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High-rise buildings are seen near Victoria Harbour in Hong Kong, China, July 24, 2023. (Photo by Costfoto/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Costfoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Asia is promoting crypto clarity amid regulatory uncertainty in the U.S., and this could make the region more attractive to investors, according to industry observers.

“Cryptocurrency regulations in Asia have moved along faster and with more clarity — green light or red light — than in the U.S.,” said Ben Charoenwong, assistant professor in finance at the National University of Singapore Business School.

“This has made Asia the premiere location for much of fintech innovation,” said Charoenwong.

Earlier this month, Hong Kong officially opened crypto trading to retail investors and upgraded licenses of two exchanges. HashKey and OSL can now expand their business beyond professional investors to now include retail investors.

“It shows that virtual assets are becoming a recognized asset class with a similar regulatory status as traditional asset classes,” said Lennix Lai, global chief commercial officer at crypto exchange OKX.

“This will further boost investor confidence, making Hong Kong more attractive as a potential global virtual asset hub,” said Lai. OKX is applying for a virtual assets trading license in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong and Singapore are both similar in terms of the approach to maintaining very high regulatory standards.

Ong Chengyi

Head of APAC policy, Chainalysis

Last year, Hong Kong said it recognizes “the potential of distributed ledger technologies and Web 3.0 to become the future of finance and commerce” and expects to enhance efficiency and transparency with proper regulation.

Rival regional financial hub Singapore has also been a frontrunner in crypto regulation. The Monetary Authority of Singapore granted Blockchain.com a license in August, an upgrade to the in-principle approval it got in October. Another player Ripple received in-principle approval in June. This means that Blockchain.com and Ripple can provide regulated crypto services in Singapore.

Meanwhile, Thailand and Indonesia have banned the use of crypto for payments, but allows it to be traded as a commodity.

Hong Kong had the opportunity and hindsight to go through the crypto winter and look at what other regulators have done to enhance and roll out its regime.

Janice Goh

Partner at Cavenagh Law

In contrast, Coinbase and Ripple are embroiled in lawsuits with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which has accused them of securities laws violations. Both Coinbase and Ripple, as well as other crypto firms, have threatened to leave the U.S. in response to the SEC’s crackdown.

Turmoil in the U.S.

To be sure, the sector has been embroiled in scandal and high drama over the past year. In November, FTX filed for bankruptcy while Terraform and its CEO Do Kwon were charged in February for defrauding investors.

Bitcoin has dropped to trade near $28,373, far below its all-time high of more than $65,000 in 2021.

Crypto leaders have slammed the U.S. and its approach to regulation, particularly for a lack of clarity.

In 2020, the SEC accused Ripple and its co-founders of breaching securities laws by selling its native cryptocurrency XRP without first registering it with the SEC. But in July, a landmark ruling determined the token was not, in itself, necessarily a security.

Meanwhile, the SEC sued Coinbase in June, alleging it was operating an unregistered exchange and broker. In the same month, Binance was charged for several securities law violations.

“I think it’s fair to say the U.S. has made it as confusing as possible as to what the rules of the road are for the crypto industry. The SEC has really been at the forefront of that confusion,” Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said in an interview with CNBC in May. He concluded some crypto firms could leave the U.S. for more progressive jurisdictions as a result.

Asia’s regulatory clarity

Across the Pacific, Singapore and Hong Kong offer far more operational clarity for many industry players

“Singapore has the first mover advantage in the Asia Pacific region, including being ahead of Hong Kong. There were no other countries that were so far ahead in having quite an advanced licensing regime,” Janice Goh, partner at Cavenagh Law, told CNBC.

There needs to be crypto regulation to protect 'good players,' says blockchain data firm

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In November, Ravi Menon, managing director of MAS, made it clear that Singapore wants to be a hub for digital assets, but not one for speculating on crypto.

“Hong Kong and Singapore are both similar in terms of the approach to maintaining very high regulatory standards, as well as being very proactive in creating an enabling environment for digital asset businesses,” said Ong Chengyi, head of APAC policy at blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis.

Ong expects Hong Kong to issue more licenses and for more crypto firms to flock to Asia.

In June, Gemini said it will increase its headcount in Singapore and that the city-state will serve as its regional hub, joining Coinbase and Ripple in expanding their Asia operations.

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Palantir’s stock is up 1,700% since its NYSE debut five years ago. Here’s how it got there

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Palantir's stock is up 1,700% since its NYSE debut five years ago. Here's how it got there

People walk by a banner featuring the logo of Palantir Technologies (PLTR) at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on the day of their initial public offering (IPO) in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., September 30, 2020.

Andrew Kelly | Reutersa

When Palantir hit the stock market in September 2020, there was a lot that could go wrong. The Covid pandemic was sweeping across the globe, society was in lockdown and markets were volatile.

Meanwhile, Palantir was operating at a loss while dealing with ongoing criticism over its government work, in particular with U.S. Customs and Immigration. And the company was going public through a direct listing rather than a traditional IPO.

At its opening price of $10 per share, Palantir was valued at $16.5 billion, down from its private market peak of $20.4 billion in 2015.

“It was the beginning of the pandemic, no one knew what was happening,” CFO David Glazer said in an interview. “The stock market wasn’t ripping, everyone wasn’t trying to go public, and we decided to go public as quickly as possible.”

Exactly five years later, Palantir has reached heights that would’ve been hard for even the biggest bulls to fathom.

The stock price has surged more than 1,700%, closing on Tuesday at $182.42 for a market cap of over $432 billion. That puts it among the 20 most-valuable U.S. companies, and above tech stalwarts like Cisco and IBM. Last year, Palantir joined the S&P 500, replacing American Airlines.

Quarterly revenue surpassed $1 billion for the first time last quarter, and is expected to reach $4.2 billion this year, according to analysts surveyed by LSEG, up almost sixfold from 2019. The company’s roster of customers grew from 125 in the first half of 2020 to 849 at the end of June. During that time, Palantir has added 1,500 full-time employees.

CEO Alex Karp, who founded the company in 2003 alongside notable investors like Peter Thiel and Joe Lonsdale, was exerting optimism on day one of Palantir’s life on the public market.

“We’ve reached a base where our company is very significant,” Karp, who holds a law degree from Stanford and PhD in neoclassical social theory from Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany, told CNBC in an interview on listing day. “Being in the public space will help us with our clients and help us grow.”

Its dizzying ascent since then has perplexed Wall Street, which is unfamiliar with these kinds of multiples, especially for companies of this size.

Palantir trades for 226 times earnings over the next 12 months, with a forward revenue multiple of over 80. Those numbers dwarf even the multiples on Tesla, which trades for 194 times forward earnings and 14 times revenue over the next year.

In a report last month, Citron Research’s Andrew Left, a noted short-seller, called Palantir “detached from fundamentals and analysis.” When compared to OpenAI’s recent $500 billion valuation, he said Palantir should be priced at $40, or less than one-quarter of its current price, if it was assessed the same revenue multiple as the artificial intelligence startup.

“Karp and his team should be proud. But for investors, that’s where discipline kicks in,” Left wrote. “Comparison is the enemy of happiness, and when measured against true AI leaders, Palantir’s price already reflects success beyond its fundamentals.”

Karp, who doesn’t shy away from a dispute, recently told detractors to “exit” if they “don’t like the price.”

“We are going to be the most important software company in the world, and people will figure out what that’s valued over a long period of time,” Karp said on the day of the company’s NYSE debut.

Palantir declined to make Karp available for an interview.

Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir, attending the annual Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, on July 9, 2025.

David A. Grogan | CNBC

Valuation isn’t the only source of controversy. Critics have also raised concerns about how Palantir’s tools are being used by the likes of ICE and other government agencies.

Palantir was founded as a response to national security threats in the wake of 9/11. The company developed hefty software that it helped customize for clients to enable them to compile and analyze large data sets. On its website, Palantir says that it’s partnered with the U.S. Army since 2008, “embedding alongside users to design and deploy modern mission essential software solutions.”

Federal documents from April show that ICE paid Palantir $30 million to provide “real-time visibility” on people self-deporting. Earlier this year, the New York Times reported that Palantir is helping the Trump administration gather data on Americans.

In a blog post, Palantir called the reporting “reckless and irresponsible.” Karp said in a June interview with CNBC that Palantir was “not surveilling Americans.”

‘Not just about Israel’

The company has also faced backlash for providing technology to the Ukrainian and Israeli militaries.

Karp told CNBC in March 2024 that employees had left the company due to his public support of Israel, and that he expected more to leave. Palantir took out a full-page ad in The New York Times following the deadly Oct. 7 attack by Hamas the prior year that said the company “stands with Israel.”

“From my perspective, it’s not just about Israel,” Karp said in the CNBC interview. “It’s like, ‘Do you believe in the West? Do you believe the West has created a superior way of living?'”

Over the last five years, Palantir has scooped up big government deals against contractors like RTX and partnered with aerospace giants such as L3Harris and Boeing. Over the summer, the company landed a software and data contract with the Army worth up to $10 billion.

Karp has long been an unapologetic defender of Palantir’s business pursuits.

Originally headquartered in Palo Alto, California, Karp moved the company to Denver in 2020 as he grew increasingly disgruntled with what he viewed as Silicon Valley’s monoculture.

In a letter to investors ahead of its direct listing, Karp said, “the engineering elite” of Silicon Valley do not know “how society should be organized or what justice requires” and that the company shares “fewer and fewer of the technology sector’s values and commitments.”

Palantir co-founder Joe Lonsdale on Pres. Trump's industrial policy, tariff agenda and AI chip sales

While Palantir has been a standout performer on the market over the past five years, long-term investors had to weather some dark days along the way.

By the end of 2020, Palantir’s stock had jumped to $23.55, a gain of almost 136%. In Karp’s letter ahead of the direct listing, he asserted that “effective software can be essential to an organization’s survival” during times of crisis.

Skepticism started building in the second half of 2021. Early the following year, rising interest rates and soaring inflation pushed investors out of risky securities and into safer assets like bonds. Palantir shares lost two-thirds of their value in 2022, closing the year at $6.42, well below the direct listing price.

But November of that year brought with it the introduction of ChatGPT and a new era of AI that revived and redefined the tech industry.

Palantir launched its AI platform called AIP in April 2023. It was designed to help securely integrate large language models when dealing with sensitive data, making it much faster and more efficient for Palantir’s technology to pull in and analyze information.

The company has attributed much of its expansion in the commercial market to AIP. Government business still accounts for most of its revenue, but Palantir has attracted corporate clients such as Wendy’s and American Airlines.

Glazer said on the latest earnings call in August that the total contract value of bookings in the quarter soared 185% to $1.1 billion, with U.S. commercial revenue jumping 93% from a year earlier.

“AIP continues to drive existing customer expansion and new customer conversions in the U.S.,” Glazer said.

One customer the company cited was auto supplier Lear and a recent five-year partnership between the two. Palantir said that Lear uses AIP for help with “proactively managing their tariff exposure, automating multiple administrative workflows, and dynamically balancing their manufacturing lines.”

Palantir’s stock soared 341% last year and is up another 141% so far in 2025.

The AI is getting a lot of use in government, too.

In 2024, Palantir landed a contract to create AI-powered mobile ground stations able to collect data for soldiers using space sensors. In May of this year, the Pentagon lifted the company’s total ceiling for its Maven Smart Systems contract for AI capabilities to $1.3 billion.

Akash Jain, Palantir’s technology chief and president of its U.S. government business, said in an interview that AI has created a whole new set of risks, forcing the government to rethink how it uses commercial technologies.

 “We’re perfectly positioned for the growth,” he said.

WATCH: Cramer on Palantir

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Disney sent cease and desist letter to Character.AI over use of copyrighted characters

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Disney sent cease and desist letter to Character.AI over use of copyrighted characters

The Walt Disney Co. signage on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Wednesday, May 7, 2025.

Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The Walt Disney Company sent a cease and desist letter to Character.AI last week, warning the artificial intelligence startup to stop using copyrighted characters without authorization, a Disney spokesperson confirmed to CNBC on Tuesday.

A spokesperson for Character.AI said it removed the characters mentioned in the letter, and that “it’s always up to rightsholders to decide how people may interact with their IP.”

The spokesperson acknowledged that while some characters on its platform are completely original creations, others are “inspired by existing characters that people love.”

“We want to partner with the industry and rightsholders to empower them to bring their characters to our platform,” the Character.AI spokesperson told CNBC. “Our goal is to give IP owners the tools to create controlled, engaging and revenue-generating experiences from deep fandom for their characters and stories, expanding their reach using our new, interactive format.”

The letter serves as the latest example of how media companies like Disney are working to protect their intellectual property during the AI boom.

Disney is already involved in an ongoing lawsuit against AI image creator Midjourney, alleging that the company improperly used and distributed AI-generated characters from movies like “Cars,” “Toy Story,” “Shrek,” “The Avengers” and others. 

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Axios first reported the cease and desist letter.

Character.AI allows users to create and interact with character-based chatbots. Google inked a $2.7 billion licensing deal with Character.AI and hired its founders in 2024, and the startup became embroiled in a wrongful death lawsuit that same year.

The family of Sewell Setzer III, a 14-year-old boy in Florida, alleged he committed suicide after he became addicted to talking with a number of AI chatbots on the app. One of the chatbots was named Daenerys Targaryen, or Dany, who is a character in the show “Game of Thrones,” according to the lawsuit.

Character.AI is not the only AI company that’s faced scrutiny over its approach to IP.

Earlier this month, a federal judge preliminarily approved Anthropic’s offer to pay $1.5 billion to settle a class action lawsuit with a group of authors, who claimed that the company had illegally downloaded their books and others from pirated databases.

If you are having suicidal thoughts or are in distress, contact the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 for support and assistance from a trained counselor.

WATCH: Disney likely to spin off ESPN and ABC post-Iger, says LightShed’s Rich Greenfield

Disney likely to spin off ESPN and ABC post-Iger, says LightShed’s Rich Greenfield

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Amazon’s new Echo devices designed for Alexa+ start at $99

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Amazon's new Echo devices designed for Alexa+ start at

Daniel Rausch, vice president of Alexa and Echo, announces the Echo Studio and Echo Dot Max during an Amazon event showcasing new products in New York City, U.S., September 30, 2025.

Kylie Cooper | Reuters

Amazon on Tuesday unveiled four new smart speakers and voice-activated displays that are revamped with Alexa+, its personal assistant that’s powered by generative artificial intelligence.

The company debuted the Echo Dot Max, a revamped version of its compact smart speaker, which costs $99.99. Amazon also unveiled a new Echo Show 8 and Echo Show 11, priced at $179.99 and $219.99, respectively.

There’s also a new version of the Echo Studio, a larger, higher-end model with a more powerful speaker, priced at $219.99.

All the devices are available for preorder on Tuesday, and users will get Alexa+ early access “out of the box,” Amazon said. The Echo Dot Max and Echo Studio ship Oct. 29, while the Echo Show 8 and Echo Show 11 ship Nov. 12.

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The devices were launched at Amazon’s fall hardware bonanza, held in New York. They’re the first batch of revamped products under the leadership of Panos Panay, a former Microsoft hardware leader who joined Amazon in 2023.

It’s also the first set of Amazon hardware to integrate the company’s long-awaited Alexa+, which debuted in February and has slowly rolled out in early access for some users.

“These are the most powerful Echo devices we have ever created,” Panay said on stage at the event. “Custom silicon, advanced sensors, our best microphones and sound, noise cancellation, understanding the user, faster than anything we’ve ever delivered before. They’re also beautifully designed to fade into the background.”

Alongside a revamped look, Amazon added new AZ3 and AZ3 Pro chips for edge processing to the devices, which are faster, more powerful and have “AI built right in,” said Daniel Rausch, the head of Amazon’s Alexa and Echo businesses.

Panos Panay, head of Amazon’s Devices and Services team, introduces Echo during an Amazon product event in the Manhattan borough of New York City on September 30, 2025. Amazon announced its next generation of Kindle, Ring, Blink, Fire TV, and Echo devices.

Charly Triballeau | Afp | Getty Images

The devices also feature a so-called Omnisense platform that gives Alexa “better contextual awareness,” Rausch said. It allows the Echo Show to be able to recognize users and serve up personalized insights, like an analysis of how they slept last night or alert users if they left their front door unlocked after midnight.

Amazon faces growing pressure to update its hardware and software for the generative AI age following the success of rivals such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini. Meta also has its Ray-Ban Meta glasses, which use its Llama large language model to answer spoken questions from the user.

Amazon is also looking beyond Alexa or Echo smart speakers for opportunities in device growth.

The company in July confirmed it’s acquiring AI wearables startup Bee, which makes a wristband that can record and transcribe conversations.

Amazon comments on $2.5 billion settlement with FTC

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