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The street's best takes on crypto — without the timeline.

A curated feed of what serious analysts are saying about specific tokens, equities, and private companies. Updated continuously.

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Latest takes

All takes are our summaries. Tap View on Xfor the analyst's original words.

Omar
Omar@TheOneandOmsy·1d

Omar argues Western Union's stablecoin strategy—launching USDPT on Solana this quarter alongside an offramp network and consumer card—offers its best path to survival by converting ~$500M in daily pre-funding float into real-time settlement and unlocking hundreds of millions more trapped across correspondent banking. If the business gains traction, WU reprices materially or becomes an acquisition target for Circle, which could roll it into Arc and consolidate merchant and consumer payment flows across a unified chain.

Baheet
Baheet@Baheet_·1d

Is Sui a Good Chain for Prediction Markets?

Baheet argues Sui's object-centric architecture, Move language, 390ms finality via Mysticeti, native DeepBook v3 CLOB, and March 2026-launched USDsui stablecoin create an underutilized technical foundation for prediction markets as the category scaled to $20-27 billion monthly volumes across Polymarket and Kalshi in 2026. While Polymarket's VP of Engineering acknowledged infrastructure strain from rapid traction—citing on-chain latency, transaction cancellations, and CLOB stability issues—Sui remains absent from the dominant prediction market apps, presenting a first-mover opportunity for builders prioritizing high-frequency scalar markets and institutional settlement over ecosystem maturity.

adcv_@adcv_·1d

What should DeFi rates really be? Probably not 12%

Adcv_ argues Tom Dunleavy's 12.55% DeFi lending yield overstates risk through double-counting independent risk premia that are already captured in expected loss, and using the wrong risk-free anchor. Using SOFR at 3.6% instead of the 10Y Treasury, the correct decomposition yields 3.95% for prime DeFi (Steakhouse USDC benchmark) and 7.1% for high-yield DeFi, implying Dunleavy's figure prices in a 7% expected loss rather than accurately reflecting current DeFi risk.

yang
yang@hftgod·2d

Yang argues Hyperliquid's priority fees update will substantially reshape market structure by disadvantaging latency-focused market makers like Alber Blanc and Pinely who currently dominate the exchange.

ltrd
ltrd@ltrd_·2d

RAVE: Step-by-step breakdown

ltrd analyzed the RAVE pump-and-dump using on-chain microstructure data, finding that Bitget spot—not major exchanges like Coinbase or Kraken—showed 10x liquidity and a -$80mm cumulative delta, suggesting a designated market maker absorbed selling pressure through aggressive limit orders. The pattern indicates arbitrage between Bitget spot and Binance perpetuals, with perps showing 200bps permanent market impact, likely netting the DMM millions while the project or OTC buyer used the liquidity to push price up from $0.25 to $25 before a 95% retracement.

Kunal Doshi
Kunal Doshi@Kunallegendd·2d

Polymarket Might Be Outgrowing Polygon

Kunal argues Polymarket's shift into perpetual futures exposes limitations in its reliance on Polygon's architecture. Perps demand low-latency, deterministic execution and cancel priority that Polygon's hybrid offchain-onchain model cannot reliably guarantee, forcing market makers to widen spreads and reducing liquidity. To compete with systems like Hyperliquid's HyperCore, Polymarket would likely need to launch its own chain—capturing transaction and sequencing fees currently worth low single digits in revenue uplift, but increasingly valuable as perps unlock new revenue streams like liquidations.

Tom Dunleavy@dunleavy89·3d

What should DeFi Rates really be?

Tom argues the $292M KelpDAO exploit and subsequent $13B TVL drain exposed severe DeFi mispricing: deposits earning 5% on major protocols like Aave accept BB-rated pricing for technically worse-than-CCC risk. Using TradFi credit frameworks, DeFi's 1.5-2.0% forward probability of default with 90% loss given default requires a fair yield floor of 12.55-13%, not 5.5%, because exploits cascade in minutes rather than quarters and composability failures create unauditable contagion that deposits absorb without protocol failure.

Alex
Alex@0xpampa·3d

The Shape of a Market: The Case for Kraken

Alex values Payward at $20B as fairly priced for today's exchange business (8-9x revenue on $2.2B adjusted revenue in 2025), with downside anchored by the crypto-exchange floor. The asymmetric upside lies in three catalysts: Bitnomial's CFTC-licensed clearing business (where switching costs are significant once institutional firms connect), xStocks tokenized equities (already $320M+ AUM with the Nasdaq partnership expected H1 2027), and banking products via the Fed Master Account and Wyoming charter. No competitor combines all four capabilities, and executing this stack could unlock substantially higher value.

Fernando Pertini
Fernando Pertini@DecodeMarkets·4d

Sam Altman's Other Bet: Identity for a World Full of AI

In a world saturated with AI agents, Altman's Worldcoin identity project becomes essential infrastructure — you need a provably-human layer. Fernando frames identity-for-AI as a category hiding in plain sight: when 'more things look like people than people do', the iris-scan primitive becomes the on-ramp for every other consumer product that needs to distinguish humans from bots.

Kaviish
Kaviish@kaviish·4d

Kalshi: The CME for Events

Kalshi did $260M fee revenue on $23.8B notional in 2025 — a 19x YoY jump. Q1 2026 accelerated: $395M gross fees on $30.5B volume. Kaviish argues Kalshi is becoming the CME of events — a derivatives exchange for outcome contracts, not just a gambling venue. The margin + volume trajectory resembles a capital markets exchange more than a consumer sportsbook.