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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SPX
S&P 500 Index
6846.50
6846.50
6846.50
6878.28
6827.18
-23.90
-0.35%
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
47739.31
47739.31
47739.31
47971.51
47611.93
-215.67
-0.45%
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
23545.89
23545.89
23545.89
23698.93
23455.05
-32.22
-0.14%
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
99.000
99.080
99.000
99.000
99.000
+0.050
+ 0.05%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.16337
1.16390
1.16337
1.16365
1.16322
-0.00027
-0.02%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.33213
1.33264
1.33213
1.33213
1.33140
+0.00008
+ 0.01%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4189.70
4190.14
4189.70
4218.85
4175.92
-8.21
-0.20%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
58.555
58.807
58.555
60.084
58.495
-1.254
-2.10%
--

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Share

Israeli Military Says It Has Struck Infrastructure Belonging To Hezbollah In Several Areas In Southern Lebanon

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SPDR Gold Holdings Down 0.11%, Or 1.14 Tonnes

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On Monday (December 8), In Late New York Trading, S&P 500 Futures Fell 0.21%, Dow Jones Futures Fell 0.43%, NASDAQ 100 Futures Fell 0.08%, And Russell 2000 Futures Fell 0.04%

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Morgan Stanley: Data Center ABS Spreads Are Expected To Widen In 2026

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(US Stocks) The Philadelphia Gold And Silver Index Closed Down 2.34% At 311.01 Points. (Global Session) The NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index Closed Down 2.17%, Hitting A Daily Low Of 2235.45 Points; US Stocks Remained Slightly Down Before The Opening Bell—holding Steady Around 2280 Points—before Briefly Rising Slightly

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IMF: IMF Executive Board Approves Extension Of The Extended Credit Facility Arrangement With Nepal

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Trump: Same Approach Will Apply To Amd, Intel, And Other Great American Companies

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Trump: Department Of Commerce Is Finalizing Details

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Trump: $25% Will Be Paid To United States Of America

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Trump: President Xi Responded Positively

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[Consumer Discretionary ETFs Fell Over 1.4%, Leading The Decline Among US Sector ETFs; Semiconductor ETFs Rose Over 1.1%] On Monday (December 8), The Consumer Discretionary ETF Fell 1.45%, The Energy ETF Fell 1.09%, The Internet ETF Fell 0.18%, The Regional Banks ETF Rose 0.34%, The Technology ETF Rose 0.70%, The Global Technology ETF Rose 0.93%, And The Semiconductor ETF Rose 1.13%

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Trump: I Have Informed President Xi, Of China, That United States Will Allow Nvidia To Ship Its H200 Products To Approved Customers In China

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Argentina's Merval Index Closed Up 0.02% At 3.047 Million Points. It Rose To A New Daily High Of 3.165 Million Points In Early Trading In Buenos Aires Before Gradually Giving Back Its Gains

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US Stock Market Closing Report | On Monday (December 8), The Magnificent 7 Index Fell 0.20% To 208.33 Points. The "mega-cap" Tech Stock Index Fell 0.33% To 405.00 Points

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Pentagon - USA State Dept Approves Potential Sale Of Hellfire Missiles To Belgium For An Estimated $79 Million

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Toronto Stock Index .GSPTSE Unofficially Closes Down 141.44 Points, Or 0.45 Percent, At 31169.97

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The Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index Closed Up Less Than 0.1%. Nxtt Rose 21%, Microalgo Rose 7%, Daqo New Energy Rose 4.3%, And 21Vianet, Baidu, And Miniso All Rose More Than 3%

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The S&P 500 Initially Closed Down More Than 0.4%, With The Telecom Sector Down 1.9%, And Materials, Consumer Discretionary, Utilities, Healthcare, And Energy Sectors Down By As Much As 1.6%, While The Technology Sector Rose 0.7%. The NASDAQ 100 Initially Closed Down 0.3%, With Marvell Technology Down 7%, Fortinet Down 4%, And Netflix And Tesla Down 3.4%

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IMF: Review Pakistan Authorities To Draw The Equivalent Of About US$1 Billion

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President Trump Is Committed To The Continued Cessation Of Violence And Expects The Governments Of Cambodia And Thailand To Fully Honor Their Commitments To End This Conflict - Senior White House Official

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          CBOE Plans November Launch for Bitcoin and Ethereum Continuous Futures Contracts

          Manuel

          Cryptocurrency

          Summary:

          The continuous futures will be cash-settled and aligned to real-time spot market prices through daily cash adjustments.

          CBOE Global Markets announced plans to launch Bitcoin and Ethereum continuous futures contracts on Nov. 10, pending regulatory review.
          According to a Sept. 9 announcement, the new product suite debuts on CBOE Futures Exchange with contracts structured as single, long-dated instruments featuring 10-year expirations.
          This design eliminates periodic rolling requirements that characterize traditional futures contracts, simplifying position management for traders seeking long-term digital asset exposure.
          The continuous futures will be cash-settled and aligned to real-time spot market prices through daily cash adjustments using a transparent funding rate methodology.
          CBOE Clear US, a derivatives clearing organization regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), will clear the contracts within the exchange’s regulated framework.
          Global head of derivatives at CBOE, Catherine Clay, said the launch brings perpetual-style utility that gained adoption in offshore markets to US traders.
          She noted that the products target institutional participants, existing Cboe Futures Exchange (CFE) customers, and retail traders seeking access to crypto derivatives.

          Regulatory opening

          The announcement coincides with increased regulatory coordination between the SEC and CFTC, which will hold a joint roundtable on Sept. 29 to advance digital asset oversight harmonization.
          The agencies acknowledged in a Sept. 5 statement that fragmented regulation had discouraged innovation and driven crypto activity overseas.
          SEC Chairman Paul Atkins and CFTC Acting Chairman Caroline Pham emphasized that coordination failures created uncertainty, hindering economic activity even for legally permissible products.
          The regulators stressed that harmonization can lower barriers, improve efficiency, and reaffirm US leadership in financial markets.
          The Sept. 29 roundtable will examine measures to align US markets with the global economy, including expanded trading hours, frameworks for perpetual contracts, and portfolio margining coordination.
          The agencies plan to review exemptions providing safe harbors for decentralized finance projects while maintaining investor protection standards.
          CBOE’s continuous futures launch builds on the exchange’s expanding CFE product suite, which includes VIX futures and products based on equity volatility, crypto, and global fixed income.
          The introduction represents a step toward onshoring compliant perpetual swap trading that currently operates primarily on offshore platforms.
          CBOE’s Options Institute will host public educational courses on continuous futures on Oct. 30 and Nov. 20 to prepare market participants for the new contracts.

          Source: Cryptoslate

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          US Consumer Finances Stay Robust Even as Jobs Data Cloud Economic Outlook, Bankers say

          Manuel

          Economic

          U.S. consumers remain in good financial health and there are little signs of credit quality deterioration, according to the nation's top banking executives, despite data showing the job market is cooling off.
          Leaders from Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo told investors this week that consumers were continuing to spend money and mostly pay their debts on time.
          "Despite what you may read in terms of softening, we are seeing activity levels still to be quite strong and credit performance to still be quite good on the consumer side," Wells Fargo CFO Mike Santomassimo told investors at a conference on Tuesday.
          Citigroup's CFO Mark Mason said consumer spending is up and delinquencies, especially on the credit card portfolio, are under control.
          "On the consumer side, we continue to see spend up particularly in our branded card portfolio," he said. "We aren't seeing any abnormal signs around delinquencies with our card customers."
          Even mid-sized banks reported strong credit quality for consumers.
          "We still see credit quality as being quite strong, said Brantley Standridge, Senior Vice President, Consumer and Regional Banking at Huntington.
          "A number of our consumer-focused businesses like our auto finance business have had very strong summer months. We also see payments data that would say that our payments activity through debit has slowed slightly but is still looking very good."
          The comments came a day after Bank of America's Chief Financial Officer Alastair Borthwick said at the same conference that consumer finances remain healthy as credit card spending accelerates and fewer borrowers have longer-term delinquencies.
          "The consumer at this point appears to be ... resilient, doing well and in a good position, and that's reflected in our asset quality numbers," he said.
          BofA's consumer net charge-offs of $1.1 billion decreased $60 million in the second quarter versus the first quarter, driven by lower credit card losses.
          Banks will start reporting their third-quarter earnings in October.
          The optimistic forecasts from bankers came as latest data showed the U.S. economy likely created 911,000 fewer jobs in the 12 months through March than previously estimated, suggesting job growth was already stalling before President Donald Trump's aggressive import tariffs.
          Americans grew notably less sanguine about the job market in August amid a notable rise in concerns about the ability to get new employment in the event of a job loss, New York Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Expectations showed.
          "The consumer in aggregate is resilient but spending is increasingly concentrated among the higher income groups and though delinquencies improved, the improvement was very minor," said Christopher Hodge, chief U.S. economist for Natixis.
          "What is helping to prevent a steep fall is the low level of layoffs and stable wage gains. So there are pockets of weakness, but overall spending should be held up by the wealthy and the fact that although wages are not rising fast, the workers have had job stability."

          Source: Reuters

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Fed seen on track for three rate cuts this year, starting next week

          Adam

          Economic

          Central Bank

          The Federal Reserve will likely resume cutting short-term rates next week and continue on for the rest of the year to shore up a labor market that may have begun cooling well before President Donald Trump began imposing sharply higher tariffs, traders bet on Tuesday.
          The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics' preliminary annual revision to its payrolls data showed the U.S. economy likely created 911,000 fewer jobs in the 12 months through March than previously estimated, suggesting average monthly payrolls gains were likely less than half of the 147,000 that had been reported.
          Coupled with recent labor market data that shows monthly employment gains have slowed even further, the report "gives the Fed another reason to lower rates next week," BMO economist Sal Guatieri wrote, and likely cements the case for more rate cuts by year-end than the two that Fed policymakers had projected back in June.
          After the data, traders stuck to their overwhelming bets that the Fed will reduce the policy rate from its current 4.25%-4.50% by a quarter of a percentage point at the central bank's September 16-17 meeting, and for a same-sized reduction at the Fed's following meeting in October.
          While traders continue to see a third rate cut in December as far more likely than a pause, they pared their bets slightly on that meeting and further for 2026, slicing the probability of a fourth rate cut by January to less than 40% from nearly 50-50 before the revised data was released.
          Fed Chair Jerome Powell said last month that rising downside risks to the job market may warrant some cautious policy easing, but central bankers remain wary of easing too much while inflation remains above their 2% goal and upside risks from Trump's tariff policy remain.
          The Fed gets a pair of inflation reports later this week expected to reflect ongoing upward price pressures.

          Source: reuters

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          US Employment Falls by 911,000 in Government Revision, Revealing Weaker-Than-Reported Jobs Market

          Manuel

          Economic

          Forex

          The US economy employed 911,000 fewer people than originally reported as of March 2025, providing stark new evidence that the labor market was downshifting long before this summer.
          The data covers the period from April 2024 to March 2025 and trims the average monthly jobs gains seen during this period (roughly the last 10 months of Joe Biden's presidency and the first two months of Trump's) from a monthly average of 147,000 to about 71,000.
          Data had previously suggested the economy added about 1.76 million jobs in that 12-month span.
          The new total is less than half that, marking another larger-than-average downward revision that immediately provided fuel for critics of the government's data collection process.
          The White House and allies of President Trump quickly seized upon the revisions as showing that the president inherited a weaker economy than previously thought and that, as Vice President JD Vance put it, "It's difficult to overstate how useless BLS data had become."
          The revisions also increased political pressure on Jerome Powell, with White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying the central banker "has officially run out of excuses and must cut the rates now."
          These job revisions are evidence that job growth was "not as strong as the Fed thought," added PNC Financial Services Group chief economist Gus Faucher on Yahoo Finance, adding it was evidence that interest rates are currently too high and "the Fed may need to cut interest rates in the near term in order to support the labor market."
          The report showed that the largest downward revisions were in leisure and hospitality, which saw 176,000 fewer jobs than previously thought. The professional and business services industry was second, with a downward revision of 158,000 jobs.
          The revisions are almost entirely in the private sector, showing 880,000 fewer jobs there, as well as 31,000 fewer government jobs.
          The backward-facing data also came in well above the expectations of many economists, who had estimated that these revisions would be hundreds of thousands of jobs lower.
          A final revised number for this period is not set to be released until February 2026.

          A transition to harder sources of jobs data

          Jobs revisions are a routine practice in which the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and other government agencies update their estimates of job levels as more concrete data sources — such as quarterly insurance tax filings — become available.
          The revisions unveiled Tuesday are an adjustment to previous estimates that were largely based on surveys.
          But job revisions have been consistently above average in recent years as response rates to surveys have declined and have also become a political flash point.
          This has been especially true since last year's preliminary annual revisions landed in the middle of the presidential campaign and showed the US economy employed 818,000 fewer people than previously thought.
          And the political heat has only increased in recent months after Trump reacted to a monthly jobs report by accusing the BLS, without evidence, of having "phony" numbers and then firing the agency's commissioner.
          Trump's pick for a new BLS commissioner, E.J. Antoni of the Heritage Foundation, is expected to have a confirmation hearing before the Senate's labor-focused panel in the coming months.
          Antoni has proved to be a polarizing pick as Trump aims to put one of the agency's fiercest critics in charge of data collection going forward. Both Antoni and various Trump aides have seized upon larger-than-normal revisions seen in recent years to argue that new approaches to data are needed, especially a rethinking of surveys.
          Tuesday's release is likely to increase those calls.
          The data is also being used as fodder by the White House to try to shift blame for the current slowdown toward Biden or Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, whom Trump for months has said is "too late."
          Trump has repeatedly lobbed the "too late" charge, including Tuesday morning in a social media post before the number was released.
          The president quoted a market analyst who said Powell should have begun cuts in 2021 and that the 2% inflation target is "too rigid."

          Source: Yahoo Finance

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Will Thursday’s Inflation Report Support a Fed Rate Cut?

          Adam

          Economic

          The Federal Reserve is widely expected to cut interest rates at next week’s policy meeting on Sep. 17. Will Thursday’s report on consumer inflation in August play along?
          Economists are expecting a mixed bag for this week’s August update on the consumer price index. Headline CPI is set to edge higher to a 2.9% year-over-year pace, according to the consensus forecast via Econoday.com. If correct, the pickup will mark the fastest annual pace since January and lift the overall inflation rate further above the Fed’s 2% target.
          Core CPI is expected to hold steady at 3.1% vs. the year-ago level, offering a degree of support for arguing that inflation isn’t accelerating. This measure of inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, is considered a better measure of the trend. But holding steady at more than a full percentage point above the Fed’s 2% target is less than ideal for arguing that current monetary policy has tamed inflation.
          Although inflation has fallen sharply over the last several years, disinflation has stalled recently and the tariffs threaten to lift pricing pressure. Thursday’s CPI update will be closely read for deciding if tariffs are finally starting to flow through to pricing data overall.
          Will Thursday’s Inflation Report Support a Fed Rate Cut?_1
          Reviewing several alternative measures of CPI suggests that a reflationary trend is emerging, if only gradually so far. The chart below compares year-over-year changes for the standard headline and core CPI estimates of inflation along with other measures that arguably offer a more robust measure of pricing pressure, such as the Atlanta Fed’s sticky-price CPI, a weighted basket of items that change price relatively slowly.
          The average of the 1-year changes for the indexes (red line) has increased for three straight months through July. A fourth advance would be worrisome by suggesting that reflationary pressure is strengthening and that easing monetary policy would fuel this trend.
          Will Thursday’s Inflation Report Support a Fed Rate Cut?_2
          The challenge for the Fed is that even if inflation is picking up, the slowdown in employment growth is now seen as a higher priority for the central bank. The bond market seems to agree. The policy-sensitive US 2-year Treasury yield fell to 3.49% on Monday (Sep. 8) – a three-year low and well below the 4.33% median Fed funds target rate.
          Will Thursday’s Inflation Report Support a Fed Rate Cut?_3
          Cue up Thursday’s CPI update, with a crucial question in mind: Will the August inflation numbers change the calculus for next week’s Fed decision?

          Source: investing

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Why a Fed rate cut might not help the stock market

          Adam

          Economic

          After a weak August jobs report, markets are nearly certain the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by 25 basis points at its policy meeting next week, with some investors even betting on a larger reduction.
          Traders hope a more dovish Fed will boost equities after a choppy summer. But some Wall Street strategists warn that rate cuts may not be all good news for stocks in the near term.
          Ed Yardeni, president and chief investment strategist of Yardeni Research, warned Monday that easier monetary policy could spark a destabilizing "melt-up" in US stocks without addressing America's labor supply shortage, strained by President Trump's immigration crackdown and an aging population.
          "We think that by cutting rates this month, the Fed would be stimulating an economy that doesn't need easier monetary policy," he said. "Stimulating an economy that doesn't need stimulation won't create more workers to address the undersupply that's constraining the demand for labor."
          Yardeni argued that with productivity improving and the unemployment rate still historically low, extra liquidity risks fueling a speculative rally driven by investor FOMO rather than fundamentals — the kind of rally, he warned, that often ends in a sharp correction.
          Yardeni isn't alone in his skepticism. Others see the risks of rate cuts outweighing the potential benefits.
          Stuart Kaiser, head of US equity trading strategy at Citi, called August's weak payrolls report a "negative growth signal" that is "more powerful than the benefit of rate cuts being priced in." Put simply, if hiring continues to slow and unemployment drifts higher, the drag on earnings and economic growth will matter more for equities than the short-term lift from easing monetary policy.
          Meanwhile, Apollo's Torsten Sløk flagged mounting job losses in tariff-hit sectors such as manufacturing, construction, retail, and transportation. Employment growth in these industries has now turned negative, according to Sløk's research, underscoring the added strain businesses face from trade policy uncertainty. (Disclosure: Yahoo Finance is owned by Apollo Global Management.)
          Inflation could also complicate the outlook if the Fed begins cutting rates in a sticky price environment. Thursday's Consumer Price Index (CPI) will show how prices are trending.
          Bloomberg consensus expects August's "core" CPI, which excludes volatile categories like food and energy, to rise 0.3% month over month and 3.1% year over year, keeping inflation firmly above the Fed's 2% target. Citi noted it would take a major upside surprise to derail next week's anticipated cut, but any signs of renewed price pressure could limit how aggressively the Fed eases from here.
          And with the initial estimate of annual benchmark payroll revisions showing a downward revision of 911,000 — more than the 700,000 economists expected and close to the 900,000 some had projected — another red flag is emerging, suggesting the next test for markets may come sooner rather than later.
          That leaves a key question for investors and policymakers alike: Will rate cuts be deep enough to counter mounting growth risks?
          Morgan Stanley strategist Mike Wilson said equities' ability to absorb labor market weakness hinges on how forcefully the Fed responds.
          With inflation still on the radar and jobs data weak but not "bad enough," he cautioned that the central bank may have limited room to ease in the near term, a setup that could mean "choppy" price action through a seasonally weak September and October.
          Still, Wilson argued that any pullback would likely pave the way for a stronger finish to the year and into 2026, supported by what he sees as a durable, broad-based earnings recovery.
          Goldman Sachs head of US equity strategy David Kostin, meanwhile, sees an even smoother path in the near term, noting that stocks typically rally during Fed cutting cycles so long as the economy avoids a recession, which he does not view as the base case.
          He expects the S&P 500 (^GSPC) to climb to 6,600 by year-end, supported by renewed earnings growth in 2026, and sees room for a rebound in small caps stocks that have lagged under higher interest rates.
          "As the economy moves through the worst of the tariff impacts, we expect imminent Fed rate cuts and a re-acceleration of growth in 2026 will support further gains for US equities," Kostin said.

          Source : finance.yahoo

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          Ethena Enters USDH Race Supported by BlackRock BUIDL, Anchorage, Securitize

          Manuel

          Cryptocurrency

          Ethena Labs submitted a proposal on Sept. 9 to become the issuer of Hyperliquid’s native stablecoin USDH, joining an increasingly competitive race.
          The bid consists of backing USDH entirely by USDtb, a stablecoin backed by BlackRock’s BUIDL fund, with the support of Anchorage Digital.
          Ethena is committed to returning 95% of net revenue generated from USDH reserves directly to the Hyperliquid community through HYPE token purchases and ecosystem development.
          Hyperliquid launched the competitive selection process for USDH following a Sept. 5 announcement that the protocol would introduce its native stablecoin in the next network upgrade.
          The move targets the $5.5 billion in USDC deposits currently serving as the primary settlement currency on the decentralized exchange.
          The selection carries significant financial implications for Hyperliquid, which currently records nearly $1.3 billion in estimated annualized revenue, according to DefiLlama data. Additionally, the network achieved an all-time high monthly trading volume of $405.8 billion in perpetual contracts during August.

          Different approach

          Ethena’s proposal differentiates itself through institutional partnerships and proposed security infrastructure.
          The company plans to establish an elected guardian network of Hyperliquid validators to oversee USDH operations, removing single-issuer control over the stablecoin’s security management.
          Beyond basic stablecoin issuance, Ethena outlined plans to launch hUSDe, a Hyperliquid-native variant of its synthetic dollar product, and committed $75 million in incentives to support HIP-3 market development.
          The firm also announced partnerships with Securitize to deploy tokenized real-world assets on HyperEVM and native USDtb integration.

          Competing proposals

          Competing proposals offer distinct approaches to USDH backing and governance. Paxos proposes backing through New York Department of Financial Services-protected accounts with monthly KPMG attestations.
          Frax Finance plans frUSD backing through treasury partnerships with BlackRock and Superstate. Agora offers short-dated US Treasuries with proof of reserves powered by Chaos Labs.
          Sky proposes flexible collateral backing through its risk management framework with LayerZero interoperability.
          The validator-driven selection process requires proposal approval through community governance before proceeding to a gas auction for final deployment rights.
          Omar Kanji from Dragonfly estimates the transition could generate $220 million in additional annualized revenue for HYPE holders while reducing Circle’s USDC supply by 7%.
          Ethena emphasized its track record managing over $23 billion in tokenized dollar assets and positioned itself as the largest counterparty capable of supporting Hyperliquid’s expansion into equity perpetual swaps through HIP-3 markets.

          Source: Cryptoslate

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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