IBOV 176,641.10 ▲ 0.51% IPSA 11,024.10 ▲ 1.05% IPC MEX 66,529.27 ▲ 0.85% MERVAL 3,229,323 ▼ 0.18% COLCAP 2,298.73 ▼ 0.39% BVL PERÚ 56,428.20 — — USD/BRL5.07▲ 0.05% USD/MXN17.42▼ 0.06% USD/CLP925.95▼ 0.07% USD/COP3,247▲ 0.33% USD/PEN3.41▲ 0.55% USD/ARS1,470▼ 0.88% USD/UYU40.23▲ 0.99% USD/PYG6,039▲ 1.12% USD/BOB10.35▲ 6.04% USD/DOP58.20▼ 0.17% USD/CRC448.93▲ 1.31% USD/GTQ7.62▲ 2.07% USD/HNL26.73▲ 1.38% USD/NIO36.62▲ 0.31% USD/VES722.19▼ 0.13% USD/PAB1.00— 0.00% USD/BZD2.00— 0.00% USD/JMD157.59▲ 0.64% USD/TTD6.75▲ 1.19% EUR/BRL5.79▼ 1.07% BRENT 85.35 ▲ 0.73% WTI 79.85 ▲ 0.64% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.37 ▲ 0.57% GOLD 4,036 ▼ 0.63% SILVER 58.24 ▼ 0.91% SOY 1,196 ▼ 0.97% CORN 465.00 ▲ 7.20% WHEAT 664.25 ▲ 5.23% COFFEE 323.55 ▼ 4.05% SUGAR 14.82 ▼ 0.40% ORANGE JUICE 140.90 ▼ 1.16% COTTON 81.10 ▲ 1.88% COCOA 5,742 ▲ 1.45% BEEF 227.75 ▼ 2.97% CATTLE 349.63 ▼ 1.33% LITHIUM 71.58 ▼ 1.02% PETR4 40.66 — 0.00% VALE3 74.01 ▲ 1.59% ITUB4 43.63 ▲ 0.25% BBDC4 18.63 ▼ 0.75% ABEV3 15.81 ▼ 0.13% BBAS3 20.59 ▲ 1.73% B3SA3 15.33 ▲ 1.39% WEGE3 44.20 ▼ 0.43% PRIO3 57.57 ▲ 0.65% SUZB3 41.11 ▼ 0.92% RENT3 40.54 ▲ 0.85% AZZA3 18.85 ▼ 1.93% CSAN3 3.89 ▼ 0.26% RAIZ4 0.31 ▼ 6.06% PCAR3 2.45 ▼ 5.41% GMAT3 3.96 ▲ 0.51% PSSA3 54.29 ▲ 0.46% CVCB3 1.38 ▲ 10.40% POSI3 3.99 — 0.00% SLCE3 13.81 ▼ 0.43% NATU3 8.55 ▼ 0.58% BRKM5 6.83 ▼ 1.59% RANI3 8.01 ▲ 0.75% CSNA3 5.20 ▼ 0.76% CMIN3 5.10 ▼ 6.42% USIM5 8.23 ▼ 1.79% GGBR4 23.32 ▲ 2.19% ENEV3 27.17 ▲ 1.08% CPFE3 47.20 ▲ 0.77% CMIG4 11.20 ▲ 1.17% EQTL3 40.95 ▲ 1.84% LREN3 14.29 ▲ 0.99% VIVT3 35.52 ▲ 2.27% RAIL3 14.13 ▲ 0.14% KLABIN 17.32 ▼ 0.92% RAIA DROGASIL 18.60 ▲ 2.20% RDOR3 36.05 ▲ 1.38% HAPV3 11.19 ▲ 6.98% FLRY3 16.41 ▲ 1.61% SMTO3 16.12 ▼ 1.53% UGPA3 30.11 ▼ 2.65% VBBR3 33.30 ▲ 1.65% BBSE3 40.39 ▲ 0.27% BPAC11 57.95 ▲ 0.75% CURY3 33.59 ▲ 1.42% AERI3 2.07 ▼ 0.48% VIVARA 23.43 ▲ 1.38% COMPASS 25.20 ▲ 1.74% VAMOS 3.15 ▲ 4.30% SANB11 27.34 ▼ 0.11% ASAI3 8.66 ▼ 0.57% SBSP3 30.34 ▼ 0.10% WALMEX 49.32 ▼ 0.66% GMEXICO 199.61 ▲ 2.06% FEMSA 232.52 ▲ 3.18% CEMEX 22.24 ▲ 2.11% GFNORTE 186.00 ▲ 2.16% BIMBO 56.55 ▲ 1.22% TELEVISA 9.49 ▼ 1.25% AMX 22.83 ▲ 1.06% GAP 394.05 ▼ 3.46% ASUR 275.61 ▼ 1.09% OMA 235.49 ▲ 0.93% KOF 180.00 ▼ 0.92% GRUMA 280.31 ▼ 0.38% KIMBER 38.53 ▲ 0.81% SQM-B 67,900 ▲ 1.03% COPEC 6,210 ▲ 2.52% BSANTANDER 78.64 ▲ 0.56% FALABELLA 5,875 ▼ 0.51% ENELAM 85.75 ▲ 1.84% CENCOSUD 2,040 — 0.00% CMPC 1,103 ▲ 2.32% BANCO CHILE 189.50 ▲ 2.43% LATAM AIR 24.90 — 0.00% YPF 77,775 ▲ 0.78% GGAL 7,910 ▼ 2.10% PAMPA 5,230 ▲ 0.10% TXAR 665.00 ▲ 0.08% ALUAR 949.00 ▼ 1.61% TGS 9,710 ▲ 1.46% CEPU 2,327 ▲ 0.35% MIRGOR 16,750 ▼ 1.47% COME 45.75 ▲ 2.17% LOMA NEGRA 3,540 ▲ 1.22% BYMA 302.50 ▼ 1.87% TELECOM ARG 4,333 ▲ 1.94% ECOPETROL 16.16 ▲ 1.76% BANCOLOMBIA 82.10 ▲ 2.09% GRUPO AVAL 4.95 ▲ 0.81% CREDICORP 392.24 ▲ 0.78% SOUTHERN COPPER 182.38 ▲ 4.50% BUENAVENTURA 31.03 ▲ 4.06% MERCADOLIBRE 1,874 ▲ 0.35% NUBANK 13.99 ▲ 2.34% XP 16.87 ▲ 3.05% PAGSEGURO 9.28 — 0.00% STONE 11.30 ▲ 1.35% GLOBANT 30.92 ▼ 3.74% TECNOGLASS 44.19 ▲ 3.15% GAP AIRPORT 225.95 ▼ 2.93% ASUR 275.61 ▼ 1.09% OMA AIRPORT 107.64 ▲ 1.42% AMX ADR 26.18 ▲ 0.58% FEMSA ADR 133.17 ▲ 3.22% CEMEX ADR 12.80 ▲ 2.81% PETROBRAS ADR 17.92 ▲ 0.22% VALE ADR 14.59 ▲ 2.89% ITAU ADR 8.55 ▲ 0.94% SANTANDER BR 5.40 ▲ 0.84% AMBEV ADR 3.09 ▲ 0.98% CSN 1.04 ▲ 0.49% GERDAU 4.61 ▲ 2.67% LATAM ADR 53.51 ▲ 0.34% BTC 64,579 ▼ 0.58% ETH 1,877 ▼ 0.68% SOL 77.31 ▼ 0.58% XRP 1.11 ▼ 0.37% BNB 578.20 ▼ 0.61% ADA 0.17 ▼ 0.14% DOGE 0.07 ▼ 1.13% AVAX 6.66 ▼ 0.55% LINK 8.35 ▲ 0.17% DOT 0.85 ▼ 0.32% LTC 45.41 ▼ 0.05% BCH 234.48 ▼ 0.85% TRX 0.33 ▲ 0.73% XLM 0.19 ▲ 0.61% HBAR 0.07 — 0.00% NEAR 2.07 ▲ 3.18% ATOM 1.57 ▲ 0.77% AAVE 98.18 ▼ 0.71% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 82.49 ▼ 0.63% EMBRAER ADR 64.91 ▲ 0.67% JBS 11.83 ▲ 0.25% JBS BDR 59.75 ▼ 1.42% MBRF3 16.09 ▲ 2.35% MBRFY 3.15 ▲ 0.32% INTER 5.70 ▲ 0.89% IBOV 176,641.10 ▲ 0.51% IPSA 11,024.10 ▲ 1.05% IPC MEX 66,529.27 ▲ 0.85% MERVAL 3,229,323 ▼ 0.18% COLCAP 2,298.73 ▼ 0.39% BVL PERÚ 56,428.20 — — USD/BRL 5.07 ▲ 0.05% USD/MXN 17.42 ▼ 0.06% USD/CLP 925.95 ▼ 0.07% USD/COP 3,247 ▲ 0.33% USD/PEN 3.41 ▲ 0.55% USD/ARS 1,470 ▼ 0.88% USD/UYU 40.23 ▲ 0.99% USD/PYG 6,039 ▲ 1.12% USD/BOB 10.35 ▲ 6.04% USD/DOP 58.20 ▼ 0.17% USD/CRC 448.93 ▲ 1.31% USD/GTQ 7.62 ▲ 2.07% USD/HNL 26.73 ▲ 1.38% USD/NIO 36.62 ▲ 0.31% USD/VES 722.19 ▼ 0.13% USD/PAB 1.00 — 0.00% USD/BZD 2.00 — 0.00% USD/JMD 157.59 ▲ 0.64% USD/TTD 6.75 ▲ 1.19% EUR/BRL 5.79 ▼ 1.07% BRENT 85.35 ▲ 0.73% WTI 79.85 ▲ 0.64% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.37 ▲ 0.57% GOLD 4,036 ▼ 0.63% SILVER 58.24 ▼ 0.91% SOY 1,196 ▼ 0.97% CORN 465.00 ▲ 7.20% WHEAT 664.25 ▲ 5.23% COFFEE 323.55 ▼ 4.05% SUGAR 14.82 ▼ 0.40% ORANGE JUICE 140.90 ▼ 1.16% COTTON 81.10 ▲ 1.88% COCOA 5,742 ▲ 1.45% BEEF 227.75 ▼ 2.97% CATTLE 349.63 ▼ 1.33% LITHIUM 71.58 ▼ 1.02% PETR4 40.66 — 0.00% VALE3 74.01 ▲ 1.59% ITUB4 43.63 ▲ 0.25% BBDC4 18.63 ▼ 0.75% ABEV3 15.81 ▼ 0.13% BBAS3 20.59 ▲ 1.73% B3SA3 15.33 ▲ 1.39% WEGE3 44.20 ▼ 0.43% PRIO3 57.57 ▲ 0.65% SUZB3 41.11 ▼ 0.92% RENT3 40.54 ▲ 0.85% AZZA3 18.85 ▼ 1.93% CSAN3 3.89 ▼ 0.26% RAIZ4 0.31 ▼ 6.06% PCAR3 2.45 ▼ 5.41% GMAT3 3.96 ▲ 0.51% PSSA3 54.29 ▲ 0.46% CVCB3 1.38 ▲ 10.40% POSI3 3.99 — 0.00% SLCE3 13.81 ▼ 0.43% NATU3 8.55 ▼ 0.58% BRKM5 6.83 ▼ 1.59% RANI3 8.01 ▲ 0.75% CSNA3 5.20 ▼ 0.76% CMIN3 5.10 ▼ 6.42% USIM5 8.23 ▼ 1.79% GGBR4 23.32 ▲ 2.19% ENEV3 27.17 ▲ 1.08% CPFE3 47.20 ▲ 0.77% CMIG4 11.20 ▲ 1.17% EQTL3 40.95 ▲ 1.84% LREN3 14.29 ▲ 0.99% VIVT3 35.52 ▲ 2.27% RAIL3 14.13 ▲ 0.14% KLABIN 17.32 ▼ 0.92% RAIA DROGASIL 18.60 ▲ 2.20% RDOR3 36.05 ▲ 1.38% HAPV3 11.19 ▲ 6.98% FLRY3 16.41 ▲ 1.61% SMTO3 16.12 ▼ 1.53% UGPA3 30.11 ▼ 2.65% VBBR3 33.30 ▲ 1.65% BBSE3 40.39 ▲ 0.27% BPAC11 57.95 ▲ 0.75% CURY3 33.59 ▲ 1.42% AERI3 2.07 ▼ 0.48% VIVARA 23.43 ▲ 1.38% COMPASS 25.20 ▲ 1.74% VAMOS 3.15 ▲ 4.30% SANB11 27.34 ▼ 0.11% ASAI3 8.66 ▼ 0.57% SBSP3 30.34 ▼ 0.10% WALMEX 49.32 ▼ 0.66% GMEXICO 199.61 ▲ 2.06% FEMSA 232.52 ▲ 3.18% CEMEX 22.24 ▲ 2.11% GFNORTE 186.00 ▲ 2.16% BIMBO 56.55 ▲ 1.22% TELEVISA 9.49 ▼ 1.25% AMX 22.83 ▲ 1.06% GAP 394.05 ▼ 3.46% ASUR 275.61 ▼ 1.09% OMA 235.49 ▲ 0.93% KOF 180.00 ▼ 0.92% GRUMA 280.31 ▼ 0.38% KIMBER 38.53 ▲ 0.81% SQM-B 67,900 ▲ 1.03% COPEC 6,210 ▲ 2.52% BSANTANDER 78.64 ▲ 0.56% FALABELLA 5,875 ▼ 0.51% ENELAM 85.75 ▲ 1.84% CENCOSUD 2,040 — 0.00% CMPC 1,103 ▲ 2.32% BANCO CHILE 189.50 ▲ 2.43% LATAM AIR 24.90 — 0.00% YPF 77,775 ▲ 0.78% GGAL 7,910 ▼ 2.10% PAMPA 5,230 ▲ 0.10% TXAR 665.00 ▲ 0.08% ALUAR 949.00 ▼ 1.61% TGS 9,710 ▲ 1.46% CEPU 2,327 ▲ 0.35% MIRGOR 16,750 ▼ 1.47% COME 45.75 ▲ 2.17% LOMA NEGRA 3,540 ▲ 1.22% BYMA 302.50 ▼ 1.87% TELECOM ARG 4,333 ▲ 1.94% ECOPETROL 16.16 ▲ 1.76% BANCOLOMBIA 82.10 ▲ 2.09% GRUPO AVAL 4.95 ▲ 0.81% CREDICORP 392.24 ▲ 0.78% SOUTHERN COPPER 182.38 ▲ 4.50% BUENAVENTURA 31.03 ▲ 4.06% MERCADOLIBRE 1,874 ▲ 0.35% NUBANK 13.99 ▲ 2.34% XP 16.87 ▲ 3.05% PAGSEGURO 9.28 — 0.00% STONE 11.30 ▲ 1.35% GLOBANT 30.92 ▼ 3.74% TECNOGLASS 44.19 ▲ 3.15% GAP AIRPORT 225.95 ▼ 2.93% ASUR 275.61 ▼ 1.09% OMA AIRPORT 107.64 ▲ 1.42% AMX ADR 26.18 ▲ 0.58% FEMSA ADR 133.17 ▲ 3.22% CEMEX ADR 12.80 ▲ 2.81% PETROBRAS ADR 17.92 ▲ 0.22% VALE ADR 14.59 ▲ 2.89% ITAU ADR 8.55 ▲ 0.94% SANTANDER BR 5.40 ▲ 0.84% AMBEV ADR 3.09 ▲ 0.98% CSN 1.04 ▲ 0.49% GERDAU 4.61 ▲ 2.67% LATAM ADR 53.51 ▲ 0.34% BTC 64,579 ▼ 0.58% ETH 1,877 ▼ 0.68% SOL 77.31 ▼ 0.58% XRP 1.11 ▼ 0.37% BNB 578.20 ▼ 0.61% ADA 0.17 ▼ 0.14% DOGE 0.07 ▼ 1.13% AVAX 6.66 ▼ 0.55% LINK 8.35 ▲ 0.17% DOT 0.85 ▼ 0.32% LTC 45.41 ▼ 0.05% BCH 234.48 ▼ 0.85% TRX 0.33 ▲ 0.73% XLM 0.19 ▲ 0.61% HBAR 0.07 — 0.00% NEAR 2.07 ▲ 3.18% ATOM 1.57 ▲ 0.77% AAVE 98.18 ▼ 0.71% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 82.49 ▼ 0.63% EMBRAER ADR 64.91 ▲ 0.67% JBS 11.83 ▲ 0.25% JBS BDR 59.75 ▼ 1.42% MBRF3 16.09 ▲ 2.35% MBRFY 3.15 ▲ 0.32% INTER 5.70 ▲ 0.89%
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Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Latin America Life & Society

Latin American Crime Cartels Turn to Crypto to Clean up Their Cash

By · December 8, 2020 · 5 min read

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RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – In April 2019, Mexican police arrested suspected human trafficker Ignacio Santoyo in a plush area of the Caribbean resort of Playa del Carmen after linking him to a prostitution racket extending across Latin America.

Yet it was not the 2,000 women Santoyo is alleged to have blackmailed and sexually exploited that ultimately led to his capture, but the bitcoin he is suspected of using to help launder the proceeds of his operations, officials said.

In April 2019, Mexican police arrested suspected human trafficker Ignacio Santoyo in a plush area of the Caribbean resort of Playa del Carmen after linking him to a prostitution racket extending across Latin America.
In April 2019, Mexican police arrested suspected human trafficker Ignacio Santoyo in a plush area of the Caribbean resort of Playa del Carmen after linking him to a prostitution racket extending across Latin America. (Photo internet reproduction)

The cryptocurrency is emerging as a new front in Latin America’s struggle against gangs battling for control of vast criminal markets for sex, drugs, guns and people, according to law-enforcement authorities.

“There’s a transition to committing crimes in cyberspace, like acquiring cryptocurrencies to launder money … and the pandemic is accelerating it,” said Santiago Nieto, head of the Mexican finance ministry’s financial intelligence unit (UIF).

Neither Santoyo, who is in custody, nor lawyers representing him could be reached for comment, and they have not commented publicly on the case in the past. The Mexican attorney general’s office declined to comment while the case remained open.

Santoyo’s arrest represented an early success for a new law in Mexico – one of only two nations in Latin America, along with Brazil, to enact such legislation – that seeks to tackle the intractable problem of how law agencies can track the use of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies designed to anonymize users.

The law requires all registered cryptocurrency trading platforms to report transfers above 56,000 pesos (US$2,830). It was passed in 2018 but it took many months to implement the system, which is still a work in progress.

Bitcoin’s use to launder money is particularly increasing among drug gangs such as the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) and the Sinaloa Cartel of captured kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, U.S. and Mexican authorities say.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has faced record levels of gang-fueled violence during his first two years in office, and the prospect of cartels hiding their profits in lightly-regulated spaces is a major concern.

The sums involved in the few cases uncovered are typically thousands or tens of thousands of dollars. They represent a drop in the ocean compared with organized crime’s hard cash laundry – estimated at US$25 billion a year in Mexico alone, according to the government and financial-intelligence firms.

Yet larger sums have begun to crop up across the region over the last three years, with a team of international police breaking up three Colombian drug gangs laundering millions of dollars via cryptocurrencies, authorities say. In Mexico, the hope is that the new rules will help snare big fish.

Bandidos Revolution

The only thing tougher than smuggling drugs across borders is getting the profits back to cartels, officials say. Cash is heavy, and transporting it exposes traffickers to high risk. Putting it into banking systems geared to detect dirty money is perilous, too.

UIF chief Nieto said criminals typically split their illicit cash into small amounts and deposited them in various bank accounts, a technique known as “smurfing”. The threshold for banking transactions that raise red flags is US$7,500.

They then use those accounts to buy a series of small amounts of bitcoin online, he added, obscuring the origin of the money and allowing them to pay associates elsewhere in the world.

In Santoyo’s case, authorities who had been pursuing him for months said they finally tracked him down after he bought enough bitcoin to trigger an alert under the new law. Moreover, when making his transactions via a registered platform, Santoyo left personal details including his phone number and address.

Between May and November 2018, Santoyo and his sister acquired some 441,000 pesos (US$22,260) in bitcoin between them on Bitso, a trading platform in Mexico and Argentina, according to government records seen by Reuters.

Bitso, one of 11 registered crypto trading platforms in Mexico, declined to comment.

Mexican authorities also have their sights set on “Bandidos revolution team”, a gang federal prosecutors suspect of stealing millions of dollars through cyber attacks on large banks.

In May 2019, authorities detained suspected gang leader Hector Ortiz in the central state of Guanajuato after he spent “tens of thousands of dollars” on bitcoin. That triggered the bitcoin threshold sensor, enabling investigators to trace Ortiz via his phone.

Neither Ortiz nor lawyers representing him could be reached for comment. The Mexican attorney general’s office declined to comment because the case remains open.

Delving into Dark Web

Rolando Rosas, head of the Cyber Investigations Unit (UICOT) at the Mexican attorney general’s office, said it was tough to track criminals’ use of bitcoin, even with the new law.

UICOT has about 120 people on its staff. But to be competitive, it needs about four times that, he added. The work is painstaking, and often frustrating.

The new law has led to 1,033 bitcoin threshold alerts being triggered so far this year. Investigators must chase up each one to check if it could be suspicious and whether the user is linked to any criminal behavior or cartels.

Even then, such a system can only identify transactions with registered trading companies. Rosas acknowledged his team had limited visibility of dealings in the dark web and unregulated platforms, which U.S. and Latin American officials say mask the true scale of laundering.

About 98% of all Mexico’s transactions above the 56,000-peso threshold in 2020 were flagged by one registered crypto platform, in the CJNG cartel’s home state of Jalisco, according to government data seen by Reuters.

That, said UIF chief Nieto, suggested the CJNG could be active in money laundering via cryptocurrencies. But it is too early to estimate how much money is involved in Mexico’s crypto laundry because data is still scarce, he added.

In another sign of the lengths to which organized crime is going to avoid moving hard cash, U.S. officials have told Reuters that cartels are also turning to Chinese “money brokers” who use burner phones and Chinese banking apps to move funds.

A drop in seizures of hard currency over the past decade – from US$741 million to US$234 million in 2018 – suggests newer technologies including cryptocurrency laundering are gaining ground, according to a U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) report published in January this year. Most of the money came from Colombian and Mexican cartels, it said.

The DEA told Reuters the use of digital currencies by such cartels – or Transnational Criminal Organizations (TCOs)- was an “emerging and increasing trend to launder illicit proceeds”.

“Both Mexican and Colombian TCOs are increasing their use of virtual currency because of the anonymity and speed of transactions,” said spokesman Michael Miller. “It is believed the use of virtual currency will only increase in the future.”

($1 = 19.8 Mexican pesos)

Source: Reuters

 

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Digital assets
Jul 15, 2026 · 08:32

Bitcoin · benchmark
64,579
-0.58%
L 64,445day rangeH 65,183

-45.17% over 12 months

Market breadth · 16 names
31% advancing

5 ▲ advancing11 declining ▼

Currencies, rates & key inputs
Ethereum
1,877
-0.68%

Solana
77.31
-0.58%

Gold
4,036
-0.63%

USD / BRL
5.07
+0.05%

Full instrument board
Instrument Last Change YoY Prev. High Low Volume
BTC 64,579 -0.58% -45.17% 64,956 65,183 64,445 30,797,514,752
ETH 1,877 -0.68% -40.22% 1,889 1,890 1,864 14,229,742,592
SOL 77.31 -0.58% -52.85% 77.76 78.47 77.09 2,311,560,704
XRP 1.11 -0.37% -62.08% 1.11 1.11 1.10 1,386,639,104
BNB 578.20 -0.61% -16.19% 581.76 582.33 575.77 1,278,171,392
ADA 0.17 -0.14% -77.91% 0.17 0.17 0.16 353,079,200
DOGE 0.07 -1.13% -63.03% 0.07 0.07 0.07 761,251,584
AVAX 6.66 -0.55% -70.42% 6.70 6.74 6.61 226,881,264
LINK 8.35 +0.17% -48.09% 8.34 8.41 8.27 315,668,544
DOT 0.85 -0.32% -79.18% 0.85 0.86 0.85 92,345,856
LTC 45.41 -0.05% -52.86% 45.43 45.88 44.62 304,887,328
BCH 234.48 -0.85% -52.90% 236.49 237.39 231.37 119,116,504
TRX 0.33 +0.73% +9.20% 0.33 0.33 0.33 460,304,384
XLM 0.19 +0.61% -58.94% 0.18 0.19 0.18 149,787,248
HBAR 0.07 +0.00% -71.15% 0.07 0.07 0.07 56,539,172
NEAR 2.07 +3.18% -22.33% 2.01 2.07 2.00 221,995,472
ATOM 1.57 +0.77% -66.29% 1.56 1.57 1.55 23,780,028
AAVE 98.18 -0.71% -69.99% 98.88 99.69 97.03 252,377,520

Largest moves today
NEAR
2.07
+3.18%
DOGE
0.07
-1.13%
BCH
234.48
-0.85%
ATOM
1.57
+0.77%
TRX
0.33
+0.73%
AAVE
98.18
-0.71%
ETH
1,877
-0.68%
BNB
578.20
-0.61%

The session read
The Bitcoin eased 0.58%, with breadth negative — 5 of 16 names higher. NEAR led, while DOGE lagged.

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