The SEC just told the world that Internet Capital Markets are America’s financial future.
After years of regulatory shadowboxing and endless gray areas (thanks Gary), the SEC’s "Project Crypto" is an explicit signal: Tokenized securities and decentralized rails aren’t just allowed but actively encouraged.
The new ETF fast-track just turned alt-coin ETFs from a crypto daydream into Wall Street's newest mainstream asset class. With programmable, yield-generating Solana ETFs like VanEck’s ready to roll, institutional capital is about to rush towards tokenized markets.
Just as electronic trading vaporized the old-school trading pits overnight, Internet Capital Markets are positioned to obsolete traditional financial intermediaries. Not because TradFi is broken, it's just slower, clunkier, and way more expensive than the on-chain alternative. Investors always chase yield and frictionless liquidity, and now the SEC just stamped official approval on precisely that: staking-driven returns embedded directly into ETFs, clearing trades in seconds rather than days, transparently and programmatically.
So what? Picture a startup in Buenos Aires instantly tapping into global liquidity from Seoul to Austin, skipping months of costly paperwork. Imagine retirees effortlessly buying treasury-backed ETFs that yield daily instead of quarterly. Or a Toronto coder tokenizing his employee stock to instantly finance a down payment on a home, without crippling interest rates. This isn’t fantasy anymore.
The future of finance is already here, and it runs on Internet Capital Markets.