort to stop the vote on a GOP redistricting plan that likely would have resulted in Republicans picking up five House seats. 

Crockett has accused Trump of hurling the low IQ insult as a racially-coded tactic to insult ‘people of color,’ including ‘The Breakfast Club’ host Charlamagne tha God. 

‘Newsflash, Wannabe Dictator: I don’t care how many times you shake the Etch A Sketch trying to redraw these lines,’ Crockett wrote on X last week. ‘I’m not disappearing. I’ll be back, still on your behind every step of the way. We’ve already been over this. I’ve got the degrees, the credentials, and the receipts. If you’re looking for ‘low IQ,’ try looking in the mirror – or at your own Cabinet.’ 

Despite the president describing her as having a low IQ, Crockett said Trump has the ‘most incompetent Cabinet in the history of this country,’ referring to the Signal-gate scandal earlier this year. 

Crockett has also dubbed Trump a ‘Temu dictator.’ At a progressive rally in Phoenix, Arizona, earlier this month, the congresswoman said on stage, ‘Donald Trump is a piece of sh–.’ 

‘This is a person who has a problem with people of color. Period,’ she told CNN. ‘I don’t care how many Black MAGA [are] out there with [their] hats, I want to be clear, when we look at who it is that he’s kicking out of this country, it’s people of color.’ 


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The gold price edged higher this week, benefiting from increased investor uncertainty as US tariffs went into effect for dozens of countries on Thursday (August 7).

Rates start at 10 percent and rise as high as 50 percent for countries like Brazil. The US is still in talks with Canada, China and Mexico, its top three trading partners.

Commenting on the news, President Donald Trump took to his social media platform Truth Social, saying that ‘billions of dollars’ will now start flowing into the US.

Aside from that, there are hopes the tariffs will provide a boost for domestic businesses as buyers turn inward. However, critics argue that the levies will be passed on to American consumers who are already dealing with the ongoing effects of inflation.

Going back to gold, the yellow metal has also seen support from strong expectations that the US Federal Reserve will cut interest rates when it meets in September.

This outlook comes after weaker-than-expected July jobs data released last week — only 73,000 jobs were added for the month, and in addition to that the Bureau of Labor Statistics revised down numbers for May and June, saying 258,000 fewer jobs were created.

Trump fired the bureau’s commissioner of labor statistics in response, saying the numbers weren’t accurate. Fed Chair Jerome Powell also found himself in the line of fire, with the president suggesting that he too should be put ‘out to pasture.’

Bullet briefing — Gold revaluation, China buying, streaming deal

Fed publishes gold revaluation article

The Fed turned heads in the resource space this week with the release of an article on gold revaluation. In it, a principal economist looks at ‘rare cases when countries used proceeds from valuation gains on gold and foreign exchange reserves.’

While precious metals market watchers have noted that the Fed publishing research on gold revaluation doesn’t mean it’s going to happen in the US, it’s still seen as significant that the central bank is mentioning it at all.

China snaps up gold, platinum

The People’s Bank of China continued snapping up gold in July, adding to its reserves of the yellow metal for the ninth month in a row. According to Bloomberg, the Asian nation now holds 73.96 million ounces of gold, an increase of 60,000 ounces over the course of the month.

China is also reportedly adding to its platinum holdings, with data from Standard Chartered (LSE:STAN) showing that it brought in 1.2 million ounces in the second quarter.

A separate article from Bloomberg indicates that state-owned entity China Platinum is making most of the purchases, meaning it’s difficult to know who is really buying the metal.

The US is picking up platinum too, while London and Zurich are seeing shortfalls of the metal. With the implied one month lease rate down from over 35 percent last month, but still elevated at 10 percent, experts are calling for continued tightness in the market.

After years of rangebound trading, the platinum price began breaking out in mid-May, eventually surpassing US$1,470 per ounce and reaching highs not seen in over a decade.

First Quantum’s US$1 billion gold stream

First Quantum Minerals (TSX:FM) will receive a US$1 billion upfront cash payment from Royal Gold (NASDAQ:RGLD) under a gold-streaming deal for its Kansanshi mine.

According to First Quantum, the agreement, announced on Tuesday (August 5), will allow it to retain exposure to all of the asset’s copper output and most of its gold production.

Located in Zambia, Kansanshi is the company’s flagship operation, as well as Africa’s largest copper mine. The asset produced about 170,000 metric tons of copper and 105,000 ounces of gold in 2024, with an expansion in the final stages of commissioning.

The amount of gold First Quantum delivers to Royal Gold will be based on its copper output. In addition to the US$1 billion initial payment from Royal Gold, First Quantum will receive 20 percent of the gold spot price for each ounce delivered, with that amount rising to 35 percent in the event that specific milestones are met. The arrangement includes acceleration provisions as well.

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

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