# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Crypto

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

World Cup Approaches, Prediction Markets Face a Major Test

The 2026 FIFA World Cup represents a major public test for sports prediction markets like Polymarket and Kalshi, which have grown significantly by offering tradable markets on event outcomes. This global event, hosted by the US, Canada, and Mexico, concentrates risks related to sports integrity, cross-border operations, and gambling ecosystems. A key concern is the potential for insider trading on non-public information (e.g., injuries, lineups), which could be exploited in granular prediction markets. FIFA's choice of its official prediction market partner, ADI Predictstreet, has raised significant doubts. The platform, relatively unknown, has faced scrutiny over the integrity of its executives—including past insider trading allegations and associations with a major EU corruption scandal—its rapid licensing in Gibraltar, and the fact its product was not yet live at the time of the announcement. This partnership begins with a "trust deficit." FIFA itself carries historical corruption baggage, and its deepening ties with betting and data industries fuel concerns about maintaining sporting integrity. While FIFA has established monitoring systems, their effectiveness against potential insider trading across decentralized global prediction markets remains unproven. Major US-based prediction platforms have updated rules to prohibit trading based on confidential information. However, the World Cup's complex ecosystem of federations, teams, and officials makes enforcement far more challenging than in domestic leagues. The event will not determine the fate of prediction markets but will critically test whether they can be integrated as a regulated event-trading infrastructure or remain a high-risk gambling-adjacent activity within global sports.

marsbit05/15 05:11

World Cup Approaches, Prediction Markets Face a Major Test

marsbit05/15 05:11

Warsh Takes the Helm at the Fed: A Capital Layout Clearing the Way for AI Productivity

Kevin Warsh's confirmation as the 17th Federal Reserve Chair signals a significant strategic pivot, not merely a political victory. The core narrative, as framed by the author's "Universal Code," is that capital flows towards maximizing intelligence output per unit of energy—currently represented by the AI-driven semiconductor and energy infrastructure boom. Warsh, uniquely among candidates, is a former tech investor who has personally invested in this AI "productivity miracle." His mandate is to enable this transformation by aligning monetary policy to support, not stifle, the capital-intensive AI buildout. His proposed policy framework blends elements of 1950s financial repression with Alan Greenspan's 1990s playbook: tolerating higher headline inflation driven by volatile components (e.g., energy) while relying on AI-driven productivity gains to suppress core inflation and unit labor costs. This allows for a more accommodative stance than conventional models suggest. The strategy's success hinges on a coordinated "Treasury-Fed Accord" with Treasury Secretary Bessant. Bessant's role is international: securing foreign demand for long-term U.S. debt through bilateral agreements (e.g., with China, Japan, Gulf states) that offer access to AI infrastructure in exchange for recycling trade surpluses into Treasuries. A weaker dollar and controlled real yields are essential to make this foreign duration buying viable. Warsh's Fed must avoid overly restrictive policy that would break this flow. The underlying coalition driving this agenda consists of crypto founders, AI infrastructure operators, and energy investors seeking policy stability. While Warsh's initial meetings may not deliver immediate rate cuts, they will signal a shift in focus toward core inflation and greater policy discretion. The critical variable is the bond market. If long-term yields, term premiums, or real yields rise beyond certain thresholds (e.g., 10-year yields above 5.5%), the entire architecture could fail regardless of Fed actions. The next six months will determine whether the bond market grants the new Fed Chair the space to implement this framework. If successful, the cycle extends, benefiting risk assets, cryptocurrencies, and AI capital expenditure stocks. The market's current pricing of a conventional inflation fight creates an asymmetry versus this productivity-led, financially repressive framework, which represents the potential for significant returns.

marsbit05/14 10:07

Warsh Takes the Helm at the Fed: A Capital Layout Clearing the Way for AI Productivity

marsbit05/14 10:07

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