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Elon Musk reveals X Money plans for April: regulatory impact and market reacts
Elon Musk announced on Tuesday that X will launch its new payment service, called X Money, next month. The platform will offer peer-to-peer transfers, direct bank deposits, a Visa debit card, and cashback rewards, operating through the subsidiary X Payments, which holds licenses in over 40 U.S. states.
X Money: Elon Musk’s payment strategy transforming the social network
The new product turns X into a full-fledged fintech platform, going beyond a simple social network. The service promises a 6% annual yield on user balances, a significantly more competitive rate than most traditional savings accounts in the U.S. and comparable to money market funds.
The operational structure involves Visa as a financing partner, ensuring robust transaction infrastructure. The product design highlights Elon Musk’s ability to drive innovation in financial services, reinforcing his reputation for transforming established industries.
DOGE returns to speculation focus: the recurring pattern with Musk’s announcements
The announcement of X Money reignited Dogecoin’s spotlight in speculation, even without any mention of cryptocurrencies in the official proposal. DOGE experienced a temporary price increase after the announcement, reflecting a pattern that has repeated since 2021: whenever Elon Musk talks about payments on X, there’s anticipation of integration with digital assets.
History fuels these speculations. Musk has called Dogecoin his “favorite cryptocurrency,” and Tesla accepted DOGE for merchandise purchases in 2022. However, as described, X Money is an exclusively fiat product, with no cryptocurrency component. It’s more similar to Venmo but integrated into a social network with hundreds of millions of users.
Currently, DOGE is down 2.5% in the last 24 hours, trading at $0.09, with a positive change of 4.14% over previous periods, following the broader decline trend in cryptocurrencies. X’s product lead, Nikita Bier, clarified in February that any cryptocurrency integration would occur through Smart Cashtags, providing only data and links to exchanges, not executing trades directly.
6% yield: the regulatory dilemma emerging with the debate over the CLARITY Act
The proposed 6% yield raises a key question for regulators: how can a fiat product on a social media platform offer returns higher than those permitted for stablecoins? The timing is no coincidence. Congress is debating the CLARITY Act, which will establish specific rules for yield-bearing stablecoins, with the Senate Banking Committee expecting conclusions between mid and late March.
The CLARITY Act aims to determine whether non-banking platforms should offer yields similar to deposit accounts to consumers. Although X Money is not a stablecoin, it addresses the same market demand—people seeking better returns than those offered by banks. If launched on a large scale before the CLARITY Act is passed, it could create a regulatory dilemma: a fintech product in fiat currency offering profitability that crypto products are being legislated to avoid.
Bitcoin under defensive pressure: traders pay record prices for protection
The Bitcoin options market reveals a defensive sentiment among professional traders. The open interest ratio between put and call options reached 0.84, the highest since June 2021, while put option premiums hit historic highs relative to spot volume.
Despite Bitcoin’s spot price stabilizing, investors remain cautious. Leveraged speculation has slowed, and realized volatility has dropped from 80 to 50, signaling a defensive market stance. Historically, similar options bias readings have preceded significant Bitcoin gains. VanEck has identified average gains of 13% over 90 days and 133% over 360 days in the past six years, suggesting the current scenario could open opportunities for substantial gains in the coming months.
This derivatives market dynamic contrasts with the speculative reaction around DOGE—while speculators fuel hopes of crypto integration with X, institutional traders are taking a defensive stance, awaiting clarity on the regulatory impact of X Money and the CLARITY Act.