Upexi Stock Jumps 520% After $100M Crypto Deal With GSR

TheCryptoTimesPubblicato 2025-04-21Pubblicato ultima volta 2025-04-21

Upexi Inc. saw its stock rise more than 520% on Monday after crypto trading firm GSR announced a $100 million private investment in the company. 

The investment was made through a private investment in public equity (PIPE), according to a press release issued by GSR. The funding will help Upexi shift to a new strategy that uses cryptocurrency, specifically Solana, as a core part of its financial plans.

Upexi said it plans to buy and stake Solana (SOL), as a way to build long-term value for its shareholders. The company, known for owning and managing consumer product brands, is one of the first public companies to use Solana in its treasury. Following the announcement, Upexi’s stock jumped to $14.08.

Upxi Stock Chart
UPXI Stock Chart | Source: Yahoo

GSR’s President Jakob Palmstierna said the deal shows the firm’s belief in the future of decentralized finance (DeFi). “We’re proud to lead this investment and support a bold strategy centered around Solana,” he said in a press release. 

Brian Rudick, Head of Research at GSR, added that the investment shows how demand is growing for secure and easy access to strong crypto assets in public markets. “Solana’s speed, scalability, and vibrant developer ecosystem make it an ideal foundation for long-term growth,” he said.

The Solana Foundation also welcomed the move. Lily Liu, President of the foundation, called it a clear sign that institutions are becoming more serious about blockchain. “It’s encouraging to see institutions exploring blockchain infrastructure in meaningful ways,” Liu said. She added that the partnership reflects the growing link between traditional finance and digital finance.

Also Read: XRP Set for 70% Rally Amid Coinbase Futures Debut



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Collateral Dollars: How Does a 'Second-Layer Dollar' Above Stablecoins Form?

Collateral Dollars: How Does a "Second Layer of Dollars" Form on Top of Stablecoins? Most assume stablecoins replicate Eurodollar functions, expanding the offshore dollar system. However, stablecoins primarily replace specific functions like operational dollar balances for settlement. They do not inherently create new dollar credit; they substitute existing claims. The key question is: what happens when financial intermediaries use stablecoins as collateral to create a new layer of dollar-denominated claims? This "collateral dollar" channel operates through secured lending, not direct money creation. A money-like event only occurs when a liability issued against the controlled stablecoin is funded, rolled over, or accepted at near-par value by another balance sheet. The discount (haircut) prices the gap between "effective control over the token" and "reliable convertibility to bank dollars." Elasticity stems not from the stablecoin itself but from the liability issued against it and the willingness of third-party balance sheets to treat that liability as a near-par asset. Compared to the traditional Eurodollar system—where elasticity originates from bank deposit creation—the stablecoin collateral chain is structurally different. Eurodollar deposits are credit-expansive from inception. Stablecoins are initially substitutive; elasticity emerges later if an intermediary's liability against them gains monetary acceptance. Stablecoins disrupt specific tiers of the offshore dollar system, mainly replacing operational settlement balances. They do not replace the need for full dollar balance-sheet capacity (credit lines, hedging, maturity transformation). For systemic impact, the second-layer liability must pass three tests: transferability, funding capacity, and monetary acceptance (being fundable or held at par by others). Pressure transmission also differs. In the Eurodollar system, stress moves up a hierarchy of claims. In a stablecoin collateral chain, the second-layer liability can lose its money-like status well before the underlying stablecoin faces a run, often triggered by haircut increases and margin calls that create a dynamic spiral of falling token prices and rising discounts. In conclusion, the "collateral dollar" is not the stablecoin itself. It is the second-layer liability issued against a controlled token balance that is willing to be funded and maintained at near-par value. Its existence depends on that liability surviving the leap from "token liquidity" to "bank dollar liquidity."

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Collateral Dollars: How Does a 'Second-Layer Dollar' Above Stablecoins Form?

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