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NDIC Begins Liquidation of ASO Savings, Union Homes as CBN Revokes Licenses, Triggers Depositor Payouts

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The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) has formally commenced the liquidation of ASO Savings and Loans Plc, and Union Homes Savings and Loans Plc, setting in motion the payment of insured deposits to thousands of customers following the withdrawal of the banks’ operating licenses by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

In a public notice issued on Tuesday, December 16, the NDIC disclosed that the CBN revoked the licenses of the two mortgage banks on December 11, 2025, citing regulatory breaches. The NDIC was subsequently appointed as liquidator under Section 12(2) of the Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA) 2020, activating the statutory process for winding down the institutions and compensating depositors.

The move represents another decisive regulatory intervention by Nigeria’s financial authorities, aimed at protecting depositors, enforcing compliance, and sustaining confidence in the financial system amid persistent stress in parts of the non-bank financial sector.

Automatic payment of insured deposits begins

The NDIC confirmed that it has commenced liquidation proceedings in line with Sections 55(1) and (2) of the NDIC Act 2023 and has begun verifying and paying insured deposits to customers of the failed lenders.

Under Nigeria’s deposit insurance framework, each depositor is entitled to a maximum insured payout of N2 million per institution. The NDIC said payments would be made automatically, using depositors’ Bank Verification Numbers (BVN) to identify alternative bank accounts into which funds will be credited.

“Depositors will be paid their insured deposits up to the maximum amount of N2,000,000 per depositor,” the Corporation said, stressing that affected customers are not required to open new accounts or engage intermediaries for the process.

This automated approach, the NDIC noted, is designed to speed up payouts and reduce the hardship typically associated with bank failures.

Treatment of balances above the insured limit

For depositors whose balances exceed N2 million, the NDIC clarified that only the insured portion will be paid immediately. Any remaining balances will be treated as uninsured deposits and settled later as liquidation dividends.

These subsequent payments will depend on how much the NDIC is able to recover through the sale of the banks’ assets and the recovery of outstanding loans owed to the defunct institutions.

To maximize recoveries, the Corporation said it will aggressively pursue delinquent borrowers and commence the disposal of physical and financial assets belonging to ASO Savings and Union Homes. The timing and size of liquidation dividends will therefore hinge on the success of these recovery efforts.

The NDIC has opened both online and physical channels for depositors and creditors to submit claims and verify their details.

Depositors can submit claims online through the NDIC’s claims portal or appear physically at the nearest branches of the closed banks between December 16 and December 30, 2025. Those opting for physical verification are required to present proof of account ownership, a valid means of identification, their BVN, and details of an alternative bank account.

Creditors of the two institutions have also been invited to submit claims within the same window. However, the NDIC emphasized that creditors will only be considered for payment after all insured and uninsured depositors have been fully settled, in accordance with statutory liquidation priorities.

Payments to staff, shareholders, and other residual claimants will come much later and only if sufficient funds remain after depositors and creditors have been paid.

Regulatory reassurance amid sector scrutiny

In its notice, the NDIC sought to reassure the banking public that the liquidation does not signal a broader systemic problem within Nigeria’s financial sector.

“Banks whose licenses have not been revoked remain safe and sound,” the Corporation said, urging Nigerians to continue their banking activities without fear.

The NDIC added that the action demonstrates its mandate to protect depositors’ funds and uphold confidence in the financial system, even when that requires closing institutions that can no longer meet regulatory standards.

The liquidation comes against a complex backdrop, particularly for ASO Savings and Loans, which had only recently returned to the market’s spotlight.

The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) had lifted a long-standing suspension on trading in ASO Savings’ shares after the company addressed years of post-listing compliance failures, especially its inability to file audited financial statements. When trading resumed, the stock rallied sharply from around 50 kobo per share to above N1.00 in less than a week, making it one of the market’s top performers for two consecutive weeks.

However, the reprieve was short-lived. Trading in the stock was suspended again a few weeks later to allow the company to conclude an ongoing share reconstruction exercise. That process was still underway when the CBN revoked the bank’s license, effectively ending its operations as a regulated mortgage lender.

Union Homes Savings and Loans followed a similar compliance trajectory. With a market capitalization of about N2.95 billion, the company persistently defaulted on post-listing requirements, prompting the NGX to eventually delist its shares after repeated efforts to secure compliance failed.

The collapse of the two institutions is believed to be the consequence of prolonged governance, capital, and reporting weaknesses. The focus now shifts to how quickly the NDIC can complete payouts and asset recoveries in a process that could stretch over several years.

However, the immediate commencement of insured depositor payments provides some relief, reinforcing the role of deposit insurance as a critical safety net in Nigeria’s financial architecture.

Michael Burry’s GameStop Regret: Inside the Trade He Got Right, the Mania He Missed, and the Market Forces He Never Saw Coming

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Michael Burry’s account of his GameStop investment reads less like a confession and more like an autopsy. In a detailed Substack post published Monday night, the investor best known for anticipating the 2008 housing collapse revisited one of the most scrutinized trades of the past decade: his early bet on GameStop — and his decision to exit months before it became the defining symbol of meme-stock excess.

Burry’s involvement with GameStop began quietly in the summer of 2018, long before retail traders turned the struggling video-game retailer into a cultural and financial phenomenon. At the time, GameStop was broadly written off by Wall Street as a business in terminal decline, squeezed by digital downloads and shifting consumer behavior.

Burry saw a different picture. He believed the stock was deeply undervalued and mispriced relative to its cash flows and balance sheet.

In his post, Burry laid out the logic behind the trade with the precision of someone reconstructing an old model. He pointed to an upcoming console refresh cycle in 2020, historically a boost for GameStop’s sales. He flagged the potential for a buyout, the possible sale of its Spring Mobile unit, and what he described as strong cash generation paired with a sizable cash balance.

That combination, he argued at the time, created room for a “very big and consequential buyback” that could materially re-rate the stock.

Yet the market remained unmoved. After months of stagnation, Burry exited the position in the second quarter of 2019. The lack of price response undermined his confidence. Still, the story did not end there. Within weeks, he was back.

By July 2019, Burry re-entered GameStop, this time more forcefully. One factor had changed: short interest. GameStop had become one of the most heavily shorted stocks in the U.S. market, and Burry viewed that as a fresh catalyst layered on top of his original fundamental thesis. He wrote that he bought the stock “with both hands,” making it one of his larger holdings.

Burry did not rely solely on spreadsheets. He said he visited a GameStop store to test whether his thesis aligned with reality on the ground. The visit raised doubts rather than confidence.

“It did not work,” he wrote. “Even the stuff that was not on sale looked like it should be on sale.”

Still, he stuck with the numbers.

He also took an activist stance, writing directly to GameStop’s board and pushing for changes. That activism led to correspondence with two figures who would later become central to the GameStop saga: Keith Gill, the retail investor later known globally as Roaring Kitty, and Ryan Cohen, the Chewy co-founder who would go on to become GameStop’s chief executive.

Burry disclosed that his second entry into GameStop was at a split-adjusted average price of about 83 cents per share. He accumulated nearly 5% of the company and held the position for more than 16 months. During that period, lending his shares to short sellers generated substantial income. He said the lending rates, often in high double digits, were “lucrative” and formed a significant part of the overall return.

By late 2020, however, Burry’s patience had worn thin. Despite tangible developments — buybacks, board changes, and progress on asset sales — the stock price and short interest showed little response. He wrote that these outcomes, which he considered “home run/slam dunk activist successes,” had “zero impact on price or short interest.” That disconnect convinced him the market was unlikely to reward the thesis.

Burry exited the position by the end of November 2020, selling his shares at an average price of $3.38 — more than four times his entry price. By traditional investment standards, it was a clear win.

What followed reshaped market history. In January 2021, retail traders coordinating on online forums such as r/WallStreetBets launched an unprecedented short squeeze. GameStop shares surged to an intraday high above $120 on January 28, triggering massive losses for hedge funds and turning early retail participants into paper millionaires.

At the peak, Burry estimated that his multi-year investment could theoretically have turned roughly $12 million into $1 billion. But he dismissed that scenario outright.

“That was never a possibility,” he wrote, noting he would have sold long before prices reached those levels.

Even so, Burry did not avoid self-examination. He acknowledged that he could have analyzed the situation better. He believed he understood GameStop’s fundamentals, the short interest, and the trading dynamics. What he underestimated, he said, was how those elements could interact with a mass retail movement untethered from traditional valuation logic.

“I was blinded by what I saw as execution risk,” he wrote.

When GameStop shares jumped after Ryan Cohen disclosed his stake, Burry seized the opportunity to close the trade.

“I had no idea what was coming,” he added. “I had no idea that a Roaring Kitty existed.”

He also said he did not foresee what he described as a “widely distributed gamma squeeze” evolving into what he called “the one and only legal market corner.”

Roughly 50 days after his exit, the company he once characterized as an “ignominious crappy business” became, in his words, the “belle of the ball.”

“The entire world could not take their eyes off her,” Burry wrote. “And neither could I.”

Burry’s reflections extended beyond personal regret. He described the early 2021 meme-stock surge as spectacular, hilarious, and tragic in equal measure. By mid-year, as speculative fervor spread into non-fungible tokens and a wide range of physical assets, his tone darkened. He said he feared retail investors would ultimately be “shredded” and felt compelled to warn them.

That impulse, he explained, was shaped by an older failure: not having been more effective in sounding the alarm ahead of the 2005–2007 housing bubble. Speaking out during the meme-stock era, he suggested, was an attempt to avoid repeating that silence.

Burry also hinted that his GameStop story is not finished. He teased an upcoming post offering a fresh assessment of the company as it exists today. He described it as a “melting ice cube” with some capital-structure optionality, broadly similar to how he viewed it in 2018. The differences are notable: short interest has fallen to about 16%, the financial figures are far larger, and Ryan Cohen now runs the company — “for better or worse,” Burry wrote.

The account stands as a rare, candid look at how a fundamentally sound trade can still miss a once-in-a-generation market event — and how even investors with a reputation for seeing around corners can be overtaken by forces that sit outside conventional financial analysis.

America’s Economic Paradox: Growth Without Jobs

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Question: How do you see the U.S. market, and what is the new normal from an African perspective?

My Response: The new normal is that the U.S. economic architecture is being redesigned, and what we are witnessing is not a single adjustment but a series of unfolding “new normals” that will play out over the next few years. I saw a similar pattern when Britain exited the European Union. The country cycled through leaders, each searching for a magic wand. None appeared because structural redesigns do not yield instant solutions.

So, what is happening in the United States? America is now experiencing jobless growth. If you track average monthly job creation since 2021, the trajectory is unmistakable: from the exuberant highs of nearly 600,000 jobs per month to fewer than 100,000. Last month, the U.S. added just 64,000 jobs. Yet, unemployment rates remain relatively low, not because the economy is firing on all cylinders, but partly because immigration has slowed, reducing new entrants into the labor force. That demographic slowdown is masking a deeper structural shift.

President Trump understands this reality. Tariffs became one lever to stimulate domestic production. But tariffs alone cannot bridge a fundamental cost gap where a worker in Cambodia earns $10 a day, making relocation to Los Angeles economically unattractive even with a 100% tariff. The Federal Reserve, bound by its dual mandate of employment and price stability, watches this paradox unfold: low unemployment on paper, but slowing job creation beneath the surface.

Meanwhile, Wall Street is euphoric. Equity markets rally, corporate profits rise, and capital flows remain strong. But for the newly graduated American seeking a first job, the experience feels very different. Somewhere between AI-driven productivity gains, corporate efficiency pushes, and shifting demographics lies an unresolved equation.

Many blame AI for the disappearance of entry-level roles. But the truth is more nuanced. The U.S. economy was already losing momentum before AI adoption accelerated following ChatGPT’s launch in late 2022. AI did not create the imbalance; it simply amplified it. And no one has yet figured out how to unwind this paralysis without trade-offs.

From an African perspective, I drop this Igbo proverb: “onye na-amaghi ebe mmiri bidoro mawa ya, agaghi ama ebe o kwusiri” [he who does not know where the rain began to beat him cannot know where it will stop]. Ask an Igbo elder around you to explain that because as Mazi Chinua Achebe noted, proverbs are the palm oil with which words are eaten.

UK Prime Minister Theresa May Resigns as Illusion of “The Rise of Me Only” Ravages

Phantom is Rolling Out Early Access to its Phantom Cash Debit Card

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Phantom, the popular multi-chain crypto wallet, officially announced that early access to its Phantom Cash debit cards is starting to roll out this week. Begins in the United States excluding New York and Alaska for some features.

Prepaid Visa debit card— virtual at launch, with physical cards coming later. It supports Apple Pay, Google Pay, and anywhere Visa is accepted. Spend directly from your Phantom Cash balance, backed by the on-chain USD-pegged stablecoin CASH on Solana.

Funds stay on-chain until the point of sale—no need to manually convert to fiat beforehand. Identity verification— KYC via Stripe is needed for the card, bank transfers, and direct deposits. Phased rollout via the existing waitlist in the Phantom mobile app. If you’re on the waitlist, access is coming gradually this week.

Internationaly planned soon after the US launch. Card issued by Lead Bank; program managed by Bridge Ventures. This is a big step for Phantom in bridging crypto with everyday spending, turning the wallet into more of a full money app.

Implications of Phantom Cash Debit Card Launch

Phantom’s rollout of its prepaid Visa debit card—virtual first, physical later marks a significant evolution for the wallet, turning it from a crypto-native tool into a hybrid money app.

Its enables seamless everyday spending directly from on-chain CASH without manual fiat conversion. Funds stay on-chain until point-of-sale, reducing friction and making crypto feel like “real money” for daily use e.g., Apple Pay/Google Pay anywhere Visa is accepted.

This bridges DeFi with traditional spending, potentially accelerating user retention—if people can spend crypto easily, they’re more likely to hold and use it. Crypto debit cards are proliferating, unlocking real-world utility and driving adoption beyond speculation.

Positions Phantom’s 20M+ users, dominant on Solana as a full-stack finance app, competing with neobanks like Cash App or Revolut. Drives demand for CASH stablecoin: Already seeing yield on balances, gas-free transfers, and now direct spending—could challenge USDT/USDC dominance with consumer-focused features.

Increases TVL and activity on Solana via more on-ramps, P2P transfers, and yield-earning stable balances. Early access via waitlist + KYC via Stripe unlocks bank links and off-ramps, expanding beyond crypto natives. Intensifies competition in Crypto Cards. Joins a crowded field: Coinbase Card, Crypto.com Visa, and dozens of others like Solflare, Bitnob, emerging projects like Pintopay or XPlace.

Truly on-chain until spend vs. many that auto-convert upfront, plus Solana’s low fees and speed. Pushes innovation—higher cashback, rewards, and yields becoming standard to attract users.

Reinforces stablecoins as a bridge for hybrid finance: More wallets adding fiat rails blurs lines between self-custody and traditional banking. Requires KYC for card/bank features, aligning with US rules like the GENIUS Act for stablecoins—could set precedents for compliant on-chain spending.

Fees apply, phased rollout, If successful, accelerates “new money” apps where wallets handle holding, swapping, earning, and spending—shrinking the gap between TradFi and Web3.

This launch is a quiet but powerful step toward real-world crypto utility. With international expansion soon, it could significantly boost Solana’s momentum and stablecoin usage in 2026. Exciting times for everyday crypto!

Solana Leads Most Blockchains Across Key Metrics in 2025

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Solana leads most major blockchains across these key metrics, based on on-chain data from sources like DeFiLlama, Artemis, Blockworks, and industry reports.

Solana consistently ranks #1, often with more monthly active addresses than all other Layer-1 and Layer-2 chains combined, ~127 million in mid-2025 per Artemis/Blockworks data; reports of 57–83 million in various months, far ahead of competitors like Tron, Base, or Near.

Solana dominates overwhelmingly, processing hundreds of millions weekly e.g., 543 million in one November 2025 week—more than triple the rest combined and billions monthly, thanks to its high throughput. No other chain comes close in total transaction count.

Solana has led network revenue for multiple consecutive quarters and much of 2025 like $271 million in Q2 2025, topping all chains per Blockworks; over $1.25 billion annually from Oct 2024–Oct 2025 per DeFiLlama/Artemis. Much of this comes from app-level activity and tips, outpacing Ethereum and others.

Closely tied to revenue, Solana generates the highest total fees paid by users in many periods e.g., $8.5 million weekly in late 2025 reports, though per-transaction fees remain extremely low ~$0.00025 average.

Solana frequently leads or co-leads DEX volume, with weeks hitting $29 billion nearly double Ethereum’s and capturing over 50% market share in peak periods. It held the top spot for multiple months in 2025, though Ethereum occasionally reclaimed it briefly.

Solana’s dominance stems from its speed, low costs, and booming ecosystem such as memecoins, DeFi, apps like Pump.fun. While competitors like Ethereum with L2s, Base, or Tron lead in isolated areas like TVL or specific quarters, Solana tops the board in these user/activity/economic metrics for most of 2025.

Drivers Behind Solana’s Surge

Solana’s explosive growth in 2025—leading in monthly active users up to 98 million, transactions ~34 billion+, revenue ~$2.85 billion annually, fees, and trading volume ~$1.6 trillion—isn’t accidental.

It’s fueled by a potent mix of technical superiority, ecosystem innovation, and real-world adoption. Solana’s high throughput and ultra-low fees ~$0.00025 per transaction make it the go-to for high-volume activities like DeFi, NFTs, and gaming.

This enables seamless, real-time trading without the bottlenecks seen on slower chains like Ethereum. Events like NFT drops and game launches create viral spikes in user engagement and transaction volume, drawing in millions of new addresses quarterly.

Platforms like Pump.fun, Jupiter Exchange, and Raydium have turned Solana into a meme-coin factory and DeFi powerhouse. Memes alone accounted for 25% of DEX volume ~$83 billion in Q4, while project tokens surged 118% quarter-over-quarter. DApps generated $90 million in October revenue, led by Pump.fun and Phantom wallets.

Builders like Drift and integrations with protocols like Jupiter’s lending and prediction markets create sticky liquidity and user loops, compounding activity. Over $476 million in ETF inflows since October, plus tokenized treasuries from Ondo, Franklin Templeton, have brought “real money” on-chain.

Solana now handles 60-70% of all stablecoin transactions via USDC, PYUSD, USDT, outpacing L2s combined, with higher velocity than competitors. Partnerships with Visa, PayPal, and Shopify for payments settle billions daily, anchoring institutional trust.

Wrapped BTC (cbBTC) inflows hit $410 million YTD via DeFi rewards, while upgrades like Alpenglow (100x faster finality) and Multiple Concurrent Leaders position Solana as the “trading venue of the planet”—balancing max performance with censorship resistance.

This attracts builders and capital, with Solana’s app revenues topping crypto for over a year. These drivers form a self-reinforcing cycle: Usage begets liquidity, which draws institutions, amplifying metrics further. Solana’s dominance signals a shift toward high-performance, user-centric blockchains, with ripple effects across markets, tech, and adoption.

As the “most used chain” in 2025, Solana captures half the users of all major L1s/L2s combined, positioning SOL for outsized gains. Analysts eye $150–$300 by mid-2026, driven by ETF demand and revenue multiples already $2.85 billion annually, outpacing peers.

This could rotate capital from BTC/ETH, making SOL a “top 3” asset and an index play for global funds. Leading in DEX volumes ~$70 billion TVL, $7 billion daily and fees cements Solana as crypto’s “financial bazaar,” fostering novel experiments like prop AMMs and on-chain perps. It draws top builders via Colosseum grants, accelerating RWAs, payments, and consumer apps.

By 2026, expect mainstream integration—Visa/PayPal scaling to trillions in settlements—turning Solana into “internet capital markets.” Solana’s metrics expose rivals’ weaknesses: Ethereum L2s fracture liquidity, while BTC lags in programmability and scalability.

This pushes innovations like MegaETH/Tempo challenging Solana’s TPS edge—but also risks like fee share erosion down to single digits from Hyperliquid/BNB competition.

Overall, it validates PoS over PoW, with Solana dubbed “Bitcoin 3.0” for superior decentralization and scarcity potential via fee burns. Parabolic adoption legitimizes crypto for institutions and consumers, enabling self-custody derivatives and global payments.

However, volatility from meme-driven surges and past outages highlight centralization concerns. If upgrades deliver, Solana could onboard trillions in tokenized value; if not, rotations to faster rivals could temper growth.

In essence, Solana’s surge isn’t hype—it’s proof that utility wins. It redefines blockchain viability, rewarding speed and composability while challenging the status quo. For investors and builders, it’s a bet on the chain where “real money works,” but diversification remains key amid crypto’s wild swings.