

Kazakhstan, the Maldives and Pakistan have recently outlined
ambitions to position themselves as crypto hubs and build out their
digital economies.
Historically, these countries haven’t been top of mind for
global crypto firms — though Kazakhstan did have a brief moment in
the spotlight as a go-to destination for Bitcoin
(BTC) miners after
China’s mining ban.
Meanwhile, established financial centers are now in a race to
become the world’s leading crypto hub by finding the right balance
of regulation, talent, capital and infrastructure.
Here’s how five of them are backing their crypto dreams.
Singapore is the crypto hub with parental guidance
Singapore has long stood out as a financial hub, bolstered by
its AAA credit
rating, low corporate tax rates and pro-business regulations.
With the emergence of digital assets, the Lion City is among the
front-runners in
the crypto hub race.
Singapore was among the early movers in crypto regulation. Its
Payment Services Act (PSA) of 2019 — enacted in
2020 — was one of Asia’s first comprehensive legal frameworks
that covered crypto activities.
The PSA uses the term “digital payment token”
(DPT) to define digital representation of value that can be
transferred, stored or traded electronically — like crypto.
At the time of writing, there are 33 DPT service
providers licensed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore
(MAS), the city-state’s central bank. Casper Johansen, co-founder
of Singapore- and Hong Kong-based Spartan Group, said license
approvals have moved at a measured pace, giving faster-moving hubs
like Dubai room to catch up.
“Singapore is more of an institutional financial hub than a
retail financial hub,” Johansen said, alluding to the city-state’s
limitations on crypto marketing to retail investors.
Singapore’s retail crypto promotion ban includes
social media influencer marketing and third-party websites.
Source: Monetary
Authority of Singapore
“The ban on marketing to retail has not affected Singapore’s
position as a global crypto hub. Crypto firms set up in Singapore
for the low and transparent taxes, strong regulatory framework and
rule of law, world-class professional services, ease of living and
global connectivity,” Johansen added.
But cracks have emerged recently, particularly around
immigration and hiring policy. In late 2024, concerns flared when
the CEO of blockchain analytics firm Nansen, Alex Svanevik, shared
that he was denied permanent residency. The government has ramped
up efforts to prioritize local
hiring amid growing political sensitivity over
foreign
labor.
Nansen CEO’s permanent residency rejection highlighted
Singapore’s tight visa and immigration environment. Source:
Alex
Svanevik
UAE rolls out the welcome mat for crypto hub status
Unlike other crypto hub contenders, Dubai has a
dedicated digital
asset regulator, the Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority
(VARA).
Its wide-ranging licensing regime provides clear guidelines —
even for NFT platforms — which major economies like the European
Union have yet to address. The EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA)
framework currently excludes NFTs.
VARA’s clarity is appealing to companies frustrated by
regulatory uncertainty elsewhere. Binance, a borderless exchange
with no official head office, has had to rethink that model under
global regulatory pressure — and the exchange’s ties to the UAE
have been growing.
Richard Teng, former CEO of free zone Abu Dhabi Global Market,
took over as the CEO of Binance after Zhao, and has recently hinted
that UAE is a strong candidate for the exchange’s headquarters,
though a decision hasn’t been made yet.
Binance’s first institutional investment is a
$2-billion bet from Abu Dhabi-based MGX. Source:
Binance
The UAE also provides its own incentives, such as
no personal
income tax and free zones like the Dubai Multi Commodities
Centre (DMCC) and Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) offer
0% corporate tax advantages and
100% foreign ownership.
Related: The
lessons learned at Operation Chokepoint 2.0 Congressional
hearings
Crypto firms have reported easier access to banking services in
Dubai, which is an improvement over the challenges companies say
they’ve
faced in the US under “Operation Chokepoint 2.0.”
Hong Kong makes crypto hub push with retail access and staking
ETFs
Hong Kong has long acted as a financial gateway to mainland
China, where crypto activities like mining and trading remain
banned.
Previously, the city had a voluntary licensing regime, when only
OSL and HashKey were licensed to serve institutions and
professional investors. In Hong Kong, professional investors are
legally defined as those with portfolios worth at least 8 million
Hong Kong dollars (about $1 million).
It was later updated to the mandatory regime, launched in 2023,
which opened the doors
to retail.
The shift to mandatory licensing marked a turning point. OSL and
HashKey became the first exchanges authorized to serve retail
investors, while firms like Bybit and OKX
withdrew their applications and exited the market. As of now,
10 platforms are licensed, while 15 have either withdrawn or been
rejected.
Eight applicants in Hong Kong still wait the SFC’s
decision. Source: Securities
and Futures Commission
Hong Kong has made further strides with the listing of Bitcoin
and Ether (ETH) ETFs,
and recently approved staking within
Ether ETFs, which is not yet permitted in the US. It has also
introduced stablecoin
sandboxes under the supervision of the Hong Kong Monetary
Authority to trial approved digital assets in a controlled
environment.
“Sandboxes are an experiment, so too are staking ETFs,” said
Kelvin Koh, a Spartan Group co-founder. “The key point is that
these experiments are happening in Hong Kong.”
Hong Kong recently released its ASPIRe
roadmap in February 2025, which aims to foster blockchain
innovation and fill regulatory gaps to set the city up as a global
crypto hub.
Hong Kong’s five-pillar strategy to become a crypto
hub. Source: Securities
and Futures Commission
Trump 2.0 dreams of crypto hub
US crypto firms were stuck in regulatory gridlock under the
Securities and Exchange Commission formerly led by Gary Gensler,
whose aggressive “regulation by enforcement” strategy triggered
years-long legal battles.
That changed with the inauguration of President Donald Trump,
who has embraced a crypto-friendly stance. The SEC has since
dropped multiple high-profile cases and investigations, including
those against Coinbase,
Uniswap and
Consensys,
signaling a shifting regulatory climate that is prepared to welcome
back crypto to US soil.
President Trump declares the US the future capital of AI and
crypto. Source: The White House
Binance.US resumed US dollar services in February after 18
months of restriction that followed enforcement action from the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission, a $2.7-billion settlement and
a four-month prison sentence for ex-Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao.
Related:
8 major crypto firms announce US expansion this
year
Rival exchange OKX reentered the US
market in April 2025 after a $500-million settlement with the
Department of Justice. Also in April, Nexo announced — during an
event with Trump’s son in attendance — that it
rekindled its
American dream after scrapping it in 2022.
Traditional finance is warming up, with institutional
investments flooding into Bitcoin and Ether spot ETFs, provided by
some of the world’s largest asset managers, including the
$11.5-trillion
giant BlackRock.
The financial love affair goes both ways as crypto firms are
also increasingly open to integrating into the existing US
infrastructure.
Galaxy Digital listed on Nasdaq on May 16, Circle is
considering another IPO attempt, and Hong Kong’s blockchain
unicorn Animoca Brands is now eyeing a New York
listing, citing Trump’s stance on crypto.
NYC Mayor Eric Adams opens Wall Street to crypto.
Source: Yedda Araujo/Cointelegraph
The world’s largest financial center, New York City, is
making its own
move. Mayor Eric Adams said on May 12 that the Big Apple is
“open for business” with crypto companies.
UK’s crypto hub push goes quiet, but London’s still
calling
In 2023, then-Prime Minister Rishi Sunak launched a bold vision
to make the UK a global
crypto hub, pushing for stablecoins to be recognized as
regulated payment instruments and outlining a broader framework to
integrate crypto into the country’s financial system.
That momentum translated into real movement: In April 2025, the
UK Treasury released near-final
legislation aimed at bringing crypto assets — like trading
platforms, stablecoins and staking services — within the country’s
regulatory perimeter.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is now
consulting on
how to regulate intermediaries, lending and other core parts of the
ecosystem, signaling continued regulatory development.
But while the machinery of regulation keeps turning, the
political will has cooled. As Arvin Abraham, partner at law firm
Goodwin’s private equity group, told Cointelegraph, crypto was once
central to Sunak’s competitiveness agenda, but under the current
Labour government, that focus has faded.
The new Financial Services Growth and Competitiveness Strategy,
spearheaded by Chancellor Rachel Reeves, highlights
fintech as a priority without a focus solely on crypto.
“The UK does not feel like it’s prioritizing it as much as it
was a few years ago,” Abraham said.
In January, Andreessen Horowitz announced the closure
of its UK office to move back to the US. Source:
Anthony
Albanese
Abraham added the UK remains “one of the best places to set up a
new startup,” especially for early-stage capital raising.
He points to generous tax incentives for angel investors and the
unique convergence of finance and startups in London, calling it
“probably one of the best cities in the world for fintech-type
businesses.”
In that sense, even without headline-grabbing crypto policy, the
UK’s structural appeal still draws Web3 firms — just now with a
quieter backdrop.
Magazine:
South Africa’s digital-nomad crypto hub: Cape Town,
Crypto City Guide
...
Continue reading Who’s got the charm, cash and code
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