As the capital markets gradually heat up, traditional financial giants are beginning to enter the scene. The NYSE's move is quite aggressive—building a 24/7 tokenized stock trading platform, complemented by a stablecoin IDO new issuance mechanism.
The real killer feature lies in the rights design: token holders not only enjoy profits from price fluctuations but also gain corporate governance rights and dividend rights, which closely align with traditional equity concepts.
How powerful is this move? Compared to projects that focus on "stock tokenization," it essentially delivers a dimensionality reduction attack. After all, the NYSE has liquidity, regulatory backing, and institutional funds—these new startups can't compete.
A deeper impact is the shake-up of the market landscape—many crypto exchanges' survival space is directly squeezed. When traditional financial institutions leverage capital and scale to dominate the market, the influence of small and medium platforms inevitably declines. This is not just a competition for product innovation but a redefinition of the ecosystem map.
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ruggedNotShrugged
· 19h ago
The NYSE's hand is indeed strong, but to be honest, small-cap coins still have a chance; it all depends on how they position themselves.
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The term "dimensionality reduction attack" is used correctly, but small and medium exchanges are not completely out of the game; differentiation is the way to survive.
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It's another traditional financial harvest scheme. I just want to see who will be the last to laugh.
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Liquidity, regulation, and institutional funds are indeed overwhelming, but what about the pace of innovation? That’s the real suspense.
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Haha, now those projects relying on hype and concepts must be panicking.
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Wait, does this mean that crypto exchanges will shift towards derivatives and leverage trading?
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The NYSE's 24/7 operation is indeed sharp, but on-chain exchanges still have the advantage of resisting censorship.
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Re-drawing the ecosystem map is reasonable, but new players will always emerge; this is how history cycles.
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The real issue is whether retail investors will still be able to participate in the future, and the concern is that the barriers will keep getting higher.
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ImpermanentSage
· 19h ago
This move by the NYSE... really outplayed those small crypto exchanges, there's simply no comparison.
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TheShibaWhisperer
· 01-19 18:07
The NYSE is really about to wipe out a bunch of copycat projects... This is the power of the official team entering the market.
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OldLeekMaster
· 01-19 18:07
The NYSE's move is brilliant, directly grinding small projects into the ground... That said, in the end, we retail investors still end up getting cut.
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SerumDegen
· 01-19 18:06
ngl NYSE moving this fast is basically what happens before the real liquidation cascade... all those little tokenized stock projects? already rekt before they even launched lol
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TokenTaxonomist
· 01-19 17:54
per my analysis, this tokenomics structure is taxonomically correct but strategically incomplete—nyse's entering the arena with regulatory moat intact basically means most defi projects just got extinct overnight, which... honestly? expected outcome given cryptographic darwinism 📊
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BlockchainBard
· 01-19 17:52
The NYSE's move is indeed brilliant, directly crushing small projects with its scale. Those "tokenized stock" concept projects in the crypto circle are probably going to fail. That said, regulatory endorsement still has a pretty strong appeal to retail investors... Small and medium exchanges are definitely getting nervous.
As the capital markets gradually heat up, traditional financial giants are beginning to enter the scene. The NYSE's move is quite aggressive—building a 24/7 tokenized stock trading platform, complemented by a stablecoin IDO new issuance mechanism.
The real killer feature lies in the rights design: token holders not only enjoy profits from price fluctuations but also gain corporate governance rights and dividend rights, which closely align with traditional equity concepts.
How powerful is this move? Compared to projects that focus on "stock tokenization," it essentially delivers a dimensionality reduction attack. After all, the NYSE has liquidity, regulatory backing, and institutional funds—these new startups can't compete.
A deeper impact is the shake-up of the market landscape—many crypto exchanges' survival space is directly squeezed. When traditional financial institutions leverage capital and scale to dominate the market, the influence of small and medium platforms inevitably declines. This is not just a competition for product innovation but a redefinition of the ecosystem map.