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Bloomberg Crypto

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Bloomberg Crypto

@0x377c85e37c50d75591c6a126d7e42511df527167

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  • While Nintendo seeks to cash in on existing fans with growing forays into cinema and theme parks, the rest of the industry is investing in new IP and luring consumers to subscription platforms that are fundamentally changing how gamers spend their time and money. “There’s an absolute oversupply of content, on every single platform,” Tokyo-based industry analyst Serkan Toto said. “You have the forever games, Fortnite, Minecraft, Roblox. And things like Netflix and TikTok, these weren’t around 10 years ago.” Inside Nintendo, that’s seen as all the more reason to keep focusing on creativity over trends and technology. Former Wii engineer Tamaki says he still remembers Iwata emphasizing to him and other young developers the importance of doing things differently and taking on risks. “It’s usually the other way around: Young people are full of energy and ideas, and middle management or executives tend to shut them down,” he said. “But at Nintendo, when we’d look around and say things like, ‘Sony is doing this, maybe we should too?’ the vibe from executives would be, ‘let them do their thing — we’re doing ours.’”
  • While Nintendo seeks to cash in on existing fans with growing forays into cinema and theme parks, the rest of the industry is investing in new IP and luring consumers to subscription platforms that are fundamentally changing how gamers spend their time and money. “There’s an absolute oversupply of content, on every single platform,” Tokyo-based industry analyst Serkan Toto said. “You have the forever games, Fortnite, Minecraft, Roblox. And things like Netflix and TikTok, these weren’t around 10 years ago.” Inside Nintendo, that’s seen as all the more reason to keep focusing on creativity over trends and technology. Former Wii engineer Tamaki says he still remembers Iwata emphasizing to him and other young developers the importance of doing things differently and taking on risks. “It’s usually the other way around: Young people are full of energy and ideas, and middle management or executives tend to shut them down,” he said. “But at Nintendo, when we’d look around and say things like, ‘Sony is doing this, maybe we should too?’ the vibe from executives would be, ‘let them do their thing — we’re doing ours.’”
  • While Nintendo seeks to cash in on existing fans with growing forays into cinema and theme parks, the rest of the industry is investing in new IP and luring consumers to subscription platforms that are fundamentally changing how gamers spend their time and money. “There’s an absolute oversupply of content, on every single platform,” Tokyo-based industry analyst Serkan Toto said. “You have the forever games, Fortnite, Minecraft, Roblox. And things like Netflix and TikTok, these weren’t around 10 years ago.” Inside Nintendo, that’s seen as all the more reason to keep focusing on creativity over trends and technology. Former Wii engineer Tamaki says he still remembers Iwata emphasizing to him and other young developers the importance of doing things differently and taking on risks. “It’s usually the other way around: Young people are full of energy and ideas, and middle management or executives tend to shut them down,” he said. “But at Nintendo, when we’d look around and say things like, ‘Sony is doing this, maybe we should too?’ the vibe from executives would be, ‘let them do their thing — we’re doing ours.’”
  • While Nintendo seeks to cash in on existing fans with growing forays into cinema and theme parks, the rest of the industry is investing in new IP and luring consumers to subscription platforms that are fundamentally changing how gamers spend their time and money. “There’s an absolute oversupply of content, on every single platform,” Tokyo-based industry analyst Serkan Toto said. “You have the forever games, Fortnite, Minecraft, Roblox. And things like Netflix and TikTok, these weren’t around 10 years ago.” Inside Nintendo, that’s seen as all the more reason to keep focusing on creativity over trends and technology. Former Wii engineer Tamaki says he still remembers Iwata emphasizing to him and other young developers the importance of doing things differently and taking on risks. “It’s usually the other way around: Young people are full of energy and ideas, and middle management or executives tend to shut them down,” he said. “But at Nintendo, when we’d look around and say things like, ‘Sony is doing this, maybe we should too?’ the vibe from executives would be, ‘let them do their thing — we’re doing ours.’”
  • Thai Princess Being Treated for Severe Infection, Bureau Says Thai Princess Bajrakitiyabha Narendira Debyavati, who has been unconscious for nearly three years after collapsing due to a heart condition, is now being treated for a severe infection, the Bureau of the Royal Household said. Doctors treating the 46-year-old princess, the oldest of King Maha Vajiralongkorn’s seven children, detected an infection in her bloodstream on Aug. 9, the bureau said in a statement Friday. She’s been administered different types of antibiotics and other medication to stabilize her blood pressure levels, it said.
  • Southern Water Brings Pound Debt Market’s Biggest Deal of Year UK utility Southern Water Ltd. is selling the biggest sterling corporate bond in nearly 18 months as it seeks to shore up its finances. The company is raising £750 million ($993 million) of seven-year senior secured notes, according to a person with knowledge of the sale, who asked not to be identified as the information is private. It’s the biggest deal in the currency from a non-financial borrower since UK film studio Pinewood priced a same-sized deal in March 2024, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
  • High-Risk Currency Trading Is the New Meme Stock for This Retail Crowd A growing band of mom-and-pop investors are dabbling in FX trading — and their billions in collective wagers are beginning to worry finance veterans Samantha Greer is definitely not your stereotypical day trader. She’s a 46-year-old lawyer in Nottingham, England, who begins her day at 5 a.m. poring over market trend charts and punching in trades — maybe £1,000 ($1,350) a pop if she feels confident; just a couple hundred if she doesn’t — before whipping up breakfast for her son, dropping him at school and rushing into the office to start her legal job at 10 a.m.
  • Singapore Luxury Condo’s Early Flop Shows Property Boom’s Limits An artist impression of the W Residences Marina View.Source: IOI Properties Group Berhad A large-scale luxury development in Singapore sold only a tiny fraction of units when it started accepting bookings, reflecting the struggles of the priciest segment in the city-state’s otherwise stratospheric property market. The W Residences Marina View condominium began pre-sales last Saturday, and buyers booked only two of its 683 units over the weekend, according to people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified sharing private information. The complex is located in the heart of the country’s central business district, a short walk from skyscrapers that house global financial institutions and multinational companies.
  • Crypto Week Cranks Up in Congress With Stablecoin Vote This is Washington Edition, the newsletter about money, power and politics in the nation’s capital. Every Monday, Bloomberg Intelligence senior analyst Nathan Dean gives his insights into what’s been happening and what’s coming up in the nooks and crannies of government and markets. Sign up here and follow us at @bpolitics. Email our editors here. Framework For the last two weeks, my family and I have been running around Finland – saunas, midnight-sun hiking, eating too much of the lovely cinnamon bread called Korvapuusti – but at the same time, I’ve been preparing for what comes next now that the “One Big Beautiful Bill” has passed. Let’s first talk crypto. Years of lobbying and legislative efforts will likely pay off as Congress kicks off “crypto week.” Most significant to us is the GENIUS Act, a bill that would allow stablecoin issuers like Circle to operate under a regulatory framework. Here’s Bloomberg News’ Yash Roy with more on the expected House vote. Since it already passed the Senate, this bill should reach President Donald Trump’s desk this week. Yet I can’t say the same for a broader crypto market structure bill called the CLARITY Act. This bill, important for platforms like Robinhood and Coinbase, would also bring regulatory clarity. But while there was bipartisan agreement on stablecoins, as I write here on the Bloomberg terminal, this bill needs more time to cook. It’ll pass the House, but the Senate may need more time. It looks to me that passage is feasible in the first half of 2026. We should also talk about deregulation. Like I’ve said before, there’s no magic wand here. There’s a process. And that process will largely kick off in the second half of 2025 now that leaders like Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman are confirmed. So whether it’s the leverage ratio for banks or relaxing of broadcaster caps, deregulation is coming. Here’s our most recent “Votes & Verdicts” podcast where my colleagues and I discuss what rules and regulations you should have on your radar for the rest of the year. Tidbits If your kids are like mine, they are averaging an ice cream once a day between camps and family desserts. But changes are coming to the industry, as Kristina Peterson writes here: “Ice Cream Makers Pledge to Remove Artificial Colors by 2028.” Now, I think Washington is hot enough in the summer, but I know of several friends heading down to Florida to check out the amusement parks. Here’s Daryl Austin with “All the Ways to Skip the Lines at Florida Theme Parks This Summer.” One question I got when I was in Europe was whether Elon Musk’s call for a third party could actually take hold. Call me skeptical, but here’s Bill Allison with “Why Elon Musk’s Third Party Plans Face Big Hurdles.” Don’t Miss Trump threatened to impose stiff financial penalties on Russia if it does not end hostilities with Ukraine, while pledging fresh weapons supplies for Kyiv. The president will announce $70 billion in artificial intelligence and energy investments tomorrow in Pennsylvania, the latest White House push to speed up development of the emerging technology. Trump indicated he is open to more trade negotiations, including with the European Union, even as he insisted that his letters threatening new tariff rates are “the deals” for US trading partners. Economists have long been warning of a tariff-driven boost to US inflation. The next report on consumer prices, which comes out tomorrow, will put their conviction to the test. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has requested that the central bank’s inspector general review its $2.5 billion building renovation, which has come under attack from Trump and his allies. A divided Supreme Court let Trump resume dismantling the Department of Education, lifting a lower court order that required the reinstatement of as many as 1,400 workers. Harvard University warned that the combined cost of federal actions against the school, including a recently passed tax increase on its endowment, could approach $1 billion annually. Attorney General Pam Bondi has fired the Justice Department's top official responsible for counseling senior political appointees on ethics matters, including financial disclosures and conflicts of interest. The ink is barely dry on Trump’s $3.4 trillion tax and spending package and House Republicans are already at work on a follow-up budget bill coming this autumn. Trump’s head of the Federal Trade Commission, Andrew Ferguson, had echoed the tough-cop message of his controversial predecessor Lina Khan, but his approach in office is more nuanced. Cuba’s crucial and struggling tourism industry was hit with more US sanctions, as the Trump administration ratchets up pressure on the communist-run island and its top officials. Watch & Listen Today on Bloomberg Television’s Balance of Power early edition at 1 p.m., hosts Joe Mathieu and Kailey Leinz interviewed retired Rear Admiral Mark Montgomery about US plans to ramp up arms sales to Ukraine and Russia's continued attacks on the country. On the Big Take podcast, host Sarah Holder and Bloomberg’s Kara Carlson examine what the disaster in Kerr County, Texas, reveals about the growing risk of flooding across the country as the climate changes — and the difficult economic choices facing communities grappling with these new risks. Listen on iHeart, Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
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