UK’s The Smarter Web Company raises $56M days after big Bitcoin buy
UK-based The Smarter Web Company has made a multimillion-dollar raise just days after it purchased $20 million worth of Bitcoin to bring its holdings to over 540 BTC.
Archive context
Older archive item. Useful for background and entity history, but not a fresh market-moving signal.
UK-based The Smarter Web Company has made a multimillion-dollar raise just days after it purchased $20 million worth of Bitcoin to bring its holdings to over 540 BTC.
Why this matters
This bitcoin story adds another data point to the current market tape and is useful when read alongside nearby source coverage.
Original source
Read on CointelegraphRelated market context
Justice Department’s Criminal Division raises concerns over crypto legislation’s impact on money laundering prosecutions
The CLARITY Act's exemptions could hinder money laundering prosecutions, potentially weakening regulatory oversight of decentraliz...
Alpaca raises $135 million to build AI agent trading infrastructure across crypto and traditional markets
AI-driven trading infrastructure could revolutionize market dynamics, enhancing efficiency and accessibility across diverse financ...
Bitcoin VC Veterans Launch $40 Million Holding Company Targeting Small Business Acquisitions
Bitcoin Magazine Bitcoin VC Veterans Launch $40 Million Holding Company Targeting Small Business Acquisitions Another day, another...
Steak ‘n Shake credits Bitcoin for company growth – But is PR value now worth more than people actually using BTC?
Steak' n Shake says US same-store sales jumped about 16% in July and wants Bitcoin to share the credit. However, one figure remain...
Crypto brokerage firm Alpaca raises $135 million for tokenized stock infrastructure
The company has previously cleared or held in custody roughly 94% of tokenized U.S. equities and now holds over $1.5 billion in un...
AI agents employ $24M market to act smarter as agentic crypto payments spread online
Lincoln Murr asked his AI agent to send some Twitter articles to his Kindle, copying a trick he'd seen suggested online. The agent...