Author: Aki Wu Talks Blockchain With the joint exposure and crackdown by the British and American governments on the transnational criminal empire of Chen Zhi, the de facto controller of the Prince Group in Cambodia, the intricate global business network behind it has also come to light. Shockingly, this group, notorious for its "pig butchering" style telecom fraud, human trafficking, and forced labor, controlled 50% of the shares of Habanos, a top Cuban cigar company, through a complex offshore structure. China is Habanos' largest consumer market. This unexpected connection reveals that in the digital age, illegal economic activities and legitimate businesses are intertwined through blockchain and offshore financial networks, forming a new "capital spider web." This article attempts to analyze the operational logic of so-called "spider web capitalism 2.0"—that is, the upgrade of traditional offshore capitalism under the special circumstances of blockchain technology and Southeast Asia—starting from the Chen Zhi case, and to demonstrate how a decentralized offshore capital network is formed. Spider Capitalism 2.0 = Offshore Capitalism × Cryptocurrency × Southeast Asia "Spiderweb Capitalism 2.0" can be understood as a new form of capitalism where traditional offshore financial networks upgrade themselves using blockchain technology. Offshore capitalism refers to the traditional practice of capital moving globally through offshore financial centers and shell companies to evade regulation and taxation. In the past, wealthy individuals and conglomerates often used tax havens such as the Cayman Islands and Swiss banks to hide assets and evade domestic regulations. The rise of cryptocurrencies has provided a completely new technological tool for this offshore operation: blockchain assets such as Bitcoin can be transferred peer-to-peer globally, without relying on the traditional banking system, thus constructing a "decentralized offshore structure." Today, opening an on-chain wallet or exchanging stablecoins on a decentralized exchange is like having a Swiss account without a trust intermediary; funds can flow freely globally and are difficult to intercept. These on-chain assets, combined with shadow trading networks, allow huge amounts of wealth to be hidden in code and anonymous addresses, making it difficult for regulatory agencies to intervene effectively. Southeast Asianization highlights the geographical foothold of this new form of capitalism. Emerging market countries in Southeast Asia, with their weak regulation, underdeveloped financial systems, and thirst for foreign investment, coupled with cheap labor and certain gray areas of political-business collusion, have become a frontier testing ground for the convergence of offshore capital and on-chain assets. This region possesses the fertile ground for traditional offshore finance (such as lax foreign exchange controls and a corrupt environment) while also providing a safe haven for new technologies like cryptocurrencies. In other words, Southeast Asia acts as a "sandbox" for the invisible structure of global capitalism. Various capital forces can boldly experiment here, circulating gray funds digitally overseas. The emergence of numerous online fraud zones and underground financial activities dominated by foreign funds in recent years, exemplified by Cambodia, Sihanoukville, and Myanmar's "Special Economic Zones," exemplifies this trend. Chen Zhi and the Prince Group: A Perfect Microcosm of Spider Web 2.0 Chen Zhi and his Cambodian Prince Group are a prime example of "spider web capitalism 2.0": traditional elite protection, local gray industries, on-chain money laundering channels, and global offshore structures are all integrated into one. Looking at Chen Zhi's business empire, its registered entities span mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, and offshore jurisdictions such as the British Virgin Islands (BVI) and the Cayman Islands, forming a complex holding network. According to an investigation by Singapore's Lianhe Zaobao, Chen Zhi is associated with as many as 128 companies globally, 17 of which are registered in Singapore. Most of these companies declare their business activities as investment consulting, real estate, and intermediary services, but their actual functions are questionable. Many shell companies also employ a "multiple names in multiple locations" strategy—for example, names like Alphaconnect, Alphaconnect Investments II, Greenbay, Binary, and Drew appear simultaneously in the registers of both Singapore and Taiwan. Four companies with the same name were established almost simultaneously in early 2019, all controlled by Singaporean citizen Lim Zhongliang, who is not on the sanctions list. These companies declare business activities in both locations covering investment consulting and international trade, and utilize local legal structures (such as Singapore's exempted private companies) to conceal the identity of the actual controller. Furthermore, it was revealed that many of the companies directly held by Chen Zhi in Singapore are registered as private limited companies (requiring shareholder disclosure), while the aforementioned exempted companies are directly held by him with no more than 20 shareholders, exempting them from institutional shareholder disclosure. Real estate and infrastructure Chen Zhi's aggressive expansion is also inseparable from Hong Kong's capital market, Asia's financial center. Between 2017 and 2019, he successively took control of two Hong Kong main board listed companies, Zhihaoda Holdings (01707.HK) and Kun Group Holdings (00924.HK). Zhihaoda Holdings (01707.HK): Originally a Hong Kong-based engineering contractor, it went public in October 2017. Just over a year after its listing, the original shareholders swiftly sold off their entire stake in December 2018, allowing Chen Zhi to acquire all shares and instantly become the controlling shareholder with a 54.79% stake. In the same month, Chen Zhi became an executive director and brought in his confidant, Qiu Dong, a senior executive of Prince Group, to co-direct the board. Subsequently, the company began to "Cambodia-ize," expanding into Cambodian real estate development from 2019 while maintaining its core Hong Kong engineering business, and further entering the luxury goods sales sector in 2023. Chen Zhi himself served as a director of its luxury goods subsidiary until his resignation in mid-2023. It is noteworthy that even though Chen Zhi ostensibly resigned from Zhihaoda in July of this year, companies he controls still maintain business dealings with Zhihaoda. For example, Zhihaoda admitted to providing property management services for Hong Kong properties held by companies under Chen Zhi's control, and the company's cash was once deposited in Prince Bank, controlled by Chen Zhi. This indicates that Chen Zhi's financial ties with the listed company have not been completely severed. Kun Group Holdings (00924.HK): A Singapore-based electromechanical engineering company registered in the Cayman Islands, it was listed in Hong Kong in July 2019. In January 2023, the founding Hong family sold all their shares, and Chen Zhi took over, holding 55% and becoming the controlling shareholder. Kun Group's main business is providing electromechanical engineering for Singapore government housing projects. After the listing, it was still operated by the original management. It is worth mentioning that after the US OFAC sanctions list was announced, Kun Group acknowledged Chen Zhi as the actual controlling shareholder and announced that his shareholding ratio was approximately 55%. Although Chen Zhi does not hold a director position in Kun Group, he has clearly achieved control of the company through behind-the-scenes investment. In Hong Kong, including the two listed companies mentioned above, Chen Zhi directly or indirectly controls 10 other companies. Most of these companies are for holding and investment purposes. For example, the US indictment reveals that the Hong Kong shell company Hing Seng Ltd. acted as Chen Zhi's underground bank for transferring huge sums of money across borders. Investigations show that in just four months, from November 2022 to March 2023, Hing Seng transferred approximately US$60 million to an affiliated company in Laos responsible for the Prince Group's cryptocurrency mining business. The funds from this Lao mining company were subsequently used to pay for the luxury consumption of the spouses of Prince Group executives, including the purchase of Rolex watches and Picasso paintings. Sun Weiqiang, the sole shareholder and director of Hing Seng, is registered with a Shantou, China ID card, but has no other publicly available resume and is not listed on any sanctions list. This suggests that these Hong Kong shell companies are merely "fronts" for Chen Zhi's cash flow, potentially corresponding to real financial operators and the destination of overseas assets. Hong Kong, as a free financial center, provided Chen Zhi with an excellent breeding ground for money laundering. He laundered funds through businesses such as engineering, real estate, and luxury goods sales, and owned local luxury homes and commercial properties. According to the Hong Kong Economic Journal, Chen Zhi's affiliated companies owned the entire building at 68 Kimberley Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, and purchased the Mount Nicholsson villa, a top-tier luxury residence on The Peak, for HK$1.4 billion. Source: Photo by Yu Junliang Gaming industry investment and money laundering Cambodia's gambling industry was once booming, and Prince Group actively engaged in casinos and online gambling. Besides participating in several casino hotels in Sihanoukville, Prince Group also undertook projects such as the Golden Fortune Technology Park in the Cambodia-China border region, which was essentially a center for online casinos and fraud. Simultaneously, it controlled online gambling platforms such as Amiga Entertainment, registered online casino licenses overseas, and recruited gamblers in China through websites and apps. Chinese courts determined that Prince Group obtained over 5 billion yuan in revenue through illegal online gambling and engaged in large-scale money laundering. The highly anonymous and cross-border nature of funds in the gambling industry made it a crucial channel for Chen Zhi's money laundering—the buying and selling of gambler chips and the offsetting transactions between gambling companies allowed illicit funds to be mixed into cash flow. US prosecutors pointed out that some of Prince Group's fraudulent proceeds were laundered through its gambling operations before flowing into legitimate accounts. Huione Group has been identified as one of the core channels through which Chen Zhi secretly operated massive financial flows in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia. Huione Group claims to provide leading financial technology services, including electronic payments (HuionePay). According to multiple sources, Huione's founder was a former financial manager under Chen Zhi in his Prince Group, thus maintaining a close relationship with him. FinCEN disclosed that between August 2021 and January 2025, Huione Group assisted in laundering at least $4 billion in illicit funds, including approximately $37 million stolen from North Korean hackers, $36 million from cryptocurrency investment scams, and approximately $300 million related to other cybercrimes. Huione has even been called the "world's largest online black market" platform—an investigation by the US blockchain analytics firm Elliptic found that Huione had built a "one-stop crime platform" on Telegram, aggregating black market merchants selling malware, personal data, and money laundering services, primarily serving Southeast Asian cryptocurrency scam groups. Back in May 2015, Telegram had already banned all channels and groups related to HSBC, indicating the platform's long-standing notoriety. In this joint US-UK crackdown, HSBC Group was directly identified by FinCEN as a key hub in the Prince Group's money laundering network and was ordered by the US, under Section 311 of the Patriot Act, to sever any connection between it and the US financial system. The sanctions notice requires all financial institutions to prohibit opening or maintaining agent accounts for HSBC and to prevent it from indirectly accessing the US dollar system. Chen Zhi, through shadow financial institutions like HSBC, wove a vast money laundering network both overtly and covertly. Following the recent news of the US-UK sanctions, large numbers of Cambodians flocked to HSBC's offline currency exchange points, even selling their electronic cash at a 10% discount in an attempt to escape as quickly as possible. Some of the exposed affiliated companies Cryptocurrency and Cigars Bitcoin mining was the most "innovative" money laundering method in Chen Zhi's criminal network. The indictment reveals that Chen Zhi invested large sums of money obtained through fraud into cryptocurrency mining operations he controlled, thereby "mining" brand-new Bitcoins without any criminal taint. In this seemingly legitimate Bitcoin mining process, the original illicit funds were transformed into "clean" digital assets derived from blockchain rewards, attempting to sever the link between the funds and the crime. Even more noteworthy is Chen Zhi's quiet acquisition of a stake in Habanos SA, the world's largest Cuban cigar company. Habanos is a cigar monopoly jointly owned by the Cuban government and Spain, holding exclusive distribution rights for high-end cigar brands worldwide. In 2020, British tobacco giant Imperial Brands decided to sell its high-end cigar business, including a 50% stake in Habanos. Chen Zhi, through Hong Kong-registered Allied Cigar Corporation, acquired this stake for €1.04 billion that year. Following the transaction, Allied Cigar underwent frequent structural changes within months. In April, the shares were transferred to Allied Cigar Fund LP, a fund registered in the Cayman Islands. In May, the company was renamed Instant Alliance Ltd., and in November, the shares were transferred to an individual named Zhang Pingshun. The company was dissolved in June 2021. This series of dazzling changes made it difficult for outsiders to identify the actual beneficiary behind Habanos. In late 2023, Gothenburg police in Sweden obtained documents (file number MKN-2025–5445) during an investigation into a cigar smuggling case, revealing the shareholding structure of Habanos Nordic, which involved Chen Zhi and a Hong Kong company, Asia Uni Corporation Ltd. The Swedish cigar media outlet Cigar World published the police document, confirming that Chen Zhi indirectly controlled 50% of Habanos' shares through multiple layers of companies (including Asia Uni, a Hong Kong-based company). Asset recovery and fund destination To date, in addition to the aforementioned massive amount of Bitcoin seized by the US, law enforcement agencies are also tracking the whereabouts of other assets of the Chen Zhi Group. For example, the US Department of Justice is seeking civil seizure of Chen Zhi's assets and bank accounts in the US and has issued an arrest warrant for him. Properties frozen in the UK are awaiting court rulings for confiscation. Under international pressure, Cambodian authorities have stated that they will cooperate with foreign law enforcement if there is sufficient evidence and will not protect violators. However, the Cambodian government has not yet taken action against Chen Zhi himself, and the apparent operations of his domestic companies remain largely unaffected. The Prince Group has even publicly denied all allegations, claiming it was due to "criminals misappropriating his name." Attempts by some Prince Group executives to transfer assets are also underway; for example, the Hong Kong-listed company involved hastily clarified its separation from Chen Zhi. According to the Hong Kong Economic Journal, Hong Kong police announced that they have frozen assets of a group suspected of international telecommunications fraud and money laundering, involving HK$2.75 billion. Although not named, it is known that this group is related to Chen Zhi, the founder of the Cambodian Prince Group. Police indicated that the frozen assets included cash, stocks, and funds, which they believed to be proceeds of crime. The global capital network woven by Chen Zhi and his Prince Group has been dismantled layer by layer by law enforcement agencies in multiple countries. This network, through a model of "fraud parks — underground banks — Bitcoin mining farms — shell companies — luxury goods," facilitated the cross-border flow and laundering of illicit gains from Southeast Asia to Europe and America. From luxury homes in Hong Kong and office buildings in London to shares in a Cuban cigar company and tens of thousands of Bitcoin wallets, all reveal alarming traces of wealth transfer. Behind this wealth lies the blood and tears of hundreds of thousands of victims who have lost everything, and the suffering and forced labor of tens of thousands who have been trafficked, imprisoned, and forced into labor. Just as Herman Karl Ram established the "industry standard" for 20th-century American robbers, Chen Zhi and his affiliated group may have demonstrated to the public how 21st-century offshore capitalism can use geographical advantages and emerging technologies to launder large sums of gray income. However, Web3 is not a lawless zone. Although the gray market once attempted to evade regulation by leveraging the decentralization and anonymity of blockchain, they will ultimately face systemic liquidation due to on-chain transparency. This traceability, in turn, provides an unprecedented technological foundation for global anti-money laundering and anti-fraud efforts.Author: Aki Wu Talks Blockchain With the joint exposure and crackdown by the British and American governments on the transnational criminal empire of Chen Zhi, the de facto controller of the Prince Group in Cambodia, the intricate global business network behind it has also come to light. Shockingly, this group, notorious for its "pig butchering" style telecom fraud, human trafficking, and forced labor, controlled 50% of the shares of Habanos, a top Cuban cigar company, through a complex offshore structure. China is Habanos' largest consumer market. This unexpected connection reveals that in the digital age, illegal economic activities and legitimate businesses are intertwined through blockchain and offshore financial networks, forming a new "capital spider web." This article attempts to analyze the operational logic of so-called "spider web capitalism 2.0"—that is, the upgrade of traditional offshore capitalism under the special circumstances of blockchain technology and Southeast Asia—starting from the Chen Zhi case, and to demonstrate how a decentralized offshore capital network is formed. Spider Capitalism 2.0 = Offshore Capitalism × Cryptocurrency × Southeast Asia "Spiderweb Capitalism 2.0" can be understood as a new form of capitalism where traditional offshore financial networks upgrade themselves using blockchain technology. Offshore capitalism refers to the traditional practice of capital moving globally through offshore financial centers and shell companies to evade regulation and taxation. In the past, wealthy individuals and conglomerates often used tax havens such as the Cayman Islands and Swiss banks to hide assets and evade domestic regulations. The rise of cryptocurrencies has provided a completely new technological tool for this offshore operation: blockchain assets such as Bitcoin can be transferred peer-to-peer globally, without relying on the traditional banking system, thus constructing a "decentralized offshore structure." Today, opening an on-chain wallet or exchanging stablecoins on a decentralized exchange is like having a Swiss account without a trust intermediary; funds can flow freely globally and are difficult to intercept. These on-chain assets, combined with shadow trading networks, allow huge amounts of wealth to be hidden in code and anonymous addresses, making it difficult for regulatory agencies to intervene effectively. Southeast Asianization highlights the geographical foothold of this new form of capitalism. Emerging market countries in Southeast Asia, with their weak regulation, underdeveloped financial systems, and thirst for foreign investment, coupled with cheap labor and certain gray areas of political-business collusion, have become a frontier testing ground for the convergence of offshore capital and on-chain assets. This region possesses the fertile ground for traditional offshore finance (such as lax foreign exchange controls and a corrupt environment) while also providing a safe haven for new technologies like cryptocurrencies. In other words, Southeast Asia acts as a "sandbox" for the invisible structure of global capitalism. Various capital forces can boldly experiment here, circulating gray funds digitally overseas. The emergence of numerous online fraud zones and underground financial activities dominated by foreign funds in recent years, exemplified by Cambodia, Sihanoukville, and Myanmar's "Special Economic Zones," exemplifies this trend. Chen Zhi and the Prince Group: A Perfect Microcosm of Spider Web 2.0 Chen Zhi and his Cambodian Prince Group are a prime example of "spider web capitalism 2.0": traditional elite protection, local gray industries, on-chain money laundering channels, and global offshore structures are all integrated into one. Looking at Chen Zhi's business empire, its registered entities span mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, and offshore jurisdictions such as the British Virgin Islands (BVI) and the Cayman Islands, forming a complex holding network. According to an investigation by Singapore's Lianhe Zaobao, Chen Zhi is associated with as many as 128 companies globally, 17 of which are registered in Singapore. Most of these companies declare their business activities as investment consulting, real estate, and intermediary services, but their actual functions are questionable. Many shell companies also employ a "multiple names in multiple locations" strategy—for example, names like Alphaconnect, Alphaconnect Investments II, Greenbay, Binary, and Drew appear simultaneously in the registers of both Singapore and Taiwan. Four companies with the same name were established almost simultaneously in early 2019, all controlled by Singaporean citizen Lim Zhongliang, who is not on the sanctions list. These companies declare business activities in both locations covering investment consulting and international trade, and utilize local legal structures (such as Singapore's exempted private companies) to conceal the identity of the actual controller. Furthermore, it was revealed that many of the companies directly held by Chen Zhi in Singapore are registered as private limited companies (requiring shareholder disclosure), while the aforementioned exempted companies are directly held by him with no more than 20 shareholders, exempting them from institutional shareholder disclosure. Real estate and infrastructure Chen Zhi's aggressive expansion is also inseparable from Hong Kong's capital market, Asia's financial center. Between 2017 and 2019, he successively took control of two Hong Kong main board listed companies, Zhihaoda Holdings (01707.HK) and Kun Group Holdings (00924.HK). Zhihaoda Holdings (01707.HK): Originally a Hong Kong-based engineering contractor, it went public in October 2017. Just over a year after its listing, the original shareholders swiftly sold off their entire stake in December 2018, allowing Chen Zhi to acquire all shares and instantly become the controlling shareholder with a 54.79% stake. In the same month, Chen Zhi became an executive director and brought in his confidant, Qiu Dong, a senior executive of Prince Group, to co-direct the board. Subsequently, the company began to "Cambodia-ize," expanding into Cambodian real estate development from 2019 while maintaining its core Hong Kong engineering business, and further entering the luxury goods sales sector in 2023. Chen Zhi himself served as a director of its luxury goods subsidiary until his resignation in mid-2023. It is noteworthy that even though Chen Zhi ostensibly resigned from Zhihaoda in July of this year, companies he controls still maintain business dealings with Zhihaoda. For example, Zhihaoda admitted to providing property management services for Hong Kong properties held by companies under Chen Zhi's control, and the company's cash was once deposited in Prince Bank, controlled by Chen Zhi. This indicates that Chen Zhi's financial ties with the listed company have not been completely severed. Kun Group Holdings (00924.HK): A Singapore-based electromechanical engineering company registered in the Cayman Islands, it was listed in Hong Kong in July 2019. In January 2023, the founding Hong family sold all their shares, and Chen Zhi took over, holding 55% and becoming the controlling shareholder. Kun Group's main business is providing electromechanical engineering for Singapore government housing projects. After the listing, it was still operated by the original management. It is worth mentioning that after the US OFAC sanctions list was announced, Kun Group acknowledged Chen Zhi as the actual controlling shareholder and announced that his shareholding ratio was approximately 55%. Although Chen Zhi does not hold a director position in Kun Group, he has clearly achieved control of the company through behind-the-scenes investment. In Hong Kong, including the two listed companies mentioned above, Chen Zhi directly or indirectly controls 10 other companies. Most of these companies are for holding and investment purposes. For example, the US indictment reveals that the Hong Kong shell company Hing Seng Ltd. acted as Chen Zhi's underground bank for transferring huge sums of money across borders. Investigations show that in just four months, from November 2022 to March 2023, Hing Seng transferred approximately US$60 million to an affiliated company in Laos responsible for the Prince Group's cryptocurrency mining business. The funds from this Lao mining company were subsequently used to pay for the luxury consumption of the spouses of Prince Group executives, including the purchase of Rolex watches and Picasso paintings. Sun Weiqiang, the sole shareholder and director of Hing Seng, is registered with a Shantou, China ID card, but has no other publicly available resume and is not listed on any sanctions list. This suggests that these Hong Kong shell companies are merely "fronts" for Chen Zhi's cash flow, potentially corresponding to real financial operators and the destination of overseas assets. Hong Kong, as a free financial center, provided Chen Zhi with an excellent breeding ground for money laundering. He laundered funds through businesses such as engineering, real estate, and luxury goods sales, and owned local luxury homes and commercial properties. According to the Hong Kong Economic Journal, Chen Zhi's affiliated companies owned the entire building at 68 Kimberley Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, and purchased the Mount Nicholsson villa, a top-tier luxury residence on The Peak, for HK$1.4 billion. Source: Photo by Yu Junliang Gaming industry investment and money laundering Cambodia's gambling industry was once booming, and Prince Group actively engaged in casinos and online gambling. Besides participating in several casino hotels in Sihanoukville, Prince Group also undertook projects such as the Golden Fortune Technology Park in the Cambodia-China border region, which was essentially a center for online casinos and fraud. Simultaneously, it controlled online gambling platforms such as Amiga Entertainment, registered online casino licenses overseas, and recruited gamblers in China through websites and apps. Chinese courts determined that Prince Group obtained over 5 billion yuan in revenue through illegal online gambling and engaged in large-scale money laundering. The highly anonymous and cross-border nature of funds in the gambling industry made it a crucial channel for Chen Zhi's money laundering—the buying and selling of gambler chips and the offsetting transactions between gambling companies allowed illicit funds to be mixed into cash flow. US prosecutors pointed out that some of Prince Group's fraudulent proceeds were laundered through its gambling operations before flowing into legitimate accounts. Huione Group has been identified as one of the core channels through which Chen Zhi secretly operated massive financial flows in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia. Huione Group claims to provide leading financial technology services, including electronic payments (HuionePay). According to multiple sources, Huione's founder was a former financial manager under Chen Zhi in his Prince Group, thus maintaining a close relationship with him. FinCEN disclosed that between August 2021 and January 2025, Huione Group assisted in laundering at least $4 billion in illicit funds, including approximately $37 million stolen from North Korean hackers, $36 million from cryptocurrency investment scams, and approximately $300 million related to other cybercrimes. Huione has even been called the "world's largest online black market" platform—an investigation by the US blockchain analytics firm Elliptic found that Huione had built a "one-stop crime platform" on Telegram, aggregating black market merchants selling malware, personal data, and money laundering services, primarily serving Southeast Asian cryptocurrency scam groups. Back in May 2015, Telegram had already banned all channels and groups related to HSBC, indicating the platform's long-standing notoriety. In this joint US-UK crackdown, HSBC Group was directly identified by FinCEN as a key hub in the Prince Group's money laundering network and was ordered by the US, under Section 311 of the Patriot Act, to sever any connection between it and the US financial system. The sanctions notice requires all financial institutions to prohibit opening or maintaining agent accounts for HSBC and to prevent it from indirectly accessing the US dollar system. Chen Zhi, through shadow financial institutions like HSBC, wove a vast money laundering network both overtly and covertly. Following the recent news of the US-UK sanctions, large numbers of Cambodians flocked to HSBC's offline currency exchange points, even selling their electronic cash at a 10% discount in an attempt to escape as quickly as possible. Some of the exposed affiliated companies Cryptocurrency and Cigars Bitcoin mining was the most "innovative" money laundering method in Chen Zhi's criminal network. The indictment reveals that Chen Zhi invested large sums of money obtained through fraud into cryptocurrency mining operations he controlled, thereby "mining" brand-new Bitcoins without any criminal taint. In this seemingly legitimate Bitcoin mining process, the original illicit funds were transformed into "clean" digital assets derived from blockchain rewards, attempting to sever the link between the funds and the crime. Even more noteworthy is Chen Zhi's quiet acquisition of a stake in Habanos SA, the world's largest Cuban cigar company. Habanos is a cigar monopoly jointly owned by the Cuban government and Spain, holding exclusive distribution rights for high-end cigar brands worldwide. In 2020, British tobacco giant Imperial Brands decided to sell its high-end cigar business, including a 50% stake in Habanos. Chen Zhi, through Hong Kong-registered Allied Cigar Corporation, acquired this stake for €1.04 billion that year. Following the transaction, Allied Cigar underwent frequent structural changes within months. In April, the shares were transferred to Allied Cigar Fund LP, a fund registered in the Cayman Islands. In May, the company was renamed Instant Alliance Ltd., and in November, the shares were transferred to an individual named Zhang Pingshun. The company was dissolved in June 2021. This series of dazzling changes made it difficult for outsiders to identify the actual beneficiary behind Habanos. In late 2023, Gothenburg police in Sweden obtained documents (file number MKN-2025–5445) during an investigation into a cigar smuggling case, revealing the shareholding structure of Habanos Nordic, which involved Chen Zhi and a Hong Kong company, Asia Uni Corporation Ltd. The Swedish cigar media outlet Cigar World published the police document, confirming that Chen Zhi indirectly controlled 50% of Habanos' shares through multiple layers of companies (including Asia Uni, a Hong Kong-based company). Asset recovery and fund destination To date, in addition to the aforementioned massive amount of Bitcoin seized by the US, law enforcement agencies are also tracking the whereabouts of other assets of the Chen Zhi Group. For example, the US Department of Justice is seeking civil seizure of Chen Zhi's assets and bank accounts in the US and has issued an arrest warrant for him. Properties frozen in the UK are awaiting court rulings for confiscation. Under international pressure, Cambodian authorities have stated that they will cooperate with foreign law enforcement if there is sufficient evidence and will not protect violators. However, the Cambodian government has not yet taken action against Chen Zhi himself, and the apparent operations of his domestic companies remain largely unaffected. The Prince Group has even publicly denied all allegations, claiming it was due to "criminals misappropriating his name." Attempts by some Prince Group executives to transfer assets are also underway; for example, the Hong Kong-listed company involved hastily clarified its separation from Chen Zhi. According to the Hong Kong Economic Journal, Hong Kong police announced that they have frozen assets of a group suspected of international telecommunications fraud and money laundering, involving HK$2.75 billion. Although not named, it is known that this group is related to Chen Zhi, the founder of the Cambodian Prince Group. Police indicated that the frozen assets included cash, stocks, and funds, which they believed to be proceeds of crime. The global capital network woven by Chen Zhi and his Prince Group has been dismantled layer by layer by law enforcement agencies in multiple countries. This network, through a model of "fraud parks — underground banks — Bitcoin mining farms — shell companies — luxury goods," facilitated the cross-border flow and laundering of illicit gains from Southeast Asia to Europe and America. From luxury homes in Hong Kong and office buildings in London to shares in a Cuban cigar company and tens of thousands of Bitcoin wallets, all reveal alarming traces of wealth transfer. Behind this wealth lies the blood and tears of hundreds of thousands of victims who have lost everything, and the suffering and forced labor of tens of thousands who have been trafficked, imprisoned, and forced into labor. Just as Herman Karl Ram established the "industry standard" for 20th-century American robbers, Chen Zhi and his affiliated group may have demonstrated to the public how 21st-century offshore capitalism can use geographical advantages and emerging technologies to launder large sums of gray income. However, Web3 is not a lawless zone. Although the gray market once attempted to evade regulation by leveraging the decentralization and anonymity of blockchain, they will ultimately face systemic liquidation due to on-chain transparency. This traceability, in turn, provides an unprecedented technological foundation for global anti-money laundering and anti-fraud efforts.

The Dark Money Behind the Cuban Cigar Empire: Unveiling Chen Zhi's "Spider Web Capitalism 2.0"

2025/11/24 18:00
14 min read

Author: Aki Wu Talks Blockchain

With the joint exposure and crackdown by the British and American governments on the transnational criminal empire of Chen Zhi, the de facto controller of the Prince Group in Cambodia, the intricate global business network behind it has also come to light. Shockingly, this group, notorious for its "pig butchering" style telecom fraud, human trafficking, and forced labor, controlled 50% of the shares of Habanos, a top Cuban cigar company, through a complex offshore structure. China is Habanos' largest consumer market. This unexpected connection reveals that in the digital age, illegal economic activities and legitimate businesses are intertwined through blockchain and offshore financial networks, forming a new "capital spider web." This article attempts to analyze the operational logic of so-called "spider web capitalism 2.0"—that is, the upgrade of traditional offshore capitalism under the special circumstances of blockchain technology and Southeast Asia—starting from the Chen Zhi case, and to demonstrate how a decentralized offshore capital network is formed.

Spider Capitalism 2.0 = Offshore Capitalism × Cryptocurrency × Southeast Asia

"Spiderweb Capitalism 2.0" can be understood as a new form of capitalism where traditional offshore financial networks upgrade themselves using blockchain technology. Offshore capitalism refers to the traditional practice of capital moving globally through offshore financial centers and shell companies to evade regulation and taxation. In the past, wealthy individuals and conglomerates often used tax havens such as the Cayman Islands and Swiss banks to hide assets and evade domestic regulations. The rise of cryptocurrencies has provided a completely new technological tool for this offshore operation: blockchain assets such as Bitcoin can be transferred peer-to-peer globally, without relying on the traditional banking system, thus constructing a "decentralized offshore structure." Today, opening an on-chain wallet or exchanging stablecoins on a decentralized exchange is like having a Swiss account without a trust intermediary; funds can flow freely globally and are difficult to intercept. These on-chain assets, combined with shadow trading networks, allow huge amounts of wealth to be hidden in code and anonymous addresses, making it difficult for regulatory agencies to intervene effectively.

Southeast Asianization highlights the geographical foothold of this new form of capitalism. Emerging market countries in Southeast Asia, with their weak regulation, underdeveloped financial systems, and thirst for foreign investment, coupled with cheap labor and certain gray areas of political-business collusion, have become a frontier testing ground for the convergence of offshore capital and on-chain assets. This region possesses the fertile ground for traditional offshore finance (such as lax foreign exchange controls and a corrupt environment) while also providing a safe haven for new technologies like cryptocurrencies. In other words, Southeast Asia acts as a "sandbox" for the invisible structure of global capitalism. Various capital forces can boldly experiment here, circulating gray funds digitally overseas. The emergence of numerous online fraud zones and underground financial activities dominated by foreign funds in recent years, exemplified by Cambodia, Sihanoukville, and Myanmar's "Special Economic Zones," exemplifies this trend.

Chen Zhi and the Prince Group: A Perfect Microcosm of Spider Web 2.0

Chen Zhi and his Cambodian Prince Group are a prime example of "spider web capitalism 2.0": traditional elite protection, local gray industries, on-chain money laundering channels, and global offshore structures are all integrated into one. Looking at Chen Zhi's business empire, its registered entities span mainland China, Hong Kong, Singapore, and offshore jurisdictions such as the British Virgin Islands (BVI) and the Cayman Islands, forming a complex holding network.

According to an investigation by Singapore's Lianhe Zaobao, Chen Zhi is associated with as many as 128 companies globally, 17 of which are registered in Singapore. Most of these companies declare their business activities as investment consulting, real estate, and intermediary services, but their actual functions are questionable. Many shell companies also employ a "multiple names in multiple locations" strategy—for example, names like Alphaconnect, Alphaconnect Investments II, Greenbay, Binary, and Drew appear simultaneously in the registers of both Singapore and Taiwan. Four companies with the same name were established almost simultaneously in early 2019, all controlled by Singaporean citizen Lim Zhongliang, who is not on the sanctions list. These companies declare business activities in both locations covering investment consulting and international trade, and utilize local legal structures (such as Singapore's exempted private companies) to conceal the identity of the actual controller. Furthermore, it was revealed that many of the companies directly held by Chen Zhi in Singapore are registered as private limited companies (requiring shareholder disclosure), while the aforementioned exempted companies are directly held by him with no more than 20 shareholders, exempting them from institutional shareholder disclosure.

Real estate and infrastructure

Chen Zhi's aggressive expansion is also inseparable from Hong Kong's capital market, Asia's financial center. Between 2017 and 2019, he successively took control of two Hong Kong main board listed companies, Zhihaoda Holdings (01707.HK) and Kun Group Holdings (00924.HK).

Zhihaoda Holdings (01707.HK): Originally a Hong Kong-based engineering contractor, it went public in October 2017. Just over a year after its listing, the original shareholders swiftly sold off their entire stake in December 2018, allowing Chen Zhi to acquire all shares and instantly become the controlling shareholder with a 54.79% stake. In the same month, Chen Zhi became an executive director and brought in his confidant, Qiu Dong, a senior executive of Prince Group, to co-direct the board. Subsequently, the company began to "Cambodia-ize," expanding into Cambodian real estate development from 2019 while maintaining its core Hong Kong engineering business, and further entering the luxury goods sales sector in 2023. Chen Zhi himself served as a director of its luxury goods subsidiary until his resignation in mid-2023. It is noteworthy that even though Chen Zhi ostensibly resigned from Zhihaoda in July of this year, companies he controls still maintain business dealings with Zhihaoda. For example, Zhihaoda admitted to providing property management services for Hong Kong properties held by companies under Chen Zhi's control, and the company's cash was once deposited in Prince Bank, controlled by Chen Zhi. This indicates that Chen Zhi's financial ties with the listed company have not been completely severed.

Kun Group Holdings (00924.HK): A Singapore-based electromechanical engineering company registered in the Cayman Islands, it was listed in Hong Kong in July 2019. In January 2023, the founding Hong family sold all their shares, and Chen Zhi took over, holding 55% and becoming the controlling shareholder. Kun Group's main business is providing electromechanical engineering for Singapore government housing projects. After the listing, it was still operated by the original management. It is worth mentioning that after the US OFAC sanctions list was announced, Kun Group acknowledged Chen Zhi as the actual controlling shareholder and announced that his shareholding ratio was approximately 55%. Although Chen Zhi does not hold a director position in Kun Group, he has clearly achieved control of the company through behind-the-scenes investment.

In Hong Kong, including the two listed companies mentioned above, Chen Zhi directly or indirectly controls 10 other companies. Most of these companies are for holding and investment purposes. For example, the US indictment reveals that the Hong Kong shell company Hing Seng Ltd. acted as Chen Zhi's underground bank for transferring huge sums of money across borders. Investigations show that in just four months, from November 2022 to March 2023, Hing Seng transferred approximately US$60 million to an affiliated company in Laos responsible for the Prince Group's cryptocurrency mining business. The funds from this Lao mining company were subsequently used to pay for the luxury consumption of the spouses of Prince Group executives, including the purchase of Rolex watches and Picasso paintings. Sun Weiqiang, the sole shareholder and director of Hing Seng, is registered with a Shantou, China ID card, but has no other publicly available resume and is not listed on any sanctions list. This suggests that these Hong Kong shell companies are merely "fronts" for Chen Zhi's cash flow, potentially corresponding to real financial operators and the destination of overseas assets. Hong Kong, as a free financial center, provided Chen Zhi with an excellent breeding ground for money laundering. He laundered funds through businesses such as engineering, real estate, and luxury goods sales, and owned local luxury homes and commercial properties. According to the Hong Kong Economic Journal, Chen Zhi's affiliated companies owned the entire building at 68 Kimberley Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, and purchased the Mount Nicholsson villa, a top-tier luxury residence on The Peak, for HK$1.4 billion.

Source: Photo by Yu Junliang

Gaming industry investment and money laundering

Cambodia's gambling industry was once booming, and Prince Group actively engaged in casinos and online gambling. Besides participating in several casino hotels in Sihanoukville, Prince Group also undertook projects such as the Golden Fortune Technology Park in the Cambodia-China border region, which was essentially a center for online casinos and fraud. Simultaneously, it controlled online gambling platforms such as Amiga Entertainment, registered online casino licenses overseas, and recruited gamblers in China through websites and apps. Chinese courts determined that Prince Group obtained over 5 billion yuan in revenue through illegal online gambling and engaged in large-scale money laundering. The highly anonymous and cross-border nature of funds in the gambling industry made it a crucial channel for Chen Zhi's money laundering—the buying and selling of gambler chips and the offsetting transactions between gambling companies allowed illicit funds to be mixed into cash flow. US prosecutors pointed out that some of Prince Group's fraudulent proceeds were laundered through its gambling operations before flowing into legitimate accounts.

Huione Group has been identified as one of the core channels through which Chen Zhi secretly operated massive financial flows in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia. Huione Group claims to provide leading financial technology services, including electronic payments (HuionePay). According to multiple sources, Huione's founder was a former financial manager under Chen Zhi in his Prince Group, thus maintaining a close relationship with him. FinCEN disclosed that between August 2021 and January 2025, Huione Group assisted in laundering at least $4 billion in illicit funds, including approximately $37 million stolen from North Korean hackers, $36 million from cryptocurrency investment scams, and approximately $300 million related to other cybercrimes. Huione has even been called the "world's largest online black market" platform—an investigation by the US blockchain analytics firm Elliptic found that Huione had built a "one-stop crime platform" on Telegram, aggregating black market merchants selling malware, personal data, and money laundering services, primarily serving Southeast Asian cryptocurrency scam groups. Back in May 2015, Telegram had already banned all channels and groups related to HSBC, indicating the platform's long-standing notoriety. In this joint US-UK crackdown, HSBC Group was directly identified by FinCEN as a key hub in the Prince Group's money laundering network and was ordered by the US, under Section 311 of the Patriot Act, to sever any connection between it and the US financial system. The sanctions notice requires all financial institutions to prohibit opening or maintaining agent accounts for HSBC and to prevent it from indirectly accessing the US dollar system. Chen Zhi, through shadow financial institutions like HSBC, wove a vast money laundering network both overtly and covertly. Following the recent news of the US-UK sanctions, large numbers of Cambodians flocked to HSBC's offline currency exchange points, even selling their electronic cash at a 10% discount in an attempt to escape as quickly as possible.

Some of the exposed affiliated companies

Cryptocurrency and Cigars

Bitcoin mining was the most "innovative" money laundering method in Chen Zhi's criminal network. The indictment reveals that Chen Zhi invested large sums of money obtained through fraud into cryptocurrency mining operations he controlled, thereby "mining" brand-new Bitcoins without any criminal taint. In this seemingly legitimate Bitcoin mining process, the original illicit funds were transformed into "clean" digital assets derived from blockchain rewards, attempting to sever the link between the funds and the crime.

Even more noteworthy is Chen Zhi's quiet acquisition of a stake in Habanos SA, the world's largest Cuban cigar company. Habanos is a cigar monopoly jointly owned by the Cuban government and Spain, holding exclusive distribution rights for high-end cigar brands worldwide. In 2020, British tobacco giant Imperial Brands decided to sell its high-end cigar business, including a 50% stake in Habanos. Chen Zhi, through Hong Kong-registered Allied Cigar Corporation, acquired this stake for €1.04 billion that year. Following the transaction, Allied Cigar underwent frequent structural changes within months. In April, the shares were transferred to Allied Cigar Fund LP, a fund registered in the Cayman Islands. In May, the company was renamed Instant Alliance Ltd., and in November, the shares were transferred to an individual named Zhang Pingshun. The company was dissolved in June 2021. This series of dazzling changes made it difficult for outsiders to identify the actual beneficiary behind Habanos.

In late 2023, Gothenburg police in Sweden obtained documents (file number MKN-2025–5445) during an investigation into a cigar smuggling case, revealing the shareholding structure of Habanos Nordic, which involved Chen Zhi and a Hong Kong company, Asia Uni Corporation Ltd. The Swedish cigar media outlet Cigar World published the police document, confirming that Chen Zhi indirectly controlled 50% of Habanos' shares through multiple layers of companies (including Asia Uni, a Hong Kong-based company).

Asset recovery and fund destination

To date, in addition to the aforementioned massive amount of Bitcoin seized by the US, law enforcement agencies are also tracking the whereabouts of other assets of the Chen Zhi Group. For example, the US Department of Justice is seeking civil seizure of Chen Zhi's assets and bank accounts in the US and has issued an arrest warrant for him. Properties frozen in the UK are awaiting court rulings for confiscation. Under international pressure, Cambodian authorities have stated that they will cooperate with foreign law enforcement if there is sufficient evidence and will not protect violators. However, the Cambodian government has not yet taken action against Chen Zhi himself, and the apparent operations of his domestic companies remain largely unaffected. The Prince Group has even publicly denied all allegations, claiming it was due to "criminals misappropriating his name." Attempts by some Prince Group executives to transfer assets are also underway; for example, the Hong Kong-listed company involved hastily clarified its separation from Chen Zhi. According to the Hong Kong Economic Journal, Hong Kong police announced that they have frozen assets of a group suspected of international telecommunications fraud and money laundering, involving HK$2.75 billion. Although not named, it is known that this group is related to Chen Zhi, the founder of the Cambodian Prince Group. Police indicated that the frozen assets included cash, stocks, and funds, which they believed to be proceeds of crime.

The global capital network woven by Chen Zhi and his Prince Group has been dismantled layer by layer by law enforcement agencies in multiple countries. This network, through a model of "fraud parks — underground banks — Bitcoin mining farms — shell companies — luxury goods," facilitated the cross-border flow and laundering of illicit gains from Southeast Asia to Europe and America. From luxury homes in Hong Kong and office buildings in London to shares in a Cuban cigar company and tens of thousands of Bitcoin wallets, all reveal alarming traces of wealth transfer. Behind this wealth lies the blood and tears of hundreds of thousands of victims who have lost everything, and the suffering and forced labor of tens of thousands who have been trafficked, imprisoned, and forced into labor.

Just as Herman Karl Ram established the "industry standard" for 20th-century American robbers, Chen Zhi and his affiliated group may have demonstrated to the public how 21st-century offshore capitalism can use geographical advantages and emerging technologies to launder large sums of gray income. However, Web3 is not a lawless zone. Although the gray market once attempted to evade regulation by leveraging the decentralization and anonymity of blockchain, they will ultimately face systemic liquidation due to on-chain transparency. This traceability, in turn, provides an unprecedented technological foundation for global anti-money laundering and anti-fraud efforts.

Market Opportunity
Aki Protocol Logo
Aki Protocol Price(AKI)
$0.001001
$0.001001$0.001001
+0.10%
USD
Aki Protocol (AKI) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Taiko Makes Chainlink Data Streams Its Official Oracle

Taiko Makes Chainlink Data Streams Its Official Oracle

The post Taiko Makes Chainlink Data Streams Its Official Oracle appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Key Notes Taiko has officially integrated Chainlink Data Streams for its Layer 2 network. The integration provides developers with high-speed market data to build advanced DeFi applications. The move aims to improve security and attract institutional adoption by using Chainlink’s established infrastructure. Taiko, an Ethereum-based ETH $4 514 24h volatility: 0.4% Market cap: $545.57 B Vol. 24h: $28.23 B Layer 2 rollup, has announced the integration of Chainlink LINK $23.26 24h volatility: 1.7% Market cap: $15.75 B Vol. 24h: $787.15 M Data Streams. The development comes as the underlying Ethereum network continues to see significant on-chain activity, including large sales from ETH whales. The partnership establishes Chainlink as the official oracle infrastructure for the network. It is designed to provide developers on the Taiko platform with reliable and high-speed market data, essential for building a wide range of decentralized finance (DeFi) applications, from complex derivatives platforms to more niche projects involving unique token governance models. According to the project’s official announcement on Sept. 17, the integration enables the creation of more advanced on-chain products that require high-quality, tamper-proof data to function securely. Taiko operates as a “based rollup,” which means it leverages Ethereum validators for transaction sequencing for strong decentralization. Boosting DeFi and Institutional Interest Oracles are fundamental services in the blockchain industry. They act as secure bridges that feed external, off-chain information to on-chain smart contracts. DeFi protocols, in particular, rely on oracles for accurate, real-time price feeds. Taiko leadership stated that using Chainlink’s infrastructure aligns with its goals. The team hopes the partnership will help attract institutional crypto investment and support the development of real-world applications, a goal that aligns with Chainlink’s broader mission to bring global data on-chain. Integrating real-world economic information is part of a broader industry trend. Just last week, Chainlink partnered with the Sei…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:34
August Crypto Market Review: ETH Leads the Rise, Institutional Funding and Macro Factors Dominate Market Trends

August Crypto Market Review: ETH Leads the Rise, Institutional Funding and Macro Factors Dominate Market Trends

By Jianing Wu , Galaxy Digital Compiled by Tim, PANews August saw various crossover signals between the macro economy and the crypto market. In traditional markets, investors faced conflicting inflation signals: the CPI released at the beginning of the month came in below expectations, but the subsequent Producer Price Index (PPI) came in above expectations. This was coupled with weakening employment data and growing market expectations that the Federal Reserve would begin cutting interest rates in September. At the end of the month's Fed meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Chairman Powell struck a dovish tone, emphasizing the "shifting balance of risks" brought about by rising unemployment, which reinforced expectations of a shift toward easing monetary policy. The stock market closed higher in a volatile session, with the S&P 500 fluctuating with the data releases. Defensive assets like gold outperformed at the end of the month. The crypto market reflected this macro uncertainty, with increased volatility. Bitcoin hit an all-time high of over $124,000 in mid-August before retreating to around $110,000, while Ethereum's gains for the entire month outpaced Bitcoin's. After experiencing its largest single-day outflow at the beginning of the month, Ethereum ETFs quickly attracted strong inflows, briefly surpassing Bitcoin's despite Ethereum's smaller market capitalization. However, the recovery in demand pushed ETH prices to a new high near $4,953, and the ETH/BTC exchange rate rose to 0.04 for the first time since November 2024. The fluctuations in ETF trading highlight that institutional position adjustments are increasingly influencing price trends, and ETH is clearly the leader in this cycle. In terms of laws and policies, regulators are gradually pushing forward reforms to reshape the industry landscape. The U.S. Department of Labor has opened the door to allocating crypto assets to 401(k) pension plans, while the U.S. SEC has explicitly stated that certain liquidity pledge businesses do not fall under the category of securities. Application trends at the market structure and institutional levels are deepening. Treasury Secretary Bessant disclosed for the first time that strategic Bitcoin reserves now hold between 120,000 and 170,000 coins, revealing the government's cumulative cryptocurrency holdings for the first time. Business activity is also accelerating: Stablecoin issuers Stripe and Circle announced plans to develop independent L1 blockchains, while Wyoming became the first state government in the US to issue a dollar-denominated stablecoin. Google also joined the enterprise blockchain fray with its "Universal Ledger" system. Meanwhile, crypto treasury companies continue to increase their asset allocation efforts. Overall, August reinforced two key trends. On the one hand, macro volatility and policy uncertainty triggered significant market volatility in both the equity and crypto markets; on the other, the underlying trend of market institutionalization is accelerating, from ETF flows to widespread adoption by sovereign institutions and corporations. These intertwining forces are likely to continue to dominate market movements as the autumn approaches, with the Federal Reserve's policy shift and ongoing structural demand likely setting the tone for the next phase of the cycle. 1. Spikes, Breakouts, and Reversals In the first half of August, Ethereum led the market, outperforming Bitcoin and driving a broad rally in altcoins. The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index shows that Bitcoin hit an all-time high of $124,496 on August 13 before reversing course, closing the month at $109,127, down from $116,491 at the beginning of the month. A week later, on August 22, Ethereum broke through the previous cycle high, reaching $4,953, surpassing the November 2021 high of $4,866 and ending a four-year consolidation. Ethereum's strong performance is particularly noteworthy given its underperformance for much of this cycle. Since its April low near $1,400, the price of Ether has more than tripled, driven by strong ETF flows and purchases by crypto treasury firms. U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs saw net inflows of approximately $4 billion in August, the second-strongest month after July. In contrast, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net outflows of approximately $639 million. However, despite a price decline in the last two weeks of August, Bitcoin ETF inflows turned positive. As market expectations for aggressive interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve grew, Bitcoin's store-of-value narrative regained focus. As the likelihood of a rate cut increased, Bitcoin's correlation with gold strengthened significantly that month. Besides ETFs, crypto treasury firms remain a significant source of demand. These firms continued to increase their holdings throughout August, with Ethereum-focused treasuries in particular injecting significant capital. Because Ethereum's market capitalization is smaller than Bitcoin's, corporate capital inflows have a disproportionate impact on spot prices. A $1 billion allocation to Ethereum can significantly impact the market landscape, far more than a similar amount allocated to Bitcoin. Furthermore, significant funds remain undeployed among publicly disclosed crypto treasury firms, suggesting further positive market conditions. The total cryptocurrency market capitalization climbed to a record high of $4.2 trillion that month, demonstrating the deep correlation between crypto assets and broader market trends. Rising expectations of interest rate cuts boosted risk appetite in both the stock and crypto markets, while ETF inflows and corporate reserve accumulation directly contributed to record highs for BTC and ETH. Despite market volatility near the end of the month, the interplay of loose macro policies, institutional capital flows, and crypto treasury reserve needs has maintained the crypto market's central position in the risk asset narrative. 2. Each company launches its own L1 public chain Favorable regulations are giving businesses more confidence to enter the crypto market directly. In late July, US SEC Chairman Paul Atkins announced the launch of "Project Crypto," an initiative aimed at promoting the on-chain issuance and trading of stocks, bonds, and other financial instruments. This initiative marks a key step in the integration of traditional market infrastructure with blockchain technology. Encouraged by this, businesses are breaking through the limitations of existing blockchain applications and launching their own Layer 1 networks. In August, three major companies announced the launch of new L1 blockchains. Circle launched Arc, which is compatible with the EVM and uses its USDC stablecoin as its native gas token. Arc features compliance and privacy features, a built-in on-chain foreign exchange settlement engine, and will launch with a permissioned validator set. Following its acquisitions of stablecoin infrastructure provider Bridge and crypto wallet service provider Privy, Stripe launched Tempo Chain, also compatible with the EVM and focused on stablecoin payments and enterprise applications. Google released the Google Cloud Universal Ledger (GCUL), a private permissioned blockchain focused on payments and asset issuance. It supports Python-based smart contracts and has attracted CME Group as a pilot partner. The logic behind enterprise blockchain development boils down to value capture, control, and independent design. By owning the underlying protocol, companies like Circle avoid paying network fees to third parties and profit directly from transaction activity. Stripe, on the other hand, can more tightly integrate its proprietary blockchain with payment systems, developing new features for customers without relying on the governance mechanisms of other chains. Both companies view control as a key element of compliant operations, particularly as regulators increase their scrutiny of illicit financial activities. Choosing to build on L1 rather than L2 avoids being constrained by other blockchain networks in terms of settlement or consensus mechanisms. Reactions from the crypto-native community have been mixed. Many believe that projects like Arc and GCUL, while borrowing technical standards from existing L1 chains, are inferior in design and exclude Ethereum and other native assets. Critics point out that permissioned validators and corporate-led governance models undermine decentralization and user autonomy. These debates echo the failed wave of "enterprise blockchains" in the mid-2010s, which ultimately failed to attract real users. Despite skepticism, these companies' moves are significant. Stripe processes over $1 trillion in payments annually, holding approximately 17% of the global payment processing market. If Tempo can achieve lower costs or offer better developer tools, competitors may be forced to follow suit. Google's entry demonstrates that major tech companies view blockchain as the next evolutionary level of financial infrastructure. If these companies can bring their scale, distribution capabilities, and regulatory resources to this area, the impact could be profound. In addition to businesses launching their own Layer 1 chains, other developments reinforce the trend of economic activity migrating on-chain. U.S. Secretary of Commerce Lutnick announced that GDP data will be published on public blockchains via oracle networks such as Chainlink and Python. Galaxy tokenized its shares to test on-chain secondary market trading. These initiatives demonstrate that businesses and governments are beginning to embed blockchain technology into core financial and data infrastructure, despite ongoing debate over the appropriate balance between compliance and decentralization. 3. Hot Trend: Crypto Treasury Companies The crypto treasury trends we highlighted in our earlier report continue. Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solver (SOL) holdings continue to accumulate, with Ethereum showing the strongest performance. Holdings data shows a sharp rise in ETH's crypto treasury throughout August, primarily driven by Bitmine's reserves, which increased from approximately 625,000 ETH at the beginning of August to over 2 million currently. Solver holdings also maintained steady growth, while BTC holdings continued their slower but steady accumulation. Compared to ETF fund flows, the activity of crypto treasury companies appears relatively flat. In July and August, ETF fund inflows were stronger than those of crypto treasury companies, and the cumulative balance of ETFs also exceeded the cumulative size of crypto treasury companies. This divergence is becoming increasingly apparent as premiums on crypto treasury stocks shrink across the board. Earlier this summer, price-to-earnings ratios for crypto treasury companies were significantly higher than their net asset values, but these premiums have gradually returned to more normal levels, signaling a growing caution among stock market investors. The stock price fluctuations are evident: KindlyMD (Nakamoto's parent company) has fallen from a peak of nearly $25 in late May to around $5, while Bitmine has fallen from $62 in early August to around $46. Selling pressure intensified in late August amid reports that Nasdaq may tighten its oversight of acquisitions of crypto treasury companies through stock offerings. This news accelerated the sell-off in shares of Ethereum-focused crypto treasury companies. Bitcoin-focused companies, such as Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy, ticker symbol: MSTR), were less affected because their acquisition strategies rely more on debt financing than equity issuance. 4. Hot Trend: Copycat Season Another hot trend is the rotation into altcoins. Bitcoin's dominance has gradually declined, from approximately 60% at the beginning of August to 56.5% by the end of the month, while Ethereum's market share has risen from 11.7% to 13.6%. Data indicates a rotation out of Bitcoin into Ethereum and other cryptocurrencies, which aligns with the outperformance of Ethereum ETFs and inflows into crypto treasury firms. While Bitcoin ETF inflows have rebounded in recent weeks, the overall trend remains unchanged: this cycle continues to expand beyond Bitcoin, with Ethereum and altcoins gaining incremental market share. 5. Our views and predictions As markets head into the final weeks of September, all eyes are on the Federal Reserve. Labor market weakness is solidifying expectations of a near-term rate cut and reinforcing risk assets. The jobs report underscores that the economic slowdown may be deeper than initially reported, raising questions about how much easing policy will be needed to cushion the economy. Meanwhile, the long end of the yield curve is flashing warning signs. Persistently high 10-year and 30-year Treasury yields reflect market concerns that inflation may be sticky and that fiscal pressures may ultimately force central banks to finance debt and spending through money printing. Expectations of short-term interest rate cuts are driving a rebound in risky assets, but the tug-of-war between short-term support from rate cuts and long-term concerns pushing yields and precious metals higher will determine the sustainability of this rebound. This conflicting dynamic has a direct impact on cryptocurrencies: Bitcoin's correlation with gold as a store of value and hedge is growing, while Ethereum and altcoins remain more sensitive to shifts in overall risk appetite.
Share
PANews2025/09/18 17:40
Why PEPE May Become the Most Important Meme Coin of This Cycle

Why PEPE May Become the Most Important Meme Coin of This Cycle

Pepe has moved back into focus during a period when the wider crypto market feels slow and uncertain. Conversation around PEPE price now centers on long-term relevance
Share
Captainaltcoin2026/02/11 16:00