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Robinhood is buying the crypto exchange Bitstamp for $200 million

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Robinhood is buying the crypto exchange Bitstamp for 0 million

Illustration: Dado Ruvic (Reuters)

Robinhood is purchasing U.K.-based crypto exchange Bitstamp for $200 million in order to expand outside the U.S. The trading platform aims to expand its global presence in cryptocurrency and attract institutional clients with new product offerings.

The acquisition is an all-cash deal expected to close in the first half of 2025.

Johann Kerbrat, the general manager of Robinhood Crypto, told The Wall Street Journal that the decision to purchase the exchange was driven by increasing customer demand for cryptocurrency products.

“Everything we’ve been doing in the past few years has been because our engagement from customers has been that they want more crypto products,” he said in an interview with the WSJ.

The news of the acquisition comes as the Securities and Exchange Commission is monitoring Robinhood’s crypto arm for allegedly violating securities laws.

Robinhood has long been a crypto advocate and was one of the first platforms to allow Dogecoin trading on its app. As a result, 62% of its crypto revenue came from Dogecoin in 2021. Moreover, it launched a cryptocurrency wallet in the same year that gained popularity among investors.

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Bitstamp was established in 2011 and has become one of Europe’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges. Currently, it offers spot trading for nearly 100 cryptocurrencies, along with services like staking and lending.

For this deal, Barclays Capital Inc. was Robinhood’s exclusive financial advisor, while Galaxy Digital Partners LLC served as Bitstamp’s exclusive financial advisor. The team of Bitstamp will collaborate with Robinhood to foster innovation and knowledge sharing across continents, per the release.

“Bringing Bitstamp’s platform and expertise into Robinhood’s ecosystem will give users an enhanced trading experience with a continuing commitment to compliance, security, and customer-centricity,” said JB Graftieaux, CEO of Bitstamp.

This is not the first time that a U.S.-based crypto company is has shown interest in expanding globally. In the past, Coinbase has also expressed an interest in making a stake overseas.

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Scam so convincing victim ignores police, puts thousands into Cryptocurrency ATM

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Scam so convincing victim ignores police, puts thousands into Cryptocurrency ATM

​WESTLAKE, Ohio (WJW) — Police in Westlake said a computer scam artist was so convincing in the story he pitched to an elderly victim that she put thousands of dollars into a Cryptocurrency ATM, even after store employees and officers pleaded with her to stop.

On Nov. 26, police were alerted by an employee at a Marathon convenience store on Center Ridge Road that a 71-year-old woman was feeding a large amount of cash into a Bitcoin ATM, while speaking with someone on her cell phone. The employee warned the woman that it appeared she was the target of a scam, but she refused to listen and kept pumping money into the machine.

On body camera video obtained by Fox 8 News, an officer approached the woman and told her, “We deal with this all the time, stop what you’re doing, I’m telling you, stop. If somebody tells you to do this, you are being scammed.” The woman responded, “They’re on the phone; they can hear everything.” The officer then told her, “Right, and they’re scamming you.”

However, the 71-year-old ignored repeated warnings from officers, after being persuaded by a scammer posing as a bank fraud investigator, that she needed to put $18,000 into the crypto machine, or risk having her life savings stolen from her account.

The officer told her, “Stop what you’re doing, you’re going to lose this money. They’re lying to you; that’s not how it works, I promise you. They’re lying, they don’t tell you to go to a gas station and go buy Bitcoin, I’m telling you, you should stop what you’re doing.”

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Officers eventually convinced the woman to stop putting cash into the ATM, but not before she lost $5,500.

The victim later told investigators the elaborate scam began earlier that day, when she received a pop-up message on her computer, indicating it was infected with a virus. A number was provided to get help, which put her in the clutches of the scam artist.

WPD Captain Jerry Vogel told Fox 8,  “She sees the pop-up, so she knows that there is an issue. Unfortunately, now the scammers use that and say, ‘Hey, it looks like maybe someone has been planting pornography or some other illicit material on your computer, you’re going to be in some trouble if you don’t get this money out of your bank and put it into a crypto machine.”

The scammer told the victim that bank employees would ask her questions about why she was taking out so much money from her account. He even gave her a story to tell, which was that she needed the cash to buy a car.

The woman told detectives, “He said, ‘Do this, do that, go here, go there.’” The final piece of the scam came when the con artist sent a QR code to the victim’s phone, which she used to direct the funds loaded into the ATM to his crypto account.

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“They weave these stories so well that the victims really believe they need to do this immediately,” said Captain Vogel.

While there is no guarantee the victim will be able to recover the money she put into the ATM, detectives were able to use new technology to immediately freeze the crypto wallet being used by the scammer. It’s part of an ongoing battle between law enforcement and cyber criminals.

According to Captain Vogel, “We take one step forward, they take another step forward, so it’s a cat and mouse game.”

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Massive 700M Euro Crypto Operation Unravels With International Raids

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Massive 700M Euro Crypto Operation Unravels With International Raids
European authorities shut down a vast crypto-fraud engine responsible for hundreds of millions in illicit flows, marking a major blow to criminal networks exploiting digital assets and exposing how deeply coordinated scams infiltrated the continent.
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Lawmakers want Indiana to become a crypto leader. That may start with retirement funds

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Lawmakers want Indiana to become a crypto leader. That may start with retirement funds
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Indiana lawmakers are hoping to make the state a cryptocurrency leader by allowing the state to invest in digital currencies like Bitcoin for state savings and retirement plans while prohibiting local communities from restricting crypto companies.

The legislation, House Bill 1042, comes as excitement grows over the once obscure digital assets that have made millionaires and wiped-out fortunes. Its supporters now include some of the country’s most powerful people, including President Donald Trump and initially hesitant financial institutions, while the first major piece of crypto legislation passed Congress earlier this year. 

Now, Indiana is looking for a slice of the windfall.  The topic was one of just a few to get an earlier-than-usual hearing as lawmakers consider redistricting, signaling it’s a major topic of interest among Republicans.

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“Crypto policy will become a mainstay of this committee’s work for probably years to come,” said bill author Kyle Pierce, R-Anderson, at a House Financial Institutions Committee meeting Dec. 4. 

A volatile investment?

Though the bill would allow public investment funds to delve into the world of digital currency, it stops short of allowing direct crypto investments.

Instead, the bill applies to cryptocurrency exchange traded funds, or EFTs — a safer, federally regulated fund that tracks crypto prices, either by holding the digital assets or a contract that speculates on prices in the future. 

The state investment programs required to provide such options include the 529 education savings plan and certain retirement funds for teachers, public employees and lawmakers. It also allows other state investment funds to place their assets in crypto EFTs. 

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While less volatile than a direct investment, it’s not entirely without risk. Because there is less oversight in the underlying crypto market, the Securities and Exchange Commission has warned it’s difficult to prevent fraud and ensure fairness, even for EFT investors. 

That was a tentative concern for Tony Green, deputy executive director of the Indiana Public Retirement System, at the House Financial Institutions Committee hearing Dec. 4. 

Though neutral on the bill, Green said IPRS would want to ensure there were proper disclaimers about volatility. And while the agency wants to offer choices to their members, he said, those surveyed were generally uninterested. 

No anti-crypto regulations

Another aspect of the bill limits how local governments and state agencies can regulate crypto, though Pierce said it’s only intended to ensure laws don’t unfairly target crypto.

Specifically, it would prohibit regulation of an individual or a business’ ability to accept digital currency as payment, including by taxing use of the payment method. It also stops local governments from denying crypto mining facilities in areas zoned for industrial use or applying noise restrictions specific to crypto. 

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There was some worry about a clause in the bill that bans a public agency from prohibiting a person’s ability to “use or accept digital assets as a method of payment for legal goods and services.” 

The bill was welcomed by the founder of the local crypto mining business Megawatt.

Ilya Rekhter, who operates mining facilities in rural areas across the state, said the legislation would help prevent a sudden change in zoning laws after a business has already invested money in a facility, Rekhter said.

“We’re not asking for any special treatment,” he said, “just the same treatment.” 

The committee won’t hold a vote on the bill until January.

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Contact breaking politics reporter Marissa Meador at mmeador@gannett.com or follow her on X @marissa_meador.

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