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Investing in impact: High-growth tech for climate and community

Across Southeast Asia, investors are looking beyond growth-at-all-costs and asking a new question: can startups scale while delivering measurable social and environmental outcomes? The urgency is clear. Climate change, demographic shifts, and infrastructure gaps are reshaping the region, creating both heightened risks and opportunities for solutions that address real-world challenges.

Impact-driven ventures are showing that “funding for good” is not just an ethical positioning but a sound strategy. Businesses that deliver independently verified results attract capital from a wider pool, from venture investors to governments and philanthropic funds, while also building resilience through strong community adoption and policy alignment.

Agriculture as a proof point

This shift is already visible across agriculture, health, education, and clean energy. Agriculture, in particular, offers a clear illustration of how measurable impact and growth can reinforce each other. Take biochar as an example. Farmers report yield improvements of 10 to 20 per cent during dry periods, while organic growers reduce input costs by as much as 60 per cent.

On the carbon finance side, each ton of biochar can store roughly 2.5 tons of CO₂ equivalent, enabling verifiable carbon credits. Importantly, reported impacts, both environmental and social, are independently verified, giving investors confidence that the metrics are credible and auditable. These outcomes show that a business can be high-growth, measurable, and socially responsible at the same time.

Southeast Asia is also among the regions most affected by climate change. Increased rainfall variability, rising temperatures, and extreme weather events threaten smallholder agriculture, fisheries, and coastal communities. Startups that provide tech-enabled climate adaptation solutions are therefore addressing immediate and escalating risks.

Also Read: How Southeast Asia’s agritech startups are turning smallholder farms into high-tech powerhouses

In agriculture, for instance, biochar improves soil resilience against droughts and floods while enhancing water retention and reducing nutrient runoff into waterways. Supporting ventures that tackle these challenges aligns capital with urgent climate mitigation and adaptation needs.

Beyond agriculture: Health, education, and clean energy

Impact-driven ventures are not unique to agriculture. Across the region, startups in health, education, and clean energy are demonstrating that measurable social impact attracts both customers and capital. Digital health platforms expanding access to care, edutech startups improving literacy rates, and renewable energy providers electrifying rural communities all show that technology applied to real societal challenges can outperform purely commercial ventures. The common denominator is clear: investors can back enterprises that generate tangible social outcomes without sacrificing growth potential.

Investors increasingly recognise this. ESG mandates, philanthropy-linked funding, and impact investing funds are growing rapidly in Southeast Asia. According to the Global Impact Investing Network, the Asia-Pacific impact investment market surpassed US$25 billion in 2022, reflecting rising interest in ventures that deliver measurable social outcomes. Startups that rigorously document impact through data, independent verification, and reporting stand out, gaining credibility with both investors and partners.

Beyond attracting capital, measurable impact strengthens resilience. Businesses that solve real problems are naturally aligned with long-term trends, policy priorities, and community needs. Governments promoting sustainable agriculture, renewable energy, or equitable education are more likely to partner with startups whose models are proven to work. Likewise, communities adopting these solutions provide a built-in market, reducing customer acquisition risk and stabilising revenue streams.

The lesson for investors is simple. Funding good is smart strategy. Ventures that integrate technology with independently verified social outcomes are better positioned to scale, attract diversified funding, from venture capital to philanthropic and government sources, and create defensible market positions. In a region facing climate, demographic, and infrastructure challenges, startups that solve real problems while generating profit are both rare and valuable.

A founder’s perspective

From my own experience at Reclimate, I’ve seen how this dual value (the combination of measurable social and environmental impact with sustainable financial returns) plays out. By combining biochar production, carbon finance, and practical training for farmers, we’ve been able to build a model that works across different geographies while generating measurable environmental and social impact. Smallholders see yield gains and lower costs, communities benefit from cleaner air and water, and carbon credits create an additional revenue stream that supports growth. Importantly, all of this is tracked and verified independently, giving investors confidence that the impact data is both transparent and reliable.

The potential for scale is enormous. Southeast Asia produces millions of tons of agricultural residues annually. Converting even a fraction into biochar could sequester millions of tons of CO₂, providing a credible carbon removal pipeline. At the same time, smallholders and rural communities benefit directly from improved soil health, water retention, and income diversification. Investing in this space therefore combines measurable environmental impact, social uplift, and financial return—a rare triple bottom line.

The path forward

For investors, the broader message is clear. Backing ventures that deliver both profit and purpose is not merely ethical; it is strategic. High-growth companies with measurable social impact can attract a mix of funding, from venture capital seeking strong returns, philanthropic capital targeting social good, and government support aimed at policy-aligned outcomes. This diversified backing reduces risk while amplifying potential returns and social reach.

Also Read: Hacking your way into angel impact investing with just US$10K

The challenge now is to make funding for good the norm rather than the exception. How can investors embed impact measurement as part of their standard due diligence? How can funders prioritise ventures that not only generate profits but also deliver independently verified social and environmental outcomes? Addressing these questions will define the next wave of sustainable investment in Southeast Asia and beyond.

Supporting startups that solve real-world challenges is a win-win. Reclimate’s work has shown me that it is possible to balance growth with independently verified environmental and social outcomes. The opportunity in Southeast Asia is clear. It is a region underrepresented in global carbon markets, heavily impacted by climate change, and full of smallholder farmers and communities ready to benefit from tech-enabled solutions. Investors willing to align capital with purpose are positioned to capture both impact and growth.

Conclusion: Doing good and doing well

Funding for good is not only possible; it is increasingly profitable, scalable, and essential for tackling some of the region’s most pressing challenges. By directing capital to high-growth, impact-driven startups, investors can help reshape Southeast Asia’s future, proving that doing good and doing well can go hand in hand.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic.

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Ecosystem Roundup: Verizon warns CX needs new AI metrics | Zhang Fan on AI-era entrepreneurship | US stake in Intel could shake markets

AI is fast becoming the darling of customer experience strategies, but the numbers don’t quite add up.

Verizon’s latest report exposes a sobering truth: while executives hail AI as a CX game-changer, most of their optimism rests on gut feel, not hard data. Seventy-two percent claim improved customer experience and 66 percent cite better loyalty, yet few can tie these gains to robust, measurable metrics.

This blind spot matters. AI’s efficiency wins–slashing content creation timelines or cutting call handle times–are tangible. But those are productivity boosts, not proof of deeper customer satisfaction or long-term loyalty.

Businesses risk confusing speed with substance. If the industry continues down this path, “AI ROI” will remain a boardroom buzzword, not a balance sheet reality.

The real challenge is measurement. Legacy CX metrics were never designed to capture the nuanced, distributed impact of generative AI across operations. That’s why a third of firms are already working on entirely new frameworks. Until those arrive, talk of ROI will be more hope than evidence.

AI in CX may be inevitable, but its value must be proven, not presumed. Without rigorous metrics, enterprises risk over-investing in tools that look transformative, but can’t yet prove they move the needle where it counts.

REGIONAL

TikTok says Tokopedia layoffs due to team size, business needs
The layoffs reportedly affected 420 employees in two rounds: 180 in July 2025, and 240 a month later | Tokopedia is an Indonesia-based e-commerce platform now controlled by TikTok after a merger.

Atome achieves FY profitability with US$236M operating income
Operating income rose 63% year-on-year, with GMV reaching over US$2B, up 50% from 2023 | As of Q2 2025, Atome Financial said its annualized net revenue surpassed US$500M, with annualised GMV crossing US$4B.

Vietnam’s business capital opens central hub for startups
Innovation Startup Center, a 17,000-square-meter facility in Xuan Hoa Ward, operates under a public-private partnership model, offering one-stop services for startups and serving as a hub for resources and policy testing.

Ytl, Sea officially debut Malaysia’s AI-powered digital bank
Ryt Bank uses an AI assistant, Ryt AI, built on a local language model called ILMU, to help users manage transactions, pay bills, and access financial information in natural language | Core services include savings accounts with daily interest and instant credit via Ryt PayLater.

Indonesian EV logistics provider Blitz raises pre-Series A
Investors include Vynn Capital, Iterative Capital, Vinner Ventures, ADB Ventures, and Peak XV | Blitz, a platform focused on last-mile delivery using a fleet of EVs, claims over 14M deliveries and operations in 60 cities.

Cashku closes US$2.4M round as digital financial planning heats up in Malaysia
Investors include Tunku Zain Al-‘Abidin Tuanku Muhriz, former Securities Commission Chairman Datuk Ali Abdul Kadir, and 1337 Ventures | Cashku will use the capital to enhance its technology, scale its outreach, and continue to develop its platform.

Earth VC backs nuclear innovator Aalo Atomics to address SEA’s data centre power crunch
The funding will be used to construct Aalo’s inaugural nuclear power plant, the Aalo-X, at the Idaho National Laboratory in the US | With criticality targeted for next summer, this project will become the first advanced nuclear facility to commence operations in the US in decades.

Thunes co-founder returns as CEO
Peter De Caluwe takes over from Floris de Kort, who previously led the firm | De Caluwe had served as deputy chairman at Thunes for the past 18 months | Thunes provides payment infrastructure enabling international transfers across bank accounts, mobile wallets, cards, and digital assets.

REPORTS, FEATURES & INTERVIEWS

Verizon study warns: AI in CX needs new metrics to justify spend
As spending on AI in CX operations is expected to grow, management will increasingly demand concrete evidence of its financial returns |
As spending on AI in CX operations is expected to grow, management will increasingly demand concrete evidence of its financial returns.

Asia’s new AI wave: Startups driving smarter healthcare, safer roads, better living
Meet the Asian startups harnessing AI to transform healthcare, mobility, security, and customer experiences, delivering innovation that directly improves everyday life.

“Don’t build for Demo Day”: Zhang Fan on the enduring truths of entrepreneurship in the AI era
In his view, Southeast Asian founders aren’t chasing applause; They’re building purposeful solutions, often with sharp market understanding and a clear focus.

INTERNATIONAL

Hong Kong overtakes US as top IPO venue for Chinese firms
So far this year, 46 Chinese firms have raised a combined US$16.5B in Hong Kong | In comparison, 16 Chinese companies listed in the US raised about US$740.9M | The city’s exchange has benefited from regulatory changes that speed up listings for large mainland companies and stronger investor sentiment.

Oyo to file IPO papers in November, eyes US$8B valuation
SoftBank, one of Oyo’s largest shareholders, has held discussions with banks including Axis, Citi, Goldman Sachs, ICICI, JM Financial, and Jefferies to gauge market sentiment | The filing is expected to highlight Oyo’s latest Q1 financial results.

Musk’s xAI sues Apple, OpenAI over AI competition
xAI accuses Apple and OpenAI of working together to limit competition in the AI sector | The complaint claims that Apple’s partnership with OpenAI, which will bring ChatGPT to Apple devices, is aimed at protecting Apple’s position in the smartphone market.

Tesla rejected US$60M offer before losing US$242.5M Autopilot verdict
The verdict was delivered over a 2019 fatal crash involving Tesla’s Autopilot system | The case concerned a Tesla Model S that went through an intersection with Autopilot engaged, striking a Chevrolet Tahoe, killing Neima Benavides Leon and severely injuring Dillon Angulo.

EV battery market grows with new types, options
Startups globally are developing new battery technologies such as sodium-ion and lithium-sulfur to lower costs and reduce dependency on key minerals for EVs | China currently accounts for 85% of global battery cell production and 90% of processing for the main lithium-ion types used in EVs.

US reportedly may sanction EU over Digital Services Act
The potential move follows US complaints that the law censors Americans and increases costs for US tech firms | Senior State Department officials have not yet decided whether to impose the measures, which could include visa restrictions.

South Korea develops AI tool to detect varroa mites in beehives.
BeeSion uses AI to analyse hive frame videos, and can reportedly identify varroa mites in real time, reducing inspection time to about 30 seconds per frame, with an accuracy rate of 97.8%.

SEMICONDUCTOR

US 10% stake in Intel could impact business, funding
The US will acquire Intel shares using US$5.7B in unpaid grants under the CHIPS Act and US$3.2B from the Secure Enclave programme | It could create risks for its business, including potential impacts on overseas sales and future government funding.

Nvidia set to report Q2 earnings as AI boom drives growth
The company’s revenue has more than tripled and profits have quadrupled since late 2022, as demand for AI chips surged after the launch of OpenAI’s ChatGPT | Nvidia’s market cap recently crossed US$4T, and its stock has risen 12x since 2022, closing at US$177.99 on August 22, 2025.

Nvidia launches Jetson AGX Thor robotics chip at US$3,499
The Jetson AGX Thor chip, based on Nvidia’s Blackwell graphics processor, will begin shipping next month, and is designed for companies building robots | Nvidia said the Jetson AGX Thor is 7.5X faster than its previous generation and comes with 128GB of memory to support large AI models.

US chipmaker Skyworks appoints ex-AMD exec as CFO
Philip Carter is leaving Advanced Micro Devices, where he was corporate vice president and chief accounting officer since November 2024 | Carter previously worked at Skyworks from 2017 to 2024 as vice president and corporate controller.

AI

How should non-tech companies approach AI?
When employees, stakeholders, or customers are not ready for AI implementation, workflows often get disrupted in a negative way | To overcome this, companies need to think about their change management strategies in advance and ensure that everyone is on the same page regarding AI implementation.

The AI classroom dilemma: Are we raising students who can’t think without machines?
The qualities that define humanity–creativity, moral reasoning, critical judgment, and navigating ambiguity–require the cognitive abilities that AI dependency weakens | Without deliberate effort to preserve human intelligence, we’ll create a generation dependent on machines in an era demanding independent thought.

From hype to harmony: Why agentic AI needs a platform-first mind-set to redefine CX
Automation excels at speed and pattern recognition; humans excel at judgment, negotiation and relationship‑building | The goal is augmentation, not substitution | A global med‑tech firm recently introduced an agentic‑AI layer that triages tickets and surfaces knowledge‑base articles.

AI in legal tech: Keeping it customer-centric
AI tools are streamlining contract lifecycle management (CLM) by automating aspects of contract drafting, review, negotiation, and risk analysis | AI is revolutionising e-discovery by quickly analysing high volumes of digital data to identify relevant evidence, reducing the time, cost, and risk of discovery in litigation.

AI and healthcare: Navigating challenges and embracing the future
In healthcare, accuracy and patient safety aren’t just ideals; they’re non-negotiable | Mistakes in a chatbot recommending dinner are harmless; errors in a clinical setting can be catastrophic | Before healthcare AI can be trusted, it must undergo rigorous testing and adhere to the highest safety standards.

AI: The secret ingredient for unlocking developer success in Asia
Home to the fastest-growing developer community globally, APAC is also the second-largest adopter of GenAI | The region’s potential is unquestionable, and local organisations are well-positioned to drive real AI innovation and all its benefits.

THOUGHT LEADERSHIP

Beyond Silicon Valley dreams: Why SEA is rewriting the rules of tech for good?
SAE’s approach represents a paradigm shift that challenges every assumption about how innovation works | Here, tech isn’t a luxury; it’s a necessity | This is how a region once considered a tech follower is becoming the world’s lab for tech that actually matters.

Powell’s pivot: How Jackson Hole reshaped markets and what comes next
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s carefully calibrated remarks last Friday did far more than hint at potential policy shifts; they effectively slammed the door on prolonged restrictive monetary policy while opening a wide window for immediate easing.

Why impact-first marketing matters more than ever for Asia startups
But in markets where trust in new technology can be low, digital literacy uneven, and access to infrastructure inconsistent, having a brilliant product is not enough | Without marketing that connects with people’s real needs, habits, and contexts, adoption stalls.

Rethinking business information Access: The role of conversational AI
Acting as digital copilots, conversational AI enables professionals to query complex datasets using natural language and get verified, contextual responses in seconds | There’s no longer a need to comb through spreadsheets or lengthy documents; insights are now delivered as if in a conversation with a trusted advisor.

From Bangkok to billions: Inside OpenAI’s startup growth playbook
Marc Manara, head of startups at OpenAI, pulled back the curtain on how the company works with founders worldwide, and why its platform is becoming a launchpad for the next generation of market leaders.

How Southeast Asia’s agritech startups are turning smallholder farms into high-tech powerhouses
Agritech is transforming the landscape by integrating emerging technologies such as IoT, AI, blockchain, and mobile fintech | These innovations address inefficiencies in input management, pest detection, supply chain transparency, and farmer financing.

From reactive to proactive: Closing Indonesia’s care gaps with digital health
Indonesia has the rails and the legal backbone | The next two years should be about disciplined execution against measurable outcomes | If Indonesia proves that scale, equity, and privacy can coexist in digital health, it will close its own care gaps.

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Atome defies market headwinds with 63 per cent income surge, US$4B GMV run rate

Singapore-based digital financial services platform Atome Financial announced today that it has achieved substantial growth alongside full-year profitability.

The company, which encompasses Buy-Now-Pay-Later (BNPL) offerings, Atome Card, and Kredit Pintar, is a part of the Singapore-headquartered Advance Intelligence Group.

Also Read: From start-up to scale-up: Atome’s growth story and vision for inclusive finance in SEA

The platform reported an operating income of US$236 million in 2024, a 63 per cent rise year over year. According to the firm, this performance is attributed to disciplined execution, operational efficiency, and the ability to scale effectively even in a challenging macroeconomic climate.

Net revenue surpassed US$500 million in Q2 (April-June) 2025, driven by an over US$4 billion annualised Gross Merchandise Volume (GMV). In 2024, Atome claims to have processed over US$2 billion in GMV, representing a 50 per cent increase year-on-year, propelled by “robust merchant partnerships and growing consumer adoption” across the region.

Key performance drivers contributing to Atome Financial’s strong showing include:

  • Product diversification: The expansion of offerings to include insurance, savings, cards, and lending. Notably, the Atome PayLater Anywhere Card in the Philippines saw accelerated adoption, with the total number of cards issued exceeding 1.5 million as of June 2025.
  • Operational excellence: Streamlined processes, a strong focus on core business functions, and the rapid deployment of Generative AI to enhance customer service, collections, and credit underwriting.
  • Capital support: A strengthened funding base from a diverse group of global and regional institutional partners. These include BlackRock, EvolutionX, Innoven Capital, CLSA’s Lending Ark, and an expanded syndicated credit facility led by HSBC, with participation from DBS, SMBC, and Baiduri Bank. Additional institutional funding partners backing Atome Financial include Standard Chartered, Bank Jago, and many others.

Also Read: Scaling with purpose: Atome’s fintech evolution and future outlook

Jefferson Chen, CEO of Atome Financial, commented, “Atome Financial’s record performance in 2024 and H1 2025 reaffirms the strength of our ‘wallet’ platform and our ability to grow sustainably while delivering real value to consumers and partners. Since day one, our mission has been to improve lives through greater financial access and technology. With a profitable BNPL business, a growing Atome Card franchise and broadening funding partnerships, we are well-positioned to shape the next phase of financial inclusion in Southeast Asia.”

Launched in December 2019, Atome offers flexible deferred payments through its mobile app to consumers across the region. It also provides digital consumer loans in Indonesia through the Kredit Pintar mobile app.

In June this year, Atome secured a US$75 million asset-backed financing facility from Lending Ark to accelerate its core mission in the Philippines: enhancing access to risk-managed, responsible, and sustainable credit products for Filipino consumers.

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Markets at a crossroads: Trump’s Fed clash, Powell’s pivot, and global ripple effects

On this late summer day in 2025, financial markets around the world display a mix of caution and optimism as investors digest a flurry of economic data, geopolitical tensions, and corporate developments. The overarching narrative centres on anticipation for key upcoming events like Nvidia’s earnings report and the personal consumption expenditures inflation figures, which could sway Federal Reserve decisions on interest rates.

At the same time, President Donald Trump’s bold move to dismiss Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook injects fresh uncertainty into the mix, highlighting ongoing frictions between the White House and the central bank. Stocks in the United States closed lower yesterday, with the S&P 500 dropping 0.3 per cent to around 6,439, the Dow Jones Industrial Average shedding 349 points to finish at approximately 44,150, and the Nasdaq 100 declining 0.4 per cent amid sector rotations that hit consumer staples, health care, and utilities hardest.

This pullback follows a strong rally last week, driven by dovish comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell at the Jackson Hole symposium, where he signalled potential rate cuts as early as September. Traders now price in an 86 per cent likelihood of such a move, reflecting hopes that lower borrowing costs will bolster economic growth amid signs of cooling inflation.

Trump’s move against the Fed

Turning to the macroeconomic landscape, Trump’s announcement yesterday afternoon marks a significant escalation in his longstanding feud with the Federal Reserve over monetary policy. He cited allegations of mortgage fraud against Cook, a claim that has drawn sharp rebukes from Democrats and raised questions about the independence of the central bank. Cook, for her part, quickly responded that she intends to continue her duties, setting the stage for potential legal battles.

This development comes at a delicate time, as the Fed navigates dual mandates of price stability and maximum employment. Experts view the action as an attempt by Trump to exert more influence over interest rate decisions, particularly after he has repeatedly criticised the Fed for not cutting rates aggressively enough to support his economic agenda.

The president posted the removal letter on his Truth Social account, accusing Cook of deceitful conduct in financial matters and expressing a lack of confidence in her ability to serve. While markets initially shrugged off the news, with the dollar paring some losses, the incident underscores broader concerns about policy interference that could erode investor trust in the institution responsible for steering the world’s largest economy.

Economic indicators and housing trends

Recent economic indicators paint a picture of an economy that remains resilient but shows pockets of weakness. New single-family home sales in July slipped 0.6 per cent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 652,000 units, which beat economists’ expectations of 630,000 but represented a slowdown from June’s revised 4.1 per cent gain.

Also Read: Powell’s pivot: How Jackson Hole reshaped markets and what comes next

The median sales price dropped to US$403,800, down 5.9 per cent year-over-year, suggesting builders are offering incentives like price cuts and mortgage rate buydowns to attract buyers in a high-interest environment. This data aligns with broader housing market trends, where affordability challenges persist despite a gradual easing in mortgage rates.

Meanwhile, the Dallas Fed’s Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey for August revealed a dip in activity, with the general business activity index falling to -1.8 from 0.9 in July, indicating a mild contraction in the sector. Production slowed to 15.3 from 21.3, though it stayed above long-term averages, and new orders turned positive at 5.8 for the first time since January.

Employment held steady at 8.8, with one in five firms adding staff while 11 per cent reduced headcounts. Capacity utilisation and shipments provided some bright spots, with the latter surging to a three-year high of 14.2. These figures highlight regional disparities, as Texas grapples with energy sector fluctuations and supply chain issues, yet overall sentiment points to cautious optimism for future growth.

The Chicago Fed National Activity Index edged lower to -0.19 in July from -0.18 in June, marking the fourth consecutive month of below-trend economic activity. Only one of the four broad categories, production worsened, while three others continued to drag on the index, underscoring persistent headwinds in employment, sales, and personal consumption.

This subpar performance reinforces the narrative of a cooling economy, which bolsters the case for Fed rate cuts but also raises flags about potential recession risks if growth stalls further. Investors closely monitor these metrics, as they influence expectations for monetary policy adjustments that could ripple through asset classes.

Regional markets: US, Europe, and Asia

In equities, European markets mirrored the US downturn yesterday, with the STOXX Europe 50 falling 0.8 per cent to 5,444 and the broader STOXX 600 declining 0.5 per cent to 559. Banks bore the brunt of the losses, as investors reassessed rate-cut probabilities following Powell’s remarks.

Notable movers included BBVA down two per cent, BNP Paribas dropping 3.5 per cent, and UniCredit slipping 0.4 per cent after it converted its stake in Commerzbank to shares. On the positive side, JDE Peet’s soared 17.5 per cent amid a 15.7 billion euro takeover bid by Keurig Dr Pepper.

In comparison, Puma climbed 16 per cent on speculation of a potential acquisition by the Pinault family. These corporate deals inject some buoyancy, but the overall retreat reflects trimmed bets on aggressive Fed easing, even as European Central Bank officials hint at their own policy shifts.

Asian markets provided a counterpoint, with substantial gains in Hong Kong and mainland China yesterday. The Hang Seng Index surged 1.9 per cent to 25,830, its highest level since October 2021, fuelled by US rate-cut hopes and fresh stimulus from Beijing. The People’s Bank of China injected a net 465.7 billion yuan into the system, the largest daily addition since July, boosting liquidity and propelling tech stocks higher.

The Hang Seng Tech Index rose three per cent ahead of Nvidia’s earnings, with standout performers like KE Holdings up 5.6 per cent, Galaxy Entertainment gaining 5.3 per cent, Lenovo advancing 3.9 per cent, Meituan climbing three per cent, and Tencent rising 2.4 per cent. Consumer, property, and financial sectors also benefited from Shanghai’s decision to scrap property taxes for first-time homebuyers.

Also Read: Jackson Hole looms: Can Powell save markets from a global risk meltdown?

In China, the Shanghai Composite climbed 1.51 per cent to 3,884, a 10-year high, while the Shenzhen Component gained 2.26 per cent to 12,441. This rally stems from easing US-China trade tensions, policy support expectations, and positive spillover from Wall Street’s recent surge.

Investors now await the upcoming purchasing managers’ index and industrial profit data for further clues on China’s recovery trajectory. Top gainers included Cambricon up 11.4 per cent, China Northern Rare Earth advancing 9.9 per cent, and Hygon Information soaring 12.9 per cent.

Currencies, commodities, and fixed income

In foreign exchange markets, the US dollar staged a rebound, with the DXY index climbing to 98.20 amid broader currency fluctuations. The euro weakened against the greenback, reflecting divergent monetary policy outlooks between the Fed and the European Central Bank.

This strength in the dollar comes despite Trump’s Fed actions, which initially pressured the currency but later saw it pare losses as gold trimmed gains. Commodities extended their upward momentum, with oil prices touching US$65 per barrel after four straight days of gains. Brent crude eased slightly today after surging nearly two per cent yesterday on concerns over Russia-Ukraine supply disruptions, but the overall trend points to tightening global inventories and geopolitical risks supporting higher prices.

In fixed income, demand for short-term US Treasuries remained robust, with three- and six-month bills attracting strong bids at recent auctions. Yields on the 10-year note hovered around 4.26 per cent last week, down modestly as investors sought safety amid equity volatility.

Crypto sector shifts and Ethereum’s momentum

The cryptocurrency sector experienced significant turbulence, with digital asset investment products recording US$1.43 billion in outflows last week, the heaviest since March, according to CoinShares. Trading volumes in exchange-traded products jumped to US$38 billion, 50 per cent above the 2025 average, reflecting heightened activity amid shifting sentiment tied to US monetary policy signals.

Early-week outflows reached US$2 billion, but inflows of US$594 million materialised later following Powell’s dovish Jackson Hole speech. Bitcoin suffered the most, with US$1 billion in outflows, while Ethereum saw US$440 million exit, though the latter rebounded strongly mid-week. Month-to-date, Ethereum boasts US$2.5 billion in net inflows compared to Bitcoin’s US$1 billion outflows, adjusting year-to-date figures to 26 per cent of assets under management for Ethereum versus 11 per cent for Bitcoin.

This divergence suggests institutional investors are reallocating toward Ethereum, drawn by its role in layer-two networks and growing adoption through exchange-traded funds. Altcoins showed mixed results, with XRP attracting US$25 million, Solana US$12 million, and Cronos US$4.4 million, indicating selective confidence in ecosystems with robust user bases.

Also Read: Bitcoin’s big moment: Can crypto shine as stocks stumble before Jackson Hole?

Tom Lee from Bitmine highlight Ethereum’s potential, predicting prices could reach US$10,000 by year-end 2025, with upside to US$12,000-US$15,000 in bullish scenarios. Lee draws parallels to Bitcoin’s 2017 surge, emphasising Ethereum’s utility in decentralised finance and corporate treasury strategies.

He points to key support levels around US$4,300, where buyers have historically intervened, and notes that holding above US$4,067 could stabilise the asset short-term. Breaking US$5,100 might trigger a rally toward US$5,450, levels that guide strategic trading rather than impulsive moves.

Beyond speculation, Ethereum positions itself as a foundational element in digital finance, attracting hedge funds, family offices, and corporations for long-term holdings rather than quick trades. In a volatile market, Lee’s counsel emphasises patience, adherence to plans, and vigilance on price thresholds to navigate dips as buying opportunities.

Outlook: Navigating opportunity and risk

From my perspective, today’s dynamics reveal an economy at a crossroads. Trump’s intervention in the Fed risks politicising an institution designed for independence, potentially leading to market instability if it erodes global confidence in US policy.

The resilient economic data, better-than-expected home sales, and positive new orders in manufacturing suggest the foundation remains solid, supporting Powell’s case for measured rate cuts. Asian gains underscore how interconnected global markets have become, with China’s stimulus providing a buffer against US uncertainties.

In crypto, the shift toward Ethereum signals maturing investor preferences, favoring utility over pure store-of-value narratives like Bitcoin’s “digital gold.” Overall, while short-term volatility looms with Nvidia’s report and PCE data, the broader outlook favours growth if policymakers avoid missteps.

Investors who focus on fundamentals over headlines stand to benefit, as these events test the durability of the post-pandemic recovery. This intricate web of factors demands careful navigation, but it also offers opportunities for those attuned to the nuances.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic.

Enjoyed this read? Don’t miss out on the next insight. Join our WhatsApp channel for real-time drops.

Image courtesy: DALL-E

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Web3 gaming is entering its “Nintendo Moment” in SEA: Bitkraft’s Jonathan Huang

Jonathan Huang, Partner at Bitkraft

The world of Web3 gaming, once hyped as a revolution and then dismissed as a fad, is quietly entering a new phase. At the forefront of this shift is Bitkraft Ventures, a US$1 billion global gaming-focused VC firm founded by gamers for gamers.

For Jonathan Huang, Partner at Bitkraft and a veteran of both Web2 and Web3 investing in Asia, this moment marks what he calls “Web3 Gaming 2.0”, a reset that strips away speculative excess and brings the focus back to games worth playing.

Also Read: ‘There is strong reaction against the P2E gaming genre’: BITKRAFT Asia Partner Jin Oh

Huang, who previously spearheaded Temasek’s late-stage investment into Roblox before joining Bitkraft in 2023, believes the industry has matured past the token-fuelled frenzy of Axie Infinity and other play-to-earn titles.

“The fundamental shift now,” he says, “is a return to first principles, where games must create genuine entertainment value before capturing economic value. The first wave of Web3 games inverted that logic.”

From play-to-earn to play-to-stay

The early crypto-gaming boom promised players the chance to earn money through gameplay. Instead, most titles devolved into thinly disguised financial products with little fun attached. When token prices collapsed, so too did player enthusiasm.

Huang argues that the next generation of blockchain-enabled titles is different. “Blockchain should be the infrastructure, not the value proposition,” he says. “The design space only becomes interesting once you ask: are you solving a real problem in Web2 gaming, or unlocking a new kind of use case?”

That means blockchain will increasingly power persistent state and player agency–the invisible rails that enable new gameplay loops and ownership models–rather than serve as a marketing hook. The best studios are now gameplay-first, staffed with AAA veterans who see blockchain as a tool, not a gimmick.

Interoperability: Beyond swords and skins

If early Web3 gaming narratives were dominated by visions of players carrying swords across different game worlds, Huang is quick to dismiss them. “That narrative is dead on arrival,” he says bluntly. “Games are fundamentally designed by their constraints. A sword balanced for one game breaks another’s economy. Assets without context are just database entries.”

Instead, Bitkraft sees promise in portable reputation and social capital. Hours are logged in DOTA 2, win rates are in Fortnite, and rankings are in Clash Royale; today, these data points are siloed on different platforms.

Blockchain could unify them, giving players a persistent identity across the gaming universe. “No single platform has a holistic view of who you are as a gamer,” Huang notes. “Unlocking this creates tremendous value. It just has nothing to do with transferring swords.”

Yet he cautions that most interoperability use cases in Web3 add more complexity than benefit. “You’d really have to ask what problem you’re solving that centralised solutions couldn’t.”

A post-crash reset in Southeast Asia

The collapse of the play-to-earn hype cycle has had a cleansing effect on Southeast Asia, once the epicentre of Axie Infinity’s rise. Opportunistic founders chasing fast token launches have largely exited, replaced by entrepreneurs building with a decade-long horizon.

“Seed funding is harder, but raising follow-on rounds is easier than ever,” says Huang. “That tells you the market has matured. The founders we back today are optimising for five- to ten-year outcomes, not five-month paydays.”

For Bitkraft, that’s a healthier environment. Southeast Asia’s combination of mobile-first gamers, high digital wallet penetration, and willingness to experiment still makes it fertile ground for the next Web3 breakthroughs. Singapore, in particular, has emerged as a hub for both capital and talent.

History repeats, and that’s a good thing

To critics who dismiss Web3 gaming as hype, Huang offers a history lesson. He points to the Atari shock of the 1980s, when console revenues collapsed from US$3 billion to US$100 million, only for Nintendo to reinvent the category. He recalls the dot-com crash, when online console gaming was declared dead—until Xbox Live and Halo 2 proved otherwise.

He also cites the 2011 collapse of social gaming, when Facebook killed viral spam and investors fled, just before Supercell and King redefined mobile-native hits.

“Every platform shift follows the same arc,” he says. “Speculation, terrible early products, spectacular crashes, obituaries, and then genuine innovation from builders who understand the medium. We’re currently in year two or three of the hatred cycle. That’s exactly when the most important games emerge.”

For Bitkraft, the holy grail isn’t just games with tokens, but games that could not exist without crypto. Huang predicts that by 2030, the biggest games will use blockchain as seamlessly as today’s titles use the internet.

What comes next

Huang and Bitkraft are tracking non-obvious shifts: from new monetisation models built on player-owned economies, to generative AI streamlining customer service and game balancing, to decentralised identity systems reshaping how players build cross-platform reputations. Each points to a broader transformation of the gamer’s relationship with platforms.

Also Read: How community-led platforms are powering the next wave of Web3 gaming

“Web3’s real promise isn’t speculation,” Huang insists. “It’s agency. It’s about giving players ownership of their time, achievements, and communities in a way that Web2 platforms never could.”

If history is any guide, the skeptics will continue to dominate headlines until the breakout hits arrive. But for Bitkraft, Southeast Asia is already incubating the developers who will write the next chapter. “The biggest games of 2030,” Huang says with quiet certainty, “will be built on crypto rails. We just need patience to see it through.”

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