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The complete package': I tested the LG G6 OLED TV side-by-side with the G5 in our testing rooms — anThe LG G5 was one of the best-performing TVs of last year, delivering superb picture quality with gorgeous colors and strong contrast. It was also one of the best options for gaming, with a full suite of features and razor-sharp performance, as well as an intuitive smart TV platform. While it was a premium TV, it was good value for what it delivered. Its successor, the LG G6, has some mighty big shoes to fill. Earlier this year, I saw the LG G6 and LG G5 side-by-side at a demo event, but now the G6 has now arrived in our testing labs for longer-term testing. I still use the G5 regularly for testing discs in my Blu-ray Bounty column, so I put the G5 and G6 next to each other, and compared the two using some 4K Blu-rays I regularly use for testing TVs, with a signal splitter from our trusty Panasonic DP-UB820 Blu-ray player. Equipped with a new-gen Primary Tandem RGB OLED 2.0 panel, the LG G6 promised a brightness upgrade over its predecessor, and it’s delivered. The G6 registered 2,471 nits of peak HDR brightness (10% window) in Filmmaker Mode, compared to the G5’s 2,268 nits. While this is only an incremental increase, fullscreen HDR brightness (100% window) in Filmmaker Mode on the G6 clocked in at 455 nits, which is a huge jump from the G5’s 331 nits. But what does this mean for pictures? In brighter scenes, such as a series of clips of snow from the Spears & Munsil UHD Benchmark’s demo material, the G6 has higher brightness in fullscreen parts of the picture. While the G5 actually appears brighter in some peak areas, such as the snow on the fence in the photo above, this is likely due to intentional Filmmaker Mode tweaks, where G6 pulls back on the vibrancy. This results in a more balanced picture, with no over-exertion of bright tones, which is how the G5 can appear at times. One area where the G6 shows a real upgrade over the G5 is reflection handling. While the G6 still shows some mirror-like reflections, they are significantly reduced compared to the G5. Watching darker scenes from movies such as The Batman, Alien: Romulus and Dark City in bright conditions, with overhead lights on in our testing lab, the G5 actually has higher perceived brightness, but the obvious mirror-like reflections make viewing difficult. The G6, despite appearing dimmer, is much better at reducing mirror-like reflections, leaving a cleaner and more distration-free image, as is clear in the photo above. The G6 even looks better than the Samsung S95F's matte anti-reflection screen in bright rooms, balancing the pros and cons the two TV's approaches to beating reflections. Using The Batman, one of my go-to discs for contrast testing because it's so damn dark, both the G6 and G5 demonstrate very strong contrast with a great balance between light and dark tones. As Batman walks through the halls and rooms of Mayor Mitchell’s house, the lamps on the wall and flash bulbs of cameras have a nice punch on both TVs and contrast well with the dark walls and floors. Where the G6 impresses is that not only do peak areas on screen, such as the aforementioned lamps, look brighter than the G5 but blacks are deeper resulting in more natural looking contrast. The G5’s dark tones appear raised in comparison, so while the G5 may appear the more eye-catching on the surface, the G6 appears to be the more accurate result. This follows what LG told me about how the more restrained Filmmaker Mode on the G6 is “by design” in the pursuit of accuracy. Both TVs demonstrate great shadow detail, with objects and textures in dark areas on screen still visible. As Bruce enters the Batcave, rocks and steel in the roof are still defined on both TVs and again, although it’s marginally more visible on the G5, the G6 strikes that nice balance between detail and black accuracy. #tobeempire #YiHeBinance #Uniswp #InvestmentAccessibility #OopsieDaisy

The complete package': I tested the LG G6 OLED TV side-by-side with the G5 in our testing rooms — an

The LG G5 was one of the best-performing TVs of last year, delivering superb picture quality with gorgeous colors and strong contrast. It was also one of the best options for gaming, with a full suite of features and razor-sharp performance, as well as an intuitive smart TV platform. While it was a premium TV, it was good value for what it delivered.
Its successor, the LG G6, has some mighty big shoes to fill. Earlier this year, I saw the LG G6 and LG G5 side-by-side at a demo event, but now the G6 has now arrived in our testing labs for longer-term testing.
I still use the G5 regularly for testing discs in my Blu-ray Bounty column, so I put the G5 and G6 next to each other, and compared the two using some 4K Blu-rays I regularly use for testing TVs, with a signal splitter from our trusty Panasonic DP-UB820 Blu-ray player.
Equipped with a new-gen Primary Tandem RGB OLED 2.0 panel, the LG G6 promised a brightness upgrade over its predecessor, and it’s delivered. The G6 registered 2,471 nits of peak HDR brightness (10% window) in Filmmaker Mode, compared to the G5’s 2,268 nits.
While this is only an incremental increase, fullscreen HDR brightness (100% window) in Filmmaker Mode on the G6 clocked in at 455 nits, which is a huge jump from the G5’s 331 nits.
But what does this mean for pictures? In brighter scenes, such as a series of clips of snow from the Spears & Munsil UHD Benchmark’s demo material, the G6 has higher brightness in fullscreen parts of the picture.
While the G5 actually appears brighter in some peak areas, such as the snow on the fence in the photo above, this is likely due to intentional Filmmaker Mode tweaks, where G6 pulls back on the vibrancy. This results in a more balanced picture, with no over-exertion of bright tones, which is how the G5 can appear at times.
One area where the G6 shows a real upgrade over the G5 is reflection handling. While the G6 still shows some mirror-like reflections, they are significantly reduced compared to the G5.
Watching darker scenes from movies such as The Batman, Alien: Romulus and Dark City in bright conditions, with overhead lights on in our testing lab, the G5 actually has higher perceived brightness, but the obvious mirror-like reflections make viewing difficult.
The G6, despite appearing dimmer, is much better at reducing mirror-like reflections, leaving a cleaner and more distration-free image, as is clear in the photo above. The G6 even looks better than the Samsung S95F's matte anti-reflection screen in bright rooms, balancing the pros and cons the two TV's approaches to beating reflections.
Using The Batman, one of my go-to discs for contrast testing because it's so damn dark, both the G6 and G5 demonstrate very strong contrast with a great balance between light and dark tones. As Batman walks through the halls and rooms of Mayor Mitchell’s house, the lamps on the wall and flash bulbs of cameras have a nice punch on both TVs and contrast well with the dark walls and floors.
Where the G6 impresses is that not only do peak areas on screen, such as the aforementioned lamps, look brighter than the G5 but blacks are deeper resulting in more natural looking contrast.
The G5’s dark tones appear raised in comparison, so while the G5 may appear the more eye-catching on the surface, the G6 appears to be the more accurate result. This follows what LG told me about how the more restrained Filmmaker Mode on the G6 is “by design” in the pursuit of accuracy.
Both TVs demonstrate great shadow detail, with objects and textures in dark areas on screen still visible. As Bruce enters the Batcave, rocks and steel in the roof are still defined on both TVs and again, although it’s marginally more visible on the G5, the G6 strikes that nice balance between detail and black accuracy.
#tobeempire
#YiHeBinance
#Uniswp
#InvestmentAccessibility
#OopsieDaisy
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Bullish
Clock is ticking': crypto bill's 2026 fate hinges on Trump and stablecoin yieldsCrypto industry sources who spoke with The Block this past week said crypto market structure legislation is hung up on two major sticking points — how to treat stablecoin yield and how to address President Donald Trump’s conflicts of interest in crypto. A Senate Banking Committee hearing on Thursday morning with SEC Chair Paul Atkins will be telling on where Democrats stand on ethics. Crypto industry views diverge sharply on the likelihood that Washington will pass sweeping digital asset legislation in 2026, with estimates ranging from 25% to 60% following a turbulent start to the year. Ron Hammond, head of policy and advocacy at Wintermute, gave those odds a 25%. Crypto industry sources who spoke with The Block this past week said crypto market structure legislation is hung up on two major sticking points: how to treat stablecoin yield and how to address President Donald Trump's conflicts of interest in crypto. If passed, a bill would broadly regulate the crypto industry, in part through designating jurisdiction between the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Commission, new disclosure requirements, and other standards. That's even higher among some of my peers," Hammond said in an interview. Bank and crypto representatives met at the White House this week for the second time this month in an effort to narrow their differences. Stablecoin rewards have emerged as the central flashpoint between banks and segments of the crypto industry. Banking groups have criticized a stablecoin law that passed over the summer, called GENIUS. Banks say allowing stablecoin yields could draw deposits away and harm community banks. Still, some in crypto argue that the issue has already been debated and accuse banks of trying to curb competition. Industry meetings on rewards are happening almost daily, one source familiar with the matter told The Block. According to one source familiar with the talks, crypto stakeholders "really dug in," strongly pushing back against several of the banking sector’s proposals. During the meeting, banks proposed a set of principles, calling for strict restrictions that go beyond the latest draft of a crypto market structure bill. A previous Senate Banking Committee version would bar yields or interest for passive stablecoin holdings but would allow narrower, activity-based rewards or incentives. "If banks want a change, if they want rewards more limited, then they need a bill," he said in an interview. "So in some sense, banks need a market structure bill just as much or even more than crypto does." Still, Kevin Wysocki, head of policy at Anchorage Digital, said he believes there will be a solution to the stablecoin issue. If the current law remains unchanged, stablecoin rewards would continue to be governed by the GENIUS Act, which bars issuers from paying direct interest to holders but does not prohibit third-party platforms, such as Coinbase, from offering rewards. Wysocki put the odds of passage in 2026 at 50%. "I think it's because the banks need it," he said, adding that people in crypto also really want a bill to pass into law. A source familiar said stablecoin rewards were the biggest issue right now and that there will not be support from Republicans until the issue is addressed. There needs to be a deal," that source said. "The conversation needs to turn from principles to redlines to actual text and proposals." The clock is ticking," they added. They gave the chance of a bill passing into law in 2026 a 60%." Beyond policy disagreements, ethics questions tied to Trump’s crypto ventures are further complicating the bill’s path. The Senate Banking Committee's hearing on Thursday morning with SEC Chair Paul Atkins will be telling on where Democrats stand on ethics, Wintermute's Hammond said. On Wednesday, Atkins faced intense questioning from Democrats in the House Financial Services Committee over the SEC's steep decline in digital assets and Trump's ties to the crypto industry. Trump has raked in about $1.4 billion from his crypto ventures, including from World Liberty Financial, Bloomberg estimated last month. The Trump family also holds a 20% stake in the mining firm American Bitcoin AABTC0% For better or for worse, the president's involvement and the family's involvement in the crypto industry, there has been a very mainstream narrative around the corruption of this administration, or perceived corruption tied to a lot of the crypto industry itself," Hammond said The Senate Banking Committee may decide not to bring up ethics. The committee's chair, Tim Scott, told CoinDesk that language should instead go through the ethics committee. The looming midterm elections add another layer of uncertainty. Already, crypto-focused political action committees are amassing millions to prepare. #PEPE创历史新高 #writetoearn #VOTEme #OopsieDaisy #Launchpool .

Clock is ticking': crypto bill's 2026 fate hinges on Trump and stablecoin yields

Crypto industry sources who spoke with The Block this past week said crypto market structure legislation is hung up on two major sticking points — how to treat stablecoin yield and how to address President Donald Trump’s conflicts of interest in crypto.
A Senate Banking Committee hearing on Thursday morning with SEC Chair Paul Atkins will be telling on where Democrats stand on ethics.
Crypto industry views diverge sharply on the likelihood that Washington will pass sweeping digital asset legislation in 2026, with estimates ranging from 25% to 60% following a turbulent start to the year.
Ron Hammond, head of policy and advocacy at Wintermute, gave those odds a 25%.
Crypto industry sources who spoke with The Block this past week said crypto market structure legislation is hung up on two major sticking points: how to treat stablecoin yield and how to address President Donald Trump's conflicts of interest in crypto. If passed, a bill would broadly regulate the crypto industry, in part through designating jurisdiction between the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Commission, new disclosure requirements, and other standards.
That's even higher among some of my peers," Hammond said in an interview.
Bank and crypto representatives met at the White House this week for the second time this month in an effort to narrow their differences.
Stablecoin rewards have emerged as the central flashpoint between banks and segments of the crypto industry. Banking groups have criticized a stablecoin law that passed over the summer, called GENIUS. Banks say allowing stablecoin yields could draw deposits away and harm community banks. Still, some in crypto argue that the issue has already been debated and accuse banks of trying to curb competition. Industry meetings on rewards are happening almost daily, one source familiar with the matter told The Block.
According to one source familiar with the talks, crypto stakeholders "really dug in," strongly pushing back against several of the banking sector’s proposals.
During the meeting, banks proposed a set of principles, calling for strict restrictions that go beyond the latest draft of a crypto market structure bill. A previous Senate Banking Committee version would bar yields or interest for passive stablecoin holdings but would allow narrower, activity-based rewards or incentives.
"If banks want a change, if they want rewards more limited, then they need a bill," he said in an interview. "So in some sense, banks need a market structure bill just as much or even more than crypto does."
Still, Kevin Wysocki, head of policy at Anchorage Digital, said he believes there will be a solution to the stablecoin issue. If the current law remains unchanged, stablecoin rewards would continue to be governed by the GENIUS Act, which bars issuers from paying direct interest to holders but does not prohibit third-party platforms, such as Coinbase, from offering rewards.
Wysocki put the odds of passage in 2026 at 50%. "I think it's because the banks need it," he said, adding that people in crypto also really want a bill to pass into law.
A source familiar said stablecoin rewards were the biggest issue right now and that there will not be support from Republicans until the issue is addressed.
There needs to be a deal," that source said. "The conversation needs to turn from principles to redlines to actual text and proposals."
The clock is ticking," they added. They gave the chance of a bill passing into law in 2026 a 60%."
Beyond policy disagreements, ethics questions tied to Trump’s crypto ventures are further complicating the bill’s path.
The Senate Banking Committee's hearing on Thursday morning with SEC Chair Paul Atkins will be telling on where Democrats stand on ethics, Wintermute's Hammond said. On Wednesday, Atkins faced intense questioning from Democrats in the House Financial Services Committee over the SEC's steep decline in digital assets and Trump's ties to the crypto industry.
Trump has raked in about $1.4 billion from his crypto ventures, including from World Liberty Financial, Bloomberg estimated last month. The Trump family also holds a 20% stake in the mining firm American Bitcoin
AABTC0%
For better or for worse, the president's involvement and the family's involvement in the crypto industry, there has been a very mainstream narrative around the corruption of this administration, or perceived corruption tied to a lot of the crypto industry itself," Hammond said
The Senate Banking Committee may decide not to bring up ethics. The committee's chair, Tim Scott, told CoinDesk that language should instead go through the ethics committee.
The looming midterm elections add another layer of uncertainty. Already, crypto-focused political action committees are amassing millions to prepare.
#PEPE创历史新高
#writetoearn
#VOTEme
#OopsieDaisy
#Launchpool
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35 key crypto hires, moves and exits: November 2025This hiring roundup was written in conjunction with crypto-native executive search firm Intersection Growth Partners. It combines Intersection’s monthly newsletter, which includes unreported executive hires, and The Block’s monthly hiring update. Crypto hiring remained active through November, with exchanges, payments firms, and infra teams adding senior operators across product, legal, and BD. Venture firms continued to promote from within, while Bitcoin-native projects and ZK ecosystems expanded leadership teams ahead of 2026 roadmaps. Talent flowed in from traditional finance and big tech, particularly in compliance, partnerships, and brand management. Infrastructure, security, and payments companies saw the largest concentration of new roles. Several networks made strategic marketing and growth hires, while stablecoin and tokenization initiatives pulled in senior talent from banks and fintech. Anchorage: David Lawant joined as Head of Research. He was previously Head of Research at FalconX. Bitget: Ignacio Aguirre Franco was appointed Chief Marketing Officer. BitMine Immersion Technologies: Chi Tsang was appointed Chief Executive Officer and joined the board. BNB Chain: Nina Rong joined as Executive Director of Growth. Circle: Wyatt Robinson joined as Chief Counsel, Payments. He was previously Senior Corporate Counsel at Microsoft. Erika Peterson joined as VP, Global Ecosystem. She was previously MD, Corporate Strategy at BlackRock. Coinbase: Shannon Kurtas joined as Head of Coinbase Advanced. He was previously VP, Product at Kraken. Liz Martin joined as VP, Product for Derivatives and Markets. She was previously a Partner at Goldman Sachs. Gareth Kay joined as VP, Brand. He was previously a Partner at The Intangibles. Joe Staples joined as VP, Creative. He was previously a Partner at Mother. Deel: Thierry Edde was promoted to Head of Crypto. FalconX: Eesa Ahmad joined as Senior Executive, Institutional Sales. He was previously Senior Director of Institutional Sales at Crypto.com. Huma Finance: Jessica Cao was appointed APAC CEO. She previously held senior roles at Ant International, BNP Paribas, Citi and Standard Chartered. MoonPay: Zach Kwartler joined as Head of Stablecoins. He was previously Product Lead, Platform at Paxos. Morpho: Tarik Bellamine joined as Head of Engineering. He was previously a Senior Engineering Manager at Uniswap Labs. OpenFX: Rushil Gambhir joined as Product Lead, Payments and New Markets. He was previously VP, Product Management at Mastercard Move. TeraHash: Hunter Rogers joined as Co-Founder. He previously served as Senior Ecosystem Development and Investment Lead at TRON DAO. Variant: Caleb Shack joined as Investment Partner. He was previously Head of Ecosystem at Arch Network. Visa: Matt Austin joined as Senior Director, Business Development, Visa Crypto. He was previously Director of Strategic Initiatives at Ripple. Wintermute: David Micley joined as Head of US BD. Dmitry Kotov joined as Lead US Counsel. H. Branch Johnson joined as Managing Director, BD. Matthew Pizzo joined as Chief Compliance Officer. Zcash Foundation: Pili Guerra was promoted to Head of Engineering. Danika Delano was promoted to Chief Operating Officer. Zerohash: Aaron Karczmer and Danny Rosenthal joined the board. Karczmer is CEO of K2 Integrity. Rosenthal is Founder and CEO of Nutshell Labs. Stripe: Ernie Tedeschi joined as Chief Economist. Tether: Bloomberg reported that Vincent Domien and Mathew O’Neill will join to support the firm’s expansion of gold-backed reserves. AlphaTON Capital: William De’Ath was appointed Chief Partnership Officer. Blockchain.com: Lane Kasselman was promoted from President to Co-CEO and President. a16z crypto: Guy Wuollet was promoted from Investment Partner to General Partner. QuickNode: Jason Hunt was promoted from Chief Strategy Officer to Chief Revenue Officer. CFTC: Michael Selig was nominated to serve as Chairman and Commissioner. He is Chief Counsel of the Crypto Task Force and Senior Advisor to the SEC Chairman. #Launchpool #OopsieDaisy #PresidentialDebate #haroonahmadofficial #MegadropLista

35 key crypto hires, moves and exits: November 2025

This hiring roundup was written in conjunction with crypto-native executive search firm Intersection Growth Partners.
It combines Intersection’s monthly newsletter, which includes unreported executive hires, and The Block’s monthly hiring update.
Crypto hiring remained active through November, with exchanges, payments firms, and infra teams adding senior operators across product, legal, and BD. Venture firms continued to promote from within, while Bitcoin-native projects and ZK ecosystems expanded leadership teams ahead of 2026 roadmaps. Talent flowed in from traditional finance and big tech, particularly in compliance, partnerships, and brand management.
Infrastructure, security, and payments companies saw the largest concentration of new roles. Several networks made strategic marketing and growth hires, while stablecoin and tokenization initiatives pulled in senior talent from banks and fintech.
Anchorage: David Lawant joined as Head of Research. He was previously Head of Research at FalconX.
Bitget: Ignacio Aguirre Franco was appointed Chief Marketing Officer.
BitMine Immersion Technologies: Chi Tsang was appointed Chief Executive Officer and joined the board.
BNB Chain: Nina Rong joined as Executive Director of Growth.
Circle: Wyatt Robinson joined as Chief Counsel, Payments. He was previously Senior Corporate Counsel at Microsoft. Erika
Peterson joined as VP, Global Ecosystem. She was previously MD, Corporate Strategy at BlackRock.
Coinbase: Shannon Kurtas joined as Head of Coinbase Advanced. He was previously VP, Product at Kraken. Liz Martin joined as VP, Product for Derivatives and Markets. She was previously a Partner at Goldman Sachs. Gareth Kay joined as VP, Brand. He was previously a Partner at The Intangibles. Joe Staples joined as VP, Creative. He was previously a Partner at Mother.
Deel: Thierry Edde was promoted to Head of Crypto.
FalconX: Eesa Ahmad joined as Senior Executive, Institutional Sales. He was previously Senior Director of Institutional Sales at Crypto.com.
Huma Finance: Jessica Cao was appointed APAC CEO. She previously held senior roles at Ant International, BNP Paribas, Citi and Standard Chartered.
MoonPay: Zach Kwartler joined as Head of Stablecoins. He was previously Product Lead, Platform at Paxos.
Morpho: Tarik Bellamine joined as Head of Engineering. He was previously a Senior Engineering Manager at Uniswap Labs.
OpenFX: Rushil Gambhir joined as Product Lead, Payments and New Markets. He was previously VP, Product Management at Mastercard Move.
TeraHash: Hunter Rogers joined as Co-Founder. He previously served as Senior Ecosystem Development and Investment Lead at TRON DAO.
Variant: Caleb Shack joined as Investment Partner. He was previously Head of Ecosystem at Arch Network.
Visa: Matt Austin joined as Senior Director, Business Development, Visa Crypto. He was previously Director of Strategic Initiatives at Ripple.
Wintermute: David Micley joined as Head of US BD. Dmitry Kotov joined as Lead US Counsel. H. Branch Johnson joined as Managing Director, BD. Matthew Pizzo joined as Chief Compliance Officer.
Zcash Foundation: Pili Guerra was promoted to Head of Engineering. Danika Delano was promoted to Chief Operating Officer.
Zerohash: Aaron Karczmer and Danny Rosenthal joined the board. Karczmer is CEO of K2 Integrity. Rosenthal is Founder and CEO of Nutshell Labs.
Stripe: Ernie Tedeschi joined as Chief Economist.
Tether: Bloomberg reported that Vincent Domien and Mathew O’Neill will join to support the firm’s expansion of gold-backed reserves.
AlphaTON Capital: William De’Ath was appointed Chief Partnership Officer.
Blockchain.com: Lane Kasselman was promoted from President to Co-CEO and President.
a16z crypto: Guy Wuollet was promoted from Investment Partner to General Partner.
QuickNode: Jason Hunt was promoted from Chief Strategy Officer to Chief Revenue Officer.
CFTC: Michael Selig was nominated to serve as Chairman and Commissioner. He is Chief Counsel of the Crypto Task Force and Senior Advisor to the SEC Chairman.
#Launchpool
#OopsieDaisy
#PresidentialDebate
#haroonahmadofficial
#MegadropLista
BNP Paribas taps Ethereum for new money market fund tokenization pilotThe tokenized shares were issued by the BNP Paribas’ AssetFoundryTM platform using a “permissioned access model on Ethereum.” This follows other experiments, including efforts to bring Swift onchain, and issue tokenized shares via Allfunds Blockchain. BNP Paribas Asset Management is tapping Ethereum for a new blockchain pilot, this time issuing a tokenised share class of a French‑domiciled money market fund. The tokenized shares, issued onchain using BNP Paribas’ AssetFoundryTM platform, will offer gated access via a "permissioned access model on Ethereum ... whereby holdings and transfers are restricted to eligible and authorised participants, in line with applicable regulatory requirements," according to the announcement. The initiative was conducted as a one‑off, limited intra‑group experiment, enabling BNP Paribas to test new end‑to‑end processes, from issuance and transfer agency to tokenisation and public‑blockchain connectivity, within a controlled and regulated framework," the company wrote. BNP Paribas Asset Management acted as the fund issuer, with BNP Paribas Securities Services business acting as transfer agent and dealer. This second issuance of tokenised money market funds, this time using public blockchain infrastructure, supports our ongoing efforts to explore how tokenisation can contribute to greater operational efficiency and security within a regulated framework," Chief Digital and Data Officer at BNP Paribas Asset Management Edouard Legrand said in a statement. BNP Paribas, a leading Paris-based multinational bank, has been an active participant in the institutional blockchain space. Last year, for instance, the firm issued an onchain share class of a money market fund in collaboration with Allfunds Blockchain, referring to the project as the "first natively tokenised money market fund." The firm is also reportedly part of an experiment to bring the Swift global financial communications network to the Ethereum Layer 2 Linea, as well as a member of a joint project among big banks, reportedly including Santander, Bank of America, Barclays, Citi, Deutsche Bank, and Goldman Sachs, to explore issuing a stablecoin. #Shibarium #YapayzekaAI #jasmyustd #VOTEme #OopsieDaisy

BNP Paribas taps Ethereum for new money market fund tokenization pilot

The tokenized shares were issued by the BNP Paribas’ AssetFoundryTM platform using a “permissioned access model on Ethereum.”
This follows other experiments, including efforts to bring Swift onchain, and issue tokenized shares via Allfunds Blockchain.
BNP Paribas Asset Management is tapping Ethereum for a new blockchain pilot, this time issuing a tokenised share class of a French‑domiciled money market fund.
The tokenized shares, issued onchain using BNP Paribas’ AssetFoundryTM platform, will offer gated access via a "permissioned access model on Ethereum ... whereby holdings and transfers are restricted to eligible and authorised participants, in line with applicable regulatory requirements," according to the announcement.
The initiative was conducted as a one‑off, limited intra‑group experiment, enabling BNP Paribas to test new end‑to‑end processes, from issuance and transfer agency to tokenisation and public‑blockchain connectivity, within a controlled and regulated framework," the company wrote.
BNP Paribas Asset Management acted as the fund issuer, with BNP Paribas Securities Services business acting as transfer agent and dealer.
This second issuance of tokenised money market funds, this time using public blockchain infrastructure, supports our ongoing efforts to explore how tokenisation can contribute to greater operational efficiency and security within a regulated framework," Chief Digital and Data Officer at BNP Paribas Asset Management Edouard Legrand said in a statement.
BNP Paribas, a leading Paris-based multinational bank, has been an active participant in the institutional blockchain space. Last year, for instance, the firm issued an onchain share class of a money market fund in collaboration with Allfunds Blockchain, referring to the project as the "first natively tokenised money market fund."
The firm is also reportedly part of an experiment to bring the Swift global financial communications network to the Ethereum Layer 2 Linea, as well as a member of a joint project among big banks, reportedly including Santander, Bank of America, Barclays, Citi, Deutsche Bank, and Goldman Sachs, to explore issuing a stablecoin.
#Shibarium
#YapayzekaAI
#jasmyustd
#VOTEme
#OopsieDaisy
Fintech firm Newity raises $11 million to bring small business loans onchainNewity has raised $11 million in new funding led by CMT Digital as it explores taking its small business lending platform onchain. The fintech firm says it has helped over 125,000 businesses access $12 billion in loans and plans to announce its blockchain strategy in Q1. Newity, a fintech firm focused on facilitating small business loans, has raised $11 million in a strategic funding round as it explores bringing those loans onchain. CMT Digital, a division of trading and investment firm CMT Group, led the round, Newity said Thursday. Additional participants included private and institutional investors, Newity co-founder and co-CEO David Cody told The Block, but he declined to disclose their names. Cody said the round marks Newity’s first fundraise, which began at the end of 2024 and closed in December 2025. The round was structured as a simple agreement for future equity (SAFE), he said, declining to disclose Newity’s valuation or whether any investors received board or advisory seats. Newity was founded in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic by Cody and co-CEO Luke LaHaie to help small businesses navigate funding challenges during the Paycheck Protection Program, a U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) loan initiative launched to support businesses during the crisis. After the program ended in May 2021, Newity shifted its focus to SBA 7(a) government-backed loans and growth term loans. Newity itself is not an SBA lender. Instead, it acts as a lending service provider to participating SBA lenders, including Northeast Bank, which ultimately originate and approve the loans. Cody declined to name other lenders Newity works with. Since launch, Newity said it has processed and serviced more than $12 billion in financing for over 125,000 small businesses. Cody said the average loan size is approximately $118,800 life-to-date, with a maximum loan size of $350,000. Asked how using Newity differs from applying directly through an SBA lender, Cody said borrowers working directly with lenders must follow each lender’s process and timeline, which can vary significantly. “Some lenders have adopted technology; others still rely heavily on paper,” he said. Newity, by contrast, offers a fully online application process, automated documentation workflows, and a dedicated team to move applications forward. Borrowers can receive funding in as little as three weeks through Newity, compared with traditional timelines that can exceed 12 weeks, he added. Cody said Newity’s “AI-first underwriting platform” analyzes hundreds of data points — including credit checks, identity verification, and tax document summaries — to determine eligibility and streamline the application process. “This allows borrowers to receive a prequalified loan amount in less than 10 minutes and funding in as little as 21 days, rather than waiting 12+ weeks,” he said. Newity generates revenue through loan-processing fees. On its crypto strategy, Cody said the firm is exploring various options to take loans onchain and expects to announce its path in the first quarter. We’re not improving small business lending, we’re reinventing the financial infrastructure that connects entrepreneurs to capital,” LaHaie said. “AI and blockchain give us the infrastructure to empower our team to operate at the scale that this market demands.” Newity is headquartered in Chicago and has about 115 employees, most of whom work from the office, with some remote staff, Cody said. The firm is actively hiring across partner, marketing, and technology roles, he added. The Funding newsletter: Stay on top of the latest crypto VC funding and M&A deals, news, and trends with my free bi-monthly newsletter, The Funding. Sign up here! #TrendingTopic #GoogleDocsMagic #MantaRWA #OopsieDaisy #Floki🔥🔥

Fintech firm Newity raises $11 million to bring small business loans onchain

Newity has raised $11 million in new funding led by CMT Digital as it explores taking its small business lending platform onchain.
The fintech firm says it has helped over 125,000 businesses access $12 billion in loans and plans to announce its blockchain strategy in Q1.
Newity, a fintech firm focused on facilitating small business loans, has raised $11 million in a strategic funding round as it explores bringing those loans onchain.
CMT Digital, a division of trading and investment firm CMT Group, led the round, Newity said Thursday. Additional participants included private and institutional investors, Newity co-founder and co-CEO David Cody told The Block, but he declined to disclose their names.
Cody said the round marks Newity’s first fundraise, which began at the end of 2024 and closed in December 2025. The round was structured as a simple agreement for future equity (SAFE), he said, declining to disclose Newity’s valuation or whether any investors received board or advisory seats.
Newity was founded in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic by Cody and co-CEO Luke LaHaie to help small businesses navigate funding challenges during the Paycheck Protection Program, a U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) loan initiative launched to support businesses during the crisis. After the program ended in May 2021, Newity shifted its focus to SBA 7(a) government-backed loans and growth term loans.
Newity itself is not an SBA lender. Instead, it acts as a lending service provider to participating SBA lenders, including Northeast Bank, which ultimately originate and approve the loans. Cody declined to name other lenders Newity works with.
Since launch, Newity said it has processed and serviced more than $12 billion in financing for over 125,000 small businesses. Cody said the average loan size is approximately $118,800 life-to-date, with a maximum loan size of $350,000.
Asked how using Newity differs from applying directly through an SBA lender, Cody said borrowers working directly with lenders must follow each lender’s process and timeline, which can vary significantly. “Some lenders have adopted technology; others still rely heavily on paper,” he said.
Newity, by contrast, offers a fully online application process, automated documentation workflows, and a dedicated team to move applications forward. Borrowers can receive funding in as little as three weeks through Newity, compared with traditional timelines that can exceed 12 weeks, he added.
Cody said Newity’s “AI-first underwriting platform” analyzes hundreds of data points — including credit checks, identity verification, and tax document summaries — to determine eligibility and streamline the application process. “This allows borrowers to receive a prequalified loan amount in less than 10 minutes and funding in as little as 21 days, rather than waiting 12+ weeks,” he said.
Newity generates revenue through loan-processing fees. On its crypto strategy, Cody said the firm is exploring various options to take loans onchain and expects to announce its path in the first quarter.
We’re not improving small business lending, we’re reinventing the financial infrastructure that connects entrepreneurs to capital,” LaHaie said. “AI and blockchain give us the infrastructure to empower our team to operate at the scale that this market demands.”
Newity is headquartered in Chicago and has about 115 employees, most of whom work from the office, with some remote staff, Cody said. The firm is actively hiring across partner, marketing, and technology roles, he added.
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Bullish
🚀 $OP /USDT Showing Strength – Key Resistance in Sight! 🚀 📈 Current Price: $1.901 (+5.67%) 24H High: $1.960 | 24H Low: $1.763 Optimism (OP) has rebounded strongly from its $1.611 low, with the price now hovering near $1.90. Momentum is building, and a test of the $1.960 resistance is on the horizon. Trade Setup: Entry Zone: $1.890 - $1.910 Immediate Target: $1.960 Next Target: $2.050 Stop-Loss: Below $1.850 💡 Strategy: Monitor for a breakout above $1.960 with strong volume to confirm bullish continuation. Secure partial profits near $1.960 and adjust your stop-loss to ride potential gains toward $2.050. A pullback to $1.850 could act as a re-entry zone. OP is gaining momentum—keep an eye on the breakout level for actionable opportunities! {spot}(OPUSDT) #op🔥🔥 #OP #OopsieDaisy
🚀 $OP /USDT Showing Strength – Key Resistance in Sight! 🚀

📈 Current Price: $1.901 (+5.67%)
24H High: $1.960 | 24H Low: $1.763

Optimism (OP) has rebounded strongly from its $1.611 low, with the price now hovering near $1.90. Momentum is building, and a test of the $1.960 resistance is on the horizon.

Trade Setup:

Entry Zone: $1.890 - $1.910

Immediate Target: $1.960

Next Target: $2.050

Stop-Loss: Below $1.850

💡 Strategy: Monitor for a breakout above $1.960 with strong volume to confirm bullish continuation. Secure partial profits near $1.960 and adjust your stop-loss to ride potential gains toward $2.050. A pullback to $1.850 could act as a re-entry zone.

OP is gaining momentum—keep an eye on the breakout level for actionable opportunities!

#op🔥🔥 #OP #OopsieDaisy
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