Cryptocurrency
A cryptocurrency is a digital asset that uses cryptography and a blockchain to record ownership and transfer value, without depending on a bank or government to issue it or keep the books.
How it works
Ownership is represented by entries on a public ledger that the whole network agrees on through a consensus mechanism. You hold the private keys that authorise spending from your addresses, and transactions are verified by the network rather than by an intermediary. New units are typically issued through mining or staking according to fixed, transparent rules.
Why it matters
Cryptocurrencies make it possible to send value over the internet directly, around the clock, across borders, with the rules enforced by code. The trade-offs are price volatility, the personal responsibility of self-custody, and an evolving regulatory landscape.
Example
Bitcoin was the first cryptocurrency; thousands of others, collectively called altcoins, have followed with different designs and goals.
Latest news

Tokenized US Treasuries vs. DeFi Staking: Where Institutional Yield-Seekers Are Allocating in 2026
With on-chain tokenized Treasuries offering 4.8% and DeFi stablecoin lending offering 4–6%, institutions face a genuine choice. We compare risk-adjusted yield, liquidity,…

Coinbase Base Hits 2M Daily Active Addresses: Inside the L2 That Is Reshaping Ethereum’s User Layer
Coinbase's Base L2 has crossed 2 million daily active addresses — making it the most-used rollup in the Ethereum ecosystem. We look…

DeFi Total Value Locked Passes $150 Billion: Aave V4 and Uniswap V4 Drive Institutional Adoption
DeFi TVL surpassed $150B for the first time since the 2021 bull cycle as Aave V4's unified liquidity model and Uniswap V4…