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58 posts tagged with "TradFi"

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Fidelity Just Quietly Handed XRP to 46 Million Brokerage Clients

· 11 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

On a Monday morning in April 2026, a three-line operational note from Fidelity's index administration team did more for XRP's institutional future than five years of courtroom drama. The firm added XRP to its Digital Commodity Index. No press release. No token-launch party. Just an index constituent change that now routes indirect Ripple exposure through 46 million Fidelity brokerage accounts and a $4.9 trillion advisory network whose model portfolios auto-rebalance into indexed assets without a single human approval step.

This is what institutional adoption actually looks like when it works: silent, structural, and impossible to unwind.

Hong Kong's First Stablecoin Licenses: Why Only 2 of 36 Applicants Made the Cut

· 9 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

On April 10, 2026, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) did something the industry had been waiting eight months to see: it handed out its first stablecoin issuer licenses. The winners were HSBC — one of the world's largest banks with roughly $3 trillion in assets — and Anchorpoint Financial, a joint venture stitched together from Standard Chartered, Hong Kong Telecom (HKT), and Animoca Brands.

The more interesting number is the one that didn't make it to the podium: 34.

By the end of September 2025, the HKMA had received 36 applications. Mainland tech giants like Ant Group and JD.com were in the pipeline. So was a long list of crypto-native names. After months of sandbox trials and paperwork, only two applicants crossed the line. Every other hopeful is now sitting on the sidelines, watching to see whether the first cohort can actually ship a product — or whether Hong Kong just set the bar so high that its stablecoin regime becomes a bank-only club.

The Bitcoin ETF Fee War Has Begun: How Morgan Stanley's 0.14% MSBT Is Forcing a Race to Zero

· 10 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Two years ago, buying Bitcoin through a US-listed fund cost you 1.5% a year. Today, it costs 0.14% — and Wall Street is only getting started.

On April 8, 2026, Morgan Stanley launched MSBT, the first spot Bitcoin ETF ever issued directly by a major US bank. Its 0.14% expense ratio undercuts BlackRock's $55 billion IBIT by 11 basis points and Grayscale's long-dominant GBTC legacy product by a factor of ten. Within its first week, MSBT pulled in more than $100 million — landing in the top 1% of all ETF launches ever tracked by Bloomberg's Eric Balchunas.

The headline is a fee cut. The real story is a structural repricing of the entire institutional on-ramp to crypto. When the biggest wealth manager in the United States decides to treat Bitcoin exposure as a commodity loss-leader rather than a premium product, the economics of every other issuer — and every service provider in the stack — quietly change underneath them.

Bitwise BAVA: Avalanche Staking ETF Rewrites the Altcoin Fee Playbook

· 12 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Bitcoin ETF issuers are racing toward zero. Morgan Stanley's MSBT launched April 8, 2026 at a 0.14% expense ratio, undercutting BlackRock's IBIT by nearly half and dragging the entire spot BTC category toward commoditization. One week later, Bitwise opened the Avalanche ETF $BAVA on the NYSE with a 0.34% sponsor fee — more than double MSBT — and nobody blinked.

The reason is simple. $BAVA holders capture roughly 5.4% in native AVAX staking yield that passes through the wrapper. A 0.34% fee against a 540 basis point gross yield is a rounding error. A 0.14% fee against zero yield is the entire value proposition.

That single contrast defines the structural fork crypto ETFs are now traversing. Pure-spot Bitcoin ETFs compete on price because there is nothing else to compete on. Staking-enabled altcoin ETFs compete on yield capture, validator economics, and operational sophistication — and they can sustain premium fees because the product itself pays investors to hold it. $BAVA is the cleanest example of the second category yet launched, and the template it establishes will shape the next wave of altcoin ETF approvals.

Circle's CPN Managed Payments: The USDC Abstraction Layer That Lets Banks Skip the Crypto Part

· 10 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

On April 8, 2026, Circle did something quietly radical. It launched CPN Managed Payments — a full-stack settlement platform where banks, fintechs, and payment service providers can move money in USDC without ever holding a stablecoin, running a node, or touching a private key. The institution sees only fiat in and fiat out. Circle handles everything between.

If that sounds boring, look again. This is the first time a major stablecoin issuer has explicitly conceded that the path to institutional adoption doesn't run through crypto-native complexity. It runs around it. And the target Circle is aiming at — SWIFT's multi-trillion-dollar cross-border corridor — is larger than the entire digital asset market combined.

Polymarket Goes Full Stack: The $2B NYSE-Backed Exchange Rebuild That Treats Prediction Markets Like Wall Street

· 11 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

On April 22, 2026, the world's largest prediction market will go offline for roughly one hour. When it comes back, almost nothing will be the same under the hood — new trading engine, new smart contracts, new collateral token, new everything. For a platform that routed $33.4 billion in cumulative volume before touching a single line of its core infrastructure, that is not a routine patch. It is a bet that the prediction market industry is about to stop being a niche DeFi curiosity and start behaving like a real financial exchange.

That bet has a surprising backer: Intercontinental Exchange, the parent of the New York Stock Exchange, which has now committed roughly $2 billion across two rounds to own the outcome.

Rayls Public Chain Mainnet: The Privacy L1 Built for Banks Goes Live April 30

· 10 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

What if the chain you used cost exactly one dollar per transaction — every time, every block, regardless of whether ETH rallied 40% overnight or a memecoin pulled gas fees into the stratosphere? That question sounds mundane until you ask a bank CFO to sign off on deploying production settlement rails on top of a system where operating costs are set by the volatility of a third-party asset.

On April 30, 2026 at 3pm UTC, Rayls switches on its public chain mainnet — and the answer it offers to that question is the defining architectural choice of the launch. Rayls is a privacy-preserving Layer 1 built by Brazilian infrastructure company Parfin, backed by a Tether strategic investment, endorsed by the Central Bank of Brazil, and already running live workloads for Santander, Itaú, and JPMorgan's Kinexys division. It pays gas in USDr, its own USD-pegged native stablecoin. It burns half of all fee-derived RLS tokens. And it wraps every transaction in an encryption layer that combines zero-knowledge proofs, homomorphic encryption, and post-quantum cryptography — while preserving selective disclosure to authorized regulators.

This is not another general-purpose L1 chasing TVL. It is a surgical response to one specific question: what does a blockchain look like when the design brief is "a compliance officer at a tier-one bank will approve this"?

The Three Problems Rayls Was Built to Solve

Most L1 launches in 2026 optimize for throughput, developer ergonomics, or fee compression. Rayls targets a different trio — a set of barriers that have kept regulated institutions out of permissionless chains despite six years of "institutional DeFi" marketing.

The volatility tax on gas. A corporate treasurer cannot forecast a $100M/year infrastructure line item if the underlying cost oscillates with a volatile native token. Holding ETH or SOL as "gas float" creates mark-to-market exposure that has to be hedged, reported, and justified to an audit committee. Circle's Arc chain addresses this by denominating gas in USDC. Tempo takes a similar path with fixed-fee payment lanes. Rayls goes further: USDr is chain-native, minted by the protocol, and burned as part of the fee cycle. Gas is literally priced in a unit of account the CFO already uses on the income statement.

The transparency problem. Public blockchains leak competitive information by design. When a bank's counterparties, transaction sizes, and liquidity positions are visible on a block explorer, trading desks get front-run, client relationships get exposed, and regulatory privacy obligations (GDPR, banking secrecy laws, MAS notices) can be violated by default. But fully private chains (classic Zcash-style) fail the opposite test — regulators cannot audit what they cannot see. Rayls Enygma threads this needle: encrypted transactions that remain verifiable, with an "auditor role" that can be assigned per-institution or per-regulator.

The counterparty-token exposure problem. On most L1s, paying gas means holding the native token, which means holding balance-sheet exposure to a speculative asset. For a bank settling tokenized deposits, the idea of the operational chain requiring them to custody RLS as a volatile counterparty is a non-starter. Rayls solves this in two layers: Privacy Node clients can pay fees in fiat, USDr, or RLS — the protocol handles conversion under the hood.

USDr: The Quiet Innovation

The flashier elements of the Rayls architecture get most of the press — zero-knowledge proofs are photogenic, post-quantum cryptography makes headlines. But USDr may be the most consequential piece of the stack.

USDr is a USD-pegged stablecoin, native to the Rayls Public Chain, used as the canonical gas unit. When a user transacts, the fee is denominated in USDr. Behind the scenes, USDr is automatically converted into RLS through an on-chain DEX at specific trigger thresholds. Fifty percent of the resulting RLS is burned. The other fifty percent is routed to the Network Security Pool to reward validators.

This structure produces three effects simultaneously:

  1. Predictable fees for users. A transaction that costs $0.02 today costs $0.02 next quarter, regardless of RLS price action. Enterprise clients can budget infrastructure costs the way they budget cloud spend.
  2. Deflationary pressure on RLS. Every block of network activity permanently removes supply. With a fixed 10 billion total supply and no inflation, sustained usage compounds scarcity.
  3. Validator rewards in a stable reference unit. Validators earn RLS rewards funded by real transaction demand, not inflationary emissions that dilute existing holders.

During the early ramp-up phase — when fee generation may not yet cover validator payouts — the Rayls Foundation is supplementing rewards from its own treasury. This is unusual transparency: most chains quietly subsidize validators through inflation and hope nobody notices the dilution math.

Rayls Enygma: Privacy That Regulators Can Live With

The privacy architecture is where Rayls gets genuinely interesting. Most "privacy chains" force a binary choice: full anonymity (which regulators reject) or full transparency (which institutions reject). Enygma refuses the binary.

Technically, Enygma combines:

  • Zero-knowledge proofs to validate transactions without revealing sender, recipient, or amount.
  • Fully homomorphic encryption (FHE) enabling computation on encrypted state.
  • Post-quantum authenticated key exchange for forward secrecy even against future quantum adversaries.
  • State root anchoring to Ethereum L1, providing censorship resistance and external verifiability for the chain's history without leaking transaction contents.

Crucially, Enygma supports a "God View" compliance model. Institutions, dApps, or operators can designate an auditor role — a regulator, an internal compliance team, or an external authority — with selective visibility into encrypted transaction data. A central bank overseeing a CBDC pilot can inspect flows without the entire network going public. A compliance officer can answer a subpoena without exposing client counterparties.

This is the architecture Brazil's Central Bank selected for the Drex CBDC pilot. It is the privacy layer JPMorgan's Project EPIC evaluated for fund tokenization. It is the design point that distinguishes Rayls from pure-transparency competitors like Base or Arbitrum and pure-anonymity competitors like Aztec or Railgun.

The Competitive Landscape

Rayls is not launching into an empty field. The regulated confidential finance category has become the most contested zone in L1 design over the past eighteen months.

Canton Network is the incumbent. Built by Digital Asset and now processing over $4 trillion monthly in on-chain U.S. Treasury repo financing through Broadridge's DLR platform, Canton is the first mover and has landed Bank of America and Circle as live participants. Its architecture is permissioned-by-default with sub-net privacy, which maps cleanly onto how TradFi thinks about counterparty relationships.

Aztec Network is the ZK-purist alternative. As a privacy-preserving rollup on Ethereum, Aztec inherits Ethereum's security and developer ecosystem but sacrifices the gas-predictability and governance controls that matter to regulated players. Aztec is where crypto-native privacy builders go; Rayls is where banks go.

Circle's Arc launched in early 2026 with USDC-denominated gas and a quantum-resistant roadmap. Arc and Rayls overlap meaningfully — both bet on stablecoin gas, both target institutions, both plan post-quantum upgrades. The differentiator is the privacy primitive: Arc's near-term privacy roadmap targets balance confidentiality; Rayls ships native transaction-level privacy from day one.

Tempo Network takes a narrower stance — purpose-built for payments with fixed fees and sub-second finality — but lacks the privacy layer for confidential settlement.

What Rayls brings to this field is a specific combination no competitor has fully assembled: stablecoin gas + native transaction privacy + selective disclosure + EVM compatibility + an existing institutional client base already running live pilots.

Why the LatAm Origin Matters

It is tempting to read Rayls as just another L1 and slot it into a ranked list. That misses the most important context: Rayls is not a crypto-native project that backed into institutional use cases. It is an institutional infrastructure company (Parfin) that built a chain because its existing bank clients needed one.

Parfin has been providing digital asset custody and tokenization infrastructure across Latin American banks for years. Santander and Itaú — two of the largest banks in Latin America by assets — were Parfin clients before RLS was a token. The Central Bank of Brazil selected Parfin for Drex because Parfin was already the operational backbone for Brazilian financial institutions experimenting with tokenized assets.

Latin America recorded nearly $1.5 trillion in crypto transaction volume in the past year, with institutional activity as a major driver. The GENIUS Act in the United States, MiCA in Europe, and Brazil's progressive stablecoin framework have created a regulatory convergence where compliant blockchain infrastructure is no longer a defensive necessity but a commercial opportunity. Tether's strategic investment in Parfin in late 2025 was a direct bet on exactly this thesis.

When Rayls launches on April 30, it does not have to bootstrap a user base. It has to activate an existing institutional pipeline that has been waiting for the public chain side of the two-chain architecture to go live.

What to Watch After Mainnet

The first six months of Rayls public chain operation will test three specific hypotheses that have defined the institutional privacy category:

Does stablecoin gas actually reduce institutional friction? If Rayls sees measurable adoption from banks that have sat out transparent chains, the architectural thesis is validated. If institutions still hesitate, it suggests the barriers were always regulatory more than technical.

Does the deflationary model work at institutional transaction volumes? Bank settlement flows are larger but fewer than retail DeFi volumes. Whether the burn rate compounds meaningfully depends on whether fee-paying transaction volume materializes at the projected scale.

Does selective disclosure satisfy regulators? The Drex pilot is the proving ground. If Brazil's central bank is satisfied with Enygma's auditor model, that credential becomes exportable to every other central bank running CBDC pilots — and the list is long.

The broader question — whether regulated confidential finance captures the TradFi migration that transparent chains have partially addressed but not closed — is the largest single bet in L1 design right now. April 30 is when the most institutionally credentialed contender in that category starts accumulating on-chain evidence.


BlockEden.xyz provides enterprise-grade RPC and API infrastructure for builders deploying across EVM-compatible chains. As privacy-preserving L1s like Rayls and confidential finance stacks like Canton mature, developers need reliable, compliant node infrastructure to bridge the regulated and permissionless sides of the ecosystem. Explore our API marketplace to build on foundations designed to last.

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RWA's Bear Market Breakout: How Keeta, Zebec, and Maple Crushed 185%+ Returns While Bitcoin Lost 23%

· 10 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

Bitcoin dropped 23% in Q1 2026. Ethereum fell 32%. Altcoins bled 40-60%. Whales realized $30.9 billion in losses. The total crypto market cap shed roughly $900 billion — evaporating from $3.4 trillion to $2.5 trillion as $15.7 billion in leveraged positions got liquidated.

And yet, a small cluster of Real-World Asset (RWA) protocols quietly posted triple-digit YTD gains in the same window. Keeta Network, Zebec Network, and Maple Finance each delivered returns north of 185% while the rest of the market torched its lunch money. BlackRock's BUIDL fund swelled to $1.9 billion. Aave's Horizon product hit $570M+ in deposits. Total tokenized RWAs climbed to roughly $29.72 billion as of April 16, 2026 — up from $5.5 billion in early 2025.

This isn't coincidence. It's a structural decoupling, and it may be the most important signal of where the next crypto cycle is actually forming.

eToro Buys Zengo for $70M: The Day a Retail Broker Chose Self-Custody

· 11 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

On April 15, 2026, a listed retail brokerage with 35 million users did something no Nasdaq-listed peer has done before: it bought a self-custody wallet company instead of building one. eToro's $70 million, mostly-cash acquisition of Israeli MPC wallet startup Zengo is the clearest signal yet that the custody wars are no longer "Coinbase vs. Kraken." They are now "exchanges vs. self-custody," and the exchanges are starting to hedge.

For seven years, the conventional wisdom on Wall Street was that retail brokers monetized custody. Charging spreads on assets users couldn't move was the whole business model. A $70 million check written to acquire a product that deliberately takes custody off eToro's balance sheet is a bet in the opposite direction — that the next decade of crypto revenue comes from users who explicitly do not want their broker to hold the keys.