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I noticed something interesting taking shape around X Money and the crypto market movements. Musk has just announced that the X platform will launch its payment feature next month, and honestly, it’s more ambitious than you might think at first glance.
So here’s the thing: X Money essentially turns X into a full fintech application. We’re talking about peer-to-peer transfers, bank deposits, a debit card, and cashback via a partnership with Visa. The platform is licensed in more than 40 U.S. states through its subsidiary X Payments. This is clearly a product aimed at competing with Venmo and traditional payment services.
But this is where it gets interesting for us in the crypto space. Almost as soon as the announcement was made, Dogecoin jumped briefly, as if people were speculating about some kind of crypto integration. Except that X Money is described as a purely fiat-currency product, with zero crypto in it. Currently, DOGE is up +0.67% over 24 hours, so the speculative move quickly cooled down. This is a pattern we’ve seen repeating since 2021—Musk talks about payments, DOGE rises on speculation, and then nothing materializes on the crypto side.
What really concerns me is the 6% return that X Money offers on balances. That’s higher than almost all U.S. savings accounts and competitive with money market funds. Regulators are certainly going to pay attention to this, especially since the Congrès is currently debating the CLARITY law concerning products that generate yields. The central question is clear: should non-bank platforms offer yields comparable to bank deposits?
X Money is not a stablecoin product, but it targets exactly the same consumer demand—people looking for better returns than what their bank offers. If X rolls this out at scale with 6% before CLARITY is adopted, it creates a delicate situation for regulators.
Elsewhere, WLFI from World Liberty Financial plunged by 8.91% over 24 hours after the Musk-linked company defended a controversial lending strategy on Dolomite. This shows how the moves around Musk and his crypto projects can be volatile.
The real issue here isn’t so much crypto integration as the yield. A fiat-currency fintech product integrated into a social networking app used by hundreds of millions of people could offer yields that crypto products see regulated out of the market. This is something to watch closely.