# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Finance

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

Crypto’s Investable Universe Is Shrinking: NYDIG

According to NYDIG's Head of Research Greg Cipolaro, the crypto industry's investable universe is shrinking as markets mature. He argues that only a limited set of blockchain applications can attract sustained capital, suggesting the broader Web3 vision may need recalibration. Investors are now focusing on applications that extend traditional financial products onto blockchain infrastructure, including Bitcoin, tokenized assets, stablecoins, select DeFi infrastructure, and general-purpose blockchains like Ethereum. Cipolaro emphasizes that blockchain’s core attributes—trustlessness, permissionlessness, and censorship resistance—align best with financial use cases, where they provide clear advantages over centralized systems. He notes that most non-financial applications, such as gaming or social media, don’t require global immutable ledgers and are more efficiently served by centralized alternatives. This shift has led to capital concentration around fewer, stronger narratives, increasing Bitcoin’s market dominance while reducing investment in speculative altcoins. Cipolaro views this trend as market consolidation rather than collapse, with a focus on economically sustainable applications. A smaller, more durable market grounded in financial utility may enhance long-term stability and attract institutional interest. The crypto space may ultimately function as a specialized financial technology layer rather than a comprehensive Web3 overhaul. The next phase of development will likely emphasize real-world utility, regulatory clarity, and prudent capital allocation over rapid narrative expansion.

TheNewsCrypto02/23 09:02

Crypto’s Investable Universe Is Shrinking: NYDIG

TheNewsCrypto02/23 09:02

Bitdeer Liquidates 943.1 BTC Reserves: Is It a 'Winter Is Coming' for Mining Giants or a 'Breakthrough Rebirth' in the AI Sector?

Bitdeer, a major Bitcoin mining company, has completely liquidated its Bitcoin reserves, selling off 943.1 BTC despite recently becoming the world's largest publicly traded mining firm by self-mining hash rate (63.2 EH/s). This move reflects severe pressure from plummeting mining profitability, driven by a sharp 14.72% increase in Bitcoin network difficulty and a collapse in Hashprice to under $30/PH/s/day—pushing many miners toward unprofitability. Rather than holding volatile Bitcoin assets, Bitdeer is prioritizing cash flow and strategic financial maneuvering. The company raised $325 million via convertible senior notes, partly to restructure debt and hedge against equity dilution, signaling a shift toward sophisticated corporate finance practices. The core strategy involves pivoting from Bitcoin mining to high-performance computing (HPC) and AI cloud services. Bitdeer aims to leverage its energy infrastructure and data center expertise to capture opportunities in the high-demand AI compute market, where long-term contracts offer more stable revenue compared to Bitcoin's volatility. This transition marks a broader industry trend where large miners evolve into diversified energy and compute infrastructure providers, prioritizing capital efficiency and new high-margin opportunities over traditional "HODL" strategies.

marsbit02/23 04:41

Bitdeer Liquidates 943.1 BTC Reserves: Is It a 'Winter Is Coming' for Mining Giants or a 'Breakthrough Rebirth' in the AI Sector?

marsbit02/23 04:41

From Lloyd's Coffeehouse to Polymarket: Prediction Markets Are Reshaping the Insurance Industry

From the coffeehouses of 17th-century London to the blockchain-based prediction markets of today, the fundamental nature of risk management is being reimagined. The article begins with a contemporary crisis: major insurers like Farmers Insurance and State Farm are canceling hundreds of thousands of policies in states like Florida and California, a "great insurance withdrawal" driven by catastrophic losses from hurricanes and wildfires that have shattered traditional actuarial models. The narrative then returns to the origin of modern insurance at Lloyd's Coffee House, where merchants and shipowners gathered to collectively underwrite voyages, dispersing individual risk among a group. For centuries, this model of risk transfer, priced by expert actuaries, has dominated. However, climate change and unprecedented disasters are now exposing its limits. The article proposes looking beyond insurance to the financial concept of *hedging*—offsetting risk rather than transferring it. Examples include Ray Dalio's innovative solution for McDonald's to lock in corn and soybean meal prices to launch the McChicken, and Southwest Airlines' legendary fuel hedging strategy that saved it billions. This "elegant" mechanism turns future uncertainty into present-day certainty through open markets. The pivotal shift is embodied by Polymarket, a prediction market platform. Here, users can trade contracts on the outcome of real-world events, from elections to weather patterns. This creates a decentralized, real-time mechanism for pricing risk based on collective wisdom, not proprietary models. A homeowner in Florida could, for instance, buy a contract predicting a hurricane's landfall; its payout would act as a personalized hedge against damage. While prediction markets threaten to disintermediate insurers by eliminating information asymmetry and operational friction, they are not a complete replacement. They excel at pricing objective, verifiable risks (weather, events) but fail with complex, subjective ones (car accidents, health). The future likely holds a hybrid model: prediction markets serving as a foundational pricing layer and risk-hedging tool, while traditional insurers evolve to focus on personalized service, complex underwriting, and long-term risk management in areas where deep engagement is required. The piece concludes that we are witnessing a historic shift from passive risk acceptance to active risk trading, empowering individuals to become their own risk managers in an increasingly uncertain world.

marsbit02/21 08:12

From Lloyd's Coffeehouse to Polymarket: Prediction Markets Are Reshaping the Insurance Industry

marsbit02/21 08:12

The 'Stablecoin Revolution' on the Balance Sheet: SEC Uses a '2% Discount' to Tear Open a Gap for Digital Asset Compliance

In a significant move toward integrating digital assets into mainstream finance, the U.S. SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets issued new guidance on February 19, allowing broker-dealers to apply a 2% discount—rather than a punitive 100% haircut—to certain payment stablecoins when calculating net capital reserves. This adjustment, announced via a statement by SEC Crypto Hub Chair Hester Peirce, aligns the regulatory treatment of qualifying stablecoins with that of money market funds and other low-risk instruments. The decision aims to remove operational and financial barriers for regulated intermediaries holding stablecoins, which serve as critical infrastructure for on-chain transactions, settlements, and tokenized securities. The guidance bridges current state-level frameworks with the forthcoming federal standards under the GENIUS Act—signed into law in July 2025—which establishes a comprehensive regulatory regime for payment stablecoins. This shift is part of a broader effort by the SEC to move away from enforcement-heavy oversight under former leadership and toward clearer, more accommodating rules. The change may encourage more broker-dealers, banks, and trading platforms to engage with digital assets, thereby expanding access to stablecoin-based services for consumers through regulated channels rather than offshore platforms. While challenges remain—including state-federal regulatory coordination and pending market structure legislation—the 2% discount symbolizes a meaningful step in recognizing stablecoins as legitimate financial tools within the U.S. securities regulatory system.

Odaily星球日报02/21 06:20

The 'Stablecoin Revolution' on the Balance Sheet: SEC Uses a '2% Discount' to Tear Open a Gap for Digital Asset Compliance

Odaily星球日报02/21 06:20

After Dragonfly Raises $650 Million in New Funding, Haseeb Says 'Crypto Is Not for Humans,' AI Agents Are the Ultimate Users

Dragonfly Capital partner Haseeb Qureshi argues that cryptocurrency was not designed for human use, but rather for AI agents. Despite being a crypto-native firm, Dragonfly still relies on legal contracts over smart contracts due to their human-friendly design and legal enforceability. Traditional financial systems, though flawed, are built for human fallibility, whereas crypto’s complexity, security risks, and lack of intuition make it poorly suited for people. Qureshi posits that AI agents are the ideal users of crypto: they don’t tire, can verify transactions instantly, audit contracts rigorously, and prefer code-based certainty over the ambiguities of legal systems. Crypto’s deterministic, self-sovereign, and always-on nature aligns perfectly with AI’s operational needs. He envisions a future where "autopilot" wallets managed by AI handle financial tasks, navigating protocols and negotiating agreements autonomously. This shift will transform how crypto services compete and interact. Early examples, such as AI agents on platforms like Moltbook and Conway Research’s autonomous crypto-earning agents, already demonstrate this trend. In conclusion, crypto’s perceived flaws are not failures but indications that humans were never the intended users. With AI agents as the primary interface, crypto may finally realize its potential.

marsbit02/21 01:10

After Dragonfly Raises $650 Million in New Funding, Haseeb Says 'Crypto Is Not for Humans,' AI Agents Are the Ultimate Users

marsbit02/21 01:10

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