Nick from ๐Ÿ‹

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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹

Nick from ๐Ÿ‹

@NickyTod

@LimeChainHQ Founder & CEO | Restless Doer | Web3 Builder | Runner | Golfer | Future is Decentralised

Earth ๊ฐ€์ž…์ผ Nisan 2011
1.1K ํŒ”๋กœ์ž‰1.4K ํŒ”๋กœ์›Œ
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions
Congratulations to @edenbdn & @tomm7y ๐Ÿฅณ The winners of the @RaylsLabs Hackathon ๐Ÿ†
Eden@edenbdn

Just won the @RaylsLabs Hackathon at Cannes, 1st place ($10,000) with @tomm7y We built Arcana, a RWA protocol bringing yield bearing assets onchain. Real-world invoices are tokenized as ERC-1155 and processed on a private chain, where an AI agent scores them and computes NAV. A ZK attestation is then pushed to the public chain, so investors can verify risk without ever seeing the underlying data. Capital flows into compliant ERC-7540 vaults on the public chain, with most allocated to yield and a small portion reserved at the protocol level for insurance via @Corkprotocol. More here: arcana-rayls.vercel.app Thanks to the @RaylsLabs team and everyone who made this possible @Corkprotocol @lagoon_finance @parfin_io @LimeChainHQ @mcvviriato @x10xalex

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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions
Our Co-founder and CEO @NickyTod will be moderating a panel discussion today (29.03) at โ€œInstitutions Onchainโ€ co-hosted by @RaylsLabs and LimeChain in Cannes ๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท Heโ€™ll be joined by senior voices from Sociรฉtรฉ Gรฉnรฉrale FORGE, Deutsche Bank and Bpifrance
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions tweet media
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
Fintechs are becoming the primary crypto on-ramps. But are they ready? @tiger_research's 2026 outlook claims that fintechs will outrun exchanges as the primary on-ramps to crypto. And the data supports it: - 470 million people worldwide now use open banking services. - Stablecoin-linked card spends hit $3.5 billion annualized in Q4 2025, growing 460% YoY. Users clearly want to access digital assets through the financial apps they already use, not through standalone exchanges. But there is a structural gap, since most fintech solutions were designed to move fiat through legacy rails. They don't have the infrastructure necessary to integrate stablecoin payments, tokenized assets, or even basic trading capabilities: 24x7 blockchain reconciliation, multi-decimal accounting, onchain transaction monitoring, and above all, compliance mechanisms to satisfy MiCA, DORA, and soon FIDA. The on-ramp opportunity is real. The infrastructure readiness is not.
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
Monthly stablecoin B2B payment volume went from under $100 million early 2023 to $6 billion by mid-2025. This signals a settlement layer migration, and fintechs must proactively build/adopt the infra to participate in this shift. Otherwise, they will find themselves intermediated by those who do.
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
78 countries have open banking frameworks. Fewer than five have open finance regulation. The EU's FIDA will be the first comprehensive framework to govern data sharing across pensions, insurance, and investment products. Fintechs that only think in terms of payment accounts are building for yesterday's regulatory reality.
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
The embedded finance market is projected to reach $156 billion in 2026. The open banking market sits at roughly $30 billion. That five-to-one ratio tells you where the value accrues: not in accessing data, but in embedding financial products directly into existing workflows. Open finance expands the embedding surface by an order of magnitude. When FIDA enables consent-based sharing across pensions, insurance, and investment data, payroll platforms can embed pension optimization. Neobanks can offer personalized insurance. But every one of those products requires backend infrastructure that can efficiently reconcile on-chain and off-chain ledgers, handle multi-decimal precision, and satisfy overlapping regulatory frameworks. The embedded finance opportunity is thus architecturally dependent on solving the open finance infrastructure problem first. --- If you're building in fintech but struggling to reconcile blockchain-native and legacy infrastructure, let's talk: limechain.tech/fintech-to-opeโ€ฆ
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
Open banking gave fintechs read access to a customer's bank account. Open finance gives them programmable access to an entire financial life: savings, investments, pensions, insurance, mortgages. One is a feature. The other is infrastructure.
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions
As a @solana validator, we care deeply about transparency and performance, as prerequisites for internet capital markets. This is why our validator is running BAM by @jito_sol! BAM (Block Assembly Marketplace) is a a block-building architecture that brings transparency, privacy and verifiable ordering to Solana transactions. Accelerate!
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions tweet media
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
Most hackathons give you testnets and toy-money. This one lets you play with the same enterprise-grade infra that Latin American banks are already using in production. Solve real problems at the Rayls Hackathon. Get a head start at EthCC.
Rayls@RaylsLabs

$17,000+ in prizes. Your own Rayls Privacy Node. And the chance to build infrastructure institutions will actually use. This Rayls Hackathon is different. Once you see it, youโ€™ll understand why ๐ŸšŠ

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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions
Weโ€™re co-hosting โ€œInstitutions Onchainโ€ together with @RaylsLabs during @EthCC week ๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท The event is for builders, founders, execs and investors actively shaping the next chapter of institutional finance Weโ€™ve prepared two panels with senior voices from banking, asset management, infra and more ...and a sunset happy hour after that ๐Ÿ˜‰๐Ÿธ
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions tweet media
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
BREAKING: Why does every second post on X start with โ€œBREAKINGโ€ these days? It makes no sense. Does this clickbait really work?
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
We helped build @RaylsLabs' blockchain architecture. Now is your chance to build with it: RWA, confidential NFTs, autonomous treasury agents, and more. And get direct mentorship from our team. If you're at @EthCC Cannes and serious about institutional DeFi, don't miss this.
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions@LimeChainHQ

Builders at EthCC, this oneโ€™s for YOU @RaylsLabs is hosting an onsite hackathon during @EthCC Cannes ๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท Build the full lifecycle of institutional assets on-chain: from issuance to privacy-preserving automation. ๐Ÿ—“๏ธMarch 28-29 ๐Ÿ“ŒChรขteau on the French Riviera ๐Ÿ’ฐ$17,500 prize pool

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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹ ๋ฆฌํŠธ์œ—ํ•จ
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions@LimeChainHQยท
Architectural decisions in crypto define your scalability, costs and growth so you better not fuck it up Book an online 1:1 session with a Senior Blockchain Architect and get actionable clarity on: - Protocol design - Scalability & performance - Smart contract architecture
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions tweet media
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
Timing a raise is often harder than timing the markets, and there's no formula that works for everyone. If you're weighing your options and want to discuss trade-offs with someone who has experienced these issues firsthand, I'm happy to chat.
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions@LimeChainHQ

Web3 founders trip over the same 3 fundraising traps: - raise too soon - raise too late - raise from the wrong people The outcome is wasted runway and stalled growth If you want to avoid these mistakes weโ€™re doing free online consultations with LimeChainโ€™s Co-Founder @NickyTod

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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
Borrowing in DeFi is becoming a self-sustaining economic activity, and over two years of architectural shifts are coming to fruition. It's called 'free financing', although, to be clear, nothing's really free here. The name oversells it, but here's what actually happens: yield-bearing collateral generates returns, algorithms route capital across providers to secure the best rates, and excess yield automatically services the debt. The loan repays itself over time. Two key things make this work now. One, maturing yield sources. Ethena's sUSDe was delivering ~6% APYs in late-2025, down from 19% the year before, but well above the current T-bill rates. Maple has originated over $4.5B in cumulative institutional loans through segregated credit pools. These are structured returns from private credit and treasury-backed instruments. Cash flows from identifiable, and more importantly, measurable economic activity. Two, the underlying architecture is shifting. Morpho's modular vaults run at 54.9% capital efficiency. Fluid: 50.2%. Aave's pooled model: 40.1%. About 37% more capital is deployed for each dollar deposited. For a self-repaying loan, that gap is the difference between a model that works and one that bleeds idle capital. And, being forward-looking as they are, institutions are already acting on this shift. Coinbase generated $1.6B+ in loans through Morpho. Fasanara, an FCA-regulated entity, went from $0 to about $190M in 12 weeks. Sociรฉtรฉ Gรฉnรฉrale, a G-SIB, chose Morpho as the exclusive infrastructure for MiCA-compliant stablecoins. Aave V4 is pivoting to the same modular architecture with its Hub & Spoke model. Having built such systems at @LimeChainHQ, however, it's crucial to note that the complexities are real. As are the constraints. Beyond multiple smart contract deployments, cross-protocol rate monitoring, LTV rebalancing, and programmatic yield harvesting, yield variability poses specific challenges. Repayment timelines aren't guaranteed, smart contract risks scale with complexity, and the model only works when collateral yield exceeds borrowing cost. That's not a given in every market. That said, these are the constraints of building a new category of financial product, not evidence that the category doesn't work. When yield-bearing collateral, modular vaults, and automated position management are composed at the protocol level, what emerges has no structural equivalent in traditional credit. The question is, which lending architectures are designed to enable that? And as a builder, are you adopting them proactively? Your ability to capture the next wave of incoming capital depends on how you answer this.
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions@LimeChainHQ

Most DeFi lending leaves 40-60% capital dormant ๐Ÿ˜ด over-collateral buffers + pooled mismatches kill yields, scalability, and TVL growth What if you activated idle capital for auto repaying loans? We built exactly this for a client, detailed in a new case study Thread ๐Ÿ‘‡

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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
Pool-based lending was the right architecture for bootstrapping DeFi. It's the wrong architecture for institutional scale. Institutions won't allocate to systems that structurally waste 40% of the capital they deposit.
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTod

Sociรฉtรฉ Gรฉnรฉrale, a 'Global Systematically Important Bank' (G-SIB), made its first production DeFi deployment last year. And it chose a vault-based, isolated-market protocol. Not a shared liquidity pool. This was an architectural choice. Banks don't evaluate DeFi the same way as crypto-natives do. Their compliance teams and risk committees need compartmentalized exposure for regulatory capital modeling. They also need separate compliance regimes for different asset classes. A MiCA-regulated stablecoin cannot share pool exposure with unregulated crypto assets. Period. Shared liquidity pools, by design, cannot meet this requirement. So, while they served DeFi well during its bootstrapping phase, they aren't fully aligned with the needs of the institutional era. Because institutions operate under fiduciary constraints that make cross-contamination risk a structural deterrent rather than merely a preference. Further, as @caladanxyz's research shows, modular, isolated vaults are more efficient with 70โ€“90% capital utilization, almost at par with TradFi, whereas 40โ€“50% of the capital sits idle on share pools. Such efficiency gains, coupled with compliance requirements, are driving institutions towards vault-based architectures and will continue to do so through 2026 and beyond. @MessariCrypto substantiates this claim in its 2026 Theses, explicitly stating that modular lending protocols are expected to outperform the monolithic ones. Yet most protocols still use traditional pooled architectures, so the race to build differentiated products remains wide open. If you're exploring how vaults and vault-based solutions can position your protocol to capture the incoming institutional capital, let's talk.

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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
Independent curators competing on risk-adjusted returns. If one makes poor decisions, depositors migrate. Distributed accountability, without any single-point-of-failure. That's what a lending market looks like when it's designed for operators, not just users.
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Nick from ๐Ÿ‹
Nick from ๐Ÿ‹@NickyTodยท
$238 million. That's the cumulative interest paid out through vault-based lending infrastructure on a single protocol in under two years. Not projected. Paid. Much of it was enabled by high utilization rates of 70โ€“90%. Whereas protocols that still use traditional pooled architecture typically have around 60% utilization, generating a third less yield on the same deposit. Compound that gap over longer time frames and substantial TVLs, and suddenly you're looking at multi-million dollars in value that either flows to depositors or sits idle in a liquidity buffer. Such underutilization is inherent in traditional shared-pool architectures because they must set risk parameters conservatively to hedge against the riskiest asset in the pool. We saw this play out in 2022, when the volatility of one asset, CRV, created bad debts across an entire pool, affecting every depositor regardless of their exposure preference. That year, Compound V2 also lost over $1.6M to cross-pool contagion. Pool providers learned from this and further tightened parameters. But tighter parameters lower utilization, leading to more idle capital. And idle capital is a huge deterrent for institutional allocations, especially when alternatives exist. Modular, vault-based markets solve utilization by calibrating for specific collateral-loan pairs. For example, a stablecoin-to-stablecoin market can operate at 90%+ utilization because the two assets are highly correlated in price. Whereas a market involving more volatile collaterals can use conservative parameters, but only for that pair, without dragging down the entire system. This shift is starting to materialize at scale. Per @caladanxyz's recent research, certain individual vault curators now manage more deposits than regional U.S. banks, signaling where productive capital migrates when the architecture stops wasting it. And if you're building a DEX or lending infrastructure against this backdrop, ask: How much yield are your depositors missing because your architecture forces capital to sit idle?
LimeChain - Blockchain & Web3 Solutions@LimeChainHQ

Most DeFi lending protocols waste huge amounts of capital Pooled liquidity forces funds to sit idle when borrowers donโ€™t perfectly match supply Thatโ€™s a design flaw, not a market problem. Institutional capital want utilization rates that rival TradFi (90%+)

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