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$10B in crypto deals, powered by record-low rates and Bitcoin frenzy – Details

$10B in crypto deals, powered by record-low rates and Bitcoin frenzy - Details

$10B in crypto deals, powered by record-low rates and Bitcoin frenzy - Details

Key Takeaways

How big was the crypto M&A boom in Q3 2025?

Crypto mergers and acquisitions hit a record $10 billion, nearly matching the combined deal value of the prior three years.

Why are investors turning to gold and Bitcoin now?

Aggressive global easing — 312 rate cuts in 24 months — is driving demand for alternative stores of value.


Crypto mergers and acquisitions went up to a record $10 billion in the third quarter of 2025!

This rise comes as global central banks slash interest rates in one of the most aggressive easing cycles in recent years, with investors increasingly turning to gold and Bitcoin [BTC] as alternative stores of value.

Crypto M&As are back!

The $10 billion posted in Q3 2025 surpasses the previous record set earlier this year. According to Architect Partners,

“Weʼve firmly broken out of the ‘Crypto Winter,’ and are reaching a more disciplined, mature state where founders that can clear diligence are raising meaningful checks.”

Source: Architect Partners

This single quarter’s total nearly matches the combined deal value recorded between early 2022 and mid-2025.

Much of this activity comes from firms trying to link TradFi with crypto, improve compliance, and build better payment systems.

Risk asset revival?

Record-low rates and the most aggressive global easing in decades are causing a revival in risk assets.

Central banks have cut interest rates 312 times over the past 24 months (nearly matching the 2008 peak) while over 82% of banks reduced rates in just the last six months.

Source: X

This easy-money environment is moving capital into both traditional and digital stores of value.

Gold for nations, BTC for the people

As central banks embrace easy money, governments are buying gold at historic rates: 830 tonnes annualized in 2025, with 23 countries increasing reserves in the first half alone.

Source: X

This follows three consecutive years of above-average accumulation — 1,080 tonnes in 2022, 1,051 in 2023, and 1,089 in 2024 — making it the 16th straight year of net purchases, the longest streak on record.

Prior to 2010, central banks were net sellers for 21 years.

Bitcoin is on a similar tangent.

Source: CryptoQuant

Long-term holders control near-record supply, exchange balances are shrinking, and institutional demand is rising.

Investors increasingly treat BTC as a digital counterpart to gold, a scarce hedge asset, as global easing and growing risk appetite drive demand for alternative stores of value.

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