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U.S. “Digital Clarity” vs. EU “MiCA”: Competing Paths for a Global Digital Asset Constitution
The U.S. Digital Asset Market Clarity Act and the EU’s MiCA represent two distinct approaches to digital asset governance. The former releases innovation flexibility through the division between securities and commodities and regulatory competition, while the latter builds order through a unified legal code, risk prevention, and consumer protection. The contest between the two will reshape innovation hubs, compliance costs, technical architectures, and global rule export, determining the value orientation embedded in the next generation of financial infrastructure.

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TerraFlow TOF Blind Box Launches Globally on February 12, 2026: Tokenizing Computing Power as Web3 E…
TerraFlow’s TOF blind box has officially launched, marking the engineering implementation of “hashrate assetization.” The project tokenizes real-world computing power into tradable and composable on-chain NFT assets, transforming hashrate into independently priced and freely combinable productive digital assets. Each NFT corresponds to actual hashrate weight and participates in protocol revenue distribution, directly linking its value to network productivity. The system automatically allocates funds, injects liquidity, and executes deflationary burns through smart contracts, establishing an internally balanced economic model. Users can upgrade hashrate NFTs through a synthesis mechanism, enabling asset leaps and enhanced rights. TerraFlow aims to build a hashrate-based economic system rooted in real production relationships—rather than market sentiment—advancing Web3 from narrative-driven speculation to endogenous value creation.

U.S. “Digital Clarity” vs. EU “MiCA”: Competing Paths for a Global Digital Asset Constitution
The U.S. Digital Asset Market Clarity Act and the EU’s MiCA represent two distinct approaches to digital asset governance. The former releases innovation flexibility through the division between securities and commodities and regulatory competition, while the latter builds order through a unified legal code, risk prevention, and consumer protection. The contest between the two will reshape innovation hubs, compliance costs, technical architectures, and global rule export, determining the value orientation embedded in the next generation of financial infrastructure.

Bybit’s Return to the UK Market: A Technical Architecture Blueprint for Compliance in Crypto Trading…
Bybit’s UK return is an FCA-driven overhaul, turning a crypto exchange into an automated compliance system.
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One of the most anticipated speakers on the opening day was Michael Saylor, Executive Chairman of Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy). This marks his first public keynote at a major Bitcoin summit in the MENA region.Saylor stated in his keynote address: “The global energy structure is rapidly reorganizing, and Bitcoin is the most important digital vessel of this transformation. Capital, energy, and computing power are redefining the financial system — and the Middle East will become a central force driving this shift.”
His remarks were widely interpreted as a strong signal that institutional Bitcoin adoption is shifting toward the Middle East.

Saifedean Ammous, author of The Bitcoin Standard, emphasized Bitcoin’s structural role within the monetary system. He noted: “Bitcoin is a global monetary standard that cannot be inflated, and the Middle East has a deeper understanding of value preservation than many other regions. As policies and regulatory frameworks mature, the region will become an acceleration engine for Bitcoin adoption.”
His comments resonated with numerous financial institution representatives attending the event.
Macro analyst Lyn Alden provided a global economic perspective on Bitcoin’s role in sovereign asset allocation. Alden said: “Sovereign capital is turning to Bitcoin not because of sentiment, but because the global monetary system is undergoing structural changes. Bitcoin’s cross-border, censorship-resistant, low-trust transmission properties make it naturally suited for sovereign wealth funds and central banks’ long-term horizon.” She highlighted 2025–2027 as a pivotal window during which Bitcoin may enter national-level allocation frameworks.
Former Federal Reserve and Credit Suisse strategist Zoltan Pozsar also noted during a closed-door roundtable that the Middle East’s energy advantage complements Bitcoin’s mining and computing architecture.
Pozsar stated:
“Energy nations are seeking new ways to convert resources into globally transferable value, and Bitcoin offers a new logic for international settlement and value storage. This will redefine MENA’s role in global geopolitics and finance.”
The global attention around this year’s conference is driven not only by its unprecedented speaker lineup, but also by the emergence of new policy, energy, and capital dynamics across the Middle East — conditions that collectively support Bitcoin’s entrance into a “sovereign phase.”
The UAE and Saudi Arabia have both established clear virtual asset regulatory frameworks in the past two years, while multiple free zones now support Web3 innovation, mining operations, and clean-energy computing facilities — creating ideal conditions for global Bitcoin infrastructure to take root in the region.

On the energy front, several leaders from major energy companies publicly expressed their stance on Bitcoin for the first time at a Bitcoin conference.
A senior executive from an Abu Dhabi energy group said during a roundtable:
“Bitcoin is not only a financial innovation — it is a new form of energy export. In the future, energy will not only be priced in kilowatt-hours, but will also be transmitted through computing power and Bitcoin.”
Such statements highlight Bitcoin’s evolution from a “financial asset” into a form of energy infrastructure.
Additionally, multiple family offices and institutional funds from Europe, the Middle East, and Asia announced that they are reassessing Bitcoin’s weight in long-term portfolios.
A representative from a Saudi wealth management firm noted:
“The narrative of Bitcoin as merely a speculative asset is outdated. Institutions are now focused on its strategic role in global value transmission. The next phase of capital allocation will unfold faster than the market expects.”

From the discussions on opening day, it is clear that Bitcoin MENA 2025 is not just an industry gathering — it is a strategic dialogue on the future of global finance and energy. Bitcoin is no longer confined to the tech community; it is becoming a critical intersection of policy, capital, energy, and national strategy.
As the Middle East strengthens its advantages in regulation, energy, and capital, the global Bitcoin landscape may experience a significant shift in geopolitical centers in the coming years.

One of the most anticipated speakers on the opening day was Michael Saylor, Executive Chairman of Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy). This marks his first public keynote at a major Bitcoin summit in the MENA region.Saylor stated in his keynote address: “The global energy structure is rapidly reorganizing, and Bitcoin is the most important digital vessel of this transformation. Capital, energy, and computing power are redefining the financial system — and the Middle East will become a central force driving this shift.”
His remarks were widely interpreted as a strong signal that institutional Bitcoin adoption is shifting toward the Middle East.

Saifedean Ammous, author of The Bitcoin Standard, emphasized Bitcoin’s structural role within the monetary system. He noted: “Bitcoin is a global monetary standard that cannot be inflated, and the Middle East has a deeper understanding of value preservation than many other regions. As policies and regulatory frameworks mature, the region will become an acceleration engine for Bitcoin adoption.”
His comments resonated with numerous financial institution representatives attending the event.
Macro analyst Lyn Alden provided a global economic perspective on Bitcoin’s role in sovereign asset allocation. Alden said: “Sovereign capital is turning to Bitcoin not because of sentiment, but because the global monetary system is undergoing structural changes. Bitcoin’s cross-border, censorship-resistant, low-trust transmission properties make it naturally suited for sovereign wealth funds and central banks’ long-term horizon.” She highlighted 2025–2027 as a pivotal window during which Bitcoin may enter national-level allocation frameworks.
Former Federal Reserve and Credit Suisse strategist Zoltan Pozsar also noted during a closed-door roundtable that the Middle East’s energy advantage complements Bitcoin’s mining and computing architecture.
Pozsar stated:
“Energy nations are seeking new ways to convert resources into globally transferable value, and Bitcoin offers a new logic for international settlement and value storage. This will redefine MENA’s role in global geopolitics and finance.”
The global attention around this year’s conference is driven not only by its unprecedented speaker lineup, but also by the emergence of new policy, energy, and capital dynamics across the Middle East — conditions that collectively support Bitcoin’s entrance into a “sovereign phase.”
The UAE and Saudi Arabia have both established clear virtual asset regulatory frameworks in the past two years, while multiple free zones now support Web3 innovation, mining operations, and clean-energy computing facilities — creating ideal conditions for global Bitcoin infrastructure to take root in the region.

On the energy front, several leaders from major energy companies publicly expressed their stance on Bitcoin for the first time at a Bitcoin conference.
A senior executive from an Abu Dhabi energy group said during a roundtable:
“Bitcoin is not only a financial innovation — it is a new form of energy export. In the future, energy will not only be priced in kilowatt-hours, but will also be transmitted through computing power and Bitcoin.”
Such statements highlight Bitcoin’s evolution from a “financial asset” into a form of energy infrastructure.
Additionally, multiple family offices and institutional funds from Europe, the Middle East, and Asia announced that they are reassessing Bitcoin’s weight in long-term portfolios.
A representative from a Saudi wealth management firm noted:
“The narrative of Bitcoin as merely a speculative asset is outdated. Institutions are now focused on its strategic role in global value transmission. The next phase of capital allocation will unfold faster than the market expects.”

From the discussions on opening day, it is clear that Bitcoin MENA 2025 is not just an industry gathering — it is a strategic dialogue on the future of global finance and energy. Bitcoin is no longer confined to the tech community; it is becoming a critical intersection of policy, capital, energy, and national strategy.
As the Middle East strengthens its advantages in regulation, energy, and capital, the global Bitcoin landscape may experience a significant shift in geopolitical centers in the coming years.
Jaden
Jaden
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