# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Assets

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Assets", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

AI Era's 'Scarce Assets'? Goldman Sachs: HALO—Heavy Assets, Low Obsolescence

In the AI era, market focus is shifting from scalable, light-asset business models to valuing hard-to-replicate physical assets and infrastructure, a trend Goldman Sachs terms "HALO" (Heavy Assets, Low Obsolescence). This reflects a repricing of scarcity driven by higher real interest rates, geopolitical fragmentation, supply chain restructuring, and massive AI-driven capital expenditure. HALO assets—such as power grids, pipelines, utilities, and critical industrial capacity—have high replication barriers (cost, regulation, engineering complexity) and remain economically durable across technology cycles. Meanwhile, AI is undermining the profitability and terminal value of some light-asset sectors (e.g., software, IT services) by reducing information costs and increasing competition. Notably, major tech firms are now becoming large-scale capital spenders, with projected Capex of $1.5 trillion from 2023-2026—surpassing their cumulative historical investment. Since 2025, Goldman’s heavy-asset portfolio (GSSTCAPI) has outperformed its light-asset counterpart (GSSTCAPL) by 35%, driven by valuation rerating rather than broad de-rating of light assets. Macro factors support this shift: higher rates compress valuations of long-duration growth stocks, while manufacturing and capex cycles benefit heavy-asset firms. Earnings momentum is also stronger for heavy-asset companies, with higher expected CAGR (14% vs. 10%) and improving ROE. Despite recent gains, institutional positioning remains underweight value/heavy-asset stocks, suggesting further potential for outperformance.

marsbit02/25 08:50

AI Era's 'Scarce Assets'? Goldman Sachs: HALO—Heavy Assets, Low Obsolescence

marsbit02/25 08:50

Assisting Turkey in Freezing $1 Billion in Assets, Tether's Compliance Approach Has Changed

On January 30, Turkish authorities froze assets worth over $500 million belonging to Veysel Sahin, who is accused of operating an illegal gambling platform and money laundering. Tether Holdings SA, the issuer of the $185 billion stablecoin USDT, assisted in the freeze at the request of the Turkish government. This action is part of a broader Turkish operation that has frozen over $1 billion in assets. Tether has increasingly collaborated with global law enforcement agencies to combat cryptocurrency-related crimes, including money laundering, drug trafficking, and sanctions evasion. According to Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino, the company follows legal procedures when working with authorities such as the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI. Analysis by Elliptic shows that Tether and its competitor Circle have blacklisted around 5,700 wallets holding approximately $2.5 billion in assets, with three-quarters of these containing USDT. Tether claims to have assisted in over 1,800 cases across 62 countries, freezing $3.4 billion in USDT tied to illicit activities. This marks a shift from Tether’s earlier tensions with U.S. regulators, including a 2021 settlement over misrepresenting reserves. The company has recently re-entered the U.S. market with a compliant stablecoin, USAT, and has gained regulatory acceptance under the Trump administration. Despite these efforts, USDT remains under scrutiny for its use in criminal activities, including a recent case involving $1 billion in money laundering and reports of Iran’s central bank using USDT to evade sanctions.

marsbit02/09 12:18

Assisting Turkey in Freezing $1 Billion in Assets, Tether's Compliance Approach Has Changed

marsbit02/09 12:18

The Next Phase of RWA: The Return of Productive Assets

The RWA (Real World Assets) sector has demonstrated strong growth, reaching a total value of $22.9 billion as of early 2026, up significantly from late 2025. This expansion is driven by clearer regulations, institutional participation, and maturing infrastructure, marking a shift from conceptual validation to scalable implementation. The market is dominated by financial assets like U.S. Treasuries ($9.8 billion), commodities ($4.1 billion), and private credit ($2.4 billion), which are favored for their predictable returns, regulatory clarity, and compatibility with institutional risk frameworks. Ethereum holds about 60% of on-chain RWA value, reflecting a preference for chains with strong regulatory and settlement support. While current growth is largely fueled by financialized assets like repo agreements and Treasuries—serving as low-risk yield tools in DeFi and institutional portfolios—the next phase is expected to focus on productive assets such as infrastructure, energy projects, and receivables. These assets face liquidity constraints in traditional finance but can achieve greater efficiency and accessibility through tokenization. Compliance is increasingly integral to asset value, with regulatory frameworks like MiCA in Europe and stablecoin regulations in Hong Kong providing clearer pathways. The industry must address challenges including asset authenticity, operational risk standards, secondary market liquidity, and cross-jurisdictional compliance to achieve broader adoption. The future of RWA lies not in re-engineering already-liquid assets but in unlocking capital for real-world production, transforming how assets are financed and managed globally.

marsbit02/05 02:33

The Next Phase of RWA: The Return of Productive Assets

marsbit02/05 02:33

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