# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Wall Street

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

Hyperliquid, Wall Street's 24/7 Trading Convenience Store

Hyperliquid: The 24/7 Trading "Convenience Store" for Wall Street Hyperliquid, a decentralized cryptocurrency exchange, has become a go-to platform for Wall Street traders seeking to trade around the clock, especially during traditional market closures. Founded by Jeff Yan, a former quantitative trader, after the FTX collapse, the platform emphasizes user self-custody of assets. It offers a wide range of perpetual contracts—leveraged derivatives with no expiry—on assets from Bitcoin and crude oil to the S&P 500 and even pre-IPO companies like SpaceX. A notable example involves a hedge fund trader who capitalized on geopolitical news over a weekend, securing a 243% return on oil derivatives before markets reopened. The platform, run by just 11 employees, generated approximately $800 million in revenue last year, and its native token HYPE has seen significant growth. Its rise highlights the merging of traditional finance and crypto. While U.S. users are currently restricted, recent CFTC rule changes could open access. The platform is known for its transparency, having processed $10 billion in liquidations during a market crash while competitors faltered. Regulators warn of the high risks and complexity of perpetual contracts for retail investors. Key to its appeal is a strong community culture, direct engagement with founders, and a simple interface. Despite rules against VPN use, it attracts global users with its permissionless approach. Hyperliquid plans to expand into prediction markets and options, aiming to eventually host all financial activity.

marsbit9 ч. назад

Hyperliquid, Wall Street's 24/7 Trading Convenience Store

marsbit9 ч. назад

The Hottest 00s Generation on Wall Street

"Wall Street's Hottest '00s Phenom: The 25-Year-Old Fund Manager Who Bet on AI's 'Boring' Backbone" At just 25, Leopold Aschenbrenner, once fired by OpenAI, now runs a hedge fund worth $13.7 billion. His strategy? Betting against the consensus. While others chased AI chips, he invested early in the physical infrastructure powering the AI boom: electricity, data centers, and energy. Expelled from OpenAI's safety team in 2024, Aschenbrenner foresaw the coming bottleneck. He argued that AI progress would be limited not by algorithms, but by power, chip capacity, and space. Acting on this, he founded Situational Awareness LP to go long on these "old economy" assets. His bets have paid off spectacularly. His fund's assets soared from $255 million in late 2024 to $13.7 billion by Q1 2026. His portfolio is a direct reflection of his thesis: major long positions in fuel cell company Bloom Energy and data center/bitcoin mining firms like CleanSpark and Riot Platforms, which control critical land and power resources. Conversely, he holds massive put options against overheated semiconductor giants like NVIDIA and AMD. A notable exception was his bullish bet on storage company SanDisk, which surged ~160% in Q2. Aschenbrenner's vision is materializing. Tech giants like Amazon, Alphabet, and Meta are ramping up colossal capital expenditure on data centers. Global data center power consumption is projected to skyrocket, with AI accounting for over half by 2030. The demand for enabling technologies like optical fiber and modules is also exploding. His story underscores a fundamental truth of the AI era: the ethereal intelligence of algorithms rests on a very physical, heavy, and power-hungry foundation. The future is being built not just in code, but in concrete, copper, and kilowatts.

marsbit05/31 07:54

The Hottest 00s Generation on Wall Street

marsbit05/31 07:54

Wall Street Takes Over Bitcoin and Stablecoins, But Where Are the Real Profit Opportunities for Retail Investors?

Wall Street is taking over Bitcoin and stablecoins, but where can retail investors really make money now? The common narrative is that Wall Street's dominance via ETFs and regulated stablecoins has structurally ended the era of easy 100x returns from altcoins. While this is true for Bitcoin and stablecoins, which are becoming traditional financial products, it's only half the story. Other crypto sectors are failing for their own reasons. GameFi is largely dead, with 93% of projects failed. NFTs are at multi-year lows with most collections losing all value. Memecoins persist but overwhelmingly benefit insiders and whales at the expense of late retail buyers. These sectors aren't being consumed by TradFi; they've exhausted their growth narratives. The real opportunities for retail in the next 6-12 months lie elsewhere: 1. **Prediction Markets:** Platforms like Polymarket have seen explosive growth (21x in a year) with a genuine, active retail user base. The utility of forecasting events provides sustainable demand beyond mere speculation. 2. **DeFi Yield:** While the era of 1000% APY farms is over, sustainable yields of 4-8% are available through liquid staking, regulated stablecoin platforms, and RWA lending. 3. **Select Altcoins:** If Bitcoin breaks its all-time high, a selective altcoin season could emerge. The favorable bets would be on ETH, assets within the Base and Solana ecosystems with real users, and asymmetric opportunities in AI-crypto and DePIN presales. The most likely market scenario (45% probability) is sideways action, making asset selection far more critical than broad market momentum. The playbook has changed. Actionable steps: Focus time on prediction markets; use DeFi for reliable yield, not lottery tickets; only buy altcoins with genuine user bases; and avoid GameFi, random NFTs, and new memecoins. The "TradFi is eating crypto" story misses the growing sectors. The easy money era is over, leaving a niche, selective market that requires real understanding, but opportunities remain for those who adapt.

marsbit05/27 12:57

Wall Street Takes Over Bitcoin and Stablecoins, But Where Are the Real Profit Opportunities for Retail Investors?

marsbit05/27 12:57

Wall Street Giants Vie for GPU Futures, Crypto Market Already in Early Skirmish

Wall Street giants CME and ICE are racing to launch GPU futures, marking a pivotal shift as computing power transforms from a critical IT resource into a tradable financial asset. In mid-May, both exchanges announced plans for futures contracts tied to GPU compute pricing indices, aiming to establish a benchmark and provide hedging tools for the volatile, trillion-dollar AI compute market. ICE partnered with data provider Ornn for a broad index covering enterprise and consumer GPUs, while CME teamed with Silicon Data to focus on an H100 leasing index with cash settlement. This push for financialization addresses a key industry pain point: the lack of risk management tools in a market dominated by a few cloud providers, where prices are opaque and highly unstable. Proponents argue futures will help large cloud operators and AI labs lock in costs and manage investment risk. However, challenges remain, including the intangible nature of compute, high market concentration, and the potential for leveraged speculation to exacerbate price swings and resource inequality. Notably, the crypto market has moved faster. Platforms like Architect Financial have already launched perpetual contracts tied to compute indices, leveraging DeFi's agility to create a parallel, global market. As Wall Street awaits regulatory approval, the race to define and control the pricing of "21st-century oil" is accelerating both in traditional and decentralized finance.

marsbit05/22 07:42

Wall Street Giants Vie for GPU Futures, Crypto Market Already in Early Skirmish

marsbit05/22 07:42

SpaceX and OpenAI Are Rushing to Go Public. Is Wall Street Ready?

SpaceX and OpenAI Rush to IPO: Is Wall Street Ready? SpaceX and OpenAI, led by former partners turned rivals Elon Musk and Sam Altman, are on a collision course to go public, igniting a potential Wall Street showdown. SpaceX filed for an IPO targeting a staggering $1.75-$2 trillion valuation. Its financials are starkly divided: while the Starlink (Connectivity) segment is profitable, these earnings are being consumed by massive losses in its core Aerospace business (rocket/Starship development) and the newly integrated AI business, formerly xAI. The entire IPO narrative hinges on investors betting that Starlink can fund Musk's long-term vision of orbital AI data centers, lunar infrastructure, and Mars colonization. OpenAI, following its legal victory over Musk, is reportedly preparing a secret IPO filing with a target to list by September. Its move is framed as a necessary "lifeline." Despite high revenue, OpenAI is burning cash at an alarming rate. Facing intense competition from rivals like Anthropic (which is nearing profitability) and pressure to sustain enormous compute costs, the IPO is seen as a critical step to secure public market funding for survival. Both companies present investors with a high-stakes gamble on future value versus present-day financial realities. SpaceX's valuation is a bet on unproven, capital-intensive space-based infrastructure. OpenAI's hinges on AI becoming a foundational platform, despite current monetization challenges and heavy losses. Their IPOs test whether Wall Street will pay a historic premium for these grand, long-term narratives or demand more conventional proof of near-term profitability, potentially setting the stage for a significant market reckoning.

marsbit05/22 01:40

SpaceX and OpenAI Are Rushing to Go Public. Is Wall Street Ready?

marsbit05/22 01:40

Dumping US Bonds, Buying Japanese Bonds: Wall Street Prepares for 'Capital Repatriation to Japan'

Wall Street is bracing for a potential "great repatriation" of Japanese capital as yields on Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) soar to multi-decade highs. The 10-year JGB yield recently hit 2.73%, its highest since 1997, while the 30-year yield broke 4% for the first time. This dramatic shift is causing global asset managers to reassess a long-ignored risk: that Japanese investors, who hold roughly $1 trillion in U.S. Treasury debt, could start bringing that money home. For decades, Japan's ultra-low interest rates pushed domestic insurers, pension funds, and banks to seek yield overseas, primarily in U.S. Treasuries. Now, with the Bank of Japan hiking rates and JGB yields climbing, the incentive is reversing. Firms like BlueBay Asset Management are preparing for this shift, believing new Japanese investments will be directed domestically rather than to foreign bonds. Early signs of repatriation are emerging, with record monthly inflows into Japanese sovereign bond funds in March. Some managers, like Ruffer's Matt Smith, hold yen as a hedge, anticipating that market stress could trigger a rapid acceleration of capital returning to Japan. However, analysts caution that a mass exodus hasn't begun yet. Japanese investors were still net buyers of foreign bonds over the past year. Uncertainty remains high as Japan's government fiscal plans could push JGB yields even higher, making investors hesitant to buy immediately. Furthermore, the Bank of Japan's withdrawal as a dominant bond buyer has increased market volatility. Nevertheless, the potential scale of Japanese selling poses a tangible risk to the U.S. Treasury market. As the largest foreign holder of U.S. debt, any sustained shift by Japanese institutions could materially impact supply and demand dynamics, pushing U.S. yields higher. Wall Street's current positioning is a forward-looking bet on this logic becoming increasingly compelling as Japanese yields continue to rise.

marsbit05/18 03:27

Dumping US Bonds, Buying Japanese Bonds: Wall Street Prepares for 'Capital Repatriation to Japan'

marsbit05/18 03:27

Weekly Editor's Picks (0509-0515)

Weekly Editor's Picks (0509-0515): A Weekly Digest to Filter Noise This weekly digest curates deep analysis often lost in fast information flows. Key highlights: * **Macro:** A new "NACHO" (Not A Chance Hormuz Opens) trade emerges on Wall Street, betting on a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz, shifting focus from political rhetoric to fundamental oil market data. * **Investment & Startups:** * Justin Sun discusses his long-term investment theses, highlighting future opportunities in embodied AI, drones, spatial computing, and space exploration. * Anthropic and OpenAI's crackdown on unauthorized stock transfers disrupts the pre-IPO token market, prompting a re-evaluation of its boundaries. * Bitwise analyzes massive capital inflows into new, compliant blockchains like Arc, Canton, and Tempo, tailored for stablecoins and asset tokenization. * A skeptical view questions HYPE's potential for further price appreciation, citing high fully diluted valuation, unlocking token supply, and unclear new buyer demographics. * **AI:** The "Semiconductor Century" report outlines the 2026 AI investment landscape, identifying key players (Nvidia, TSMC, ASML) and catalysts across the semiconductor supply chain, from design to manufacturing. * **Policy & Stablecoins:** The potential CLARITY Act is analyzed for its impact on DeFi. It could trigger massive institutional capital inflows and redirect stablecoin yields, benefiting structured, compliant DeFi protocols like Pendle, Morpho, and Centrifuge. * **CeFi & DeFi:** New tokens like sato and FLOOD, built on Uniswap v4's "Hook" mechanism, are gaining traction. Meanwhile, following the Kelp DAO exploit, Chainlink's CCIP is gaining market share from LayerZero in the cross-chain sector. * **Ethereum:** Grayscale suggests Ethereum's staking reward model needs reform to address issues like reduced fee burns from L2s and potentially excessive ETH lock-up, proposing a reward curve with a cap to benefit ETH's long-term value. * **Weekly Recap:** Summarizes key events including Trump's China visit, new Fed leadership, CLARITY Act progress, notable price movements (ZEC, TON), strong corporate earnings (Circle, Gemini), and institutional Bitcoin accumulation.

marsbit05/16 02:40

Weekly Editor's Picks (0509-0515)

marsbit05/16 02:40

活动图片