Crypto Adoption: Latin America Grew Three Times Faster than the U.S.

Argentina remained the leading country in the region in terms of active users, quadrupling not only the Latin American average, but also the number of Argentine users recorded in 2021.

Bitcoin and the wider crypto market is in a rough patch.
Bitcoin and the wider crypto market is in a rough patch.

Although Bitcoin’s volatility marked the end of 2025, the broader crypto industry in Latin America — and in Argentina in particular — set new records. Over the past year, Latin America recorded crypto user growth that was three times higher than in the United States. The region also became the second fastest-growing region globally in crypto inflows, with a 60% increase compared to 2024, representing 10% of total global transaction volume.

These figures come from the report “State of the Industry in Latin America”, published by fintech Lemon Cash, based on proprietary data and information from Chainalysis. The report emphasizes that growth in the region “is not explained by volume alone.” In 2025, monthly active users grew three times faster than in the United States and increased by nearly 18% year over year.

This trend, according to the report, “does not depend solely on crypto market cycles.” While regional app downloads fell by 9%, the total number of people actively using crypto apps in Latin America grew by 18% in 2025, with sharp spikes in January, when Bitcoin reached new all-time highs and crypto began consolidating its role as a new layer for cross-border payments, particularly through systems like PIX.

Experts highlighted that three of the world’s top 20 crypto adoption countries are in the region: Brazil, Argentina, and Venezuela. However, they also stressed that Latin America is not a homogeneous block, and adoption patterns vary according to each country’s economic conditions.

In fact, while the term “crypto” itself lost visibility during the past year, one segment never stopped growing: stablecoins — not only as a savings tool, but increasingly as infrastructure for new and more efficient use cases.

Brazil’s surge, Peru’s rise, and three adoption models

One of the report’s major surprises was Brazil’s performance. The country tripled its received crypto volume and overtook Argentina, surpassing USD 318 billion:
“This represents nearly one-third of the region’s total volume and an annual growth rate close to 250%, driven mainly by institutional transactions.”

At the same time, Peru surpassed Chile in transaction volume, climbing one position compared to 2024 and reaching seventh place, with year-over-year growth above 20%. Notably, the number of Peruvian users on crypto apps also doubled.

“The development of the Peruvian market reflects the success of interoperability policies and the entry of international players that have sustained adoption in the country,” Lemon explained.

The report also identifies three distinct crypto adoption models in the region:

  • Brazil and Mexico — where usage is driven primarily by institutional volume and market speculation. Regulatory frameworks have allowed large banks and institutions to offer crypto trading services, enabling new business models such as remittances.
  • Argentina and Venezuela — where crypto assets are more closely linked to store-of-value and savings functions, driven by persistent currency devaluation.
  • Countries such as Peru and Colombia — with more stable economies, where adoption is tied to accessing better financial solutions and achieving higher returns than those available through local currencies.

Global ETF Funds Reached a New Record of $20.64 Trillion in Assets

According to market data compiled in London, the global ETF industry has once again broken its all-time record for assets under management, following a strong January that came just short of being the best on record.


At a time when markets and investors are rotating portfolios, recalibrating positions and forecasts, and debating the end of the tech bubble linked to artificial intelligence (AI), the latest January figures show that investment bets remain firmly in place. One of the main beneficiaries of this trend continues to be global ETFs, which at the start of 2026 set a new record for invested assets, surpassing $20 trillion.

Data from London indicate that in January the ETF industry recorded global net inflows of $150.41 billion, according to the specialized consultancy ETFGI. As a result, total assets invested in the global ETF industry reached a new all-time high of $20.64 trillion at the end of the month, surpassing the previous record of $19.85 trillion set at the end of 2025. This implies a 4% increase year-to-date, based on ETFGI’s survey, which draws on data from ETF/ETP sponsors, exchanges, regulatory filings, Thomson Reuters/Lipper, Bloomberg, public sources, and proprietary datasets.

There is little doubt that January’s net inflows of more than $150 billion reflect strong market interest in this investment vehicle. In fact, they represent the second-highest January inflows on record (the highest being January 2025 with $152.57 billion), exceeding those of January 2024 ($136.67 billion). Moreover, January 2026 marked the 80th consecutive month of net inflows into global ETFs.

This performance took place in a context where the S&P 500 rose 1.45% in January, while developed markets excluding the US advanced 6.15%, led by Korea (+26.7%) and Luxembourg (+18.6%). Emerging markets posted an average gain of 5.5%, led by Peru (+26.2%) and Colombia (+23.2%), according to Deborah Fuhr of ETFGI.

iShares as the Market Leader

iShares remains the world’s largest ETF provider, with $5.77 trillion in assets under management and a 28% market share. Vanguard ranks second, with $4.4 trillion in assets and a 21.3% market share, followed by State Street SPDR ETFs, which manages $2.07 trillion and holds a 10% market share.

The Mexican Peso Posted Modest Gains Versus the Dollar

The peso gained ground in a session lacking major economic catalysts, as traders continued to digest the impact of a new global U.S. tariff framework.

The Mexican peso strengthened against the dollar in Wednesday’s trading. The local currency advanced in a session with few key economic references, while market participants continued to assess the outlook shaped by the introduction of a new global tariff policy by the United States.

The exchange rate closed at 17.1579 pesos per dollar. Compared with Tuesday’s close of 17.1753, according to official data from Banco de México (Banxico), this represented a gain of 1.74 centavos, or 0.10%, for the currency.

During the session, the dollar traded within a range of 17.2255 pesos at the high and 17.1390 pesos at the low. The Dollar Index (DXY), from the Intercontinental Exchange, which measures the U.S. currency against six major peers, fell 0.20% to 97.70 points.

U.S. President Donald Trump said in his State of the Union address that the country is “gaining enormously” from its tariff policy, while also criticizing a Supreme Court ruling last week that invalidated many of the tariffs.

Geopolitical risk also featured in Trump’s speech, as he claimed that Iran has reactivated its nuclear program, fueling market nervousness over the possibility of military action if diplomatic efforts fail to deliver concrete results.

Overall, the exchange rate experienced a volatile session, with the peso tracking movements in the dollar, while markets remained focused on rising geopolitical tensions between the United States and Iran following Trump’s State of the Union address.

Binance Takes Top Spot in Reserves with Stablecoins Now Above 65%

The exchange highlighted its strong liquidity position in the market, signaling a healthy period for both Binance and its users.

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Binance is seen on their exhibition stand at the Delta Summit, Malta’s official Blockchain and Digital Innovation event promoting cryptocurrency, in Ta’ Qali, Malta October 3, 2019. REUTERS/Darrin Zammit Lupi

Binance now leads capital allocation in the cryptocurrency market, holding more than 65% of stablecoin reserves (USDT and USDC) stored on centralized exchanges — equivalent to $47.5 billion across the sector — according to data from on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant.

These stablecoins, which are pegged to fiat currencies such as the U.S. dollar, serve as a key indicator of market liquidity. In this context, their concentration reflects market health and efficiency, ensuring deeper liquidity and lower slippage (the difference between an order’s expected price and its actual execution price).

“The report shows that Binance’s total stablecoin reserves grew 31% year over year, even amid market turbulence, demonstrating the platform’s deep liquidity and resilience during the recent bearish phase,” Binance said in a statement.

In relative terms, Binance’s stablecoin reserves are now roughly five times larger than those of the second-largest exchange, eight times larger than the third, and nearly twelve times those of the fourth-largest platform.

Outflows fall to $2 billion

The report also shows that stablecoin outflows from exchanges declined to just $2 billion, around four times lower than the $8.4 billion drop recorded at the peak of the market correction.

This decline points to easing liquidity pressures and reinforces the stabilization of cash flows across platforms, reducing the risk of sharp price swings linked to systemic stress. It also signals growing structural confidence among users in the crypto ecosystem.

Nvidia Stuns Wall Street Again as Revenue Surges 73%

The tech giant once again delivered results that beat market expectations and forecast record revenue for the next quarter. The data center business remains the main engine of growth.

Nvidia's earnings report moved the market.
Nvidia’s earnings report moved the market.

U.S. earnings season delivered one of its biggest highlights on Wednesday with Nvidia’s latest report. The company, now firmly established as a key barometer for the artificial intelligence industry, not only exceeded market expectations for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2026 but also issued guidance for the current period that reignited optimism on Wall Street.

Following the release of the results, the company’s shares rose nearly 3% in after-hours trading, climbing back above the $200 level and reflecting strong investor confidence.

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Results beat consensus estimates

For the fiscal fourth quarter ended in January, Nvidia reported revenue of $68.127 billion, representing a 73% year-over-year increase. The figure exceeded consensus estimates compiled by Investing.com, which had projected revenue of $65.56 billion (an annual increase of 66.7%).

On profitability, the company posted net income of $39.552 billion, up 79% from the same period a year earlier. Earnings per share (EPS) came in at $1.62, an 82% year-over-year jump and well above the $1.52 expected by the market.

Performance was once again driven by the artificial intelligence business. In particular, revenue from the data center segment reached $62.3 billion, up 22% from the previous quarter and 75% year over year.

AI strategy and the next generation of chips

“Computing demand is growing exponentially — the inflection point of agent-based AI has arrived. Grace Blackwell, with NVLink, is the queen of inference today, delivering much lower cost per token, and Vera Rubin will extend that leadership even further,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of the company.

He also emphasized that “enterprise adoption of AI agents is surging,” adding that clients are accelerating investments in AI infrastructure, which he described as “the factories powering the AI industrial revolution and its future growth.”

Gold Breaks Above $5,000 as Trade and Geopolitical Tensions Intensify

The precious metal is up 0.5% and remains above $5,000 an ounce, supported by a weaker dollar and rising demand for safe-haven assets amid uncertainty over new U.S. tariffs and escalating tensions with Iran.

Gold prices rose on Wednesday, driven by a softer U.S. dollar and increased safe-haven demand as uncertainty surrounding American trade tariffs and growing frictions between Washington and Tehran unsettled markets.

Spot gold climbed 0.5% to $5,175.00 per ounce, while U.S. gold futures for April delivery advanced 0.5% to $5,193.90. The dollar index weakened, making dollar-denominated gold cheaper for holders of other currencies.

Spot gold continues to hold above the $5,000 level, supported by dollar weakness, unclear prospects for U.S. trade policy, and persistent geopolitical tensions.

Among other precious metals, spot silver jumped 3.5% to $90.40 an ounce, its highest level in three weeks. Spot platinum surged 5.4% to $2,285.64, its highest level since February 4, while palladium rose 2.7% to $1,816.21.

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U.S. tariff dispute continues

U.S. President Donald Trump said in his State of the Union address that “almost all” countries and companies want to maintain previously agreed tariff and investment deals with Washington. The United States began imposing a temporary 10% tariff on global imports on Tuesday, and was working to raise it to 15%, according to a White House official.

Meanwhile, U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are scheduled to meet with an Iranian delegation for a third round of nuclear talks on Thursday in Geneva.

Iran is also close to finalizing a deal with China to purchase anti-ship cruise missiles, according to sources cited by Reuters. The missiles could potentially target U.S. naval forces currently deployed near the Iranian coast, further heightening regional tensions.

Wall Street Rebounds, Led by AMD’s 9% Rally

Wall Street shook off the previous session’s sharp selloff and closed higher, driven by a rebound in tech stocks.

Wall Street ended in the Green.

AMD led the rally with a nearly 9% jump, as investors remained focused on trade tensions and the pace of artificial intelligence.

U.S. markets recovered on Tuesday after Monday’s steep decline, powered by a rebound in technology shares led by Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). Growing uncertainty over global trade and fears of potential disruption from rapid advances in artificial intelligence had weighed heavily on sentiment the day before, pushing all three major benchmark indexes sharply lower.

In this context, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.76% to 49,174.81 points, the S&P 500 gained 0.78% to 6,891.04, and the Nasdaq Composite advanced 1.05% to 22,863.68.

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FedEx leads tariff refund claims

Markets remain focused on the outlook for global trade following the implementation of new U.S. tariffs promoted by President Donald Trump, which set a 10% rate as of midnight Tuesday, after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling struck down the so-called “reciprocal” tariffs.

The 10% tariff was communicated via a notice from U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and is lower than the 15% rate Trump announced over the weekend. However, the White House is reportedly preparing a formal executive order to raise the tariff to 15%, according to Bloomberg News.

Amid uncertainty over Trump’s trade agenda, doubts have also emerged about the future of bilateral agreements previously negotiated with key partners. Reports that some countries may reassess those deals following the court ruling prompted Trump to warn on social media against taking advantage of the situation.

Adding pressure, FedEx (+0.6%) filed a lawsuit against the U.S. government on Monday seeking a “full refund” of emergency tariffs paid over the past year.

FedEx is the first company to formally demand refunds following the Supreme Court decision, joining a broader wave of legal challenges to U.S. tariff policy. The ruling did not clarify the fate of revenues collected from the tariffs deemed illegal, which are estimated to exceed $160 billion.

Tech rebound and standout movers

Calm returned to the technology sector after Monday’s panic, which had been triggered by a report from Citrini Research, as several major companies move forward with new AI-related partnerships.

Shares of AMD surged 8.7% after the company announced an expansion of its agreement with Meta Platforms (+0.3%), the parent company of Facebook, to supply chips for artificial intelligence infrastructure.

Meanwhile, several software stocks advanced following a wave of deals linked to AI tools from Anthropic. In particular, Thomson Reuters posted a gain of nearly 12%.

Mexican Peso Reverses Losses and Gains Ground Against the Dollar

The Mexican peso strengthened after early losses, as traders assessed economic data from Mexico and the United States.

The peso appreciated against the dollar in the second session of the week, recovering ground after an early decline, as market participants digested economic figures from both countries and monitored Mexico’s domestic security situation.

The exchange rate closed at 17.1753 pesos per dollar. Compared with Monday’s close of 17.2659, according to official data from Banco de México (Banxico), the peso posted a gain of 9.06 centavos, or 0.53%.

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The dollar traded within a range of 17.3023 at the high and 17.1606 at the low. Meanwhile, the Dollar Index (DXY) from the Intercontinental Exchange, which measures the dollar against six major currencies, rose 0.13% to 97.87 points.

Earlier in the session, traders absorbed Mexican inflation data that came in above market expectations. Headline inflation rose 3.92% year-on-year in the first half of February, while core inflation unexpectedly eased to 4.52%.

The peso’s initial weakness also reflected a stronger dollar, as investors analyzed better-than-expected U.S. consumer confidence data. Markets are also awaiting the State of the Union address by President Donald Trump.

Mexican Peso Projections and Context

In addition, the peso recovered after Monday’s decline, which had been driven by market caution following violent incidents reported on Sunday across several Mexican states. The unrest was linked to the killing of the leader of the Cártel Jalisco Nueva Generación (CJNG), known as El Mencho.

Looking ahead, moderate volatility is expected in the near term. The peso could attempt to consolidate below the 17.25 level if Trump adopts a conciliatory tone following the crackdown on drug trafficking in Mexico.

J.P. Morgan CEO Warns of 2008-Style Financial Risks

Jamie Dimon has identified patterns emerging today that mirror the dynamics that led to the collapse of the U.S. financial system 18 years ago.

The CEO of J.P. Morgan, Jamie Dimon, has drawn a parallel between current market conditions and the period preceding the 2008 financial crisis, citing intense competition within the financial industry as a key source of risk.

At that time, an aggressive race to expand lending ended tragically for the market. “Unfortunately, we saw this in 2005, 2006, and 2007 — almost the same thing: the rising tide lifted all boats and everyone made a lot of money,” Dimon told investors. However, he stressed that J.P. Morgan is unwilling to take on riskier lending simply to boost net interest income (NII): “I see a couple of people doing foolish things. They’re just doing foolish things to generate NII.”

Dimon led the largest U.S. bank through the 2008 financial crisis, during which it absorbed two major competitors that collapsed. He now warns of a deterioration in credit quality and expects the credit cycle to eventually worsen again — though he admits the timing is uncertain.

Referring to last year’s collapses of auto finance company Tricolor Holdings and auto-parts supplier First Brands Group, Dimon used a metaphor: seeing a “cockroach” usually means more are coming.

The veteran banker, who has led J.P. Morgan for more than 20 years, also addressed his future at the firm, saying he plans to remain CEO for a few more years and later continue as executive chairman, although the final decision rests with the company’s board.

AI: the factor shaping today’s economic cycle

Speaking about the credit cycle, Dimon noted that there is always a surprise, and the uncertainty lies in which sector will be hit next: “This time, it could be software because of artificial intelligence (AI).”

Several industries have already faced AI-driven uncertainty, as investors assess how the technology may reshape markets. However, Dimon expressed skepticism that AI will have a material impact on credit losses.

Financial stocks have also faced recent market pressure linked to AI-related concerns. Dimon, however, sees J.P. Morgan as one of the winners in the AI race. “At the end of the day, in 100 areas we’ll be winners in 75 and losers in 25,” he said.

Bitcoin Is on Track for Its Worst Monthly Decline Since 2022

The world’s leading cryptocurrency continues to slide, fueling fears that it could break through key support levels.

Bitcoin is in danger of an extreme drop.
Bitcoin is in danger of an extreme drop.

Bitcoin (BTC) extended its losing streak on Tuesday, falling 3.6% to $63,484.35, as it heads toward its worst monthly decline since 2022 — a year marked by a series of corporate collapses across the crypto industry.

The cryptocurrency briefly dropped as low as $62,858, and is now down more than 19% in February, putting it on track for its worst monthly performance since June 2022. That period was defined by the implosion of the TerraUSD project, which triggered a cascade of bankruptcies, including hedge fund Three Arrows Capital and crypto lender BlockFi.

Adding to the bearish outlook, Bitcoin is approaching its fifth consecutive monthly decline, which would mark its longest losing streak since 2018 — another brutal chapter for crypto markets, following the collapse of initial coin offerings after the sector’s early boom.

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What’s behind Bitcoin’s decline?

The latest leg of the downturn has been shaped by rising global uncertainty following a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court that struck down Donald Trump’s tariff program. Markets were further unsettled after Trump announced a new 10% global tariff on imports for 150 days, along with a rate increase to 15%, the maximum allowed under the relevant statute.

Despite the narrative of Bitcoin as “digital gold,” it continues to trade like a risk asset. When macroeconomic fears intensify, capital flows toward traditional safe havens — and Bitcoin is not yet perceived as one of them. This is compounded by the absence of short-term catalysts that could restore investor confidence.

Spot Bitcoin ETFs listed in the United States recorded outflows of more than $200 million on Monday, while bearish hedging demand in the options market is running at roughly twice the level of bullish positioning, according to data from Deribit.

From a technical perspective, the next major support level sits at $60,000, with Bitcoin moving steadily closer to its 200-week moving average at $58,503. A break below the $58,000–$60,000 support zone would likely open the door to a deeper correction.

Meanwhile, the total market value of all cryptocurrencies fell by more than $120 billion between Monday and Tuesday, according to CoinGecko.