The article compares the differences between tokens and stocks in terms of risk structure, P/S premium, institutional access, index inclusion, and repurchase mechanisms despite similar price increases. It also uses cases such as Circle, Figure, Bullish, and Hyperliquid to illustrate how "moats, diversification, shareholder value, and sector sentiment" drive repricing.
2026-03-23 07:28:35
The SEC has approved Nasdaq's pilot program for trading tokenized securities, signaling the official entry of traditional finance into the era of tokenization. This article offers an in-depth analysis of tokenized securities mechanisms, regulatory frameworks, and their effects on RWAs and the global capital markets.
2026-03-23 07:27:30
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, commonly referred to as US30, and the NASDAQ-100 are two of the most representative U.S. stock indices. They reflect the performance of traditional blue-chip companies and technology-driven growth companies, respectively. US30 is made up of 30 major U.S. companies spanning mature sectors such as finance, industrials, and consumer goods. The NASDAQ-100, by contrast, consists of 100 large non-financial companies listed on the Nasdaq, with technology firms holding the dominant weight. As a result, it more directly reflects the momentum of innovation-focused and high-growth businesses.
2026-03-23 07:23:06
The Dow Jones Industrial Average CFD is a derivative financial instrument that allows traders to participate in index price movements without owning the underlying stocks. Through the Contract for Difference mechanism, investors can take long or short positions based on market expectations while using margin and leverage to control larger notional positions. This makes US30 not only a market benchmark but also a flexible, tradable index asset.
2026-03-23 07:21:50
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, commonly referred to as US30 in trading markets, is one of the most representative stock indices in the world. It consists of 30 blue-chip companies that play a significant role in the U.S. economy, spanning key sectors such as technology, finance, consumer goods, and industrials.
The index uses a price-weighted methodology, meaning companies with higher share prices have a greater impact on index movements. As a result, US30 is widely used to track the performance of major U.S. corporations and broader economic cycles.
2026-03-23 07:20:43

In February 2026, the on-chain ecosystem exhibited more pronounced structural divergence amid price pressure. On-chain activity did not contract in tandem, but instead became further concentrated on high-frequency and high-efficiency networks. Solana maintained its dominance in high-frequency activity, while Base and Polygon continued to expand. Arbitrum saw a recovery in activity, but its capital retention and value capture weakened. Ethereum shifted from net outflows to significant net inflows, reinforcing its role as the primary settlement layer and a key hub for macro asset deployment. On the BTC side, the price pullback pushed short-term holders broadly into unrealized losses, with profit-taking cooling and sell pressure still concentrated among short-term positions, while the long-term holder structure remained intact. At the sector level, AI Agent, supply-side shocks, and institutional DeFi narratives coexisted. Short-term returns were driven by structural catalysts, while mid-term allocation continued
2026-03-23 06:51:42
RWA (Real World Assets) are traditional financial assets—including bonds, stocks, and real estate—that are tokenized using blockchain technology, allowing them to be represented, traded, and circulated on-chain. This article begins with the core logic of TradFi (traditional finance), systematically examining how RWA depends on, connects to, and enhances the traditional financial system. It analyzes whether RWA will ultimately replace traditional finance or simply complement it, and identifies avenues for efficiency gains, the underlying reasons for institutional adoption, and the practical limitations and future convergence trends.
2026-03-23 03:01:58
Lombard (BARD) is a decentralized finance platform designed for asset management and yield optimization. Its core objective is to enable efficient capital allocation and risk control through on-chain protocols and automated strategies.
2026-03-23 02:24:37
Lombard is a decentralized protocol focused on cross-chain asset liquidity and security infrastructure. Its core design uses the BARD token to establish a scalable governance system, gradually shifting control from the core team to the community while aligning on-chain decision-making with economic incentives.
2026-03-23 02:13:17
Lombard (BARD) is a DeFi protocol focused on unlocking and reusing Bitcoin liquidity. Its core token, BARD, connects LBTC assets with on-chain financial activity through incentive mechanisms, governance participation, and value capture.
2026-03-23 01:49:01
ether.fi is a non-custodial liquid staking and restaking protocol built on Ethereum that enables users to stake ETH while retaining control over their assets and receiving liquid staking tokens such as eETH. With the expansion of Ethereum staking and decentralized finance, it has become part of a broader infrastructure that combines staking, liquidity, and extended security mechanisms.
2026-03-20 11:20:02
$500 Million Becomes $30 Billion: An “Investment Legend” Outside a Federal Prison
In 2022, SBF funneled FTX customer funds into Anthropic, investing $500 million for an 8% equity stake. Four years later, as Anthropic’s valuation surged past $38 billion, this stake—liquidated due to fraud—reached a theoretical value of $30 billion.
This article explores the “Effective Altruism (EA)” network linking SBF and Anthropic’s founders, exposing how the most audacious investment in AI history stemmed not from vision, but from a covert cycle of funds within the community. It stands as both a dark comedy of a 60x return and a sober account of EA philosophy’s unraveling amid the pursuit of wealth and power.
2026-03-20 10:01:33
Amid the outbreak of war, why have stablecoin issuers emerged as the biggest winners? From February to March 2026, Circle’s stock price defied the broader market, soaring from $49 to $123. This article provides an in-depth analysis of the truth behind Circle’s “war dividend”: geopolitical tensions have locked in expectations of delayed interest rate cuts, allowing its $79 billion treasury bond reserve to generate sustained excess returns. Meanwhile, USDC’s ability to serve as a “physical safe haven” and facilitate “cross-border settlements” amid the Middle East turmoil has driven its trading volume to surpass that of USDT. However, beneath the surging stock price, structural concerns such as the profit-sharing agreement with Coinbase and a deep dependence on a high-interest-rate environment continue to weigh on Circle.
2026-03-20 09:33:54
The article analyzes the potential of the pay-as-you-go model in the age of agents, while warning about the gray areas of web crawling and the balance between revenue and V2 dynamic routing.
2026-03-20 09:20:58
Through case studies such as Morpho×Apollo and BlackRock×Uniswap, the article reveals the logic that 90% of projects overlook: holder quality matters more than price noise.
2026-03-20 08:56:55