# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Stablecoin

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

RWA Weekly Report|On-Chain Total Value Rises Again; U.S. SEC Issues Crypto Asset Custody Guidance (12.10-12.17)

RWA Weekly Report: On-Chain Value Rebounds; SEC Issues Crypto Custody Guidance (Dec 10–17) The total distributed asset value (DAV) of real-world assets (RWA) on-chain rose to $18.74 billion, up 1.63% from the previous week, ending a period of stagnation. The represented asset value (RAV) increased 4.92% to $410.38 billion, marking the largest weekly gain in two months. The number of asset holders grew by over 14,000 to 575,752. Stablecoin market cap slightly declined to $300.18 billion, but user numbers increased by 1.42% to 210.72 million. U.S. Treasuries remained the largest asset class but decreased marginally to $8.7 billion. Commodity assets grew to $3.2 billion, while private credit saw a modest rise to $2.4 billion. Public equities and non-U.S. government debt also increased, whereas private equity slightly declined. Key developments include the U.S. Congress urging the SEC to allow cryptocurrencies in 401(k) plans, the SEC releasing crypto custody guidance emphasizing wallet risks, and approving DTCC to custody tokenized stocks and RWAs on blockchain. Nasdaq proposed extending trading hours to 23 hours daily to align with crypto markets. Visa began USDC settlement via Solana for U.S. banks. Ondo Finance announced plans to launch tokenized stocks and ETFs on Solana in early 2026 after the SEC closed its investigation without charges. MSX (STONKS) reported a record $2 billion in daily trading volume and is preparing for potential official tokenized stock adoption following Nasdaq’s SEC application.

Odaily星球日报12/17 11:15

RWA Weekly Report|On-Chain Total Value Rises Again; U.S. SEC Issues Crypto Asset Custody Guidance (12.10-12.17)

Odaily星球日报12/17 11:15

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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