It’s spring statement day – a bigger day than the Treasury probably ever wanted it to be – but definitely not a budget.
With Chancellor Rachel Reeves on course to break her own fiscal rules, she’ll lay out how she intends to find billions of pounds of extra savings.
At the eleventh hour, it looks like welfare cuts will be tougher than first thought – with a hit on universal credit.
Sam and Anne outline what the calculations are likely to be and how the chancellor will handle the day.
And beyond today – if there’s no glimmer of growth by the end of the year, how would she approach the autumn budget? Could that be where raising taxes is the only option?
Institutional adoption of Bitcoin in the European Union remains sluggish, even as the United States moves forward with landmark cryptocurrency regulations that seek to establish BTC as a national reserve asset.
More than three weeks after President Donald Trumpâs March 7 executive order outlined plans to use cryptocurrency seized in criminal cases to create a federal Bitcoin (BTC) reserve, European companies have largely remained silent on the issue.
The stagnation may stem from Europeâs complex regulatory regime, according to Elisenda Fabrega, general counsel at Brickken, a European real-world asset (RWA) tokenization platform.
âThis hesitation reflects a deeper structural divide, rooted in regulation, institutional signaling and market maturity. Europe has yet to take a definitive stance on Bitcoin as a reserve asset.â
Bitcoinâs economic model favors early adopters, which may pressure more investment firms to consider gaining exposure to BTC. The asset has outperformed most major global assets since Trumpâs election despite a recent correction.
Asset performance since Trumpâs election victory. Source: Thomas Fahrer
Despite Trumpâs executive order, only a small number of European companies have publicly disclosed Bitcoin holdings or crypto services. These include French banking giant BNP Paribas, Swiss firm 21Shares AG, VanEck Europe, Malta-based Jacobi Asset Management and Austrian fintech firm Bitpanda.
The EUâs slower adoption appears tied to its patchwork of regulations and more conservative investment mandates, analysts at Bitfinex told Cointelegraph. âEuropeâs institutional landscape is more fragmented, with regulatory hurdles and conservative investment mandates limiting Bitcoin allocations.â
âAdditionally, European pension funds and large asset managers have been slower to adopt Bitcoin exposure due to unclear guidelines and risk aversion,â they added.
Beyond the fragmented regulations, European retail investor appetite and retail participation are generally lower than in the US, according to Iliya Kalchev, dispatch analyst at digital asset investment platform Nexo.
Europe is âgenerally more conservative in adopting new financial instruments,â the analyst told Cointelegraph, adding:
âThis stands in stark contrast to the deep, liquid, and relatively unified US capital market, where the spot Bitcoin ETF rollout was buoyed by strong retail demand and a clear regulatory green light.â
BlackRock, the worldâs largest asset manager, launched a Bitcoin exchange-traded product (ETP) in Europe on March 25, a development that may boost institutional confidence among European investors.
The New York State Attorney Generalâs (NAYG) recent legal action against Galaxy Digital over its promotional ties to the now-collapsed cryptocurrency Terra (LUNA) was unfair and an abuse of the legal system, says SkyBridge Capital and founder Anthony Scaramucci.
âItâs LAWFARE, pure and simple due to an obscure but dangerously powerful New York law known as the Martin Act,â Scaramucci said in a March 28 X post.
Martin Law can âopen the door for abuseâ
âThe law has no need to prove intent, creating a low standard of proof that can open the door for abuse like this. It shouldnât exist,â he said.
New Yorkâs Martin Act is one of the US’s strictest anti-fraud and securities laws, allowing prosecutors the power to pursue financial fraud cases without needing to prove intent. The NAYG alleged that Galaxy Digital violated the Martin Act over its alleged promotion of Terra, with Galaxy Digital agreeing to a $200 million settlement.
According to NAYG documents filed on March 24, Galaxy Digital acquired 18.5 million LUNA tokens at a 30% discount in October 2020, then promoted them before selling them without abiding by disclosure rules.Â
Scaramucci reiterated that Galaxy CEO Michael Novogratz was under the impression everything he was saying about Luna was true, as he had been deceived by Terraform Labs and its former CEO, Do Kwon.
The filing alleged that Galaxy helped a âlittle-knownâ token, referring to LUNA, increase its market price from $0.31 in October 2020 to $119.18 in April 2022 while âprofiting in the hundreds of millions of dollars.â
Asset manager and investor Anthony Pompliano said he isnât familiar with the details of the lawsuit but vouched for Novogratz, calling him a âgood manâ who has devoted a lot of time and money to helping others.
The Terra collapse is one of the crypto industryâs most infamous failures. In March 2024, SEC attorney Devon Staren said in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York that Terra was a âhouse of cardsâ that collapsed for investors in 2022.
Billionaire investor Elon Musk has sold his social media platform X to his AI startup xAI, sparking controversy as it coincides with a US judge rejecting his bid to dismiss a lawsuit tied to the social media platform.
The transfer of ownership of X to xAI on March 28 means that the class-action lawsuit against Musk â accusing him of defrauding former Twitter shareholders by delaying the disclosure of his initial investment in the social media platform â has become âa whole lot spicer,â Cinneamhain Ventures partner Adam Cochran said in a March 28 X post.
Acquisition may open up xAI to more âexposureâ
On the same day that Musk said âxAI has acquired X in an all-stock transaction,â a US judge reportedly rejected Muskâs attempt to dismiss the lawsuit. Cochran said it has âopened up his AI entity to exposure here too, and itâs a much bigger pie.â
Musk said the deal values xAI at $80 billion and X at $33 billion, factoring in $12 billion in debt from the $45 billion valuation. He originally bought X, formerly Twitter, for around $44 billion in April 2022.
âxAI and Xâs futures are intertwined. Today, we officially take the step to combine the data, models, compute, distribution and talent,â Musk said.
âThis combination will unlock immense potential by blending xAIâs advanced AI capability and expertise with Xâs massive reach,â he said, adding:
âThis will allow us to build a platform that doesnât just reflect the world but actively accelerates human progress.â
However, Cochran claimed that âMusk used his pumped up xAI stock to pay multiple times over value for X, but still take an $11B loss on the transaction.â He said that Musk is âscrewing over xAI investors, and X investorsâ and was executed to sell user data to xAI.
xAI is best known for its AI chatbot âGrokâ which is built into the X platform. When Musk released it in November 2023, he claimed it could outperform OpenAIâs first iteration of ChatGPT in several academic tests.
Musk explained at the time that the motivation behind building Grok is to create AI tools equipped to assist humanity by empowering research and innovation.
While Cochran said that Grok being valued at $80 billion is an âinsanely dumb valuation,â crypto developer âKeefâ disagrees. Keef said, âThis is shady all around, but given the day, Grok is genuinely probably the top model for various tasks.â