6)
b) You want to send money back home to a relative in Brazil.
You... walk to a physical Western Union store, I guess? Or maybe use some app, figure out how to load money on to it, and then send it...
...to your relative who doesn't have a bank, let alone USD?
Conversation
14) Just to demonstrate this:
I initialized Bob with $99.75 and some SOL (from FTX) (solscan.io/account/CHEr3k).
I then created a second brand new wallet, solscan.io/account/JAEcyo ('Alice')
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15) So then I went to send $50 from Bob to Alice.
I clicked 'send' at 8:19:33 am.
By 8:19:45, when I tabbed over to Alice, the $50 had already landed.
The fee I paid was $0.0002: around 2% of a penny.
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16) Blockchains allow anyone to create a wallet and use it to send and receive tokens--including USD pegged stablecoins.
Those payments take seconds to process, cost fractions of a penny, and are finalized in less than a minute.
No long wait, no account balance uncertainty.
Replying to
17) Ok, so how about market structure?
On January 28th 2021, most major retail brokers shut down.
Users were unable to buy; sometimes they were unable to sell, too. And on some platforms users got liquidated.
The weird thing is that there was basically no leverage!
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24) And eventually that risk got too big for the brokers, which had to partially shut down.
How does crypto help this?
Well, first of all, with a full stack product, settlement is way simpler.
Here's what it takes to buy and settle on ftx.com/trade/BTC/USD:
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27) So blockchain can create simpler, more equitable, and less risky market structure and settlement.
It can help us avoid problems like Gamestop day. And, for that matter, LME Nickel: ftxpolicy.com/posts/risk-man.
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