Before diving into April in review, be sure to check out a few recently released reports from our research team:
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April 2025 unfolded as a pivotal month for digital-asset markets, marked by an unusual harmony of regulatory softening, heavyweight corporate action and relentless stress-testing in DeFi. Washington relaxed its grip, scrapping the “DeFi broker” rule, winding down the DOJ’s crypto-crime task force and, crucially, signalling that redeemable dollar-stablecoins are not securities, while Hong Kong opened the door to licensed staking. Capital responded at once: Circle filed to list on the NYSE, Cantor and SoftBank readied a multibillion-dollar bitcoin venture, and ETF sponsors rushed to register spot and staked-asset funds. At the protocol layer, Binance deepened retail access with Apple Pay, Babylon unveiled Bitcoin-secured tokenomics, and Aave launched a buy-back alongside fixed-yield integrations. Yet the month was no victory lap; hackers drained or imperilled more than $90 million across KiloEx, ZKSync and other projects, and a dramatic JELLY-perp manipulation forced Hyperliquid to intervene. Against this backdrop of regulatory détente, institutional bravado and technical fragility, bitcoin punched through $ 90,000 and CME crypto-derivative volumes hit records, setting a high-stakes stage for the months ahead.
Washington and Hong Kong both tipped the scales toward looser supervision. On 4 April, the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance declared that fiat-redeemable “covered stablecoins” are not securities, lifting a critical cloud from issuers such as DC and PYD. Three days later, Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission confirmed licensed exchanges may offer staking, provided they ring-fence risk and disclose terms in plain English.
The U.S. Department of Justice pivoted too: on 8 April, it disbanded the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team and instructed prosecutors to focus on actual investor harm rather than going after wallets and exchanges as de facto regulators. Capitol Hill reinforced that shift when President Trump signed a bill on 11 April repealing the “DeFi broker” reporting rule, removing a compliance burden that the industry had branded unworkable. By month-end, the SEC itself closed its probe into PayPal’s PYD without action, underscoring the new hands-off mood.
The rule-making backdrop mattered because a trio of ETF filings hit the SEC’s desk in quick succession: VanEck sought approval for a spot-backed BNB fund on 2 April; Grayscale followed with a Solana trust on 4 April; and Canary filed for the first staked-TRX ETF on 19 April. The applications illustrate how fast product innovation now chases regulatory daylight.
Stable-coin behemoth Circle opened the month by publicly lodging its S-1, seeking a New York Stock Exchange listing and reporting 2024 revenue of $1.68 billion. The filing adds another marquee name to the queue of crypto firms pursuing public-market capital while policy winds are favourable.
Balance-sheet allocation to bitcoin surged. Tether revealed it had added 8,888 BTC in the first quarter, lifting reserves to 75,354 BTC and cementing its place among the world’s largest holders. MicroStrategy, now rebranded simply Strategy, kept pace with two more bites: 3,459 BTC on 14 April and 6,556 BTC on 21 April, spending a combined $841.6 million. Medical-device firm Semler Scientific went further, filing a $500 million shelf to fund prospective bitcoin purchases.
Traditional finance crossed the aisle, too. Brokerage giant Cantor Fitzgerald lined up a $3 billion venture with SoftBank and Tether aimed at bulk bitcoin acquisition, echoing MicroStrategy’s playbook. Market maker GSR led a $100 million private placement into Nasdaq-listed Upexi to seed a Solana-based treasury strategy, while DWF Labs committed $25 million to World Liberty Financial, a DeFi outfit backed by the Trump family. Payments stalwart Stripe, not to be left behind, confirmed it is building a stablecoin product of its own.
In April 2025, spot Bitcoin ETFs took in a net 2.97 billion D. BlackRock’s IBIT gathered 2.69 billion D, roughly 91 percent of the total, while Fidelity’s FBTC attracted 156 million D. Among the smaller funds, ARKB recorded 126 million D, BITB 30 million D, BRRR 27 million D, EZBC 25 million D, HODL 16 million D and BTCO 5 million D. BTCW was the only new entrant with a net withdrawal, losing 24 million D. Grayscale’s legacy GBTC continued to experience redemptions, posting an outflow of 237 million D. Daily flows were volatile: the largest single-day net outflow occurred on 8 April at 328 million D, followed by another 150 million D outflow on 10 April, whereas 22-23 April delivered a combined 1.87 billion D inflow. Net positive flows persisted through month-end despite the ongoing shift of assets from GBTC to the lower-fee products, particularly IBIT.
Spot ether ETFs finished April 2025 with a net inflow of 66 million D. 21Shares’ ETHA was the strongest contributor, adding 108 million D, while Fidelity’s FETH drew 43.5 million D. The physically backed ETH product recorded 34.4 million D, and smaller gains came from CoinShares’ CETH at 7.6 million D, Purpose’s QETH at 1.8 million D and Franklin’s EZET at 0.3 million D. Offsetting part of this demand, Grayscale’s legacy ETHE saw 124.5 million D of redemptions, with modest outflows from Bitwise’s ETHW (3.2 million D) and VanEck’s ETHV (1.8 million D). Daily flows were volatile: the deepest net withdrawal occurred on 2 April at 51.3 million D, followed by a two-day 68 million D pullback on 10-11 April; momentum then shifted, and 25 April logged the largest single-day inflow at 104.1 million D, supported by additional strong sessions on 22, 24 and 28 April. Overall, inflows into the newer low-fee products more than compensated for ETHE’s continued attrition, indicating rotation rather than net selling of ether exposure.
Infrastructure and Exchange Evolution
Consumer ramps broadened: Binance switched on Apple Pay and Google Pay rails for crypto purchases via Worldpay on 7 April, shrinking the gap between Web 2 payments and Web 3 wallets. In the same week, Hyperliquid upgraded its validator set to 21 permissionless nodes, signalling a march toward greater decentralisation.
Yet Hyperliquid also supplied April’s cautionary tale. Early in the month, a trader manipulated the JELLY perpetuals market, forcing liquidations that dropped roughly $13 million of unrealised loss into the protocol’s risk vault.
Tokens, Staking and Treasury Mechanics
Protocols used the regulatory lull to refine economics. Bitcoin-secured network Babylon published full details of its inflationary 10 billion-token BABY supply and dual BTC / BABY staking design on 3 April, pitching Bitcoin’s security as rentable collateral for new chains.
DeFi blue-chip Aave passed two governance milestones mid-month: it will integrate Pendle Finance principal tokens into Aave V3 (bringing fixed-yield assets to its money markets) and execute a $4 million open-market buy-back of its AAVE token, the first leg of refreshed “Aavenomics”.
On the venture side, Andreessen Horowitz purchased $55 million of LayerZero’s ZRO tokens under a three-year lock-up on 18 April, signalling long-term conviction in cross-chain messaging infrastructure.
Maple Finance Surpasses $1 Billion TVL, Cementing Leadership in On-Chain Credit
In April, Maple Finance officially surpassed $1 billion in total value locked, marking a decisive transition from post-CeFi fallout to category leader in institutional on-chain credit. This 66× rebound from its $15 million low in 2023 reflects more than market recovery. It validates Maple’s model of overcollateralized, fixed-rate lending with full on-chain transparency. Since its pivot, Maple has originated $6.9 billion in loans without a single default, scaled to a $5 million revenue run-rate, and secured institutional commitments from Bitwise, Spark, Sky, and Grayscale. The rise in TVL is not just capital inflow. It is proof that code-enforced credit, backed by legal recourse and real-time auditability, can outperform both centralized desks and DeFi money markets.
Attackers Exploited Multiple DeFi Loopholes:
- KiloEx lost $7 million on 15 April after an oracle manipulation but recovered funds when the hacker accepted a 10 % bug-bounty deal.
- A day later, a compromised admin key let thieves mint $5 million worth of unclaimed ZK tokens; all were returned within a week under a white-hat agreement
- Mantra Chain’s governance token OM suffered a 90 % intraday crash on 14 April before the team organised a 300 million-token burn to stabilise supply.
These incidents, plus the Hyperliquid manipulation, pushed April’s recorded DeFi losses above $90 million according to Immunefi, more than doubling March’s tally.
Taken together, the events of April 2025 show an industry moving rapidly from regulatory limbo towards mainstream finance, without shaking off its engineering growing pains. Policymakers delivered the clearest signals yet that well-structured stablecoins, staking services and exchange-traded products will be accommodated rather than suppressed. Corporations seized the opening: treasuries bought more bitcoin, IPO and ETF pipelines were full, and payment rails blended seamlessly into Web3. Simultaneously, DeFi exploits and market-manipulation episodes reminded builders that credibility hinges on hardening code, oracles and key security as much as on courting capital. Whether May reinforces the rally or exposes fresh weaknesses will depend on how quickly the sector can translate April’s regulatory goodwill into durable market infrastructure and stronger defences.
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