# Settlement Related Articles

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

Operation Chokepoint 2.0 Concludes as Fed Withdraws Crypto Restrictions: A Long-Overdue Institutional Shift

The article discusses the end of "Operation Chokepoint 2.0," a coordinated U.S. regulatory effort to restrict banking services for the cryptocurrency industry in 2023. Internal FDIC documents confirmed this de-banking campaign, which increased regulatory friction and limited crypto firms' access to banking services following the collapse of several banks. A key tool was a Federal Reserve policy that classified crypto-related activities—such as stablecoin services, on-chain settlement, and crypto custody—as "high-risk innovation," subjecting them to additional scrutiny. Recently, the Federal Reserve officially revoked this restrictive policy, signaling a shift in regulatory approach. This change is not due to a sudden pro-crypto stance but reflects the growing recognition that isolating the industry is increasingly impractical. Stablecoin adoption has expanded, on-chain dollar settlements have become more frequent, and capital flows have continued outside the traditional banking system, creating potential systemic risks. The case of Custodia Bank, which was denied a master account and access to the dollar clearing system, exemplifies the impact of these policies. Custodia has since sought a rehearing, and its legal challenge is seen as a test of whether regulators are moving from a default rejection to a compliance-based准入 approach. Concurrently, the SEC issued guidance on how broker-dealers should custody crypto assets, detailing requirements for private key management, blockchain risk assessment, and response to extreme events like 51% attacks. Other agencies, like the OCC, have also expanded recognition of stablecoins and custody services. The overall trend indicates a regulatory pivot from blocking crypto to managing it structurally. Activities are being modularized into manageable components—settlement, custody, clearing, and risk control—rather than being treated as a monolithic high-risk category. The shift acknowledges that on-chain dollar flows are now a integral part of global finance, and regulators must engage with them rather than remain absent. The real impact will be seen in who is permitted to participate in the next phase of the dollar settlement and custody system.

marsbit12/19 11:30

Operation Chokepoint 2.0 Concludes as Fed Withdraws Crypto Restrictions: A Long-Overdue Institutional Shift

marsbit12/19 11:30

The On-Chain Game of Payment Giants: The Battle for a $40 Trillion Settlement Layer

The payment industry, while perceived as traditional, remains one of the earliest and most adaptable parts of the financial system to technological transformation. While the market continues to debate whether cryptocurrencies are assets, payment giants Visa and Mastercard have reached a consensus on a more fundamental issue: the need for a more efficient settlement layer that can integrate with existing payment systems, rather than requiring a complete overhaul. Their answer is stablecoins. Visa has begun integrating USDC stablecoin settlements via the Solana blockchain for U.S. banks, emphasizing standardization and productization rather than disruptive innovation. This allows for near-instant, 24/7 settlements, reducing liquidity constraints and transaction times, all while maintaining a seamless experience for end-users. Meanwhile, Mastercard is pursuing a multi-chain strategy, partnering with entities like Ripple and Gemini to build a flexible compliance layer that connects traditional finance with on-chain settlement networks. This approach prioritizes adaptability across various stablecoins and blockchain environments, particularly for cross-border and B2B payments. Both companies recognize that the real competition is not about individual stablecoin growth, but about controlling the future settlement layer—where an estimated $40 trillion in credit market activity could be redefined. The shift toward programmable settlement tools could reshape core financial processes like credit issuance and risk management. This transition is occurring quietly in the background—a technical migration that is gradual but likely irreversible. As major payment networks adopt on-chain settlement capabilities, blockchain is becoming embedded within the infrastructure of finance itself, changing the underlying logic of how value moves globally.

marsbit12/18 10:03

The On-Chain Game of Payment Giants: The Battle for a $40 Trillion Settlement Layer

marsbit12/18 10:03

The Underestimated Matrixdock: A Sovereign-Level Watershed in Gold Tokenization

Beyond the prevailing focus on "asset tokenization" and "scale" in the RWA (Real World Asset) sector, a more critical question is whether tokenized assets can be integrated into real-world economic operations for actual use, settlement, and interoperability. Matrixdock, the RWA platform under Matrixport, has been appointed by the Gelephu Mindfulness City Administration (GMCA) of Bhutan as the core tokenization technology provider for its gold-backed digital token, TER. This sovereign-level partnership signifies a formal endorsement of Matrixdock’s underlying technical architecture—not just a specific product—by a national government. Unlike many RWA projects focused on short-term financialization, Matrixdock emphasizes verifiability, regulatory and technical interoperability, and long-term operational stability. Its collaboration with GMC aims to transform gold from a mere investment asset into a transactional medium within a sovereign digital financial ecosystem. This shift from “holding” to “settlement” represents a watershed moment for RWA adoption, moving beyond narrative-driven growth toward tangible, state-level infrastructure implementation. The market has underestimated not Matrixdock’s progress, but the strategic significance of its sovereign-grade technical capabilities. When RWA ceases to be a narrative and becomes embedded in real-world systems, Web3 truly enters the economy. Matrixdock’s role in Bhutan’s digital city project poses a foundational question: after the hype, which RWA infrastructures will endure?

marsbit12/17 10:20

The Underestimated Matrixdock: A Sovereign-Level Watershed in Gold Tokenization

marsbit12/17 10:20

When Nasdaq Starts 'Putting Stocks on the Chain', What Are We Really Welcoming?

Nasdaq is advancing a proposal to move U.S. stock settlement onto the blockchain, which could fundamentally reshape the infrastructure of American capital markets. This shift aims to replace the current slow, manual, and multi-layered clearing system with real-time, automated on-chain settlement. While many discussions focus on surface-level changes like 24/7 trading, the core transformation is structural: moving from outdated T+2 (or even T+1) settlement to instantaneous, programmable, and transparent ledger-based clearing. This isn’t about making stocks “more Web3” but modernizing a financial system that still relies on processes from the 1970s. The existing system—with its custodians, sub-custodians, and clearing intermediaries—creates operational friction, risk, and cost, as seen during events like the GameStop trading halts and the FTX collapse. On-chain settlement could reduce the need for traditional custodial roles, compress arbitrage opportunities built on settlement delays, and turn static securities into dynamic, composable financial instruments. The move faces significant resistance from entrenched intermediaries who profit from the current structure, but the direction of change appears inevitable. As demonstrated by Hong Kong’s recent issuance of a green bond settled in one second (versus five days), tokenization of traditional assets is becoming an operational reality—not a conceptual experiment. When stocks migrate on-chain, other assets like bonds and derivatives may follow, leading to a quiet but profound shift in how global markets function. This isn’t just a change in technology; it’s a change in the nature of finance itself.

cointelegraph_中文12/08 10:33

When Nasdaq Starts 'Putting Stocks on the Chain', What Are We Really Welcoming?

cointelegraph_中文12/08 10:33

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