# Efficiency Related Articles

HTX News Center provides the latest articles and in-depth analysis on "Efficiency", covering market trends, project updates, tech developments, and regulatory policies in the crypto industry.

From Double-Entry Bookkeeping to Blockchain 'Triple-Entry Bookkeeping': Why Must Banks Go On-Chain?

Banks rely on ledgers, and so does blockchain at its core—but the two are fundamentally different. Today, financial institutions face a choice similar to that of print media decades ago: adapt to the digital age or risk obsolescence. The rise of stablecoins further accelerates this shift. While many banks are adopting cryptographic technologies, the underlying reason encrypted ledgers may eventually replace traditional banking ledgers lies in accounting methodology. Traditional banks use double-entry bookkeeping, invented in medieval Italy, which records each transaction in at least two accounts (debit and credit) to ensure balance and auditability. However, this system relies on independent record-keeping, leaving room for manipulation and reconciliation errors—exemplified by scandals like Enron. In contrast, blockchain introduces triple-entry accounting. This extends double-entry bookkeeping by adding a third, cryptographically-secured, and immutable entry—recorded on a distributed ledger via consensus mechanisms like Proof-of-Work or Proof-of-Stake. Each transaction is not only in the sender’s and receiver’s accounts but also in a tamper-proof, timestamped block, creating a transparent and trustless system. Triple-entry accounting eliminates the need for intermediaries, reduces auditing complexity, and enables near-real-time verification. For banks, adopting blockchain means transitioning from double-entry to triple-entry bookkeeping. Once issues like privacy (e.g., zero-knowledge proofs) and compliance (e.g., KYC) are resolved, moving operations to the chain can significantly boost efficiency, reduce reliance on legacy systems, and provide a more resilient infrastructure. The message is clear: embrace blockchain or risk marginalization. This may be one of the most critical strategic decisions for banks in the coming decades.

marsbit12/18 09:03

From Double-Entry Bookkeeping to Blockchain 'Triple-Entry Bookkeeping': Why Must Banks Go On-Chain?

marsbit12/18 09:03

Hyperliquid to Launch Portfolio Margin: A Game-Changer or a Double-Edged Sword?

Hyperliquid, a leading Perp DEX, is introducing portfolio margin on its testnet, a significant upgrade aimed at professional and institutional traders. This system unifies users' spot and perpetual accounts, calculating margin requirements based on net risk exposure rather than summing individual positions. It rewards hedging strategies by freeing up capital, potentially improving efficiency by over 30%, as seen in traditional finance. This move signals Hyperliquid's strategic shift towards courting capital-efficient institutional players, offering benefits like a unified account for seamless trading, automatic yield on idle assets, and a theoretical 3.35x increase in leverage. It aims to support complex strategies like delta-neutral trading and arbitrage, potentially improving liquidity and tightening spreads. However, the system amplifies risks inherent in DeFi's lender-of-last-resort absence. Higher efficiency means losses and liquidations can accelerate more quickly. In extreme market conditions, correlated crashes could cause hedges to fail simultaneously, rapidly expanding risk exposure. Furthermore, the liquidation of a large, leveraged unified account could trigger a multi-asset fire sale, potentially creating a cascading liquidation spiral across connected markets and even impacting integrated lending protocols within Hyperliquid's HyperEVM ecosystem. This innovation is a high-stakes gamble on attracting institutions and a severe test for DeFi's resilience.

marsbit12/16 13:20

Hyperliquid to Launch Portfolio Margin: A Game-Changer or a Double-Edged Sword?

marsbit12/16 13:20

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