Daily Market Wrap | Sep. 10

tokeninsight_newsPubblicato 2025-09-10Pubblicato ultima volta 2025-09-10

Hot Topics

  • Nasdaq filed with the SEC to allow trading of tokenized stocks—blockchain-based shares to be traded alongside traditional equities.
  • HSBC now expects the Bank of England to resume interest rate cuts from April 2026, abandoning its previous timeline.
  • The CFTC issued an advisory letting foreign crypto.
  • exchanges register as Foreign Boards of Trade (FBOTs)—reopening legal access for U.S. traders to offshore platforms.

Market Updates

  • Fidelity’s tokenized money market fund—Fidelity Digital Interest Token—launched on Ethereum with $202 million minted and held by Ondo as reserve.
  • Chainlink jumped as Grayscale filed to convert its LINK Trust into the first U.S. Chainlink spot ETF.
  • Metaplanet will raise $1.4 billion in an international share sale on Sept 10, 2025, to fund Bitcoin buys and operations, sending its stock up 16%.

Letture associate

Why Is No One Buying DeFi Insurance?

"Why DeFi Insurance Remains Unpurchased" explores the paradox of decentralized finance insurance. While DeFi insurance promises automatic, unbiased payouts via smart contracts—eliminating traditional insurers' denial practices—it struggles to attract users. The core issue is economic viability. Premiums are prohibitively high relative to the yields from DeFi protocols. For example, insuring a deposit on Aave or Maple Finance can consume most or even all of the annual yield, leaving returns comparable to or worse than traditional savings. Only the safest protocols, like MakerDAO, offer affordable premiums. Furthermore, the DeFi insurance model is structurally fragile. Unlike traditional insurance where risks are uncorrelated, DeFi risks are highly interconnected (e.g., oracle failures, bridge hacks). A single major exploit can simultaneously threaten multiple protocols, potentially bankrupting the entire insurance pool, which holds only millions against billions in total value locked. The governance model also creates a conflict of interest. In platforms like Nexus Mutual, token holders who vote on claims risk their own capital if payouts are approved, incentivizing denials. Consequently, the market is tiny and shrinking. Nexus Mutual dominates with $81.56 million in assets, but the industry lacks the capacity to cover a catastrophic event like the $292M Kelp DAO hack. Other providers have dwindled or shut down. The article concludes that DeFi insurance faces a "tragedy of the commons": its stability requires widespread adoption, but individual users have no incentive to pay for it, as premiums destroy their yields. Current solutions involve preventative measures like bug bounties and seeking external capital from traditional reinsurance, acknowledging that on-chain capital alone is insufficient to cover on-chain risks.

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Why Is No One Buying DeFi Insurance?

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