Howard

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Howard

Howard

@howardx30

Building @EdgeHxyz on @hyperliquidx. Prev partner @SyncracyCapital. Everything else is noise.

NYC Katılım Kasım 2013
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DYJ
DYJ@davidyjeong·
we ship
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tread.fi@tread_fi

How to run MM bot for @Polymarket > Find a market with rewards (take note of min. shares for reward) > Split shares to get initial inventory (similiar to spot MM, but automatically hedged Yes+No) > Run MM bot > Merge shares after the bot is done to free up margin Open for some beta users

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勃勃OC
勃勃OC@bboczeng·
WSJ最近发表文章,披露Meta是如何错失DeepMind的,在我看来,扎克伯格实确实是一个过早致富的大富豪, 他声称对什么都感兴趣,甚至说自己用过Manus和OpenClaw,但是从他和Hassabis的对话中,我们可以看出来 这个人从头到尾都在撒谎。他用极大的热情和慷慨掩盖自己的无知,企图用钱拿下所有的东西,正如当年买入Instagram,甚至购买一整套《习近平治国理政》讨好中国政府那样 可惜,在AI时代和真正的聪明人面前,这种低劣的伎俩可能已经失效了 以下是华尔街日报的原文: "如果Facebook不收购DeepMind,它就会落入谷歌之手。Hassabis专程飞到西海岸,与仍是最强竞购方的拉里·佩奇共进午餐。 扎克伯格得知消息后,随即邀请他共进晚餐。抵达扎克伯格帕洛阿尔托的家中,Hassabis对他施了一个不动声色的测试。两人谈及AI的潜力,扎克伯格表现出恰如其分的兴奋。 但随着晚餐推进,Hassabis话锋一转,聊起其他热门技术:VR、AR、3D打印。扎克伯格对每一项都表现出同等程度的亢奋。'这就是我想知道的答案,' Hassabis说,'Facebook出价更高,但我想找的是真正理解AI为何远胜其他一切的人。' 晚餐结束后,Hassabis回到拉里·佩奇那里,说了一句话:'我们继续谈。'" 扎克伯格对VR的错误押注,对Meta造成的伤害远不止800亿美元的烧钱——更致命的是声誉损伤。 Hassabis在那顿晚餐里就已洞穿一切,而扎克伯格甚至不知道自己错失了什么。八年后,他把公司改名Meta,在一个懂行的人都知道已死透的方向上加倍下注。 到了2025年,为了追赶AI,扎克伯格又豪掷140亿美元收购了一家由话术型CEO掌舵的数据标注公司,同时大刀阔斧改组AI团队——这两步操作在业内人士眼中同样是翻白眼级别的决策,进一步坐实了Meta技术领导层的严重失格。
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MapleLeafCap
MapleLeafCap@MapleLeafCap·
@howardx30 太爽了,完全无法进行任何别的娱乐活动
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Howard
Howard@howardx30·
@gothburz AI couldn't write a masterpiece like this
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Peter Girnus 🦅
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz·
My net worth peaked at $1.2 million. None of it was real. I don't mean that philosophically. I mean it was located on servers that have since been turned off. I own eleven properties in the metaverse. Three in Decentraland. Four in The Sandbox. Two in Voxels. One in Otherside. And a beachfront villa in Horizon Worlds that I bought for $214,000 because Mark Zuckerberg called it "the next frontier." The frontier closed last week. It's a mobile app now. Last year I mass DM'd 340 people the phrase "you don't understand how early we are." I have since stopped doing that. Not because I was wrong. Because most of them blocked me. I got into metaverse real estate in November 2021. Everyone was buying. Someone paid $450,000 to be Snoop Dogg's neighbor. In a video game. With no legs. The avatars didn't have legs. I thought that was bullish. "The legs are coming," I told my Discord. "Legs are a roadmap item." Three hundred people reacted with rocket emojis. I called myself a "digital land baron." I put it in my Twitter bio. I put it in my LinkedIn headline. I said it on a podcast that had eleven listeners. Three of them were bots. The rest were my alts. My virtual property has more square footage than my actual apartment. My actual apartment has furniture. Location, location, location. My most valuable asset was a plot next to a virtual Gucci store. Gucci left in 2023. The store is still there. Nobody's in it. It's like a mall in Ohio but with worse graphics and no food court. I held. Diamond hands. That's what we said. "Diamond hands." It means refusing to sell while your investment loses 94% of its value. We turned financial paralysis into a personality trait. A guy in my Discord paid $2.4 million for a 618-parcel estate in Decentraland. Prime district. High foot traffic. I asked him what "foot traffic" meant when the platform had 38 daily active users. He said I didn't understand the technology. I didn't. I still bought more. We had a DAO. A decentralized autonomous organization. That means we voted on decisions. There were nine of us. Three never showed up. Two voted on everything without reading it. The other four were me and my alts. We voted to "acquire strategic parcels." The vote passed unanimously. I voted four times. My portfolio peaked at $1.2 million. I told everyone. I made a spreadsheet. I projected 40x returns by 2025. I made a pitch deck. The pitch deck had a slide that said "WE ARE BUILDING THE DIGITAL ECONOMY." The slide had a rocket emoji. That was my entire financial model. In 2023 I bought a Bored Ape for $189,000. It's worth $14,000 now. I don't talk about the Ape. I still use it as my profile picture. People ask me about it. I say "I'm long-term bullish." Long-term bullish means I can't sell it without crying in a Panera. My mom asked me what a Bored Ape was. I said "digital art on the blockchain." She asked why it cost more than her car. I said "you don't understand Web3." She said "I understand you live in a studio apartment." She's not in my Discord. Justin Bieber bought one for $1.3 million. It's worth about $90,000 now. I felt better about mine after I heard that. That's community. WAGMI. We're All Gonna Make It. We said that every day. In the group chat. While the floor dropped. While the volume dried up. While 95% of all NFT collections went to zero. We're all gonna make it. None of us made it. But we said it with conviction and a laser-eye profile picture. That counts for something. It doesn't. But we said it did. That's decentralized consensus. Meta spent $84 billion on the metaverse. I need to say that again. $84 billion. More than the GDP of Luxembourg. More than the GDP of Iceland, Luxembourg, and Malta combined. They spent it on a platform where the avatars had no legs, the graphics looked like a 2006 Wii game, and the peak user count was lower than the lunch rush at a Chipotle in Des Moines. They just pulled Horizon Worlds from VR headsets. It lives on as a mobile app. My beachfront villa is now a mobile app. Location, location, location. Zuckerberg renamed the entire company for this. Facebook became Meta. A $900 billion company changed its legal name because the CEO watched Ready Player One and said "I want that." Reality Labs lost $10 billion in 2021. $14 billion in 2022. $16 billion in 2023. $18 billion in 2024. $19 billion in 2025. That's not a strategy. That's a speedrun. They laid off 1,500 Reality Labs employees this year. Shut down three VR studios. Killed Supernatural. Put the entire VR social vision in a casket and said "we're pivoting to AI and wearables." The pivot took four years and $84 billion. I pivoted too. I'm an AI real estate investor now. I bought a virtual plot in an AI-generated world that doesn't exist yet. The founder said it was "the intersection of spatial computing and large language models." I don't know what that means. I gave him $40,000. He has a whitepaper. It's 47 pages. I read the title and the tokenomics section. The tokenomics section is a pie chart. I love pie charts. They make everything look like a plan. The project has a roadmap. Q1: "Build community." Q2: "Launch beta." Q3: "Scale ecosystem." Q4 is blank. Q4 is always blank. That's where the exit scam goes. My accountant asked me to value my metaverse portfolio for tax purposes. I said $1.2 million. He said "current market value." I said $6,400. He stared at me for eleven seconds. I know because I counted. He asked if I had any other investments. I showed him my NFTs. He stared for longer. I told him they were "cultural artifacts with long-term provenance." He asked if I'd considered a 401k. I told him a 401k was "legacy finance." He told me to leave his office. The metaverse is dead. I don't accept that. I am a digital land baron. I own eleven properties across four platforms. I have a beachfront villa in a mobile app, a plot next to an empty Gucci store, and a cartoon monkey that cost me more than my actual car. Location, location, location. The location is nowhere. But I'm early. I'm always early. That's the same as being wrong except you get to say it with confidence.
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jeff.hl
jeff.hl@chameleon_jeff·
Huge congratulations to TradeXYZ and S&P for this historic partnership. I'm honored that these teams choose to build on Hyperliquid. Seeing official S&P500 perpetual futures launch exclusively on Hyperliquid is a validation of everyone's past years of hard work: global access to decentralized finance, perpetual futures as 24/7 price discovery, and Hyperliquid upgrading the existing financial stack to house all of finance. The S&P500 is synonymous with "the market," a single number that captures the essence of the largest economy in the world. Looking forward to tracking the world's most important financial gauge 24/7 on the most liquid permissionless markets.
trade.xyz@tradexyz

S&P Dow Jones Indices and trade[XYZ] have joined forces to launch the first official S&P 500 perpetual contract, available exclusively on Hyperliquid. For 69 years, the S&P 500 has been a defining reference point for global finance. Until now, access to that benchmark has been shaped by market hours, intermediaries, and geography. Today, that changes. The S&P 500 perp is now available 24/7/365, anchored by the official index data required for deep liquidity and institutional confidence at scale.  SPDJI helped define modern indexing. They are stewards of an iconic benchmark, the standard against which portfolios across the globe are measured. We are honored to bring that legacy on-chain. Trade[XYZ] is bringing the world's most iconic assets towards a future of global, continuous markets — a future powered by Hyperliquid.

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Ryan Watkins
Ryan Watkins@RyanWatkins_·
Perps eating global financial markets is the highest conviction thesis I’ve had in my 4 years since starting Syncracy. If we’re right, the sector could produce $350B+ in value over the next 5 years, with the winning chain becoming one of the largest platforms in global finance. As shared in our OG Hyperliquid thesis released over a year ago, we believe $HYPE is the fastest horse in this race. While many skeptics view platforms like Hyperliquid as products of regulatory arbitrage, over time we believe they will come to be understood as a fundamental transformation of the global trading stack. What was once a fragmented world of brokers, exchanges, clearinghouses, among other intermediaries, is giving way to integrated trading systems that are continuously margined, atomically settled, globally accessible, and permissionless to build on. The case isn’t just theoretical as early signs of disruption are already visible in the data. In the early months of perps’ “real world asset” expansion they’re already impacting global financial markets — most recently functioning as a price discovery engine on weekends for oil during the Iran conflict. We believe this is only the beginning and that perps will absorb an increasing share of leveraged directional trading that today lives in retail options, CFDs, and fixed-tenor futures. Even low single-digit penetration of these markets could produce dramatic outcomes for the sector. In parallel, it remains under-appreciated how quickly DEXs like Hyperliquid have emerged as leaders in equity and commodity perps. Should DEXs continue scaling these markets, it will accelerate their share gains from the likes of Binance and Coinbase while also positioning them to challenge legacy derivatives venues such as CME, who will struggle to compete due to regulatory and architectural incompatibilities. Finally, as decentralized venues lead the growth of perps, we believe they will also expand into adjacent categories. Perps are the hardest product to nail on blockchains and once a blockchain can successfully host perps it naturally starts to aggregate other crypto use cases as a byproduct. We are already seeing early evidence of this with Hyperliquid’s expansion into spot trading and stablecoins, and soon prediction markets and options. It’s in this sense that perpetual DEXs are also Trojan horses for the financial platform of the future. —— Enjoyed writing this one with @defi_monk who was the first sell-side analyst to cover Hyperliquid in summer 2024 and among the leading thinkers on the sector. Hope you all enjoy what is a very detailed and data-driven piece that was a long time in the making.
MONK@defi_monk

x.com/i/article/2033…

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Alexander Pack
Alexander Pack@alpackaP·
I was an early investor in like 5+ multi-billion perp dexs that Hyperliquid eventually vanquished. Plus many of the biggest CEXs. Here is exactly how HL won: 1. HLP: every winning perp exchange used an internal market maker. Liquidity is THE product, you can't outsource it. FTX <> Alameda is the infamous failure case, but Jeff also bootstrapped HL with his trading firm. He then took it to the next level by democratizing access to that internal MMer with HLP. 2. Centralization: they launched with a permissioned chain, with the team as sole validators. Competitors were messing around with experimental chains like Starknet and Solana, some parts on-chain and some off-, it was a mess. HL's approach was clean and fast, but also took major reg risk that a US team could never have done. But it paid off, because... 3. The best product: sorry to my founders, but HL was the whole package. The UX, the speed, the auto-margining… wow. CeFi-level trading experience. 4. Airdrop and VC-less fair launch: great narrative to give all tokens to the users and only the users. That’s what crypto is about.
Mippo 🟪@MikeIppolito_

What is the best explanation for why HyperLiquid succeeded where so many other perp DEXes failed? GMX, dydx, gains, vertex, there's a graveyard of chains that got traction and went first, why didn't any stick?

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JJ
JJ@hyperliquidbull·
"Across 35 HIP-3 instruments spanning single-name equities, commodity futures, index ETFs, thematic baskets, FX, and bonds, Hyperliquid's weekend markets predicted the direction of the Monday/Sunday opening gap with 100% accuracy (34 out of 34 assets with a meaningful gap)."
matteo@0xmattegoat

x.com/i/article/2028…

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jack
jack@jack·
we're making @blocks smaller today. here's my note to the company. #### today we're making one of the hardest decisions in the history of our company: we're reducing our organization by nearly half, from over 10,000 people to just under 6,000. that means over 4,000 of you are being asked to leave or entering into consultation. i'll be straight about what's happening, why, and what it means for everyone. first off, if you're one of the people affected, you'll receive your salary for 20 weeks + 1 week per year of tenure, equity vested through the end of may, 6 months of health care, your corporate devices, and $5,000 to put toward whatever you need to help you in this transition (if you’re outside the U.S. you’ll receive similar support but exact details are going to vary based on local requirements). i want you to know that before anything else. everyone will be notified today, whether you're being asked to leave, entering consultation, or asked to stay. we're not making this decision because we're in trouble. our business is strong. gross profit continues to grow, we continue to serve more and more customers, and profitability is improving. but something has changed. we're already seeing that the intelligence tools we’re creating and using, paired with smaller and flatter teams, are enabling a new way of working which fundamentally changes what it means to build and run a company. and that's accelerating rapidly. i had two options: cut gradually over months or years as this shift plays out, or be honest about where we are and act on it now. i chose the latter. repeated rounds of cuts are destructive to morale, to focus, and to the trust that customers and shareholders place in our ability to lead. i'd rather take a hard, clear action now and build from a position we believe in than manage a slow reduction of people toward the same outcome. a smaller company also gives us the space to grow our business the right way, on our own terms, instead of constantly reacting to market pressures. a decision at this scale carries risk. but so does standing still. we've done a full review to determine the roles and people we require to reliably grow the business from here, and we've pressure-tested those decisions from multiple angles. i accept that we may have gotten some of them wrong, and we've built in flexibility to account for that, and do the right thing for our customers. we're not going to just disappear people from slack and email and pretend they were never here. communication channels will stay open through thursday evening (pacific) so everyone can say goodbye properly, and share whatever you wish. i'll also be hosting a live video session to thank everyone at 3:35pm pacific. i know doing it this way might feel awkward. i'd rather it feel awkward and human than efficient and cold. to those of you leaving…i’m grateful for you, and i’m sorry to put you through this. you built what this company is today. that's a fact that i'll honor forever. this decision is not a reflection of what you contributed. you will be a great contributor to any organization going forward. to those staying…i made this decision, and i'll own it. what i'm asking of you is to build with me. we're going to build this company with intelligence at the core of everything we do. how we work, how we create, how we serve our customers. our customers will feel this shift too, and we're going to help them navigate it: towards a future where they can build their own features directly, composed of our capabilities and served through our interfaces. that's what i'm focused on now. expect a note from me tomorrow. jack
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Citrini
Citrini@citrini·
I spent 100 hours over the past week researching, writing and editing the piece we just put out. It’s a scenario, not a prediction like most of our work. But it was rigorously constructed, dismissing it outright requires the kind of intellectual laziness that tends to get expensive. And we’ve released it for free. Hopefully you enjoy it. citriniresearch.com/p/2028gic
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Colin Wu
Colin Wu@colinwu·
最近和币圈朋友们聊天,普遍而统一的感觉是: 做二级的大多放弃炒币去炒美股甚至 A 股了 做一级的大多放弃投资币圈去看 AI 了 股票代币化和预测市场,直接从项目质量和可玩性上毁灭了山寨币 怎么办?静观其变吧
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kel.
kel.@kelxyz_·
Since nobody is going to Eth denver (it’s 70% ppl who are all in nyc anyways) I propose we coordinate a nyc event at the same time instead It won’t have jack to do with Eth but ppl are already mentally primed to network so it works Mix of > dinners > debates > developer showcases If like 20 people are interested enough to dm I’ll set it up, I’m known to host a good dinner debate at a min. If we get to a crazy number I’ll figure it out I got places
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Haseeb >|<
Haseeb >|<@hosseeb·
I woke up today still thinking about Kyle leaving Multicoin. Kyle and I are very different--that's obvious to anyone who knows us. But among crypto VCs, deep down, he was the most like me. He was a dark horse. He built an online following and a platform he had no business having. He turned Multicoin into a franchise out of sheer force of will. He made mistakes in public, and even when no one had his back, he dusted himself off and carried on. He was always convinced he had the right to win, and refused to be bullied or to give up. Kyle is the apotheosis of what made this industry great. He went west in search of adventure, and adventure found him. Over the years, we believed crypto might replace sovereign money, become the currency of the metaverse, replace electoral systems, replace luxury brands, that all physical infrastructure would run on blockchain, that AIs themselves would become blockchain's primary consumers. He made so many batshit crazy stupid investments and believed in them all. I'm still not convinced those things won't happen. But we saw it all, and we dreamt it all together. It's 10 years later now. We've gotten older. Everything took longer than we thought. But in a deeper sense, the crazy bet we made on this space all those years ago, through all the ups and downs, was proven right. Kyle moving on is, for me, incredibly melancholic. Because more than anyone, he represents a changing of the guard. Kyle was wild, contrarian, and almost believed he could make things true just by out-arguing his detractors. His leaving is the truest sign that we as an industry are growing up. The true end of the wild west. The pioneers are never the same as the settlers who follow them. It's a law of human nature. The west still exists. But it's no longer just territory--there are cities there now, with city councils and zoning laws. I am still so bullish crypto. I know it's weird to say with markets roiling. But there's not much patience anymore for dreams that are 10 years away. The dreamer chapter is over. The builder chapter is replacing it. And this is neither good nor bad--it just is. Kyle leaving Multicoin is not the end of crypto VC. It's not even the beginning of the end. But it is the end of the beginning.
Kyle Samani@KyleSamani

0/ A personal update I have decided to step back from @multicoin. It's a bittersweet moment for me because my time at Multicoin has been some of the most meaningful and rewarding of my life. That said, I am excited to take some time off and explore new areas of technology. After nearly a decade in crypto, I’m more confident than ever that crypto is going to fundamentally rewire the circuitry of finance. I believe the Clarity Act will unlock a tidal wave of new entrants and spur adoption unlike anything we’ve seen. I remain bullish on crypto, specifically Solana, and intend to continue making personal investments in the space and supporting Multicoin portfolio companies. Moreover, I will continue to serve on the board of @zama, and I will continue in my role as Chairman at Forward Industries (@FWDind). More on Forward in next tweet. It goes without saying that I also remain bullish on Multicoin. My partners @tushar_jain, Brian Smith, @johnrobertreed, @mattshap1, @xethalis, @SpencerApplebau, and @shayonsengupta are some of the best investors and operators in the world. I am excited for them to continue to drive the crypto ecosystem and Multicoin forward for many years to come. To all of our portfolio founders, LPs, and industry partners—thank you for the opportunity to work with you. For reference, here is the letter we shared with LPs today drive.google.com/file/d/1bsoabi…

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Howard@howardx30·
death of a giant
David Marcus@davidmarcus

A few thoughts about PayPal, nearly 12 years after I left. I woke up this morning to dozens of messages from former PayPal colleagues. It pushed me to finally speak up. I never spoke publicly about the company after I left. Part of that was loyalty to John Donahoe, who gave me an unlikely opportunity, handing the reins of PayPal to a startup guy who, on paper, had no business running a then 15,000-person organization. But part of it was something else: I had left. I chose not to stay and fight for the changes I believed in. Speaking from the sidelines felt like armchair commentary. Easy opinions without the burden of execution. So I stayed quiet. But twelve years of silence is long enough. And today's news makes it clear the pattern I've watched unfold isn't self-correcting. I left PayPal in 2014 because I was deeply frustrated. We had executed a silent turnaround of a company that had lost its soul. We brought back engineering talent, shipped good products quickly, and acquired Braintree and Venmo. The company was on a tear. So much so that Carl Icahn felt compelled to accumulate a position in eBay and push for a PayPal spinoff. At the time, eBay decided to fight Icahn. It was a difficult period for me, caught between what I felt was right for PayPal and my loyalty to the eBay team. This is when Mark Zuckerberg approached me to join Facebook. The combination of his conviction that messaging would become foundational, the appeal of going back to building products at scale, and my growing exhaustion with the internal politics at PayPal and eBay eventually convinced me to leave and join one of the best teams in the world, one I had admired for a long time. In the summer of 2014, I met John in a café in Portola Valley and told him I had decided to leave. During that conversation, he told me that Icahn had effectively won the fight, that PayPal was going to become an independent company, and he tried to convince me to stay on as CEO, but I had already said yes to Mark, and my word is my bond. There was no turning back. After my departure, the board scrambled to find a replacement, and it took a few months for them to land on Dan Schulman. The leadership style shifted from product-led to financially-led. Over time, product conviction gave way to financial optimization. Much of the momentum we had created still persisted and carried the company forward, mainly driven by Bill Ready, who came over in the Braintree acquisition and rose to COO. Under his leadership, Venmo grew exponentially, and total payment volume (TPV) accelerated quickly. But the shift under Schulman became more pronounced after Bill's departure at the end of 2019. With him went the product conviction that had defined the post-spinoff momentum. Then, for a period, COVID-fueled online shopping hid a lot of the company's new weaknesses. During that period, the company made a fundamental miscalculation: it optimized for payment volume instead of margin and differentiation. It leaned into unbranded checkout, where PayPal had the least leverage, instead of branded checkout, where the margin, data, and customer relationship actually lived. Visa masterfully structured a deal that effectively ended PayPal's ability to steer customers toward bank-funded transactions, which had been a core driver of PayPal's economics. Not long after, PayPal lost a significant portion of eBay's volume. Over time, it saw its share of checkout among its most profitable customers steadily erode as Apple Pay and others continued to execute well. The same pattern repeated itself across lending, buy-now-pay-later (BNPL), and new rails. On lending, PayPal missed the opportunity to turn it into a platform weapon. Products like Working Capital were conservative, short-duration, and optimized for loss minimization. Lending never became programmable, never became identity-driven, and never became a reason for merchants or consumers to choose PayPal over something else. The missed opportunity in BNPL was even more striking. Klarna, Affirm, and Afterpay didn't just offer installment payments, they built consumer finance brands, persistent credit identities, and new shopping behaviors. PayPal saw the BNPL turn, entered the market, and had every advantage: distribution, trust, and merchant relationships. But BNPL was treated as a defensive checkout feature rather than an offensive category. There was no attempt to turn it into a core consumer relationship, no super-app behavior, and no meaningful differentiation for merchants. Others built platforms, PayPal added a feature. The failure to lean into building and owning new rails followed the same logic. After the spinoff, PayPal had a once-in-a-generation opportunity to build a global, at scale payment network. Instead, the company focused on building on top of existing networks and third-party rails. More recently, that mindset carried over to PYUSD. Technically, the product was sound. Strategically, it launched without a compelling transactional reason to exist. PYUSD had distribution, but no organic demand. It was not embedded deeply enough into flows to become a true settlement layer, a cross-border merchant rail, or a programmable money primitive. It sat adjacent to the product instead of inside the core of it. Acquisitions during this period followed a similar pattern. Honey was not a strategic acquisition for PayPal. It added activity, but not leverage. It lived outside the transaction, monetized affiliate economics rather than payment economics, and never meaningfully strengthened PayPal's control of the customer or the checkout moment. Xoom solved a real problem in remittances, but it never compounded PayPal's advantage. It scaled volume without changing the underlying rails, identity graph, or settlement model, and as importantly, it didn’t cater to a high-value, high-margin customer archetype. None of these were bad companies. They were just a wrong fit for PayPal and became unnecessary distractions. The board eventually recognized the problem. In 2023, they brought in Alex Chriss, an Intuit veteran with a strong product background, explicitly to restore product conviction. It was the right instinct. But Alex came from software, not payments. He understood SMB product development. He didn't have the muscle memory for transaction economics, network effects, or settlement infrastructure. In hindsight, he also made an error: clearing out much of the leadership team that understood payments deeply. Executives with years of institutional knowledge departed within his first year. This morning, Alex was removed as CEO. Branded checkout grew 1% last quarter. The board tapped another operator, Enrique Lores, the former HP CEO who's been on the PayPal board for five years. I don’t know Enrique. And he might be a great leader, but on paper at least, he’s a hardware executive. For a payments company. The common thread through all of this is incentive design. Once PayPal became independent, short/medium-term predictability beat long-term vision and ambition. Stock performance mattered more than platform risk and network opportunity. Financial optimization replaced product conviction. I'm not claiming I would have made every call differently. Running a public company at scale involves tradeoffs I didn't have to make after I left. But the pattern, choosing predictability over platform risk, again and again, was a choice, not an inevitability. Over time, the company that had every advantage and could’ve become the most consequential and relevant payments company of our time, lost its mojo, its product edge, and its ability to compete in a market that’s being rewired and reinvented in front of our eyes. That's the part that's hardest to watch for a company I care so deeply about.

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Andrew Kang
Andrew Kang@Rewkang·
The last crypto bubbles were an extreme misallocation of capital especially in the backdrop of the 4th Industrial Revolution enabled by AI The bubbles were driven by excess liquidity seeking world changing technology. This technology has arrived in the form of AI and Robotics which will drive and capture real economic value. Given the effects on productivity, efficiency, and development speed, we will see a new normal of double digit economic growth across both new companies and also tangential companies It is not too late to get involved, the 4th Industrial Revolution is just starting
Andrew Kang@Rewkang

Crypto to Deep Tech (Humanoid robotics, Nuclear Fusion, New age biomed, Space) will be a legendary parlay for the history books

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