Interview with Circle's Chief Economist: USDC's Entry into Hyperliquid Benefits Circle and HYPE, Stablecoins Are Becoming Marginal Buyers of U.S. Treasuries

marsbitPublished on 2026-05-20Last updated on 2026-05-20

Abstract

In an interview with Circle's Chief Economist Gordon Liao, the conversation covers the strategic significance of USDC replacing USDH as the reference asset on the decentralized perpetual exchange Hyperliquid. This shift, facilitated by Coinbase as the reserve manager and Circle providing technical infrastructure, aims to capture net interest income for the platform, with 90% of reserve earnings directed back to Hyperliquid for HYPE token buybacks. Liao discusses how stablecoins like USDC, with their substantial on-chain settlement volumes (e.g., $21 trillion in Q1 2026), are emerging as marginal buyers of U.S. Treasuries, concentrating on short-term debt and effectively reducing the weighted duration of the market, which may provide underlying support for long-term rates. The dialogue also explores the evolving nature of stablecoins as both a medium of exchange and a vehicle for capital and collateral liquidity. Additionally, the panel touches on the CLARITY Act's legislative progress, noting compromises around "activity-based rewards" and remaining hurdles like ethics concerns. On AI, there's debate over value capture, with predictions that distribution and application layers, rather than foundational model companies like OpenAI, will accrue most value. Regarding the bond market, Liao attributes the rise in 30-year yields primarily to an increased term premium (around 80 bps) driven by supply-demand dynamics, including fiscal expansion and changing investor demand, rather t...

Compiled & Edited: Deep Tide TechFlow

Guests: Gordon Liao (Chief Economist, Circle), Ram Ahluwalia (Co-founder & CEO, Lumida Wealth), Chris Perkins (Managing Partner, CoinFund)

Host: Austin Campbell

Original Title: The Fed, China, and CLARITY + Coinbase Eats USDH

Podcast Source: Unchained

Air Date: May 19, 2026

Editor's Note

In this podcast, Gordon Liao, Chief Economist at Circle, systematically explains for the first time the market structure logic behind USDH being replaced by USDC. USDC balances on the Hyperliquid platform have roughly doubled over the past year. 90% of the reserve earnings are returned to Hyperliquid for HYPE buybacks, with Coinbase acting as the treasury deployer and Circle as the technical deployer, staking 500,000 HYPE tokens.

Gordon also breaks down the long-end U.S. Treasury rates. The current 30-year yield breaking above 5% is primarily driven by the term premium. Meanwhile, stablecoins are quietly becoming marginal buyers of U.S. Treasuries. In Q1 2026 alone, USDC on-chain settlement volume reached $21 trillion. Stablecoins' concentrated purchases of short-term Treasuries effectively lower the overall weighted duration of U.S. government debt, potentially providing support against rising long-end rates.

Additionally, the program discusses key sticking points in the CLARITY Act and differing views on where value will be captured in AI following the OpenAI lawsuit.

Key Quotes

USDH Replaced by USDC

  • "This is essentially a liquidity supernova event. As the dominant perpetual contract platform on-chain, the collateral asset it uses radiates throughout the on-chain economy."
  • "That governance vote eight or nine months ago chose a different reference asset. But as the platform grows and matures, it also needs to interface with more traditional institutions. Using high-quality, institutional-grade collateral is a key part of that."
  • "Anywhere that can lock up TVL—be it an exchange, a prediction market—will figure out how to monetize that floating rate. Why give that money to a third party?"
  • "For Coinbase and Circle, this is a strategic move that neutralizes an emerging competitor. Coinbase, as the collateral manager, inserts itself at a key node of this new infrastructure."

Multiple Attributes of Stablecoins

  • "Regarding whether stablecoins are a medium of exchange or a store of value, we see they can be multiple things simultaneously. In payment scenarios, they are a medium of exchange. In this scenario, they are a carrier for capital liquidity and collateral liquidity. As the system scales and institutionalizes, the latter becomes increasingly important."
  • "An Agent would likely want a money market fund that pays interest while funds are idle. But the moment it initiates a payment, it would want that money wrapped as a stablecoin. The compliance paperwork just for paying with securities is unbearable."

OpenAI Case and AI Value Capture

  • "There's almost no value capture at the LLM layer. These AI Labs spend tens of billions providing free services for people like us; it's essentially public service. The value of an LLM lies in the model weights—that's IP."
  • "Whoever owns the end-user delivers the most value. Value primarily resides at the application layer, and with cloud businesses and AI implementation service providers, companies like Accenture will do quite well."
  • "I think it's a barbell structure. Besides the distribution end, the other end is energy. Whoever gets almost free energy and cheap compute wins. Elon has an advantage there."

On the CLARITY Act

  • "The compromise by Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks essentially separates the store of value, settlement, and unit of account functions of money."
  • "We are approaching Hillary's Step (the final challenging ascent on Everest). There's still the committee seat issue and the ethics issue. The ethics hurdle will be very difficult to pass."
  • "I've felt from the start that the banking industry's fight on this was quixotic. What exactly do you want to get out of it? Are you just stabbing each other, or handing a big gift to asset management companies?"

Long-Term Treasuries and Rates

  • "Most of the upward movement in the 30-year yield comes from the term premium, now around 80 bps, which is quite high compared to being negative two years ago. This means the market reflects supply-demand dynamics, not expectations of future short-term rates."
  • "The narrative that stablecoins are marginal buyers of U.S. Treasuries has more substance than people credit. Their duration is very short, concentrated in short-term bills and reverse repos. This actually frees up space for the Treasury to issue more debt on the short end. On a dollar-duration weighted basis, it reduces the supply of long-term Treasuries in the market."
  • "Investors are saying: I need more compensation to hedge against greater inflation risk. That's all. They know the Fed isn't inclined to cut rates."

Coinbase and Circle Take Down USDH

Austin Campbell (Host): Welcome to Bits + Bips, where we explore how crypto and macro collide in basis points. I'm host Austin Campbell. Today's guests are Ram Ahluwalia, Co-founder & CEO of Lumida Wealth; Chris Perkins, Managing Partner at CoinFund; and Gordon Liao, Chief Economist at Circle. Lots of topics in rates and news today, I'm especially looking forward to Gordon's perspective.

Let's start with Circle. Coinbase and Circle essentially ate USDH. USDC will be crowned as the quote asset aligned with Hyperliquid (an on-chain perpetual DEX). Native Markets, which won the governance contest eight months ago, was acquired by Coinbase. USDH holders will redeem for USDC during a migration period. Coinbase will become the official reserve asset management/deployment partner for USDC on Hyperliquid. Circle will handle USDC's technical integration and operational infrastructure on Hyperliquid and stake 500,000 HYPE tokens for a validator seat. 90% of reserve earnings will flow back to Hyperliquid, likely for HYPE buybacks via a grant fund.

Rough calculation: Currently about $5 billion USDC on Hyperliquid. At ~4% yield, that's nearly $200 million annualized. Most of this flows to Hyperliquid, Coinbase takes a cut, and Circle gains a new deployment venue for USDC, continuing to catch up with Tether's size.

The bull case: deeper order books, less slippage, faster on/off-ramps, better market maker support. HYPE is tied to platform fees, staking, and builder activity. Bitwise is also applying for a spot HYPE ETF. The bear case, e.g., from ZachXBT, worries that if Hyperliquid's core collateral, quote asset, and liquidity become increasingly dependent on USDC, the system hands part of its lifeline to Circle/Coinbase/regulatory orders. Plus governance issues with Native Markets. Chris, as an investor in this space, what's your take?

Chris Perkins: I think this is one of a series of moves we'll see. The keyword is "net interest income." Step back and look at the traditional exchange model: you earn ticket fees, a small cut per trade; clearing usually isn't profitable, though in our space it's become a new line, sometimes making a bit from data. But the real money is in net interest income.

How it works in TradFi: clients give you dollars as collateral, you give them to the clearinghouse, which invests them, keeps a big chunk, and returns a small piece to you. That's your net spread. It's a fundamental part of any exchange's business model. Many dApps overlooked this, giving away this nice income. Now they realize they need to bring it back.

I can tell you, anywhere that can lock up TVL—exchanges, apps, prediction markets—will figure out how to monetize that floating rate. Why give it to a third party?

From the exchange's perspective, that's the bull case—Hyperliquid rallied on the news because this circle is now closed (pun on Circle). You solved net interest income, returning it to token holders. From the Circle/Coinbase side, you also win—details matter, like lock-up period, rate renegotiation frequency, not sure if Gordon can share. But you get distribution for your stablecoin. USDC is fungible; the more it circulates, the more likely end-users accept it as payment.

So USDC wins too. Maybe economic terms get adjusted later. Hyperliquid wins big, securing net interest income; Circle gets greater distribution, larger scale, broader utility, and hopefully incremental use cases. I think it's a win-win.

Austin Campbell: Gordon, passing the ball to you. I'm also familiar with Circle. USDC has many facets in the current market. From a market structure perspective, Americans are used to viewing money as layered—the money you buy coffee with isn't the same as what you settle derivatives with. But now we're seeing USDC used for many things simultaneously; fungibility is increasing. What's your view from Circle's perspective? How does it look from your economics background and market structure lens?

Gordon Liao: A few observations. First, we're witnessing the overall maturation of infrastructure. Hyperliquid is the dominant on-chain perp platform today, scaling significantly. USDC balances on the platform have roughly doubled year-over-year.

That governance vote eight or nine months ago did choose a different reference asset. But as the platform grows and matures, it needs to interface with more traditional institutions. Using high-quality, institutional-grade collateral is a key part of that. Choosing USDC is recognition of its underlying safety and the 1:1 reserve commitment.

As Chris said, this is a win-win and a liquidity supernova event. As the dominant on-chain perp platform, the collateral asset it uses radiates throughout the on-chain economy. So it's a significant liquidity event that will encourage the use of USDC and associated infrastructure.

We deployed USDC to Hyperliquid last September, along with CCTP. So it's been there for a while, but this is a great "reaffirmation" event.

Regarding whether stablecoins are a medium of exchange or a store of value, we see they can be multiple things simultaneously. In some scenarios, they are a medium of exchange for payments. In others, they are carriers for capital liquidity and collateral liquidity. As the system scales and institutionalizes, the latter becomes increasingly important.

A similar trend is visible in settlement volume. Our recent earnings showed Q1 USDC on-chain settlement volume was $21 trillion. This reflects expanding infrastructure and improving liquidity on major platforms—both centralized and decentralized.

Austin Campbell: Following that line, USDC circulation is highly tied to Coinbase. Coinbase has many products built on USDC, like debit/credit card payments, enterprise payments. Now we're also using it as a core asset for exchanges like Hyperliquid. Ram, from a market perspective, does this make you more bullish or bearish on Coinbase and Circle stock?

Ram Ahluwalia: It's positive for everyone, especially for Hyperliquid. For Coinbase and Circle, they successfully neutralized an emerging competitor. Coinbase, as collateral manager, inserts itself at a key node of the new infrastructure—a very strategic move.

For Hyperliquid, keeping 90% of the revenue is a reward for its achievements over the past few years. We discussed Hyperliquid three or four weeks ago; it's one of the assets you want to hold this cycle. Coinbase acted very proactively because Hyperliquid is becoming core to decentralized trading venues. Circle gets a significant recurring net interest income stream. So it's a win for all, especially beneficial for Hyperliquid.

This ties back to another topic we've discussed: distribution will ultimately drive most of the returns in this system. Gordon, you also said Hyperliquid is an emerging perp DEX in crypto. All these parties coming together essentially recognize the position of distribution and users. This theme will recur when judging winners and losers.

OpenAI Lawsuit

Austin Campbell: Speaking of users and winners, today Elon Musk lost, Sam Altman won, at least round one. An Oakland federal jury unanimously rejected all of Musk's claims in under two hours. The core was the three-year statute of limitations. The jury found Musk knew about OpenAI's shift to for-profit in 2021; he didn't sue until February 2024.

He originally sought $134 billion in "unjust enrichment" and removal of Altman and Brockman from leadership, citing the 2025 for-profit reorganization. But substantive issues—breach of charitable trust, unjust enrichment—were not adjudicated. Musk's team indicated an appeal. Wired commented that both sides painted the other as self-serving; neither Musk nor Altman came out looking good. The takeaway is that OpenAI can likely proceed to IPO, at least in the interim.

A few interesting reactions on X. Structural skeptics say it's a major legal win for OpenAI, but bigger political/institutional questions remain—what does it mean for an organization built with a "non-profit, human-first" mission for public legitimacy to become one of the world's most valuable commercial platforms? News24 says a non-profit machine created to benefit humanity was forcibly turned into a closed, for-profit machine backed by Microsoft. The trial did reveal broken promises on openness and safety. Chris, your thoughts?

Chris Perkins: Seems the statute of limitations lapsed; that's clean. Not sure how Musk's lawyers appeal, but they're smart; they'll figure something out.

At this point, Ram usually has something negative to say about OpenAI—he'll call it much ado about nothing. Before he does, the bigger issue for crypto is that due to regulatory pressure over the past four years, many foundations were structured as non-profits alongside Labs. I wish there was clear precedent to sort out the relationship between foundations and Labs. In many protocols, who's responsible for what, who is who, gets confusing.

Not saying foundations are useless—they absolutely have non-profit ideals to advance, like cryptographic research for Ethereum. But many foundations were motivated by seeking protection against a very aggressive regulator. So this case will have far-reaching implications for crypto. Sam is also getting more involved in the space now.

Ram Ahluwalia: Chris, you literally handed me the ball. I didn't expect this case to amount to much, so indeed, nothing happened—much ado about nothing.

The tech world has produced heroes and villains. I put many in the hero bucket, some in the villain bucket, but that doesn't mean they haven't created value. Sam's issue is a history of signing contracts and then violating them. He even played this game with Microsoft—signing with Amazon before renegotiating with Microsoft. Microsoft, in turn, got very favorable terms, and OpenAI got needed capital. Of course, Microsoft also wanted to deliver their 10x return by funding OpenAI.

To me, Sam is clearly a villain. He was fired by a board he appointed, inadvertently seeding his main competitor during that period, and had an employee die under suspicious circumstances during his tenure.

Chris Perkins: That's a bit extreme.

Ram Ahluwalia: No no, it's factual. "Had an employee die under suspicious circumstances during his tenure" is an accurate statement; those circumstances were indeed suspicious.

Anyway, there are heroes and villains in this space; I put him in the villain bucket.

Austin Campbell: Gordon, any thoughts?

Gordon Liao: Looking more broadly, AI is fiercely competitive at every layer; this courtroom drama is one facet. But for our audience interested in both blockchain and AI, where are the opportunities? I think it's about building the rails for tomorrow—for Agents, for AI. This is what we at Circle have been doing, releasing our agent tech stack and what we call ARC, the "Agentic Runtime for Commerce." I believe these will have lasting network effects, as strong as USDC's. So even with intense competition at the base model layer, there are many opportunities elsewhere from a business perspective.

Chris Perkins: Competition is good; we need more. No one is perfect; I'm not. It's a brutal race. Hope they keep innovating, keep creating value, and hope the free market prevails.

Austin Campbell: Let me push along this line: We're fighting over OpenAI in court today because the private market sees it as one of the most valuable foundational model companies. But let me stress-test this: long-term, could this trial be remembered as much ado about nothing? The rationale being, if distribution is where value ultimately accrues, will value reside with companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, or with platforms that deliver models to users and collect tolls?

Ram Ahluwalia: Definitely the latter. There's almost no value capture at the LLM layer. These AI Labs spend tens of billions providing free services for us; it's essentially public service. But Microsoft owns OpenAI's IP—after six years they can dispose of shares, but the IP is permanent. They can do anything with the IP, even put it on the internet—not saying they will, but LLM value lies in model weights; that's IP. It goes to a direct competitor.

So I support AI Labs raising more money to invest in humanity's future, but there's no value capture in their business model. Meta brought in the 'A-team' (Ram references 80s TV shows), their new models are strong, they're spending big on NVIDIA GPUs. So this race is still early.

Anthropic is leading, revenue growing fast. Today I also saw Michael Dell from Dell reveal they signed 1,000 new enterprise customers. We're moving from a world of only hyperscale data centers and AI Labs burning GPUs to real commercial deployment, and it's still early.

Whoever owns the end-user delivers the most value—primarily at the application layer, cloud business, and AI implementation service providers like Accenture.

Chris Perkins: I agree with the distribution-end logic, but I think it's a barbell. The other end is energy. Whoever gets almost free energy and cheap compute wins. Elon has an advantage there. The science of getting almost free energy from space isn't easy, but if anyone can, it's the person who can put things in space globally. That's Elon's unfair advantage at the stack's very bottom. But the front end remains distribution king.

Ram Ahluwalia: We also haven't seen Apple truly unveil its play. How many times has Apple descended late in the race and then dominated? There's been internal churn lately; this company is worth watching.

Austin Campbell: Apple is an interesting story here. While its "Mag 7" peers are spending on model training CapEx, Apple seems to be saying: We're a vertically integrated hardware company from front to back—iPhone, MacBook to servers, Mac Studio. We'll be the endpoint for your model distribution; we'll collect tolls. Look at what they do with the App Store, look at ecosystem bundling.

Incidentally, Chris, this ties back to your pet topic of identity—Apple is one of the few big tech companies that does a "passable" job on privacy, easier to trust on these issues. So one bifurcation I'm watching: Do you build your own AI, or deploy others' AI and tax them? The latter are distributors.

Gordon, you're at a company making "money" and have seen many cases of Agentic Commerce and AI entwined with finance. How do you see this relating to modernizing the U.S. financial system and adoption of new products? Reminder for U.S. listeners: Asia had 24/7 real-time gross settlement systems from the late 90s/early 2000s. We're two decades behind. Could this accelerate the refresh of the entire financial economy, not just the AI sector?

Gordon Liao: Absolutely. Currently, most transactions are human-intermediated, but many forecasts predict machine-to-machine, machine-initiated payments will dominate. Today's large LLM companies are big and important, but models change very fast; even open-source models aren't far behind. So value will increasingly flow to commodities, hardware, and the rails where Agentic Commerce happens.

For example, micropayments—we recently released a micropayment protocol, essentially a market where agents can browse, find each other, use the best tools, and run machine-to-machine commerce even when no one is present. All this will be built on blockchain rails. We've seen huge growth areas with ARC, tightly integrated with finance. We'll touch on this again with CLARITY, which contrasts with balance-sheet-based intermediation and aligns well with activity-based finance.

Austin Campbell: Let me offer a counterpoint. I often hear agent payments will go on-chain, but I also think they'll use traditional rails—an Agent getting a credit card is easy. I think the winners here will be those who can facilitate flow across different systems. That's why I watch combos like Coinbase + Circle, or companies like Fidelity launching products—they already have money market funds, cash management products, and are now launching a stablecoin.

Agents seem to have less "loyalty" than human consumers, but they excel at optimizing across different flows. Not all flows use the same framework—sometimes you need on-chain payment, sometimes card swipe, sometimes bank account. I suspect winners in Agentic Commerce will be those who seamlessly integrate across these. In theory, pure on-chain or pure off-chain entities might lose to those bridging both.

CLARITY Act: At 'Hillary's Step'

Austin Campbell: The Senate Banking Committee voted 15-9, bipartisan, to send the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act to the full Senate. It needs 60 votes to proceed to formal consideration on the floor. Another pending issue: whether more amendments will be added once it reaches the floor.

The bill's core includes: decentralization test, SEC-CFTC jurisdictional split, which tokens fall under which agency. Everyone agrees it's imperfect but workable.

Let me highlight two points. First, the stablecoin yield controversy—consumers, retail, and the crypto industry call it "functioning as designed," banking lobbyists still call it a "loophole." Senators Tillis and Alsobrooks reached a compromise: strictly passive yield is prohibited, but "activity-based rewards" are allowed. The American Bankers Association (ABA) is unhappy, other parties are somewhat satisfied, and Senators say "no more renegotiation." Let's discuss assuming Tillis and Alsobrooks are correct—no renegotiation. If the bill passes as is, what are your thoughts?

Gordon Liao: I'll start. Money itself has multiple attributes: a settlement tool and a store of value. In a sense, it separates the store of value, settlement, and unit of account functions.

It also echoes a larger trend in financial intermediation. Traditional intermediation is heavily balance-sheet-dependent, hence banking rules centered on stress-testing bank balance sheets. In that world, growing the balance sheet is key, with corresponding regulation. But looking at the evolution of on-chain finance, a significant portion is activity-based—not about balance sheet size, but a set of activities intermediated by smart contracts.

This compromise nicely captures the boundary between old and new—from a traditional, balance-sheet-heavy intermediated world to a new, smart-contract and agent-led intermediated world. Players focused on activity-based rewards, activity-based services, and new intermediation forms have a big opportunity.

Chris Perkins: First, kudos to Senator Tim Scott, Senator Loomis, Republican leadership did a great job. Special mention to Senator Gallego and Senator Alsobrooks. Gallego is a Marine; I was in Ramadi, he fought in Haditha. This guy has courage; he gave the bill bipartisan color in committee, excellent.

We are now approaching Hillary's Step (the final challenging ascent on Everest). The committee seat issue remains, the ethics issue remains. The ethics hurdle will be very difficult to pass. Then there's banking dissatisfaction. The banking lobby is pulling the national security card today, perhaps because they're unhappy with other provisions. So getting to the finish line will be tough.

But I still believe the bill ultimately passes. I'd like to hear your views, as we've diverged on this at times.

Ram Ahluwalia: I think it squeaks through. What did Trump do? He tweeted about the CLARITY Act, saying he'd put chips on the table. With midterms approaching, there's little benefit in letting it fail. I still think it squeaks through.

Austin Campbell: I'm a bit more skeptical than both of you. Reaching the floor is a very positive signal; whatever the prior probability estimate was, it should be raised. But Chris, no one has given me a truly credible solution for the "ethics issue." I see two possible paths here: one appears good short-term but very bad long-term—CLARITY passes along pure partisan lines in House and Senate. That's possible in the current framework. But if passed by Republicans only, it would likely be like the Affordable Care Act—the other side starts dismantling it once in power. Forcing transformative legislation through on a purely partisan basis hasn't ended well in U.S. legislative history.

The other path is the bill crashes directly on the ethics rock. If it dies, it dies there. Every other issue, including the banking yield debate, has solutions. Many arguments are essentially industry special pleading, unfavorable to the average consumer, the U.S. economy, and national security agencies increasingly interested in and positive about digital assets. The ethics part is where I still have doubts after talking to people on both sides. So I'm pumping the brakes.

Ram Ahluwalia: Austin, what's the specific sticking point on ethics?

Austin Campbell: The core is: Will Democrats vote for a bill that doesn't force the Trump family to divest from World Liberty Financial, meme coins, etc.? Will Republicans send a bill to the President's desk that forces the President to do that? That's the breakpoint. I don't see an elegant solution. But Chris is right, it gets weird now that it's on the floor. It has a non-zero chance of moving forward. Maybe some compromise unrelated to crypto, like trading other chips.

Ram Ahluwalia: Differentiating between yield and "activity" is very clever design; I like it in principle. The question is, how many edge cases can activity-based regulation accommodate?

Chris Perkins: We now live in a "post-Chevron deference" era (referring to the Supreme Court overturning Chevron, meaning courts no longer default to deferring to agency interpretations). Before, it was "when rules aren't clear, regulators decide," agencies could fill in blanks in ambiguous text. Now legislation must be more rigid, more prescriptive, resulting in worse drafting. Then any dispute goes to court. In a way, we needed Chevron to go, but it had its benefits. Not saying bring it back, just noting increased complexity.

Austin Campbell: Let me add another angle: This issue is essentially a Gordian knot, rooted in structural problems of U.S. financial regulation overall. To prevent money market funds from paying yield, you'd need to rewrite the 1940 Investment Company Act—they are legally required to pay earnings to clients, can't keep money compounding in the vehicle. As long as we have tokenized securities on one side, stablecoins on the other, and reserves resembling tokenized securities, this door cannot be closed. The issue is form, not substance. Otherwise, you'd need to rewrite the Banking Act and the 1940 Act. I don't think Congress has the appetite.

They almost couldn't confirm Warsh, which is just putting a person in a chair for a specific job. We expect them to rewrite the fundamental structure of U.S. securities regulation? No way. So from the start, I felt the banking industry's fight was quixotic—what exactly do you want to get? Isn't this just stabbing each other and handing a big gift to asset management companies?

Chris Perkins: Senator Gillibrand is now one of the key people to watch. She's pro-crypto, deeply involved from the earliest legislative formation, but she's very firm on ethics. If someone can cut a deal with her, it would be impactful.

Bond Vigilantes vs. New Fed Chair Warsh

Austin Campbell: Warsh is the most narrowly confirmed Fed Chair in modern history. The first FOMC meeting is mid-June, but hours after his confirmation, a $25 billion 30-year Treasury auction broke 5%. The 30-year yield hit 5.12% intraday, the first "5-handle" since the 2008 financial crisis. The 10-year is at 4.59%, the 2-year at 4.08%. CME FedWatch shows a 50% probability of a hike later this year, completely reversing the prior rate cut narrative. Of course, how to read this data is debatable; it's not a straight line to hikes.

Ed Yardeni, who coined "bond vigilante," says they are now setting policy; the Fed may be forced to hike in July. Vincent Ahn from WisdomTree says Warsh wanted to keep the option of a day-one cut, but the bond market just took that option off the table. Morgan Stanley says rate cuts are delayed until 2027. Ryan Swift from BCA says if Warsh goes dovish amid this bloodbath, inflation expectations could de-anchor, and the Fed loses control of the long end.

Some think it's good. Phil Blacanto from Reuters Breakingviews says evaporating rate cut expectations could constrain an overly interventionist Fed, possibly a good thing. But rates are a complex space, often misread even in traditional markets. Gordon, as an economist, market observer, with Fed background, what do you think the market is saying now?

Gordon Liao: I'll answer from a background perspective. I used to work at the Federal Reserve Board in Washington. In such a role, when you see rate moves, the first question is: Is it the term premium moving, or expected short-term rates?

Using a classic ACM model breakdown, most of the upward move in the 30-year yield is driven by the term premium. The term premium is currently around 80 bps, quite high relative to being negative two years ago. The term premium largely reflects supply-demand, while expected short rates reflect market expectations of whether the Fed will hike.

The yield increase primarily from term premium means the market is reflecting several supply-demand factors. On the demand side: first, ongoing fiscal issues, fiscal expansion; second, possibly reduced confidence in the Fed's ability to control inflation long-term; third, potentially weaker foreign demand—there have been significant changes in international flows over the past year.

The supply side is also interesting. Incoming Chair Warsh supports shrinking the Fed's balance sheet, implying reverse QE. This coincides with the long-end yield pressure you see.

Another narrative is stablecoins as marginal buyers of U.S. Treasuries. I think this narrative has more substance than credited. Not just because stablecoin supply is growing, but because of the duration structure. Stablecoin holdings have very short duration, which frees up space for the Treasury to issue more debt at the short end.

If you do a duration-weighted calculation, this actually implies a significant shift in dollar duration, reducing the supply of long-duration dollars in the market, potentially alleviating current upward rate pressure. So these are connected. Don't view rates as a single number; break them into term premium and expected short rates, then consider balance sheet aspects—expected changes to the Fed's balance sheet and private sector demand.

Austin Campbell: An important point you made, often overlooked: It's not just who is buying Treasuries, but more granularly, who is buying which maturity. Constrained by the GENIUS Act, stablecoins prefer short-term Treasuries. Even without that preference, they use reverse repos, can collateralize with Treasuries, but longer-duration Treasuries have larger haircuts, so there's a maturity preference.

Meanwhile, the biggest buyers of the 30-year long end are insurance companies and sovereign funds. Their preferences are shifting: sovereign funds reducing long-term Treasury holdings, perhaps with geopolitical considerations; insurance companies tied to the demographic curve of the countries they serve. As the baby boomers phase out, the next major cohort is millennials, the insurance curve distorts, demand for 30-year may decline.

So I'm watching the term premium. Gordon, you said 80 bps is relatively high recently, but historically it's actually low—historically it could reach 150 bps or higher. The term premium curve itself is distorting, a neglected part of this story. Ram, from an investment perspective, what's your view on long-end bonds?

Ram Ahluwalia: First, I agree it's supply-demand driven. Investors are saying: I need more compensation to hedge against greater inflation risk. That's all. They know the Fed isn't inclined to cut rates, so someone has to give, and the way to give is rates going up.

You can see inflation's resurgence in oil prices' impact on memory prices, gasoline, etc. I find it somewhat ironic Warsh's confirmation vote was so lopsided. Elizabeth Warren's litmus test was: Will you cut rates? This guy wants to cut, so the vote was more a political signal.

Overall, I expect rates are peaking. If so, rate-sensitive sectors that have been beaten down, like insurance, will bounce. Insurance is a balance sheet business, similar to banks. When rates rise, the value of bonds they hold falls, and the discounted asset value of future liabilities also falls. So they've been suppressed.

But the most interesting shift in the last couple of days: long-duration, high free-cash-flow assets started bouncing. The major indices were down over a point the last two days, but long-duration high free-cash-flow assets were up. The equity market is telling you: they believe long-end rates will come down. It's a bit funny—usually we view bonds as part of the equity market, but maybe the stock market is right this time. Warsh's confirmation is a sort of capitulation event. We're still missing a viral Ray Dalio "End of Times" video; that hasn't dropped yet.

Chris Perkins: Let me chime in. Long-term, there are some very deflationary pressures hitting the economy—first AI, then energy prices; investment in cheap energy is staggering. Elon will put it in space, and compute coming from there will be unprecedented. These are long-term deflationary. Warsh himself has talked about this, especially regarding AI.

The problem is the short term. Sovereign funds are selling Treasuries—some because they want decoupling, some because they need cash. High oil prices have their reasons. This administration is different from any post-war one: first, it's re-evaluating how inflation itself is measured; second, the collaboration between Treasury, led by Bessent, and the Fed is unprecedented. I think this collaboration leads to a more holistic policy response. Doesn't mean Warsh isn't independent—you can be both independent and collaborative, and I think that's how it should be. So I'm optimistic here.

Finally, geopolitics can turn bad quickly or good quickly. I think it turns good—midterms approaching, Americans don't like the current state. It's tough, but I'd guess Trump leans towards de-escalation rather than escalation.

Austin Campbell: That's time. Thanks so much for joining today; the timing was perfect. Hope listeners benefited from your perspectives.

Related Questions

QWhat is the main strategic significance of USDC becoming the primary quote asset on Hyperliquid, according to the analysts in the article?

AThe move is a 'liquidity supernova event' that signifies infrastructure maturation. For Hyperliquid, it legitimizes the platform and captures significant net interest income (90% of reserve yield) for token buybacks. For Circle and Coinbase, it neutralizes a potential competitor, expands USDC's distribution and utility, and strategically positions Coinbase as the reserve manager, deepening their integration into key DeFi infrastructure.

QHow does Gordon Liao analyze the breakdown of the rising 30-year Treasury yield, and what role does he assign to stablecoins in the bond market?

AGordon Liao states that the rise in the 30-year yield is primarily driven by an increase in the term premium (now around 80 bps), not expectations of higher short-term rates. He argues that stablecoins like USDC are becoming a significant marginal buyer of US Treasuries. Importantly, because stablecoins concentrate on short-term Treasuries and reverse repos, they effectively reduce the weighted average duration of US debt in the market, which can provide counter-pressure on long-term rates by shifting duration exposure.

QAccording to the discussion on the CLARITY Act, what is the core compromise regarding stablecoin yields, and why is it considered a smart design?

AThe compromise, led by Senators Tillis and Alsobrooks, distinguishes between 'passive yield' (which is prohibited for retail) and 'activity-based rewards' (which are allowed). This is considered smart because it acknowledges the evolution from traditional, balance-sheet-heavy financial intermediation to a new, smart-contract and agent-driven model based on facilitating activities. It creates a regulatory boundary that supports innovative, activity-based financial services without falling back on old banking frameworks.

QWhat is the prevailing view among the podcast guests about where long-term value will be captured in the AI stack, and why?

AThe prevailing view is that long-term value will primarily be captured at the distribution layer (applications, cloud services, integration firms like Accenture) and not at the foundational LLM layer. They argue that LLM companies are spending vast sums to provide a near-public good with little direct value capture for themselves. Value accrues to those who own the end-user relationship and the distribution channels. Chris Perkins adds a 'barbell' view, noting that the other end of value capture is energy/compute, where players with access to cheap power (like Elon Musk) have an advantage.

QWhat major obstacle does the article identify for the passage of the CLARITY Act in the full Senate, beyond industry lobbying?

AThe major identified obstacle is the 'ethics problem.' This refers to whether the bill will include or exclude provisions that would force President Trump's family to divest from crypto-related entities like World Liberty Financial. Finding a bipartisan compromise that navigates this highly political and personal issue is seen as the final, difficult hurdle ('Hillary's Step') for the bill's passage.

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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. 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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. 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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.

1.4k 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. 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54 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. 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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.

679 Total ViewsPublished 2025.01.14Updated 2025.01.14

What is AGENT S

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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.

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