Coin info
Rank
Market Cap
Volume (24h)
Circulating Supply
Total Supply
Do you think the price will rise or fall?
Rise 40%
Fall 60%
Price perfomance
Depth of Market
Depth +2%
Depth -2%


PRICE
+13.2%
$44.07
PRICE
+10.11%
$0.03418
PRICE
+6.88%
$0.009336

PRICE
+5.7%
$78.83

PRICE
+5.61%
$1.5

PRICE
+5.41%
$0.1622

PRICE
+4.85%
$557.25

PRICE
+4.74%
$1.38
PRICE
+4.3%
$0.01095

PRICE
+4.24%
$0.06939

PRICE
+4.23%
$0.1214

PRICE
+3.79%
$98.94

PRICE
+3.74%
$10.54

PRICE
+3.72%
$0.7009

PRICE
+3.54%
$3.76

PRICE
+3.03%
$0.2715

PRICE
+3.01%
$306.13

PRICE
+2.89%
$0.1634

PRICE
+2.85%
$2.4

PRICE
+2.77%
$58.49

PRICE
+2.77%
$0.03320

PRICE
+2.73%
$9.53

PRICE
+2.55%
$81,338.7

PRICE
+2.51%
$0.2639

PRICE
+2.51%
$1.92
VOL24
+336.5%
$0.01095

VOL24
+238.76%
$0.5485

VOL24
+212.69%
$0.1622

VOL24
+200.67%
$0.9998

VOL24
+155.25%
$2,828.52

VOL24
+122.05%
$78.83
VOL24
+93.03%
$0.009336

VOL24
+78.19%
$44.07

VOL24
+68.52%
$0.9997

VOL24
+62.34%
$0.052

VOL24
+58.51%
$1.5

VOL24
+56.91%
$2.84

VOL24
+51.2%
$0.9988

VOL24
+49.32%
$1.01
VOL24
+44.19%
$1.97

VOL24
+41.43%
$0.1161

VOL24
+40.82%
$4,660

VOL24
+40.14%
$59.68

VOL24
+39.06%
$1.01

VOL24
+32.09%
$3.76

VOL24
+31.16%
$0.09480

VOL24
+30.72%
$0.1634
VOL24
+30.26%
$0.03418

VOL24
+29.55%
$0.001889

VOL24
+27.63%
$81,338.7

PRICE
+13.2%
$44.07
PRICE
+10.11%
$0.03418
PRICE
+6.88%
$0.009336

PRICE
+5.7%
$78.83

PRICE
+5.61%
$1.5

PRICE
+5.41%
$0.1622

PRICE
+4.85%
$557.25

PRICE
+4.74%
$1.38
PRICE
+4.3%
$0.01095

PRICE
+4.24%
$0.06939

PRICE
+4.23%
$0.1214

PRICE
+3.79%
$98.94

PRICE
+3.74%
$10.54

PRICE
+3.72%
$0.7009

PRICE
+3.54%
$3.76

PRICE
+3.03%
$0.2715

PRICE
+3.01%
$306.13

PRICE
+2.89%
$0.1634

PRICE
+2.85%
$2.4

PRICE
+2.77%
$58.49

PRICE
+2.77%
$0.03320

PRICE
+2.73%
$9.53

PRICE
+2.55%
$81,338.7

PRICE
+2.51%
$0.2639

PRICE
+2.51%
$1.92
VOL24
+336.5%
$0.01095

VOL24
+238.76%
$0.5485

VOL24
+212.69%
$0.1622

VOL24
+200.67%
$0.9998

VOL24
+155.25%
$2,828.52

VOL24
+122.05%
$78.83
VOL24
+93.03%
$0.009336

VOL24
+78.19%
$44.07

VOL24
+68.52%
$0.9997

VOL24
+62.34%
$0.052

VOL24
+58.51%
$1.5

VOL24
+56.91%
$2.84

VOL24
+51.2%
$0.9988

VOL24
+49.32%
$1.01
VOL24
+44.19%
$1.97

VOL24
+41.43%
$0.1161

VOL24
+40.82%
$4,660

VOL24
+40.14%
$59.68

VOL24
+39.06%
$1.01

VOL24
+32.09%
$3.76

VOL24
+31.16%
$0.09480

VOL24
+30.72%
$0.1634
VOL24
+30.26%
$0.03418

VOL24
+29.55%
$0.001889

VOL24
+27.63%
$81,338.7
Rise 40%
Fall 60%


$1.12
#25005
$0.00
$199,981
0
31,060,042.34
14 May 2026, 19:37

🚨 Over 450 million USDT in $USDT frozen since September 2024. T3 Financial Crime Unit targets global money laundering and crypto crime rings. 🕵️♀️ Critical data: Over 500 million USDT locked in past 30 days alone. Continue Reading: Tether froze over 450 million USDT since September 2024 The post Tether froze over 450 million USDT since September 2024 appeared first on COINTURK NEWS .
14 May 2026, 17:40

Kazakhstan claims it has finalized the legalization of crypto transactions in its economy with an updated legislation that entered into force earlier this month. While cryptocurrency payments are now supposedly legal, too, it has become clear that the fiat tenge remains the only legal tender in direct purchases. Kazakhstan adopts rules for crypto circulation Cryptocurrency has been formally recognized in Kazakhstan since the enforcement of the law “On Digital Assets” in 2023. But legal options to transact with it were quite limited. One could easily buy digital cash or acquire it through mining, but there was almost nowhere to spend it or convert it domestically without breaking the law. Before the latest push to resolve the issue, Bitcoin had already ceased to be something exotic, as noted by the 24.kz news channel on Wednesday, and many Kazakhstanis were already invested in crypto. However, trading was only permitted through a handful of exchanges registered at the Astana International Financial Center (AIFC), the fintech hub in the capital city. As a result, some 95% of the country’s crypto turnover was taking place outside this regulated market, the Tengrinews.kz website remarked last week. Digital coins were changing hands either within the gray sector of the economy, including in peer-to-peer deals and on unofficial exchanges, or through foreign-based platforms. Amendments were made to the Digital Assets act at the start of month and bylaws adopted by the National Bank of Kazakhstan (NBK) to bring these flows out of the shadows. The revamped legislation introduces comprehensive and systemic regulation for cryptocurrency circulation in the Central Asian nation. That includes a more detailed classification of digital assets, which are now divided into two main types – secured and unsecured. The latter category includes regular cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), the value of which depends mainly on market demand. And the former covers tokens backed by real assets like gold, commodities, or fiat money in reserve. Such is the stablecoin Tether (USDT), for example, which is pegged to the U.S. dollar. Then, the updated framework adds the term “digital asset service providers,” also defined as licensed market participants, supervised by the NBK. These will include issuers of tokenized assets, operators of trading platforms like crypto exchanges and those of offices offering only crypto-fiat exchange. Asan Akhmetzhan, head of the monetary authority’s press service, was quoted as stating: “Unified rules have emerged for everyone … We are consciously moving from a restrictive approach to regulated circulation. Now it’s possible to buy, sell, and store cryptocurrency.” But what happens with crypto payments? Officially, cryptocurrency payments, as a part of the digital-asset turnover, were also legalized in Kazakhstan on May 1, both local media reports highlighted. It turns out, however, that Kazakhstani citizens won’t be able to buy a coffee or pay their rent using Bitcoin, as explained by experts interviewed by the news outlets. Spending digital coins for purchases will be possible only through instant conversion to the national fiat handled by a licensed intermediary, in which the seller receives tenge, not Tether. From a legal standpoint, crypto is not a means of payment yet, emphasized Kirill Greshnikov, a lawyer who commented for Tengrinews: “We need to dispel the main myth: direct payments with cryptocurrency are still prohibited in Kazakhstan.” What the authorities mean with “legalization of payments” is merely the introduction of the digital assets into civil circulation, he elaborated. These assets, recognized as property, can only serve as a source of funds, added Dmitry Zaika, a representative of a licensed domestic exchange. To use them for payment, one needs to register on a platform like his, pass identity verification, open and top up a crypto wallet. Then they need to have one of those CryptoPay cards , issued in Kazakhstan with Mastercard and linked to a payment app like Apple Pay, Google Pay, or Samsung Pay, he explained further. This scheme allows coins to be spent almost everywhere. But while the buyer perceives the transaction as a crypto payment, the seller receives tenge, which remains the legal tender in Kazakhstan. “The only means of payment in our country is the tenge. Cryptocurrency also is in some countries, but legalization did not change this here,” financial analyst Andrey Chebotarev told 24.kz. While commenting on the rise of non-cash payments, which already exceed 80% in Kazakhstan, and the growing use of the digital tenge, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev recently emphasized on the need for coordinated institutional efforts to transform the country into a crypto hub . If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter .
14 May 2026, 17:38

🚀 Oobit has launched crypto payments in Colombia, its ninth Latin American market. Most crypto spending happens in supermarkets, with USDT leading transactions in $USDT-powered purchases regionwide. 🗝️ Key point: Stablecoins now represent 40% of crypto buys as use cases expand and transaction volumes jump across Latin America. Continue Reading: Oobit launches crypto payments in Colombia as USDT dominates The post Oobit launches crypto payments in Colombia as USDT dominates appeared first on COINTURK NEWS .
14 May 2026, 17:19

A joint collaboration between Tether, TRON and blockchain analytics firm TRM Labs called the T3 Financial Crime Unit has announced on Wednesday that it has frozen more than $450 million in USDT suspected to be acquired through illicit, criminal means since the initiative launched in September 2024. The frozen funds by the crime unit involve investigations into various illicit operations including money laundering, crypto exchange hacks, North Korea-linked cyber operations, terrorist cells financing, drug trafficking, and violent crimes including kidnappings and extortion, according to a statement published by Tether. The T3 FCU has enlisted the help of multiple law enforcement agencies in its fight against illicit activity in the crypto community. These agencies span five different continents, with countries like the U.S., Spain, Germany, the Netherlands and Bulgaria having the highest volume of assets frozen. Tether’s T3 puts in the work The T3 FCU reported that it helped in the recovery of 43.9% more illicit proceeds in 2025 compared to the previous year. The unit claimed it can execute asset freezes within 24 hours of a request by law enforcement regarding an investigation, a pace that traditional banks and services find hard to match. The group pointed to several high-profile cases where it helped with asset freezing and recovery. One involved the freezing of about $26.4 million allegedly connected to a European money-laundering ring that was dismantled alongside Spain’s Guardia Civil in early 2025 . Another case was “Operation Lusocoin”, a Brazilian Federal Police investigation that froze more than 3 billion Brazilian reais in crypto assets, of which 4.3 million USDT linked to a criminal network was a part, according to Tether’s statement. Additional freezes targeted wallets tied to North Korean cyber activity and funds traced to the Bybit hack, with nearly $9 million in crypto funds identified. In addition, Tether confirmed a $344 million USDT freeze on TRON in April 2026 following intelligence-sharing with U.S. and international law enforcement. T3 FCU breaks higher ground amid international recognition The Financial Action Task Force cited T3 FCU earlier this year as an “invaluable resource for law enforcement agencies worldwide.” The FATF highlighted the unit alongside TRM Labs’ Beacon Network as leading examples of public-private partnerships for combating criminal activity in the crypto community. The recognition comes amid a sharp rise in illicit cryptocurrency activity, with blockchain-related criminal activity reaching a record $158 billion in 2025, according to estimates from TRM Labs. The figures underscore the growing pressure on stablecoin issuers and blockchain platforms to strengthen compliance frameworks as regulators intensify the crypto sector’s scrutiny. “Compliance is not an option; it is a part of our commitment to protect our users and stop any illicit behaviors,” said Paolo Ardoino in the announcement. “This $450 million milestone is just the beginning of what T3 is capable of,” he added. Chris Janczewski, who previously served as a special agent with the IRS Criminal Investigation division, said the initiative combines “real-time intelligence and expertise with coordinated public-private action to disrupt illicit activity as it happens.” The comments reflect an intensified industry effort to ensure stronger oversight and enforcement capabilities. Is crypto decentralization a myth? The scale of the recent asset freezes has reignited debate over the level of control centralized stablecoin issuers retain within blockchain ecosystems that are often said to be ‘decentralized’. Tether includes issuer-level controls that allow Tether to blacklist specific wallet addresses and freeze associated funds, which goes against the intent behind cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. According to onchain data compiled by BlockSec, more than $500 million worth of USDT was frozen over a recent 30-day period. This amount extends beyond the activity linked to the T3 Financial Crime Unit in the statement and proves Tether is doing even more blacklisting on multiple blockchains. The smartest crypto minds already read our newsletter. Want in? Join them .