Can Open USD Support Stripe's Ambitions?

marsbitPublished on 2026-07-07Last updated on 2026-07-07

Abstract

Can Open USD support Stripe's ambition? The article argues that OUSD represents a pivotal strategic move for Stripe, shifting its narrative from being a superior payments API company to becoming a "money movement network." Unlike simply facilitating payments, this new model aims to organize and define the settlement layer, default assets, and economic distribution rules for future commerce. The analysis highlights OUSD's role in giving Stripe a potential default settlement asset, enabling deeper economics through reserve earnings, and providing a programmable money layer for emerging use cases like AI agentic commerce. Crucially, OUSD is presented not as a direct "USDC killer" but as an attempt to redefine the business model of stablecoins, proposing a collaborative governance structure where contributing partners share in the network's economic benefits and governance. For Stripe, this is about evolving from a powerful "abstraction layer" over traditional financial rails into an active participant and potential architect of the next-generation global settlement network. While OUSD alone cannot immediately realize this ambition, it signals Stripe's intent to move closer to the money layer itself, positioning itself at the center of future money flows in an increasingly automated, platform-driven, and AI-powered economy. The ultimate question is whether Stripe can transition from being a best-in-class payment processor to becoming the foundational infrastructure for internet...

Author: Yokiiiya Stablehunter

Five months ago, I wrote an article titledStripe|AWS of the Financial World: Why It Becomes the Biggest Winner in the AI + Stablecoin Era, where I argued that Money will run on Stripe. Stripe is not just building a better payment button; it is turning financial capabilities like collecting payments, making payouts, issuing cards, managing fund accounts, handling taxes, and billing into infrastructure that developers can call, much like cloud services.

But with the emergence of Open USD, we see that Stripe wants to prove not just that money will run on Stripe. It aims to show that:

Money will not only run through Stripe.

Money may settle on a network Stripe helped define.

I. OUSD is a Key Step for Stripe's Transformation into a Money Movement Network

The significance of OUSD lies not in it being just another stablecoin, but in it providing Stripe with a bigger narrative: transforming from a payments API company into a money movement network.

It won't replace USDC in the short term, nor can it bypass all traditional financial systems. However, it gives Stripe the opportunity not just to connect payments but to reorganize settlement, liquidity, and yield distribution. In the past, we often understood Stripe as a better payment gateway, but more accurately, Stripe is an aggregation layer built upon card networks, bank account systems, local clearing networks, acquiring/issuing licenses, and various traditional payment rails.

This is also its limitation.

What Stripe truly wants to break through is the strategic constraint of being "just the API layer on top of traditional payment networks." If Stripe were merely a better payments API, no matter how big it gets, it could easily be framed against competitors like Adyen, PayPal, Fiserv, Checkout.com, and acquiring banks. The market would focus on transaction volume, take rate, whether gross margins can be maintained, if card network costs will continue to rise, and whether regulations and local licenses will limit expansion.

This would still be a very good company, but not yet a truly financial network. The significance of OUSD is that it gives Stripe the chance to advance its narrative from "we help merchants connect payment methods" to "we participate in defining the next-generation commercial settlement network."

The valuation logic for these two things is completely different. The former is software and payment aggregators, the latter is a network.

What is most valuable in the payments industry has never been just the API, but network effects. Visa and Mastercard are valuable not because they have prettier payment buttons, but because they organize a multi-sided network: issuers, acquirers, merchants, consumers, risk rules, dispute resolution, and clearing paths all operate within the same rule system.

If Stripe wants to tell a bigger story than "payments API," it must answer one question: Can it not only connect others' networks but also organize its own network? OUSD provides the narrative entry point. What attracts Stripe to OUSD is not whether it's another dollar stablecoin, but that it points to four things simultaneously.

First, it gives Stripe the opportunity to have a default settlement asset.

In the past, Stripe helped merchants connect to Visa, Mastercard, ACH, local wallets, and bank transfers. In the future, if OUSD can become the default settlement asset for Stripe's merchants, platforms, marketplaces, and AI agents, Stripe would not just be connecting others' networks but organizing its own.

Second, it changes economic distribution.

In traditional payments, Stripe can charge processing fees, but underlying network fees, bank fees, card network fees, and some fund yields remain with others. If stablecoin reserve yields, minting/redeeming, liquidity, wallets, cards, and on/off-ramps are all organized within the Stripe/Bridge system, Stripe has a chance to tap into deeper economics.

Third, it provides a programmable money layer for agentic commerce.

If the underlying layer remains just credit cards and bank transfers, what agents can do will be constrained by authorization, risk controls, settlement delays, cross-border costs, and reconciliation processes. Stablecoins don't solve all problems, but they are closer to a money rail that machines can call.

Fourth, it moves Stripe from a software company toward a network company.

If OUSD succeeds, Stripe's story could shift from "we make payments easier" to "we are organizing the next-generation global commercial settlement network." This is its truly important aspect. But we must also look at it calmly.

Currently, OUSD is more like the narrative starting point for this ambition, rather than a completed infrastructure. Stablecoin networks aren't announced; they need deep enough liquidity, stable and low-friction redemption, bank and regulatory acceptance, merchants willing to hold or auto-settle, integration with enterprise ERP, treasury, and reconciliation systems, stable cross-chain and cross-region experiences, and participant governance that doesn't become a slow-decision alliance.

Therefore, OUSD is not a USDC killer in the short term. It's more like Stripe asking the market a question: If future money movement doesn't just rely on traditional payment networks, then who will organize the new settlement assets, distribution networks, and economic distribution mechanisms?

II. What OUSD Actually Aims to Do: Not a USDC Killer, But Rewriting Stablecoin Benefit Distribution

Open USD, abbreviated as OUSD, is a new dollar stablecoin announced by Open Standard on June 30, 2026. The official definition is: a shared stablecoin for global financial activity, i.e., a stablecoin for global financial activities.

It is not a "private stablecoin" issued solely by Stripe. It is governed and operated by Open Standard, an independent company, with participation from a group of payment companies, banks, fintech companies, crypto infrastructure firms, and merchant platforms. Official participants listed include Stripe, Visa, Mastercard, BlackRock, BNY, Coinbase, Shopify, Bridge, Tempo, Privy, etc.

There's an interesting detail here: OUSD was not directly launched by Stripe officially. It was announced by Open Standard, and Open Standard's founding CEO is Zach Abrams. Zach Abrams is also the co-founder/CEO of Bridge, which has been acquired by Stripe.

Organizationally, OUSD is not unrelated to Stripe. On the contrary, it clearly lies on the strategic extension line of Stripe/Bridge's stablecoin strategy. But from a product and governance narrative perspective, it cannot be packaged as Stripe's private stablecoin.

This is precisely where OUSD is delicate: It needs Stripe and Bridge's execution capabilities, payment network understanding, and future distribution power, but it must present itself as a stablecoin network with multi-party participation, co-governance, and shared economic benefits through the independent entity Open Standard.

In other words, it needs Stripe's strength, but it mustn't appear to be just Stripe's coin. OUSD's design focuses on three aspects.

First, minting and redeeming are free, with no artificially set scale limits.

Second, the yield generated by OUSD's reserve assets, after deducting a small management fee, will be distributed to partners who drive adoption and distribution.

Third, it adopts collaborative governance. Open Standard's board is composed of OUSD partners. The official vision is for it not to be a private network of any single company, but a stablecoin infrastructure shaped by participants. OUSD is not just another dollar stablecoin; it attempts to answer a more commercial question:

If stablecoins become the infrastructure for global money movement, should the companies that use, distribute, and bring transaction scenarios to them also participate in governance and benefit distribution?

So, what does OUSD actually aim to do? I don't believe it is a USDC killer in the short term.

USDC's first-mover advantage is very real. It has liquidity, exchange and DeFi use cases, institutional trust, a compliance brand, and many completed integrations. Stablecoins aren't something you can migrate just by changing the name; behind them lies redemption trust, liquidity depth, counterparty acceptance, and operational inertia.

After OUSD's announcement, Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire quickly responded to competition concerns raised by OUSD. His core point wasn't "anyone can issue a stablecoin," but quite the opposite: stablecoins are a long-term accumulation of platform and network effects.

He emphasized that USDC's moat comes mainly from three things: developer and application integrations, global liquidity, and regulatory and financial system integration.

In Circle's official Q1 2026 data, USDC's circulating supply is $77 billion, with quarterly on-chain transaction volume of $21.5 trillion. This number may not fully reflect real commercial payment penetration, but it's enough to show one thing: USDC is not a ticker that can be easily replaced; it's already an operational stablecoin network.

This is also why framing OUSD as a "USDC killer" would be an oversimplification. What's truly interesting about OUSD is not that it will immediately replace someone, but that it has chosen a different path: It doesn't start by competing for trading liquidity in the crypto-native world, but cuts in from enterprise payments, platform settlement, merchant distribution, and reserve yield distribution.

In existing stablecoin models, many users are actually just distributors or channels. The more a stablecoin is used, the more the issuer benefits from reserve yields. While payment companies, platforms, merchants, wallets, banks, and fintech contribute to distribution and use cases, they may not fully participate in the underlying economics.

This is what OUSD wants to change. It tries to persuade enterprises: You're not just using a stablecoin; you can also participate in the governance and economic distribution of this stablecoin network.

Therefore, what OUSD challenges is not just USDC's market share. It challenges a more fundamental issue in the stablecoin industry: Who contributes to the stablecoin's use cases, and who should share how much of its economic benefits?

From this perspective, USDC's advantages remain strong, but what OUSD proposes is not a simple replacement relationship, but a new benefit distribution model. This also explains why it emphasizes open, neutral governance, and shared economics.

Open, to reduce the psychological cost for enterprises to join and exit. Neutral governance, to make participants believe this isn't a private stablecoin of any single company. Shared economics, to allow companies that truly bring distribution and transaction volume to participate in reserve yield and network value distribution.

This is not purely a technical issue; it's a commercial organization issue. Of course, this path is also harder. The larger the alliance, the higher the coordination costs. The more participants, the more complex the governance. The more a stablecoin wants to become public infrastructure, the more it must address who is responsible, who benefits, who bears liability, and who makes final decisions.

Allaire's rebuttal to "everyone sharing benefits" precisely touches this contradiction: If all revenue is distributed, who will continuously invest in infrastructure? This isn't just Circle's defensive rhetoric. It is indeed a question OUSD must answer in the future.

Circle's logic is: A strong issuer needs to retain sufficient profits to continuously build compliance, liquidity, redemption, and global financial infrastructure.

OUSD's logic is: If stablecoins are to become shared infrastructure, then participants contributing distribution, use cases, and transaction volume should also share more reserve economics and governance rights.

Therefore, this isn't a simple competition of "who is cheaper." It's competition between two ways of organizing stablecoins. OUSD is not a USDC killer in the short term.

It is more like a commercial counter-question to the USDC model: If stablecoins truly become the next-generation global payment infrastructure, should they be dominated by a strong issuer, or co-governed by a group of commercial networks that genuinely contribute traffic, use cases, and trust?

III. Stripe Needs More Than Growth; It Needs a Larger Company Narrative

Stripe is already a very large company, serving a vast number of global internet companies, SaaS, platform businesses, marketplaces, and emerging AI companies. Its products have long been more than just payment buttons, covering a whole suite of financial infrastructure including payments collection, payouts, billing, taxes, risk controls, card issuing, fund accounts, and business registration.

But the problem is, the capital market doesn't just ask if a company is big. It also asks: What exactly is this company? This is a question Stripe has always needed to answer.

If Stripe is understood as a payments company, it gets valued within the framework of payments companies. The market will look at its transaction processing volume, take rate, gross margin, card network costs, competitive intensity, regulatory pressure, and whether it can sustain high growth long-term.

If Stripe is understood as a software company, it faces another problem: Its revenue structure includes a large portion driven by payment volume, unlike pure SaaS with very clear subscription revenue and software margin models.

Therefore, Stripe's most imaginative narrative has never been "we are a payments company," nor simply "we are a SaaS company."

It is: We are the financial infrastructure for the internet economy. Five months ago, I wrote about it being the "AWS of the Financial World," which is exactly this point.

AWS's core isn't that it has many APIs, but that enterprises run their computing, storage, databases, networking, security, and deployment processes on it. It provides not a point tool, but the default runtime environment.

What Stripe wants to become isn't a point payment tool either. It wants to become the default financial runtime environment for internet commerce, which is also why OUSD is important to Stripe.

Because if Stripe continues just packaging more traditional financial capabilities as APIs, it remains an abstraction on top of the existing financial system. It can become more user-friendly, more complete, more like a financial OS, but the settlement assets, clearing networks, and part of the economic benefits it depends on remain in others' hands.

What OUSD gives it is an opportunity to move down into the money layer. From this perspective, actions like Bridge, Open Issuance, OUSD, Privy, agentic commerce, and Tempo are not isolated. Bridge gives Stripe stablecoin issuance/orchestration capabilities. Open Issuance allows enterprises to issue and manage their own stablecoins. OUSD provides an entry point for a shared stablecoin and alliance network. Privy brings Stripe closer to wallet, identity, and user-side crypto-native onboarding. Tempo is a payments-focused blockchain incubated by Stripe and Paradigm, pointing to stablecoin payment and settlement rails. Agentic commerce provides a new use case for all this: If AI agents in the future truly represent users, enterprises, and software systems to initiate purchases, subscriptions, service calls, and complete settlements, then payments will no longer be just human actions of clicking checkout buttons, but ongoing fund flows between software.

Looking at these actions together, the story Stripe wants to tell is not just: We make payments easier. It is: We enable the money movement in the next-generation internet economy to be callable by software, manageable by enterprises, and settled globally.

This is the money movement network narrative. It is bigger than payments API, and bigger than "supporting stablecoin payments."

Of course, this story is still just a story for now. OUSD hasn't become a real default settlement asset, and agentic commerce hasn't entered large-scale commercialization. Whether enterprises are willing to hold stablecoins, whether financial systems can integrate, how regulators view it, how traditional payment networks will react—none of these have answers yet.

But a company narrative doesn't emerge only after everything is done; it often appears when a company is about to cross its existing boundaries.

The boundary Stripe is now crossing is from "I help you connect to payments" to "I help you organize money movement."

OUSD is not just another competitor in the stablecoin market. It is a signal of Stripe pushing itself from a payment company toward a money movement network.

IV. Agentic Payment Isn't Competing for the Payment Gateway; It's Competing for the Settlement Layer of Machine Transactions

OUSD is worth examining alongside agentic payment, not because AI agents will definitely only use OUSD for payments in the future.

In fact, the most common and mature stablecoin asset in agentic payment today is still USDC. Many agent wallet, x402, and on-chain micropayment solutions are more easily built around USDC by default. USDC's advantage isn't just its compliance brand, but its integration into developer tools, wallets, exchanges, payment infrastructure, and on-chain liquidity networks.

Visa and Mastercard aren't bystanders either. They won't sit back and wait for stablecoins to replace them. A more realistic scenario is that card networks are also transforming themselves into payment networks usable by agents: finer-grained authorization, stronger tokenized credentials, risk controls, limits, and settlement rules more suitable for machine transactions.

In June 2026, Visa announced a set of AI, stablecoin, and token innovations to support more intelligent, programmable commercial transactions. Mastercard also launched Agent Pay for Machines, explicitly supporting multi-rail settlement with cards, accounts, and stablecoins.

Therefore, the future of agentic payment won't be a simple story of "stablecoins replacing card networks."

What is more likely to happen is: Card networks, bank accounts, stablecoins, wallets, on-chain settlement, and merchant systems will simultaneously compete for the same position: Who will become the settlement layer that agents can call, enterprises can control, merchants can accept, and finance departments can reconcile?

This is also why Stripe's moves are worth looking at together:

OUSD is an attempt at a settlement asset.

Tempo is an attempt at a payment chain and stablecoin settlement rail.

Bridge is infrastructure for stablecoin issuance/orchestration.

Privy is an entry point for wallets, identity, and user onboarding.

If viewed separately, these are just product moves. But viewed together, they point to the same question: Stripe doesn't just want to participate in the front-end checkout of agentic payment. It wants to move from the payment gateway down to the settlement layer. This is also the truly interesting aspect between Stripe and traditional card networks.

Visa and Mastercard's advantage is that they already have global merchant networks, issuer networks, risk rules, and dispute resolution systems. Their most natural path is to transform their existing networks into payment networks that agents can also call.

Stripe's strength isn't owning the card network itself, but standing on the side of merchants, developers, platforms, and emerging software companies, packaging complex financial capabilities into APIs. It is closer to the application layer and merchant side, and more easily integrated into the workflows of AI-native companies, agent tools, SaaS, and marketplaces.

Therefore, if agentic payment truly develops, Stripe won't be satisfied just helping agents call Visa or Mastercard.

What it wants to do more is: Enable agents to use money securely within Stripe's rule system. The key here isn't "can it pay," but the whole set of questions after payment:

Who authorizes? Who sets the budget? Who bears the risk? Who does KYC? Who handles refunds and disputes? Who syncs transactions into the enterprise's accounting system? Who decides how much an agent can spend, on which services, and with which assets to settle?

This is where machine transactions become truly complex. An agent purchasing APIs, calling data, subscribing to tools, paying for compute, completing cross-border tasks—superficially, it's a payment, but behind it lies a set of permission, identity, risk, budget, audit, and reconciliation issues.

Stablecoins can solve part of the settlement efficiency problem, but they can't solve all commercial payment issues alone. Card networks can continue providing authorization, risk controls, and merchant acceptance, but they also need to adapt to low-value, high-frequency, cross-platform, software-initiated transaction patterns.

What Stripe wants to compete for is precisely the middle layer between these two:

On one side, connecting merchants and developers; on the other, organizing stablecoins, wallets, identity, risk controls, settlement, and reconciliation.

From this perspective, OUSD isn't the entire answer to agentic payment; it is a piece of the puzzle for Stripe moving down to the settlement layer.

The real ambition is to turn agentic payment into a money movement network that Stripe can organize.

V. So, Can OUSD Support Stripe's Ambitions?

Returning to the initial question: Can Open USD support Stripe's ambitions? My answer is: Not in the short term, but it makes this ambition more concrete for the first time.

It can't immediately free Stripe from traditional payment networks. Visa, Mastercard, ACH, local banks, card organizations, acquirers, issuers, regulatory licenses, KYC, AML, taxes, reconciliation—these things won't disappear just because a stablecoin is announced. Real-world commercial payments are never as simple as "money moves from A to B."

Stablecoins can solve part of the transmission problem; they can make funds move faster, cheaper, and more programmably, but they can't automatically solve the landing problem.

After the money arrives, who is responsible for booking it? Who does KYC? Who bears fraud risk? Who handles refunds and disputes? Who ensures the merchant receives funds they can use? Who integrates this transaction into the enterprise's ERP, financial system, and tax processes?

These problems still require a lot of traditional financial and commercial infrastructure, which is also why Stripe won't become a pure crypto company because of OUSD.

The more likely path it will take is another: making stablecoins part of its existing financial infrastructure. That is, if OUSD succeeds, it won't be because it makes Stripe leave the traditional financial system, but because it gives Stripe an additional settlement network, defined with its participation, outside the traditional system.

This network may not replace everything, but it can change Stripe's position in money movement.

In the past, Stripe was more like an excellent translator, translating complex financial systems into APIs developers could call, turning capabilities like payments, billing, taxes, card issuing, risk controls, and fund accounts into modules enterprises could embed into their products.

But OUSD points to something else: Stripe isn't just translating existing financial systems. It is starting to participate in defining new financial systems. This is why I think it's worth writing about. Not because OUSD will definitely win, but because it exposes the most important strategic question for Stripe's next stage:

Does Stripe want to become a better payment processor, or does it want to become the money movement network for the next generation of internet commerce?

These two things seem close but are actually far apart. A payment processor's value comes from transaction processing, risk controls, integration efficiency, and merchant coverage. A money movement network's value comes from network effects, default settlement assets, rule-making capabilities, liquidity organization capabilities, and economic distribution mechanisms.

The former is a service; the latter is infrastructure.

What Stripe has done best over the past fifteen years is turning financial services into software interfaces. But if it wants to support AI commerce, global platform economies, cross-border payouts, stablecoin settlement, and agentic payment in the future, it cannot just stay at the interface layer.

It needs to get closer to the money itself. OUSD gives it an entry point to get closer to the money. Of course, whether this entry point becomes a real network depends on the coming years. It depends on whether OUSD has real use cases, whether Stripe deeply embeds it into merchant, platform, and developer tools, whether participants truly bring distribution rather than just putting logos on the announcement page, whether regulators accept this alliance stablecoin structure, and also how Circle, Tether, banks, card networks, and other payment companies respond.

This won't be answered quickly, but it has already made one thing clear: Stablecoins are no longer just trading assets in the crypto world. They are becoming tools for payment companies, banks, platforms, merchants, and AI companies to compete for the entry point of the next-generation money network.

From this perspective, OUSD isn't Stripe's endpoint; it's a signal of Stripe trying to push itself from a payments API company toward a money movement network.

Five months ago, I wrote: Money will run on Stripe.

Looking today, this statement can be pushed one step further. What Stripe wants to prove is:

Money may settle on a network Stripe helped define.

Trending Cryptos

Related Questions

QAccording to the article, what is the core strategic significance of Open USD (OUSD) for Stripe, beyond being just another stablecoin?

AThe article argues that OUSD's core significance for Stripe is not as another stablecoin, but as a narrative vehicle for a larger strategic shift. It moves Stripe's story from being a "payments API company" to becoming a "money movement network." This transition means Stripe would no longer just be an aggregator/abstraction layer on top of existing card and banking networks, but a participant in defining the settlement assets, distribution networks, and economic distribution mechanisms for the next generation of global commerce. This shift has a fundamentally different valuation logic, from a software/payments aggregator to a network.

QHow does the design of OUSD attempt to rewrite the profit-sharing model of the stablecoin industry?

AOUSD attempts to rewrite the stablecoin profit-sharing model through three key design principles: 1) No fees for minting and redeeming, with no artificial caps. 2) The yield generated by OUSD's reserve assets, after a small management fee, is distributed to the partners who drive its adoption and distribution. 3) It employs collaborative governance through the Open Standard entity, involving partners in its board. The core idea is that companies contributing to the stablecoin's usage, distribution, and transaction volume should share in the governance rights and the economic benefits (reserve yield) of the network, rather than having those benefits primarily accrue to a single issuer.

QWhat are the four key areas that OUSD points towards, which collectively support Stripe's ambition to build a 'money movement network'?

AThe article states that OUSD points towards four key areas for Stripe's ambition: 1) **Owning a default settlement asset**: It gives Stripe the chance to have OUSD as the default settlement asset for its merchants, platforms, and AI agents, moving beyond just connecting to others' networks. 2) **Changing economic distribution**: It allows Stripe to capture a deeper layer of economics, including reserve yield and liquidity, beyond just processing fees. 3) **Providing a programmable money layer for agentic commerce**: It offers a financial rail more suitable for machine-initiated transactions compared to traditional systems. 4) **Moving from a software company to a network company**: It enables the narrative of organizing the next-generation global commercial settlement network.

QIn the context of agentic payments, what is the critical layer that Stripe, according to the article, is competing to own, beyond just the payment checkout?

AIn the context of agentic payments, the article suggests Stripe is competing to own the **settlement layer**. This goes beyond the front-end payment checkout. It's about the comprehensive system that handles authorization, budgeting, risk management, KYC, refunds/disputes, transaction reconciliation with enterprise systems (like ERP), and deciding which assets settle a transaction. Stripe aims to be the middle layer that connects merchants/developers on one side and organizes stablecoins, wallets, identity, risk controls, settlement, and reconciliation on the other, making agentic payments a part of its 'money movement network.'

QWhat is the article's final assessment on whether OUSD can support Stripe's ambition in the short term and what is its symbolic importance?

AThe article's final assessment is that OUSD **cannot** fully support Stripe's ambition in the short term, as it faces significant challenges like building liquidity, gaining regulatory acceptance, and integrating with real-world business processes (KYC, accounting, etc.). However, its symbolic importance is that it makes Stripe's ambition much more concrete for the first time. OUSD serves as a signal and an entry point for Stripe to move from being a 'payments API company' to a 'money movement network.' It represents Stripe's attempt to participate in defining a new financial layer (a settlement network) alongside, not in full replacement of, the traditional financial system.

Related Reads

Goldman Sachs Research Report Analysis: Circle and USDC Are Moving Beyond the Crypto World, Cross-Border Payments and AI Agents Become New Battlegrounds

Goldman Sachs published a summary of its meeting with Circle Internet Group (issuer of USDC) on July 5th. The core takeaway is that stablecoins, led by USDC, are evolving from a crypto-native tool into foundational infrastructure for traditional finance and the AI economy. USDC's use cases are rapidly expanding beyond crypto trading into cross-border payments, e-commerce, capital market settlements, and notably, payments for AI agents. Circle's management emphasized that stablecoin growth is now decoupled from crypto market cycles, driven by this diversification. They outlined five key application layers and highlighted USDC's network effects, global liquidity depth, and regulatory compliance as competitive moats. Circle distinguishes USDC from bank-issued tokenized deposits, arguing the former is an open, internet-native system without bank credit risk. Strategically, Circle is building a broader fintech platform with its Arc Layer 1 blockchain, the Circle Payments Network for cross-border transfers, and an "Agentic Stack" to serve AI agent economies, where USDC already dominates. Regarding regulation, Circle views potential U.S. legislation like the CLARITY Act as a catalyst for growth rather than a constraint, expecting it to encourage broader institutional adoption and active usage. Goldman Sachs maintains a Neutral rating on Circle with a $96 price target, noting the company's shift from a pure stablecoin issuer to a financial infrastructure provider. Key risks include competition from USDT and potential earnings pressure from declining interest rates on its reserve assets.

marsbit22m ago

Goldman Sachs Research Report Analysis: Circle and USDC Are Moving Beyond the Crypto World, Cross-Border Payments and AI Agents Become New Battlegrounds

marsbit22m ago

The Robinhood Stock Tokens You Bought Are Just Debts from Jersey Island

The Robinhood stock tokens you buy are essentially debt securities issued by a shell company in Jersey, not real equity. These tokens merely track stock prices like NVIDIA or Apple but grant no shareholder rights like voting or dividends. If the underlying company fails, you have no claim on its assets. Instead, you hold a debt instrument from Robinhood Assets (Jersey) Limited, which promises returns based on stock performance. If this Jersey entity goes bankrupt, you become an unsecured creditor. This complex structure stems from Robinhood's past crisis during the 2021 GameStop short squeeze, where T+2 settlement caused liquidity issues. The blockchain-based tokens enable instant settlement, theoretically preventing such trading halts. The product is classified by the SEC as a "linked security" or structured note, carrying counterparty risk not borne by actual shareholders. It is available globally but excluded from the US, UK, and other major markets, while Robinhood offers a fully compliant, asset-backed token model in Europe under MiFID II. The system relies on oracles for pricing, which poses risks like manipulation and faulty liquidations seen in DeFi exploits. Robinhood profits from spreads and aims to become a full-chain settlement layer. Meanwhile, competitors like Ondo have launched SEC-registered, fully compliant equity tokens in the US with actual voting rights and dividends. Robinhood’s Jersey debt model appears as a transitional, regulatory-arbitrage product, aiming to capture market share ahead of future regulatory clarity.

Foresight News55m ago

The Robinhood Stock Tokens You Bought Are Just Debts from Jersey Island

Foresight News55m ago

Trading

Spot

Hot Articles

What is SONIC

Sonic: Pioneering the Future of Gaming in Web3 Introduction to Sonic In the ever-evolving landscape of Web3, the gaming industry stands out as one of the most dynamic and promising sectors. At the forefront of this revolution is Sonic, a project designed to amplify the gaming ecosystem on the Solana blockchain. Leveraging cutting-edge technology, Sonic aims to deliver an unparalleled gaming experience by efficiently processing millions of requests per second, ensuring that players enjoy seamless gameplay while maintaining low transaction costs. This article delves into the intricate details of Sonic, exploring its creators, funding sources, operational mechanics, and the timeline of significant events that have shaped its journey. What is Sonic? Sonic is an innovative layer-2 network that operates atop the Solana blockchain, specifically tailored to enhance the existing Solana gaming ecosystem. It accomplishes this through a customised, VM-agnostic game engine paired with a HyperGrid interpreter, facilitating sovereign game economies that roll up back to the Solana platform. The primary goals of Sonic include: Enhanced Gaming Experiences: Sonic is committed to offering lightning-fast on-chain gameplay, allowing players and developers to engage with games at previously unattainable speeds. Atomic Interoperability: This feature enables transactions to be executed within Sonic without the need to redeploy Solana programmes and accounts. This makes the process more efficient and directly benefits from Solana Layer1 services and liquidity. Seamless Deployment: Sonic allows developers to write for Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) based systems and execute them on Solana’s SVM infrastructure. This interoperability is crucial for attracting a broader range of dApps and decentralised applications to the platform. Support for Developers: By offering native composable gaming primitives and extensible data types - dining within the Entity-Component-System (ECS) framework - game creators can craft intricate business logic with ease. Overall, Sonic's unique approach not only caters to players but also provides an accessible and low-cost environment for developers to innovate and thrive. Creator of Sonic The information regarding the creator of Sonic is somewhat ambiguous. However, it is known that Sonic's SVM is owned by the company Mirror World. The absence of detailed information about the individuals behind Sonic reflects a common trend in several Web3 projects, where collective efforts and partnerships often overshadow individual contributions. Investors of Sonic Sonic has garnered considerable attention and support from various investors within the crypto and gaming sectors. Notably, the project raised an impressive $12 million during its Series A funding round. The round was led by BITKRAFT Ventures, with other notable investors including Galaxy, Okx Ventures, Interactive, Big Brain Holdings, and Mirana. This financial backing signifies the confidence that investment foundations have in Sonic’s potential to revolutionise the Web3 gaming landscape, further validating its innovative approaches and technologies. How Does Sonic Work? Sonic utilises the HyperGrid framework, a sophisticated parallel processing mechanism that enhances its scalability and customisability. Here are the core features that set Sonic apart: Lightning Speed at Low Costs: Sonic offers one of the fastest on-chain gaming experiences compared to other Layer-1 solutions, powered by the scalability of Solana’s virtual machine (SVM). Atomic Interoperability: Sonic enables transaction execution without redeployment of Solana programmes and accounts, effectively streamlining the interaction between users and the blockchain. EVM Compatibility: Developers can effortlessly migrate decentralised applications from EVM chains to the Solana environment using Sonic’s HyperGrid interpreter, increasing the accessibility and integration of various dApps. Ecosystem Support for Developers: By exposing native composable gaming primitives, Sonic facilitates a sandbox-like environment where developers can experiment and implement business logic, greatly enhancing the overall development experience. Monetisation Infrastructure: Sonic natively supports growth and monetisation efforts, providing frameworks for traffic generation, payments, and settlements, thereby ensuring that gaming projects are not only viable but also sustainable financially. Timeline of Sonic The evolution of Sonic has been marked by several key milestones. Below is a brief timeline highlighting critical events in the project's history: 2022: The Sonic cryptocurrency was officially launched, marking the beginning of its journey in the Web3 gaming arena. 2024: June: Sonic SVM successfully raised $12 million in a Series A funding round. This investment allowed Sonic to further develop its platform and expand its offerings. August: The launch of the Sonic Odyssey testnet provided users with the first opportunity to engage with the platform, offering interactive activities such as collecting rings—a nod to gaming nostalgia. October: SonicX, an innovative crypto game integrated with Solana, made its debut on TikTok, capturing the attention of over 120,000 users within a short span. This integration illustrated Sonic’s commitment to reaching a broader, global audience and showcased the potential of blockchain gaming. Key Points Sonic SVM is a revolutionary layer-2 network on Solana explicitly designed to enhance the GameFi landscape, demonstrating great potential for future development. HyperGrid Framework empowers Sonic by introducing horizontal scaling capabilities, ensuring that the network can handle the demands of Web3 gaming. Integration with Social Platforms: The successful launch of SonicX on TikTok displays Sonic’s strategy to leverage social media platforms to engage users, exponentially increasing the exposure and reach of its projects. Investment Confidence: The substantial funding from BITKRAFT Ventures, among others, emphasizes the robust backing Sonic has, paving the way for its ambitious future. In conclusion, Sonic encapsulates the essence of Web3 gaming innovation, striking a balance between cutting-edge technology, developer-centric tools, and community engagement. As the project continues to evolve, it is poised to redefine the gaming landscape, making it a notable entity for gamers and developers alike. As Sonic moves forward, it will undoubtedly attract greater interest and participation, solidifying its place within the broader narrative of blockchain gaming.

1.8k Total ViewsPublished 2024.04.04Updated 2024.12.03

What is SONIC

What is $S$

Understanding SPERO: A Comprehensive Overview Introduction to SPERO As the landscape of innovation continues to evolve, the emergence of web3 technologies and cryptocurrency projects plays a pivotal role in shaping the digital future. One project that has garnered attention in this dynamic field is SPERO, denoted as SPERO,$$s$. This article aims to gather and present detailed information about SPERO, to help enthusiasts and investors understand its foundations, objectives, and innovations within the web3 and crypto domains. What is SPERO,$$s$? SPERO,$$s$ is a unique project within the crypto space that seeks to leverage the principles of decentralisation and blockchain technology to create an ecosystem that promotes engagement, utility, and financial inclusion. The project is tailored to facilitate peer-to-peer interactions in new ways, providing users with innovative financial solutions and services. At its core, SPERO,$$s$ aims to empower individuals by providing tools and platforms that enhance user experience in the cryptocurrency space. This includes enabling more flexible transaction methods, fostering community-driven initiatives, and creating pathways for financial opportunities through decentralised applications (dApps). The underlying vision of SPERO,$$s$ revolves around inclusiveness, aiming to bridge gaps within traditional finance while harnessing the benefits of blockchain technology. Who is the Creator of SPERO,$$s$? The identity of the creator of SPERO,$$s$ remains somewhat obscure, as there are limited publicly available resources providing detailed background information on its founder(s). This lack of transparency can stem from the project's commitment to decentralisation—an ethos that many web3 projects share, prioritising collective contributions over individual recognition. By centring discussions around the community and its collective goals, SPERO,$$s$ embodies the essence of empowerment without singling out specific individuals. As such, understanding the ethos and mission of SPERO remains more important than identifying a singular creator. Who are the Investors of SPERO,$$s$? SPERO,$$s$ is supported by a diverse array of investors ranging from venture capitalists to angel investors dedicated to fostering innovation in the crypto sector. The focus of these investors generally aligns with SPERO's mission—prioritising projects that promise societal technological advancement, financial inclusivity, and decentralised governance. These investor foundations are typically interested in projects that not only offer innovative products but also contribute positively to the blockchain community and its ecosystems. The backing from these investors reinforces SPERO,$$s$ as a noteworthy contender in the rapidly evolving domain of crypto projects. How Does SPERO,$$s$ Work? SPERO,$$s$ employs a multi-faceted framework that distinguishes it from conventional cryptocurrency projects. Here are some of the key features that underline its uniqueness and innovation: Decentralised Governance: SPERO,$$s$ integrates decentralised governance models, empowering users to participate actively in decision-making processes regarding the project’s future. This approach fosters a sense of ownership and accountability among community members. Token Utility: SPERO,$$s$ utilises its own cryptocurrency token, designed to serve various functions within the ecosystem. These tokens enable transactions, rewards, and the facilitation of services offered on the platform, enhancing overall engagement and utility. Layered Architecture: The technical architecture of SPERO,$$s$ supports modularity and scalability, allowing for seamless integration of additional features and applications as the project evolves. This adaptability is paramount for sustaining relevance in the ever-changing crypto landscape. Community Engagement: The project emphasises community-driven initiatives, employing mechanisms that incentivise collaboration and feedback. By nurturing a strong community, SPERO,$$s$ can better address user needs and adapt to market trends. Focus on Inclusion: By offering low transaction fees and user-friendly interfaces, SPERO,$$s$ aims to attract a diverse user base, including individuals who may not previously have engaged in the crypto space. This commitment to inclusion aligns with its overarching mission of empowerment through accessibility. Timeline of SPERO,$$s$ Understanding a project's history provides crucial insights into its development trajectory and milestones. Below is a suggested timeline mapping significant events in the evolution of SPERO,$$s$: Conceptualisation and Ideation Phase: The initial ideas forming the basis of SPERO,$$s$ were conceived, aligning closely with the principles of decentralisation and community focus within the blockchain industry. Launch of Project Whitepaper: Following the conceptual phase, a comprehensive whitepaper detailing the vision, goals, and technological infrastructure of SPERO,$$s$ was released to garner community interest and feedback. Community Building and Early Engagements: Active outreach efforts were made to build a community of early adopters and potential investors, facilitating discussions around the project’s goals and garnering support. Token Generation Event: SPERO,$$s$ conducted a token generation event (TGE) to distribute its native tokens to early supporters and establish initial liquidity within the ecosystem. Launch of Initial dApp: The first decentralised application (dApp) associated with SPERO,$$s$ went live, allowing users to engage with the platform's core functionalities. Ongoing Development and Partnerships: Continuous updates and enhancements to the project's offerings, including strategic partnerships with other players in the blockchain space, have shaped SPERO,$$s$ into a competitive and evolving player in the crypto market. Conclusion SPERO,$$s$ stands as a testament to the potential of web3 and cryptocurrency to revolutionise financial systems and empower individuals. With a commitment to decentralised governance, community engagement, and innovatively designed functionalities, it paves the way toward a more inclusive financial landscape. As with any investment in the rapidly evolving crypto space, potential investors and users are encouraged to research thoroughly and engage thoughtfully with the ongoing developments within SPERO,$$s$. The project showcases the innovative spirit of the crypto industry, inviting further exploration into its myriad possibilities. While the journey of SPERO,$$s$ is still unfolding, its foundational principles may indeed influence the future of how we interact with technology, finance, and each other in interconnected digital ecosystems.

99 Total ViewsPublished 2024.12.17Updated 2024.12.17

What is $S$

What is AGENT S

Agent S: The Future of Autonomous Interaction in Web3 Introduction In the ever-evolving landscape of Web3 and cryptocurrency, innovations are constantly redefining how individuals interact with digital platforms. One such pioneering project, Agent S, promises to revolutionise human-computer interaction through its open agentic framework. By paving the way for autonomous interactions, Agent S aims to simplify complex tasks, offering transformative applications in artificial intelligence (AI). This detailed exploration will delve into the project's intricacies, its unique features, and the implications for the cryptocurrency domain. What is Agent S? Agent S stands as a groundbreaking open agentic framework, specifically designed to tackle three fundamental challenges in the automation of computer tasks: Acquiring Domain-Specific Knowledge: The framework intelligently learns from various external knowledge sources and internal experiences. This dual approach empowers it to build a rich repository of domain-specific knowledge, enhancing its performance in task execution. Planning Over Long Task Horizons: Agent S employs experience-augmented hierarchical planning, a strategic approach that facilitates efficient breakdown and execution of intricate tasks. This feature significantly enhances its ability to manage multiple subtasks efficiently and effectively. Handling Dynamic, Non-Uniform Interfaces: The project introduces the Agent-Computer Interface (ACI), an innovative solution that enhances the interaction between agents and users. Utilizing Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs), Agent S can navigate and manipulate diverse graphical user interfaces seamlessly. Through these pioneering features, Agent S provides a robust framework that addresses the complexities involved in automating human interaction with machines, setting the stage for myriad applications in AI and beyond. Who is the Creator of Agent S? While the concept of Agent S is fundamentally innovative, specific information about its creator remains elusive. The creator is currently unknown, which highlights either the nascent stage of the project or the strategic choice to keep founding members under wraps. Regardless of anonymity, the focus remains on the framework's capabilities and potential. Who are the Investors of Agent S? As Agent S is relatively new in the cryptographic ecosystem, detailed information regarding its investors and financial backers is not explicitly documented. The lack of publicly available insights into the investment foundations or organisations supporting the project raises questions about its funding structure and development roadmap. Understanding the backing is crucial for gauging the project's sustainability and potential market impact. How Does Agent S Work? At the core of Agent S lies cutting-edge technology that enables it to function effectively in diverse settings. Its operational model is built around several key features: Human-like Computer Interaction: The framework offers advanced AI planning, striving to make interactions with computers more intuitive. By mimicking human behaviour in tasks execution, it promises to elevate user experiences. Narrative Memory: Employed to leverage high-level experiences, Agent S utilises narrative memory to keep track of task histories, thereby enhancing its decision-making processes. Episodic Memory: This feature provides users with step-by-step guidance, allowing the framework to offer contextual support as tasks unfold. Support for OpenACI: With the ability to run locally, Agent S allows users to maintain control over their interactions and workflows, aligning with the decentralised ethos of Web3. Easy Integration with External APIs: Its versatility and compatibility with various AI platforms ensure that Agent S can fit seamlessly into existing technological ecosystems, making it an appealing choice for developers and organisations. These functionalities collectively contribute to Agent S's unique position within the crypto space, as it automates complex, multi-step tasks with minimal human intervention. As the project evolves, its potential applications in Web3 could redefine how digital interactions unfold. Timeline of Agent S The development and milestones of Agent S can be encapsulated in a timeline that highlights its significant events: September 27, 2024: The concept of Agent S was launched in a comprehensive research paper titled “An Open Agentic Framework that Uses Computers Like a Human,” showcasing the groundwork for the project. October 10, 2024: The research paper was made publicly available on arXiv, offering an in-depth exploration of the framework and its performance evaluation based on the OSWorld benchmark. October 12, 2024: A video presentation was released, providing a visual insight into the capabilities and features of Agent S, further engaging potential users and investors. These markers in the timeline not only illustrate the progress of Agent S but also indicate its commitment to transparency and community engagement. Key Points About Agent S As the Agent S framework continues to evolve, several key attributes stand out, underscoring its innovative nature and potential: Innovative Framework: Designed to provide an intuitive use of computers akin to human interaction, Agent S brings a novel approach to task automation. Autonomous Interaction: The ability to interact autonomously with computers through GUI signifies a leap towards more intelligent and efficient computing solutions. Complex Task Automation: With its robust methodology, it can automate complex, multi-step tasks, making processes faster and less error-prone. Continuous Improvement: The learning mechanisms enable Agent S to improve from past experiences, continually enhancing its performance and efficacy. Versatility: Its adaptability across different operating environments like OSWorld and WindowsAgentArena ensures that it can serve a broad range of applications. As Agent S positions itself in the Web3 and crypto landscape, its potential to enhance interaction capabilities and automate processes signifies a significant advancement in AI technologies. Through its innovative framework, Agent S exemplifies the future of digital interactions, promising a more seamless and efficient experience for users across various industries. Conclusion Agent S represents a bold leap forward in the marriage of AI and Web3, with the capacity to redefine how we interact with technology. While still in its early stages, the possibilities for its application are vast and compelling. Through its comprehensive framework addressing critical challenges, Agent S aims to bring autonomous interactions to the forefront of the digital experience. As we move deeper into the realms of cryptocurrency and decentralisation, projects like Agent S will undoubtedly play a crucial role in shaping the future of technology and human-computer collaboration.

767 Total ViewsPublished 2025.01.14Updated 2025.01.14

What is AGENT S

Discussions

Welcome to the HTX Community. Here, you can stay informed about the latest platform developments and gain access to professional market insights. Users' opinions on the price of S (S) are presented below.

活动图片