@austincampbell@Aarondklein@faryarshirzad > which have essentially zero duration risk.
doing quite a bit of lifting here!
under GENIUS and BoE regulatory regimes issuers do have a requirement to redeem in 1 day...
It's incredible after the @DriftProtocol people still are having such CATASTROPHIC multsig setups.
1/3 is just not good enough.
@range_org we can help you truly understand and manage your multisigs.
Private key compromise caused 43.8% of all stolen crypto in 2024. That is 5x the next category.
And the trend is not reversing: $3.4B was stolen in 2025, up 55% on 2024.
Our new report breaks down how institutions are actually defending against it. 👇
Stablecoins are not an efficient way to strengthen the international role of the euro, says President Christine @Lagarde.
The best solution remains deeper capital market integration through the savings and investment union and a stronger safe asset base https://t.co/Xewr8ysz9B
We don’t talk about systemic risk enough in this industry.
"If institutions see that putting money to work in DeFi means all your assets can get wiped out, that's putting real systemic risk into the industry."
@aesmonty, Co-Founder & CEO of @range_org on what the Drift hack exposed:
"We're working with @SolanaFndn and the broader ecosystem to prevent things like this. Teams like @multisig are pioneers."
When Gensler left the SEC in January 2025, Bitcoin was at 109k. Today Bitcoin is at 75k.
One major reason the crypto markets have suffered is because market participants started to lose faith in the industry itself.
After Gensler left, it essentially just opened the floodgates to the grifting age of crypto, where influencers and politicians were launching memecoins and rug-pulling their followers each and every day, without fear of any repercussions. This led to a massive misallocation of capital into useless assets that drained liquidity from the industry.
While people celebrated Gensler leaving, it actually marked a turning point in the industry, with Bitcoin only marginally going higher before entering a bear market.
Now that people celebrate Powell's removal as chair of the Federal Reserve, it makes me think history will repeat itself once again.
People celebrate it in the short-term, but as we look back on this era in a few years, I imagine it will mark a major turning point in credibility at the Fed. If the Fed just becomes another cabinet of the executive branch, it may lead to a lack of trust in the institution itself.
Perhaps many will look back in a few years and realize that markets were better off with Powell than without him.