BTCC / BTCC Square / Cryptopolitan /
Cardano and Litecoin Poised to Rally, But This Low-Cap Contender Could Deliver a 10x Before October

Cardano and Litecoin Poised to Rally, But This Low-Cap Contender Could Deliver a 10x Before October

Published:
2025-08-25 19:15:26
7
1

Malaysia launched its first locally designed AI chip, the MARS1000

Cardano and Litecoin Set for Major Breakout—While This Under-the-Radar Gem Eyes 10x Gains by October

The sleeping giants of crypto are stirring. Cardano's development activity hits new peaks while Litecoin's institutional adoption quietly accelerates. Both show classic bullish patterns that could ignite significant rallies in the coming weeks.

But the real story? A low-market-cap project that's flying under Wall Street's radar.

While traditional investors chase the usual suspects, this contender combines DeFi utility with cross-chain interoperability—delivering real-world solutions instead of vaporware promises. Its presale momentum suggests retail investors are waking up faster than the institutional suits.

October could bring more than just autumn leaves—it might deliver returns that make traditional finance's 8% annual gains look like pocket change. Because let's be honest: if your portfolio isn't outperforming inflation, you're just paying fees to lose money slowly.

Malaysia moves to gain edge with home-grown processor

For decades, Malaysia has been known as a reliable workhorse in the semiconductor industry, handling packaging, testing, and assembly for multinational players like Intel and Infineon. But the country has rarely been credited for design breakthroughs.

That’s why the MARS1000 matters. It signals a shift in national ambition, from back-office support to front-line innovation.

SkyeChip, founded in 2019, has been building expertise in high-performance chip architecture. Now, the company is eyeing an initial public offering (IPO), buoyed by steady revenue growth and a surge of investor interest in AI hardware.

The government, too, is betting big. Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has pledged RM25 billion (about $6 billion) to boost Malaysia’s chip sector, with goals ranging from chip design and wafer fabrication to expanding AI-ready data centers.

Tech giants Microsoft and Oracle have already committed billions to new digital infrastructure in the country.

A tough neighbourhood

Malaysia’s push comes at a time when competition across Southeast Asia is heating up. Singapore is fast becoming a hub for AI model training. Vietnam and Thailand are luring foreign investment into packaging and design. And across the strait, Taiwan and South Korea remain firmly in control of advanced fabrication.

Malaysia’s edge may lie in its ability to combine strong manufacturing roots with a new wave of design talent. But there are challenges ahead.

Geopolitics loom large. The US is considering tighter controls on AI chip exports to Malaysia and Thailand, worried that smugglers are using both countries as stopovers to funnel restricted chips into China.

Kuala Lumpur has pushed back, introducing stricter export monitoring and stressing that it will not allow the country to become a hub for illicit trade.

SkyeChip’s IPO plans could set the tone for other Malaysian startups eager to break into the global chip design market.

Industry analysts caution that competing head-on with Nvidia, AMD or Intel is unrealistic. But Malaysia doesn’t need to win the whole race.

Analysts say that even modest gains in market share could have an outsized impact on Malaysia’s economy.

Get seen where it counts. Advertise in Cryptopolitan Research and reach crypto’s sharpest investors and builders.

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users