In the past 24 hours, the crypto market has witnessed a range of dynamics, from macroeconomic discussions to specific ecosystem developments. Mainstream topics have focused on institutional capital's tentative entry into on-chain infrastructure and the risk concerns sparked by high-leverage narratives. In terms of ecosystem development, Solana continues to advance institutional-grade financial applications, while Perp DEXs are intensifying competition by introducing real-world assets and incentive mechanisms.
I. Mainstream Topics
1. BlackRock Lists BUIDL Token on Uniswap and Purchases UNI
BlackRock, the world's largest asset management company, announced the listing of its tokenized product, BUIDL—backed by U.S. Treasury bonds and valued at approximately $1.8 billion—on the decentralized exchange Uniswap. This marks its first direct participation in DeFi trading. Simultaneously, BlackRock acquired an undisclosed amount of UNI governance tokens. Following the news, the price of UNI surged by about 40% in a short period.
The transaction was executed via UniswapX, exclusively for accredited investors (with a minimum asset size of $5 million), with Securitize handling compliance and settlement. This move is seen as the first relatively comprehensive attempt by a traditional financial giant to introduce tokenized assets into a more open on-chain liquidity system, signaling a tentative integration of TradFi and DeFi.
Community reactions were generally optimistic. Many interpreted it as a sign of a DeFi revival, suggesting that institutions are quietly but systematically building positions on Ethereum (e.g., "quietly accumulating during a fear index of 11"). More cautious voices pointed out that this may not signify true "decentralized adoption" but rather a test of the boundaries of permissionless infrastructure—when the world's largest asset manager holds governance tokens, can the protocol's neutrality be maintained?
Overall, the market widely acknowledges the event's validation of DeFi's efficiency and feasibility but remains watchful of whether it will evolve into a "walled garden" for institutional use. Short-term traders caution that UNI's current liquidity is thin, with price volatility driven more by speculative sentiment, and后续 attention should be paid to whether real on-chain liquidity and institutional commitments persist.
2. Michael Saylor's Latest Interview Sparks Community Concerns
In a recent media interview, MicroStrategy (MSTR) founder Michael Saylor discussed the company's debt and capital structure strategy, stating that even if Bitcoin's price fell to $8,000, the company could sustain operations through "rolling debt" or refinancing. He emphasized that Bitcoin's volatility itself continues to create value but did not specify the source of refinancing in extreme scenarios.
Currently, MicroStrategy heavily depends on Bitcoin as its core asset, with its capital structure essentially betting on Bitcoin maintaining double-digit annual growth over the long term. This statement quickly triggered community anxiety, with many comparing it to SBF or Do Kwon-style "stable narrative declarations" (e.g., "just like when Caroline said she bought FTT at $22").
The core concern lies in leverage risk: if Bitcoin experiences a deep correction, MSTR could face systemic liquidation risks, with almost no possibility of external rescue in extreme cases ("when your ship is burning, no one will save you"). A few voices defended Saylor, noting that he controls about 3% of Bitcoin's supply, leaving strategic room. However, more views perceive this narrative as exhibiting "Ponzi-like structure" characteristics, calling for a shift to a more sustainable "real yield" Bitcoin banking or financial services model.
Overall sentiment is negative, with some seeing it as a potential risk exposure point for Bitcoin's corporatization narrative, though others consider the "$8,000" scenario extreme and low-probability.
3. Coinbase CEO Allegedly Continues Selling Company Stock
Public disclosure data shows that Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has consistently sold COIN stock over the past year, with the pace accelerating during relatively high stock prices. Although no new sales have been recorded in the past month, Coinbase's CFO recently sold approximately 350,000 shares. Overall, Armstrong still holds about $14 billion in shares but has cashed out around $500 million cumulatively.
This behavior has been interpreted by some in the community as an "insider selling" signal, raising doubts about the company's growth prospects ("if the CEO is selling, why should others buy?"). Critics argue that against a backdrop of slowing business growth, executive sales create psychological pressure on retail investors and are even seen as an asymmetric signal.
At the same time, more rational voices point out that executive stock sales are often related to tax planning, asset diversification, and other factors, not necessarily indicating a loss of confidence in the company's fundamentals ("selling during a strong period is normal supply behavior"). Overall, the market remains divided on Coinbase's long-term value as a "crypto gateway," with concerns about its growth space on one hand and acknowledgment of its unique role in compliance advancement and on-chain transparency building on the other.
II. Mainstream Ecosystem Dynamics
1. Solana
Citibank (Citi) completed the full lifecycle operation of an on-chain bill of exchange on the Solana network, covering issuance, circulation, and final settlement. This marks the first time a traditional financial institution has used Solana's high-performance network to handle a real supply chain financing scenario, seen as a significant case of institutional-grade trade finance moving on-chain.
The Solana Foundation positions this as part of the network's expansion into "internet capital markets, payments, and AI agents." The case stems from research on supply chain finance published by Citi.
Community reactions are generally positive, with many viewing it as another "institutional win for Solana" ("another W for Solana") and believing it strengthens its leading position in the path to institutional adoption, even sparking discussions about SOL's pricing relative to ETH. Some focus on asset tokenization potential, while speculators顺势炒作相关 meme 资产. Overall sentiment is optimistic, though a few caution about potential long-term impacts on network decentralization.
2. Perp DEX
Lighter launched four Korean stock perpetual contracts, including the Korea Composite Stock Price Index ($KRCOMP), Samsung ($SAMSUNG), Hyundai ($HYUNDAI), and SK Hynix ($SKHYNIX), with initial leverage of 10x. This is the first time a decentralized exchange has offered such Korean equity perpetual contracts, filling a gap in trading demand not covered by the traditional U.S. financial system.
Simultaneously, Lighter introduced a funding rate rebate mechanism: eligible traders paying funding fees can receive up to 15% cashback based on advanced membership tiers or LIT staking, aimed at improving overall capital efficiency.
Another Perp protocol, Nado, raised the NLP deposit cap from $2 million to $4 million, effective from February 12 at 14:00 UTC, prioritizing allocation to Alpha Trader Tiers (Tornado and Storm levels), with plans to further expand for NFT holders next week.
The community reacted enthusiastically to Lighter's launch of Korean contracts, seeing it as providing exposure to assets difficult to access via TradFi ("listing assets like Hyundai and Samsung on-chain is significant") and关注是否支持 24/7 交易. The funding rate rebate mechanism is considered innovative, though some express disappointment with LIT token performance. Nado's expansion measures received positive feedback, overall seen as further progress for Perp DEXs in capital efficiency and institutional appeal, though concerns about short-term volatility remain.
3. Others
Dune × Visa: The two partnered to release a native stablecoin research report, covering over 200 non-USD pegged stablecoins, accompanied by an enterprise-grade dataset (built with SteakhouseFi), spanning 30+ chains, a total market cap exceeding $1 billion, and cumulative transfer volume of $300 billion. The report is expected by the end of February, with the dataset going live in March.
Pudgy Penguins: Launched the Visa crypto payment card (Pengu Card) in partnership with KAST, supporting 150 million merchants globally. Users can directly spend stablecoins or crypto assets without going through CEX deposits/withdrawals. The card comes in three tiers: Standard, Gold, and Black, offering up to 12% rewards and 7% yield. A waitlist is now open.
AI Agents × Coinbase: Some AI agents have begun autonomously exploring and recommending the use of Coinbase's Agent Wallet for on-chain operations, such as calling payment APIs or conducting asset swaps.
The community widely sees the Dune and Visa collaboration as institutional endorsement for the stablecoin sector, anticipating systematic analysis of non-USD stablecoins; the Pengu Card sparked heated discussion due to its global availability and high incentives, though some holders expressed dissatisfaction with the thresholds for higher-tier cards. AI agents "actively choosing" on-chain wallets was interpreted by many as an early signal of the machine economy, while also raising discussions about potential risks and human-driven factors.







