Asia Pacific Morning Brief: How Institutional Infrastructure is Reshaping Finance in 2025
Wall Street’s old guard scrambles as Asia’s crypto pipelines steal the show.
Institutional money floods APAC’s digital asset corridors—while legacy banks still argue about compliance forms.
The quiet revolution: Overnight, Singapore’s MAS-approved custody solutions processed more volume than London’s gold vaults. Hong Kong’s ETF approvals now outpace New York’s paperwork backlog.
Meanwhile, traditional finance clings to spreadsheets like life rafts—just as real-time blockchain settlements hit 1.2 million TPS.
Bonus jab: Your grandfather’s hedge fund is still waiting for ‘the Bitcoin bubble to pop’… from his fax machine.
SUI Surges on Bitcoin Integration and ETF Momentum
SUI experienced significant upward momentum, climbing over 10% in 24 hours from $3.44 to reach $3.99 before settling at $3.87 at press time. Trading volume surged to $2.89 billion, reflecting substantial market interest in platform-specific developments.
The rally centers on two catalysts: Bitcoin-backed tBTC integration and advancing ETF prospects. SUI became the first non-EVM chain enabling direct tBTC minting, attracting $500 million in Bitcoin liquidity to native protocols within days. This represents 10% of SUI’s total value locked, demonstrating rare cross-chain appeal.
Institutional momentum builds through Nasdaq’s 19b-4 filing for 21Shares’ spot SUI ETF, currently under SEC review. The network’s technical architecture, processing 297,000 transactions per second with 400-millisecond tBTC settlement, positions SUI uniquely in bridging bitcoin liquidity with next-generation DeFi infrastructure.
Despite recent gains, sui remains 28% below its $5.35 all-time high, with supply dynamics creating long-term structural considerations.
South Korean Minister Nominee Divests Crypto Holdings to Avoid Conflicts
Bae Gyeong-hun, nominee for South Korea’s Ministry of Science and ICT, disclosed complete divestiture of cryptocurrency holdings during parliamentary hearings Monday. The nominee liquidated approximately 100,000 won ($75) in digital assets and closed associated accounts to prevent potential conflicts of interest.
“Public officials holding VIRTUAL assets poses conflict concerns,” Bae stated, emphasizing proactive measures given blockchain technology falls under ministerial jurisdiction. He similarly divested family stock holdings to eliminate oversight ambiguity, though clarifying all transactions remained legally compliant throughout his tenure.
Hong Kong’s Animoca Brands Commits $100M Bitcoin to NYSE-Listed DDC Strategic Partnership
Hong Kong blockchain gaming leader Animoca Brands signed a non-binding memorandum with NYSE-listed DDC Enterprise, committing up to $100 million in Bitcoin for yield optimization strategies. The partnership accelerates DDC’s Bitcoin treasury approach while developing revenue frameworks for public companies adopting digital assets.
Animoca co-founder Yat Siu joins DDC’s newly formed Bitcoin Visionary Council, providing strategic guidance for the food company’s crypto transformation. DDC recently acquired 230 additional Bitcoin, expanding holdings to 368 BTC, following a $528 million funding round to advance its treasury strategy.
Superstate CEO Executes Strategic Acquisition of Distressed Liquor Retailer
Robert Leshner, Superstate’s CEO and former Compound founder, acquired a controlling 56.9% stake in LQR House for $2.03 million, triggering a 45% share surge. The publicly traded e-commerce liquor retailer operates CWSpirits.com and previously implemented Bitcoin treasury allocation strategies.
Leshner candidly acknowledged the company’s “somewhat shady history” and 90% share decline since March, emphasizing his acquisition represents a high-risk turnaround play. His strategic approach involves complete board restructuring and exploring alternative business directions.
This acquisition reflects broader cryptocurrency leadership migration into traditional public markets. Similar moves include ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin’s Sharplink Gaming chairmanship and Fundstrat’s Thomas Lee joining BitMine Immersion Technology. These transactions signal crypto veterans leveraging public market vehicles for strategic positioning, though Leshner hasn’t disclosed specific digital asset integration plans for his restructuring initiative.
Coinbase Challenges Oregon’s Crypto Regulatory Shift Through Public Records Lawsuit
Coinbase filed injunctive relief in Oregon’s Marion County Circuit Court, targeting Governor Tina Kotek over alleged transparency violations in digital asset policy development. The exchange contends state officials executed an undisclosed regulatory pivot without public input or formal rulemaking procedures.
The dispute centers on Oregon’s April 2025 enforcement action, where Attorney General Dan Rayfield sued Coinbase for allegedly offering over 30 unregistered securities tokens. Previously, state officials had not classified digital assets as securities, creating what Coinbase characterizes as a “flip-flop” decision made behind closed doors.
Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal emphasized the transparency concerns, stating officials violated public records laws by withholding over 80,000 emails that could require more than a year to produce. This legal challenge represents Coinbase’s broader advocacy strategy, paralleling similar Freedom of Information Act requests against federal agencies like the SEC and FDIC.
The timing coincides with Stand With Crypto’s push for federal legislation addressing central bank digital currencies, payment stablecoins, and market structure—potentially reshaping regulatory frameworks nationwide.
Additional reporting by Shigeki Mori and Paul Kim.