# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Innovation

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

Staking Tokens for Equity: How Does Backpack's 'Users Become Shareholders' Work?

Backpack, a Solana-based wallet and exchange platform founded by ex-FTX member Armani Ferrante, has announced a novel staking-to-equity conversion plan. Users who stake the platform’s native token for at least one year can exchange it for real company equity at a fixed ratio, with 20% of equity reserved for this purpose. The platform emerged after FTX’s collapse, having lost 80% of its initial funding from FTX Ventures. It gradually built a user base through its Mad Lads NFT collection and later expanded into exchange services, securing regulatory licenses in Dubai and Europe. Backpack tokenomics includes a total supply of 1 billion tokens, with 62.5% pre-IPO allocation. The TGE will release 250 million tokens, entirely distributed to users. The project is also negotiating a $50 million funding round at a $1 billion valuation. This dual-token-and-equity model presents regulatory challenges, particularly from the SEC, which may view tokens as securities. The structure risks conflicts between token holders and equity investors. While unprecedented in crypto, Backpack’s team includes former Coinbase advisors who had previously explored similar token-equity hybrid models. This approach aims to transform users into legal co-owners, offering an alternative to the typical “peak at launch” token model. It remains a high-stakes experiment in regulatory and economic design.

比推02/25 14:46

Staking Tokens for Equity: How Does Backpack's 'Users Become Shareholders' Work?

比推02/25 14:46

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

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