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Home Blog Page 43

Kevin Warsh Nomination as Next FED Chair Could Shift Crypto Regulation

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Kevin Warsh has been officially nominated by President Donald Trump to serve as the next Chair of the Federal Reserve, replacing Jerome Powell whose term as chair ends in May 2026. The White House formally transmitted the nomination to the Senate on March 4, 2026. This includes: A four-year term as Chair of the Board of Governors.

A separate 14-year term as a member of the Fed Board from February 1, 2026. Warsh, a former Fed Governor under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, was initially announced as Trump’s pick on January 30, 2026. The March 4 action marks the official submission, advancing the process to the Senate Banking Committee for hearings and a confirmation vote.

If confirmed by the Republican-controlled Senate, Warsh would assume the role amid ongoing debates over monetary policy, interest rates, and potential reforms. He has a reputation as relatively hawkish on inflation and has expressed views supportive of Bitcoin as a disciplinary force on central bank policies, which some observers see as signaling a potential shift toward more disciplined monetary approaches.

The nomination has drawn attention in financial and crypto circles for its implications on future Fed direction, though confirmation could face hurdles, including any lingering political tensions around the current Fed leadership.

Jerome Powell’s legacy as Chair of the Federal Reserve is complex and highly debated, shaped by navigating extraordinary challenges: the COVID-19 pandemic, the sharpest inflation surge in four decades, banking stresses; SVB collapse, and intense political pressures, including from President Trump.

Powell oversaw aggressive stimulus during the pandemic, including near-zero interest rates and massive asset purchases, which supported a rapid economic recovery and avoided a deeper depression. The U.S. achieved a “soft landing” in many views—bringing inflation down significantly without triggering a major recession—through decisive rate hikes starting in 2022 and later measured cuts.

He emphasized data-dependence, consensus-building on the FOMC, and reinforcing the Fed’s independence amid threats; refusing to bow to calls for premature easing or resigning under pressure. In late-term reflections, Powell stressed leaving the economy in strong shape, with stable growth, low unemployment, and inflation nearing target.

Some analysts credit him with upholding the Fed’s non-partisan credibility and adapting frameworks shifting from flexible average inflation targeting in practice toward a more inflation-focused stance. The most cited black mark is the 2021 “transitory” inflation call, which underestimated persistence, delaying tightening and allowing prices to surge to 9%+ highest since the 1980s.

Critics argue this eroded purchasing power, fueled asset bubbles, and contributed to cost-of-living crises for households. Early pandemic-era policies; prolonged low rates and QE are blamed for inflating stocks/housing while widening inequality. Aggressive 2022 hikes caught markets off-guard, risking financial instability.

Partisan attacks label him as obstructive; resisting Trump-aligned priorities like faster cuts or politically compromised ties to Wall Street. Some conservative voices call his tenure among the “worst” for mismanagement, while others see it as a “wash”—historic stumbles offset by resilience.

Assessments in early 2026 remain mixed: praised for crisis management and independence defense, but faulted for inflation misjudgment and long-term distortions; housing market effects. His advice to successors—stay out of politics, build congressional ties, prioritize evidence—underscores his focus on institutional integrity amid unprecedented scrutiny, including investigations and removal threats.

Powell’s era ends with the economy resilient but scarred by inflation’s aftermath, setting a transitional stage for his nominated successor, Kevin Warsh. History’s full judgment will depend on whether post-Powell stability endures.

MicroStrategy’s MSTR Perpetual Stock Continues To Trade Slightly Above its $100 Par Value

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Strategy’s formerly MicroStrategy, ticker MSTR perpetual preferred stock, known as Stretch (STRC), continues to trade at or slightly above its $100 par value as of early March 2026.

This stability is by design: the company adjusts the variable dividend rate monthly; currently set at 11.50% annualized for March 2026, up from 11.25% in February to anchor trading near par, minimizing volatility and attracting income-focused investors while enabling efficient capital raises.

When STRC trades at or above $100, Strategy can activate its at-the-market (ATM) issuance program to sell new shares. Proceeds from these sales fund Bitcoin purchases without heavily diluting common stock (MSTR). Recent activity highlights this mechanism in action.

On March 3–4, 2026 (around the query timeframe), STRC saw high trading volume (e.g., over $198 million on one day, with significant portions above par), signaling major ATM activity. Estimates from trackers like STRC.live indicated this supported Strategy acquiring roughly 1,000 BTC in a single day—the largest one-day accumulation via STRC since its July 2025 debut. Combined with prior days, totals reached ~1,762 BTC over a short period.

Earlier in the month, Strategy reported buying 3,015 BTC for ~$204 million; average ~$67,700/BTC, pushing total holdings to 720,737 BTC. This preferred stock approach reduces reliance on common equity issuance, as noted by CEO Phong Le, amid Bitcoin’s price fluctuations.

However, related prediction markets on Polymarket include: Bets on whether Strategy will announce holdings of 740k+ BTC by March 31, 2026 implying ~19k+ net purchases from current ~720k levels. Markets for specific weekly announcements >1,000 BTC purchase in early March periods.

Broader BTC price outcomes for March, but nothing exactly matching “20K BTC bought.” Current pace shows strong but not yet 20k-level monthly accumulation; thousands per week via STRC and other means. If STRC remains above par with sustained high volume, it could accelerate buys, but 20k+ for the full month would require exceptionally aggressive issuance amid market conditions.

Polymarket’s crowd wisdom currently reflects optimism for continued accumulation but no consensus on that high threshold in available markets. Strategy’s STRC is a perpetual preferred stock with a variable dividend mechanism designed to maintain price stability near its $100 par (stated) value.

This structure makes it function somewhat like a high-yield, low-volatility fixed-income instrument while funding the company’s Bitcoin acquisitions through ATM (at-the-market) issuances when trading at or above par. The annualized dividend rate is adjustable monthly at the company’s discretion. It started at 9.00% upon launch in July 2025 and has increased over time—reaching 11.50% for March 2026 (up 25 basis points from 11.25% in February, marking the seventh hike).

Dividends are cumulative (meaning unpaid amounts accrue) and paid monthly in cash (in arrears) on the last day of each month; next payout for March: March 31, 2026, to shareholders of record around mid-month. The rate applies to the $100 stated amount per share, so at 11.50%, the monthly cash dividend is approximately $0.9583 per share ($100 × 11.50% / 12).

Strategy explicitly adjusts the rate monthly “to encourage trading around STRC’s $100 par value and to help strip away price volatility.” If shares trade below $100; due to market pressure or rising rates elsewhere, the company increases the rate to boost yield and attract buyers, pulling the price back toward par.

If shares trade above $100, the rate could theoretically decrease, though recent trends show mostly increases amid Bitcoin/MSTR volatility. This dynamic helps keep STRC stable often trading very close to $100, like $100.05 recently, unlike the highly volatile common stock (MSTR).

Reductions are limited; no more than 25 basis points plus certain SOFR-based adjustments from the prior period, and not below one-month term SOFR. The company cannot lower the rate unless all prior accumulated dividends are paid in full. The intention is to set the rate in a way that maintains trading near $100, though it’s at the board’s sole discretion with some safeguards for investors.

Compounding if Unpaid: If a dividend isn’t paid on time, it accumulates as “compounded dividends” at the then-current rate until paid. STRC dividends have priority over common stock dividends. Strategy maintains reserves and uses proceeds from STRC issuances when above/at par to help cover obligations, reducing reliance on dilutive common stock sales.

This mechanism positions STRC as a “digital credit” or high-yield preferred alternative, appealing to income-focused investors seeking Bitcoin exposure with lower volatility. The effective yield is close to the stated rate when trading near par currently ~11.49–11.50%.

However, dividends aren’t guaranteed, and the rate could drop significantly in the future if conditions allow though recent history shows upward adjustments to defend par amid market drawdowns.

Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) Crypto Arm Targeting ~$2 Billion for its Fifth Dedicated Fund

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Andreessen Horowitz’s (a16z) crypto arm is reportedly targeting around $2 billion for its fifth dedicated crypto venture fund.

The firm, led by general partner Chris Dixon, has begun fundraising and aims to close the fund by the end of the first half of 2026.Key details: This would be a16z crypto’s fifth fund, following: First: $300 million in 2018 Subsequent funds grew larger, peaking with the fourth at $4.5 billion (raised in 2022/2023, from which they continue to invest).

The new target is significantly smaller (less than half the size of the previous one), reflecting a more cautious approach amid a broader downturn in crypto venture funding and deal activity. Crypto VC has contracted sharply from peaks like $86 billion in 2022 to under $8 billion in recent years.

The firm is opting for a shorter fundraising cycle to adapt to fast-moving trends in the sector. A16z crypto has backed notable projects including Uniswap, Anchorage Digital, and Jito Network, and collectively its prior four crypto funds have raised at least $7.6 billion.

This move signals continued strong conviction in blockchain’s long-term potential from one of the sector’s biggest players, even as the market faces tighter conditions and competition from areas like AI.

This move comes amid a significant contraction in crypto venture funding—from peaks like $86 billion in 2022 to under $8 billion in recent years—and a broader blockchain market downturn, including sharp drawdowns in valuations and deal activity.

The firm remains one of the most committed players in crypto VC, having already raised at least $7.6 billion across its prior four funds starting from $300 million in 2018 and scaling up to $4.5 billion for the fourth.

Raising $2 billion—even if less than half the previous fund—signals long-term belief in blockchain’s potential, including areas like stablecoins, tokenization of real-world assets (RWAs), financial infrastructure, AI-crypto intersections, privacy tools, prediction markets, and emerging Web3 applications.

Analysts view this as a contrarian bet against recent market stress, positioning a16z to deploy capital into high-conviction early-stage projects when competition is lower and valuations more reasonable. The smaller target reflects tighter LP appetite, reduced risk tolerance post-2022 crash, and a broader VC pullback in speculative crypto plays.

A shorter fundraising cycle allows faster adaptation to rapid trends in a volatile sector—prioritizing agility over mega-sized funds. This could encourage other VCs to adopt similar disciplined underwriting, focusing on fundamentals like revenue-generating infrastructure, security, scaling solutions, and real utility rather than hype-driven consumer tokens.

In a maturing crypto space, smaller but still substantial funds like this separate “builder-focused” investors from tourists, potentially leading to higher-quality deployments and better long-term returns. Combined with other recent developments, it suggests smart money is positioning for the next cycle—focusing on sustainable growth rather than bubble-era exuberance.

If closed successfully, the fund could catalyze activity in high-potential niches; crypto-AI agents, tokenized finance, decentralized identity, boosting early-stage innovation when overall VC has been subdued. This isn’t a full-throated “return to 2021 mania” but a measured vote of confidence from a top-tier player.

It highlights resilience in institutional interest amid challenges, while underscoring a more selective, infrastructure-oriented phase for crypto venture capital. The speed of the raise and deployment choices will serve as a key barometer for broader sector sentiment heading into late 2026.

Meteora Launches its Dynamic Terminal for Enhanced Experience for Liquidity Providers 

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Meteora, a leading decentralized liquidity protocol on Solana, has recently launched its Dynamic Terminal — an upgraded interface specifically designed to enhance the experience for liquidity providers (LPs).

This new “trading terminal”-style dashboard upgrades the existing DLMM (Dynamic Liquidity Market Maker) interface, making it more powerful and user-friendly for managing liquidity positions. Key features of the Dynamic Terminal include: A professional trading-terminal-inspired layout for better usability.

Integrated TradingView charts for advanced price analysis. Unified analytics for pools and tokens, with real-time metrics on fees, TVL (Total Value Locked), and more. Precise controls for setting min/max price ranges. Quick LP actions, such as one-click rebalancing and faster position management.

Improved P&L tracking, clearer data visualization, and tools to help LPs capture fees more efficiently. The launch emphasizes empowering the “LP Army” — Meteora’s community of liquidity providers — by simplifying advanced strategies, reducing friction for newcomers, and maximizing fee earnings through better tools and insights.

This update aligns with Meteora’s core mission to build dynamic, high-yield liquidity pools including DLMM, DAMM, and others that benefit LPs, launchpads, and token launches on Solana. The platform has seen massive growth, with billions in swap volume and significant fees generated.

This seems like a solid step forward for Solana DeFi liquidity provision. This isn’t just a cosmetic refresh—it’s designed to lower barriers, boost efficiency, and ultimately drive higher fee earnings and participation in Meteora’s ecosystem.

The terminal introduces TradingView-integrated charts, real-time metrics (fees, TVL, P&L tracking, holder stats, average fees per minute), precise min/max range controls, one-click rebalancing/fee claims, and quick actions like “Ape In” for single-token liquidity deployment.

This makes advanced LP strategies; concentrated liquidity, dynamic fee capture during volatility far more approachable for newcomers while giving pros a unified, customizable workspace. Reduces friction and “guesswork” in position management, encouraging more users to join or deepen participation in the LP Army.

Community feedback highlights it as a “gift” to LPs, turning liquidity provision into something closer to active trading with passive income benefits; fees from volume, not price direction bets. This aligns with Meteora’s long-term mission to build the strongest, most educated LP community in crypto.

Features like clearer data visualization, P&L dashboards, and faster tools help LPs spot opportunities, adjust ranges dynamically, and capture more fees with less manual effort. In volatile markets (common on Solana with memecoins and launches), this could amplify returns by minimizing out-of-range positions and maximizing dynamic fees.

Potential for higher individual LP yields and overall protocol fee generation. Meteora already powers massive volume; billions in swaps historically, high daily fees from major launches, and a more efficient LP base sustains deeper liquidity ? lower slippage ? more traders ? virtuous cycle.

By making DLMM more powerful and user-friendly, the terminal strengthens Meteora’s position as Solana’s go-to liquidity layer for token launches, launchpads, and trading. It supports composability with tools like DAMM v2 (single-sided pools, coming soon), vaults, and integrations, attracting more projects and volume.

Reinforces Solana’s edge in high-speed, low-cost DeFi and memecoin activity. Deeper, more efficient liquidity from empowered LPs benefits the entire network—better price discovery, reduced fragmentation, and higher overall TVL/volume. Meteora’s growth suggests this upgrade could accelerate that dominance.

Launch posts from Meteora and LP Army members emphasize it as a “new era” for LPing, with walkthroughs and excitement around its trader-focused design. It builds on Meteora’s community-driven ethos; points systems, DAO governance hints, LP stimulus, potentially increasing engagement and loyalty ahead of future incentives or expansions.

Strengthens the “LP Army” narrative—turning retail providers into sophisticated market makers with quant-like tools on Solana’s cheap infra. This could draw more capital into Solana DeFi amid competition.

The Dynamic Terminal is a targeted evolution that prioritizes LP success to fuel protocol growth. Early indicators (launch hype, quick community adoption) suggest positive short-term traction, with longer-term effects likely including sustained TVL/volume increases and solidified positioning for Meteora in Solana’s liquidity stack.If you’re providing liquidity on Meteora.

Sui Officially Launches USDsui on Mainnet 

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Sui has officially launched USDsui also called Sui Dollar, its native stablecoin, on the mainnet.

This follows an initial announcement in November 2025, with the token going live recently through a collaboration involving Bridge, a company acquired by Stripe (the payments giant). Bridge issues USDsui using its Open Issuance platform, providing enterprise-grade infrastructure, compliance features (including alignment with regulations like the GENIUS Act), and 1:1 backing by cash and short-term U.S. Treasuries.

Designed as a unified, native digital dollar for scalable finance, global payments, DeFi, remittances, and institutional on-chain use within the Sui ecosystem. It’s fully interoperable and integrated across Sui wallets, protocols, and dApps.

Interest on yield generated from the backing assets is redirected back to the Sui ecosystem—potentially through repurchasing and burning SUI tokens or deploying into DeFi/AMM liquidity to boost incentives and swaps.

It’s already live on platforms like Turbos, Cetus, Suilend, and Ferra where USDsui-USDC liquidity pools offer yield plus boosted points. This aims to capture more of Sui’s massive stablecoin volume; hundreds of billions in transfers reported in recent periods while bridging on-chain liquidity with real-world payment rails.

Stripe’s involvement brings regulated, compliant rails that connect traditional fintech with blockchain, making USDsui suitable for broader adoption beyond pure crypto use cases. This launch positions Sui as a stronger contender in high-performance blockchains for payments and DeFi, especially with Stripe’s backing adding credibility and infrastructure.

The move has sparked discussions in the community about USDsui potentially becoming the default stablecoin on Sui, with some bullish sentiment around ecosystem growth and $SUI price implications. The launch of USDsui represents a major infrastructure upgrade for the Sui ecosystem. Issued by Bridge, this native stablecoin is backed 1:1 by cash and short-term U.S. Treasuries, with compliance features aligned toward regulations like the GENIUS Act.

Its most distinctive aspect is the yield-recycling model: interest from reserves flows back to the Sui ecosystem rather than staying with the issuer (unlike traditional stablecoins such as USDT or USDC). USDsui integrates immediately with major Sui protocols like  Cetus, Turbos, Suilend, Ferra, Bluefin, Aftermath, enabling trading, lending, and liquidity pools.

This boosts on-chain liquidity depth, reduces reliance on third-party stablecoins (like USDC), and supports seamless use in DeFi, gaming, remittances, and payments. Early liquidity incentives attract LPs and drive TVL higher—Sui’s TVL was already around $2.22B pre-launch, with massive stablecoin volumes.

Treasury yield is redirected to: Repurchasing and potentially burning SUI tokens reducing supply and supporting price if demand holds. Deploying into DeFi/AMMs to subsidize swaps, deepen liquidity, and lower costs. This creates a “closed loop” where stablecoin activity directly benefits the network, fostering alignment among users, developers, and holders. It inverts the typical model where issuers capture all value externally.

Stripe/Bridge involvement brings enterprise-grade compliance, regulated rails, and connections to traditional fintech/payment systems. This positions Sui for scalable global payments, cross-border transfers, and institutional on-chain finance. Combined with Sui’s high throughput, low fees, and features like gasless transfers, it enhances accessibility and mass adoption potential.

Competitive Edge for Sui

A native stablecoin reduces dependency on external issuers, strengthens internal liquidity resilience, and differentiates Sui from other L1s. It supports a “closed investment-payment loop”, potentially increasing TVL, network effects, and overall activity in a competitive Layer-1 landscape.

The launch has sparked immediate bullish sentiment, with SUI showing gains up ~3-6% in the 24 hours post-launch in various reports, trading near $0.95–$0.97 with a ~$3.78B market cap. Traders view it as a catalyst for breakout potential toward $1+ levels, driven by ecosystem utility and the yield loop’s deflationary/incentive effects.

Success depends on sustainable yield generation, transparent reserve management, and actual adoption volumes. Regulatory scrutiny on stablecoins remains high, and novel yield mechanisms could draw attention. Competition from established stablecoins (USDT/USDC) persists, and any downturn in Sui’s DeFi or broader market could impact utility.

The model relies on Sui’s growth bootstrapping via existing holdings helps, but long-term traction is key. USDsui accelerates Sui’s push into payments and scalable finance, potentially creating a compounding flywheel that captures more value on-chain. It’s seen as a thoughtful evolution in stablecoin design, with strong early integration and community excitement signaling positive momentum for the ecosystem.