Crypto
Webinar: Crypto and public pensions—risks, rewards, and fiduciary duties
As digital assets such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies become increasingly integrated into financial markets, public pension systems face important questions about whether and how to incorporate them into investment portfolios.
On June 23, a Reason Foundation webinar with leading experts explored how public pension systems should evaluate cryptocurrency investments; how to assess and manage the risk and volatility for public workers, retirees, and taxpayers; and how to provide the public with transparency into these investments.
You can watch the webinar here:
The panelists and moderator of this webinar:
Brad Briner
Brad Briner is the treasurer of North Carolina. Before taking office, he served as co-chief investment officer for Willett Advisors, which manages the philanthropic and personal investment assets of Mike Bloomberg. His prior experience includes roles at Morgan Creek Capital, UNC Management Company, ArcLight Capital, and Goldman Sachs. Briner graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a Morehead Scholar with a degree in economics with distinction and earned an MBA with distinction from Harvard Business School.
Todd D. Kanaster
Todd D. Kanaster is a director at S&P Global Ratings specializing in municipal pensions and retiree medical benefits. His work includes analyzing issuers, training analysts, and serving as a nationwide specialist on public pension and retiree health care issues within S&P’s local government credit analysis. He is an Associate of the Society of Actuaries, a Member of the American Academy of Actuaries, and a Fellow of the Conference of Consulting Actuaries.
Mariana Trujillo
Mariana Trujillo is managing director of government finance at Reason Foundation. Her research focuses on the fiscal health of federal, state, and local governments, with particular attention to the impact of pension liabilities on government finances and the effect of retirement benefits on public-employee recruitment and retention.
Leonard Gilroy (moderator)
Leonard Gilroy is vice president of government reform at Reason Foundation and senior managing director of Reason’s Pension Integrity Project. Under his leadership, the Pension Integrity Project assists policymakers and other stakeholders in designing, analyzing and implementing public sector pension reforms.
Related policy study:
U.S. public pension and trust fund investment in digital assets
Frequently asked questions about public pensions investing in Bitcoin and other digital assets
Crypto
Bank of Thailand Backs 1:1 Baht Stablecoin While Tightening Cross-Border Payment Rules
Key Takeaways
- Bank of Thailand plans to hold public hearings by late 2026 for a 1:1 baht-backed stablecoin.
- Regulators suspended 5,000 Alipay and Wechat Pay accounts to curb unauthorized yuan QR transfers.
- Speculative retail forex operations will face stiff fines under Thailand’s 1942 Exchange Control Act.
Baht-Pegged Stablecoin Framework
The Bank of Thailand plans to introduce a stablecoin pegged to the national currency as part of an initiative to support financial innovation, central bank Governor Vitai Ratanakorn announced June 30. Speaking at a financial conference hosted by efinanceThai, Ratanakorn said the central bank will hold a public hearing on the proposal by the end of the year.
Under the initial framework, any operating stablecoin must be fully backed on a 1-to-1 basis by Thai baht reserves. The central bank will limit the first phase of the rollout to financial institutions for settlement purposes only, with broader use cases to be evaluated later.
According to a local report, the central bank is also tightening enforcement on cross-border mobile payment platforms. Ratanakorn reiterated that all personal QR code payments in Thailand must be conducted exclusively in baht.
Regulators have suspended approximately 5,000 accounts used for peer-to-peer yuan transfers via Alipay and Wechat Pay between February 2025 and May 2026. The central bank is currently coordinating with those platforms to review transactions and identify regulatory violations.
Payment service providers that process transactions in unauthorized currencies face corrective measures, fines, suspensions, or the revocation of their licenses, Ratanakorn warned. Additionally, the governor clarified that the central bank will not grant licenses for retail foreign-exchange operations intended for speculative trading.
Facilitating transfers to settle speculative forex transactions may violate the Exchange Control Act of 1942, which carries penalties of up to 3 years’ imprisonment and a $6,012 (200,000 baht) fine. Furthermore, individuals who advertise or promote speculative currency trading could face fraud charges under a 1984 emergency decree, punishable by up to 10 years in prison and significant daily fines.
Ratanakorn said the central bank’s dual objective is to foster financial technology while maintaining strict control over consumer protection and domestic currency flows.
Crypto
UK investors sue Binance in London for £150 million
Crypto
Japanese Yen Sinks to 162.27, Its Weakest Since 1986, Reviving Intervention Bets
Key Takeaways
- The yen fell to 162.27 per dollar on June 30, its weakest level against the greenback since 1986.
- A wide rate gap, the BOJ at 0.75% versus the Fed’s 3.50%-3.75%, keeps pressuring the currency.
- Japan spent a record 11.73 trillion yen ($72.4 billion) on intervention from late April to late May.
A Four-Decade Low
The yen’s slide to a four-decade low has put Japanese authorities back on intervention watch. The currency has been dragged down by a persistent interest-rate gap between Japan and the United States, heavy speculative short positioning, and the limited staying power of Tokyo’s earlier efforts to prop it up.
The mechanics are straightforward given the Bank of Japan (BOJ) typically holds its policy rate at 0.75%, while the U.S. Federal Reserve’s target sits at 3.50% to 3.75%. That spread rewards investors who borrow cheaply in yen and park funds in higher-yielding dollar assets, a so-called carry trade that steadily pressures the Japanese currency.
Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama signaled Tokyo’s readiness to act, saying the government was prepared to take appropriate action against excessive currency moves.
Intervention Has Already Failed Once
Tokyo has been here before and recently Japan launched its first yen-buying operation in nearly two years (after the currency punched through the politically sensitive 160 level). Authorities then spent a record 11.73 trillion yen, about $72.4 billion, defending the yen between late April and late May, only to watch it weaken again.
That track record is why traders doubt a fresh round would hold because the forces dragging on the yen are structural, rooted in the rate gap rather than short-term sentiment, and intervention can slow the slide without reversing it. Markets are now watching whether a move toward the 160-to-162 range triggers another defense from the finance ministry.
Where Does Crypto Fit Into All This?
A depreciating home currency has historically nudged some Japanese savers toward alternative stores of value, and bitcoin sits among them. Japan is one of the world’s most active retail crypto markets, and a yen losing ground against the dollar strengthens the argument that scarce, non-sovereign assets can hedge currency risk. Bitcoin priced in yen has tracked far higher than its dollar quote, mirroring the currency’s erosion over time.
The pressure also feeds into global risk appetite since a weaker yen can unwind carry trades suddenly when sentiment shifts, a dynamic that has spilled into crypto and equity markets before, sending leveraged positions scrambling.
In any case, the immediate question is whether Tokyo intervenes again or lets the slide run. With the rate gap unlikely to close soon, the Fed has held rates elevated while the BOJ moves cautiously. That said, the yen’s path ahead depends heavily on the next moves from both central banks and until that spread narrows, the currency’s weakness looks set to persist.
-
California5 minutes ago
As fireworks pop off for July 4, which are legal to use in California?
-
Colorado8 minutes agoAvalanche Signs Beckman | Colorado Avalanche
-
Connecticut13 minutes agoImmigrant advocates urge Connecticut to prepare after Supreme Court TPS ruling
-
Delaware20 minutes ago
Delaware’s dangerous heat wave impacts pets. How to keep them safe
-
Florida22 minutes agoCocaine, guns reported found after gas station surveillance in Florida
-
Georgia28 minutes agoLIVE BLOG: Severe storms threaten North Georgia
-
Hawaii35 minutes ago
Suspect arrested in attempted armed robbery on North Shore
-
Idaho38 minutes agoU.S. Marshals track Meridian man in Idaho Falls after suspected robbery