And it’s not just about access to some of the world’s largest proven oil reserves. There’s a far more interesting asset on the radar right now: Bitcoin linked to the Venezuelan regime.
If the rumors turn out to be true, the US Department of Justice could gain access to up to
Context matters here.
The US has been very clear: it doesn’t plan to buy Bitcoin for its strategic reserve. Instead, that reserve is being built exclusively from confiscated assets. Every BTC currently under US control came from seizures, not market purchases. And that’s what makes the Venezuela story especially telling.
Based on confirmed onchain data, Venezuela officially holds only around
And if even a fraction of those estimates turns out to be accurate, the old question comes back into play:
Because suddenly, the US Department of Justice has a real chance to overtake BlackRock as early as the beginning of 2026.
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Who’s really winning the BTC hoarding race by 2026? 🧐
Anonymous Poll
38%
BlackRock
38%
US Department of Justice
25%
Satoshi Nakamoto
0%
bc1q~jr38
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Telegram gave Web3 its first wave of mini apps. Some of them pulled in millions of users in just weeks. Then the hype faded fast.
Weak project economics turned those mini apps into hate magnets. Most were abandoned.
And the problem wasn’t the format. It was who made money and how.
Base doesn’t have a messenger with hundreds of millions of users. So instead of squeezing attention out of an audience, they chose a different path:
financial incentives for creators and users.
• earning rewards based on engagement with apps and posts
• selling apps, posts, games, and other content
• joining airdrops or running their own
Base’s core focus is content and creators. And creators can go even further by turning posts into ERC-20 tokens anyone can buy.
Telegram tried to make money from creators. Base is trying to create conditions where creators make money. That’s why mini apps on Base aren’t just another format. They’re an attempt to finally close the missing link between
Let’s see if it works this time
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The story starts back in 2018.
That’s when Pavel Durov launched the $GRAM token ICO and raised $1.8B from major investors. At the time, it was one of the biggest and loudest rounds the industry had ever seen.
Then 2019 happened.
U.S. regulators stepped in. The GRAM launch was blocked. The ICO was ruled unlawful, largely because U.S. citizens had participated in the sale. That’s where the rollback began.
Telegram had to return the money to investors. The only problem was that Durov had already spent it
To deal with the fallout, Telegram raised $1B through eurobonds to cover part of the refunds. Not long after, a “non-affiliated” nonprofit showed up in Switzerland – the TON Foundation. That’s where $TON came from.
Years pass. But debts don’t disappear. And this is where things get interesting.
In March 2026, Telegram has to repay that same $1B in bonds. That leaves one obvious question. If not from TON, where exactly is that money supposed to come from?
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Right now the market is being shaped by two powerful money flows. One moves from traditional finance into crypto. The other goes the opposite way, from crypto into traditional assets.
Each flow relies on its own instrument. And it feels like the right moment to compare their real growth potential.
This model comes with clear trade-offs:
Here, money flows into tokenized real-world assets that are sold for crypto. The assets get locked, while crypto markets receive something else, a cash flow generated by real economic activity.
So which approach has more room to grow?
ETF growth is limited by the size of the Web3 market itself. Today that market is around $3.1 trillion, with $1.8 trillion coming from BTC alone.
RWA look at the entire global financial market. And that is a completely different scale:
• Commercial real estate at $32 trillion
• Securities markets at $128.1 trillion
From a market-size perspective, RWA clearly have more upside than ETFs. But size alone doesn’t create demand. What really matters is the problem an instrument solves.
ETFs have already found their role. They act as a bridge for institutions moving from traditional markets into crypto. But RWA face a tougher question:
That’s the question this market will have to answer
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CBDCs are not stablecoins. And confusing the two leads to false conclusions.
Armstrong uses the digital yuan as an example when talking about yield and “benefits for ordinary people.”
The problem is that a CBDC and a stablecoin are fundamentally different instruments.
A CBDC can only be issued by a central bank. A stablecoin, on the other hand, can be issued by any company that holds bank deposits and proper reserves.
If we’re talking specifically about yield-bearing stablecoins, those already exist. USDL, for example, distributes income from its reserves on a daily basis.
And against that backdrop, one more fact stands out. In 2024, Tether earned around $13 billion in interest income and paid USDT holders… $0.
Not because it couldn’t. But because it never promised to
The stablecoin market won’t change because of CBDCs. The real turning point will come when a mass-market crypto dollar appears that:
▪️ shares yield transparently
▪️ remains competitive on liquidity
▪️ and is easy for regular users to understand
When that happens, Tether’s leadership will no longer look untouchable.
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An economy built for good times 🫧
One of the oldest patterns in DeFi hasn’t really changed. Tokens get launched first. Demand is expected to catch up later.
In 2025, Hyperliquid decided not to play that game. Instead, they built a very tight liquidity support system. One that directly ties the token to the exchange itself.
The idea is simple and, honestly, elegant:
99% of all fees go straight into buying back HYPE. Every trader opening a position is indirectly supporting the token’s price.
🔥 The recent one billion dollar burn takes this even further. This is no longer just about mechanics. It’s a clear signal. The team is willing to give up short-term revenue to reinforce long-term stability.
But this design comes with a condition:
It works beautifully while trading activity stays high.
If volumes drop, say by three times, something the crypto market has seen more than once, the buyback mechanism naturally loses strength. The unlock schedule for the team and funds, meanwhile, doesn’t pause. It simply continues.
There’s another delicate layer here.
Twenty-one validators and a relatively small group of large holders control a meaningful share of the supply. Any sharp move from that group could pressure liquidity faster than automated systems can adjust.
Taken together, HYPE’s token model looks like a system optimized for performance during strong market conditions. It’s efficient. It’s aligned. But it doesn’t leave much room for stress.
There’s no built-in buffer for a real slowdown.
If volumes fall, the system doesn’t break overnight. But it does start carrying the full weight of its own emissions.
No room for mistakes.
One of the oldest patterns in DeFi hasn’t really changed. Tokens get launched first. Demand is expected to catch up later.
In 2025, Hyperliquid decided not to play that game. Instead, they built a very tight liquidity support system. One that directly ties the token to the exchange itself.
The idea is simple and, honestly, elegant:
When the exchange earns, the token benefits
99% of all fees go straight into buying back HYPE. Every trader opening a position is indirectly supporting the token’s price.
But this design comes with a condition:
If volumes drop, say by three times, something the crypto market has seen more than once, the buyback mechanism naturally loses strength. The unlock schedule for the team and funds, meanwhile, doesn’t pause. It simply continues.
There’s another delicate layer here.
Twenty-one validators and a relatively small group of large holders control a meaningful share of the supply. Any sharp move from that group could pressure liquidity faster than automated systems can adjust.
Taken together, HYPE’s token model looks like a system optimized for performance during strong market conditions. It’s efficient. It’s aligned. But it doesn’t leave much room for stress.
There’s no built-in buffer for a real slowdown.
If volumes fall, the system doesn’t break overnight. But it does start carrying the full weight of its own emissions.
No room for mistakes.
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A Bitcoin ETF is already a baseline instrument for institutional portfolio construction. $SOL, however, represents a more deliberate and forward-looking choice by the bank’s analysts.
Morgan Stanley will acquire $SOL via third-party custodians and stake the assets to generate yield. This approach supports not only $SOL price, but also TVL across the Solana DeFi ecosystem.
Institutions are no longer just buying the asset.
They’re optimizing for yield from day one
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In 2025, the picture became even clearer. On Solana launchpads, the average number of new tokens per day ranged from 56,400 in January to 26,200 in September. Even using rough averages, that’s 10-15 million tokens a year in just one slice of the market.
The majority of these tokens can’t have a product by definition.
Not because teams “didn’t try hard enough,” but because it’s economically impossible. Product development and distribution simply don’t scale at the same speed as token deployment.
When we talk about tokens with real business utility, we mean tokens that:
🔸are used to pay fees,
🔸grant access to a service,
🔸secure a network,
🔸connect directly to real cash flows.
Those launches aren’t measured in millions. They’re measured in hundreds per year.
~50–200 tokens per year have real, working utility.
~200–600 tokens have partial utility: something exists, but demand is propped up by incentives, or the product hasn’t proven itself yet.
The result is a sharply divided market.
There’s a small layer of projects where the token is deeply embedded into the product and actually needed. They’re rare because they require serious engineering, thoughtful token design, and a solid economic model.
And then there’s a massive layer of tokens with no product at all. Simply because today,
In sheer numbers, the gap between tokens with real utility and tokens without a product is measured in tens of thousands.
And that explains a lot
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But the problem is not October. And it is not crises or Black Swans either. Meme coins, like many other tokens, fall for a much simpler reason. They have no utility.
They are simply not needed.
Demand for meme coins is driven by marketing budgets and market makers. As soon as the cost of keeping a meme alive exceeds the revenue from its trading, teams don’t improve the product. They launch a new meme.
Crises can accelerate the fall to zero. But tokens stay there not because of macro events, but because of their irrelevance. We have already covered this earlier.
Now look at the scale.
At that pace, you barely have time to come up with a name, let alone build real tokenomics.
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When our experts read another report on why memecoin prices crashed...
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The restrictions cover privacy-focused cryptocurrencies such as Zcash (ZEC) and Monero (XMR), along with all related activity. Under the new rules, companies must be able to identify every participant involved in a crypto transaction.
The timing is hard to ignore. The ban comes just as interest in privacy coins is picking up. In 2025, Zcash traded as high as $540, and Monero has now set a new all-time high at $565.
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Why isn’t DeFi making money where the money already is? 💸 🤔
Many traders have already noticed how much U.S. macro data now drives crypto price action. Scroll through any crypto trading feed and you’ll see entire strategies built around specific macro indicators.
Today, crypto traders watch the same things traditional market traders do: Federal Funds Rate, PCE Price Index, Non Farm Payrolls, even oil inventory data. So why?
Because the real drivers of token prices are large, professional investors with serious capital. And those investors always have a choice of where and when to allocate. Crypto is just one tool in their portfolio. Most crypto projects, however, are still ignoring this shift.
Here’s a simple example👇
The Federal Reserve cuts rates. The dollar gets cheaper and more accessible. Deposits and bonds start yielding less. Credit becomes cheaper.
At that point, investors go looking for alternatives and start paying attention to crypto.
And they usually have two basic options:
➡️ buy tokens,
➡️ or park capital in DeFi.
And this is where DeFi should shine.
For an investor rotating out of bonds, DeFi offers passive yield with relatively low risk. Exactly what they want. But there’s a catch.
An investor buys $USDT, goes into Aave, locks the stablecoins and that’s it. The $AAVE token is not required in this flow. No buying pressure. No demand or price growth📉
The economics could have been designed differently. DeFi could be capturing far more value from rate cut cycles.
But for now, it’s simply letting that opportunity slip away🤷♂️
Many traders have already noticed how much U.S. macro data now drives crypto price action. Scroll through any crypto trading feed and you’ll see entire strategies built around specific macro indicators.
Today, crypto traders watch the same things traditional market traders do: Federal Funds Rate, PCE Price Index, Non Farm Payrolls, even oil inventory data. So why?
Because the real drivers of token prices are large, professional investors with serious capital. And those investors always have a choice of where and when to allocate. Crypto is just one tool in their portfolio. Most crypto projects, however, are still ignoring this shift.
Here’s a simple example
The Federal Reserve cuts rates. The dollar gets cheaper and more accessible. Deposits and bonds start yielding less. Credit becomes cheaper.
At that point, investors go looking for alternatives and start paying attention to crypto.
And they usually have two basic options:
And this is where DeFi should shine.
For an investor rotating out of bonds, DeFi offers passive yield with relatively low risk. Exactly what they want. But there’s a catch.
Today, crypto is leaving money on the table.
An investor buys $USDT, goes into Aave, locks the stablecoins and that’s it. The $AAVE token is not required in this flow. No buying pressure. No demand or price growth
The economics could have been designed differently. DeFi could be capturing far more value from rate cut cycles.
But for now, it’s simply letting that opportunity slip away
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🇬🇧 Ripple secured an EMI license from the UK FCA. The market barely reacted – and that’s a mistake.
This license allows Ripple to legally process fiat payments and run full payment flows within the UK. Ripple’s payment infrastructure is built on XRPL, where XRP functions as a native settlement asset, not a currency and not a speculative token.
Ripple didn’t wait for regulators to label $XRP as money. Instead, the token is structured as a native accounting asset inside a licensed payment system. This is the part the market keeps missing.
💡 This is exactly the model we recommend to clients when they need to legalize transactions through their own token.
The structure is straightforward:
1) users buy the token for fiat from a licensed partner,
2) pay for services on the platform using the token,
3) and the platform sells the tokens back to the partner for fiat.
From a regulatory perspective, this is treated as a fiat payment. The token is only an internal accounting tool within the partner’s digital money system. The only real requirement is a licensed partner authorized to operate with digital money.
⏳ Price action is secondary. The real impact comes when actual payment flows start moving through the system.
This license allows Ripple to legally process fiat payments and run full payment flows within the UK. Ripple’s payment infrastructure is built on XRPL, where XRP functions as a native settlement asset, not a currency and not a speculative token.
Ripple didn’t wait for regulators to label $XRP as money. Instead, the token is structured as a native accounting asset inside a licensed payment system. This is the part the market keeps missing.
The structure is straightforward:
1) users buy the token for fiat from a licensed partner,
2) pay for services on the platform using the token,
3) and the platform sells the tokens back to the partner for fiat.
From a regulatory perspective, this is treated as a fiat payment. The token is only an internal accounting tool within the partner’s digital money system. The only real requirement is a licensed partner authorized to operate with digital money.
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At the very dawn of Web3, every new project was chasing one thing: a record-breaking ICO. Raising tens of millions felt normal. Almost boring.
Eight years passed. Everyone knows Ethereum. But what happened to EOS?
The idea was ambitious. A Layer 1 built for decentralized apps. Fast dApp launches through smart contract builders. Near-zero fees thanks to cheap gas. On paper, it looked perfect.
In reality, EOS managed to step on several rakes at once:
▫️a poorly thought-out token model
▫️painfully slow development
▫️capital spent with little accountability
The idea itself had gone stale.
EOS, much like many AI projects later on, tried to charge money for something the market would soon offer for free. DeFi expanded across every network. Apps became available on TON and Base. And cheap gas stopped being an advantage.
EOS became Vaulta, with a new focus: crypto lending, RWA, payments.
The problem was that those markets had already been occupied and evolving for years. The $EOS token was swapped for $A at a 1:1 ratio. The expected growth never came, and the price started falling even faster.
The EOS story shows the importance of responsible capital management. In the end, it is a story about responsibility and trust.
That record-breaking $4B ICO was, above all, the community believing in an idea. And today’s $0.17 price for token $A shows just how easily that belief was thrown away
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When our expert finishes tokenomics with the token integrated into the product and hands it over to the client 😅
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🚰 Is sewage tokenization the new oil for RWA?
When someone says “RWA,” the first images that come to mind are usually Dubai skyscrapers and tokenized Nasdaq stocks. But the real economy tends to move in a very different direction. In Indonesia, a pilot project is launching to tokenize water treatment facilities, with plans to scale to $200 million across Southeast Asia within a year.
These assets are some of the most logical candidates for tokenization: water networks, heating systems, warehouses, roads. Infrastructure with constant demand and predictable cash flows. With the right structure, they fit naturally into a subscription-based monetization model.
Not glamorous, but scalable.
8Blocks approves🙂
When someone says “RWA,” the first images that come to mind are usually Dubai skyscrapers and tokenized Nasdaq stocks. But the real economy tends to move in a very different direction. In Indonesia, a pilot project is launching to tokenize water treatment facilities, with plans to scale to $200 million across Southeast Asia within a year.
These assets are some of the most logical candidates for tokenization: water networks, heating systems, warehouses, roads. Infrastructure with constant demand and predictable cash flows. With the right structure, they fit naturally into a subscription-based monetization model.
Not glamorous, but scalable.
These are the kinds of RWA that can actually move global GDP
8Blocks approves
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Why is it so hard to predict a Black Swan? 🦢
We’re used to cycles in crypto. At some point, we even start waiting for them. Sometimes we make money on them. The market goes up, then it goes down, liquidity builds. And the loop starts again.
😟 But on October 10, something happened that Web3 hadn’t seen before. Something we now call a Black Swan. For thousands of years, scholars were convinced all swans were white. Until Australia was discovered. Until the first black swan was seen on the Swan River.
That’s the core of the idea.
That’s why Black Swans are so dangerous. They arrive suddenly. And their impact can be unlimited.
They can’t be predicted because no one knows what the next Black Swan will look like.Or what, exactly, it will affect .
Unless someone does?🤔
P.S. Highly recommend reading The Black Swan by Nassim Taleb.
We’re used to cycles in crypto. At some point, we even start waiting for them. Sometimes we make money on them. The market goes up, then it goes down, liquidity builds. And the loop starts again.
That’s the core of the idea.
We mistake what’s familiar for what’s inevitable. And we don’t believe in what we haven’t seen yet.
That’s why Black Swans are so dangerous. They arrive suddenly. And their impact can be unlimited.
They can’t be predicted because no one knows what the next Black Swan will look like.
Unless someone does?
P.S. Highly recommend reading The Black Swan by Nassim Taleb.
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Spoiler:
Liquidity means new money. Money that buys tokens. But where does it come from, and what can bring it into the market?
Historically, fresh money entered the market during Bitcoin rallies. But let’s be honest: BTC is no longer a multiple-upon-multiple asset. It has grown into a large, mature market with limited upside. And without the promise of outsized returns, traditional capital has little reason to move into Web3.
That’s why the market can only grow through ideas with a low entry threshold. Products you can step into immediately, without long explanations or heavy onboarding.
And we’ve already seen this pattern before.
Yes, these models had flaws. And yes, many tokens eventually collapsed and people lost money. But they scaled the crypto audience fast. Very fast.
So what’s next?
The market needs ideas with a simple entry point. No blockchain lectures or loud promises.
People want simplicity and scale. Here and now
What do you think still doesn’t exist – but if it did, people would gladly pay for it?
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State Street is launching an institutional tokenization platform focused on money market funds, ETFs, and tokenized assets. The bank manages over $5.4 trillion in AUM.
At first glance, this looks like another step toward tokenizing liquid instruments that already have no shortage of demand.
Among all directions, State Street explicitly highlights the tokenization of bank deposits.
This is where tension starts to build. If stablecoins and DeFi continue offering higher yields, capital will begin flowing out of traditional bank deposits and into Web3. For banks, losing deposits isn’t about product competition. It means reduced lending and, at scale, a risk to economic growth itself.
In this context, tokenized banking products don’t look like experiments. They look like a necessity.
If a traditional deposit yields 3% annually, while an on-chain product from the same bank offers 7% annually, the question is no longer about technology.
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