Türkiye, 2025 ortası itibarıyla $878 milyar kümülatif kripto girişi ile artık sadece MENA’nın değil, dünyanın en büyük ve en dinamik kripto pazarlarından biri.
2021’den bu yana süren istikrarlı büyüme; kriptonun Türkiye’de hem finansal sisteme destekleyici bir unsur hem de alternatif bir değer saklama aracı olarak benimsendiğini çok net gösteriyor.
2024’te yürürlüğe giren düzenlemeler ise ekosistemi bambaşka bir seviyeye taşıdı. Daha güçlü uyum, daha net kurallar ve daha güvenli bir yapı…
Bu çerçeve, sektörde kalıcı oyuncular için büyük bir eşik niteliğinde.
Bu noktada Binance TR’nin konumu ayrı bir yerde duruyor:
2025’te yaklaşık %100 büyüme ile 3 milyar TL’yi aşan özsermayesi, şirketin hem finansal sağlamlığını hem de Türkiye’ye olan uzun vadeli bağlılığını net şekilde ortaya koyuyor.
Ayrıca CoinMarketCap verilerine göre platformun yıl boyunca küresel ölçekte ilk 15 kripto varlık platformu arasında yer alması; kullanıcı güveninin, performansın ve operasyonel kalitenin uluslararası çapta tescili.
2026’da ise odak çok daha belirgin:
• Lisans sürecini başarıyla tamamlama
• İleri teknoloji yatırımlarını büyütme
• Türkiye kripto ekosisteminin sürdürülebilir ve güvenilir gelişimine liderlik etme
Türkiye’nin hızlı büyüyen kripto pazarında, güçlü yapı + doğru regülasyon + uzun vadeli yatırım = Binance TR’nin konumunu daha da güçlendirecek gibi görünüyor.
It's Too Obvious. What If AI Doesn't Actually End The World?
The stock market just erased -$800 BILLION in market cap because AI "taking over the world" is becoming the consensus view. That view is too obvious. And the "obvious" trade never actually wins. The doomsday scenario went viral because it captured something visceral. It framed AI not as a productivity tool, but as a macroeconomic destabilizer capable of triggering a negative feedback loop: layoffs lead to weaker consumption, weaker consumption leads to more automation, and automation accelerates layoffs. What's obviously true: AI is not another software feature or efficiency gain. It is a general-purpose capability shock that touches every white-collar workflow simultaneously. Unlikely any revolution in history, AI is getting better at EVERYTHING simultaneously. But, what if the doomsday scenario is false? It assumes demand is fixed, that productivity gains don’t expand markets, and that the system cannot adapt faster than the disruption. We believe there is a second path that is being dramatically underpriced. The same Anthropic “takedowns” that look like early signs of systemic collapse may ultimately be the start of the largest productivity expansion EVER. Before we begin, BOOKMARK this article and refer back to it over the next 12 months. While the below analysis is not a certain outcome, it is important to remember that humanity has ALWAYS prevailed; and the free market ALWAYS works itself out. THE ANTHROPIC TAKEDOWNS ARE REAL Let's start by saying we cannot ignore the market. Anthropic is disrupting the world through Claude, with Fortune 500 companies shedding hundreds of billions of market cap as a result. It's a story we have seen several times already in 2026: Anthropic releases a new AI tool, Claude gets materially better at coding and workflow automation, and within hours the market collapses for the targeted industry. If you haven't been paying attention, below are some examples:
The trigger? A new report from Citron claiming that AI agents could eventually bypass the 2–3% card network fees and route payments through cheaper stablecoin rails.
I summarized this report in yesterday’s video, and the market seems to have woken up to a key question:
How durable are credit-card business models in an AI-driven payments world?
Today, credit cards sit at the center of payment flows because we are the decision-makers.
But tomorrow, AI agents may handle purchases on our behalf — automatically choosing the fastest and cheapest payment method.
If these agents shift toward low-cost stablecoin rails, card fees will naturally come under pressure.
So far, so logical.
But I think the market is missing one crucial point: trust.
People use credit cards not just for convenience, but for credit limits, dispute rights, transparency, and consumer protection.
For any new system to win, it must rebuild that entire trust package.
Lower fees alone aren’t enough.
If we’re going to authorize AI agents to spend on our behalf, we’ll need a security and protection layer stronger than today’s.
And who can provide that?
Possibly the card networks themselves.
But Apple, Google, Amazon, Stripe and others are also well-positioned to innovate here.
So yes — credit-card companies face a tough road and new competitive pressures.
Valuations being questioned is normal.
But it’s far too early to claim these networks will disappear.
If they adapt intelligently, they might even become the winners of this new cycle.
Visa and Mastercard have already taken some steps toward stablecoin integrations, which may explain why their drop was milder yesterday.
The payment landscape is changing fast — and it’s getting very, very interesting.