
Philippines pushes for fairer digital transaction fees
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), the Philippine central bank, is urging financial institutions to adopt a 'market-based' and 'fair' pricing mechanism for digital transaction fees, in a move aimed at reducing—if not removing—costs for consumers transferring money electronically.
The BSP is currently seeking comments from stakeholders on a draft circular that would guide banks and non-bank financial institutions in setting their fees for electronic fund transfers such as InstaPay and PESONet.
'The pricing mechanism must be adequately supported by an analysis of costs incurred by the BSFI [BSP-supervised financial institution] in delivering electronic payment products and services, which may be subject to validation by the BSP,' the proposal stated. BSP emphasized that these pricing models must not create an imbalance between different users. 'The pricing mechanism shall not unduly favor one end-user relative to others,' the draft further noted.
The proposed guidance marks a shift from the central bank's previous approach, explicitly proposing eliminating fees on small-value personal fund transfers. That provision is no longer part of the current draft.
Although the response of banks to the earlier proposal remains unclear, any effort to bring down digital transaction costs aligns with the BSP's broader agenda to increase digital adoption and improve financial access across the Philippine population.
According to BSP data, current InstaPay fees range from PHP8 to PHP75 ($0.14 to $1.35) per transaction, while PESONet charges can go as high as PHP600 ($11). Furthermore, the draft circular introduces an added layer of oversight, requiring BSP approval for any increases in existing fees or the introduction of new charges on digital payment services.
Digital payment usage surges as BSP eyes more inclusive system
The BSP's push for fairer transaction fees comes on the back of rising digital payments across the country. According to the latest central bank data, the share of digital payments in total retail transactions rose to 52.8% in 2023, up from 42.1% in 2022. This means that out of the estimated five billion monthly retail payment transactions in the country last year, over 2.6 billion were conducted through digital channels. The central bank sees this growth as both an opportunity and a responsibility. By ensuring that fees are aligned with actual service delivery costs, it aims to support further uptake while making financial services more accessible to more Filipinos.
BSP governor cites financial sector strength, vows reform continuity
The BSP's regulatory efforts to improve digital transactions are part of a broader strategy to strengthen the financial system, which the central bank said closed 2024 with strong momentum.
In its report on the Philippine Financial System for the second half of 2024, the BSP highlighted the continued growth of supervised financial institutions, including banks, trust operations, and foreign currency deposit units. These gains, it said, have enabled institutions to keep delivering essential financial services to households and businesses alike.
'BSP's policy reforms and collaboration, alongside improving macroeconomic and industry outlook, have enabled supervised entities to expand and meet Filipinos' evolving financial needs,' BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona, Jr. said in a statement. 'These efforts support a more resilient financial system.'
The report attributed sector-wide growth to a widening financial services network and advances in digital platforms. These trends, BSP noted, are enhancing customer experiences and increasing the reach of financial services, including to underserved and remote communities.
The BSP also outlined its continued focus on safeguarding the system against financial crime and cyber threats. It spotlighted the rollout of enhanced supervision mechanisms for money laundering and terrorism financing risks, as well as a cyber resilience roadmap and updated regulatory approaches for money service businesses and pawnshops.
Additionally, the lifting of the moratorium on the establishment of digital banks was cited as a forward-looking step, reinforcing the BSP's commitment to innovation while maintaining oversight.
Watch: The Philippines is at the forefront of blockchain tech adoption
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Coin Geek
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BIS finds tokenization is the future of financial system
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... In a report published on June 24, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), an institution made up of central banks from around the world, claimed that fiat-pegged stablecoins 'fall short of requirements to be the mainstay of the monetary system' as they fail the three key tests of singleness, elasticity, and integrity. However, it argued that tokenization does meet this test. In a 'special chapter' of the BIS's Annual Economic Report 2025, titled 'The next-generation monetary and financial system,' the BIS concluded that, building on the proposal for a unified ledger, the 'trilogy' of tokenized central bank reserves, commercial bank money and government bonds is 'the next logical step to deliver profound change for the financial system.' The report argued that tokenization can enhance efficiency and open new possibilities in cross-border payments, securities markets, and beyond while maintaining the key principles of sound money. 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The ' singleness of money ' refers to whether money can be issued by different banks and accepted by all without hesitation, otherwise known as 'acceptance for payment at par'; elasticity refers to whether money provides the flexibility to meet the need for large-value payments in the economy, 'so that obligations are discharged in a timely way without gridlock taking over'; and integrity refers to a system's ability to safeguard against financial crime and other illicit activity. According to the BIS, stablecoins do not meet any of these three criteria and are, therefore, not suitable to become the cornerstone of the next financial revolution. 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When it comes to elasticity, stablecoins failed the test because assets, such as Tether's USDT—the world's largest stablecoin by market cap—can be backed by a 'nominally equivalent amount of assets,' which means any 'additional issuance requires full upfront payment by holders' imposing a 'cash-in-advance constraint.' In other words, the stablecoin issuer's balance sheet cannot be expanded at will; any additional supply of stablecoins requires full upfront payment by its holders, which differs from banks, which can 'elastically expand and contract their balance sheets within regulatory limits.' Finally, stablecoins have been well publicized and have 'significant shortcomings when it comes to promoting the integrity of the monetary system' and are prone to Know Your Customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) compliance weaknesses. 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The report argued that the unified ledger can transform intermediary interactions, particularly when it comes to cross-border payments and, by combining programmability and transaction bundling, it can integrate and automate sequences of financial transactions. 'This eliminates delays and reduces manual interventions and reconciliations arising from the traditional separation of messaging, clearing and settlement,' noted the report. According to the BIS, tokenization also enables the joint execution of three previously separate steps: the debiting of the payer's account, the crediting of the receiver's account, and settlement on the central bank balance sheet. This allows for the 'synchronous exchange' of assets so that each transfer occurs only upon the transfer of the others. 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Coin Geek
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Some block reward miners ditch AI for BTC; others ditch BTC for ETH
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Hut 8 didn't say how it planned to use its new credit beyond 'near-term opportunities advancing through its growth.' In March, Hut 8 announced it had partnered with President Trump's sons to launch American Bitcoin Corp (ABTC), a new mining/BTC treasury operation comprising 'substantially all' of Hut 8's mining gear. In May, ABTC announced plans to go public on the Nasdaq sometime in Q3 via a merger with Gryphon Digital Mining. The following month, ABTC revealed that it had acquired 215 BTC for its treasury. But there's been no word on ABTC's mining performance since that March announcement. Other miners raising cash include IREN, which closed its upsized $550 million convertible notes offering earlier this month, netting the company just under $535 million. Around $146 million of that haul will go towards servicing future debt obligations, with the rest targeted for general corporate purposes and working capital. Other miners are taking different avenues to raise cash. Riot Platforms (NASDAQ: RIOT) announced earlier this month that it had sold nearly 1.75 million shares in rival Bitfarms (NASDAQ: BITF), earning Riot just under $1.6 million. Last year, Riot began acquiring major chunks of Bitfarms as part of a hostile takeover bid that sought to oust Bitfarms' directors. Riot acquired nearly 19% of Bitfarms before the companies reached a settlement last September, and Riot began selling off bits of Bitfarm. This latest sale brought Riot's stake down to 14.3%. Back to the top ↑ Bit Digital ditching BTC for ETH Bit Digital (NASDAQ: BTBT) announced earlier this week that it was shoring up its finances with a new C$60 million (US$44 million) credit agreement with the Royal Bank of Canada. The company said it would use the funds to expand its AI/high-performance computing (HPC) operations, which have taken precedence over its mining business. Bit Digital's mining revenue totaled $7.8 million in Q1, 31% of its total revenue, down from 72% in the same period last year. However, Bit Digital followed that news on Wednesday by announcing a major 'strategic shift,' saying it was looking to get out of the BTC mining business entirely. The company said it has 'commenced a strategic alternatives process for its bitcoin mining operations that is expected to result in their sale or wind-down.' Instead of BTC, Bit Digital will now focus on the Ethereum network's native token, ETH, with the goal of becoming 'a pure play [ETH] staking and treasury company.' Bit Digital will also 'over time' convert its current 417.6 BTC treasury to ETH, boosting the 24,434 ETH it already holds. Any net proceeds from the wind-down of its BTC mining operations will be similarly converted to ETH. To help grease these wheels, Bit Digital is commencing an underwritten public offering of its ordinary shares. Bit Digital didn't offer any specifics on the size or timing of this offering, nor even if the offering would actually take place. But the proceeds will be used to (wait for it) buy more ETH. In what was clearly a busy day at the Bit Digital offices, the company also announced plans to conduct an initial public offering of its wholly-owned HPC subsidiary WhiteFiber Inc. Here, too, specifics are short, as the company filed its IPO application with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on a confidential basis, allowing it to keep facts and figures under wraps for the time being. Back to the top ↑ Canaan ditching AI for BTC On June 23, miner Genesis Digital Assets (GDA) announced a deal with mining rig manufacturer Auradine to buy 1,000 of the latter's Teraflux AT2880-277 air-cooled units. The rigs will be installed at GDA's data center in Glasscock County, Texas, one of 20 locations GDA operates worldwide and part of GDA's U.S. expansion strategy. Auradine has become a more attractive option for U.S.-based miners due to the ongoing impact of President Trump's tariff war. The three largest rig-makers—Bitmain, Canaan Inc (NASDAQ: CAN), and MicroBT—are all foreign-based, and while they're making efforts to establish U.S. roots, ramping up manufacturing capacity is a slow and pricey process. Speaking of Canaan, the company just announced a 'strategic realignment' that will see it 'discontinue its non-core AI semiconductor business unit,' a process the company expects will take a few months to conclude. Going forward, Canaan will focus on 'sharpening its focus on its core businesses of bitcoin mining machine sales, self-mining operations, and consumer mining products.' Canaan's AI operations were a minor contributor to its bottom line, accounting for just $900,000 of its total 2024 revenue of $223.2 million. However, AI accounted for 15% of 2024's operating expenses, and Canaan believes mothballing the unit will result in significant savings. The move distinguishes Canaan from some prominent U.S. miners who have embraced the more predictable revenue streams from AI/HPC operations. Canaan CEO Nangeng Zhang said, 'doubling down on our core strengths in crypto infrastructure and bitcoin mining is the most strategic path forward.' Back to the top ↑ Tether seeks BTC mining crown Tether, the issuer of the market-leading USDT stablecoin, has been talking up its own mining operations for years now without offering specifics as to the success or failure of these operations. However, since May 2024, Tether has steadily increased its stake in Bitdeer (NASDAQ: BTDR) and held a 22.8% stake in Bitdeer as of this April. Earlier this month, Bitdeer announced that Tether had exercised its warrants from that 2024 financing deal, handing Tether another 5.2 million ordinary shares in exchange for $50 million. Tether held ~34 million Bitdeer shares in April, so the warrants represent a significant increase. During his appearance at the recent Bitcoin 2025 Conference in Las Vegas, Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino claimed that Tether had 'invested $2 billion in energy production and Bitcoin mining,' then said the total was actually greater than that. Either way, Ardoino boldly predicted that 'it is very realistic that, by the end of this year, Tether will be the biggest Bitcoin miner in the world, even including all the public companies.' Ardoino went on to suggest that Tether's interest in mining was both altruistic and selfish in that Tether claims to hold over 100,000 BTC and thus has an interest in the integrity of the network. Not long after that speech, Ardoino tweeted that Tether 'will work towards open-sourcing its Bitcoin Mining OS (MOS).' This will allegedly allow new mining companies to 'enter the game' without the need for third-party hosted software, and create 'an even playing field reducing the gap between publicly listed companies and smaller players.' This week, Ardoino went on The Block's Big Brain Podcast, where he repeated his claim of Tether having 100,000 BTC, saying the company needs to be 'part of the Bitcoin mining security team … to protect our own investment.' Ardoino again stated his belief that Tether 'will become the biggest Bitcoin miner out there.' Tether has long been criticized for making claims regarding its finances that require the public to take them at their word (even if that word sometimes proved fraudulent). Tether has also been accused of Photoshopping its logo onto shipping containers that Ardoino claimed contained some of Tether's mining rigs. Ardoino pushed back against these claims, arguing that while the logo was indeed added after the fact, it was only to preserve the 'physical privacy of the site.' Back to the top ↑ Norway says no way? Many countries around the world are dealing with strained electrical grids due to the heavy demands of local mining sites (both legal and illegal). Norway has sufficient energy to serve its citizens' needs, but on June 20, Minister of Digitalization and Public Administration Karianne Tung announced that the government 'has a clear intention to limit the mining of cryptocurrency in Norway as much as possible.' The government is exploring its authority under the energy allocation provisions of the Planning and Building Act to preserve power for other energy-intensive activities, including 'socially beneficial data centers.' This is by no means the first time Norway and Tung have expressed concern about mining's power consumption. Local residents have also expressed outrage over the excessive noise produced by mining sites. Tung said mining is 'very energy-intensive, and yields little in the local community in the form of jobs and income.' By limiting mining's access to local power, Norway 'can free up land, power and grid capacity for other uses that contribute more to value creation, jobs and cuts in greenhouse gas emissions.' Those 'other uses' include AI data centers 'that are a critical prerequisite for digitalization.' Tung also appeared to suggest the potential for a carveout for 'the useful use of blockchain technology,' although no specifics were offered. The government is still studying the matter but expects to come to a decision by 'autumn.' The proposed (temporary) ban appears to be aimed at prohibiting the launch of new mining operations and possibly grandfathering existing sites. These sites have been told to register their operations by July 1 to ensure the government has accurate data with which to make their conclusions. Back to the top ↑ Watch: Teranode is the digital backbone of Bitcoin title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen="">