South Korea's Financial Services Commission has referred two virtual asset market manipulation cases to prosecutors, exposing sophisticated schemes that targeted domestic investors. In the first case, suspects allegedly cornered over half of a token's global circulating supply, pumped its price on overseas exchanges, and then exploited cross-market arbitrage to dump on Korean platforms, leaving losses concentrated among local traders. The second involved ultra-short-term manipulation of a so-called "kimchi coin," using API-driven rapid-fire orders to fabricate trading activity and lure buyers before offloading positions. These actions underscore intensifying regulatory scrutiny in one of Asia's most active crypto markets.
Shanghai Prosecutors Secure Convictions in $200 Million Crypto-Facilitated Forex Scheme
A Shanghai court has convicted five individuals in a cross-border illegal forex exchange case involving over 200 million yuan (about $28 million) processed via virtual currencies. The defendants, operating through an offshore entity disguised as a "private bank," targeted high-net-worth Chinese clients seeking overseas property, immigration, or education services. Using a peer-to-peer model, they swapped yuan for crypto domestically and crypto for foreign currency abroad without any actual fund transfers, charging a 3% service fee. This case highlights China's continued crackdown on crypto-enabled capital flight despite broader restrictions.
Binance Partners with Anchorage Digital for Institutional Tri-Party Custody
Binance has expanded its institutional custody solutions by integrating Anchorage Digital as a new tri-party banking partner. Institutional clients can now keep assets in Anchorage's qualified custody accounts while trading on Binance's platform, using both crypto and yield-bearing USD accounts as collateral. Anchorage joins Binance's existing custody network, reinforcing efforts to attract institutional liquidity by separating custody from execution—a key demand of large investors. The partnership signals Binance's push to deepen ties with regulated U.S. infrastructure providers for its global Asian client base.
Citi Slashes Bitcoin and Ethereum Price Targets Amid ETF Outflows
Citi has sharply cut its 12-month price forecasts for bitcoin and ether, citing persistent ETF outflows and waning risk appetite. The bank now sees bitcoin at $82,000 (down from $112,000) and ether at $2,240 (down from $3,175), and slashed its ETF inflow estimate to zero from a prior $10 billion. For Asian crypto markets heavily influenced by global flows, this revision adds to near-term bearish sentiment. Citi's bear-case scenario projects bitcoin at $53,000 and ether at $1,094, underscoring downside risks.
Japan's bitFlyer Becomes First Japanese Exchange to Secure MiCA CASP License
bitFlyer Holdings' European subsidiary has obtained a Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) license under the EU's MiCA framework, effective June 26. The license, granted by Luxembourg's financial regulator, allows bitFlyer to offer services across all 27 EU member states. As the first Japanese exchange to achieve this milestone, bitFlyer is positioned to bridge regulatory-compliant crypto services between Asia and Europe. The move comes as MiCA's full transitional period ends, tightening market access for unlicensed platforms.
UAE Private Bank Goldman Lampe Buys €120 Million in Bitcoin During Dip
During a market downturn that saw bitcoin briefly fall below $58,000, UAE-based private bank Goldman Lampe purchased €120 million (approximately $132 million) worth of bitcoin. The sizable buy from a Middle Eastern institution highlights sustained demand from regional family offices and wealth managers, even as global spot ETFs bleed funds. The UAE continues to position itself as a crypto-friendly hub, attracting both conventional and digital asset wealth.

