Fintech & Banking Daily

Meta's $900M CRED Bet, Senate CBDC Ban & Crypto Staking Deadlock

4 min · 24. juni 2026
episode Meta's $900M CRED Bet, Senate CBDC Ban & Crypto Staking Deadlock cover

Description

(00:00:00) Meta's $900M CRED Bet, Senate CBDC Ban & Crypto Staking Deadlock (00:01:29) U.S. Senate Bans Retail CBDC (00:02:54) Crypto Staking Tax Deadlock (00:03:58) What To Watch Next Meta has made its most aggressive move yet in Indian payments, leading a $900 million investment in CRED at a $4.5 billion valuation — and installing CRED founder Kunal Shah as CEO of WhatsApp. The appointment is an admission that WhatsApp Pay's failure to crack India's UPI market required domestic leadership, not just capital. With PhonePe and Google Pay controlling around 80% of UPI volume, Meta is betting that Shah's credibility with high-income urban consumers can unlock a segment that has consistently resisted WhatsApp Pay. Indian regulatory clearance remains the first concrete test. In Washington, the U.S. Senate passed a provision banning the Federal Reserve from issuing a retail digital dollar until December 31, 2030. The four-year moratorium is paired explicitly with the administration's push for private stablecoin regulation — a clear signal that U.S. digital currency policy will run through the private sector, not the Fed. That policy air cover is a direct tailwind for stablecoin builders, even as China's digital yuan and a prospective ECB digital euro advance on the other side. Meanwhile, H.R. 9175 — the crypto staking tax bill — remains stalled in the House Ways and Means Committee. The core dispute is phantom income: miners and stakers potentially owing tax on newly minted tokens before any liquidity event. A proposed five-year deferral cap from Representative Horsford has hardened opposition from the crypto industry, leaving IRS treatment ambiguous and compliance uncertainty unresolved. All three stories share a single through-line: payments, digital currency, and crypto taxation are each waiting on a different kind of institutional approval. Those approval timelines are the signals worth tracking. This episode includes AI-generated content.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Fintech & Banking Daily community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

44 episodes

episode Meta's $900M CRED Bet, Senate CBDC Ban & Crypto Staking Deadlock artwork

Meta's $900M CRED Bet, Senate CBDC Ban & Crypto Staking Deadlock

(00:00:00) Meta's $900M CRED Bet, Senate CBDC Ban & Crypto Staking Deadlock (00:01:29) U.S. Senate Bans Retail CBDC (00:02:54) Crypto Staking Tax Deadlock (00:03:58) What To Watch Next Meta has made its most aggressive move yet in Indian payments, leading a $900 million investment in CRED at a $4.5 billion valuation — and installing CRED founder Kunal Shah as CEO of WhatsApp. The appointment is an admission that WhatsApp Pay's failure to crack India's UPI market required domestic leadership, not just capital. With PhonePe and Google Pay controlling around 80% of UPI volume, Meta is betting that Shah's credibility with high-income urban consumers can unlock a segment that has consistently resisted WhatsApp Pay. Indian regulatory clearance remains the first concrete test. In Washington, the U.S. Senate passed a provision banning the Federal Reserve from issuing a retail digital dollar until December 31, 2030. The four-year moratorium is paired explicitly with the administration's push for private stablecoin regulation — a clear signal that U.S. digital currency policy will run through the private sector, not the Fed. That policy air cover is a direct tailwind for stablecoin builders, even as China's digital yuan and a prospective ECB digital euro advance on the other side. Meanwhile, H.R. 9175 — the crypto staking tax bill — remains stalled in the House Ways and Means Committee. The core dispute is phantom income: miners and stakers potentially owing tax on newly minted tokens before any liquidity event. A proposed five-year deferral cap from Representative Horsford has hardened opposition from the crypto industry, leaving IRS treatment ambiguous and compliance uncertainty unresolved. All three stories share a single through-line: payments, digital currency, and crypto taxation are each waiting on a different kind of institutional approval. Those approval timelines are the signals worth tracking. This episode includes AI-generated content.

24. juni 20264 min
episode MoneyGram Joins Solana, BoE Softens Stablecoin Rules & CRED's $900M Meta Raise artwork

MoneyGram Joins Solana, BoE Softens Stablecoin Rules & CRED's $900M Meta Raise

(00:00:00) MoneyGram Joins Solana, BoE Softens Stablecoin Rules & CRED's $900M Meta Raise (00:00:56) Toss Bank Solana Remittance Bet (00:01:33) BitGo Regulated DeFi Vaults (00:02:07) Bank of England Softens Stablecoin Rules (00:02:53) CRED Meta Raise Shah Exits (00:03:28) Nuvion Europe Funding Contraction Payment operators are becoming blockchain infrastructure participants — and today's briefing captures the moment that shift became undeniable. MoneyGram has joined the Solana validator set alongside Mastercard, Western Union, and Worldpay, lending operational weight to a network that processed $650 billion in stablecoin volume in February alone. South Korea's Toss Bank adds a second Solana data point, launching a cross-border remittance proof-of-concept across 30 countries — timed, notably, ahead of its parent company's $10B+ US IPO in 2026. On the institutional DeFi front, BitGo and Morpho have released the first clean structural template for enterprise DeFi access: custody, risk oversight, and protocol execution deliberately separated across three independent parties. That unbundling may be what finally makes DeFi sellable to compliance-driven institutions. Regulators are recalibrating too. The Bank of England cut mandatory stablecoin cash reserves from 40% to 30%, scrapped individual holding caps, and replaced them with a £40B per-stablecoin circulation ceiling — a deliberate trade of strict reserves for growth guardrails. In fintech funding, CRED closed a $900M Series H from Meta at a $4.5B valuation, even as founder Kunal Shah steps down to lead WhatsApp globally. And European fintech funding contracted sharply in Q1 2026 — down 31% year-on-year to $3.8B — with mega-rounds collapsing 55%. Nuvion's Visa Direct integration rounds out today's episode, signalling that fiat and crypto settlement infrastructure are converging into a single default architecture for cross-border payments. This episode includes AI-generated content.

Yesterday5 min
episode Japan's Pension Fund Crypto Framework, Russia's Rate Cut & Kenya's Capital Delay artwork

Japan's Pension Fund Crypto Framework, Russia's Rate Cut & Kenya's Capital Delay

(00:00:00) Japan's Pension Fund Crypto Framework, Russia's Rate Cut & Kenya's Capital Delay (00:00:56) Japan Crypto Regulatory Pipeline (00:02:06) Russia's Cautious Rate Cut (00:03:04) Kenya Lending Over Capital Rules (00:03:57) The Institutional Crypto Signal Japan's Nationwide Business Corporate Pension Fund has made its first crypto allocation — roughly one percent of a $130 million portfolio — but the headline number undersells the story. Six years of internal research, a yen-hedging thesis, and a passive hedge fund vehicle make this a fiduciary framework story, not a speculation play. With Japan's Financial Instruments Exchange Act reclassification advancing, spot Bitcoin ETF approvals targeted for 2028, Osaka Exchange Bitcoin futures on the same timeline, and a yen stablecoin due March 2027, institutional allocators now have a sequenced regulatory pipeline to point to. The pension fund moved before the full stack was in place — that signals conviction. In Russia, the central bank cut its key rate by just 25 basis points to 14.25 percent, disappointing markets priced for a 50 basis point move. Budget deficit pressures and persistent fuel price inflation are keeping the easing path narrower than guidance suggested. The next move could go either way. In Kenya, the National Treasury has extended the minimum core capital deadline for banks from 2029 to December 2032. Private sector credit growth accelerated to 9.3 percent in May, and regulators are explicitly protecting lending momentum over near-term capital targets. Four banks remain below the interim threshold — how they raise capital in current market conditions is the unresolved question. The connecting thread: institutions and regulators making calculated moves inside imperfect frameworks, sequencing carefully rather than waiting for certainty that never arrives. This episode includes AI-generated content.

22. juni 20264 min
episode India's Offline CBDC, Bitcoin's Dividend ETF Shift & Prediction Markets at $10.8B artwork

India's Offline CBDC, Bitcoin's Dividend ETF Shift & Prediction Markets at $10.8B

(00:00:00) India's Offline CBDC, Bitcoin's Dividend ETF Shift & Prediction Markets at $10.8B (00:00:35) Programmable Welfare at Scale (00:01:35) Bitcoin Institutional Accumulation Signal (00:02:26) Franklin Templeton DRIP ETF Shift (00:03:13) Prediction Markets Cross Derivatives Scale (00:03:54) Argentina vs Ireland Regulatory Fork India's Reserve Bank has deployed offline functionality for its Digital Rupee using NFC-based wallet-to-wallet transfers — no internet required. With fifteen banks onboard and over one hundred million low-connectivity users in scope, the e-rupee is now functioning as live state infrastructure, not a pilot. Kerala's Kudumbashree scheme is already using programmable e-rupee to deliver income directly to welfare workers, with national scale targeting ten million beneficiaries. This is the gap El Salvador's Bitcoin experiment never closed. On the institutional Bitcoin front, Franklin Templeton has filed two hybrid funds that convert US equity dividends into automated Bitcoin purchases — a structural shift that moves crypto from a separate allocation bucket into mainstream portfolio architecture. Coinbase is extending the same logic with tokenized equities offering 24/7 on-chain trading, positioning Ethereum as post-trade settlement infrastructure. Prediction markets reached a weekly volume record of $10.8 billion — up from roughly $500 million at the start of 2025 — driven by SpaceX IPO contracts, geopolitical events, and major sports. The regulatory classification fight between derivatives and gambling frameworks remains unresolved and could cap growth sharply. Finally, two contrasting regulatory signals: Argentina scrapped its 1.2% bank transaction tax on registered crypto platforms to attract liquidity and meet FATF standards, while Ireland launched a thirty-point AML action plan targeting crypto with blockchain forensics and EU Travel Rule enforcement. Two-speed regulation is now the operating reality for any platform with global reach. This episode includes AI-generated content.

21. juni 20265 min
episode CBDC Live Settlement, $154B Stablecoin Crime & HSBC's $35M Scam Penalty artwork

CBDC Live Settlement, $154B Stablecoin Crime & HSBC's $35M Scam Penalty

(00:00:00) CBDC Live Settlement, $154B Stablecoin Crime & HSBC's $35M Scam Penalty (00:01:17) Stablecoin Crime $154B Illicit Flow (00:02:08) HSBC $35M Scam Penalty Precedent (00:02:42) Fintech Funding Shifts to Discipline (00:03:21) FIFA Blockchain Ticketing on Avalanche Hong Kong just made the most significant wholesale CBDC move of the year. The Hong Kong Monetary Authority and HKEX have launched a live e-HKD pilot for after-hours derivatives margin settlement, with HSBC and Bank of China transacting in real value. The target is a structural gap in post-trade infrastructure — derivatives markets run 24/7, but traditional settlement doesn't. This is wholesale CBDC doing what retail pilots rarely achieve: solving an institutional problem that incumbent systems genuinely can't. Meanwhile, the darker side of digital finance is generating hard numbers. Illegal addresses received $154 billion in crypto in 2025, with stablecoins accounting for 84% of illicit volume — a 162% year-over-year jump. Travel Rule legislation exists in 85 of 117 countries, but 59% have never enforced it. The gap between legislation and enforcement is where the crime lives. In traditional banking, HSBC is facing a $35 million penalty in Australia for scam protection failures, with $21.5 million already paid in customer compensation. Australian regulators are establishing direct bank liability for inadequate fraud prevention — a precedent that other jurisdictions will be watching closely. On funding, India's top VCs are publicly shifting capital toward governance, compliance, and sustainable unit economics as fintech funding fell from $8.3B in 2021-22 to $2.2B in 2025. The growth-at-all-costs model is out. Finally, FIFA is piloting blockchain ticketing on the Avalanche network ahead of the World Cup, using tradable digital entitlements for allocation and fraud prevention — one of the more concrete blockchain infrastructure deployments to watch. This podcast was built using AI technology. A YesWee production. This episode includes AI-generated content.

20. juni 20264 min