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CoinStats

Crypto Stocks Crash As EU Targets New Crypto Regulations

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Key Insights:

  • Crypto stocks trailed Big Tech as Coinbase and Circle extended losses.
  • EU lawmakers pushed crypto regulations for DeFi, NFTs and staking.
  • Securitize expected $400 million from its public listing deal.

Crypto stocks fell deeper than major technology shares as Coinbase and Circle underperformed the broader U.S. market. The weakness came as digital asset prices dropped, European lawmakers reviewed crypto regulations, and Securitize advanced its public listing plan.

The downturn showed how crypto stocks remained tied to weak token prices. Bitcoin’s fall below $60,000 hit market sentiment, while Ether’s slide toward $1,500 pressured exchange-linked earnings and investor appetite.

Crypto Stocks Lag As Digital Assets Slide

The Kobeissi Letter data showed that Coinbase and Circle dropped 69% and 72% from their record highs. That fall placed crypto stocks below large technology peers during the latest market pullback.

Source: X
Source: X

Oracle, Salesforce, Netflix and Palantir lost between 48% and 57% from their peaks. The S&P 500 Index slipped just 3.5% from its recent high. That gap showed that investors treated crypto-linked equities as higher-risk exposure.

The divergence followed a deeper digital asset downturn. Bitcoin extended its decline to over 54% from its October peak, while Ether traded around 69% below last year’s high.

Weak token prices weighed directly on listed crypto firms. Coinbase reported first-quarter revenue that missed Wall Street expectations. That result reinforced concerns over trading volumes, fee income and retail activity.

Circle also faced pressure despite its stablecoin business model. Investors priced the stock like a crypto proxy, not a defensive payments company. That reaction tied its equity performance to broader market risk.

The market response showed a clear split between Big Tech and crypto stocks. Artificial intelligence-linked names still drew capital, while crypto equities lost momentum.

Crypto Regulations Add Pressure To Crypto Stocks

The European Parliament’s economic affairs committee urged the European Commission to review several crypto activities. The report covered decentralized finance, staking, non-fungible tokens, lending and borrowing services.

The proposal formed part of an own-initiative resolution drafted by Belgian lawmaker Johan Van Overtveldt. It asked the Commission to assess whether MiCA should cover additional digital asset activities.

The legislature. Source: European Parliament

The committee also called for wider tokenization across financial services. It supported euro-denominated stablecoins and urged closer review of new market structures.

The report will move to a plenary vote on July 7. If approved, it would become Parliament’s official policy position. However, it would not amend MiCA or create direct legal obligations.

The timing still mattered for crypto stocks. Investors often price regulatory risk before legal text reaches enforcement. That pattern was visible across exchange, stablecoin and tokenization-linked firms.

Crypto regulations also created a split inside the sector. Firms with licenses and institutional clients could benefit from clearer rules. Smaller platforms may face higher costs if lawmakers expand oversight.

The EU process showed that MiCA was no longer the final policy step. Lawmakers had started to assess gaps around activities that grew outside centralized exchange rules.

Crypto Stocks Face Securitize Listing Test

Securitize said it expected to raise $400 million through its planned public debut. The company pursued the listing through a merger with Cantor Equity Partners II.

The firm said fewer shareholders redeemed shares than expected before the deal close. That result helped preserve trust capital and supported the expected proceeds.

Cantor Equity Partners II shares climbed after the redemption update. The move showed that investors still backed some crypto infrastructure stories despite weak token prices.

Securitize focused on tokenized securities, a sector tied to real-world assets and regulated finance. That business line differs from spot trading platforms because it targets institutional issuance.

The deal was expected to close on Wednesday, subject to shareholder approval and other conditions. After closing, the combined company planned to trade under SECZ on the New York Stock Exchange.

The listing gave investors another public-market test for tokenization demand. It also arrived as crypto stocks struggled to separate business fundamentals from digital asset prices.

Securitize’s timing carried risk. Public investors had become more selective toward crypto exposure after the latest drawdown. That backdrop could shape early trading once the stock lists.

Still, the transaction showed that capital markets remained open for selected digital asset firms. Investors appeared more willing to back regulated infrastructure than speculative token-linked businesses.

The next test for crypto stocks will come from Bitcoin’s attempt to reclaim $60,000 and the EU vote on July 7. A failure on either front could keep pressure on Coinbase, Circle and other listed crypto names.

The post Crypto Stocks Crash As EU Targets New Crypto Regulations appeared first on The Coin Republic.

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