# Сопутствующие статьи по теме PayPal

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

The Ghost of X.com, Musk's 25-Year Revenge

Elon Musk's 25-year quest to reclaim his original vision for X.com culminated in the acquisition and transformation of Twitter. In 1999, Musk invested his entire $22 million fortune from the sale of Zip2 into X.com, an ambitious online financial platform. The venture merged with Confinity (later PayPal), but Musk was ousted in a board coup while on his honeymoon. The X.com brand was discarded, leaving a "fishbone" of regret in Musk. His 2022 acquisition of Twitter was not primarily about free speech but about复仇 (revenge) for that early betrayal. He systematically rebranded it as X and began a gradual transformation from a microblogging site into an all-in-one "everything app." This involved introducing long-form content, enhanced video, creator monetization, and, most crucially, laying the groundwork for financial services. The key development is the "Smart Cashtags" feature, allowing users to embed asset tickers (e.g., $TSLA) in posts that link to real-time data and, ultimately, enable direct trading. This creates a seamless loop from seeing information to making a financial decision to executing a trade, all within X. To build trust for this financial future, Musk took the unprecedented step of open-sourcing the platform's algorithm. The article frames this as Musk finally realizing his 1999 vision, an idea validated by the success of Chinese super-apps like WeChat. The timing is now perfect, with mature mobile payments, crypto adoption, and shifting regulations. Musk's lifelong obsession with the letter "X" (SpaceX, Model X, xAI, his son's name) is presented as a unifying thread in his mission to control the flow of global capital and information, making X the central nervous system of the digital economy.

marsbit01/14 09:21

The Ghost of X.com, Musk's 25-Year Revenge

marsbit01/14 09:21

Selling Assets While Racing for a Bank Charter: What's the Rush at PayPal?

Facing intense pressure from the shifting financial landscape, PayPal is making two seemingly contradictory moves: selling off $7 billion in "Buy Now, Pay Later" loan assets while simultaneously applying for an industrial bank charter (ILC) to establish "PayPal Bank." The core reason is a strategic pivot to escape the vulnerabilities of its current "rent-a-license" model. For years, PayPal's massive lending business relied on WebBank's charter, making it a "middleman" whose core operations were dependent on a partner. A recent crisis involving a similar intermediary, Synapse, which froze user funds, highlighted the extreme risk of this model. Furthermore, in a high-interest-rate environment, PayPal is missing out on billions in profit by parking its 430 million users' funds at partner banks instead of leveraging them as low-cost deposits to earn interest and lending revenue itself. The urgency is amplified by the existential threat of stablecoins. PayPal's own stablecoin, PYUSD, is issued by a partner, Paxos. As regulators move to grant such partners official banking status and new legislation like the GENIUS Act takes shape, control over stablecoin issuance—and its near-zero-fee model—is shifting to licensed entities. This directly threatens PayPal's core business, which relies on high transaction fees for e-commerce payments. To survive, PayPal must control the entire financial stack. The asset sale was a crucial prerequisite for the bank application. By offloading the risky loan assets, PayPal presented a "clean" balance sheet to regulators (the FDIC), drastically increasing its chances of approval for the highly coveted ILC charter. This charter is a rare "backdoor" that allows commercial companies like PayPal to operate a bank without the parent company becoming a heavily regulated bank holding company. PayPal is racing against time. Regulatory scrutiny on ILCs is increasing, and this window of opportunity may soon close. The bank charter is not just about loans; it's an option for the future—allowing PayPal to legally custody crypto assets, connect to DeFi protocols, and transform from a payment processor into a full-scale asset manager for the Web3 era. This is a desperate bid for survival: to become the J.P. Morgan of crypto or risk becoming a relic of the early internet.

marsbit12/17 10:15

Selling Assets While Racing for a Bank Charter: What's the Rush at PayPal?

marsbit12/17 10:15

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