Crypto攻城狮|Nov 25, 2025 12:42
Last night, I was having skewers with a buddy who does cross-border e-commerce. He was checking his wallet while complaining: 'U.S. Treasury yields are so high, but my USDT sitting on-chain isn’t earning any interest. I’m losing out big time.'
I casually asked him, 'Do you know there are projects that bring U.S. Treasuries directly on-chain?'
Turns out, he hadn’t even heard of @fraxfinance. The dev was silent for three seconds on the spot.
Frax has actually been moving pretty fast these past few months: the old FRAX has been replaced with fully collateralized frxUSD, backed by real U.S. Treasuries and other cash equivalents. On top of that, they’ve added sfrxUSD, which packages the interest from these assets into an 'on-chain money market fund,' automatically switching between T-Bills, carry trades, and AMOs, chasing the benchmark interest rate.
Above that is FraxNet + Fraxtal: one handles account creation, fiat on/off ramps, and multi-chain minting and redemption; the other serves as a high-performance settlement layer. Together, they form a stablecoin operating system. Recently, the timeline has been buzzing with strategies for sfrxUSD, LP activities on EchoMarket, and the account opening experience on FraxNet.
The dev’s take? If this path really works out, in the future, getting paid on-chain, storing funds in a 'money market fund,' and making cross-chain payments might all be done within the Frax ecosystem.
Of course, this isn’t financial advice to ape in. Just don’t dismiss it as 'just another early algorithmic stablecoin' anymore.
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