# Regulation Articoli collegati

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

The End of the Crypto Premium? Market Logic Shift Seen Through Gemini's Post-IPO Struggles

The article "The End of the Crypto Premium? Market Logic Shifts as Gemini Struggles Post-IPO" examines the dramatic downturn of cryptocurrency exchange Gemini following its public listing in September 2025. Initially part of a wave of crypto IPOs, including Bullish, which saw soaring valuations and massive investor interest, Gemini's stock price has since collapsed by over 80%, falling from $28 to around $5. The company has cut 30% of its workforce, exited international markets, and faces significant financial strain, including $330 million in Bitcoin-denominated debt. The core argument is that Gemini's struggles reflect a broader market shift where the "excess premium" once associated with crypto assets is disappearing. Two key factors are identified: the erosion of regulatory arbitrage, as compliance costs rise for all players (up 22.5% for small firms in 2026), and the decline of liquidity scarcity premiums, as institutional investors now access crypto via low-friction ETFs and stocks rather than volatile altcoins. The approval of Bitcoin and other crypto ETPs, which now manage $1.8 trillion globally, has diverted institutional capital away from altcoins, causing their liquidity to dry up and volatility to increase. For Gemini, its strategy of being "the most compliant exchange" became a liability in a bear market, as fixed compliance costs remained high while trading revenue fell. The article concludes that the era of narrative-driven crypto valuations is ending, giving way to a market logic focused on fundamentals like actual usage, liquidity depth, and sustainable institutional adoption.

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The End of the Crypto Premium? Market Logic Shift Seen Through Gemini's Post-IPO Struggles

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Understanding the Key Issues of Tokenization in One Article

The core of tokenization lies in eliminating friction in financial infrastructure, not speculative digital assets. The true value is in near-instant settlement (T+0 vs. traditional T+2), 24/7 liquidity, fractional ownership, and the disintermediation of financial processes. Tokenization represents real-world assets (real estate, bonds, private equity) as digital tokens on a blockchain, functioning as programmable digital deeds that enable self-custody and automated ownership tracking. It addresses four key problems: 1) Settlement Speed: Atomic, near-instant settlement replaces multi-day processes. 2) Liquidity: Enables secondary markets for historically illiquid assets. 3) Fractional Ownership: Drastically lowers investment minimums by automating administrative overhead. 4) Disintermediation: Replaces trust-based functions of custodians and clearinghouses with self-executing smart contracts. This is not about cryptocurrency speculation. Major institutions like J.P. Morgan (Onyx), BlackRock (BUIDL), and Goldman Sachs are building the infrastructure, focusing on reliable asset management. Significant hurdles remain, including uncertain legal frameworks, lack of different blockchain platforms, and resistance from intermediaries protecting their revenue streams. Tokenization doesn't create a frictionless utopia but fundamentally reshapes the cost structure and efficiency of global financial infrastructure, representing its largest reorganization since the advent of electronic trading.

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Understanding the Key Issues of Tokenization in One Article

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Understanding Stock Tokenization in One Article: Who's Doing It, How to Buy, and What Are the Risks?

In the past 60 days, the U.S. capital market has undergone structural changes surpassing the last decade. The SEC outlined a blueprint for tokenized securities, Nasdaq received approval for token settlement, and NYSE partnered with Securitize to launch a tokenization platform. Despite a global equity market worth ~$140 trillion, tokenized stocks represent only ~$890 million—a 0.0007% penetration. The SEC’s January 2026 statement classified tokenized securities into four models: - **Model A (Issuer-Sponsored)**: Direct on-chain ownership (e.g., Galaxy Digital tokenizing its own stock). - **Model B (Tokenized Securities)**: Intermediated custody with blockchain settlement (adopted by Nasdaq, NYSE, DTC). - **Model C (Pegged Securities)**: Synthetic claims via omnibus accounts (e.g., Ondo Finance, xStocks, Dinari—dominant with ~$650M TVL). - **Model D (Derivative Contracts)**: Pure synthetic exposure (e.g., Ventuals’ perpetual swaps on Hyperliquid). For public stocks, Models C and B lead, but face challenges: Model C introduces counterparty risk (no SIPC insurance), while Model A requires issuer participation. Private market tokenization is more transformative, addressing illiquidity and high barriers in the $7T private equity space. Platforms like PreStocks and Jarsy offer 24/7 tokenized access to pre-IPO stocks (e.g., SpaceX, OpenAI) but lack direct ownership rights. Traditional private equity platforms (Forge, EquityZen) are regulated but slow and expensive. Key risks include fee stacking in SPV structures, regulatory uncertainty, and synthetic products’ high funding rates (e.g., Ventuals’ 54% annualized cost for long positions). Infrastructure players (e.g., Securitize, Berry) are advancing models with independent custody to mitigate risks. The convergence of institutional adoption and retail demand signals a foundational shift in market structure, though scalability and transparency remain critical hurdles.

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Understanding Stock Tokenization in One Article: Who's Doing It, How to Buy, and What Are the Risks?

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