Le TSX connaît sa plus forte hausse en quatre mois alors que les prix des métaux rebondissent
Points clés TSX en hausse de 1,5 % à 32 470,98 Affiche le plus grand gain depuis le 14 octobre Les mineurs en tête alors que l'or rebondit Le taux de chômage tombe à 6,5% Par Fergal Smith L'indice boursier principal du Canada a terminé une semaine volatile sur une note positive vendredi, alors que les prix des métaux ont flambé et que les investisseurs ont profité de l'affaiblissement récent du marché. L'indice S&P/TSX Composite TSX a terminé en hausse de 476,38 points, soit 1,5 %, à 32 470,98, enregistrant sa plus grande avancée depuis le 14 octobre et récupérant la plupart de la forte baisse de la veille. Pour la semaine, l'indice a augmenté de 1,7%.
Le fonds SAFU de Binance ajoute 3 600 Bitcoin (233 M$) alors que le marché fait face à des pressions
Bitcoin a connu l'une de ses corrections les plus marquées ces dernières années, tombant en dessous du seuil de 65 000 $ et atteignant son prix le plus bas depuis octobre 2024. Le déclin reflète une pression de vente persistante sur le marché des cryptomonnaies, accompagnée d'un sentiment macroéconomique détérioré, d'une liquidité réduite et d'un positionnement prudent parmi les participants institutionnels. L'action récente des prix suggère que le marché entre dans une phase critique où la confiance, plutôt que les niveaux techniques seuls, pourrait déterminer le prochain mouvement directionnel.
Les actions, le bitcoin regagnent du terrain avec les métaux précieux
Points clés Les actions de Wall Street montent, mais le Nasdaq se dirige vers une perte hebdomadaire
Le dollar américain baisse alors que les actifs risqués attirent des acheteurs
Les cryptomonnaies rebondissent après de fortes pertes
Le pétrole augmente alors que les discussions entre les États-Unis et l'Iran commencent
Par Sinéad Carew et Sophie Kiderlin
Par Sinéad Carew et Sophie Kiderlin
L'indice des actions mondiales de MSCI a augmenté de plus de 1 % vendredi après avoir chuté lors de cinq des six dernières séances, tandis que le bitcoin a également tenté un retour après une forte vente et que les prix de l'or et de l'argent au comptant ont tenté de regagner un peu de terrain perdu.
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#plasma $XPL Plasma Coin : Paiements en Stablecoin Construits pour le Monde Réel Plasma Coin est construit sur une idée simple mais puissante que de nombreuses blockchains négligent : les stablecoins sont déjà l'argent d'internet, pourtant l'infrastructure qui les soutient est encore inefficace. Des personnes dans le monde entier utilisent l'USDT et d'autres stablecoins pour envoyer, économiser et régler de la valeur à l'échelle mondiale, mais l'expérience reste complexe, coûteuse et peu fiable pendant les périodes de forte utilisation. La plupart des blockchains essaient d'être tout en même temps — hubs DeFi, plateformes NFT, réseaux de jeux et couches d'identité. Plasma adopte une approche ciblée. C'est une blockchain Layer-1 conçue spécifiquement pour les paiements en stablecoin. Au lieu de traiter les stablecoins comme un simple jeton, Plasma les considère comme de l'argent de première classe. Un des plus grands problèmes dans l'utilisation des stablecoins aujourd'hui est la friction des frais. Les utilisateurs doivent garder des jetons de gaz prêts, les coûts de transaction changent de manière imprévisible, et même les petits transferts semblent inutilement compliqués. Plasma aborde cela en permettant des transferts USDT sans frais par conception. Ce n'est pas un stratagème marketing, mais une décision architecturale visant à éliminer la friction des paiements quotidiens. @Plasma
Plasma: Rebuilding Stablecoin Payments from the Ground Up
Most blockchains try to do everything at once. Payments, DeFi, NFTs, gaming, identity, and even abstract ideas like becoming a “world computer.” Plasma takes a different path. Instead of expanding horizontally, it narrows its focus around a single observation that most networks overlook: stablecoins have already become the digital dollar, but the infrastructure beneath them is still inefficient. USDT and similar stablecoins are already used globally. People save in them, send them across borders, and settle obligations with them. Yet the experience remains awkward. Users must hold extra gas tokens, fees fluctuate during congestion, and simple transfers feel like interacting with developer tooling rather than money. Plasma exists to remove this friction at the base layer. Plasma is a Layer-1 blockchain designed specifically for stablecoin payments at scale. It is fully EVM-compatible, allowing developers to use familiar tools, but the design priorities are centered around high-volume, low-friction transfers. The goal is not to compete for attention—it is to quietly power the movement of digital dollars.
The core thesis behind Plasma is simple: people using stablecoins are not seeking speculation. They are not excited about gas tokens or yield mechanics. What they want is speed, predictable costs, and simplicity. Stablecoins already provide price stability and global reach, but most chains treat them as secondary assets rather than first-class money. Plasma flips this model. If stablecoins are becoming the internet’s default currency, then the chain underneath them must be built around their needs. This is why Plasma is designed as stablecoin-native infrastructure, not a general-purpose chain that happens to support stablecoins. Zero-fee USDT transfers are not a marketing trick. They are a consequence of the architecture. Plasma removes the requirement for users to hold volatile tokens “just in case” a fee is needed. This eliminates cognitive friction and makes stablecoins feel like money rather than applications layered on top of complex systems. Fee friction is one of the largest barriers to stablecoin adoption, especially for small or frequent payments. Plasma’s design allows wallets to abstract away gas entirely, enabling micro-transactions, subscriptions, and everyday commerce. Over time, this encourages stablecoins to be used as utilities rather than speculative instruments. Payments alone, however, are not enough. A modern payment network must also be programmable. Plasma embraces full EVM compatibility so that stablecoin transfers can interact with smart contracts seamlessly. This bridges the gap between simple payments and programmable money without forcing developers to adopt new tooling or languages. The future stablecoin economy will not revolve around basic transfers. It will include payroll systems that automatically allocate funds, merchant tools with instant settlement, subscription models with refund logic, and global marketplaces using escrow rules. Plasma is built to support this complexity while keeping the user experience simple. Security is where Plasma anchors its long-term credibility. Rather than inventing a new narrative, Plasma aligns itself with Bitcoin’s reputation for neutrality and permanence. Through a trust-reduced Bitcoin bridge, BTC can be used in smart contracts while benefiting from Bitcoin’s security assumptions. Speed alone is easy to advertise; trust is much harder to earn.
The objective is clear: combine Bitcoin’s credibility with a modern payment chain that feels fast, intuitive, and developer-friendly. If stablecoins are to be treated as real money, they must settle on infrastructure that carries a strong security and settlement narrative. XPL, Plasma’s native token, plays a supporting—not dominant—role. In a stablecoin-first system, users prefer to remain in stable assets, but the network still requires incentives, validator rewards, and governance. XPL coordinates these economic functions without forcing volatility onto everyday users. This structure makes zero-fee stablecoin transfers sustainable. Plasma does not claim the network is free; it ensures that costs are absorbed at the infrastructure level rather than pushed onto someone sending $20 to a family member. Validator economics, architecture, and non-core monetization support the system. Real adoption is measured by integration, not slogans. Institutional partners care less about narratives and more about reliability. The integration announced by Cobo, a major digital-asset custodian, highlights Plasma’s positioning as a stablecoin settlement layer, referencing USDT0 and lifetime zero-fee transfers. Infrastructure adoption usually begins with custodians and payment workflows before becoming visible to end users. Plasma appears to be following that path deliberately.
The long-term question is whether Plasma can make stablecoins invisible. The ideal experience is simple: open a wallet, send digital dollars, done. No explanations, no gas tokens, no complexity. Plasma’s educational focus reflects this goal—emphasizing speed, simplicity, and usability rather than speculation. Instant confirmations, stablecoin-first contracts, and fee abstraction define the experience. There are risks. A stablecoin-centric strategy depends on issuer policies and regulation. Plasma plans to support multiple stablecoins over time, but USDT remains central. Sustainability of zero-fee transfers must also be proven under real network conditions. Competition from existing chains and L2s is real, and Plasma’s bet is that specialization will outperform generalization as markets mature. These risks raise the bar but do not invalidate the thesis. Payment rails are infrastructure, not memes. They must earn trust through execution. Plasma stands out because of focus, not novelty. In a space driven by attention, clarity of purpose is rare. If Plasma succeeds, it will not look like a typical crypto success—it will look like boring, dependable money quietly moving across the internet. $XPL #Plasma @Plasma