Ethereum Q1 Report: On-chain Activity Hits Record High, Tokenized Assets Lead the Industry

marsbitPublished on 2026-06-19Last updated on 2026-06-19

Abstract

Ethereum Q1 2026 Report: On-chain activity hits record high, tokenized assets lead the industry. In Q1 2026, Ethereum's network experienced a unique divergence: on-chain activity soared while USD-denominated metrics declined. Monthly active users reached 13.2 million, transactions hit 200.4 million, and TPS averaged 25.78, all setting new highs. However, total value locked (TVL) fell 11.0% to $316.2B, DEX volume dropped 24.0% to $134.5B, and ETH's fully diluted market cap fell 30.3% to $290B. A key driver was the Blob Parameter Fork (BPO#2) in January, which increased data capacity and caused a sharp 47.9% drop in layer-1 transaction fees despite higher usage. Etherean's tokenized asset market cap reached $203.4B, up 42.9% year-over-year. While stablecoins ($178.9B) saw a slight dip, tokenized funds ($19.4B, +73.1% YoY), commodities ($4.7B, +325.9% YoY), and stocks ($365.1M) grew strongly. Ethereum dominates cross-chain comparisons, holding 71% of TVL, 79.2% of active loans, 61.8% of stablecoins, and 73% of tokenized funds among top chains. The report highlights a "Jevons Paradox" scenario: network expansion reduces per-transaction costs but unleashes latent demand, driving long-term growth. Ethereum's strategy mirrors Amazon's early focus on scale over profit. Its open, neutral foundation is seen as critical for institutional adoption, as evidenced by growing activity from firms like BlackRock and JPMorgan. The roadmap targets further scalability, aiming for thousands of ...

Author:Token Terminal

Translation:Saoirse,Foresight News

Ethereum is the core underlying settlement network for on-chain assets, relying on ETH to pay transaction fees and secure the network through staking. Traditional finance suffers from slow settlement, numerous intermediaries, and high counterparty risks, whereas tokenized assets and stablecoins offer on-chain solutions. As relevant regulations mature from 2025 to 2026, institutional deployment of on-chain business formally meets implementation conditions.

Various stablecoins, tokenized funds, commodities, and on-chain stocks are issued and settled on Ethereum, with layer-2 networks diverting transactions before ultimately returning to layer-1 for validation, allowing ETH to continuously accumulate value. By market capitalization, Ethereum remains the world's largest platform for tokenized assets, jointly operated by the Ethereum Foundation and the developer community. Teams like Etherealize specialize in connecting with traditional financial institutions, driving institutional capital inflow. In Q1 2026, the Ethereum ecosystem presented a divergent trend, analyzed in detail below using complete data from Token Terminal.

The market in Q1 2026 displayed a distinct two-sided dynamic: On-chain usage scale reached a historical high—monthly active users, total transaction volume, and throughput all set new records; however, dollar-denominated asset scale and fee metrics contracted simultaneously, with fully diluted market cap, total value locked (TVL), trading volume, and two types of fee data all declining sequentially. Key events this quarter profoundly shaped this unique market condition:

In January, the second round of the Fusaka upgrade cycle, the Blob Parameter Fork (BPO#2), was implemented, significantly enhancing data storage capacity.

In February, the ERC-8004 standard launched on mainnet, becoming the universal standard for AI agent identity and credit ratings.

The Ethereum Foundation finalized the three core goals for the 2026 protocol: scaling, optimizing user experience, and strengthening layer-1 foundational security.

In March, the Institutional Ethereum Forum was held, with participation enthusiasm from traditional financial institutions notably increasing.

Q1 2026 Key Metrics Overview

Ecosystem Total Value Locked: $316.2 billion (QoQ -11.0%, YoY +22.8%)

Ecosystem Outstanding Active Loans: $21.8 billion (QoQ -16.6%, YoY +39.0%)

Ecosystem Decentralized Exchange Total Volume: $134.5 billion (QoQ -24.0%, YoY -31.2%)

Full Ecosystem Application Fee Revenue: $2.0 billion (QoQ -16.9%, YoY -7.8%)

On-chain Tokenized Asset Total Market Cap: $203.4 billion (QoQ -0.7%, YoY +42.9%)

Stablecoins: $178.9 billion (QoQ -2.3%, YoY +37.6%)

Tokenized Funds: $19.4 billion (QoQ +4.9%, YoY +73.1%)

Tokenized Commodities: $4.7 billion (QoQ +60.0%, YoY +325.9%)

Tokenized Stocks: $365.1 million (QoQ +16.5%)

Monthly Active User Addresses: 13.2 million (QoQ +53.5%, YoY +85.9%)

Layer-1 Total Transactions: 200.4 million (QoQ +38.0%, YoY +81.5%)

Average Transactions Per Second (TPS): 25.78 (QoQ +41.2%, YoY +81.7%)

Layer-1 Mainnet Transaction Fee Revenue: $39.9 million (QoQ -47.9%, YoY -81.9%)

ETH Fully Diluted Market Cap: $290.0 billion (QoQ -30.3%, YoY -9.9%)

ETH Staking Ratio: 0.31 (Increased 0.03 QoQ and YoY)

Total ETH Holding Addresses: 292.8 million (QoQ +8.1%, YoY +24.9%)

Note: This report's statistical scope includes only the Ethereum Layer-1 mainnet; layer-2 networks are considered independent blockchains, and their data is not included in Ethereum statistics.

Overall Ecosystem Development

Total Value Locked refers to the total USD value of assets deposited into various on-chain applications, a leading indicator for revenue-generating activities like lending, trading, and staking; here it represents the on-chain, user-withdrawable funds settled across the entire Ethereum ecosystem. In Q1 2026, the average TVL for the Ethereum ecosystem reached $316.2 billion, down 11.0% quarter-over-quarter but up 22.8% year-over-year. The sequential contraction stemmed from a general price correction in crypto assets, while the substantial year-over-year growth demonstrates a real expansion in ecosystem scale compared to the same period last year.

Among the top five blockchains by TVL, Ethereum leads by a wide margin: $316.2 billion far exceeds the sum of Tron ($84.5B), Solana ($28.8B), BNB Chain ($10.3B), and Plasma ($5.7B), accounting for 71% of the total TVL across these five chains. Funds are concentrated in two major sectors: the liquid staking sector led by Lido, and the lending sector centered around Aave; restaking protocols like EigenLayer and ether.fi, as well as synthetic dollar platforms like Ethena and Sky, also hold significant capital. High concentration of funds is Ethereum's most prominent structural advantage.

The Active Loans metric represents the scale of deposits that are lent out and generate interest income, directly reflecting lending business revenue; here it is the total outstanding borrowing across all Ethereum lending applications. In Q1, the average active loan scale in the ecosystem was $21.8 billion, down 16.6% QoQ but up 39.0% YoY. The contraction in loan balances alongside TVL reflects a cooling overall market risk appetite, but the scale remains significantly higher than the same period last year.

Ethereum's lending market is concentrated in a few pools, with Aave dominating: its active loan scale at quarter-end was approximately $13.5 billion, capturing the vast majority of the ecosystem's share; followed by Morpho (~$1.9B), Spark under Sky (~$1.0B), and Maple (~$840M). The contraction this quarter was primarily driven by Aave, as declining crypto asset prices led to cooler borrowing demand, with its total loan volume shrinking by about 24%. Comparing the top five chains, Ethereum's $21.8 billion in active loans significantly leads Solana ($2.5B), Plasma ($2.1B), BNB Chain ($760.8M), and Avalanche ($392.4M), accounting for 79.2% of the total lending volume across these five chains, making this the sector where Ethereum holds its highest share among the measured sectors.

Decentralized Exchange Volume refers to the total transaction value completed on on-chain spot exchanges; traders pay fees during transactions, making volume highly correlated with platform revenue. This data aggregates all DEX trading within the Ethereum ecosystem. In Q1, total ecosystem trading volume was $134.5 billion, down 24% QoQ and 31.2% YoY. The decline in trading volume was steeper than the contraction in TVL, confirming a significant reduction in market risk appetite during this quarter's asset downtrend.

Ethereum DEX trading flow is highly concentrated among leading platforms: Uniswap's Q1 volume was approximately $85.5 billion, accounting for two-thirds of the ecosystem total; followed by Curve (~$22.1B) and CoW Swap (~$12.4B). Trading volume is the only metric where Ethereum does not top the five major chains: BNB Chain's total volume of $162.5 billion exceeded Ethereum's $134.5 billion, followed closely by Solana ($104.9B), with Avalanche ($14.5B) and Polygon ($10.7B) ranking lower. Ethereum's volume constitutes 31.5% of the total across the five chains, second to BNB Chain's 38%.

Ecosystem Fees refer to all fees generated by users using various applications, including borrower interest and trader transaction fees, directly reflecting the economic value created by the ecosystem; this sums all application fees across Ethereum. In Q1, total ecosystem fees amounted to $2.0 billion, down 16.9% QoQ and 7.8% YoY, declining alongside reduced trading and lending activity.

Ethereum's $2.0 billion in ecosystem fees far surpasses Tron ($599.3M), Solana ($532.5M), BNB Chain ($231.9M), and Polygon ($38.8M), accounting for 58.4% of the total fees across the top five chains. Even with the Q1 decline, Ethereum remains the number one source of application fees in the industry. Summarizing all indicators in this section: Ethereum leads the industry in TVL, lending scale, and ecosystem fees, trailing only in DEX volume behind BNB Chain.

Tokenized Assets Sector

Circulating Asset Total Market Cap refers to the total value of on-chain tokenized assets, calculated as circulating supply multiplied by the daily closing price; for stablecoins, it's the total circulation, for tokenized funds, it's the on-chain assets under management, and for tokenized stocks, it's the total value of issued on-chain shares. This section only counts assets issued on Ethereum.

In Q1, the average total market cap of Ethereum tokenized assets was $203.4 billion, essentially flat QoQ (only down 0.7%), but up significantly by 42.9% YoY. Stablecoins accounted for 87.9% of the total, with the remaining share divided among tokenized funds, commodities, and stocks.

Stablecoins

In Q1, the average Ethereum stablecoin scale was $178.9 billion, down slightly by 2.3% QoQ but up 37.6% YoY, making it the only tokenized sub-sector to contract sequentially this quarter. The market is dominated by two major issuers: at quarter-end, Tether USDT ($94.1B) and Circle USDC ($54.5B) combined held the vast majority of Ethereum stablecoin market cap; other leading products include Sky USDS ($12.4B), Ethena USDe ($5.9B), and PayPal PYUSD ($2.9B); new compliant tokens like Ripple's RLUSD ($1.1B) have also launched. Comparing the top five chains, Ethereum's $178.9 billion stablecoin scale leads Tron ($84.5B), Solana ($14.5B), Arbitrum One ($6.8B), and Base ($4.7B), accounting for 61.8% of the total stablecoin value across these five chains.

Tokenized Funds

In Q1, the average scale of Ethereum tokenized funds was $19.4 billion, up 4.9% QoQ and surging 73.1% YoY. This sector divides into two main types:

Yield-generating on-chain USD products (largest by scale): Sky sUSDS (~$6.4B) and Ethena sUSDe (~$3.5B);

Traditional finance compliant funds (core vehicles for institutional narrative): BlackRock BUIDL (issued via Securitize, ~$1.0B), WisdomTree Government Money Fund (~$815M), Superstate USTB (~$620M), with Ondo OUSG (~$320M) following closely. Comparing the top five chains, Ethereum's $19.4 billion in tokenized funds significantly leads ZKsync Era ($2.5B), BNB Chain ($2.3B), Solana ($1.3B), and Stellar ($1.1B), accounting for 73% of the total, making this Ethereum's second most dominant tokenized asset sector.

Tokenized Commodities

In Q1, the average scale of Ethereum tokenized commodities was $4.7 billion, up 60% QoQ and soaring 325.9% YoY, making it the fastest-growing tokenized category. This sector is almost entirely composed of on-chain gold: Tether Gold XAUT (~$2.6B) and Paxos Gold PAXG (~$2.4B) together account for nearly all of the sector's share. Comparing the five relevant public chains, Ethereum's $4.7 billion scale far exceeds Ripple ($736.6M), Arbitrum One ($95.9M), BNB Chain ($38.4M), and Solana ($29.8M), accounting for 84% of the total, making this Ethereum's most dominant sub-sector.

Tokenized Stocks

Tokenized stocks are the smallest sub-category. In Q1, the average Ethereum scale was $365.1 million, nearly zero a year ago, up 16.5% QoQ. This sector is almost entirely monopolized by Ondo Finance, which issues S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 broad-based indices, and dozens of individual stock tokens on-chain, constituting the vast majority of Ethereum's tokenized stock market cap. Comparing the top five chains, Ethereum's $365.1M slightly leads Solana ($249.0M), BNB Chain ($150.5M), Arbitrum One ($29.0M), and Stellar ($4.2M), but only accounts for 45.8% of the total tokenized stock value across these five chains, making it the only tokenized asset sector where Ethereum does not hold an absolute majority share.

Summarizing the tokenized assets sector: Q1 saw a slight decline in stablecoin supply, but Ethereum's monopoly positions in tokenized funds and commodities were further solidified.

On-chain Usage Activity

Monthly Active Users are defined as unique addresses that generate revenue-generating on-chain transactions each month; this metric only counts interaction addresses on the Ethereum Layer-1 mainnet. In Q1, the average monthly active users were 13.2 million, surging 53.5% QoQ and up 85.9% YoY, setting a historical record and ending the slow growth trend of previous quarters, with user growth accelerating significantly.

Total Transaction Volume refers to the number of transactions written to and confirmed on the blockchain, reflecting user engagement; Transactions Per Second (TPS) is the average confirmation rate during the period, measuring the network's real-time capacity. Both metrics are for the Ethereum Layer-1 mainnet only. In Q1, layer-1 total transactions were 200.4 million, up 38% QoQ and 81.5% YoY; average TPS increased to 25.78, up 41.2% QoQ. Both data points set new historical highs, proving that user growth has translated into real on-chain business activity increments.

Fees here specifically refer to the base network cost users pay to initiate transactions on Ethereum Layer-1, distinguished from the full ecosystem application fees in section two. In Q1, layer-1 total transaction fees were $39.9 million, plummeting 47.9% QoQ and down sharply 81.9% YoY. Rising activity paired with drastically falling fees is the quarter's core data paradox: transaction volume increased 38%, yet total fees fell by nearly half. The core reason is that Blob scaling significantly increased block storage capacity, making block space more abundant and thus significantly reducing the cost per transaction.

The core conclusion of this section is that scaling benefits have materialized: users and transaction counts have simultaneously hit record highs, while overall network usage costs have declined. When network throughput expansion outpaces the growth rate of market transaction demand, it results in the characteristic "activity up, fees down."

Native Token ETH Fundamentals

Fully Diluted Market Cap calculation: ETH token price × total supply under the current tokenomics model (including circulating, locked, unlocked, and to-be-issued tokens). In Q1, ETH's average fully diluted market cap was $290.0 billion, down sharply 30.3% QoQ and 9.9% YoY. This is the largest sequential decline among all valuation metrics in the report and the core factor driving the decline in USD-denominated asset scale across the ecosystem.

Staking Ratio: The total value of ETH staked to secure the Proof-of-Stake network, divided by ETH's overall market cap; 0.31 indicates approximately 31% of ETH's market cap is participating in staking. In Q1, the average staking ratio was 0.31, higher than 0.28 in the previous quarter and the same period last year. Despite ETH's overall market cap correcting significantly, the proportion of tokens participating in network security staking increased, indicating stable long-term staking intentions among users even during price downturns.

Token Holder Metric: The total number of unique wallet addresses holding ETH. In Q1, the average number of ETH holding addresses was 292.8 million, up 8.1% QoQ and 24.9% YoY, marking a steady increase for five consecutive quarters. Against the backdrop of a continuously declining fully diluted market cap, the expansion of holding addresses represents a further dispersion of the ETH holder base, with ordinary users' willingness to acquire not cooling with short-term market trends.

Etherealize Team Commentary and Analysis

The quarter's core paradox: Ethereum's Layer-1 mainnet on-chain usage scale hit a historical high, yet network transaction fees declined simultaneously. Ethereum proactively advances network scaling, willingly sacrificing short-term fee revenue. The long-term logic is: cheaper block space will unleash a massive wave of latent market demand, ultimately driving long-term growth in overall network revenue.

Data from Token Terminal's "Ethereum Q1 2026 Report" proves this long-term logic is being realized: on a YoY basis, monthly active users grew 85.9%, total transaction volume rose 81.5%, and network throughput increased 81.7%. This is a typical manifestation of the Jevons Paradox. The team predicts that the long-term increase in total network transaction demand will fully offset the short-term revenue loss from lower per-transaction fees. Drawing an analogy to the semiconductor industry: When Gordon Moore proposed Moore's Law in 1975, industry revenue was limited. Today, industry revenue has grown by several orders of magnitude. Scaling benefits are not yet fully realized: The Glamsterdam upgrade scheduled for Q3 plans to increase the gas limit more than threefold; Ethereum's long-term roadmap envisions achieving tens of thousands of TPS by 2029, building a high-speed Layer-1 blockchain with second-level finality.

The team agrees with BlackRock CEO Larry Fink's view from December last year: The current stage of the tokenization industry is equivalent to the internet in 1996—when Amazon's online book sales were only $16 million. At that time, the market generally believed Amazon was merely surviving on the internet bubble, a continuously loss-making online bookstore. But Jeff Bezos predicted the internet would completely reshape retail, abandoning short-term profits to fully build network effects and scale advantages. Ethereum is now making the same trade-off to solidify its position as the global financial settlement layer.

The development of the internet offers another crucial insight: Open, permissionless networks will ultimately triumph over closed, private networks. In 1995, Bill Gates predicted in "The Road Ahead" that digital commerce would rely on corporate proprietary private networks, "information superhighways," not the open internet. At the time, Microsoft built MSN, and services like America Online, CompuServe, and Prodigy operated closed walled gardens, boasting millions of paying users; France's Minitel terminal system even had more users globally than the entire internet until late 1996. Yet all these closed systems ultimately failed. No major legitimate corporation is willing to build its business on a network controlled by a competitor; more crucially, no single company can perpetually keep pace with the innovation speed of a permissionless, open ecosystem. History repeatedly confirms this pattern: Linux overtaking proprietary Unix systems, the open web replacing corporate intranets, Wikipedia superseding the Encyclopædia Britannica. In each transformation's early stages, proprietary products hold an initial advantage due to more refined features, ample marketing, and business resources. But once the open ecosystem accumulates sufficient development tools, developers, and neutral, trustworthy attributes, the first-mover advantage rapidly erodes.

This industry pattern is now replaying in financial infrastructure, as all data in this report demonstrates that Ethereum has crossed the ecosystem critical point: it holds dominant market share in all core sectors. Institutions choosing Ethereum for tokenized finance is not based on ideological preference, but because ecosystem liquidity, composability, and mature institutional use cases are concentrated here. Report data shows: Ethereum holds 79.2% of DeFi active lending, 61.8% of stablecoins, 73% of tokenized funds, and 84% of tokenized commodities market share among the top five chains. Each new class of tokenized assets further deepens ecosystem liquidity, continuously attracting more institutions. A neutral, unbiased foundation is the only stable equilibrium solution for the industry—major financial institutions will never uniformly choose a competitor's private chain for asset settlement. Moreover, institutions are gradually realizing that private interactions, access restrictions, KYC compliance, and asset transfer controls can all be implemented via privacy-preserving computational environments and permissioned token standards on top of Ethereum, while fully accessing the public network's vast liquidity; conversely, closed private chains cannot tap into the open ecosystem's massive liquidity and diverse applications.

Following the quarter-end, institutional deployment has accelerated further, with multiple significant developments in May alone: Asset Management: BlackRock filed for two additional tokenized funds; JPMorgan issued its second Ethereum on-chain money market fund, JLTXX; Fidelity International launched the Moody's AAA-rated dollar liquidity fund FILQ, launched as an ERC-20 token. Stablecoin Sector: The Japanese Blockchain Association's yen-pegged stablecoin EJPY is set to deploy on Ethereum; a European alliance of 12 major banks (including BNP Paribas, ING, UniCredit, BBVA, etc.) is preparing a compliant Euro stablecoin.

The internet seemed distant in 1990, but by 2005 it had become a societal necessity. If Fink's assessment of the tokenization industry's development stage is accurate, the next few years may be the most opportune period in Ethereum's development history. The team's previous "Efficient Money" report posited a core view: Network fees establish an intrinsic value floor for ETH; the long-term optimistic logic is that, with more robust monetary properties, ETH has the potential to absorb the premium from the combined monetary storage value of gold and Bitcoin, exceeding $30 trillion. Ethereum can establish industry leadership without relying on high transaction fees.

Trending Cryptos

Related Reads

When the World Cup Collides with Agents: From Web2 to Web3, How Are Wallets Evolving into Agentic Wallets?

World Cup as a Catalyst for Agentic Wallets: From Web2 to Web3 This article explores how the World Cup provides a real-world scenario for observing the evolution of digital wallets from simple asset managers towards "Agentic Wallets"—intelligent, AI-powered interfaces. Using the example of prediction markets like Polymarket, it illustrates how AI Agents can lower the barrier to Web3 interaction. Instead of navigating complex DApps, users can express intent in natural language (e.g., "I think Portugal will win") within platforms like Discord or web pages. The Agent then interprets this intent, finds the relevant market, and seamlessly guides the user through the on-chain transaction via their wallet. The core shift is from wallets as mere "function menus" for signing transactions to "intent interpreters" that understand user goals. The article highlights parallel developments in traditional finance, such as Mastercard's "Agent Pay" and WeChat Pay's AI tests, which focus on granting AI controlled, authorized, and auditable payment capabilities. This underscores a broader trend of AI entering the financial layer. However, the article emphasizes that the primary challenge for Agentic Wallets in Web3 is not automation but establishing clear security boundaries. Unlike traditional systems with chargebacks, on-chain transactions are often irreversible. Therefore, future wallets must ensure users retain ultimate control and comprehension. They need to transparently communicate an Agent's permissions, spending limits, authorized durations, and provide easy ways to pause or revoke access. The World Cup experiments represent early steps toward wallets that are not just applications but ubiquitous, intelligent interfaces that simplify Web3 while keeping users securely in control.

marsbit1h ago

When the World Cup Collides with Agents: From Web2 to Web3, How Are Wallets Evolving into Agentic Wallets?

marsbit1h ago

Options Don't Work in DeFi? Vitalik Might Not Agree

For years, the prevailing view has been that options struggle to gain traction in DeFi due to complexity, fragmented liquidity, and lack of natural demand compared to products like perpetual futures. However, a recent algorithmic stablecoin design proposed by Vitalik Buterin presents a different perspective, using options not as a standalone trading product, but as foundational infrastructure for other financial instruments. In this design, one unit of ETH is split into two components: a "stable" side (P) that retains value up to a specified strike price, and an "upside" side (N) that captures all appreciation above that strike. Combined, they always equal one ETH, eliminating debt, margin, and liquidation risks inherent in typical collateralized debt position (CDP) stablecoins. The stable component essentially mimics the payoff of a covered call option. To function as a stablecoin, this structure requires continuously rolling deep in-the-money calls, which introduces challenges like rollover slippage, predictable transaction flow vulnerable to front-running, and persistent liquidity needs. A core hurdle is finding consistent buyers for the leveraged ETH upside exposure (N). While it offers leverage without funding rates or liquidation, it must compete with simpler alternatives like direct call options or perpetuals. The system's scalability depends on a sustained demand for this specific form of leverage. The author draws parallels to their experience with Rysk, where earlier versions of DeFi options protocols struggled. The breakthrough came with Rysk V12, which aligns incentives: asset holders generate yield by selling covered calls against their holdings, while market makers efficiently acquire the desired option exposure. This demonstrates that options can find product-market fit when embedded as a risk distribution and pricing engine within structured products, stablecoins, or yield-generating assets, rather than marketed as a complex direct trading instrument. Vitalik's proposal reinforces this architectural approach—using fully collateralized, non-custodial, and physically settled options as a fundamental building block. The real opportunity for options in DeFi may lie not in becoming the next perpetual swap, but in powering the next generation of on-chain financial products.

marsbit1h ago

Options Don't Work in DeFi? Vitalik Might Not Agree

marsbit1h ago

Conversation with Investor Zheng Di: MicroStrategy's Coin Sale Experiment, AI Economy, and Opportunities in US Stocks

Frontier tech investor Zheng "Didier" Di discusses the recent Bitcoin price drop, the financial strategy shift at MicroStrategy, the AI-driven surge in U.S. stocks, and the evolving role of crypto exchanges. Didier posits that the recent BTC decline stems less from macro factors or ETF outflows, and more from market repricing due to MicroStrategy's new financial structure. Following a wave of preferred stock and debt issuance (STRC, STRZ, etc.), MicroStrategy must now manage cash flow to pay dividends, potentially leading to a market expectation of sustained, small-scale BTC sales to maintain its "per-share bitcoin neutral" principle. Didier views this as a financial "experiment" testing market capacity for such recurring sell pressure, which, while creating near-term structural headwinds, likely avoids a true "death spiral" absent major new external shocks. Shifting to AI, Didier argues that tokens are becoming the new form of labor, with AI models and compute (tokenized inputs) increasingly replacing human roles in execution and middle-management. This drives enterprise efficiency and higher margins, fueling the sustained rally in U.S. semiconductor, data center, and infrastructure stocks. He foresees an emerging "machine economy" where automated agents transact and collaborate on-chain. Regarding crypto exchanges offering U.S. equities, Didier sees this as a natural evolution. With few crypto-native assets generating lasting value, exchanges are pivoting towards real-world assets (RWAs) like stocks and bonds. This doesn't necessarily cannibalize crypto but reflects a maturing industry focusing on blockchain's core utilities: decentralized choice and efficient settlement. He notes that trading logic for crypto natives doesn't need to drastically change, as meme-driven and fundamentalist strategies find analogs in U.S. markets. The "1011 event" (likely referring to a major market crash) severely damaged crypto market liquidity, marking a probable end to the altcoin speculative cycle, with capital flowing towards the deeper liquidity of U.S. markets. For the macro outlook, Didier is cautious about near-term market pressure from potential mega-IPOs (e.g., SpaceX) and the U.S. midterm elections, which could bring more regulatory scrutiny. Long-term, he remains bullish on AI's productivity gains and its convergence with blockchain/Web3, predicting a shift from speculative frenzy to a more institutionalized, industrial phase for the crypto sector.

marsbit2h ago

Conversation with Investor Zheng Di: MicroStrategy's Coin Sale Experiment, AI Economy, and Opportunities in US Stocks

marsbit2h ago

Playnance’s $GCOIN Lists on KoinBX Amid Rapid Growth in India

Playnance's native token, $GCOIN, has been listed on the cryptocurrency exchange KoinBX as of June 18. This move aims to enhance accessibility for its rapidly growing community, particularly in India, where the blockchain-powered Web3 iGaming ecosystem has gained significant traction. Over 130 partners in Playnance's "Be the Boss" program have built communities engaging thousands of active players in the region. The "Be the Boss" model allows participants to create and manage their own gaming communities, earning rewards tied to community activity. CEO Pini Peter noted India's high engagement, with community leaders successfully building player networks. One partner, Dr. Nicolas, reported earning over $57,000 through the program in recent months, highlighting both the financial rewards and the opportunity to grow an engaged community. $GCOIN serves as the ecosystem's core utility token, incentivizing participation and aligning the interests of players and community leaders ("Bosses"). The listing on KoinBX is part of Playnance's strategy to expand globally, increasing the token's utility and accessibility by combining community ownership, gamified engagement, and blockchain-based incentives. Founded in 2020, Playnance is a Web3 iGaming infrastructure company focused on creating live, non-custodial, on-chain products to onboard mainstream users. It currently processes approximately one million transactions daily, aiming to simplify the user experience while maintaining full on-chain transparency.

TheNewsCrypto3h ago

Playnance’s $GCOIN Lists on KoinBX Amid Rapid Growth in India

TheNewsCrypto3h ago

Trading

Spot
Futures

Hot Articles

Discussions

Welcome to the HTX Community. Here, you can stay informed about the latest platform developments and gain access to professional market insights. Users' opinions on the price of ETH (ETH) are presented below.

活动图片