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Data: Tokens Like SUI, BIO, and OP Set for Major Unlocks This Week
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Data: Tokens Like SUI, BIO, and OP Set for Major Unlocks This Week
#SUI #BIO #OP On May 25, 2025, crypto analytics platform Token Unlocks released its latest unlock forecast, showing that several popular tokens — including Sui (SUI), Bio Protocol (BIO), and Optimism (OP) — are scheduled for major unlock events in the upcoming week, with a total market value exceeding $500 million. These unlocks have sparked widespread community discussion and drawn intense attention from investors regarding the short-term price movements of the involved tokens. As we all kno...
Governments and Institutions Now Hold Over 8% of Bitcoin — Strategic Hedge or Emerging Sovereign Ris…
In previous articles, we initiated an analysis on the topics of “Global Exchange BTC Liquidity is Decreasing” and “The Liquidity Battle in the Crypto Market in 2025.” As of May, it has become evident that the competition for liquidity has intensified. Ultimately, the surge in the number of Bitcoin holdings by institutional investors over the past year has led to a depletion of liquidity. Do you remember yesterday’s article titled “New Hampshire’s Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Bill”: A Comprehensi...
Trump Removes Cook, Crypto Market Faces Chain Reaction: From Central Bank Independence to the Butter…
#Trump #Cook #Crypto Disclaimer: This article provides an in-depth analysis of market hot topics only. It does not involve or represent any political stance or political views. A butterfly flaps its wings in South America, and the result might be a tornado in Texas. At this moment, the butterfly effect has been vividly demonstrated: what seemed like a trivial mortgage issue triggered a storm leading to the attempted removal of a Federal Reserve Governor. This is essentially a political clash ...
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#DeFi #Stablecoin #Crypto
If you’ve been spending your time wondering when the bull market will return or which chain will be the ultimate winner, you might have missed a far more structural shift:More and more top DeFi projects are quietly launching their own stablecoins.
Curve rolled out crvUSD. Aave launched GHO. Even OG projects like dYdX, Synthetix, and MakerDAO are all experimenting with a new playbook of “stablecoin + closed-loop ecosystem.”
But why stablecoins? Shouldn’t they be focusing on governance tokens? Driving TVL? Staking incentives? Why are they all suddenly turning into “mint factories”?
This isn’t a short-term hype cycle. It’s the natural evolution of the DeFi business model. Today, we’ll unpack this underappreciated migration that’s reshaping crypto.

Let’s start with a simple fact: DeFi is the one sector where any new idea you launch today will be forked tomorrow.
Why? Because there’s virtually no moat:
Code is open source
Frontends can be cloned
Users are highly mobile
There’s no regulatory protection or brand monopoly
This forces teams to constantly innovate.
But a single innovative product doesn’t make you sustainable — and it’s still easy to copy.So what do you do?
Simple:You mint your own money.
Importantly, this isn’t about “air tokens.” It’s about protocol-native stablecoins backed by collateral, algorithms, or real-world assets — and designed for closed-loop use cases:
Want to trade? Use our stablecoin for cheaper settlement.
Want to stake? Earn higher yields in our stablecoin.
Want to try new protocols? They’ll prioritize our stablecoin.
At that point, the stablecoin isn’t just a financial tool — it becomes the profit engine of the entire business model.
Look at Aave’s GHO:
Current circulation: ~$250 million
Collateral rate: ~2.1%
Annual revenue: $1.3 million+
Share of Aave’s total income: nearly 50%
Or Curve’s crvUSD:
Backed by collateral and AMM pools
Liquidity pools power trading, lending, and minting
Curve collects both trading fees and interest
Meanwhile, the system reinforces governance power and boosts CRV token utility
In short: Stablecoins combine high margins, strong closed loops, and deep control.And this model doesn’t even exist in traditional finance — after all, have you ever seen a bank allow customers to mint their own money?
The whole journey can be divided into five stages:
Examples: Uniswap, dYdX
Problem: Fierce competition, with most profits going to liquidity providers. Trading fees keep shrinking, making the model unsustainable over time.
Examples: MakerDAO, Lido
Logic: No trade matching — just provide stable yields. Users lock ETH and mint DAI or stETH.
Upside: No need to split revenue with LPs. Income is more predictable.
Challenge: Network effects take time to build. Derivative assets face adoption hurdles.
Examples: Yearn, Convex
Approach: Help users optimize yields and take a management fee.
Problem: Easy to copy, hard to scale, and margins are thin. Convex partly overcame this by amassing CRV, but it’s an exception.
Examples: Instadapp, DeFi Saver
Function: Packaging, automation, and UX improvements.
Problem: No control over capital sources. Barriers to entry are minimal. Revenue ceiling is obvious.
Examples: dYdX v4, Curve, Aave, Synthetix
Strategy: Launch your own stablecoin, create closed-loop use cases, unify liquidity, yields, and the ecosystem.
It’s simple: When A becomes B’s future, it’s because A solves B’s current pain points.And what are DeFi’s current pain points?
✅ Too little revenue
✅ High incentive costs
✅ Unstable liquidity
✅ Low composability
✅ Weak user retention
How does a closed-loop stablecoin solve these five problems?
✅ Interest income: direct profitability
✅ Internal incentives: less reliance on external farming
✅ Core function integration: the stablecoin becomes the glue
✅ Standardized collateral: composability across protocols
✅ More use cases: higher switching costs and stickiness
In short:Stablecoin closed loops = low-cost acquisition + compounding income + liquidity control.
Right now, the closed-loop stablecoin strategy is dominated by OG protocols. Why?
Because it doesn’t just require technology — it demands trust and time.
If a project is new and untested, users simply won’t risk using its stablecoin for collateral, trading, or liquidity farming. Without demand, your stablecoin is worthless.
That’s why newer platforms like Hyperliquid decided to skip VCs altogether and raise liquidity directly from users to build trust.
But this is an extremely difficult path — most teams won’t survive it.
In the early days, DeFi thrived on innovative products.
Today, DeFi is about sustainable cash flows and ecosystem synergy.
✅ Whoever controls liquidity controls stablecoins.
✅ Whoever controls stablecoins controls the future of DeFi.
This is why every major DeFi project has launched its own stablecoin strategy. It’s not just about creating another revenue stream — it’s about building a self-contained financial ecosystem.
If you missed DeFi Summer in 2020, this is your next big cycle.
Don’t just watch token prices — understand the business logic. Because the next wave of opportunity is already taking flight from stablecoins.

#DeFi #Stablecoin #Crypto
If you’ve been spending your time wondering when the bull market will return or which chain will be the ultimate winner, you might have missed a far more structural shift:More and more top DeFi projects are quietly launching their own stablecoins.
Curve rolled out crvUSD. Aave launched GHO. Even OG projects like dYdX, Synthetix, and MakerDAO are all experimenting with a new playbook of “stablecoin + closed-loop ecosystem.”
But why stablecoins? Shouldn’t they be focusing on governance tokens? Driving TVL? Staking incentives? Why are they all suddenly turning into “mint factories”?
This isn’t a short-term hype cycle. It’s the natural evolution of the DeFi business model. Today, we’ll unpack this underappreciated migration that’s reshaping crypto.

Let’s start with a simple fact: DeFi is the one sector where any new idea you launch today will be forked tomorrow.
Why? Because there’s virtually no moat:
Code is open source
Frontends can be cloned
Users are highly mobile
There’s no regulatory protection or brand monopoly
This forces teams to constantly innovate.
But a single innovative product doesn’t make you sustainable — and it’s still easy to copy.So what do you do?
Simple:You mint your own money.
Importantly, this isn’t about “air tokens.” It’s about protocol-native stablecoins backed by collateral, algorithms, or real-world assets — and designed for closed-loop use cases:
Want to trade? Use our stablecoin for cheaper settlement.
Want to stake? Earn higher yields in our stablecoin.
Want to try new protocols? They’ll prioritize our stablecoin.
At that point, the stablecoin isn’t just a financial tool — it becomes the profit engine of the entire business model.
Look at Aave’s GHO:
Current circulation: ~$250 million
Collateral rate: ~2.1%
Annual revenue: $1.3 million+
Share of Aave’s total income: nearly 50%
Or Curve’s crvUSD:
Backed by collateral and AMM pools
Liquidity pools power trading, lending, and minting
Curve collects both trading fees and interest
Meanwhile, the system reinforces governance power and boosts CRV token utility
In short: Stablecoins combine high margins, strong closed loops, and deep control.And this model doesn’t even exist in traditional finance — after all, have you ever seen a bank allow customers to mint their own money?
The whole journey can be divided into five stages:
Examples: Uniswap, dYdX
Problem: Fierce competition, with most profits going to liquidity providers. Trading fees keep shrinking, making the model unsustainable over time.
Examples: MakerDAO, Lido
Logic: No trade matching — just provide stable yields. Users lock ETH and mint DAI or stETH.
Upside: No need to split revenue with LPs. Income is more predictable.
Challenge: Network effects take time to build. Derivative assets face adoption hurdles.
Examples: Yearn, Convex
Approach: Help users optimize yields and take a management fee.
Problem: Easy to copy, hard to scale, and margins are thin. Convex partly overcame this by amassing CRV, but it’s an exception.
Examples: Instadapp, DeFi Saver
Function: Packaging, automation, and UX improvements.
Problem: No control over capital sources. Barriers to entry are minimal. Revenue ceiling is obvious.
Examples: dYdX v4, Curve, Aave, Synthetix
Strategy: Launch your own stablecoin, create closed-loop use cases, unify liquidity, yields, and the ecosystem.
It’s simple: When A becomes B’s future, it’s because A solves B’s current pain points.And what are DeFi’s current pain points?
✅ Too little revenue
✅ High incentive costs
✅ Unstable liquidity
✅ Low composability
✅ Weak user retention
How does a closed-loop stablecoin solve these five problems?
✅ Interest income: direct profitability
✅ Internal incentives: less reliance on external farming
✅ Core function integration: the stablecoin becomes the glue
✅ Standardized collateral: composability across protocols
✅ More use cases: higher switching costs and stickiness
In short:Stablecoin closed loops = low-cost acquisition + compounding income + liquidity control.
Right now, the closed-loop stablecoin strategy is dominated by OG protocols. Why?
Because it doesn’t just require technology — it demands trust and time.
If a project is new and untested, users simply won’t risk using its stablecoin for collateral, trading, or liquidity farming. Without demand, your stablecoin is worthless.
That’s why newer platforms like Hyperliquid decided to skip VCs altogether and raise liquidity directly from users to build trust.
But this is an extremely difficult path — most teams won’t survive it.
In the early days, DeFi thrived on innovative products.
Today, DeFi is about sustainable cash flows and ecosystem synergy.
✅ Whoever controls liquidity controls stablecoins.
✅ Whoever controls stablecoins controls the future of DeFi.
This is why every major DeFi project has launched its own stablecoin strategy. It’s not just about creating another revenue stream — it’s about building a self-contained financial ecosystem.
If you missed DeFi Summer in 2020, this is your next big cycle.
Don’t just watch token prices — understand the business logic. Because the next wave of opportunity is already taking flight from stablecoins.

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