Arden
Blackwing Lair Raider

New Hampshire Becomes First State to Approve Crypto Reserve Law
Governor Kelly Ayotte signed a bill into law that allows the investment of a portion of the state's public funds in precious metals and crypto assets.
Because shit happens? Even sound reasoning can be thrown off by unforeseen events.I mean, who the fuck would sell more than they need to of the obvious superior store of wealth that will definitely continue to increase in value relative to the dollar because it hasn't hit critical mass yet? If he doesn't need $300 million today for some reason, why would he liquidate it when it will be worth $3 billion at some point in the future?
I’m not sure alts deserve love. I get the money making aspect of alts. But I’ve seen maybe 4-5 alt coins that offer non-pumpndump value. They are all shit.
I’m not a Bitcoin purist or anything but at least I get the general concept there. But the alt coins, in general are pure garbage
For someone who dabbles….wtf does “tokenize stocks” mean? By definition are they not already ”tokenized” I buy a share and this I own 1 “amc-coin” or “google-coin”…is that not exactly what a share is?
about the ONLY thing I can see improving via “tokenizing” stocks is that it would, in theory, 100% put a stop to shaded ass market shit like shorting more shares than exist and shit like that as every “token” would be on chain and tracked. So in that sense I’m for it, but it’s not a truly novel concept. The SEC Could stop the shady shit now if it wanted(it doesn’t), it’s not a technology problem.
Some half truths there.
First to note, last year trade settlements were updated to T+1, so all trades are settled overnight basically.
Also, there are plenty of brokers that do not participate in payments for order flow. There are also brokers that offer direct exchange routing.
It’s Joe Blow retail who either dabble in stocks and aren’t aware of it or just buy and hold and don’t care about it.
This was one of the primary real world use cases for NFTs. When we saw the NFT boom/bust recently it was really more of a proof of concept run for what NFTs could do. An NFT, by virtue of being "non fungible" means if functions like a cryptographically verifiable contract. When you think about it, a share of stock is really a contract from the originating company designating certain ownership rights to you. Done right, NFTs could digitally replace virtually any contract we have now. This would include things like deeds to property, title to your car, wills, birth/death certificates. For instance you could buy a car, and part of that purchase would be transferring an NFT representing the car (i.e. tokenizing the car) to your digital wallet.For someone who dabbles….wtf does “tokenize stocks” mean? By definition are they not already ”tokenized” I buy a share and this I own 1 “amc-coin” or “google-coin”…is that not exactly what a share is?
about the ONLY thing I can see improving via “tokenizing” stocks is that it would, in theory, 100% put a stop to shaded ass market shit like shorting more shares than exist and shit like that as every “token” would be on chain and tracked. So in that sense I’m for it, but it’s not a truly novel concept. The SEC Could stop the shady shit now if it wanted(it doesn’t), it’s not a technology problem.
Oh sweet summer child.
You pay your broker for stock, they then go to a market maker who matches your buy order with a sell order almost istantly, then it takes two days for the trade to "settle" and officially transfer to you.
The market maker pays the broker for the privilege and the market maker profits by settling at a slightly lower price than you paid, it's legal and regulated, but it means your order may not go directly to the exchange. And the big boys get to be in the front of the line always.
Tokenization would remove the middle men, bc then you'd be directly purchasing the token (share) of stock instead of working through a brokerage and market maker.
I am fairly novice in terms of blockchain technicalities, but if I am correct, transaction volume on blockchain is a massive hurdle, no? Especially when we start talking about pure volume of transactions in the global stock markets. What kind of compute would be required to keep up with that ledger?