BlockLayer Podcast

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BlockLayer Podcast

BlockLayer Podcast

@0xBlockLayer

Accelerating Web3, documenting the builders. Podcast with top guests on conviction, craft, and scaling. 📧 [email protected]

New York, NY Sumali Nisan 2020
86 Sinusundan113.6K Mga Tagasunod
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
How to Stop Crypto From Hitting $10 Trillion Charlie Munger liked to say: "Invert, always invert." Instead of asking how to succeed, ask how to fail. So here are a few reliable ways to make sure crypto never becomes a $10 trillion market. Today, we're inverting the question to find the path forward.👇 ~~ Article by @kenzixbt ~~ Assume the World Cares About Our Chains Since the inception of crypto, the industry has operated around chains. And for a long time, that was the correct thing to do. Chains are the foundation on which everything else runs. So it's very important that we get that part right. And that's exactly what we did. Over the first fifteen years of crypto, blockchains became the most heavily funded category in the industry. The smartest minds, from Satoshi to Vitalik to Anatoly, have spent the prime of their lives building blockchains the way they believed they should be built. And this practice of building around chains has had lollapalooza effects on how everything else happens in the industry. Value accrual has long been understood to accrue at the chain layer, popularized by the fat protocol thesis. Chain tokens have been the best performing assets in the history of crypto. From ETH to SOL to BNB, these have provided some of the best returns to investors over the last decade. Wallets became the most widely used interfaces in the industry, tools designed primarily to help users interact with what's happening onchain. Builders and users began organizing themselves around chains, gravitating toward the ecosystem that resonated with them. This framing has worked really well for us. The industry needed an anchor in crypto's early years. Chains became that anchor. They became flagbearers for different versions of the crypto ethos, each optimizing for a different set of trade-offs. Crypto is now a $4 trillion market. All of this made sense. But this moment should also mark the beginning of the end of the idea that crypto should revolve around chains. Because today, this same framing is starting to work against us. And the simple reason is fragmentation. Fragmentation of liquidity. Fragmentation of capital. Fragmentation of users. Fragmentation of talent. Fragmentation of attention. Under chain-first thinking, we're fragmented at the core and operate in isolation. We behave as if things happen in isolation in this industry. While in reality, crypto is a tightly coupled collection of small markets, which together operate as a single universal market. Think about this question posed by a16z crypto's X account: Which chains are you building on? It shows exactly what's wrong with this thinking around chains. Why does it matter if someone is building on Ethereum or Solana or xyz chain? What matters is that they're building in crypto. It's one market. Yet because we frame crypto as a collection of separate chains, we allocate resources accordingly. Liquidity, capital, users, and builders are spread thin across different environments, each optimizing its own walled garden. That local optimization comes at the expense of global outcomes. This is the inversion we need to make as an industry. We need to stop building for our chains and start building for crypto. Otherwise, we risk optimizing individual pieces while stifling the growth of the market as a whole. The analogy we can learn from is countries. Countries are divided into states to improve local execution, but they compete and operate as a single economy on the global stage. The states work together as a united front. No serious country optimizes its states at the expense of its national market. Crypto needs a similar unification moment. Chains are the states. Crypto is the country. We're all divided into states like chains, but we're all part of one big country called crypto—and we have to come together as a united front to make crypto a bigger market. Markets, not chains. That should be the rallying call for the future of crypto. To the outside world, this is already the truth. When institutions, fintechs, governments, or consumer platforms evaluate crypto, they don't see chains, they see a large, growing market. If we want the next leg of adoption, we have to align with that reality and be willing to set aside internal incentives, tribal loyalties, and bag bias. That means convincing the world why crypto as a market is a massive opportunity: to rebuild financial rails onchain. Rails that are globally accessible, rooted in transparent public ledgers, and that move value faster and cheaper for everyone. Build Things and Wait for People to Come One of the lazier criticisms of crypto is that it hasn't built anything people actually want. I don't buy it. That narrative is consensus because it's easy to take a shot on crypto. In reality, it starts from the wrong expectations and applies the wrong mental model. It assumes crypto should have produced consumer social apps, when in reality crypto has been rebuilding the financial layer of the world from scratch—so it's inevitable that we have applications that look financial and speculative by nature. And I think that's the actual innovation of crypto. Crypto embeds the ability to move value directly into the internet layer. This was missing from the world and we're changing that. Any crypto application will, in some form, express that property. Crypto has built a lot of cool things. But the negative outlook comes from the fact that all of them are financial primitives or linked to speculation somehow. But on that point, I'd like to point that the whole world operates on speculation, and crypto is rebuilding the legacy financial system from scratch with new principles. So it's no surprise that the most widely used crypto applications today include trading terminals, exchange frontends, leverage platforms, and memecoin markets. From the outside, this looks like financial nihilism. But in reality, it's just crypto serving the needs of the world. In doing so, we've created entirely new markets. Memecoins turn attention and internet culture into tradeable assets. Prediction markets present a way to speculate on the events of the world. NFTs created a native digital form for art and ownership rights. DeFi rebuilt lending and borrowing without credit scores, replacing reputation with collateral and math. But where the industry does face a real challenge now is not application building, but distribution. Up to this point, crypto could grow by building better technology and assuming users would eventually show up. That phase is over. From here on, growth depends on whether we can reach people who don't already care about crypto. Hence, crypto has a distribution challenge. Our problem is simple but hard to solve: how do we market to the world that doesn't live on crypto twitter? Right now, crypto marketing is overwhelmingly inward-facing. We talk to builders, traders, and power users on Crypto Twitter and convince ourselves we're "educating the market." In reality, we're preaching to the same audience over and over again. I think we need distribution channels that already reach the mainstream. And a lot of you will hate me for saying this but, centralized exchanges have the reach, trust and familiarity to take crypto mainstream: They have the household name brand recognition already. They have revenues and marketing budgets that allow them to market to the mainstream. They have products that the average investor wants. Think about it: How many people outside of crypto know about Uniswap? Very few. How many people outside of crypto know about Binance / Coinbase? A lot. So maybe CEXs become the gateway for onboarding the next wave of users. But the lesson to take from CEXs for crypto's growth is that we need to prioritize distribution and market crypto to the world in simple terms. Build trusted brands and market to the average investor and not just the average crypto bro. From here on, crypto's success depends less on better protocols and more on better communication. We need to think like marketers, not just builders. If we want adoption, we have to make crypto legible, desirable, and accessible to the rest of the world, and actively bring users in instead of waiting for them to show up. Sell Our Soul to the Suits One quick way to make sure crypto fails is to sell out to the suits at the finish line. After spending fifteen years proving that crypto deserves to be taken seriously, there will be a temptation to make compromises to "close the deal" with institutions. To soften positions in the name of pragmatism. To meet the market where it is. That would be the biggest mistake we could make. As institutions come onchain, it becomes even more important for crypto to hold the line on the things that actually make it valuable: self-custody, censorship resistance, permissionless access, and open participation. Now that crypto has a seat at the table, the worst thing we could do is pretend those principles are negotiable. If we do this, we will lose. Because if we remove what makes crypto fundamentally better, we'll be left competing with incumbents on their terms. There are a few obvious ways this can go wrong. Take stablecoins. They are simply a better way to move value over the internet: faster settlement, lower costs, global reach. Treating CBDCs as acceptable substitutes would undermine the entire point. Or take private chains. People often push them as a reasonable middle ground to onboard institutions to crypto, but in reality, they're just mid-curving. Private chains sacrifice transparency and composability—and these are not acceptable trade-offs we should be willing to take. If institutions want to build in crypto, they should build things that align with the crypto ethos. Crypto doesn't need to prove it belongs anymore. That argument is over. Now we need to preserve the properties that made it worth adopting in the first place. No trade-offs at the home stretch. Conclusion If crypto wants to fail to become a $10 trillion market, the playbook is clear: Obsess over chains instead of markets. Fragment into walled gardens. Build applications without figuring out distribution. Abandon our ethos. Instead of going down this forbidden path, we need to prioritize around the right things: Markets matter more than chains. Applications matter more than infrastructure. Access to crypto as a market matters most. Doubling down on properties that make crypto, crypto. Crypto doesn't need a miracle to get to $10 trillion. It just needs to stop doing the things that prevent it from getting there. Invert those habits, and the rest takes care of itself. Markets usually do.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
“After moving from Berlin to Silicon Valley, I found myself bored at a new school — so I started spending time at my dad’s SAP Lab: fast internet, endless reading, and the beginning of my love for technology.” Our host @kenzixbt sits down with @michaelh_0g (@0G_labs) to trace his origin story — from early curiosity and a growing obsession with tech to his path into Web3, and ultimately, the founding of his company.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
“DA layers really differ across three dimensions: performance, programmability, and AI-native design — because on-chain AI can’t operate in a world measured in mere megabytes per second.” @sachitakahara catches up with @michaelh_0g, Founder of @0G_labs, to break down how 0G compares with Celestia, Avail, and EigenDA: why throughput needs to increase by orders of magnitude, how to move beyond the broadcast bottleneck, and why a decentralized storage network is essential for ultra-fast data ingestion and retrieval.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
“Back in 2016–17, crypto felt like a true idea factory — hundreds of experiments, zero gatekeeping, and pure creative energy.” Our host @dikshaarden sits down with @michaelh_0g, Founder of @0G_labs, to explore one of the most exciting parts of building in Web3: a culture shaped by experimentation first. They also dive into how tokenization creates new ways to fund and sustain projects — including open-source work — beyond the limits of the traditional Web2 business model.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
This week’s episode features Michael Heinrich (@michaelh_0g), founder of 0G Labs (@0G_labs). We dive into Michael’s journey from high school boredom to building 0G Labs, the first modular AI blockchain platform, and how an unconventional path shaped the way he thinks about leadership, focus, and company building. The conversation explores how spiritual practices like meditation influenced Michael’s mindset as a founder, helping him build with more clarity, discipline, and long-term conviction. Michael also breaks down the future of decentralized AI infrastructure, and why community-owned data and compute networks may become one of the most important foundations for the next era of artificial intelligence. We dig into how 0G Labs is building AI blockchain tools and applications that connect decentralized networks, unlock data infrastructure, and make storage, machine learning, and AI systems more open for businesses and builders. At its core, this episode is about the intersection of AI, crypto, data ownership, and founder psychology — and why the next wave of AI infrastructure may need to be decentralized from day one.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
Selling crypto to cover expenses hurts: you trigger taxes and lose exposure. DeFi borrowing fixes both. Instead of selling your ETH, lock it as collateral, borrow USDC instantly onchain, spend like cash, and stay long — no taxable event in the U.S. And now, do this directly through Coinbase👇 ~~ Analysis by @punk4053 ~~ This is an integration I can happily recommend to my family and friends, as @coinbase is one of the most trusted and easy-to-navigate crypto exchanges, while @Morpho is one of the most proven and dependable DeFi lending protocols. With this integration, you can now borrow against your ETH without leaving the comfort of the Coinbase app. Assuming you already have some ETH holdings on Coinbase, you just: 1. Click on your ETH balance to bring up your Ethereum dashboard. 2. Scroll down to the "Borrow" tab and press "Start." 3. Review the primer info—your Borrow up to amount (based on your ETH deposited to Coinbase), the Variable rate (the fluctuating interest Morpho will charge on your loan), and the Liquidation LTV (the "loan-to-value" point at which your underlying ETH could be liquidated for repayment)—and then press "Continue." 4. Input the amount of USDC you want to borrow, then click "Review loan." 5. Check that your loan details are satisfactory. When ready, press "Borrow now," then "Accept and continue." Your loan will be submitted, though it may take a minute or two to finalize in Coinbase's UI. That's all it takes to get started! If you open a loan, navigate to your Coinbase "Cash" tab and in the "Borrow" section you'll see a "Manage Loans" button. Go here for the "Repay" option to pay back the USDC you borrowed over time. These ETH-backed loans have a flexible term, so you don't have to pay back specific amounts per a specific schedule. Just repay whenever in whatever amounts suit you, though keep a close eye on your loan health to avoid liquidation. Also, keep in mind that USDC borrowed on Coinbase can't be used for buying crypto on Coinbase, so this particular avenue is meant for cashing out and spending. As far as DeFi onramps go, this integration is about as simple and safe as it gets. If you or someone you know hasn't gotten around to borrowing against ETH yet, this is certainly a good place to start.
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BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
The Ethereum L2 Squeeze Much will come in the wake of Vitalik's declaration that "the original vision of L2s... no longer makes sense." With the L1 scaling and blockspace now an abundant commodity, L2s and Alt-EVM chains must differentiate or get squeezed out 👇 ~~ Analysis by @kenzixbt ~~ Last month, Vitalik Buterin sparked debate with a blog post stating that "the original vision of L2s and their role in Ethereum no longer makes sense." Days later, he sharpened the message: > "If you make an EVM chain without an optimistic bridge to Ethereum (aka an alt L1), that's even worse. We don't friggin need more copypasta EVM chains, and we definitely don't need even more L1s. L1 is scaling and is going to bring lots of EVM blockspace." As L1 scales, it becomes cheaper and more capable. Mainnet is becoming the blockchain that L2s aspired to become, without the complexities of L2 designs. This forces L2s and Alt-EVM L1s to differentiate or get squeezed out. The Squeeze The pressure has been building for months. L2 and Alt-EVM L1 tokens are down 80-90% from highs, with adoption plateauing once airdrops ended. Last week Base announced it's leaving Optimism's Superchain, taking 97% of the collective's real economic value with it. The rationale: ship faster, reduce dependencies, and keep fees in-house. Beyond recalibration, chains face revenue pressures as the industry matures. Blockspace is no longer scarce. Too many chains compete for users, turning differentiation into a commodity. Meanwhile, revenue-generating chains like Hyperliquid set a new standard, proving sustainable economics matter more than narrative. The "gas fee only" model is breaking down. Chains must find a niche justifying their existence off Mainnet and generate revenue to sustain themselves. How Chains Are Responding While Vitalik's post served as a messaging wakeup call, months of rough metrics had already led EVM L1s and Ethereum L2s to seek deeper differentiation. > Polygon: The Payments Stack. Even before Vitalik's post, Polygon pivoted to become a "revenue-generating blockchain company." In January, @0xPolygon Labs announced $250M in acquisitions: Coinme (payments firm with money transmitter licenses) and Sequence (wallet infrastructure). These anchor the forthcoming "Open Money Stack," a framework for regulated stablecoin payments launching later this year. Stablecoins see the most real-world adoption globally. USDC in Polymarket drives significant Polygon activity. Stablecoin transactions on Polygon outpace all other L2s, gaining speed from these acquisitions, prediction market growth, and the October 2025 Rio upgrade, which overhauled the chain's architecture for payment-specific performance. Polygon hasn't explicitly tied this pivot to POL token value accrual yet, but the strategic direction is clear. > Sonic: Vertical Integration. Alt-EVM L1 @SonicLabs takes a different approach. In their [early February post, Sonic announced it's abandoning the "gas fee only" model entirely. With blockspace commoditized, gas fees no longer sustain chains. Sonic's solution: build and acquire core DeFi products—trading infrastructure, lending, liquidity provision, stablecoins, staking—to operate in-house. Revenue flows directly back to the S token rather than external apps. Base serves as a cautionary tale, highlighting the dangers of relying on external parties to generate chain value. Unlike Polygon, Sonic explicitly addresses token value accrual. Buybacks will only come when real protocol revenue develops from these integrated solutions. The sequencing matters. Optimism announced last month they'd allocate 50% of Superchain revenue to token buybacks, then their primary revenue vehicle left. What Comes Next @VitalikButerin by reiterating that existing L2s and EVM chains can bring new features to the table: Privacy (@aztecnetwork). App-specific efficiency. Ultra-low latency. Expect chains to respond in three ways: > Alt-L1s → Rollups. Some may follow Celo's path from last cycle, converting into rollups and trading sovereignty for tighter Ethereum alignment. > Acquisitions. Well-capitalized chains will pursue acquisitions to accelerate pivots, as Polygon has done and Sonic suggests it will. > Verticalization. More chains will pick a specific category and build infrastructure to own it. We'll likely see buyback talk, but hopefully as a secondary priority. Chains announcing buybacks before making adjustments put the cart before the horse. The market will punish them if they lack revenue to support it. The era of "we do everything" L2s is ending. What replaces it looks like Polygon's payments focus or Sonic's vertical integration: chains that identify their category, build revenue around it, and earn the right to reward holders. It's a step in the right direction, but will cause pain.
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Melon Podcast
Melon Podcast@MelonPodcasts·
After moving from Berlin to Silicon Valley, I found myself bored at a new school, so I started spending time at my dad's SAP Lab: fast internet, endless reading, and the beginning of my love for technology." Our host @mariawilliamsmp sits down with @michaelh_0g (@0G_labs) to trace his origin story, from early curiosity and a growing obsession with tech to his path into Web3, and ultimately, the founding of his company.
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Melon Podcast
Melon Podcast@MelonPodcasts·
After moving from Berlin to Silicon Valley, I found myself bored at a new school, so I started spending time at my dad's SAP Lab: fast internet, endless reading, and the start of my love for technology." Our host @M4rcusHale sits down with @michaelh_0g (@0G_labs) to trace his origin story. Early curiosity, a growing obsession with tech, his path into Web3, and the founding of his company.
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Melon Podcast
Melon Podcast@MelonPodcasts·
this week on melon: anna kazlauskas (@annakaz), founder of @Vana we get into her jump from tradfi into decentralized ai, and what it takes to build a platform where people own their data and choose how it trains models. tokenomics as core infra, not a side quest we hit the real startup stuff too: early hires, mission fit over resumes, staying focused when the narrative shifts every week and we close on the ai data crunch. why private data is uniquely valuable, how data daos unlock it, and what separates a dao from a trust or a union
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Melon Podcast
Melon Podcast@MelonPodcasts·
"gary gensler was teaching a class while i was on campus. i skipped it, and i've regretted it ever since" our host @M4rcusHale links up with @annakaz, founder of @Vana, on the small early moments that quietly shape how you think. brushing up against future regulators, and realizing way too late which rooms you should've been in
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
“We focused on four core areas: finance, gaming, social, and entertainment — but DeFi on @Aptos has seen the strongest traction.” @sachitakahara sits down with @averyching to unpack Aptos’ real-world use cases and why DeFi has emerged as the breakout category: the safety of Move, the composability that allows products to plug into larger protocols, and an ecosystem that is now beginning to hit meaningful momentum.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
“Bitcoin was the first distributed systems paper I read with an economic layer built into it — and that changed everything.” @kenzixbt catches up with @averyching, Co-Founder & CTO of @Aptos, to trace his journey from high-performance computing and supercomputers, to scaling data infrastructure at Meta, to discovering Bitcoin and realizing that crypto was distributed systems with incentives natively embedded — the insight that ultimately led him to co-found Aptos Labs.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
“What inspires you to get up and build every day? For me, it’s pushing Web3 forward — making blockchain a true public utility for everyone.” @dikshaarden sits down with @averyching (Co-Founder & CTO of @Aptos) to talk about what drives him: building the next era of the internet where blockchain brings ownership back to users and enables permissionless, trustless transactions that connect people globally.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
New episode out today featuring @AveryChing - Co-Founder & CTO of @Aptos. We explore the intersection of crypto and Al, Aptos' fundraising journey, how the network compares to other Layer 1s such as Solana and Ethereum, and what lies ahead for the Move programming language. Avery also shares his perspective on decentralized use cases, Aptos' long-term ambitions, and how more than a decade spent scaling distributed systems at Meta — including his work on the Diem blockchain — continues to shape his vision for the future of Web3 infrastructure.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
In a grim bit of irony, the very day Binance published its postmortem on the record-setting 10/10 liquidations, crypto investors were subjected to another brutal flash crash. Last Friday, BTC dropped down deep into the 70s, ETH close to $2K, while more than $2.5B in leveraged positions were wiped out. Crypto wasn't alone—gold and silver saw historic volatility too. Here's what went down.👇 ~~ Analysis by @kenzixbt ~~ New Blood at The Fed Late Thursday, @Polymarket signalled that Kevin Warsh would be the next Federal Reserve Chair, with Trump confirming the appointment the next morning. Markets reacted immediately and harshly. Warsh built his reputation as a "hard money" advocate during his time at the Fed in the late 2000s, calling for the central bank to shrink its balance sheet and tighten policy. That spooked investors, who started pricing in higher interest rates and tighter monetary policy. But context matters. Warsh's hawkish stance came when he wasn't in charge. Now he's entering the Fed against the backdrop of Trump's constant meddling in monetary policy. Warsh appears to have wooed the President by publicly criticizing Powell's rate cut skittishness. Powell's reluctance to cut rates has earned the White House's ire. Trump's administration has indicated a pivot toward more quickly lowering interest rates to crank the AI boom into hypergrowth. Treasury Secretary Bessent said he wants the new Fed chair to be a "supporter" of the AI productivity boom—someone willing to let the economy run hot. The Warsh news didn't land in a vacuum. A partial U.S. government shutdown added to the risk-off mood. Reports of an explosion at Iran's Bandar Abbas port raised geopolitical tensions. Combined with Fed uncertainty, these factors created the conditions for a broad selloff. Historic Metal Moves and the China Factor While crypto grabbed headlines, the real historic action was in precious metals. Silver's single-day drop last Friday ranks among the largest in its recorded market history. Gold volatility spiked to levels only seen during the 2008 financial crisis and the COVID crash in March 2020. To understand why metals have been so volatile, you have to understand China's role. Chinese investors have been a major force behind the gold and silver rally over the past year. With the country's property market in free fall and the banking system sitting on hidden losses, wealthy households have been seeking safe havens. Gold and silver fit the bill—especially since Bitcoin access is heavily restricted onshore. China's economy is roughly two-thirds the size of the U.S., yet its central bank holds far less gold—only about 10% of its reserves compared to 80% for the United States. According to charts from @caprioleio, over the past two years, China's gold reserves have increased nearly tenfold. Silver in China had been trading at a 42% premium over international prices. As @abcampbell framed it: "If you're a rich Chinese household, do you want more money in a zombie banking system with trillions of hidden losses? Or are you okay buying physical silver at elevated levels and risking a drawdown?" For months the pattern held: New York would sell, Shanghai would buy, and prices would recover. That pattern broke on Friday. When China opened, investors sold gold in size. The local Chinese silver ETF was halted. The rescue bid that Western bulls had relied on didn't show up. Without that backstop, prices fell through the floor. Bitcoin: Outflows Accelerate U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs saw roughly $1.49B exit during the final week of January. Thursday's $818M outflow was the largest single-day redemption of 2026. For the full month, bitcoin ETFs lost approximately $1.6B, making January the third-worst month on record. That's a stark reversal from early January, when ETFs pulled in over $1.16B in the first two trading days. Spot ether ETFs lost around $353M for January, with $253M exiting last Thursday alone. The synchronized outflows make clear institutions were reducing crypto exposure broadly. The Warning Sign There's a pattern worth paying attention to here. Historically, as investor @qthomp shows, every time Bitcoin drops 20-30% or more, equities tend to follow. Given that crypto markets trade 24/7, react faster to macro shifts, and carry more leverage, the industry acts as a "canary in the coal mine." Gold volatility sitting at crisis-level readings reinforces the concern. These spikes in precious metals have historically preceded broader market turmoil, not followed it. None of this means equities will definitely crash. But when crypto, gold, silver, and insider behavior all flash warning signs at once, it's worth paying attention. The question now is whether this is another false alarm or the start of something bigger.
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leak.me | Crypto KOL Tracker
leak.me | Crypto KOL Tracker@leakmealpha·
Top Projects/Accounts followed by KOLs in the last 6h: 1. Sakana AI (@sakanaailabs) 2. hardmaru (@hardmaru) 3. Ethan (@ethanabuck) 4. Andrew Curran (@andrewcurran_) 5. BlockLayer Podcast (@blocklayercast) 6. Nick Nemeth (Mispriced Assets) (@nicknemo17) 7. bryan (@bryzonx) 8. Ren (@ren_stocks) 9. Ren Takasawa (@rentakasawa) 10. HypeTerminal (@hypeterminal_) Ad: best trading terminal @leakme" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">axiom.trade/@leakme Our 24h data is free for everyone! Visit leak.me
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Arcium ☂️
Arcium ☂️@Arcium·
ARX is available across @solana. See all the venues below ↓
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
“What happens when someone inside one of the most iconic retail platforms of the last cycle sees its limits up close?” @kenzixbt speaks with @jayendra_jog, Co-Founder of @SeiNetwork, to trace the path that took him from the early days of Robinhood in Palo Alto — through hypergrowth, the IPO era, and the shock of the GameStop moment — to building in crypto. They discuss how witnessing the mechanics and constraints of traditional financial infrastructure firsthand reshaped his thinking, why the suspension of buys during one of retail’s most defining episodes left such a lasting impression, and how that experience ultimately pushed him toward systems designed to be more open, more resilient, and less dependent on centralized control.
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BlockLayer Podcast
BlockLayer Podcast@0xBlockLayer·
“High-performance infrastructure only matters if it expands what users can actually do onchain — and makes that experience accessible at scale.” @sachitakahara sits down with @jayendra_jog, Co-Founder of @SeiNetwork, to examine why parallelized execution is becoming increasingly important for the next generation of onchain applications. From trading and DeFi to high-frequency user activity that simply breaks in low-throughput environments, they discuss how lower fees and greater execution capacity can fundamentally reshape the user experience — especially for smaller participants who are otherwise priced out. They also explore how this plays out in practice through projects like Bancor’s Carbon DeFi, where Sei has emerged as the ecosystem driving the strongest activity and volume, underscoring how performance advantages translate into real adoption.
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