# Integration Articoli collegati

Il Centro Notizie HTX fornisce gli articoli più recenti e le analisi più approfondite su "Integration", coprendo tendenze di mercato, aggiornamenti sui progetti, sviluppi tecnologici e politiche normative nel settore crypto.

Circle: From Issuance to Infrastructure

Title: Circle: From Issuance to Infrastructure Circle, the issuer of the USDC stablecoin, is undergoing a strategic transformation from a single-product company dependent on reserve interest income to a vertically integrated, full-stack financial platform. Its primary revenue source, earnings from US Treasury reserves backing USDC, is under pressure from declining Federal Reserve interest rates. Furthermore, Circle pays out a significant portion (~60 cents per dollar earned) to partners like Coinbase for distribution and settlement, leading to value leakage. To address these challenges and capture more value across the payment stack, Circle announced three key initiatives in Q1 2026: 1. **Settlement Layer**: Launching its own Layer-1 blockchain, **Arc**. Designed for institutional use with configurable privacy and quantum-resistant architecture, Arc uses USDC as its native gas token, allowing Circle to capture transaction fees currently paid to other blockchains like Ethereum. 2. **Distribution Layer**: Expanding the **Circle Payments Network (CPN)**, which connects financial institutions directly to Circle, reducing reliance on third-party exchanges for USDC distribution and on/off-ramps. 3. **Application Layer**: Building infrastructure for an **AI agent economy**, including tools for agent wallets, nanopayments, and a marketplace. Circle aims to monetize the high volume of AI-driven microtransactions predominantly settled in USDC. This vertical integration strategy aims to diversify Circle's revenue away from volatile interest income. However, a key challenge remains: aligning the value capture of the new ARC token with the interests of existing public market shareholders (CRCL) who invested primarily for reserve yields. The success of this stack-wide expansion hinges on Arc's adoption and Circle's ability to balance value distribution between its core corporate entity and its new blockchain ecosystem.

链捕手17 h fa

Circle: From Issuance to Infrastructure

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Why is the RWA Boom Failing to Benefit DeFi?

The rapid growth of the tokenized real-world assets (RWA) market, now nearing $30 billion on-chain, has largely bypassed the DeFi ecosystem. Only about $2.47 billion is actively locked in DeFi protocols, indicating a penetration rate of just 9%. A major barrier is the "permissioned" architecture of most RWA products, like BlackRock's BUIDL fund, which are designed for institutional compliance. They require whitelisting, off-chain settlement, and strict investor accreditation, making them incompatible with open, permissionless DeFi applications like Aave or Uniswap. This is evident in categories like bonds/money market funds ($16.6B on-chain, $920M in DeFi) and tokenized equities ($2.7B on-chain, $78M in DeFi). Notable exceptions are private credit protocols (e.g., Maple Finance, Centrifuge) and assets like Ondo's USDY, which were designed from inception for DeFi composability, allowing them to be used freely as collateral. Morpho and Aave Horizon also demonstrate successful RWA lending integrations. However, industry reports (IOSCO, ECB) warn that growth may remain confined within traditional financial systems due to fragmented regulations, lack of unified standards, and inherent conflicts between DeFi's open logic and compliance requirements like minimum investments and fixed redemption windows. The RWA sector is effectively split into two markets: a compliant, permissioned on-chain finance market and a smaller DeFi-native market focused on composability. For DeFi penetration to rise significantly, asset issuers must prioritize designs that enable permissionless circulation from the start, moving away from models centered solely on institutional compliance.

marsbit21 h fa

Why is the RWA Boom Failing to Benefit DeFi?

marsbit21 h fa

Telegram Takes Direct Control of TON, Social Traffic Rewrites the Public Chain Narrative

Telegram founder Pavel Durov announced that Telegram will replace the TON Foundation as the core driver and largest validator of The Open Network (TON). Key initiatives include a sixfold reduction in transaction fees, performance upgrades, and improved developer tools within the next few weeks. This marks a strategic shift from Telegram merely providing user access to deeply integrating TON into its platform's core infrastructure. The goal is to transform Telegram's massive social traffic into sustainable on-chain activity. While viral mini-apps like Notcoin have demonstrated Telegram's ability to drive user adoption, TON aims to support frequent, low-value transactions inherent to social platforms—such as tipping, in-app payments, and game rewards. Ultra-low fees and sub-second finality (0.6 seconds) are crucial to making blockchain interactions seamless and nearly invisible within the Telegram user experience. However, Telegram's increased central role raises questions about network decentralization. Durov argues that Telegram's participation will attract more large validators, thereby enhancing decentralization. TON also offers high annual staking rewards (18.8%), aiming to retain capital within its ecosystem. The fundamental challenge for TON is no longer leveraging Telegram's user base, but becoming an indispensable, seamless infrastructure layer for Telegram's everyday applications—moving from an adjacent chain to an embedded utility.

marsbit05/11 01:30

Telegram Takes Direct Control of TON, Social Traffic Rewrites the Public Chain Narrative

marsbit05/11 01:30

Telegram Takes Direct Control of TON, Social Traffic Reshapes Public Chain Narrative

Telegram's founder, Pavel Durov, has announced a major shift in the development of The Open Network (TON). Telegram will now become the core driver of TON, replacing the TON Foundation and becoming its largest validator. The focus will be on technical upgrades over the next few weeks, including slashing network fees by six times to near-zero and improving finality time to 0.6 seconds. This move signifies a deeper integration between Telegram and TON, moving beyond just providing a user base. The goal is to transform Telegram's vast social traffic and built-in features—like Mini Apps, payments, and bots—into sustainable, on-chain usage scenarios. The reduced fees and faster speeds are crucial for enabling the small, frequent transactions typical of social interactions. While this promises stronger execution and product alignment, it raises questions about centralization. Durov argues Telegram's involvement will attract more validators, enhancing decentralization, but the outcome remains to be seen. Additionally, TON's high annual staking reward of 18.8% aims to retain capital within the ecosystem. The key challenge for TON is no longer just leveraging Telegram's entry point, but becoming an invisible, seamless infrastructure layer within Telegram's daily use. Its success hinges on converting viral attention into lasting, embedded utility.

Odaily星球日报05/11 01:21

Telegram Takes Direct Control of TON, Social Traffic Reshapes Public Chain Narrative

Odaily星球日报05/11 01:21

TON Enters the Telegram Era: The On-Chain Experiment of Super Apps is Unfolding

The TON token recently surged nearly 120% in 4 days, approaching $3. This rally is primarily driven by Telegram founder Pavel Durov's announcement that Telegram will become the core driver of the TON network, replacing the TON Foundation and serving as its largest validator. This move signals a fundamental shift: Telegram is no longer just supporting TON from a distance but is formally taking over its governance and operations. This changes TON's valuation narrative from being a crypto project with Telegram's user base to becoming the foundational blockchain infrastructure for Telegram's future commercial ecosystem—transitioning from a crypto narrative to an internet-platform-level story. TON's recent technical upgrades focus on 10x faster speeds, 6x lower fees, and near-instant confirmations. These optimizations target Telegram's internal high-frequency, micro-transaction scenarios like tipping, bot services, and Mini App purchases. The goal is to enable seamless, near-zero-cost transactions for its nearly 1 billion users, making blockchain usage almost invisible—akin to platforms like WeChat Pay. TON's path is unique: it already has a massive user base and is building the blockchain system to serve it, aiming to onboard users into Web3 without them realizing it. The vision is to integrate wallet, payment, bot, and Mini App functionalities into a closed loop within Telegram, positioning TON as the value-exchange infrastructure for a super-app. In essence, this surge reflects a market reassessment: TON is emerging as the first blockchain ecosystem with a genuine super-app gateway. Its true competitors may not be other Layer 1 blockchains but global internet payment systems. With Telegram now fully committed, the experiment of on-chaining a super-app is underway.

marsbit05/08 09:37

TON Enters the Telegram Era: The On-Chain Experiment of Super Apps is Unfolding

marsbit05/08 09:37

From Robinhood to Polymarket: Is the Era of Integrating All Assets on a Single Platform Coming?

From Robinhood to Polymarket: The Era of All-in-One Asset Platforms Is Coming Asset classes are rapidly converging. Platforms that once specialized in single categories—such as stocks, cryptocurrencies, or prediction markets—are now moving toward offering all three. Robinhood pioneered this model, starting with equities, adding crypto in 2018, and prediction markets in 2025. This strategy has proven resilient: when crypto revenues fell, other segments like options and stocks filled the gap. Now, prediction market leaders Polymarket and Kalshi are moving in the same direction, both announcing perpetual futures trading on April 21, 2026, pending regulatory approval. These futures will cover assets like Bitcoin, gold, and stocks such as Nvidia. This trend mirrors the consolidation seen in consumer tech, like smartphones replacing dedicated cameras and MP3 players. Younger users, accustomed to interacting with multiple asset types from an early age, will increasingly demand unified platforms. A key competitive advantage in prediction markets is collateral utilization—idle assets locked during betting periods. Polymarket’s move into perpetuals may be a strategy to generate yield from that capital, similar to earlier DeFi integrations like PolyAave. As the regulatory landscape evolves, traditional finance is also likely to incorporate crypto and prediction markets, further accelerating this convergence.

marsbit04/24 07:59

From Robinhood to Polymarket: Is the Era of Integrating All Assets on a Single Platform Coming?

marsbit04/24 07:59

More and More 'Model Supermarkets' Are Opening: ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent Compete to Integrate

Chinese tech giants like ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent are accelerating the rollout of integrated AI model subscription services—dubbed “model supermarkets”—to provide developers with bundled access to multiple leading domestic large language models (LLMs). ByteDance’s Volcengine recently upgraded its "Coding Plan" by adding newer models like GLM-5.1, Minimax M2.7, and Kimi k2.6, allowing subscribers to use various top models under a single monthly fee starting at ¥40. However, user feedback reveals significant issues, including rapid consumption of usage limits (e.g., hitting caps within hours), frequent server errors (like HTTP 429), and slow response times during peak hours. Complaints about misleading deduction rates—where calls to advanced models consume more quota—are also common. The trend is industry-wide: Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu have all launched similar multi-model coding plans. While these platforms reduce trial costs for developers, they also expose challenges in balancing affordability with service quality and computational stability. Amid this shift, independent AI companies like Zhipu, MiniMax, and Moonlight Face (Kimi) are developing strategies to avoid becoming mere “pipes” in this ecosystem—focusing on vertical applications, autonomous agents, and long-context models to retain competitiveness. Analysts suggest that, while platform aggregation may pressure model firms in the short term, specialized and vertical AI capabilities will remain differentiated in the long run.

marsbit04/24 04:07

More and More 'Model Supermarkets' Are Opening: ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent Compete to Integrate

marsbit04/24 04:07

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