
TL;DR
The US 2025Q3 GDP surpassed expectations and showed resilience, which lowered the expectations for Fed rate cut in 2026.
The quarter-on-quarter annualized growth rate of US GDP in Q3 2025 rose from 3.8% in Q2 to 4.3%, exceeding Bloomberg’s consensus estimate of 3.3%. Year-over-year growth increased by 0.2pps to 2.3%. By component, the effects of tariffs on inventory and net exports persisted. Excluding these distortions, the growth rate of private consumption + investment, a measure of underlying economic momentum, edged up from 2.9% to 3.0%. The stronger-than-expected GDP growth led to a pullback in expectations for Fed rate cuts in 2026.
From a breakdown of GDP components, household consumption continued to recover, private investment (excluding inventory) slowed marginally, and government investment and consumption rebounded significantly. Specifically, household consumption growth accelerated from 2.5% to 3.5%, contributing 2.4pps to GDP, indicating strong resilience in US consumer spending as tariff effects faded. Private investment (excluding inventory) growth slowed from 4.4% to 1.0%, reflecting a moderation in AI-related investments and continued weakness in residential investment. Export growth rebounded, while tariff implementation and reduced pre-importing led to slower import growth, narrowing the trade deficit and contributing 1.6pps to GDP in Q3. Looking ahead, Q4 is expected to see technical deceleration due to the government shutdown. The CBO estimates that the shutdown could lower GDP’s annualized quarterly growth rate by over 1pp; and this gap will likely be offset in Q1 2026 without affecting the economy’s underlying trend.
This week’s incoming data includes BLS December jobs report, the JOLTS, the ADP Employment Report, ISM PMIs and Michigan consumer confidence survey. The December jobs report is expected to show nonfarm payrolls rising by about 55,000, down from 64,000 in November, while the unemployment rate is seen edging lower to 4.5% from a more than four-year high of 4.6%. The ISM surveys are likely to signal another month of contraction in manufacturing and a modest slowdown in services activity, while the Michigan sentiment data is expected to show broadly stable consumer morale at the start of the year. (1, 2)
Crypto Markets Overview
160.58M in inflows. (6)
The ETH/BTC ratio climbed 2.35% to 0.034, reflecting ETH’s relative strength. Market sentiment was largely unchanged from the prior week, remaining in the Extreme Fear zone with a reading of 26. (7)
3. Top 30 Crypto Assets Performance
The Key Crypto Highlights
1. Vitalik outlines how PeerDAS and ZK-EVMs redefine Ethereum’s scaling
Vitalik Buterin argued that the combination of PeerDAS now live on mainnet and production-grade ZK-EVM performance marks a structural shift for Ethereum, enabling decentralization, consensus, and high bandwidth simultaneously. He framed this as a decade-long effort finally delivering a new class of network, with safety work on ZK-EVMs remaining. Looking ahead, Ethereum expects staged gas limit increases, ZK-EVM-based validation, and more distributed block building, reshaping execution, data availability, and validator economics over the next four years. (10)
2. BlackRock’s BUIDL distributes $100M, validating tokenized finance at scale
BlackRock’s tokenized money market fund, BUIDL, has distributed 2B and multi-chain expansion beyond Ethereum to Solana, Aptos, Avalanche and Optimism, BUIDL provides a live case study of how blockchain infrastructure can replicate and streamline core functions of traditional asset management. (11)
3. Grayscale files for Bittensor trust ETF to tap decentralized AI demand
Grayscale submitted a preliminary S-1 filing to the SEC for a Bittensor-focused trust that could convert into a spot ETF under the ticker GTAO, offering regulated exposure to the TAO token. The move signals growing institutional interest in decentralized AI infrastructure, where Bittensor uses crypto incentives to coordinate open-source model development. If approved, GTAO would lower barriers for investors seeking AI-themed crypto exposure without direct token custody, though regulatory approval remains uncertain amid heightened SEC scrutiny of crypto ETFs. (12)
1. SQRIL secures Tether backing to unify QR code payments across borders
Tether has invested in SQRIL, a Southeast Asia–based startup building a real-time Scan-to-Pay QR payment switch that enables cross-border payments across Asia, Africa and Latin America. SQRIL’s API allows banks, neobanks and e-wallets to let users pay foreign merchants via local QR codes while settling FX and payouts in local currency. The move aligns with rising adoption of national QR schemes and stablecoins in emerging markets, positioning SQRIL as infrastructure for interoperable, real-time retail payments beyond traditional card networks. (13)
2. AIAV raises $4M Seed round to build decentralized AI avatar infrastructure
AIAV raised a $4M Seed round co-led by Animoca Brands and DuckDAO with Castrum Capital, Bedrock Ventures and other investors to advance its decentralized AI avatar platform. Built on a decentralized learning framework and data-to-value pipeline, AIAV lets users own, train and monetize AI models from real conversations. As AI adoption raises data ownership and incentive challenges, the round reflects demand for Web3-native AI systems that return control and economic value to users. (14)
3. Cango raises $10.5M Strategic round to expand mining, energy and AI compute
Cango secured a $10.5M strategic follow-on investment from Enduring Wealth Capital Limited, increasing EWCL’s ownership and voting stake through a Class B share subscription. The capital supports scaling Bitcoin mining efficiency while advancing parallel initiatives in energy and AI compute infrastructure. As miners seek diversification beyond pure hashpower economics, the investment reflects confidence in Cango’s strategy to evolve into an integrated digital infrastructure platform aligned with long-term demand for energy- and compute-intensive workloads. (15)
The number of deals closed in the previous week was 4, with Infra and Data having 2 deals each, representing 50% of the total number of deals.
13M. Most funded deals: Cango (4M)
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