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2026 ASEAN Store September 10-12, MITEC Pavilion, Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaASEAN SHOP is a professional touring exhibition focused on major markets in Southeast Asia. Malaysia combines its rapidly developing economy with consumers who are proficient in digital technology and ready to purchase, making it an ideal market. The retail market in the country is expected to grow from approximately $89.7 billion in 2024 to $119.6 billion in 2029, with a compound annual growth rate of 5.9%, surpassing most regional peers. From AI driven payment systems to self-service vending and retail technologies, ASEAN Shopping Centers connect global innovators with the most dynamic markets in ASEAN. The scope of exhibits includes: Vending machines and self-service facilities: Self service vending machines, vending machine accessories, payment solutions and vending machine technology, smart retail solutions, smart operation and management solutions, office coffee machines Payment solution: Payment systems, payment devices, commercial AI applications, payment service scenario solutions, device peripherals, and consumables Visitor Register Asia Commercial Refrigeration Equipment Supermarket Display Cases, Convenience & Specialty Store Cases, Fresh Processing & Display Equipment, Back-of-Store Storage & Processing Equipment, In-Store Processing & Fresh-Keeping Equipment, Integrated Cold Chain Solutions, Smart Control Systems Asia Commercial Service Robot Commercial Robotics Complete Solutions, Front Desk Reception Robot Autonomous Retail Robot, CoreComponents & Technical Support, Ancillary Equipment & Services Restaurant: Beverages, coffee, tea, dairy products, nuts, dried fruits and vegetables, healthy and functional foods, ready to eat foods,  seasonings and condiments, food service and technology Retail Store: Retail stores, supermarkets, smart retail and technology, unmanned store solutions, store management systems, brand owners, franchising and brand authorization Asia Commercial Display & Store Fitting Commercial Interior Design & Fit-Out, Smart Visual Merchandising & Display, Commercial Lighting &Display Fixtures, Retail Security Solutions, Innovative Materials & Technologies The audience scope includes: service provider Importer/Exporter Manufacturer/Processor Large supermarkets/retailers/wholesalers/distributors Grocery stores, shops, supermarkets/cafes/restaurants Media/Publications government representative ASEAN SHOP explores cutting-edge solutions in six professional fields, connecting industry pioneers and innovative suppliers shaping the future of ASEAN retail from smart vending and digital payments to cold chain technology. We look forward to gaining strategic insights at the ASEAN Retail Leaders Summit. Join ASEAN SHOP Malaysia – Let's shape the future of smart retail together! If you are interested in exhibiting or visiting the World Expo, please contact me. Mail: xu71139@gmail.com Whatsapp: 19584515076 Wechat: 17658107280

2026 ASEAN Store September 10-12, MITEC Pavilion, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

ASEAN SHOP is a professional touring exhibition focused on major markets in Southeast Asia. Malaysia combines its rapidly developing economy with consumers who are proficient in digital technology and ready to purchase, making it an ideal market. The retail market in the country is expected to grow from approximately $89.7 billion in 2024 to $119.6 billion in 2029, with a compound annual growth rate of 5.9%, surpassing most regional peers. From AI driven payment systems to self-service vending and retail technologies, ASEAN Shopping Centers connect global innovators with the most dynamic markets in ASEAN.

The scope of exhibits includes: Vending machines and self-service facilities: Self service vending machines, vending machine accessories, payment solutions and vending machine technology, smart retail solutions, smart operation and management solutions, office coffee machines

Payment solution: Payment systems, payment devices, commercial AI applications, payment service scenario solutions, device peripherals, and consumables

Visitor Register

Asia Commercial Refrigeration Equipment Supermarket Display Cases, Convenience & Specialty Store Cases, Fresh Processing & Display Equipment, Back-of-Store Storage & Processing Equipment, In-Store Processing & Fresh-Keeping Equipment, Integrated Cold Chain Solutions, Smart Control Systems

Asia Commercial Service Robot Commercial Robotics Complete Solutions, Front Desk Reception Robot Autonomous Retail Robot, CoreComponents & Technical Support, Ancillary Equipment & Services

Restaurant: Beverages, coffee, tea, dairy products, nuts, dried fruits and vegetables, healthy and functional foods, ready to eat foods,  seasonings and condiments, food service and technology

Retail Store: Retail stores, supermarkets, smart retail and technology, unmanned store solutions, store management systems, brand owners, franchising and brand authorization

Asia Commercial Display & Store Fitting Commercial Interior Design & Fit-Out, Smart Visual Merchandising & Display, Commercial Lighting &Display Fixtures, Retail Security Solutions, Innovative Materials & Technologies

The audience scope includes: service provider Importer/Exporter Manufacturer/Processor Large supermarkets/retailers/wholesalers/distributors Grocery stores, shops, supermarkets/cafes/restaurants Media/Publications government representative

ASEAN SHOP explores cutting-edge solutions in six professional fields, connecting industry pioneers and innovative suppliers shaping the future of ASEAN retail from smart vending and digital payments to cold chain technology. We look forward to gaining strategic insights at the ASEAN Retail Leaders Summit. Join ASEAN SHOP Malaysia – Let's shape the future of smart retail together!

If you are interested in exhibiting or visiting the World Expo, please contact me. Mail: xu71139@gmail.com Whatsapp: 19584515076 Wechat: 17658107280
2026 ASEAN Store September 10-12, MITEC Pavilion, Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaASEAN SHOP is a professional touring exhibition focused on major markets in Southeast Asia. Malaysia combines its rapidly developing economy with consumers who are proficient in digital technology and ready to purchase, making it an ideal market. The retail market in the country is expected to grow from approximately $89.7 billion in 2024 to $119.6 billion in 2029, with a compound annual growth rate of 5.9%, surpassing most regional peers. From AI driven payment systems to self-service vending and retail technologies, ASEAN Shopping Centers connect global innovators with the most dynamic markets in ASEAN. The scope of exhibits includes: Vending machines and self-service facilities: Self service vending machines, vending machine accessories, payment solutions and vending machine technology, smart retail solutions, smart operation and management solutions, office coffee machines Payment solution: Payment systems, payment devices, commercial AI applications, payment service scenario solutions, device peripherals, and consumables Visitor Register Asia Commercial Refrigeration Equipment Supermarket Display Cases, Convenience & Specialty Store Cases, Fresh Processing & Display Equipment, Back-of-Store Storage & Processing Equipment, In-Store Processing & Fresh-Keeping Equipment, Integrated Cold Chain Solutions, Smart Control Systems Asia Commercial Service Robot Commercial Robotics Complete Solutions, Front Desk Reception Robot Autonomous Retail Robot, CoreComponents & Technical Support, Ancillary Equipment & Services Restaurant: Beverages, coffee, tea, dairy products, nuts, dried fruits and vegetables, healthy and functional foods, ready to eat foods,  seasonings and condiments, food service and technology Retail Store: Retail stores, supermarkets, smart retail and technology, unmanned store solutions, store management systems, brand owners, franchising and brand authorization Asia Commercial Display & Store Fitting Commercial Interior Design & Fit-Out, Smart Visual Merchandising & Display, Commercial Lighting &Display Fixtures, Retail Security Solutions, Innovative Materials & Technologies The audience scope includes: service provider Importer/Exporter Manufacturer/Processor Large supermarkets/retailers/wholesalers/distributors Grocery stores, shops, supermarkets/cafes/restaurants Media/Publications government representative ASEAN SHOP explores cutting-edge solutions in six professional fields, connecting industry pioneers and innovative suppliers shaping the future of ASEAN retail from smart vending and digital payments to cold chain technology. We look forward to gaining strategic insights at the ASEAN Retail Leaders Summit. Join ASEAN SHOP Malaysia – Let's shape the future of smart retail together! If you are interested in exhibiting or visiting the World Expo, please contact me. Mail: xu71139@gmail.com Whatsapp: 19584515076 Wechat: 17658107280

2026 ASEAN Store September 10-12, MITEC Pavilion, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

ASEAN SHOP is a professional touring exhibition focused on major markets in Southeast Asia.
Malaysia combines its rapidly developing economy with consumers who are proficient in digital technology and ready to purchase, making it an ideal market. The retail market in the country is expected to grow from approximately $89.7 billion in 2024 to $119.6 billion in 2029, with a compound annual growth rate of 5.9%, surpassing most regional peers. From AI driven payment systems to self-service vending and retail technologies, ASEAN Shopping Centers connect global innovators with the most dynamic markets in ASEAN.

The scope of exhibits includes:
Vending machines and self-service facilities:
Self service vending machines, vending machine accessories, payment solutions and vending machine technology, smart retail solutions, smart operation and management solutions, office coffee machines

Payment solution:
Payment systems, payment devices, commercial AI applications, payment service scenario solutions, device peripherals, and consumables

Visitor Register

Asia Commercial Refrigeration Equipment
Supermarket Display Cases, Convenience & Specialty Store Cases, Fresh Processing & Display Equipment, Back-of-Store Storage & Processing Equipment, In-Store Processing & Fresh-Keeping Equipment, Integrated Cold Chain Solutions, Smart Control Systems

Asia Commercial Service Robot
Commercial Robotics Complete Solutions, Front Desk Reception Robot Autonomous Retail Robot, CoreComponents & Technical Support, Ancillary Equipment & Services

Restaurant:
Beverages, coffee, tea, dairy products, nuts, dried fruits and vegetables, healthy and functional foods, ready to eat foods,  seasonings and condiments, food service and technology

Retail Store:
Retail stores, supermarkets, smart retail and technology, unmanned store solutions, store management systems, brand owners, franchising and brand authorization

Asia Commercial Display & Store Fitting
Commercial Interior Design & Fit-Out, Smart Visual Merchandising & Display, Commercial Lighting &Display Fixtures, Retail Security Solutions, Innovative Materials & Technologies

The audience scope includes:
service provider
Importer/Exporter
Manufacturer/Processor
Large supermarkets/retailers/wholesalers/distributors
Grocery stores, shops, supermarkets/cafes/restaurants
Media/Publications
government representative

ASEAN SHOP explores cutting-edge solutions in six professional fields, connecting industry pioneers and innovative suppliers shaping the future of ASEAN retail from smart vending and digital payments to cold chain technology. We look forward to gaining strategic insights at the ASEAN Retail Leaders Summit. Join ASEAN SHOP Malaysia – Let's shape the future of smart retail together!

If you are interested in exhibiting or visiting the World Expo, please contact me.
Mail: xu71139@gmail.com
Whatsapp: 19584515076
Wechat: 17658107280
From Media to Crypto: How CryptoBosh Built One of the Biggest Crypto YouTube ChannelsToday our guest is CryptoBosh (Yuriy Boshnikov) — one of the most recognizable crypto bloggers on Russian-language YouTube. Unlike many who entered the industry through trading or a technical background, Yuriy came into crypto from the media side. Before 2022, he already had a successful YouTube channel and strong expertise in content creation. When the bear market began, he saw crypto not just as hype, but as a growing tech industry with relatively low competition in high-quality content — and decided to apply his skills here. Today, his crypto channel has nearly 400,000 subscribers, and he combines blogging, education, spot investing, and real estate in Dubai. — Yuriy, hi! I’m really happy to see you. Today I want to talk not only about the market, but also about your path in crypto. Many people know you as CryptoBosh — an influencer and media personality with a strong YouTube channel. As far as I know, you came into crypto in 2022 — meaning you entered right when the bear market started? Yes, I caught the moment when everything started falling. But I came into crypto out of necessity: I had a previous business, I shut it down, and I was looking for a place where the money is right now. I was looking at where money is concentrated and where my expertise could be applied — at that time, it was media. I know how to create good content. The niche I used to work in was already starting to “die,” while crypto is a developing industry — the technology keeps evolving — so the choice was obvious. I’m doing the same actions as before, but the result is massively bigger: competition is kind of a joke, and there are very few strong players willing to produce high-quality content for the audience. — So you already had the media/content skill set? Yes. Even before crypto, I created a YouTube channel to promote my website-building services. I experimented. And at some point I filmed a video that had nothing to do with websites — about a trip to Bali. It got 700,000 views. And inside that video, I embedded an ad for my free website course. From that moment, I realized YouTube is a huge tool. Before crypto, I already had a channel with 200,000 subscribers. And when I entered crypto, I created a new channel from scratch. Now it has almost 400,000 subscribers. — There are bloggers who’ve been in crypto for 5–7 years but hit a ceiling. What’s the secret behind growth? There’s no secret. It’s simple: “do it well — and it will be fine.” The main problem is that people don’t understand who they’re making content for. From the start, I made content for beginners. I was a beginner myself. I was surprised that exchanges even have limit orders. And I wasn’t embarrassed about it. Many “veterans” think beginners are stupid and don’t want to explain the basics. But I’m totally fine repeating things. That’s my job. I analyze a lot: — I watch the Western market — I study thumbnails and presentation — I track what “blows up” — I test hypotheses I write scripts myself. I have assistants, but the content is mine. I spend a huge amount of time on YouTube analyzing competitors. Who wins? The one who works more and more systematically. There’s no secret. Just: “do it well — and it will be fine.” — Is your main audience beginners? Yes. I speak their language. I don’t fly off into complex topics. Though I adapt to the market. For example, now there’s more trading content because that’s what people want. Personally, I don’t like futures. But I don’t do what I like — I do what the audience needs. — How do you understand what the audience is genuinely interested in? Is it feedback, analytics, or more intuition? It’s more like “at my fingertips.” I watch the Western market a lot — I take many ideas from there. I track patterns: which topics perform well, what starts gaining traction. Then I look at what’s growing in the Russian-speaking space. And I test it myself: I release a video and look at the reaction — subscriptions, comments, unsubscribes, hate. From the response, it’s immediately clear whether you hit the topic or not. — You teach in parallel, and some of your materials are free. How is your system structured — from basics to advanced — and what do you ultimately earn money from? Right now, I have a free course — a person watches the videos on YouTube, and that covers the basics. Then they can go deeper: there’s a trading chat subscription (€19 per month) where people trade and get futures education. And there’s a closed club — comprehensive work with spot, futures, portfolio building, and weekly reviews. The deeper part is led by a partner. If we talk about income — my main income is blogger activity. Plus investments. There is advertising too, but now I only take projects I know personally or via recommendations — the market is harsh, and it’s easy to get into unpleasant stories. In crypto, there are also many tools where you can earn even without investment — I have a separate pinned post about this in Telegram. — Tell us more about your journey in crypto. Did you enter crypto with a big capital? At that time, globally, there wasn’t much money. Every cup of coffee felt like “the last one.” There was some reserve, but definitely not for years — more like a minimal financial cushion. I already had financial literacy, so the pressure was there. I entered crypto with small money. You can look at my first videos and Telegram posts — I didn’t delete anything. I was genuinely surprised: I bought a coin for $50, it grew to $75, I made $25 — and I was like, “wow, this is crypto, this is money.” Over time, with practice, capital was gradually built. I don’t show everything publicly, but for example, you can see that I have around $50,000 sitting in spot bots. Everything accumulated step by step. My approach is simple: slowly, with lower risk, calmly — and work a lot. I don’t know any other approach. — If we summarize: is your strategy more mid-term or long-term? The main focus is spot and base assets? And how do you feel about the current panic around Bitcoin? Yes. The core of my capital is in spot. No secret: the base is Bitcoin and Ethereum. From the very beginning, we built a portfolio around that. That doesn’t mean I didn’t buy altcoins — I have alts too. If it drops — not a big deal. We’ll buy more or we won’t — we’ll see. I bought Bitcoin even when it was going up. My average entry used to be around $25K; now it’s closer to $30K. Even now, when it’s 80-something — it’s still fine. When it was at the bottom, I simply didn’t have enough capital to buy. Now I’m ready. — The market changes every 2–3 months: new trends, tools, restrictions. How do you adapt your education to these changes and stay on top of things? Of course, you have to do it constantly. There are things that don’t change globally — for example, registering on an exchange. But even those we periodically rewrite so that interfaces are up to date. For example, topping up via P2P used to be normal; now exchanges or swap services are often more convenient. We provide vetted options for different regions — Russia, Ukraine, Europe, Dubai — and quickly communicate all updates in Telegram: what you can do, what you can’t, where the risks are. Telegram is the fastest way to stay in contact with the audience. I can record a voice message on the spot if something happens. And if it needs deeper explanation — I do a separate breakdown. There are also unpopular tools where I don’t earn anything at all — for example, spot bots. No referral links, nothing. But I show them because I use them myself and they generate income for me. — Most of your investments are in crypto. Do you also look at stocks or real estate? I’m still learning about the stock market — how to structure everything properly and implement it. I haven’t shown it publicly yet. But I do talk about real estate: I live in Dubai and bought apartments as investments. I have a separate YouTube channel called “NedvizhBozh,” where I share details about the Dubai market — there are lots of nuances. Because one thing is to theoretically say how “great it is to buy real estate in Dubai,” and another is when you’ve bought one, then a second apartment and gone through the process yourself. I run everything through my own experience and my own money — I ask partners questions, figure out what’s good and what’s bad — and only then draw conclusions. — Do you invest in precious metals — gold or silver? And how do you feel about gold as a “classic” asset in current conditions? No, I haven’t gotten to it yet. And overall, precious metals have already “flown to the moon.” Even if it’s a decent long-term story, with gold there’s always the question: how do you store it? If you buy paper instruments — it’s almost like stocks. If you buy bars — where do you store them? If through a bank — that’s trusting the bank, and that trust is questionable. And if you have to relocate (which is popular now) — how do you transport it? Declare it, move it — complicated. I had a case: I was “pushing” gold, then had to leave Ukraine — I sold the gold, bought a Ural motorcycle, and left. As a living tool — fine. But storing gold in today’s situation, when you might need to move at any time, doesn’t feel great to me. — Yeah, a Ledger is convenient in that sense — you carry it with you, and nobody really checks. They might check, but they generally shouldn’t. There’s no law that prohibits carrying a Ledger across a border. — But then there’s a security question. How important is it what kind of crypto you have on your wallet? It’s very important that only “clean” crypto sits on your wallet. We don’t face this every day, but there are real cases: someone long ago received or sent crypto without thinking much, and years later they move to another country — and they run into problems because there were “dirty” transactions in the history. — Right, because someone could have sent funds through an exchange and you don’t even know the origin… Exactly. You can’t verify everyone. And in a couple of years it can “surface.” It’s a very scary situation. That’s why I’m increasingly looking toward solutions with an intermediate wallet or service: you use it as a buffer, don’t keep funds there for long, and receive “clean” money on your main wallet from a legal entity — условно, from Binance. And I’m currently searching for these kinds of solutions. — Are you planning new verticals? Or developing what you already have? I look at what people need and find partners to implement it. For example, if a better exchanger appears — I switch it into the chain. If the market changes and it becomes difficult to earn on spot — we go into trading. Since September 2025, we launched a trading chat: we filter traders, publish statistics, show reports. If the market changes — we’ll change direction. Right now I don’t see any obvious new trends. — Can we say your focus has shifted toward futures? Is that your strategy — to go where the market actually allows you to earn? It’s not that everyone wants to trade futures — it’s just one of the few tools that really works right now. DeFi works, but with large capital. Futures are short trades: intraday or максимум two days. You set up a setup — either stop-loss or profit. That’s the skill: making sure the stats of profits are higher than the stats of stops. There’s no point forcing spot if the market is falling and everyone is getting “shaved.” If I give people tools that don’t work right now, they’ll lose money — and I’ll be responsible. My job is to choose what can work now. No guarantees — but you have to choose as carefully as possible. — Do you feel like people are leaving crypto? Are views down? For other bloggers — yes. For me, somehow I’ve managed to keep views стабильными so far. The English-speaking market is alive — but I’m nobody there. In the Russian-speaking space, we’re holding on. — What would you advise someone with a small capital — how not to blow the deposit and become profitable over time? It’s simple: take all the free education that exists. Then look at paid options. Join communities to stay in the information flow, get актуальные updates, and understand the market pulse. Don’t go into futures with 90% of your capital — максимум 10%. The rest — lower-risk instruments. I moved gradually myself: chose tools with lower returns and lower risk, worked over time. Over four years, I got a financial result simply because I work consistently. There’s no secret. Plus окружение: clubs, strong people, constant immersion in the market. And focus only on what brings money and value to the audience.

From Media to Crypto: How CryptoBosh Built One of the Biggest Crypto YouTube Channels

Today our guest is CryptoBosh (Yuriy Boshnikov) — one of the most recognizable crypto bloggers on Russian-language YouTube.

Unlike many who entered the industry through trading or a technical background, Yuriy came into crypto from the media side. Before 2022, he already had a successful YouTube channel and strong expertise in content creation.

When the bear market began, he saw crypto not just as hype, but as a growing tech industry with relatively low competition in high-quality content — and decided to apply his skills here. Today, his crypto channel has nearly 400,000 subscribers, and he combines blogging, education, spot investing, and real estate in Dubai.

— Yuriy, hi! I’m really happy to see you. Today I want to talk not only about the market, but also about your path in crypto. Many people know you as CryptoBosh — an influencer and media personality with a strong YouTube channel. As far as I know, you came into crypto in 2022 — meaning you entered right when the bear market started?

Yes, I caught the moment when everything started falling. But I came into crypto out of necessity: I had a previous business, I shut it down, and I was looking for a place where the money is right now. I was looking at where money is concentrated and where my expertise could be applied — at that time, it was media. I know how to create good content.

The niche I used to work in was already starting to “die,” while crypto is a developing industry — the technology keeps evolving — so the choice was obvious. I’m doing the same actions as before, but the result is massively bigger: competition is kind of a joke, and there are very few strong players willing to produce high-quality content for the audience.

— So you already had the media/content skill set?

Yes. Even before crypto, I created a YouTube channel to promote my website-building services. I experimented. And at some point I filmed a video that had nothing to do with websites — about a trip to Bali. It got 700,000 views. And inside that video, I embedded an ad for my free website course. From that moment, I realized YouTube is a huge tool.

Before crypto, I already had a channel with 200,000 subscribers. And when I entered crypto, I created a new channel from scratch. Now it has almost 400,000 subscribers.

— There are bloggers who’ve been in crypto for 5–7 years but hit a ceiling. What’s the secret behind growth?

There’s no secret. It’s simple: “do it well — and it will be fine.” The main problem is that people don’t understand who they’re making content for.

From the start, I made content for beginners. I was a beginner myself. I was surprised that exchanges even have limit orders. And I wasn’t embarrassed about it.

Many “veterans” think beginners are stupid and don’t want to explain the basics. But I’m totally fine repeating things. That’s my job.

I analyze a lot: — I watch the Western market — I study thumbnails and presentation — I track what “blows up” — I test hypotheses

I write scripts myself. I have assistants, but the content is mine. I spend a huge amount of time on YouTube analyzing competitors.

Who wins? The one who works more and more systematically.

There’s no secret. Just: “do it well — and it will be fine.”

— Is your main audience beginners?

Yes. I speak their language. I don’t fly off into complex topics. Though I adapt to the market. For example, now there’s more trading content because that’s what people want.

Personally, I don’t like futures. But I don’t do what I like — I do what the audience needs.

— How do you understand what the audience is genuinely interested in? Is it feedback, analytics, or more intuition?

It’s more like “at my fingertips.” I watch the Western market a lot — I take many ideas from there. I track patterns: which topics perform well, what starts gaining traction. Then I look at what’s growing in the Russian-speaking space. And I test it myself: I release a video and look at the reaction — subscriptions, comments, unsubscribes, hate. From the response, it’s immediately clear whether you hit the topic or not.

— You teach in parallel, and some of your materials are free. How is your system structured — from basics to advanced — and what do you ultimately earn money from?

Right now, I have a free course — a person watches the videos on YouTube, and that covers the basics. Then they can go deeper: there’s a trading chat subscription (€19 per month) where people trade and get futures education. And there’s a closed club — comprehensive work with spot, futures, portfolio building, and weekly reviews. The deeper part is led by a partner.

If we talk about income — my main income is blogger activity. Plus investments. There is advertising too, but now I only take projects I know personally or via recommendations — the market is harsh, and it’s easy to get into unpleasant stories.

In crypto, there are also many tools where you can earn even without investment — I have a separate pinned post about this in Telegram.

— Tell us more about your journey in crypto. Did you enter crypto with a big capital?

At that time, globally, there wasn’t much money. Every cup of coffee felt like “the last one.” There was some reserve, but definitely not for years — more like a minimal financial cushion. I already had financial literacy, so the pressure was there.

I entered crypto with small money. You can look at my first videos and Telegram posts — I didn’t delete anything. I was genuinely surprised: I bought a coin for $50, it grew to $75, I made $25 — and I was like, “wow, this is crypto, this is money.”

Over time, with practice, capital was gradually built. I don’t show everything publicly, but for example, you can see that I have around $50,000 sitting in spot bots. Everything accumulated step by step.

My approach is simple: slowly, with lower risk, calmly — and work a lot. I don’t know any other approach.

— If we summarize: is your strategy more mid-term or long-term? The main focus is spot and base assets? And how do you feel about the current panic around Bitcoin?

Yes. The core of my capital is in spot. No secret: the base is Bitcoin and Ethereum. From the very beginning, we built a portfolio around that. That doesn’t mean I didn’t buy altcoins — I have alts too.

If it drops — not a big deal. We’ll buy more or we won’t — we’ll see. I bought Bitcoin even when it was going up. My average entry used to be around $25K; now it’s closer to $30K.

Even now, when it’s 80-something — it’s still fine. When it was at the bottom, I simply didn’t have enough capital to buy. Now I’m ready.

— The market changes every 2–3 months: new trends, tools, restrictions. How do you adapt your education to these changes and stay on top of things?

Of course, you have to do it constantly. There are things that don’t change globally — for example, registering on an exchange. But even those we periodically rewrite so that interfaces are up to date.

For example, topping up via P2P used to be normal; now exchanges or swap services are often more convenient. We provide vetted options for different regions — Russia, Ukraine, Europe, Dubai — and quickly communicate all updates in Telegram: what you can do, what you can’t, where the risks are.

Telegram is the fastest way to stay in contact with the audience. I can record a voice message on the spot if something happens. And if it needs deeper explanation — I do a separate breakdown.

There are also unpopular tools where I don’t earn anything at all — for example, spot bots. No referral links, nothing. But I show them because I use them myself and they generate income for me.

— Most of your investments are in crypto. Do you also look at stocks or real estate?

I’m still learning about the stock market — how to structure everything properly and implement it. I haven’t shown it publicly yet.

But I do talk about real estate: I live in Dubai and bought apartments as investments. I have a separate YouTube channel called “NedvizhBozh,” where I share details about the Dubai market — there are lots of nuances.

Because one thing is to theoretically say how “great it is to buy real estate in Dubai,” and another is when you’ve bought one, then a second apartment and gone through the process yourself. I run everything through my own experience and my own money — I ask partners questions, figure out what’s good and what’s bad — and only then draw conclusions.

— Do you invest in precious metals — gold or silver? And how do you feel about gold as a “classic” asset in current conditions?

No, I haven’t gotten to it yet. And overall, precious metals have already “flown to the moon.” Even if it’s a decent long-term story, with gold there’s always the question: how do you store it?

If you buy paper instruments — it’s almost like stocks. If you buy bars — where do you store them? If through a bank — that’s trusting the bank, and that trust is questionable.

And if you have to relocate (which is popular now) — how do you transport it? Declare it, move it — complicated. I had a case: I was “pushing” gold, then had to leave Ukraine — I sold the gold, bought a Ural motorcycle, and left. As a living tool — fine. But storing gold in today’s situation, when you might need to move at any time, doesn’t feel great to me.

— Yeah, a Ledger is convenient in that sense — you carry it with you, and nobody really checks.

They might check, but they generally shouldn’t. There’s no law that prohibits carrying a Ledger across a border.

— But then there’s a security question. How important is it what kind of crypto you have on your wallet?

It’s very important that only “clean” crypto sits on your wallet. We don’t face this every day, but there are real cases: someone long ago received or sent crypto without thinking much, and years later they move to another country — and they run into problems because there were “dirty” transactions in the history.

— Right, because someone could have sent funds through an exchange and you don’t even know the origin…

Exactly. You can’t verify everyone. And in a couple of years it can “surface.” It’s a very scary situation. That’s why I’m increasingly looking toward solutions with an intermediate wallet or service: you use it as a buffer, don’t keep funds there for long, and receive “clean” money on your main wallet from a legal entity — условно, from Binance. And I’m currently searching for these kinds of solutions.

— Are you planning new verticals? Or developing what you already have?

I look at what people need and find partners to implement it. For example, if a better exchanger appears — I switch it into the chain.

If the market changes and it becomes difficult to earn on spot — we go into trading. Since September 2025, we launched a trading chat: we filter traders, publish statistics, show reports.

If the market changes — we’ll change direction. Right now I don’t see any obvious new trends.

— Can we say your focus has shifted toward futures? Is that your strategy — to go where the market actually allows you to earn?

It’s not that everyone wants to trade futures — it’s just one of the few tools that really works right now. DeFi works, but with large capital.

Futures are short trades: intraday or максимум two days. You set up a setup — either stop-loss or profit. That’s the skill: making sure the stats of profits are higher than the stats of stops.

There’s no point forcing spot if the market is falling and everyone is getting “shaved.” If I give people tools that don’t work right now, they’ll lose money — and I’ll be responsible. My job is to choose what can work now. No guarantees — but you have to choose as carefully as possible.

— Do you feel like people are leaving crypto? Are views down?

For other bloggers — yes. For me, somehow I’ve managed to keep views стабильными so far. The English-speaking market is alive — but I’m nobody there. In the Russian-speaking space, we’re holding on.

— What would you advise someone with a small capital — how not to blow the deposit and become profitable over time?

It’s simple: take all the free education that exists. Then look at paid options. Join communities to stay in the information flow, get актуальные updates, and understand the market pulse.

Don’t go into futures with 90% of your capital — максимум 10%. The rest — lower-risk instruments. I moved gradually myself: chose tools with lower returns and lower risk, worked over time. Over four years, I got a financial result simply because I work consistently. There’s no secret.

Plus окружение: clubs, strong people, constant immersion in the market. And focus only on what brings money and value to the audience.
From Media to Crypto: How CryptoBosh Built One of the Biggest Crypto YouTube ChannelsToday our guest is CryptoBosh (Yuriy Boshnikov) — one of the most recognizable crypto bloggers on Russian-language YouTube. Unlike many who entered the industry through trading or a technical background, Yuriy came into crypto from the media side. Before 2022, he already had a successful YouTube channel and strong expertise in content creation. When the bear market began, he saw crypto not just as hype, but as a growing tech industry with relatively low competition in high-quality content — and decided to apply his skills here. Today, his crypto channel has nearly 400,000 subscribers, and he combines blogging, education, spot investing, and real estate in Dubai. — Yuriy, hi! I’m really happy to see you. Today I want to talk not only about the market, but also about your path in crypto. Many people know you as CryptoBosh — an influencer and media personality with a strong YouTube channel. As far as I know, you came into crypto in 2022 — meaning you entered right when the bear market started? Yes, I caught the moment when everything started falling. But I came into crypto out of necessity: I had a previous business, I shut it down, and I was looking for a place where the money is right now. I was looking at where money is concentrated and where my expertise could be applied — at that time, it was media. I know how to create good content. The niche I used to work in was already starting to “die,” while crypto is a developing industry — the technology keeps evolving — so the choice was obvious. I’m doing the same actions as before, but the result is massively bigger: competition is kind of a joke, and there are very few strong players willing to produce high-quality content for the audience. — So you already had the media/content skill set? Yes. Even before crypto, I created a YouTube channel to promote my website-building services. I experimented. And at some point I filmed a video that had nothing to do with websites — about a trip to Bali. It got 700,000 views. And inside that video, I embedded an ad for my free website course. From that moment, I realized YouTube is a huge tool. Before crypto, I already had a channel with 200,000 subscribers. And when I entered crypto, I created a new channel from scratch. Now it has almost 400,000 subscribers. — There are bloggers who’ve been in crypto for 5–7 years but hit a ceiling. What’s the secret behind growth? There’s no secret. It’s simple: “do it well — and it will be fine.” The main problem is that people don’t understand who they’re making content for. From the start, I made content for beginners. I was a beginner myself. I was surprised that exchanges even have limit orders. And I wasn’t embarrassed about it. Many “veterans” think beginners are stupid and don’t want to explain the basics. But I’m totally fine repeating things. That’s my job. I analyze a lot: — I watch the Western market — I study thumbnails and presentation — I track what “blows up” — I test hypotheses I write scripts myself. I have assistants, but the content is mine. I spend a huge amount of time on YouTube analyzing competitors. Who wins? The one who works more and more systematically. There’s no secret. Just: “do it well — and it will be fine.” — Is your main audience beginners? Yes. I speak their language. I don’t fly off into complex topics. Though I adapt to the market. For example, now there’s more trading content because that’s what people want. Personally, I don’t like futures. But I don’t do what I like — I do what the audience needs. — How do you understand what the audience is genuinely interested in? Is it feedback, analytics, or more intuition? It’s more like “at my fingertips.” I watch the Western market a lot — I take many ideas from there. I track patterns: which topics perform well, what starts gaining traction. Then I look at what’s growing in the Russian-speaking space. And I test it myself: I release a video and look at the reaction — subscriptions, comments, unsubscribes, hate. From the response, it’s immediately clear whether you hit the topic or not. — You teach in parallel, and some of your materials are free. How is your system structured — from basics to advanced — and what do you ultimately earn money from? Right now, I have a free course — a person watches the videos on YouTube, and that covers the basics. Then they can go deeper: there’s a trading chat subscription (€19 per month) where people trade and get futures education. And there’s a closed club — comprehensive work with spot, futures, portfolio building, and weekly reviews. The deeper part is led by a partner. If we talk about income — my main income is blogger activity. Plus investments. There is advertising too, but now I only take projects I know personally or via recommendations — the market is harsh, and it’s easy to get into unpleasant stories. In crypto, there are also many tools where you can earn even without investment — I have a separate pinned post about this in Telegram. — Tell us more about your journey in crypto. Did you enter crypto with a big capital? At that time, globally, there wasn’t much money. Every cup of coffee felt like “the last one.” There was some reserve, but definitely not for years — more like a minimal financial cushion. I already had financial literacy, so the pressure was there. I entered crypto with small money. You can look at my first videos and Telegram posts — I didn’t delete anything. I was genuinely surprised: I bought a coin for $50, it grew to $75, I made $25 — and I was like, “wow, this is crypto, this is money.” Over time, with practice, capital was gradually built. I don’t show everything publicly, but for example, you can see that I have around $50,000 sitting in spot bots. Everything accumulated step by step. My approach is simple: slowly, with lower risk, calmly — and work a lot. I don’t know any other approach. — If we summarize: is your strategy more mid-term or long-term? The main focus is spot and base assets? And how do you feel about the current panic around Bitcoin? Yes. The core of my capital is in spot. No secret: the base is Bitcoin and Ethereum. From the very beginning, we built a portfolio around that. That doesn’t mean I didn’t buy altcoins — I have alts too. If it drops — not a big deal. We’ll buy more or we won’t — we’ll see. I bought Bitcoin even when it was going up. My average entry used to be around $25K; now it’s closer to $30K. Even now, when it’s 80-something — it’s still fine. When it was at the bottom, I simply didn’t have enough capital to buy. Now I’m ready. — The market changes every 2–3 months: new trends, tools, restrictions. How do you adapt your education to these changes and stay on top of things? Of course, you have to do it constantly. There are things that don’t change globally — for example, registering on an exchange. But even those we periodically rewrite so that interfaces are up to date. For example, topping up via P2P used to be normal; now exchanges or swap services are often more convenient. We provide vetted options for different regions — Russia, Ukraine, Europe, Dubai — and quickly communicate all updates in Telegram: what you can do, what you can’t, where the risks are. Telegram is the fastest way to stay in contact with the audience. I can record a voice message on the spot if something happens. And if it needs deeper explanation — I do a separate breakdown. There are also unpopular tools where I don’t earn anything at all — for example, spot bots. No referral links, nothing. But I show them because I use them myself and they generate income for me. — Most of your investments are in crypto. Do you also look at stocks or real estate? I’m still learning about the stock market — how to structure everything properly and implement it. I haven’t shown it publicly yet. But I do talk about real estate: I live in Dubai and bought apartments as investments. I have a separate YouTube channel called “NedvizhBozh,” where I share details about the Dubai market — there are lots of nuances. Because one thing is to theoretically say how “great it is to buy real estate in Dubai,” and another is when you’ve bought one, then a second apartment and gone through the process yourself. I run everything through my own experience and my own money — I ask partners questions, figure out what’s good and what’s bad — and only then draw conclusions. — Do you invest in precious metals — gold or silver? And how do you feel about gold as a “classic” asset in current conditions? No, I haven’t gotten to it yet. And overall, precious metals have already “flown to the moon.” Even if it’s a decent long-term story, with gold there’s always the question: how do you store it? If you buy paper instruments — it’s almost like stocks. If you buy bars — where do you store them? If through a bank — that’s trusting the bank, and that trust is questionable. And if you have to relocate (which is popular now) — how do you transport it? Declare it, move it — complicated. I had a case: I was “pushing” gold, then had to leave Ukraine — I sold the gold, bought a Ural motorcycle, and left. As a living tool — fine. But storing gold in today’s situation, when you might need to move at any time, doesn’t feel great to me. — Yeah, a Ledger is convenient in that sense — you carry it with you, and nobody really checks. They might check, but they generally shouldn’t. There’s no law that prohibits carrying a Ledger across a border. — But then there’s a security question. How important is it what kind of crypto you have on your wallet? It’s very important that only “clean” crypto sits on your wallet. We don’t face this every day, but there are real cases: someone long ago received or sent crypto without thinking much, and years later they move to another country — and they run into problems because there were “dirty” transactions in the history. — Right, because someone could have sent funds through an exchange and you don’t even know the origin… Exactly. You can’t verify everyone. And in a couple of years it can “surface.” It’s a very scary situation. That’s why I’m increasingly looking toward solutions with an intermediate wallet or service: you use it as a buffer, don’t keep funds there for long, and receive “clean” money on your main wallet from a legal entity — условно, from Binance. And I’m currently searching for these kinds of solutions. — Are you planning new verticals? Or developing what you already have? I look at what people need and find partners to implement it. For example, if a better exchanger appears — I switch it into the chain. If the market changes and it becomes difficult to earn on spot — we go into trading. Since September 2025, we launched a trading chat: we filter traders, publish statistics, show reports. If the market changes — we’ll change direction. Right now I don’t see any obvious new trends. — Can we say your focus has shifted toward futures? Is that your strategy — to go where the market actually allows you to earn? It’s not that everyone wants to trade futures — it’s just one of the few tools that really works right now. DeFi works, but with large capital. Futures are short trades: intraday or максимум two days. You set up a setup — either stop-loss or profit. That’s the skill: making sure the stats of profits are higher than the stats of stops. There’s no point forcing spot if the market is falling and everyone is getting “shaved.” If I give people tools that don’t work right now, they’ll lose money — and I’ll be responsible. My job is to choose what can work now. No guarantees — but you have to choose as carefully as possible. — Do you feel like people are leaving crypto? Are views down? For other bloggers — yes. For me, somehow I’ve managed to keep views стабильными so far. The English-speaking market is alive — but I’m nobody there. In the Russian-speaking space, we’re holding on. — What would you advise someone with a small capital — how not to blow the deposit and become profitable over time? It’s simple: take all the free education that exists. Then look at paid options. Join communities to stay in the information flow, get актуальные updates, and understand the market pulse. Don’t go into futures with 90% of your capital — максимум 10%. The rest — lower-risk instruments. I moved gradually myself: chose tools with lower returns and lower risk, worked over time. Over four years, I got a financial result simply because I work consistently. There’s no secret. Plus окружение: clubs, strong people, constant immersion in the market. And focus only on what brings money and value to the audience.

From Media to Crypto: How CryptoBosh Built One of the Biggest Crypto YouTube Channels

Today our guest is CryptoBosh (Yuriy Boshnikov) — one of the most recognizable crypto bloggers on Russian-language YouTube.

Unlike many who entered the industry through trading or a technical background, Yuriy came into crypto from the media side. Before 2022, he already had a successful YouTube channel and strong expertise in content creation.

When the bear market began, he saw crypto not just as hype, but as a growing tech industry with relatively low competition in high-quality content — and decided to apply his skills here. Today, his crypto channel has nearly 400,000 subscribers, and he combines blogging, education, spot investing, and real estate in Dubai.

— Yuriy, hi! I’m really happy to see you. Today I want to talk not only about the market, but also about your path in crypto. Many people know you as CryptoBosh — an influencer and media personality with a strong YouTube channel. As far as I know, you came into crypto in 2022 — meaning you entered right when the bear market started?

Yes, I caught the moment when everything started falling. But I came into crypto out of necessity: I had a previous business, I shut it down, and I was looking for a place where the money is right now. I was looking at where money is concentrated and where my expertise could be applied — at that time, it was media. I know how to create good content.

The niche I used to work in was already starting to “die,” while crypto is a developing industry — the technology keeps evolving — so the choice was obvious. I’m doing the same actions as before, but the result is massively bigger: competition is kind of a joke, and there are very few strong players willing to produce high-quality content for the audience.

— So you already had the media/content skill set?

Yes. Even before crypto, I created a YouTube channel to promote my website-building services. I experimented. And at some point I filmed a video that had nothing to do with websites — about a trip to Bali. It got 700,000 views.
And inside that video, I embedded an ad for my free website course. From that moment, I realized YouTube is a huge tool.

Before crypto, I already had a channel with 200,000 subscribers. And when I entered crypto, I created a new channel from scratch. Now it has almost 400,000 subscribers.

— There are bloggers who’ve been in crypto for 5–7 years but hit a ceiling. What’s the secret behind growth?

There’s no secret. It’s simple: “do it well — and it will be fine.” The main problem is that people don’t understand who they’re making content for.

From the start, I made content for beginners. I was a beginner myself. I was surprised that exchanges even have limit orders. And I wasn’t embarrassed about it.

Many “veterans” think beginners are stupid and don’t want to explain the basics. But I’m totally fine repeating things. That’s my job.

I analyze a lot:
— I watch the Western market
— I study thumbnails and presentation
— I track what “blows up”
— I test hypotheses

I write scripts myself. I have assistants, but the content is mine. I spend a huge amount of time on YouTube analyzing competitors.

Who wins? The one who works more and more systematically.

There’s no secret. Just: “do it well — and it will be fine.”

— Is your main audience beginners?

Yes. I speak their language. I don’t fly off into complex topics. Though I adapt to the market. For example, now there’s more trading content because that’s what people want.

Personally, I don’t like futures. But I don’t do what I like — I do what the audience needs.

— How do you understand what the audience is genuinely interested in? Is it feedback, analytics, or more intuition?

It’s more like “at my fingertips.” I watch the Western market a lot — I take many ideas from there. I track patterns: which topics perform well, what starts gaining traction. Then I look at what’s growing in the Russian-speaking space.
And I test it myself: I release a video and look at the reaction — subscriptions, comments, unsubscribes, hate. From the response, it’s immediately clear whether you hit the topic or not.

— You teach in parallel, and some of your materials are free. How is your system structured — from basics to advanced — and what do you ultimately earn money from?

Right now, I have a free course — a person watches the videos on YouTube, and that covers the basics. Then they can go deeper: there’s a trading chat subscription (€19 per month) where people trade and get futures education. And there’s a closed club — comprehensive work with spot, futures, portfolio building, and weekly reviews. The deeper part is led by a partner.

If we talk about income — my main income is blogger activity. Plus investments. There is advertising too, but now I only take projects I know personally or via recommendations — the market is harsh, and it’s easy to get into unpleasant stories.

In crypto, there are also many tools where you can earn even without investment — I have a separate pinned post about this in Telegram.

— Tell us more about your journey in crypto. Did you enter crypto with a big capital?

At that time, globally, there wasn’t much money. Every cup of coffee felt like “the last one.” There was some reserve, but definitely not for years — more like a minimal financial cushion. I already had financial literacy, so the pressure was there.

I entered crypto with small money. You can look at my first videos and Telegram posts — I didn’t delete anything. I was genuinely surprised: I bought a coin for $50, it grew to $75, I made $25 — and I was like, “wow, this is crypto, this is money.”

Over time, with practice, capital was gradually built. I don’t show everything publicly, but for example, you can see that I have around $50,000 sitting in spot bots. Everything accumulated step by step.

My approach is simple: slowly, with lower risk, calmly — and work a lot. I don’t know any other approach.

— If we summarize: is your strategy more mid-term or long-term? The main focus is spot and base assets? And how do you feel about the current panic around Bitcoin?

Yes. The core of my capital is in spot. No secret: the base is Bitcoin and Ethereum. From the very beginning, we built a portfolio around that. That doesn’t mean I didn’t buy altcoins — I have alts too.

If it drops — not a big deal. We’ll buy more or we won’t — we’ll see. I bought Bitcoin even when it was going up. My average entry used to be around $25K; now it’s closer to $30K.

Even now, when it’s 80-something — it’s still fine. When it was at the bottom, I simply didn’t have enough capital to buy. Now I’m ready.

— The market changes every 2–3 months: new trends, tools, restrictions. How do you adapt your education to these changes and stay on top of things?

Of course, you have to do it constantly. There are things that don’t change globally — for example, registering on an exchange. But even those we periodically rewrite so that interfaces are up to date.

For example, topping up via P2P used to be normal; now exchanges or swap services are often more convenient. We provide vetted options for different regions — Russia, Ukraine, Europe, Dubai — and quickly communicate all updates in Telegram: what you can do, what you can’t, where the risks are.

Telegram is the fastest way to stay in contact with the audience. I can record a voice message on the spot if something happens. And if it needs deeper explanation — I do a separate breakdown.

There are also unpopular tools where I don’t earn anything at all — for example, spot bots. No referral links, nothing. But I show them because I use them myself and they generate income for me.

— Most of your investments are in crypto. Do you also look at stocks or real estate?

I’m still learning about the stock market — how to structure everything properly and implement it. I haven’t shown it publicly yet.

But I do talk about real estate: I live in Dubai and bought apartments as investments. I have a separate YouTube channel called “NedvizhBozh,” where I share details about the Dubai market — there are lots of nuances.

Because one thing is to theoretically say how “great it is to buy real estate in Dubai,” and another is when you’ve bought one, then a second apartment and gone through the process yourself. I run everything through my own experience and my own money — I ask partners questions, figure out what’s good and what’s bad — and only then draw conclusions.

— Do you invest in precious metals — gold or silver? And how do you feel about gold as a “classic” asset in current conditions?

No, I haven’t gotten to it yet. And overall, precious metals have already “flown to the moon.” Even if it’s a decent long-term story, with gold there’s always the question: how do you store it?

If you buy paper instruments — it’s almost like stocks. If you buy bars — where do you store them? If through a bank — that’s trusting the bank, and that trust is questionable.

And if you have to relocate (which is popular now) — how do you transport it? Declare it, move it — complicated. I had a case: I was “pushing” gold, then had to leave Ukraine — I sold the gold, bought a Ural motorcycle, and left. As a living tool — fine. But storing gold in today’s situation, when you might need to move at any time, doesn’t feel great to me.

— Yeah, a Ledger is convenient in that sense — you carry it with you, and nobody really checks.

They might check, but they generally shouldn’t. There’s no law that prohibits carrying a Ledger across a border.

— But then there’s a security question. How important is it what kind of crypto you have on your wallet?

It’s very important that only “clean” crypto sits on your wallet. We don’t face this every day, but there are real cases: someone long ago received or sent crypto without thinking much, and years later they move to another country — and they run into problems because there were “dirty” transactions in the history.

— Right, because someone could have sent funds through an exchange and you don’t even know the origin…

Exactly. You can’t verify everyone. And in a couple of years it can “surface.” It’s a very scary situation.
That’s why I’m increasingly looking toward solutions with an intermediate wallet or service: you use it as a buffer, don’t keep funds there for long, and receive “clean” money on your main wallet from a legal entity — условно, from Binance. And I’m currently searching for these kinds of solutions.

— Are you planning new verticals? Or developing what you already have?

I look at what people need and find partners to implement it. For example, if a better exchanger appears — I switch it into the chain.

If the market changes and it becomes difficult to earn on spot — we go into trading. Since September 2025, we launched a trading chat: we filter traders, publish statistics, show reports.

If the market changes — we’ll change direction. Right now I don’t see any obvious new trends.

— Can we say your focus has shifted toward futures? Is that your strategy — to go where the market actually allows you to earn?

It’s not that everyone wants to trade futures — it’s just one of the few tools that really works right now. DeFi works, but with large capital.

Futures are short trades: intraday or максимум two days. You set up a setup — either stop-loss or profit. That’s the skill: making sure the stats of profits are higher than the stats of stops.

There’s no point forcing spot if the market is falling and everyone is getting “shaved.” If I give people tools that don’t work right now, they’ll lose money — and I’ll be responsible. My job is to choose what can work now. No guarantees — but you have to choose as carefully as possible.

— Do you feel like people are leaving crypto? Are views down?

For other bloggers — yes. For me, somehow I’ve managed to keep views стабильными so far. The English-speaking market is alive — but I’m nobody there. In the Russian-speaking space, we’re holding on.

— What would you advise someone with a small capital — how not to blow the deposit and become profitable over time?

It’s simple: take all the free education that exists. Then look at paid options. Join communities to stay in the information flow, get актуальные updates, and understand the market pulse.

Don’t go into futures with 90% of your capital — максимум 10%. The rest — lower-risk instruments. I moved gradually myself: chose tools with lower returns and lower risk, worked over time. Over four years, I got a financial result simply because I work consistently. There’s no secret.

Plus окружение: clubs, strong people, constant immersion in the market. And focus only on what brings money and value to the audience.
On-Chain Data Signals Growing Market Fragility as Bitcoin Struggles Near $70KRecent on-chain insights suggest that the current crypto market environment is entering a fragile phase, with several indicators pointing to weakening demand despite improving network fundamentals. According to data from Glassnode, Bitcoin’s present market structure closely resembles conditions last seen in mid-2022 — a period marked by systemic stress following the collapse of the Terra/LUNA ecosystem. At current price levels around $70,000, unrealized losses now account for roughly 16% of Bitcoin’s total market capitalization, highlighting the growing pressure faced by holders who entered at higher levels. On-chain signals remain mixed. While fundamental activity across the network is showing signs of recovery — including stronger engagement and usage — capital flows continue to deteriorate. Measures tied to realized profits and losses indicate that profitability remains limited, suggesting that renewed activity has not yet translated into sustainable demand or capital inflows. Market sentiment has also shifted decisively to the downside. Social indicators tracked on-chain point to one of the lowest levels of attention toward crypto in recent years, reinforcing the broader risk-off mood across digital asset markets. ETF Outflows ETF flows are also reflecting this cautious environment. Bitcoin ETFs have shown signs of weakness in recent sessions, although a brief improvement was observed today, with approximately $145 million in net inflows into Bitcoin ETFs and $57 million into Ethereum ETFs. While these inflows offer short-term relief, they have yet to alter the broader trend of subdued risk appetite. Overall, the data paints a picture of a market caught between improving on-chain fundamentals and deteriorating financial conditions — a setup that historically has required either renewed demand or further price adjustment to restore balance.

On-Chain Data Signals Growing Market Fragility as Bitcoin Struggles Near $70K

Recent on-chain insights suggest that the current crypto market environment is entering a fragile phase, with several indicators pointing to weakening demand despite improving network fundamentals.

According to data from Glassnode, Bitcoin’s present market structure closely resembles conditions last seen in mid-2022 — a period marked by systemic stress following the collapse of the Terra/LUNA ecosystem. At current price levels around $70,000, unrealized losses now account for roughly 16% of Bitcoin’s total market capitalization, highlighting the growing pressure faced by holders who entered at higher levels.

On-chain signals remain mixed. While fundamental activity across the network is showing signs of recovery — including stronger engagement and usage — capital flows continue to deteriorate. Measures tied to realized profits and losses indicate that profitability remains limited, suggesting that renewed activity has not yet translated into sustainable demand or capital inflows.

Market sentiment has also shifted decisively to the downside. Social indicators tracked on-chain point to one of the lowest levels of attention toward crypto in recent years, reinforcing the broader risk-off mood across digital asset markets.

ETF Outflows

ETF flows are also reflecting this cautious environment. Bitcoin ETFs have shown signs of weakness in recent sessions, although a brief improvement was observed today, with approximately $145 million in net inflows into Bitcoin ETFs and $57 million into Ethereum ETFs. While these inflows offer short-term relief, they have yet to alter the broader trend of subdued risk appetite.

Overall, the data paints a picture of a market caught between improving on-chain fundamentals and deteriorating financial conditions — a setup that historically has required either renewed demand or further price adjustment to restore balance.
On-Chain Data Signals Growing Market Fragility As Bitcoin Struggles Near $70KRecent on-chain insights suggest that the current crypto market environment is entering a fragile phase, with several indicators pointing to weakening demand despite improving network fundamentals. According to data from Glassnode, Bitcoin’s present market structure closely resembles conditions last seen in mid-2022 — a period marked by systemic stress following the collapse of the Terra/LUNA ecosystem. At current price levels around $70,000, unrealized losses now account for roughly 16% of Bitcoin’s total market capitalization, highlighting the growing pressure faced by holders who entered at higher levels. On-chain signals remain mixed. While fundamental activity across the network is showing signs of recovery — including stronger engagement and usage — capital flows continue to deteriorate. Measures tied to realized profits and losses indicate that profitability remains limited, suggesting that renewed activity has not yet translated into sustainable demand or capital inflows. Market sentiment has also shifted decisively to the downside. Social indicators tracked on-chain point to one of the lowest levels of attention toward crypto in recent years, reinforcing the broader risk-off mood across digital asset markets. ETF Outflows ETF flows are also reflecting this cautious environment. Bitcoin ETFs have shown signs of weakness in recent sessions, although a brief improvement was observed today, with approximately $145 million in net inflows into Bitcoin ETFs and $57 million into Ethereum ETFs. While these inflows offer short-term relief, they have yet to alter the broader trend of subdued risk appetite. Overall, the data paints a picture of a market caught between improving on-chain fundamentals and deteriorating financial conditions — a setup that historically has required either renewed demand or further price adjustment to restore balance.

On-Chain Data Signals Growing Market Fragility As Bitcoin Struggles Near $70K

Recent on-chain insights suggest that the current crypto market environment is entering a fragile phase, with several indicators pointing to weakening demand despite improving network fundamentals.

According to data from Glassnode, Bitcoin’s present market structure closely resembles conditions last seen in mid-2022 — a period marked by systemic stress following the collapse of the Terra/LUNA ecosystem. At current price levels around $70,000, unrealized losses now account for roughly 16% of Bitcoin’s total market capitalization, highlighting the growing pressure faced by holders who entered at higher levels.

On-chain signals remain mixed. While fundamental activity across the network is showing signs of recovery — including stronger engagement and usage — capital flows continue to deteriorate. Measures tied to realized profits and losses indicate that profitability remains limited, suggesting that renewed activity has not yet translated into sustainable demand or capital inflows.

Market sentiment has also shifted decisively to the downside. Social indicators tracked on-chain point to one of the lowest levels of attention toward crypto in recent years, reinforcing the broader risk-off mood across digital asset markets.

ETF Outflows

ETF flows are also reflecting this cautious environment. Bitcoin ETFs have shown signs of weakness in recent sessions, although a brief improvement was observed today, with approximately $145 million in net inflows into Bitcoin ETFs and $57 million into Ethereum ETFs. While these inflows offer short-term relief, they have yet to alter the broader trend of subdued risk appetite.

Overall, the data paints a picture of a market caught between improving on-chain fundamentals and deteriorating financial conditions — a setup that historically has required either renewed demand or further price adjustment to restore balance.
All Roads Lead to Rome As AIBC and AGS Announce 2026 RoadmapAffiliate Grand Slam (AGS) and AIBC took the stage at Dubai Festival Arena today for a joint press conference held ahead of the AIBC Eurasia Summit, where both brands unveiled their respective 2026 calendars and newly revamped websites. The 2026 roadmap outlines an international tour strategy aimed at strengthening regional engagement while scaling global communities. Rome emerged as the flagship show for both, with AIBC also announcing two additional events this year: AIBC Eurasia and AIBC Manila. All roads lead to Rome A highlight of the upcoming global summit schedule will be AIBC World and AGS Rome – flagship events taking place at the Fiera Roma from 02 – 05 November. With 30,000 delegates, 300 speakers, eight halls and five stages, this is one of Europe’s largest gatherings to date. The Blockchain Hub at AIBC World 2026 Throughout the three-days of the conference and expo, the AIBC pavilion will serve as a fully dedicated technology hub, spotlighting leading AI and blockchain companies while hosting a stage agenda delivering premium content focused on emerging technologies. The brand underlined its mission to connect innovators, enterprise leaders, investors, and policymakers in environments designed to accelerate technology adoption and open doors to cross-pollination opportunities with other verticals. AGS Rome 2026 – Powering the world’s affiliates AGS also outlined plans to expand its multi-vertical affiliate and performance marketing footprint at the Fiera Roma, where the brand will have a dedicated hall and conference stage. Designed to drive partnerships, deal flow, and measurable business outcomes, AGS Rome reflects the brand’s commitment to creating a premium meeting environment for affiliates, advertisers, platforms, and solution providers operating across the digital economy. Newly redesigned websites launched Both brands also officially launched newly redesigned websites. The updated platforms feature optimised user experiences, improved navigation, and expanded access to event information, partnerships, and community engagement tools. The digital upgrades are designed to support the rapid international growth of each platform and better serve their evolving audiences. Dubai carries symbolic importance for both AGS and AIBC, as the brands first launched in the city in May 2021. Returning to Dubai Festival Arena for this milestone announcement reflects the region’s continued role as a global hub for innovation, entrepreneurship, and cross-border collaboration. Additional details about tour destinations, event programming, and platform capabilities will roll out in the coming months as both brands prepare for their 2026 expansion.

All Roads Lead to Rome As AIBC and AGS Announce 2026 Roadmap

Affiliate Grand Slam (AGS) and AIBC took the stage at Dubai Festival Arena today for a joint press conference held ahead of the AIBC Eurasia Summit, where both brands unveiled their respective 2026 calendars and newly revamped websites.

The 2026 roadmap outlines an international tour strategy aimed at strengthening regional engagement while scaling global communities. Rome emerged as the flagship show for both, with AIBC also announcing two additional events this year: AIBC Eurasia and AIBC Manila.

All roads lead to Rome

A highlight of the upcoming global summit schedule will be AIBC World and AGS Rome – flagship events taking place at the Fiera Roma from 02 – 05 November. With 30,000 delegates, 300 speakers, eight halls and five stages, this is one of Europe’s largest gatherings to date.

The Blockchain Hub at AIBC World 2026

Throughout the three-days of the conference and expo, the AIBC pavilion will serve as a fully dedicated technology hub, spotlighting leading AI and blockchain companies while hosting a stage agenda delivering premium content focused on emerging technologies. The brand underlined its mission to connect innovators, enterprise leaders, investors, and policymakers in environments designed to accelerate technology adoption and open doors to cross-pollination opportunities with other verticals.

AGS Rome 2026 – Powering the world’s affiliates

AGS also outlined plans to expand its multi-vertical affiliate and performance marketing footprint at the Fiera Roma, where the brand will have a dedicated hall and conference stage. Designed to drive partnerships, deal flow, and measurable business outcomes, AGS Rome reflects the brand’s commitment to creating a premium meeting environment for affiliates, advertisers, platforms, and solution providers operating across the digital economy.

Newly redesigned websites launched

Both brands also officially launched newly redesigned websites. The updated platforms feature optimised user experiences, improved navigation, and expanded access to event information, partnerships, and community engagement tools. The digital upgrades are designed to support the rapid international growth of each platform and better serve their evolving audiences.

Dubai carries symbolic importance for both AGS and AIBC, as the brands first launched in the city in May 2021. Returning to Dubai Festival Arena for this milestone announcement reflects the region’s continued role as a global hub for innovation, entrepreneurship, and cross-border collaboration.

Additional details about tour destinations, event programming, and platform capabilities will roll out in the coming months as both brands prepare for their 2026 expansion.
All roads lead to Rome as AIBC and AGS announce 2026 RoadmapAffiliate Grand Slam (AGS) and AIBC took the stage at Dubai Festival Arena today for a joint press conference held ahead of the AIBC Eurasia Summit, where both brands unveiled their respective 2026 calendars and newly revamped websites. The 2026 roadmap outlines an international tour strategy aimed at strengthening regional engagement while scaling global communities. Rome emerged as the flagship show for both, with AIBC also announcing two additional events this year: AIBC Eurasia and AIBC Manila. All roads lead to Rome A highlight of the upcoming global summit schedule will be AIBC World and AGS Rome – flagship events taking place at the Fiera Roma from 02 – 05 November. With 30,000 delegates, 300 speakers, eight halls and five stages, this is one of Europe’s largest gatherings to date. The Blockchain Hub at AIBC World 2026 Throughout the three-days of the conference and expo, the AIBC pavilion will serve as a fully dedicated technology hub, spotlighting leading AI and blockchain companies while hosting a stage agenda delivering premium content focused on emerging technologies. The brand underlined its mission to connect innovators, enterprise leaders, investors, and policymakers in environments designed to accelerate technology adoption and open doors to cross-pollination opportunities with other verticals. AGS Rome 2026 – Powering the world’s affiliates AGS also outlined plans to expand its multi-vertical affiliate and performance marketing footprint at the Fiera Roma, where the brand will have a dedicated hall and conference stage. Designed to drive partnerships, deal flow, and measurable business outcomes, AGS Rome reflects the brand’s commitment to creating a premium meeting environment for affiliates, advertisers, platforms, and solution providers operating across the digital economy. Newly redesigned websites launched Both brands also officially launched newly redesigned websites. The updated platforms feature optimised user experiences, improved navigation, and expanded access to event information, partnerships, and community engagement tools. The digital upgrades are designed to support the rapid international growth of each platform and better serve their evolving audiences. Dubai carries symbolic importance for both AGS and AIBC, as the brands first launched in the city in May 2021. Returning to Dubai Festival Arena for this milestone announcement reflects the region’s continued role as a global hub for innovation, entrepreneurship, and cross-border collaboration. Additional details about tour destinations, event programming, and platform capabilities will roll out in the coming months as both brands prepare for their 2026 expansion.

All roads lead to Rome as AIBC and AGS announce 2026 Roadmap

Affiliate Grand Slam (AGS) and AIBC took the stage at Dubai Festival Arena today for a joint press conference held ahead of the AIBC Eurasia Summit, where both brands unveiled their respective 2026 calendars and newly revamped websites.

The 2026 roadmap outlines an international tour strategy aimed at strengthening regional engagement while scaling global communities. Rome emerged as the flagship show for both, with AIBC also announcing two additional events this year: AIBC Eurasia and AIBC Manila.

All roads lead to Rome

A highlight of the upcoming global summit schedule will be AIBC World and AGS Rome – flagship events taking place at the Fiera Roma from 02 – 05 November. With 30,000 delegates, 300 speakers, eight halls and five stages, this is one of Europe’s largest gatherings to date.

The Blockchain Hub at AIBC World 2026

Throughout the three-days of the conference and expo, the AIBC pavilion will serve as a fully dedicated technology hub, spotlighting leading AI and blockchain companies while hosting a stage agenda delivering premium content focused on emerging technologies. The brand underlined its mission to connect innovators, enterprise leaders, investors, and policymakers in environments designed to accelerate technology adoption and open doors to cross-pollination opportunities with other verticals.

AGS Rome 2026 – Powering the world’s affiliates

AGS also outlined plans to expand its multi-vertical affiliate and performance marketing footprint at the Fiera Roma, where the brand will have a dedicated hall and conference stage. Designed to drive partnerships, deal flow, and measurable business outcomes, AGS Rome reflects the brand’s commitment to creating a premium meeting environment for affiliates, advertisers, platforms, and solution providers operating across the digital economy.

Newly redesigned websites launched

Both brands also officially launched newly redesigned websites. The updated platforms feature optimised user experiences, improved navigation, and expanded access to event information, partnerships, and community engagement tools. The digital upgrades are designed to support the rapid international growth of each platform and better serve their evolving audiences.

Dubai carries symbolic importance for both AGS and AIBC, as the brands first launched in the city in May 2021. Returning to Dubai Festival Arena for this milestone announcement reflects the region’s continued role as a global hub for innovation, entrepreneurship, and cross-border collaboration.

Additional details about tour destinations, event programming, and platform capabilities will roll out in the coming months as both brands prepare for their 2026 expansion.
“Time, Place, People”: Alexey Nasybullin on the Formula Behind Successful Web3 & IGaming EventsToday our guest is Alexey Nasybullin — founder of Lead Volume and organizer of major Web3 and iGaming conferences worldwide, including BWiGA. In this conversation, we talked about what actually makes a conference successful today — beyond big names and flashy stages. Alexey shared what creates real value for attendees and partners, and why so many events end up missing the mark. We also discussed where attention is really going right now — iGaming or crypto — and how that demand has shifted over the years. Alexey spoke about his own path in the industry, how many events his team runs each year, and what he’s building beyond conferences within the Lead Volume ecosystem. – Alexey, hi! You’ve been organizing IT events for over 10 years. At what point did you realize that iGaming and Web3 are not just hype, but industries with real revenue, money, and sustainable business models? And which year was that for you? Hello! In 2016, I held the largest SEO traffic conference in the CIS for the first time, and since then, I’ve worked closely with iGaming experts. Even back then, this niche was quite robust and developed. Over the past 10 years, some other verticals have already declined, while iGaming, on the contrary, has been developing rapidly. In 2017, the crypto hype began, and I began inviting industry experts to conferences, organizing a separate crypto discussion room in Moscow and Astana. Also, since 2018, I’ve been organizing accelerators for blockchain startups. One of the winning gaming project ultimately went to China, where it received $3 million in investment. The crypto industry was purging itself of unnecessary people and maturing for several years. Since 2021, I’ve been organizing blockchain and CPA conferences in Turkey, and then in the Balkans.   – Could you please tell us in more details what you do at Lead Volume? It’s clear that your main focus is iGaming and Web3, but approximately how many events do you organize per year? And do you also participate in other events as partners or sponsors?   We typically host 2-3 conferences per year. This year, we’re planning two of our own events and three side events in different regions of the world: the Balkans, the Caucasus, Southeast Asia, and MENA. Currently, our focus is on iGaming and, to a lesser extent, crypto (due to the industry’s dire state during the crypto winter). In addition, our marketing department provides various services for promoting iGaming and crypto projects, including lead generation, targeted traffic, SMM, content creation, and media outreach. We can attract traffic from virtually any region of the world by tailoring our advertising and creating content. It’s convenient that the audiences of iGaming and Web3 are largely similar. As for participating in third-party events, I usually only attend them as a speaker, co-organizer, or partner. Lately, this has been less possible, as my own projects take up a lot of my time. Previously, I was a speaker at 10 different conferences, including in Dubai and Istanbul, and also was a presenter at two of the largest traffic conferences in the CIS. – There are currently a huge number of events in Web3 and gaming, but opinions about their quality vary a lot. What do you think is the key to a truly successful event — both for organizers and for attendees? Is it strong speakers, the right audience, projects with real demand, or something else?   It’s true that there are more conferences, but few of them are held consistently for several years and remain interesting to audiences. Another important reason is the self-sufficiency of such events, which is very difficult to achieve. Because of this, many agencies decide to abandon event organizing—too much effort, stress, and money goes into it, and there may be no profit. I’ve been in this market for 10 years and have learned how to manage risks, control the roadmap, accurately calculate expenses and income, and work with sponsors and investors. As for the quality of different events, each has its own standards. Formats can vary. Large events strive for mass participation. Smaller networking events emphasize C-level and deals during the conference. The quality of a conference also depends on the budget and the number of sponsors. Of course, the audience, the right location, and the date are important. My formula: time, place, people. A miscalculation in planning can cost a reputation and an entire business.   – Very soon you’ll be hosting the Belgrade iGaming Awards. Why did you choose Serbia as the location for the event and, more broadly, as a base for your iGaming activities? And if we look at the global picture, which region do you think currently dominates iGaming, and why?   The Balkans is well-developed in terms of iGaming, but lacks local conferences. The region is just beginning to develop its events scene. There’s still room for growth, making the Balkans a promising region. Next year, the first Expo 2027 will be held, along with numerous side events surrounding this unique international event. As for other regions, the Caucasus and Asia are developing well. European countries and North America remain the leaders. However, traffic statistics show that Asian countries are the most active in this area.   – Which projects most often win Awards: those with a strong product, or those that know how to market themselves well?   As a marketer and advisor to blockchain startups, I can say that a company’s market positioning and advertising are crucial. A product can take a long time to develop if it’s complex and innovative. During this time, competitors can succeed in marketing and reap all the profits. Without marketing, your exciting product may go unnoticed or be discovered too late. In any case, you need to immediately launch a PR campaign and promote your developing product and its unique features.   – How do you see the current market: are we in a phase of growth, cleansing, or rethinking Web 3?     Cleaning and rethinking. Web 3 is heavily influenced by various market and global political factors. Many companies cannot survive a long period without investment and cash infusions. The remaining projects dream of becoming leaders after the industry is cleaned up, bringing innovative ideas and profits to their investors. Many are now being repackaged as AI.   – We see many people moving from Web 3 into AI and iGaming. Do you see this as a signal that iGaming has greater potential right now, or is it simply a market cycle where each industry goes through its own phase? Both of your assessments are correct. Right now, iGaming is more profitable than crypto. On the other hand, the crypto market is cyclical and will eventually recover, attracting new players and capital. Furthermore, iGaming is now actively integrating crypto payments. That’s why we, too, combine games and Web 3 in our operations—it’s the most successful combination right now. I recognized this trend last year when I launched Web3 and iGaming аwards.   – And finally, if we put events aside, how does your life look apart from events? Do you have other businesses? We are currently launching our own development studio with experienced programmers capable of developing products in both blockchain and iGaming. I also have extensive experience in sports management and marketing, having worked in this industry for almost 10 years, including 7.5 years at a football club that participated in the 2009-2011 Champions League. Therefore, I can pursue a career in this field as well. Furthermore, I hold a PhD in sociology in Europe. I’ve also been playing chess since I was 4 years old and was the European School Champion in 2000. Perhaps later I’ll become a teacher, professor, and even a chess coach. Diversity and versatility are always a wonderful thing!

“Time, Place, People”: Alexey Nasybullin on the Formula Behind Successful Web3 & IGaming Events

Today our guest is Alexey Nasybullin — founder of Lead Volume and organizer of major Web3 and iGaming conferences worldwide, including BWiGA.

In this conversation, we talked about what actually makes a conference successful today — beyond big names and flashy stages. Alexey shared what creates real value for attendees and partners, and why so many events end up missing the mark.

We also discussed where attention is really going right now — iGaming or crypto — and how that demand has shifted over the years. Alexey spoke about his own path in the industry, how many events his team runs each year, and what he’s building beyond conferences within the Lead Volume ecosystem.

– Alexey, hi! You’ve been organizing IT events for over 10 years. At what point did you realize that iGaming and Web3 are not just hype, but industries with real revenue, money, and sustainable business models? And which year was that for you?

Hello! In 2016, I held the largest SEO traffic conference in the CIS for the first time, and since then, I’ve worked closely with iGaming experts. Even back then, this niche was quite robust and developed. Over the past 10 years, some other verticals have already declined, while iGaming, on the contrary, has been developing rapidly.

In 2017, the crypto hype began, and I began inviting industry experts to conferences, organizing a separate crypto discussion room in Moscow and Astana. Also, since 2018, I’ve been organizing accelerators for blockchain startups. One of the winning gaming project ultimately went to China, where it received $3 million in investment. The crypto industry was purging itself of unnecessary people and maturing for several years. Since 2021, I’ve been organizing blockchain and CPA conferences in Turkey, and then in the Balkans.   – Could you please tell us in more details what you do at Lead Volume? It’s clear that your main focus is iGaming and Web3, but approximately how many events do you organize per year? And do you also participate in other events as partners or sponsors?   We typically host 2-3 conferences per year. This year, we’re planning two of our own events and three side events in different regions of the world: the Balkans, the Caucasus, Southeast Asia, and MENA. Currently, our focus is on iGaming and, to a lesser extent, crypto (due to the industry’s dire state during the crypto winter).

In addition, our marketing department provides various services for promoting iGaming and crypto projects, including lead generation, targeted traffic, SMM, content creation, and media outreach. We can attract traffic from virtually any region of the world by tailoring our advertising and creating content. It’s convenient that the audiences of iGaming and Web3 are largely similar.

As for participating in third-party events, I usually only attend them as a speaker, co-organizer, or partner. Lately, this has been less possible, as my own projects take up a lot of my time. Previously, I was a speaker at 10 different conferences, including in Dubai and Istanbul, and also was a presenter at two of the largest traffic conferences in the CIS.

– There are currently a huge number of events in Web3 and gaming, but opinions about their quality vary a lot. What do you think is the key to a truly successful event — both for organizers and for attendees? Is it strong speakers, the right audience, projects with real demand, or something else?   It’s true that there are more conferences, but few of them are held consistently for several years and remain interesting to audiences. Another important reason is the self-sufficiency of such events, which is very difficult to achieve. Because of this, many agencies decide to abandon event organizing—too much effort, stress, and money goes into it, and there may be no profit. I’ve been in this market for 10 years and have learned how to manage risks, control the roadmap, accurately calculate expenses and income, and work with sponsors and investors.

As for the quality of different events, each has its own standards. Formats can vary. Large events strive for mass participation. Smaller networking events emphasize C-level and deals during the conference. The quality of a conference also depends on the budget and the number of sponsors. Of course, the audience, the right location, and the date are important. My formula: time, place, people. A miscalculation in planning can cost a reputation and an entire business.   – Very soon you’ll be hosting the Belgrade iGaming Awards. Why did you choose Serbia as the location for the event and, more broadly, as a base for your iGaming activities? And if we look at the global picture, which region do you think currently dominates iGaming, and why?   The Balkans is well-developed in terms of iGaming, but lacks local conferences. The region is just beginning to develop its events scene. There’s still room for growth, making the Balkans a promising region. Next year, the first Expo 2027 will be held, along with numerous side events surrounding this unique international event. As for other regions, the Caucasus and Asia are developing well. European countries and North America remain the leaders. However, traffic statistics show that Asian countries are the most active in this area.   – Which projects most often win Awards: those with a strong product, or those that know how to market themselves well?   As a marketer and advisor to blockchain startups, I can say that a company’s market positioning and advertising are crucial. A product can take a long time to develop if it’s complex and innovative. During this time, competitors can succeed in marketing and reap all the profits. Without marketing, your exciting product may go unnoticed or be discovered too late. In any case, you need to immediately launch a PR campaign and promote your developing product and its unique features.   – How do you see the current market: are we in a phase of growth, cleansing, or rethinking Web 3?     Cleaning and rethinking. Web 3 is heavily influenced by various market and global political factors. Many companies cannot survive a long period without investment and cash infusions. The remaining projects dream of becoming leaders after the industry is cleaned up, bringing innovative ideas and profits to their investors. Many are now being repackaged as AI.   – We see many people moving from Web 3 into AI and iGaming. Do you see this as a signal that iGaming has greater potential right now, or is it simply a market cycle where each industry goes through its own phase?

Both of your assessments are correct. Right now, iGaming is more profitable than crypto. On the other hand, the crypto market is cyclical and will eventually recover, attracting new players and capital. Furthermore, iGaming is now actively integrating crypto payments. That’s why we, too, combine games and Web 3 in our operations—it’s the most successful combination right now. I recognized this trend last year when I launched Web3 and iGaming аwards.   – And finally, if we put events aside, how does your life look apart from events? Do you have other businesses?

We are currently launching our own development studio with experienced programmers capable of developing products in both blockchain and iGaming. I also have extensive experience in sports management and marketing, having worked in this industry for almost 10 years, including 7.5 years at a football club that participated in the 2009-2011 Champions League.

Therefore, I can pursue a career in this field as well. Furthermore, I hold a PhD in sociology in Europe. I’ve also been playing chess since I was 4 years old and was the European School Champion in 2000. Perhaps later I’ll become a teacher, professor, and even a chess coach. Diversity and versatility are always a wonderful thing!
“Time, Place, People”: Alexey Nasybullin on the Formula Behind Successful Web3 & iGaming EventsToday our guest is Alexey Nasybullin — founder of Lead Volume and organizer of major Web3 and iGaming conferences worldwide, including BWiGA. In this conversation, we talked about what actually makes a conference successful today — beyond big names and flashy stages. Alexey shared what creates real value for attendees and partners, and why so many events end up missing the mark. We also discussed where attention is really going right now — iGaming or crypto — and how that demand has shifted over the years. Alexey spoke about his own path in the industry, how many events his team runs each year, and what he’s building beyond conferences within the Lead Volume ecosystem. – Alexey, hi! You’ve been organizing IT events for over 10 years. At what point did you realize that iGaming and Web3 are not just hype, but industries with real revenue, money, and sustainable business models? And which year was that for you? Hello! In 2016, I held the largest SEO traffic conference in the CIS for the first time, and since then, I’ve worked closely with iGaming experts. Even back then, this niche was quite robust and developed. Over the past 10 years, some other verticals have already declined, while iGaming, on the contrary, has been developing rapidly. In 2017, the crypto hype began, and I began inviting industry experts to conferences, organizing a separate crypto discussion room in Moscow and Astana. Also, since 2018, I’ve been organizing accelerators for blockchain startups. One of the winning gaming project ultimately went to China, where it received $3 million in investment. The crypto industry was purging itself of unnecessary people and maturing for several years. Since 2021, I’ve been organizing blockchain and CPA conferences in Turkey, and then in the Balkans.   – Could you please tell us in more details what you do at Lead Volume? It’s clear that your main focus is iGaming and Web3, but approximately how many events do you organize per year? And do you also participate in other events as partners or sponsors?   We typically host 2-3 conferences per year. This year, we’re planning two of our own events and three side events in different regions of the world: the Balkans, the Caucasus, Southeast Asia, and MENA. Currently, our focus is on iGaming and, to a lesser extent, crypto (due to the industry’s dire state during the crypto winter). In addition, our marketing department provides various services for promoting iGaming and crypto projects, including lead generation, targeted traffic, SMM, content creation, and media outreach. We can attract traffic from virtually any region of the world by tailoring our advertising and creating content. It’s convenient that the audiences of iGaming and Web3 are largely similar. As for participating in third-party events, I usually only attend them as a speaker, co-organizer, or partner. Lately, this has been less possible, as my own projects take up a lot of my time. Previously, I was a speaker at 10 different conferences, including in Dubai and Istanbul, and also was a presenter at two of the largest traffic conferences in the CIS. – There are currently a huge number of events in Web3 and gaming, but opinions about their quality vary a lot. What do you think is the key to a truly successful event — both for organizers and for attendees? Is it strong speakers, the right audience, projects with real demand, or something else?   It’s true that there are more conferences, but few of them are held consistently for several years and remain interesting to audiences. Another important reason is the self-sufficiency of such events, which is very difficult to achieve. Because of this, many agencies decide to abandon event organizing—too much effort, stress, and money goes into it, and there may be no profit. I’ve been in this market for 10 years and have learned how to manage risks, control the roadmap, accurately calculate expenses and income, and work with sponsors and investors. As for the quality of different events, each has its own standards. Formats can vary. Large events strive for mass participation. Smaller networking events emphasize C-level and deals during the conference. The quality of a conference also depends on the budget and the number of sponsors. Of course, the audience, the right location, and the date are important. My formula: time, place, people. A miscalculation in planning can cost a reputation and an entire business.   – Very soon you’ll be hosting the Belgrade iGaming Awards. Why did you choose Serbia as the location for the event and, more broadly, as a base for your iGaming activities? And if we look at the global picture, which region do you think currently dominates iGaming, and why?   The Balkans is well-developed in terms of iGaming, but lacks local conferences. The region is just beginning to develop its events scene. There’s still room for growth, making the Balkans a promising region. Next year, the first Expo 2027 will be held, along with numerous side events surrounding this unique international event. As for other regions, the Caucasus and Asia are developing well. European countries and North America remain the leaders. However, traffic statistics show that Asian countries are the most active in this area.   – Which projects most often win Awards: those with a strong product, or those that know how to market themselves well?   As a marketer and advisor to blockchain startups, I can say that a company’s market positioning and advertising are crucial. A product can take a long time to develop if it’s complex and innovative. During this time, competitors can succeed in marketing and reap all the profits. Without marketing, your exciting product may go unnoticed or be discovered too late. In any case, you need to immediately launch a PR campaign and promote your developing product and its unique features.   – How do you see the current market: are we in a phase of growth, cleansing, or rethinking Web 3?     Cleaning and rethinking. Web 3 is heavily influenced by various market and global political factors. Many companies cannot survive a long period without investment and cash infusions. The remaining projects dream of becoming leaders after the industry is cleaned up, bringing innovative ideas and profits to their investors. Many are now being repackaged as AI.   – We see many people moving from Web 3 into AI and iGaming. Do you see this as a signal that iGaming has greater potential right now, or is it simply a market cycle where each industry goes through its own phase? Both of your assessments are correct. Right now, iGaming is more profitable than crypto. On the other hand, the crypto market is cyclical and will eventually recover, attracting new players and capital. Furthermore, iGaming is now actively integrating crypto payments. That’s why we, too, combine games and Web 3 in our operations—it’s the most successful combination right now. I recognized this trend last year when I launched Web3 and iGaming аwards.   – And finally, if we put events aside, how does your life look apart from events? Do you have other businesses? We are currently launching our own development studio with experienced programmers capable of developing products in both blockchain and iGaming. I also have extensive experience in sports management and marketing, having worked in this industry for almost 10 years, including 7.5 years at a football club that participated in the 2009-2011 Champions League. Therefore, I can pursue a career in this field as well. Furthermore, I hold a PhD in sociology in Europe. I’ve also been playing chess since I was 4 years old and was the European School Champion in 2000. Perhaps later I’ll become a teacher, professor, and even a chess coach. Diversity and versatility are always a wonderful thing!

“Time, Place, People”: Alexey Nasybullin on the Formula Behind Successful Web3 & iGaming Events

Today our guest is Alexey Nasybullin — founder of Lead Volume and organizer of major Web3 and iGaming conferences worldwide, including BWiGA.

In this conversation, we talked about what actually makes a conference successful today — beyond big names and flashy stages. Alexey shared what creates real value for attendees and partners, and why so many events end up missing the mark.

We also discussed where attention is really going right now — iGaming or crypto — and how that demand has shifted over the years. Alexey spoke about his own path in the industry, how many events his team runs each year, and what he’s building beyond conferences within the Lead Volume ecosystem.

– Alexey, hi! You’ve been organizing IT events for over 10 years. At what point did you realize that iGaming and Web3 are not just hype, but industries with real revenue, money, and sustainable business models? And which year was that for you?

Hello! In 2016, I held the largest SEO traffic conference in the CIS for the first time, and since then, I’ve worked closely with iGaming experts. Even back then, this niche was quite robust and developed. Over the past 10 years, some other verticals have already declined, while iGaming, on the contrary, has been developing rapidly.

In 2017, the crypto hype began, and I began inviting industry experts to conferences, organizing a separate crypto discussion room in Moscow and Astana. Also, since 2018, I’ve been organizing accelerators for blockchain startups. One of the winning gaming project ultimately went to China, where it received $3 million in investment. The crypto industry was purging itself of unnecessary people and maturing for several years. Since 2021, I’ve been organizing blockchain and CPA conferences in Turkey, and then in the Balkans.
 
– Could you please tell us in more details what you do at Lead Volume? It’s clear that your main focus is iGaming and Web3, but approximately how many events do you organize per year? And do you also participate in other events as partners or sponsors?
 
We typically host 2-3 conferences per year. This year, we’re planning two of our own events and three side events in different regions of the world: the Balkans, the Caucasus, Southeast Asia, and MENA. Currently, our focus is on iGaming and, to a lesser extent, crypto (due to the industry’s dire state during the crypto winter).

In addition, our marketing department provides various services for promoting iGaming and crypto projects, including lead generation, targeted traffic, SMM, content creation, and media outreach. We can attract traffic from virtually any region of the world by tailoring our advertising and creating content. It’s convenient that the audiences of iGaming and Web3 are largely similar.

As for participating in third-party events, I usually only attend them as a speaker, co-organizer, or partner. Lately, this has been less possible, as my own projects take up a lot of my time. Previously, I was a speaker at 10 different conferences, including in Dubai and Istanbul, and also was a presenter at two of the largest traffic conferences in the CIS.

– There are currently a huge number of events in Web3 and gaming, but opinions about their quality vary a lot. What do you think is the key to a truly successful event — both for organizers and for attendees? Is it strong speakers, the right audience, projects with real demand, or something else?
 
It’s true that there are more conferences, but few of them are held consistently for several years and remain interesting to audiences. Another important reason is the self-sufficiency of such events, which is very difficult to achieve. Because of this, many agencies decide to abandon event organizing—too much effort, stress, and money goes into it, and there may be no profit. I’ve been in this market for 10 years and have learned how to manage risks, control the roadmap, accurately calculate expenses and income, and work with sponsors and investors.

As for the quality of different events, each has its own standards. Formats can vary. Large events strive for mass participation. Smaller networking events emphasize C-level and deals during the conference. The quality of a conference also depends on the budget and the number of sponsors. Of course, the audience, the right location, and the date are important. My formula: time, place, people. A miscalculation in planning can cost a reputation and an entire business.
 
– Very soon you’ll be hosting the Belgrade iGaming Awards. Why did you choose Serbia as the location for the event and, more broadly, as a base for your iGaming activities? And if we look at the global picture, which region do you think currently dominates iGaming, and why?
 
The Balkans is well-developed in terms of iGaming, but lacks local conferences. The region is just beginning to develop its events scene. There’s still room for growth, making the Balkans a promising region. Next year, the first Expo 2027 will be held, along with numerous side events surrounding this unique international event. As for other regions, the Caucasus and Asia are developing well. European countries and North America remain the leaders. However, traffic statistics show that Asian countries are the most active in this area.
 
– Which projects most often win Awards: those with a strong product, or those that know how to market themselves well?
 
As a marketer and advisor to blockchain startups, I can say that a company’s market positioning and advertising are crucial. A product can take a long time to develop if it’s complex and innovative. During this time, competitors can succeed in marketing and reap all the profits. Without marketing, your exciting product may go unnoticed or be discovered too late. In any case, you need to immediately launch a PR campaign and promote your developing product and its unique features.
 
– How do you see the current market: are we in a phase of growth, cleansing, or rethinking Web 3?
 
 
Cleaning and rethinking. Web 3 is heavily influenced by various market and global political factors. Many companies cannot survive a long period without investment and cash infusions. The remaining projects dream of becoming leaders after the industry is cleaned up, bringing innovative ideas and profits to their investors. Many are now being repackaged as AI.
 
– We see many people moving from Web 3 into AI and iGaming. Do you see this as a signal that iGaming has greater potential right now, or is it simply a market cycle where each industry goes through its own phase?

Both of your assessments are correct. Right now, iGaming is more profitable than crypto. On the other hand, the crypto market is cyclical and will eventually recover, attracting new players and capital. Furthermore, iGaming is now actively integrating crypto payments. That’s why we, too, combine games and Web 3 in our operations—it’s the most successful combination right now. I recognized this trend last year when I launched Web3 and iGaming аwards.
 
– And finally, if we put events aside, how does your life look apart from events? Do you have other businesses?

We are currently launching our own development studio with experienced programmers capable of developing products in both blockchain and iGaming. I also have extensive experience in sports management and marketing, having worked in this industry for almost 10 years, including 7.5 years at a football club that participated in the 2009-2011 Champions League.

Therefore, I can pursue a career in this field as well. Furthermore, I hold a PhD in sociology in Europe. I’ve also been playing chess since I was 4 years old and was the European School Champion in 2000. Perhaps later I’ll become a teacher, professor, and even a chess coach. Diversity and versatility are always a wonderful thing!
Michael Saylor’s Strategy Faces $4.3B Unrealized Bitcoin LossThe latest Bitcoin correction has put significant pressure on the core investment thesis of Michael Saylor and his company Strategy. During the recent market move, Bitcoin briefly dropped below the $70,000 level, directly impacting Strategy’s balance sheet. At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading around $69,403, marking its lowest price since October 2024 and reinforcing the growing bearish sentiment across the crypto market. Unrealized Losses and Market Pressure Strategy currently holds 713,502 BTC, valued at approximately $49.9 billion at current prices. With an estimated average acquisition price close to $76,000 per BTC, the company is now facing an unrealized loss of roughly $4.4 billion on its Bitcoin position. This drawdown comes amid broader signs of market stress. Bitcoin ETFs have shifted from inflows to heavy outflows, with outflows reaching $544.9 million on February 4, signaling a clear reduction in institutional risk appetite. Saylor’s Long-Term Bitcoin Thesis Since 2020, Michael Saylor has positioned Strategy as a leveraged Bitcoin exposure vehicle. The company has consistently raised capital through convertible debt and at-the-market (ATM) equity offerings, deploying the proceeds into BTC accumulation. This approach — often referred to as a “Bitcoin flywheel” — has allowed Strategy to continue buying during both bull and bear market phases. Despite the scale of the current unrealized losses, Saylor’s strategy remains unchanged. Strategy continues to treat Bitcoin as a long-term monetary asset rather than a short-term trade. However, the approach has drawn criticism from more traditional investors. Market participants focused on equities, gold, and commodities frequently view Strategy’s Bitcoin-heavy balance sheet as an exceptionally high-risk allocation — especially during prolonged market downturns like the current one. Strategy acquired its Bitcoin holdings at an average price of around $76,052 per BTC. Despite current market conditions, the company has continued to add to its position, most recently purchasing 855 BTC between January 26 and February 1, 2026, at an average price of $87,974 per Bitcoin.

Michael Saylor’s Strategy Faces $4.3B Unrealized Bitcoin Loss

The latest Bitcoin correction has put significant pressure on the core investment thesis of Michael Saylor and his company Strategy.

During the recent market move, Bitcoin briefly dropped below the $70,000 level, directly impacting Strategy’s balance sheet. At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading around $69,403, marking its lowest price since October 2024 and reinforcing the growing bearish sentiment across the crypto market.

Unrealized Losses and Market Pressure

Strategy currently holds 713,502 BTC, valued at approximately $49.9 billion at current prices. With an estimated average acquisition price close to $76,000 per BTC, the company is now facing an unrealized loss of roughly $4.4 billion on its Bitcoin position.

This drawdown comes amid broader signs of market stress. Bitcoin ETFs have shifted from inflows to heavy outflows, with outflows reaching $544.9 million on February 4, signaling a clear reduction in institutional risk appetite.

Saylor’s Long-Term Bitcoin Thesis

Since 2020, Michael Saylor has positioned Strategy as a leveraged Bitcoin exposure vehicle. The company has consistently raised capital through convertible debt and at-the-market (ATM) equity offerings, deploying the proceeds into BTC accumulation. This approach — often referred to as a “Bitcoin flywheel” — has allowed Strategy to continue buying during both bull and bear market phases.

Despite the scale of the current unrealized losses, Saylor’s strategy remains unchanged. Strategy continues to treat Bitcoin as a long-term monetary asset rather than a short-term trade.

However, the approach has drawn criticism from more traditional investors. Market participants focused on equities, gold, and commodities frequently view Strategy’s Bitcoin-heavy balance sheet as an exceptionally high-risk allocation — especially during prolonged market downturns like the current one.

Strategy acquired its Bitcoin holdings at an average price of around $76,052 per BTC. Despite current market conditions, the company has continued to add to its position, most recently purchasing 855 BTC between January 26 and February 1, 2026, at an average price of $87,974 per Bitcoin.
Michael Saylor’s Strategy Faces $4.3B Unrealized Bitcoin LossThe latest Bitcoin correction has put significant pressure on the core investment thesis of Michael Saylor and his company Strategy. During the recent market move, Bitcoin briefly dropped below the $70,000 level, directly impacting Strategy’s balance sheet. At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading around $69,403, marking its lowest price since October 2024 and reinforcing the growing bearish sentiment across the crypto market. Unrealized Losses and Market Pressure Strategy currently holds 713,502 BTC, valued at approximately $49.9 billion at current prices. With an estimated average acquisition price close to $76,000 per BTC, the company is now facing an unrealized loss of roughly $4.4 billion on its Bitcoin position. This drawdown comes amid broader signs of market stress. Bitcoin ETFs have shifted from inflows to heavy outflows, with outflows reaching $544.9 million on February 4, signaling a clear reduction in institutional risk appetite. Saylor’s Long-Term Bitcoin Thesis Since 2020, Michael Saylor has positioned Strategy as a leveraged Bitcoin exposure vehicle. The company has consistently raised capital through convertible debt and at-the-market (ATM) equity offerings, deploying the proceeds into BTC accumulation. This approach — often referred to as a “Bitcoin flywheel” — has allowed Strategy to continue buying during both bull and bear market phases. Despite the scale of the current unrealized losses, Saylor’s strategy remains unchanged. Strategy continues to treat Bitcoin as a long-term monetary asset rather than a short-term trade. However, the approach has drawn criticism from more traditional investors. Market participants focused on equities, gold, and commodities frequently view Strategy’s Bitcoin-heavy balance sheet as an exceptionally high-risk allocation — especially during prolonged market downturns like the current one. Strategy acquired its Bitcoin holdings at an average price of around $76,052 per BTC. Despite current market conditions, the company has continued to add to its position, most recently purchasing 855 BTC between January 26 and February 1, 2026, at an average price of $87,974 per Bitcoin.

Michael Saylor’s Strategy Faces $4.3B Unrealized Bitcoin Loss

The latest Bitcoin correction has put significant pressure on the core investment thesis of Michael Saylor and his company Strategy.

During the recent market move, Bitcoin briefly dropped below the $70,000 level, directly impacting Strategy’s balance sheet. At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading around $69,403, marking its lowest price since October 2024 and reinforcing the growing bearish sentiment across the crypto market.

Unrealized Losses and Market Pressure

Strategy currently holds 713,502 BTC, valued at approximately $49.9 billion at current prices. With an estimated average acquisition price close to $76,000 per BTC, the company is now facing an unrealized loss of roughly $4.4 billion on its Bitcoin position.

This drawdown comes amid broader signs of market stress. Bitcoin ETFs have shifted from inflows to heavy outflows, with outflows reaching $544.9 million on February 4, signaling a clear reduction in institutional risk appetite.

Saylor’s Long-Term Bitcoin Thesis

Since 2020, Michael Saylor has positioned Strategy as a leveraged Bitcoin exposure vehicle. The company has consistently raised capital through convertible debt and at-the-market (ATM) equity offerings, deploying the proceeds into BTC accumulation. This approach — often referred to as a “Bitcoin flywheel” — has allowed Strategy to continue buying during both bull and bear market phases.

Despite the scale of the current unrealized losses, Saylor’s strategy remains unchanged. Strategy continues to treat Bitcoin as a long-term monetary asset rather than a short-term trade.

However, the approach has drawn criticism from more traditional investors. Market participants focused on equities, gold, and commodities frequently view Strategy’s Bitcoin-heavy balance sheet as an exceptionally high-risk allocation — especially during prolonged market downturns like the current one.

Strategy acquired its Bitcoin holdings at an average price of around $76,052 per BTC. Despite current market conditions, the company has continued to add to its position, most recently purchasing 855 BTC between January 26 and February 1, 2026, at an average price of $87,974 per Bitcoin.
From Trading to Business: How Artem Onishchuk Adapts Strategies to the New MarketToday, our guest is Artem Onishchuk (Tema Ultra) — co-founder and CFO of A01K, the biggest trading community in CIS region, an entrepreneur and investor who has been working in crypto for more than 5 years. In this interview, Artem shares his view on the current market: what’s really happening right now, why many people feel stuck, and where to look for opportunities during a prolonged cycle. We discuss where he’s investing today, how his team adapts education to the realities of the current market rather than past bull runs, and which approaches are no longer working. – Artem, hi! Tell us—how did you get into crypto in the first place? What year was it, how did your journey start, and how did you eventually become a co-founder of A01K? Hi. I came into crypto in 2019—that was when I bought my first crypto asset. At the time, I was working at the State Land Cadastre of Kyiv region, sitting in an office and doing an internship. Bitcoin was around $3,000 back then and almost immediately started going up. I made money, and that was the moment I realized I didn’t want an office life anymore and wanted to understand this space more deeply. I started specifically with trading—scalping crypto. I also tried Forex, but scalping worked best for me, and that’s where I made my first real money. Scalping essentially helped me grow my deposit from almost nothing and build a solid amount over a couple of years. Later, I became interested in expanding further—not just trading, but also investing, reinvesting, and participating in sales. I saw that others were getting good results, especially with airdrops—you could make serious money there as well. That’s how my life gradually became fully connected to both trading and crypto. As for the community side: I have a partner, Sergey. He’s quite public and has a large audience. A big part of building A01K came from his public presence. – How did that partnership and the creation of A01K actually happen? It wasn’t an accident or pure luck—I was working toward it. Sergey and I met, started communicating, and over time it grew from a friendship into a partnership. We started very small, step by step, and eventually built a full ecosystem. I and the other partners mainly handle operations—making sure everything is structured, running properly, that there are quality products, a strong team, and a clear direction for people to join. Sergey, on the other hand, focused on visibility—making sure people actually heard about us. In many ways, the community was built through his public presence. In Ukraine, he was one of the first people to talk openly about crypto. I personally heard about him completely by chance. We weren’t friends or connected in any way. At that time, crypto wasn’t really discussed in the media—not just in Ukraine, but across the entire CIS region. – How is your ecosystem structured today? Besides trading and “classic crypto” activities like ICOs, retrodrops, and on-chain activity—are there other areas you’re developing? Our two main directions are trading and crypto, but over time we’ve also developed sub-directions. Right now, we’re actively growing GM Agency—a marketing agency where we help projects with marketing, PR, and KOL collaborations. We can close these requests quickly thanks to direct connections. We also have a small technical direction—a team that builds products and Telegram applications. – You’ve said that the market has changed significantly compared to 2020–2022. How do you see the current situation? Where are people going now—classic trading or crypto directions like retrodrops and on-chain activity? The market has definitely changed, but that doesn’t mean it’s worse—it’s just different. In 2021, there were many fast money stories. But there were also plenty of opportunities in 2024–2025—the market just operated under different rules. If ICOs were the main model in 2021, and almost everyone was abusing them, the market later matured. In 2024, many of the biggest gains weren’t made by traders, but by people launching their own meme coins. These weren’t unreachable teams—just regular people who previously made money on Bitcoin and ICOs and then started building their own projects. Many say, “That will never happen again,” but that’s not true—the form just changes. Onchain trading (“degen”) emerged as an alternative to the ICO model: the same upside, but with more complexity and psychological pressure. Right now, the market is in a phase of correction and consolidation, which is normal—most of the time, markets either go sideways or down. In the end, those who win are the ones who stay flexible—who adapt and let go of outdated models. Crypto is very young, around 15 years old, and constantly changing. You can’t get stuck in what used to work. – Crypto is extremely dynamic, with trends changing every few months. How do you adapt your education programs and explain to beginners what matters right now? Trading is simpler in that sense—narratives and approaches change, but the fundamentals stay the same. Crypto, on the other hand, is constantly evolving, so we have to be flexible and update education regularly. You can see this clearly in our academy updates. In 2024, we started with retrodrops, ICOs, investments, nodes, and NFTs—but later removed what stopped working. Then we added degen trading and on-chain trading—how to find and trade meme coins. We constantly update the product: remove outdated content and add what’s relevant. Essentially, we evolve together with the market. The latest major update was inter-exchange arbitrage, spreads, and funding rates. We added this block in spring and believe the timing was right—it’s now one of the most relevant and hyped narratives, especially among younger people in the CIS. – What are you investing in long-term now, and are you speculating at all in the current market? Right now, my portfolio is basically stagnant — and that’s fine. Occasionally, I enter position trades “on candles,” mostly to cover current expenses, but overall the market isn’t about active profits right now. I fixed most of my positions back in September, keeping only a small portion in BTC and ETH. – Why did you decide to exit the market in September? What signals did you see? There were three key reasons. First—the chart. On higher timeframes, weakness was visible: price couldn’t break highs, there was no buyer. For me, that’s a strong signal—the chart rarely lies. Second—fundamentals. A lot of positive news was coming out, but it stopped moving the price. Any news caused a small pump and was immediately sold off. That means the market was using news for distribution. Third—crowd sentiment. Everyone was convinced the “altseason was just beginning.” There was euphoria everywhere—memes, BSC season, new listings, random assets doing multiples. That combination is a clear signal for me to exit. Long-term, I’m looking at Bitcoin as an alternative to gold. The hype around gold at all-time highs looks suspicious to me—I wouldn’t be surprised if large players rotate out of gold into Bitcoin, which is simpler, more liquid, and has a fixed supply. – Can October 2025 be considered the start of a bear market? In my view, the bear market started back in September—when I exited. That was the last wave of euphoria, the final multiples, the peak FOMO. From September–October onward, we’ve essentially been in a bear market. The question now is how long it will last. The world has accelerated, the halving effect is much weaker, and there’s a lot of liquidity in the system. I don’t think this bear market will be as long as previous ones. More likely, we’ll see constant local narratives and pumps—there won’t be a completely “dead” market with nothing to do. – Are you looking at the stock market as a reference now? Do you use it as an indicator for crypto entries, or are you considering stock investments yourself? Yes, right now I primarily watch the stock market. I might already be buying Bitcoin, but I want to see what equities do first. The S&P 500 and major indices are at all-time highs, while uncertainty is everywhere—Trump’s actions, the Fed leadership question, interest rate policy, unclear real inflation. Markets don’t like uncertainty, especially at highs. Given geopolitics, trade wars, and economic risks, I believe a correction or even a flash crash is possible. That’s why I’m waiting. If stocks start correcting and pull crypto down, that’s when I’ll look for initial long-term entries. Long-term, Bitcoin is still my main focus — I’m just waiting for a better entry point. – What principles helped you avoid blowing up after 2020–2021 and successfully go through the 2022–2023 bear market? First — having a business helps a lot. People who rely only on crypto and pure speculation struggle psychologically in these phases. They immediately worry about income and survival. When you have a business, it still brings some revenue — not bull-market money, but enough to stay calm and avoid fear-based decisions. Second — you always need something to do. In bear markets, we build: products, materials, projects. I believe the best thing to do in a bear market is to build. Some people study, some read, some build communities. When you’re busy, you’re not staring at charts asking, “Where should I put my money?” — which almost always leads to losses. Third—long-term thinking. In 2022–2023, I bought Bitcoin at $16–20k. At the time, it didn’t bring any profit. But when I later closed those positions, they generated the biggest gains of the entire bull run. The same applies now: I can make moves that don’t bring income today, but I know that in 2–3 years, they’ll deliver the main result. That’s how this market works. – What advice would you give to people who are in crypto now—either newcomers or those stuck in stagnation? First—don’t be alone. When you’re alone with the market, it feels like you’re the only one struggling or doing something wrong. Talking to others — especially those who’ve already been through similar phases — helps a lot. Community is the foundation; it’s much easier to get through these periods together. Second — if it gets really hard, it’s okay to take a break. A break doesn’t mean giving up. Many people resist this because of ego—it feels like stopping means the market “won.” But taking a pause for a month or two, switching focus to family, other activities, or learning is completely fine and often beneficial. Overall, these phases are great for learning and rebuilding. When the market is flying, money comes easily and problems stay hidden. In stagnation, weaknesses become obvious—whether in product, marketing, or content. You start looking for new opportunities. Personally, in just a month and a half, I discovered two new directions I hadn’t noticed before. These markets teach you to think, adapt, and lay the foundation for the next cycle.

From Trading to Business: How Artem Onishchuk Adapts Strategies to the New Market

Today, our guest is Artem Onishchuk (Tema Ultra) — co-founder and CFO of A01K, the biggest trading community in CIS region, an entrepreneur and investor who has been working in crypto for more than 5 years.

In this interview, Artem shares his view on the current market: what’s really happening right now, why many people feel stuck, and where to look for opportunities during a prolonged cycle. We discuss where he’s investing today, how his team adapts education to the realities of the current market rather than past bull runs, and which approaches are no longer working.

– Artem, hi! Tell us—how did you get into crypto in the first place? What year was it, how did your journey start, and how did you eventually become a co-founder of A01K?

Hi. I came into crypto in 2019—that was when I bought my first crypto asset. At the time, I was working at the State Land Cadastre of Kyiv region, sitting in an office and doing an internship. Bitcoin was around $3,000 back then and almost immediately started going up. I made money, and that was the moment I realized I didn’t want an office life anymore and wanted to understand this space more deeply.

I started specifically with trading—scalping crypto. I also tried Forex, but scalping worked best for me, and that’s where I made my first real money. Scalping essentially helped me grow my deposit from almost nothing and build a solid amount over a couple of years.

Later, I became interested in expanding further—not just trading, but also investing, reinvesting, and participating in sales. I saw that others were getting good results, especially with airdrops—you could make serious money there as well. That’s how my life gradually became fully connected to both trading and crypto.

As for the community side: I have a partner, Sergey. He’s quite public and has a large audience. A big part of building A01K came from his public presence.

– How did that partnership and the creation of A01K actually happen?

It wasn’t an accident or pure luck—I was working toward it. Sergey and I met, started communicating, and over time it grew from a friendship into a partnership.

We started very small, step by step, and eventually built a full ecosystem. I and the other partners mainly handle operations—making sure everything is structured, running properly, that there are quality products, a strong team, and a clear direction for people to join.

Sergey, on the other hand, focused on visibility—making sure people actually heard about us. In many ways, the community was built through his public presence. In Ukraine, he was one of the first people to talk openly about crypto.

I personally heard about him completely by chance. We weren’t friends or connected in any way. At that time, crypto wasn’t really discussed in the media—not just in Ukraine, but across the entire CIS region.

– How is your ecosystem structured today? Besides trading and “classic crypto” activities like ICOs, retrodrops, and on-chain activity—are there other areas you’re developing?

Our two main directions are trading and crypto, but over time we’ve also developed sub-directions.

Right now, we’re actively growing GM Agency—a marketing agency where we help projects with marketing, PR, and KOL collaborations. We can close these requests quickly thanks to direct connections. We also have a small technical direction—a team that builds products and Telegram applications.

– You’ve said that the market has changed significantly compared to 2020–2022. How do you see the current situation? Where are people going now—classic trading or crypto directions like retrodrops and on-chain activity?

The market has definitely changed, but that doesn’t mean it’s worse—it’s just different. In 2021, there were many fast money stories. But there were also plenty of opportunities in 2024–2025—the market just operated under different rules. If ICOs were the main model in 2021, and almost everyone was abusing them, the market later matured.

In 2024, many of the biggest gains weren’t made by traders, but by people launching their own meme coins. These weren’t unreachable teams—just regular people who previously made money on Bitcoin and ICOs and then started building their own projects.

Many say, “That will never happen again,” but that’s not true—the form just changes. Onchain trading (“degen”) emerged as an alternative to the ICO model: the same upside, but with more complexity and psychological pressure. Right now, the market is in a phase of correction and consolidation, which is normal—most of the time, markets either go sideways or down.

In the end, those who win are the ones who stay flexible—who adapt and let go of outdated models. Crypto is very young, around 15 years old, and constantly changing. You can’t get stuck in what used to work.

– Crypto is extremely dynamic, with trends changing every few months. How do you adapt your education programs and explain to beginners what matters right now?

Trading is simpler in that sense—narratives and approaches change, but the fundamentals stay the same.

Crypto, on the other hand, is constantly evolving, so we have to be flexible and update education regularly. You can see this clearly in our academy updates. In 2024, we started with retrodrops, ICOs, investments, nodes, and NFTs—but later removed what stopped working.

Then we added degen trading and on-chain trading—how to find and trade meme coins. We constantly update the product: remove outdated content and add what’s relevant. Essentially, we evolve together with the market.

The latest major update was inter-exchange arbitrage, spreads, and funding rates. We added this block in spring and believe the timing was right—it’s now one of the most relevant and hyped narratives, especially among younger people in the CIS.

– What are you investing in long-term now, and are you speculating at all in the current market?

Right now, my portfolio is basically stagnant — and that’s fine. Occasionally, I enter position trades “on candles,” mostly to cover current expenses, but overall the market isn’t about active profits right now. I fixed most of my positions back in September, keeping only a small portion in BTC and ETH.

– Why did you decide to exit the market in September? What signals did you see?

There were three key reasons.

First—the chart. On higher timeframes, weakness was visible: price couldn’t break highs, there was no buyer. For me, that’s a strong signal—the chart rarely lies.

Second—fundamentals. A lot of positive news was coming out, but it stopped moving the price. Any news caused a small pump and was immediately sold off. That means the market was using news for distribution.

Third—crowd sentiment. Everyone was convinced the “altseason was just beginning.” There was euphoria everywhere—memes, BSC season, new listings, random assets doing multiples. That combination is a clear signal for me to exit.

Long-term, I’m looking at Bitcoin as an alternative to gold. The hype around gold at all-time highs looks suspicious to me—I wouldn’t be surprised if large players rotate out of gold into Bitcoin, which is simpler, more liquid, and has a fixed supply.

– Can October 2025 be considered the start of a bear market?

In my view, the bear market started back in September—when I exited. That was the last wave of euphoria, the final multiples, the peak FOMO. From September–October onward, we’ve essentially been in a bear market.

The question now is how long it will last. The world has accelerated, the halving effect is much weaker, and there’s a lot of liquidity in the system. I don’t think this bear market will be as long as previous ones. More likely, we’ll see constant local narratives and pumps—there won’t be a completely “dead” market with nothing to do.

– Are you looking at the stock market as a reference now? Do you use it as an indicator for crypto entries, or are you considering stock investments yourself?

Yes, right now I primarily watch the stock market. I might already be buying Bitcoin, but I want to see what equities do first. The S&P 500 and major indices are at all-time highs, while uncertainty is everywhere—Trump’s actions, the Fed leadership question, interest rate policy, unclear real inflation.

Markets don’t like uncertainty, especially at highs. Given geopolitics, trade wars, and economic risks, I believe a correction or even a flash crash is possible. That’s why I’m waiting. If stocks start correcting and pull crypto down, that’s when I’ll look for initial long-term entries. Long-term, Bitcoin is still my main focus — I’m just waiting for a better entry point.

– What principles helped you avoid blowing up after 2020–2021 and successfully go through the 2022–2023 bear market?

First — having a business helps a lot. People who rely only on crypto and pure speculation struggle psychologically in these phases. They immediately worry about income and survival. When you have a business, it still brings some revenue — not bull-market money, but enough to stay calm and avoid fear-based decisions.

Second — you always need something to do. In bear markets, we build: products, materials, projects. I believe the best thing to do in a bear market is to build. Some people study, some read, some build communities. When you’re busy, you’re not staring at charts asking, “Where should I put my money?” — which almost always leads to losses.

Third—long-term thinking. In 2022–2023, I bought Bitcoin at $16–20k. At the time, it didn’t bring any profit. But when I later closed those positions, they generated the biggest gains of the entire bull run. The same applies now: I can make moves that don’t bring income today, but I know that in 2–3 years, they’ll deliver the main result. That’s how this market works.

– What advice would you give to people who are in crypto now—either newcomers or those stuck in stagnation?

First—don’t be alone. When you’re alone with the market, it feels like you’re the only one struggling or doing something wrong. Talking to others — especially those who’ve already been through similar phases — helps a lot. Community is the foundation; it’s much easier to get through these periods together.

Second — if it gets really hard, it’s okay to take a break. A break doesn’t mean giving up. Many people resist this because of ego—it feels like stopping means the market “won.” But taking a pause for a month or two, switching focus to family, other activities, or learning is completely fine and often beneficial.

Overall, these phases are great for learning and rebuilding. When the market is flying, money comes easily and problems stay hidden. In stagnation, weaknesses become obvious—whether in product, marketing, or content. You start looking for new opportunities. Personally, in just a month and a half, I discovered two new directions I hadn’t noticed before. These markets teach you to think, adapt, and lay the foundation for the next cycle.
From Trading to Business: How Artem Onishchuk Adapts Strategies to the New MarketToday, our guest is Artem Onishchuk (Tema Ultra) — co-founder and CFO of A01K, the biggest trading community in CIS region, an entrepreneur and investor who has been working in crypto for more than 5 years. In this interview, Artem shares his view on the current market: what’s really happening right now, why many people feel stuck, and where to look for opportunities during a prolonged cycle. We discuss where he’s investing today, how his team adapts education to the realities of the current market rather than past bull runs, and which approaches are no longer working. – Artem, hi! Tell us—how did you get into crypto in the first place? What year was it, how did your journey start, and how did you eventually become a co-founder of A01K? Hi. I came into crypto in 2019—that was when I bought my first crypto asset. At the time, I was working at the State Land Cadastre of Kyiv region, sitting in an office and doing an internship. Bitcoin was around $3,000 back then and almost immediately started going up. I made money, and that was the moment I realized I didn’t want an office life anymore and wanted to understand this space more deeply. I started specifically with trading—scalping crypto. I also tried Forex, but scalping worked best for me, and that’s where I made my first real money. Scalping essentially helped me grow my deposit from almost nothing and build a solid amount over a couple of years. Later, I became interested in expanding further—not just trading, but also investing, reinvesting, and participating in sales. I saw that others were getting good results, especially with airdrops—you could make serious money there as well. That’s how my life gradually became fully connected to both trading and crypto. As for the community side: I have a partner, Sergey. He’s quite public and has a large audience. A big part of building A01K came from his public presence. – How did that partnership and the creation of A01K actually happen? It wasn’t an accident or pure luck—I was working toward it. Sergey and I met, started communicating, and over time it grew from a friendship into a partnership. We started very small, step by step, and eventually built a full ecosystem. I and the other partners mainly handle operations—making sure everything is structured, running properly, that there are quality products, a strong team, and a clear direction for people to join. Sergey, on the other hand, focused on visibility—making sure people actually heard about us. In many ways, the community was built through his public presence. In Ukraine, he was one of the first people to talk openly about crypto. I personally heard about him completely by chance. We weren’t friends or connected in any way. At that time, crypto wasn’t really discussed in the media—not just in Ukraine, but across the entire CIS region. – How is your ecosystem structured today? Besides trading and “classic crypto” activities like ICOs, retrodrops, and on-chain activity—are there other areas you’re developing? Our two main directions are trading and crypto, but over time we’ve also developed sub-directions. Right now, we’re actively growing GM Agency—a marketing agency where we help projects with marketing, PR, and KOL collaborations. We can close these requests quickly thanks to direct connections. We also have a small technical direction—a team that builds products and Telegram applications. – You’ve said that the market has changed significantly compared to 2020–2022. How do you see the current situation? Where are people going now—classic trading or crypto directions like retrodrops and on-chain activity? The market has definitely changed, but that doesn’t mean it’s worse—it’s just different. In 2021, there were many fast money stories. But there were also plenty of opportunities in 2024–2025—the market just operated under different rules. If ICOs were the main model in 2021, and almost everyone was abusing them, the market later matured. In 2024, many of the biggest gains weren’t made by traders, but by people launching their own meme coins. These weren’t unreachable teams—just regular people who previously made money on Bitcoin and ICOs and then started building their own projects. Many say, “That will never happen again,” but that’s not true—the form just changes. Onchain trading (“degen”) emerged as an alternative to the ICO model: the same upside, but with more complexity and psychological pressure. Right now, the market is in a phase of correction and consolidation, which is normal—most of the time, markets either go sideways or down. In the end, those who win are the ones who stay flexible—who adapt and let go of outdated models. Crypto is very young, around 15 years old, and constantly changing. You can’t get stuck in what used to work. – Crypto is extremely dynamic, with trends changing every few months. How do you adapt your education programs and explain to beginners what matters right now? Trading is simpler in that sense—narratives and approaches change, but the fundamentals stay the same. Crypto, on the other hand, is constantly evolving, so we have to be flexible and update education regularly. You can see this clearly in our academy updates. In 2024, we started with retrodrops, ICOs, investments, nodes, and NFTs—but later removed what stopped working. Then we added degen trading and on-chain trading—how to find and trade meme coins. We constantly update the product: remove outdated content and add what’s relevant. Essentially, we evolve together with the market. The latest major update was inter-exchange arbitrage, spreads, and funding rates. We added this block in spring and believe the timing was right—it’s now one of the most relevant and hyped narratives, especially among younger people in the CIS. – What are you investing in long-term now, and are you speculating at all in the current market? Right now, my portfolio is basically stagnant — and that’s fine. Occasionally, I enter position trades “on candles,” mostly to cover current expenses, but overall the market isn’t about active profits right now. I fixed most of my positions back in September, keeping only a small portion in BTC and ETH. – Why did you decide to exit the market in September? What signals did you see? There were three key reasons. First—the chart. On higher timeframes, weakness was visible: price couldn’t break highs, there was no buyer. For me, that’s a strong signal—the chart rarely lies. Second—fundamentals. A lot of positive news was coming out, but it stopped moving the price. Any news caused a small pump and was immediately sold off. That means the market was using news for distribution. Third—crowd sentiment. Everyone was convinced the “altseason was just beginning.” There was euphoria everywhere—memes, BSC season, new listings, random assets doing multiples. That combination is a clear signal for me to exit. Long-term, I’m looking at Bitcoin as an alternative to gold. The hype around gold at all-time highs looks suspicious to me—I wouldn’t be surprised if large players rotate out of gold into Bitcoin, which is simpler, more liquid, and has a fixed supply. – Can October 2025 be considered the start of a bear market? In my view, the bear market started back in September—when I exited. That was the last wave of euphoria, the final multiples, the peak FOMO. From September–October onward, we’ve essentially been in a bear market. The question now is how long it will last. The world has accelerated, the halving effect is much weaker, and there’s a lot of liquidity in the system. I don’t think this bear market will be as long as previous ones. More likely, we’ll see constant local narratives and pumps—there won’t be a completely “dead” market with nothing to do. – Are you looking at the stock market as a reference now? Do you use it as an indicator for crypto entries, or are you considering stock investments yourself? Yes, right now I primarily watch the stock market. I might already be buying Bitcoin, but I want to see what equities do first. The S&P 500 and major indices are at all-time highs, while uncertainty is everywhere—Trump’s actions, the Fed leadership question, interest rate policy, unclear real inflation. Markets don’t like uncertainty, especially at highs. Given geopolitics, trade wars, and economic risks, I believe a correction or even a flash crash is possible. That’s why I’m waiting. If stocks start correcting and pull crypto down, that’s when I’ll look for initial long-term entries. Long-term, Bitcoin is still my main focus — I’m just waiting for a better entry point. – What principles helped you avoid blowing up after 2020–2021 and successfully go through the 2022–2023 bear market? First — having a business helps a lot. People who rely only on crypto and pure speculation struggle psychologically in these phases. They immediately worry about income and survival. When you have a business, it still brings some revenue — not bull-market money, but enough to stay calm and avoid fear-based decisions. Second — you always need something to do. In bear markets, we build: products, materials, projects. I believe the best thing to do in a bear market is to build. Some people study, some read, some build communities. When you’re busy, you’re not staring at charts asking, “Where should I put my money?” — which almost always leads to losses. Third—long-term thinking. In 2022–2023, I bought Bitcoin at $16–20k. At the time, it didn’t bring any profit. But when I later closed those positions, they generated the biggest gains of the entire bull run. The same applies now: I can make moves that don’t bring income today, but I know that in 2–3 years, they’ll deliver the main result. That’s how this market works. – What advice would you give to people who are in crypto now—either newcomers or those stuck in stagnation? First—don’t be alone. When you’re alone with the market, it feels like you’re the only one struggling or doing something wrong. Talking to others — especially those who’ve already been through similar phases — helps a lot. Community is the foundation; it’s much easier to get through these periods together. Second — if it gets really hard, it’s okay to take a break. A break doesn’t mean giving up. Many people resist this because of ego—it feels like stopping means the market “won.” But taking a pause for a month or two, switching focus to family, other activities, or learning is completely fine and often beneficial. Overall, these phases are great for learning and rebuilding. When the market is flying, money comes easily and problems stay hidden. In stagnation, weaknesses become obvious—whether in product, marketing, or content. You start looking for new opportunities. Personally, in just a month and a half, I discovered two new directions I hadn’t noticed before. These markets teach you to think, adapt, and lay the foundation for the next cycle.

From Trading to Business: How Artem Onishchuk Adapts Strategies to the New Market

Today, our guest is Artem Onishchuk (Tema Ultra) — co-founder and CFO of A01K, the biggest trading community in CIS region, an entrepreneur and investor who has been working in crypto for more than 5 years.

In this interview, Artem shares his view on the current market: what’s really happening right now, why many people feel stuck, and where to look for opportunities during a prolonged cycle. We discuss where he’s investing today, how his team adapts education to the realities of the current market rather than past bull runs, and which approaches are no longer working.

– Artem, hi! Tell us—how did you get into crypto in the first place? What year was it, how did your journey start, and how did you eventually become a co-founder of A01K?

Hi. I came into crypto in 2019—that was when I bought my first crypto asset. At the time, I was working at the State Land Cadastre of Kyiv region, sitting in an office and doing an internship. Bitcoin was around $3,000 back then and almost immediately started going up. I made money, and that was the moment I realized I didn’t want an office life anymore and wanted to understand this space more deeply.

I started specifically with trading—scalping crypto. I also tried Forex, but scalping worked best for me, and that’s where I made my first real money. Scalping essentially helped me grow my deposit from almost nothing and build a solid amount over a couple of years.

Later, I became interested in expanding further—not just trading, but also investing, reinvesting, and participating in sales. I saw that others were getting good results, especially with airdrops—you could make serious money there as well. That’s how my life gradually became fully connected to both trading and crypto.

As for the community side: I have a partner, Sergey. He’s quite public and has a large audience. A big part of building A01K came from his public presence.

– How did that partnership and the creation of A01K actually happen?

It wasn’t an accident or pure luck—I was working toward it. Sergey and I met, started communicating, and over time it grew from a friendship into a partnership.

We started very small, step by step, and eventually built a full ecosystem. I and the other partners mainly handle operations—making sure everything is structured, running properly, that there are quality products, a strong team, and a clear direction for people to join.

Sergey, on the other hand, focused on visibility—making sure people actually heard about us. In many ways, the community was built through his public presence. In Ukraine, he was one of the first people to talk openly about crypto.

I personally heard about him completely by chance. We weren’t friends or connected in any way. At that time, crypto wasn’t really discussed in the media—not just in Ukraine, but across the entire CIS region.

– How is your ecosystem structured today? Besides trading and “classic crypto” activities like ICOs, retrodrops, and on-chain activity—are there other areas you’re developing?

Our two main directions are trading and crypto, but over time we’ve also developed sub-directions.

Right now, we’re actively growing GM Agency—a marketing agency where we help projects with marketing, PR, and KOL collaborations. We can close these requests quickly thanks to direct connections. We also have a small technical direction—a team that builds products and Telegram applications.

– You’ve said that the market has changed significantly compared to 2020–2022. How do you see the current situation? Where are people going now—classic trading or crypto directions like retrodrops and on-chain activity?

The market has definitely changed, but that doesn’t mean it’s worse—it’s just different. In 2021, there were many fast money stories. But there were also plenty of opportunities in 2024–2025—the market just operated under different rules.
If ICOs were the main model in 2021, and almost everyone was abusing them, the market later matured.

In 2024, many of the biggest gains weren’t made by traders, but by people launching their own meme coins. These weren’t unreachable teams—just regular people who previously made money on Bitcoin and ICOs and then started building their own projects.

Many say, “That will never happen again,” but that’s not true—the form just changes. Onchain trading (“degen”) emerged as an alternative to the ICO model: the same upside, but with more complexity and psychological pressure. Right now, the market is in a phase of correction and consolidation, which is normal—most of the time, markets either go sideways or down.

In the end, those who win are the ones who stay flexible—who adapt and let go of outdated models. Crypto is very young, around 15 years old, and constantly changing. You can’t get stuck in what used to work.

– Crypto is extremely dynamic, with trends changing every few months. How do you adapt your education programs and explain to beginners what matters right now?

Trading is simpler in that sense—narratives and approaches change, but the fundamentals stay the same.

Crypto, on the other hand, is constantly evolving, so we have to be flexible and update education regularly. You can see this clearly in our academy updates. In 2024, we started with retrodrops, ICOs, investments, nodes, and NFTs—but later removed what stopped working.

Then we added degen trading and on-chain trading—how to find and trade meme coins. We constantly update the product: remove outdated content and add what’s relevant. Essentially, we evolve together with the market.

The latest major update was inter-exchange arbitrage, spreads, and funding rates. We added this block in spring and believe the timing was right—it’s now one of the most relevant and hyped narratives, especially among younger people in the CIS.

– What are you investing in long-term now, and are you speculating at all in the current market?

Right now, my portfolio is basically stagnant — and that’s fine. Occasionally, I enter position trades “on candles,” mostly to cover current expenses, but overall the market isn’t about active profits right now. I fixed most of my positions back in September, keeping only a small portion in BTC and ETH.

– Why did you decide to exit the market in September? What signals did you see?

There were three key reasons.

First—the chart. On higher timeframes, weakness was visible: price couldn’t break highs, there was no buyer. For me, that’s a strong signal—the chart rarely lies.

Second—fundamentals. A lot of positive news was coming out, but it stopped moving the price. Any news caused a small pump and was immediately sold off. That means the market was using news for distribution.

Third—crowd sentiment. Everyone was convinced the “altseason was just beginning.” There was euphoria everywhere—memes, BSC season, new listings, random assets doing multiples. That combination is a clear signal for me to exit.

Long-term, I’m looking at Bitcoin as an alternative to gold. The hype around gold at all-time highs looks suspicious to me—I wouldn’t be surprised if large players rotate out of gold into Bitcoin, which is simpler, more liquid, and has a fixed supply.

– Can October 2025 be considered the start of a bear market?

In my view, the bear market started back in September—when I exited. That was the last wave of euphoria, the final multiples, the peak FOMO. From September–October onward, we’ve essentially been in a bear market.

The question now is how long it will last. The world has accelerated, the halving effect is much weaker, and there’s a lot of liquidity in the system. I don’t think this bear market will be as long as previous ones. More likely, we’ll see constant local narratives and pumps—there won’t be a completely “dead” market with nothing to do.

– Are you looking at the stock market as a reference now? Do you use it as an indicator for crypto entries, or are you considering stock investments yourself?

Yes, right now I primarily watch the stock market. I might already be buying Bitcoin, but I want to see what equities do first. The S&P 500 and major indices are at all-time highs, while uncertainty is everywhere—Trump’s actions, the Fed leadership question, interest rate policy, unclear real inflation.

Markets don’t like uncertainty, especially at highs. Given geopolitics, trade wars, and economic risks, I believe a correction or even a flash crash is possible. That’s why I’m waiting. If stocks start correcting and pull crypto down, that’s when I’ll look for initial long-term entries. Long-term, Bitcoin is still my main focus — I’m just waiting for a better entry point.

– What principles helped you avoid blowing up after 2020–2021 and successfully go through the 2022–2023 bear market?

First — having a business helps a lot. People who rely only on crypto and pure speculation struggle psychologically in these phases. They immediately worry about income and survival. When you have a business, it still brings some revenue — not bull-market money, but enough to stay calm and avoid fear-based decisions.

Second — you always need something to do. In bear markets, we build: products, materials, projects. I believe the best thing to do in a bear market is to build. Some people study, some read, some build communities. When you’re busy, you’re not staring at charts asking, “Where should I put my money?” — which almost always leads to losses.

Third—long-term thinking. In 2022–2023, I bought Bitcoin at $16–20k. At the time, it didn’t bring any profit. But when I later closed those positions, they generated the biggest gains of the entire bull run. The same applies now: I can make moves that don’t bring income today, but I know that in 2–3 years, they’ll deliver the main result. That’s how this market works.

– What advice would you give to people who are in crypto now—either newcomers or those stuck in stagnation?

First—don’t be alone. When you’re alone with the market, it feels like you’re the only one struggling or doing something wrong. Talking to others — especially those who’ve already been through similar phases — helps a lot. Community is the foundation; it’s much easier to get through these periods together.

Second — if it gets really hard, it’s okay to take a break. A break doesn’t mean giving up. Many people resist this because of ego—it feels like stopping means the market “won.” But taking a pause for a month or two, switching focus to family, other activities, or learning is completely fine and often beneficial.

Overall, these phases are great for learning and rebuilding. When the market is flying, money comes easily and problems stay hidden. In stagnation, weaknesses become obvious—whether in product, marketing, or content. You start looking for new opportunities. Personally, in just a month and a half, I discovered two new directions I hadn’t noticed before. These markets teach you to think, adapt, and lay the foundation for the next cycle.
Affiliate World Global Dubai 2026: the Offline Meeting Place for the World’s Top Affiliate and Ec...Affiliate World Dubai is back on 4-5 March and is set to break the record for our biggest performance marketing conference yet. The world’s #1 super affiliate event will bring together 7,000+ affiliates, ecommerce entrepreneurs, affiliate networks, traffic sources and industry companies for what promises to be an unmissable two days of networking, learning and partying. You will network with the industry’s savviest marketers. Get exclusive offers from companies exhibiting, like AdMaven, Chargebacks911, and Traffic Partner B.V. Absorb mastermind-level content on stage from industry experts such as Maor “The Wolf” Benaim (CEO, The Wolf Marketing), Marin Ištvanić (Head of Performance, Inspire), Ashley Wright (Founder & CEO, Social Tale), and Carmen Muley (CEO, Paragon Social Commerce) who will share their secret strategies and real case studies for what’s working right now in affiliate and ecommerce marketing. Here’s what’s included in your ticket: 2-day access to 300+ exhibitors in the marketplace 35+ live speeches, panels & Q&As 5+ tracks like Meta Ads, TikTok Ads, Google Ads, Native Ads, Ecommerce Ads and more, with hyper-focused sessions on stages, followed by Networking Mixers to meet other affiliates interested in the same topics as you Early access to the Official AWC Networking App New to AW? You get exclusive access to the First-Timers’ Networking Event It’s literally the smartest investment you will make to set you off in the right direction for 2026. Reserve Your Booth Now!  https://affiliateworldconferences.com/dubai/booths

Affiliate World Global Dubai 2026: the Offline Meeting Place for the World’s Top Affiliate and Ec...

Affiliate World Dubai is back on 4-5 March and is set to break the record for our biggest performance marketing conference yet.

The world’s #1 super affiliate event will bring together 7,000+ affiliates, ecommerce entrepreneurs, affiliate networks, traffic sources and industry companies for what promises to be an unmissable two days of networking, learning and partying.

You will network with the industry’s savviest marketers.

Get exclusive offers from companies exhibiting, like AdMaven, Chargebacks911, and Traffic Partner B.V.

Absorb mastermind-level content on stage from industry experts such as Maor “The Wolf” Benaim (CEO, The Wolf Marketing), Marin Ištvanić (Head of Performance, Inspire), Ashley Wright (Founder & CEO, Social Tale), and Carmen Muley (CEO, Paragon Social Commerce) who will share their secret strategies and real case studies for what’s working right now in affiliate and ecommerce marketing.

Here’s what’s included in your ticket:

2-day access to 300+ exhibitors in the marketplace

35+ live speeches, panels & Q&As

5+ tracks like Meta Ads, TikTok Ads, Google Ads, Native Ads, Ecommerce Ads and more, with hyper-focused sessions on stages, followed by Networking Mixers to meet other affiliates interested in the same topics as you

Early access to the Official AWC Networking App

New to AW? You get exclusive access to the First-Timers’ Networking Event

It’s literally the smartest investment you will make to set you off in the right direction for 2026.

Reserve Your Booth Now!  https://affiliateworldconferences.com/dubai/booths
Affiliate World Global Dubai 2026: The Offline Meeting Place for the World’s Top Affiliate and Ec...Affiliate World Dubai is back on 4-5 March and is set to break the record for our biggest performance marketing conference yet. The world’s #1 super affiliate event will bring together 7,000+ affiliates, ecommerce entrepreneurs, affiliate networks, traffic sources and industry companies for what promises to be an unmissable two days of networking, learning and partying. You will network with the industry’s savviest marketers. Get exclusive offers from companies exhibiting, like AdMaven, Chargebacks911, and Traffic Partner B.V. Absorb mastermind-level content on stage from industry experts such as Maor “The Wolf” Benaim (CEO, The Wolf Marketing), Marin Ištvanić (Head of Performance, Inspire), Ashley Wright (Founder & CEO, Social Tale), and Carmen Muley (CEO, Paragon Social Commerce) who will share their secret strategies and real case studies for what’s working right now in affiliate and ecommerce marketing. Here’s what’s included in your ticket: 2-day access to 300+ exhibitors in the marketplace 35+ live speeches, panels & Q&As 5+ tracks like Meta Ads, TikTok Ads, Google Ads, Native Ads, Ecommerce Ads and more, with hyper-focused sessions on stages, followed by Networking Mixers to meet other affiliates interested in the same topics as you Early access to the Official AWC Networking App New to AW? You get exclusive access to the First-Timers’ Networking Event It’s literally the smartest investment you will make to set you off in the right direction for 2026. Reserve Your Booth Now!  https://affiliateworldconferences.com/dubai/booths

Affiliate World Global Dubai 2026: The Offline Meeting Place for the World’s Top Affiliate and Ec...

Affiliate World Dubai is back on 4-5 March and is set to break the record for our biggest performance marketing conference yet.

The world’s #1 super affiliate event will bring together 7,000+ affiliates, ecommerce entrepreneurs, affiliate networks, traffic sources and industry companies for what promises to be an unmissable two days of networking, learning and partying.

You will network with the industry’s savviest marketers.

Get exclusive offers from companies exhibiting, like AdMaven, Chargebacks911, and Traffic Partner B.V.

Absorb mastermind-level content on stage from industry experts such as Maor “The Wolf” Benaim (CEO, The Wolf Marketing), Marin Ištvanić (Head of Performance, Inspire), Ashley Wright (Founder & CEO, Social Tale), and Carmen Muley (CEO, Paragon Social Commerce) who will share their secret strategies and real case studies for what’s working right now in affiliate and ecommerce marketing.

Here’s what’s included in your ticket:

2-day access to 300+ exhibitors in the marketplace

35+ live speeches, panels & Q&As

5+ tracks like Meta Ads, TikTok Ads, Google Ads, Native Ads, Ecommerce Ads and more, with hyper-focused sessions on stages, followed by Networking Mixers to meet other affiliates interested in the same topics as you

Early access to the Official AWC Networking App

New to AW? You get exclusive access to the First-Timers’ Networking Event

It’s literally the smartest investment you will make to set you off in the right direction for 2026.

Reserve Your Booth Now!  https://affiliateworldconferences.com/dubai/booths
Gold Trades Like a Risk Asset As Volatility Spikes Above BitcoinGold, long considered a global safe haven, is now showing price behavior more commonly associated with speculative assets. According to article by GuruFocus and Bloomberg data, the metal’s 30-day volatility has surged above 44%, exceeding Bitcoin’s roughly 39% and reaching its highest level since the 2008 financial crisis. This inversion is highly unusual. Since Bitcoin’s launch nearly 17 years ago, gold has been more volatile than the cryptocurrency only twice — most recently in May last year, during a spike in global trade tensions linked to tariff threats from US President Donald Trump. From Safe Haven to High Volatility Asset The recent spike in gold volatility comes after an aggressive rally followed by a sharp correction. As of February 3, gold is trading near $4,900, down significantly from last week’s peak close to $5,600. The drop marks the metal’s steepest decline in more than a decade. The earlier surge was fueled by a combination of macro and geopolitical factors: rising global uncertainty, fears of currency debasement, growing concerns around the Federal Reserve’s independence, and heightened geopolitical risks. Market participants also point to heavy buying activity from Chinese investors, which may have amplified the move. Crypto Fails to Capture Risk-Off Flows Bitcoin, however, has not benefited from the same dynamics. The asset fell to a 10-month low following a weekend sell-off and is now down more than 40% from its October peak. The price action suggests there has been little capital rotation from traditional safe havens into crypto — despite a weaker dollar and escalating geopolitical stress. More broadly, precious metals such as gold and silver are attracting increasing investor attention, while crypto markets remain under pressure. Bitcoin briefly touched $75,000, while Ethereum declined toward $2,200, further dampening market sentiment and sidelining risk appetite across the sector. For now, volatility is no longer a defining feature exclusive to crypto. As gold’s price swings intensify, the traditional boundaries between “safe” and “speculative” assets are beginning to blur.

Gold Trades Like a Risk Asset As Volatility Spikes Above Bitcoin

Gold, long considered a global safe haven, is now showing price behavior more commonly associated with speculative assets. According to article by GuruFocus and Bloomberg data, the metal’s 30-day volatility has surged above 44%, exceeding Bitcoin’s roughly 39% and reaching its highest level since the 2008 financial crisis.

This inversion is highly unusual. Since Bitcoin’s launch nearly 17 years ago, gold has been more volatile than the cryptocurrency only twice — most recently in May last year, during a spike in global trade tensions linked to tariff threats from US President Donald Trump.

From Safe Haven to High Volatility Asset

The recent spike in gold volatility comes after an aggressive rally followed by a sharp correction. As of February 3, gold is trading near $4,900, down significantly from last week’s peak close to $5,600. The drop marks the metal’s steepest decline in more than a decade.

The earlier surge was fueled by a combination of macro and geopolitical factors: rising global uncertainty, fears of currency debasement, growing concerns around the Federal Reserve’s independence, and heightened geopolitical risks. Market participants also point to heavy buying activity from Chinese investors, which may have amplified the move.

Crypto Fails to Capture Risk-Off Flows

Bitcoin, however, has not benefited from the same dynamics. The asset fell to a 10-month low following a weekend sell-off and is now down more than 40% from its October peak. The price action suggests there has been little capital rotation from traditional safe havens into crypto — despite a weaker dollar and escalating geopolitical stress.

More broadly, precious metals such as gold and silver are attracting increasing investor attention, while crypto markets remain under pressure. Bitcoin briefly touched $75,000, while Ethereum declined toward $2,200, further dampening market sentiment and sidelining risk appetite across the sector.

For now, volatility is no longer a defining feature exclusive to crypto. As gold’s price swings intensify, the traditional boundaries between “safe” and “speculative” assets are beginning to blur.
Gold Trades Like a Risk Asset as Volatility Spikes Above BitcoinGold, long considered a global safe haven, is now showing price behavior more commonly associated with speculative assets. According to article by GuruFocus and Bloomberg data, the metal’s 30-day volatility has surged above 44%, exceeding Bitcoin’s roughly 39% and reaching its highest level since the 2008 financial crisis. This inversion is highly unusual. Since Bitcoin’s launch nearly 17 years ago, gold has been more volatile than the cryptocurrency only twice — most recently in May last year, during a spike in global trade tensions linked to tariff threats from US President Donald Trump. From Safe Haven to High Volatility Asset The recent spike in gold volatility comes after an aggressive rally followed by a sharp correction. As of February 3, gold is trading near $4,900, down significantly from last week’s peak close to $5,600. The drop marks the metal’s steepest decline in more than a decade. The earlier surge was fueled by a combination of macro and geopolitical factors: rising global uncertainty, fears of currency debasement, growing concerns around the Federal Reserve’s independence, and heightened geopolitical risks. Market participants also point to heavy buying activity from Chinese investors, which may have amplified the move. Crypto Fails to Capture Risk-Off Flows Bitcoin, however, has not benefited from the same dynamics. The asset fell to a 10-month low following a weekend sell-off and is now down more than 40% from its October peak. The price action suggests there has been little capital rotation from traditional safe havens into crypto — despite a weaker dollar and escalating geopolitical stress. More broadly, precious metals such as gold and silver are attracting increasing investor attention, while crypto markets remain under pressure. Bitcoin briefly touched $75,000, while Ethereum declined toward $2,200, further dampening market sentiment and sidelining risk appetite across the sector. For now, volatility is no longer a defining feature exclusive to crypto. As gold’s price swings intensify, the traditional boundaries between “safe” and “speculative” assets are beginning to blur.

Gold Trades Like a Risk Asset as Volatility Spikes Above Bitcoin

Gold, long considered a global safe haven, is now showing price behavior more commonly associated with speculative assets. According to article by GuruFocus and Bloomberg data, the metal’s 30-day volatility has surged above 44%, exceeding Bitcoin’s roughly 39% and reaching its highest level since the 2008 financial crisis.

This inversion is highly unusual. Since Bitcoin’s launch nearly 17 years ago, gold has been more volatile than the cryptocurrency only twice — most recently in May last year, during a spike in global trade tensions linked to tariff threats from US President Donald Trump.

From Safe Haven to High Volatility Asset

The recent spike in gold volatility comes after an aggressive rally followed by a sharp correction. As of February 3, gold is trading near $4,900, down significantly from last week’s peak close to $5,600. The drop marks the metal’s steepest decline in more than a decade.

The earlier surge was fueled by a combination of macro and geopolitical factors: rising global uncertainty, fears of currency debasement, growing concerns around the Federal Reserve’s independence, and heightened geopolitical risks. Market participants also point to heavy buying activity from Chinese investors, which may have amplified the move.

Crypto Fails to Capture Risk-Off Flows

Bitcoin, however, has not benefited from the same dynamics. The asset fell to a 10-month low following a weekend sell-off and is now down more than 40% from its October peak. The price action suggests there has been little capital rotation from traditional safe havens into crypto — despite a weaker dollar and escalating geopolitical stress.

More broadly, precious metals such as gold and silver are attracting increasing investor attention, while crypto markets remain under pressure. Bitcoin briefly touched $75,000, while Ethereum declined toward $2,200, further dampening market sentiment and sidelining risk appetite across the sector.

For now, volatility is no longer a defining feature exclusive to crypto. As gold’s price swings intensify, the traditional boundaries between “safe” and “speculative” assets are beginning to blur.
Gamma Prime Brings the Tokenized Capital Summit to Hong Kong on Feb 9, Highlighting Its Tokenized...Gamma Prime, a tokenized marketplace for private investments focused on hard-to-access, non-correlated assets, will host the Tokenized Capital Summit 2026 in Hong Kong on February 9. The event is expected to attract more than 3,500 participants, including representatives from family offices, investment firms, and other institutional investors. The speaker lineup includes Yat Siu, Nenter Chow, Andrew Robinson (Head of Institutional Coverage at Coinbase), Adrian Tan (Head of Binance VIP & Institutional), and Akshat Vaidya (Co-Founder of Maelstrom), along with other industry leaders. Together, the speakers represent more than $20 billion in assets under management, positioning the Tokenized Capital Summit 2026 Hong Kong as one of the key industry events of the year. Gamma Prime’s Product Gamma Prime operates a compliant and secure marketplace for private investments, built to provide access to opportunities that are typically difficult to reach. The platform focuses on non-correlated yield, offering investors a practical way to diversify their portfolios beyond public markets. By adhering to regulatory requirements across multiple jurisdictions, Gamma Prime is developing into a global marketplace for hedge funds, venture capital, private equity, and other illiquid private assets. This approach enables funds to reach new institutional partners, family offices, and accredited investors worldwide, while expanding the range of investment opportunities available on the platform. The company’s leadership team includes DeFi builders, professionals from traditional finance, and Stanford PhDs, combining strong experience in blockchain innovation with institutional-grade governance and operational discipline. Connecting Traditional Markets and Tokenization The Tokenized Capital Summit marks an important milestone for the institutional web3 sector. It brings together participants from traditional finance and leaders in tokenization, helping both groups better understand ongoing market developments. Through these events, Gamma Prime demonstrates its commitment to opening global access to formerly fragmented and inaccessible private investments. The Tokenized Capital Summit 2026 in Hong Kong, held on February 9, also highlights how institutional investors, family offices, and Web3 companies are increasingly working together to shape the next phase of the financial industry. About Gamma Prime Gamma Prime is a tokenized marketplace of curated private investments specializing in hard-to-find uncorrelated returns – hedge funds, private credit, and other alternatives across both digital and real world asset classes. Fully regulatory compliant and built with institutional security standards, Gamma Prime is positioned to become the leading global platform for hedge funds, venture capital, private equity, and other illiquid private investment opportunities. The company was founded by a team of DeFi pioneers, traditional finance professionals, and Stanford PhDs.

Gamma Prime Brings the Tokenized Capital Summit to Hong Kong on Feb 9, Highlighting Its Tokenized...

Gamma Prime, a tokenized marketplace for private investments focused on hard-to-access, non-correlated assets, will host the Tokenized Capital Summit 2026 in Hong Kong on February 9. The event is expected to attract more than 3,500 participants, including representatives from family offices, investment firms, and other institutional investors.

The speaker lineup includes Yat Siu, Nenter Chow, Andrew Robinson (Head of Institutional Coverage at Coinbase), Adrian Tan (Head of Binance VIP & Institutional), and Akshat Vaidya (Co-Founder of Maelstrom), along with other industry leaders. Together, the speakers represent more than $20 billion in assets under management, positioning the Tokenized Capital Summit 2026 Hong Kong as one of the key industry events of the year.

Gamma Prime’s Product

Gamma Prime operates a compliant and secure marketplace for private investments, built to provide access to opportunities that are typically difficult to reach. The platform focuses on non-correlated yield, offering investors a practical way to diversify their portfolios beyond public markets.

By adhering to regulatory requirements across multiple jurisdictions, Gamma Prime is developing into a global marketplace for hedge funds, venture capital, private equity, and other illiquid private assets. This approach enables funds to reach new institutional partners, family offices, and accredited investors worldwide, while expanding the range of investment opportunities available on the platform.

The company’s leadership team includes DeFi builders, professionals from traditional finance, and Stanford PhDs, combining strong experience in blockchain innovation with institutional-grade governance and operational discipline.

Connecting Traditional Markets and Tokenization

The Tokenized Capital Summit marks an important milestone for the institutional web3 sector. It brings together participants from traditional finance and leaders in tokenization, helping both groups better understand ongoing market developments.

Through these events, Gamma Prime demonstrates its commitment to opening global access to formerly fragmented and inaccessible private investments. The Tokenized Capital Summit 2026 in Hong Kong, held on February 9, also highlights how institutional investors, family offices, and Web3 companies are increasingly working together to shape the next phase of the financial industry.

About Gamma Prime

Gamma Prime is a tokenized marketplace of curated private investments specializing in hard-to-find uncorrelated returns – hedge funds, private credit, and other alternatives across both digital and real world asset classes. Fully regulatory compliant and built with institutional security standards, Gamma Prime is positioned to become the leading global platform for hedge funds, venture capital, private equity, and other illiquid private investment opportunities. The company was founded by a team of DeFi pioneers, traditional finance professionals, and Stanford PhDs.
EMTECH INVEST DAVOS 2026 Where Execution Met Global Decision-Making Davos, Switzerland | January ...During the World Economic Forum week in Davos, EmTech Invest convened an invitation-only gathering of global investors, policymakers, founders, scientists, and leaders, focused on the technological trends of 2026. Hosted at the Grand Hotel Belvédère and Mountain Plaza Hotel, EmTech Invest reaffirmed its position as one of Davos’ most strategically relevant private events — where advanced technologies meet capital, regulation, and real-world deployment. “The world does not lack ideas — it lacks brave execution,” said Alena Yudina, Founder of EmTech Invest. “Progress happens when technology, capital, and governance dance together.” Over three days, EmTech Invest delivered a tightly curated program addressing artificial intelligence, medical technologies, digital assets, governance, longevity, and institutional-grade innovation.  Day One | January 20 The Davos Masterclass — Co-Hosted by BlockBuzz and EmTech Invest The program opened at the Grand Hotel Belvédère with a closed-door morning masterclass. Designed as a high-signal, off-the-record forum, the session brought together leaders such as Clayton Thomas (Founder of ROOT Brands), Wendy Starland (Co-Founder & President of MusicSoul), Dr. Lisa Corsa (Founder of Premier Therapy Solutions), Dr. Christina Rahm (CEO of DRC Ventures), Riadh Bouaziz (Founder of RKF Luxury Linen), Jessica Chaijaya (President of United Society Council) — setting the strategic tone for the week and prioritizing substance over spectacle. Days Two & Three | January 21–22 Technology, AI, Regulation & Capital The core program continued at the Mountain Plaza Hotel with over 500 guests, and focused discussions on applied AI, blockchain infrastructure, capital strategy, and regulatory frameworks shaping global innovation. AI in Action: Scaling Innovation Across Tech, Energy, Grid Systems & Media Moderated by Liz Perkins (The Sunday Telegraph), the panel explored real-world deployment of AI across operational environments. Speakers examined how AI is already embedded into software development, decision-making processes, and large-scale energy and infrastructure systems. Cully Cavnes (Crusoe Energy Systems) shared practical experience deploying AI at infrastructure scale, alongside insights from Yuval Dvir (SandboxAQ) and Sandra Trittin (Futurize Energy). The discussion underscored that AI has moved beyond experimentation and is now a core operational layer across critical industries. Keynote: Creating Abundance and Avoiding the Zero-Sum Trap: Prioritising Creation over Reduction for Responsible AI Yuval Dvir, Senior Advisor at SandboxAQ, delivered a keynote challenging efficiency-only narratives around AI. He introduced Large Quantitative Models (LQMs) as a framework for long-term value creation, scientific expansion, and sustainable economic growth. Blockchain Beyond Speculation: Infrastructure & Enterprise Adoption Moderated by Sheraz Ahmed, this panel examined blockchain’s transition from speculative assets to foundational infrastructure. Leaders from the Filecoin Foundation, Cardano Foundation, Hashgraph Association, BostonTrading, and Nethermind discussed enterprise adoption, public-goods infrastructure, protocol scalability, and institutional standards. Keynote: Capital Allocation in a Fragmented Financial System Todd Ault, Founder of Ault & Company, addressed capital strategy in an era shaped by financial fragmentation, de-banking, and systemic risk, highlighting the growing need for resilient investment models beyond traditional banking frameworks. Keynote: Chris Voss — Never Split the Difference Former FBI lead hostage negotiator Chris Voss shared practical frameworks from his bestselling book Never Split the Difference, applying high-stakes negotiation principles to leadership, deal-making, and decision-making under pressure. Unstoppable Women Moderated by award-winning executive coach Ellen Mannaer, the Unstoppable Women panel brought together leaders from business, investment, philanthropy, and creative industries. Speakers, including Wendy Starland, Maya Marburger, Dr. Christina Rahm, and Jessica Chaijaya discussed leadership under pressure, responsibility, and long-term impact. Investor Reception An exclusive Investor Reception started with a panel on Investment Strategies, joined by Swiss Entrepreneur Patrizia Laeri from elleXX and Israeli investor Naor Baruch from AlgoBlessed. The panel and reception were supported by VNTR Capital, Network VC Group, Black River Ventures, and more than 200 guests, strengthening direct connections between global innovation and institutional capital. Books Presentations An intellectual highlight of EmTech Invest 2026 was the presentation of Decoding Despair: How AI Is Reshaping Psychiatry by Mariam Khayretdinova, Founder & CEO of Brainify.AI. Published by Wiley (2026), the book explores how artificial intelligence can overcome structural limitations of modern psychiatry, offering a practical framework for innovation in diagnostics, research, and next-generation treatment models. Global release: January 27, 2026 · Available on Amazon: https://a.co/d/i9m0TRU The program also featured a special book presentation by Chris Voss, former FBI lead negotiator and bestselling author, who introduced his upcoming book Lead with Empathy. The work focuses on empathy-driven leadership, high-stakes communication, and negotiation as strategic tools for modern executives and decision-makers. About EmTech Invest EmTech Invest is a global innovation and investment platform convening advanced research, institutional capital, and frontier technologies. Since 2019, EmTech Invest has united founders, investors, policymakers, and executives representing over $500B in assets under management, creating a trusted environment for high-level dialogue, deal flow, and long-term partnerships across AI, blockchain, medtech, fintech, biotech, and digital infrastructure. Website: https://emtechinvest.com Looking Ahead Following the success of EmTech Invest 2026, the platform continues its global program with upcoming private gatherings, investor forums, and strategic technology summits.  Media & Partnership Inquiries: media@emtechinvest.com  

EMTECH INVEST DAVOS 2026 Where Execution Met Global Decision-Making Davos, Switzerland | January ...

During the World Economic Forum week in Davos, EmTech Invest convened an invitation-only gathering of global investors, policymakers, founders, scientists, and leaders, focused on the technological trends of 2026.

Hosted at the Grand Hotel Belvédère and Mountain Plaza Hotel, EmTech Invest reaffirmed its position as one of Davos’ most strategically relevant private events — where advanced technologies meet capital, regulation, and real-world deployment.

“The world does not lack ideas — it lacks brave execution,” said Alena Yudina, Founder of EmTech Invest. “Progress happens when technology, capital, and governance dance together.”

Over three days, EmTech Invest delivered a tightly curated program addressing artificial intelligence, medical technologies, digital assets, governance, longevity, and institutional-grade innovation. 

Day One | January 20

The Davos Masterclass — Co-Hosted by BlockBuzz and EmTech Invest

The program opened at the Grand Hotel Belvédère with a closed-door morning masterclass. Designed as a high-signal, off-the-record forum, the session brought together leaders such as Clayton Thomas (Founder of ROOT Brands), Wendy Starland (Co-Founder & President of MusicSoul), Dr. Lisa Corsa (Founder of Premier Therapy Solutions), Dr. Christina Rahm (CEO of DRC Ventures), Riadh Bouaziz (Founder of RKF Luxury Linen), Jessica Chaijaya (President of United Society Council) — setting the strategic tone for the week and prioritizing substance over spectacle.

Days Two & Three | January 21–22

Technology, AI, Regulation & Capital

The core program continued at the Mountain Plaza Hotel with over 500 guests, and focused discussions on applied AI, blockchain infrastructure, capital strategy, and regulatory frameworks shaping global innovation.

AI in Action: Scaling Innovation Across Tech, Energy, Grid Systems & Media

Moderated by Liz Perkins (The Sunday Telegraph), the panel explored real-world deployment of AI across operational environments. Speakers examined how AI is already embedded into software development, decision-making processes, and large-scale energy and infrastructure systems.

Cully Cavnes (Crusoe Energy Systems) shared practical experience deploying AI at infrastructure scale, alongside insights from Yuval Dvir (SandboxAQ) and Sandra Trittin (Futurize Energy). The discussion underscored that AI has moved beyond experimentation and is now a core operational layer across critical industries.

Keynote: Creating Abundance and Avoiding the Zero-Sum Trap: Prioritising Creation over Reduction for Responsible AI

Yuval Dvir, Senior Advisor at SandboxAQ, delivered a keynote challenging efficiency-only narratives around AI. He introduced Large Quantitative Models (LQMs) as a framework for long-term value creation, scientific expansion, and sustainable economic growth.

Blockchain Beyond Speculation: Infrastructure & Enterprise Adoption

Moderated by Sheraz Ahmed, this panel examined blockchain’s transition from speculative assets to foundational infrastructure. Leaders from the Filecoin Foundation, Cardano Foundation, Hashgraph Association, BostonTrading, and Nethermind discussed enterprise adoption, public-goods infrastructure, protocol scalability, and institutional standards.

Keynote: Capital Allocation in a Fragmented Financial System

Todd Ault, Founder of Ault & Company, addressed capital strategy in an era shaped by financial fragmentation, de-banking, and systemic risk, highlighting the growing need for resilient investment models beyond traditional banking frameworks.

Keynote: Chris Voss — Never Split the Difference

Former FBI lead hostage negotiator Chris Voss shared practical frameworks from his bestselling book Never Split the Difference, applying high-stakes negotiation principles to leadership, deal-making, and decision-making under pressure.

Unstoppable Women

Moderated by award-winning executive coach Ellen Mannaer, the Unstoppable Women panel brought together leaders from business, investment, philanthropy, and creative industries. Speakers, including Wendy Starland, Maya Marburger, Dr. Christina Rahm, and Jessica Chaijaya discussed leadership under pressure, responsibility, and long-term impact.

Investor Reception

An exclusive Investor Reception started with a panel on Investment Strategies, joined by Swiss Entrepreneur Patrizia Laeri from elleXX and Israeli investor Naor Baruch from AlgoBlessed. The panel and reception were supported by VNTR Capital, Network VC Group, Black River Ventures, and more than 200 guests, strengthening direct connections between global innovation and institutional capital.

Books Presentations

An intellectual highlight of EmTech Invest 2026 was the presentation of Decoding Despair: How AI Is Reshaping Psychiatry by Mariam Khayretdinova, Founder & CEO of Brainify.AI. Published by Wiley (2026), the book explores how artificial intelligence can overcome structural limitations of modern psychiatry, offering a practical framework for innovation in diagnostics, research, and next-generation treatment models. Global release: January 27, 2026 · Available on Amazon: https://a.co/d/i9m0TRU

The program also featured a special book presentation by Chris Voss, former FBI lead negotiator and bestselling author, who introduced his upcoming book Lead with Empathy. The work focuses on empathy-driven leadership, high-stakes communication, and negotiation as strategic tools for modern executives and decision-makers.

About EmTech Invest

EmTech Invest is a global innovation and investment platform convening advanced research, institutional capital, and frontier technologies.

Since 2019, EmTech Invest has united founders, investors, policymakers, and executives representing over $500B in assets under management, creating a trusted environment for high-level dialogue, deal flow, and long-term partnerships across AI, blockchain, medtech, fintech, biotech, and digital infrastructure.

Website: https://emtechinvest.com

Looking Ahead

Following the success of EmTech Invest 2026, the platform continues its global program with upcoming private gatherings, investor forums, and strategic technology summits. 

Media & Partnership Inquiries: media@emtechinvest.com

 
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