In 2025, cryptocurrencies shifted from speculative assets to essential financial infrastructure, marked by regulatory frameworks, institutional adoption, and technological upgrades. Governments and banks integrated Bitcoin and stablecoins into official systems, while hacks and memecoin booms highlighted ongoing challenges. This transformation redefined crypto's role in global finance.
The year 2025 began with expectations of a Bitcoin rally driven by halving, spot ETFs, and Federal Reserve policy shifts, but it ended with Bitcoin trading 30% below its October peak of over $126,000, consolidating around $90,000. North Korean hackers stole a record $2 billion in crypto, including a $1.5 billion heist, contributing to cumulative thefts of $6.75 billion since tracking started. The US government responded by building reserves from seized coins, signaling a new era.
On March 6, President Donald Trump signed an executive order creating the US Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, comprising about 200,000 BTC from seizures like Silk Road, and directed agencies to retain rather than auction Bitcoin. This policy reframed Bitcoin as a strategic asset, reducing selling pressure and influencing global views. In July, Trump enacted the GENIUS Act, the first federal framework for dollar-backed stablecoins, allowing banks to issue them via subsidiaries and providing licensing for nonbanks, with FDIC rules proposed in December.
Europe's MiCA regulation fully activated, imposing EU-wide licensing for crypto services and stablecoins, while Hong Kong advanced its virtual-asset rules and spot ETF market. Australia's and UK's frameworks further standardized operations. The SEC enabled in-kind creations for Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, adopted generic listing standards, and saw Bitcoin ETFs attract $22 billion in net inflows and Ethereum ETFs $6.2 billion by December 23.
Ethereum executed the Pectra hard fork on May 7, enhancing account abstraction and throughput, followed by the Fusaka upgrade in December, projecting up to 60% fee cuts for layer-2 rollups. Stablecoin supply exceeded $309 billion, and tokenized US Treasuries reached $9 billion, rivaling traditional payment volumes. Circle's NYSE IPO raised $1 billion, sparking a wave of public crypto listings.
Memecoins surged, with 9.4 million minted on Pump.fun, fueling lawsuits like one accusing it of Ponzi schemes under RICO. These developments hardened crypto's infrastructure, concentrating control among states and institutions, though crime and speculation persisted, raising questions about supervision and scalability.