Ethereum sits in the spotlight today as the UK writes digital assets like ETH directly into property law while derivatives traders quietly rebuild leverage after October’s wipeout. Together, the legal shift and the rise in open interest show how Ethereum’s role keeps deepening both in traditional courts and on crypto futures markets.UK passes law that directly strengthens ETH property rightsDigital assets such as Bitcoin and Ethereum now have explicit recognition as personal property in England, Wales and Northern Ireland after the Property (Digital Assets etc) Act 2025 received Royal Assent and came into force on Dec. 2.The Act states that a “thing,” including something digital or electronic, is not prevented from being the object of personal property rights just because it is neither a “thing in possession” nor a “thing in action,” the two traditional categories in English law. In effect, lawmakers have opened the door for a third category of personal property to cover assets like crypto-tokens and non-fungible tokens.The UK government says the change confirms that digital assets can be recognised as personal property and gives stronger protection to victims of digital theft and fraud, who can now rely on a clearer statutory basis when they go to court.Courts will be able to apply existing property law tools more directly to crypto, including freezing, tracing and recovery of misappropriated coins, and to handle digital asset balances more cleanly in insolvency or exchange failure cases.At the same time, legal analysts say the Act removes uncertainty for banks, custodians and funds that want to hold or use crypto under English-law structures. With digital assets now recognised as objects of property rights in statute, it becomes easier to document security interests and collateral arrangements over ETH and other tokens in secured lending and structured finance transactions. The legislation applies across England, Wales and Northern Ireland and took effect immediately on the day it was passed, following recommendations from the Law Commission’s 2023 digital assets report.ETH open interest climbs again after October crashMeanwhile, Ethereum futures open interest has been rebuilding since the violent wipeout on Oct. 10, leaving derivatives traders more exposed again, according to chart data shared by analyst Ted (@TedPillows). The ETHUSDT perpetual contract on Binance Futures now shows steadily rising positioning even as spot price trades well below its early-autumn levels.Ethereum Futures Open Interest Rebuilds. Source: TedPillowsThe accompanying chart tracks Ethereum’s daily candles on Binance Futures alongside aggregated open interest in coins from analytics platform Velo. It shows leverage collapsing in mid-October, when open interest dropped sharply, then grinding higher through November and into early December as traders slowly added new positions.Ted said he expects much of this rebuilt open interest to “be wiped out in the coming months,” arguing that market makers may push Ethereum into a choppy trading range to flush out leveraged longs and shorts. In that scenario, open interest could fall again as positions are forced to close, even if spot price does not revisit the October crash levels.Ethereum sits in the spotlight today as the UK writes digital assets like ETH directly into property law while derivatives traders quietly rebuild leverage after October’s wipeout. Together, the legal shift and the rise in open interest show how Ethereum’s role keeps deepening both in traditional courts and on crypto futures markets.UK passes law that directly strengthens ETH property rightsDigital assets such as Bitcoin and Ethereum now have explicit recognition as personal property in England, Wales and Northern Ireland after the Property (Digital Assets etc) Act 2025 received Royal Assent and came into force on Dec. 2.The Act states that a “thing,” including something digital or electronic, is not prevented from being the object of personal property rights just because it is neither a “thing in possession” nor a “thing in action,” the two traditional categories in English law. In effect, lawmakers have opened the door for a third category of personal property to cover assets like crypto-tokens and non-fungible tokens.The UK government says the change confirms that digital assets can be recognised as personal property and gives stronger protection to victims of digital theft and fraud, who can now rely on a clearer statutory basis when they go to court.Courts will be able to apply existing property law tools more directly to crypto, including freezing, tracing and recovery of misappropriated coins, and to handle digital asset balances more cleanly in insolvency or exchange failure cases.At the same time, legal analysts say the Act removes uncertainty for banks, custodians and funds that want to hold or use crypto under English-law structures. With digital assets now recognised as objects of property rights in statute, it becomes easier to document security interests and collateral arrangements over ETH and other tokens in secured lending and structured finance transactions. The legislation applies across England, Wales and Northern Ireland and took effect immediately on the day it was passed, following recommendations from the Law Commission’s 2023 digital assets report.ETH open interest climbs again after October crashMeanwhile, Ethereum futures open interest has been rebuilding since the violent wipeout on Oct. 10, leaving derivatives traders more exposed again, according to chart data shared by analyst Ted (@TedPillows). The ETHUSDT perpetual contract on Binance Futures now shows steadily rising positioning even as spot price trades well below its early-autumn levels.Ethereum Futures Open Interest Rebuilds. Source: TedPillowsThe accompanying chart tracks Ethereum’s daily candles on Binance Futures alongside aggregated open interest in coins from analytics platform Velo. It shows leverage collapsing in mid-October, when open interest dropped sharply, then grinding higher through November and into early December as traders slowly added new positions.Ted said he expects much of this rebuilt open interest to “be wiped out in the coming months,” arguing that market makers may push Ethereum into a choppy trading range to flush out leveraged longs and shorts. In that scenario, open interest could fall again as positions are forced to close, even if spot price does not revisit the October crash levels.

UK Locks In Ethereum Property Rights as Futures Bets Rebuild

2025/12/08 02:17
3 min read

Ethereum sits in the spotlight today as the UK writes digital assets like ETH directly into property law while derivatives traders quietly rebuild leverage after October’s wipeout. Together, the legal shift and the rise in open interest show how Ethereum’s role keeps deepening both in traditional courts and on crypto futures markets.

UK passes law that directly strengthens ETH property rights

Digital assets such as Bitcoin and Ethereum now have explicit recognition as personal property in England, Wales and Northern Ireland after the Property (Digital Assets etc) Act 2025 received Royal Assent and came into force on Dec. 2.

The Act states that a “thing,” including something digital or electronic, is not prevented from being the object of personal property rights just because it is neither a “thing in possession” nor a “thing in action,” the two traditional categories in English law. In effect, lawmakers have opened the door for a third category of personal property to cover assets like crypto-tokens and non-fungible tokens.

The UK government says the change confirms that digital assets can be recognised as personal property and gives stronger protection to victims of digital theft and fraud, who can now rely on a clearer statutory basis when they go to court.Courts will be able to apply existing property law tools more directly to crypto, including freezing, tracing and recovery of misappropriated coins, and to handle digital asset balances more cleanly in insolvency or exchange failure cases.

At the same time, legal analysts say the Act removes uncertainty for banks, custodians and funds that want to hold or use crypto under English-law structures. With digital assets now recognised as objects of property rights in statute, it becomes easier to document security interests and collateral arrangements over ETH and other tokens in secured lending and structured finance transactions.

The legislation applies across England, Wales and Northern Ireland and took effect immediately on the day it was passed, following recommendations from the Law Commission’s 2023 digital assets report.

ETH open interest climbs again after October crash

Meanwhile, Ethereum futures open interest has been rebuilding since the violent wipeout on Oct. 10, leaving derivatives traders more exposed again, according to chart data shared by analyst Ted (@TedPillows). The ETHUSDT perpetual contract on Binance Futures now shows steadily rising positioning even as spot price trades well below its early-autumn levels.

Ethereum Futures Open Interest Rebuilds. Source: TedPillows

The accompanying chart tracks Ethereum’s daily candles on Binance Futures alongside aggregated open interest in coins from analytics platform Velo. It shows leverage collapsing in mid-October, when open interest dropped sharply, then grinding higher through November and into early December as traders slowly added new positions.

Ted said he expects much of this rebuilt open interest to “be wiped out in the coming months,” arguing that market makers may push Ethereum into a choppy trading range to flush out leveraged longs and shorts. In that scenario, open interest could fall again as positions are forced to close, even if spot price does not revisit the October crash levels.

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