Institutions and policy continue to drive crypto adoption and the market rally
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With news breaking that the U.S. is putting some GDP data on-chain the institutional and policy-driven rally of 2025 looks set to continue rolling forward, but there are developments and news that some investors might have overlooked.
As the summer of crypto begins to near its close the reality is that some crypto investors across the board still harbor doubts about the stickiness of institutional adoption and programs. After all, during the last recent bull market of 2021 there was multiple partnerships and agreements inked by between crypto native firms are TradFi institutions. Celebrity endorsements were courted aggressively, and T.V. commercials for crypto exchanges and firms became commonplace. Under the surface the crypto sector still lacked many of the institutional and enterprise tools necessary for wider and more comprehensive adoption. That is a key differentiator between the bull market and excitement of 2025 and previous bull runs; this market is being driven in large part of by policymakers, regulators, and institutions.
Something that is worth noting is that such agreements and partnership may not drive as scintillating or as exciting headlines as have occurred in earlier cycles. These headlines may not be as exciting, but actually bode better for the market that other previous cycles. Let’s take a look at 3 major (and recent) developments involving regulators, crypto-native organizations, and the TradFi sector that investors might have missed.
Crypto Lobbying Versus TradFi Lobbying
As the crypto industry has celebrated a run of policy and legislative victories in 2025 the TradFi lobbying apparatus has begun to take note. Specifically the passage of crypto friendly legislation, and particularly legislation focused around stablecoins, does have some banks and associated lobbyists treating the risk of capital flight as a clear and present issue. Compounding this risk are the efforts by crypto-native organizations – including Circle the issuer of the well regarded USDC – to obtain national banking licenses. Given statements and pronouncements from both the OCC and FDIC that are walking back prior efforts to prevent this, existing banking institutions are correct to be taking note and attempting to slow such changes.
On the other hand crypto firms are also engaging in efforts to maintain certain bans of fees for data that TradFi firms are looking to change. The real fight came to the surface after the passage and signing into law of the GENIUS Act, which has received intense pushback from TradFi banking institutions, and especially from smaller independent banks which are set to suffer the most from potential deposit flight. With hundreds of millions having been poured into crypto lobbying efforts since the Presidential election the legal fight between these two groups appears to have no end in sight.
Stablecoin Reporting Continues To Improve
Even with the great strides that have been made with regards to stablecoin regulation and policy the market itself remains fragmented from an issuer, reporting, and transparency perspective. One primary issue is that the same stablecoin can behave and trade differently depending on which chain it is trading on, and that different stablecoins can react differently to headlines, inflation figures, or other market wide events. This actively works against the claims by the stablecoin issuers that stablecoins are, in essence, an equivalent for dollars and can be treated as such. While not able to be entirely addressed merely through changes to reporting, disclosure, and transparency efforts, a recent partnership is set to improve these measures across the board.
Circle and Paxos have recently partnered with Blyprynt in order to develop and deploy methodologies to trace specific tokens back to a verified issuer. Benefits derived from this partnership include providing provenance up front and throughout the transaction process, a reduction in complexity for individual transactions, and providing both regulators and investors with much needed transparency. Primary issues to be addressed include offsetting the rise in counterfeit tokens and impersonation attacks, as well as improving the ability to audit stablecoin issuers and stablecoin transactions.
Market Transparency Is On The Rise
Despite the progress that has been made on the crypto policy and markets front the crypto sector is still oftentimes associated with opacity, fraudulent activities, and uncertainty as to which regulator is actually in charge of the marketplace. In August 2025, following executive orders and Federal Reserve statements seeking to prevent the issuance or creation of a U.S. CDBC, and alongside the GENIUS and CLARITY Act the CFTC has made a major move toward improving market trust and transparency.
The CFTC has integrated a financial surveillance tool developed by Nasdaq to enhance the ability of the CFTC team to detect market abuse, fraud, insider trading, and the plethora of scams and rug pulls that have continued to create headlines in the crypto sector. As per Nasdaq the algorithms underpinning the tool has been tailored to identify and report potentially suspicious trading patterns specific to cryptoassets, helping to enable real-time analytics and crackdowns on bad actors. As crypto becomes more integrated into markets, balance sheets, and retirement plans the need for better analytics and transparency will only increase.
While some detractors bemoan the increasing convergence between crypto and TradFi, the reality is that such comprehensive partnership are integral for the continued growth and adoption of the sector.