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Vol. I · No. 163
Friday, 12 June 2026
13:24 UTC
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Opinion

Equity perps, a $2 trillion slide, and the quiet merger of Wall Street and crypto

Ondo launched 20x equity perps on the same afternoon US equities shed $2 trillion. The merger of Wall Street and crypto is no longer a forecast — it is a product page.
Ondo launched 20x equity perps on the same afternoon US equities shed $2 trillion.
Ondo launched 20x equity perps on the same afternoon US equities shed $2 trillion. / DECRYPT · via Monexus Wire

At 17:00 UTC on 9 June 2026, US stocks lost nearly $2 trillion in market value in roughly two hours. Nine hours later, at 02:10 UTC on 10 June, Ondo opened a public beta that lets selected traders put up to 20 times leverage on US equity perpetual futures, denominated on-chain. The two events sat minutes apart on the same news wire, and that is the point.

The mainstream read of the last cycle framed crypto as a parallel casino, a place to bet on bitcoin and a handful of altcoins while Wall Street did its own thing. That framing is now obsolete. The product and the panic arrived in the same trading session, and the people selling the product were the same people quoting the panic. Welcome to the merger.

The product is the argument

Perpetual futures are synthetic. They track an underlying asset — a stock, an index, a commodity — without ever settling in it. The leverage, in this case up to 20x, is a margin mechanic, not a balance-sheet claim. It is a derivatives object designed for traders, not holders, and it is the form factor that has eaten most of the crypto market since 2020.

What changes when the underlying is a US equity? The counterparty stack changes. A bitcoin perp is settled against a basket of dollars flowing through a small set of offshore exchanges and a large set of stablecoin issuers. An equity perp — even one tokenised, even one run from a public beta — sits next to the actual settlement rails of the underlying stock. Ondo's marketing line, delivered in the launch note, is the deepest liquidity in the market. That is a claim about plumbing. The plumbing now runs through both venues.

The panic, read sideways

A two-hour, $2 trillion drawdown is not a crash. It is a margin call expressed at index scale. But its political content is unambiguous: when a deep, fast sell-off lands, the conversation in Washington is no longer about whether crypto belongs in the system, but which crypto, and under which rulebook. The industry answer, telegraphed in a single sentence from Changpeng Zhao on the same wire on 9 June — "our kids will judge us on how we regulate and progress AI and crypto innovations today" — is that the next generation will be unforgiving of any regime that built walls between the two.

There is a counter-read worth taking seriously. Regulators and incumbent exchanges have spent a decade warning that tokenised equity products are a regulatory end-run, that 20x leverage on a synthetic apple-share is not the same instrument as 20x leverage on a real one, and that the disclosure regime for the synthetic version is years behind the disclosure regime for the listed version. That is true. It is also true that the same regulator, in the same decade, approved inverse ETFs, single-stock futures, and a derivatives complex whose notional exposure dwarfs the underlying market by a factor of ten. The complaint about the new product is structurally the same complaint Wall Street spent the 2000s deflecting.

What the merger actually looks like

The merger is not a takeover. It is convergence around the same balance sheet. Three structural shifts are visible in the last week of news, and they are not independent of each other.

First, the venue. Tokenised equity perps move trading hours, leverage, and counterparty risk from a handful of New York and Chicago floors to a permissionless ledger. The settlement currency is the choice the trader makes; the margin is whatever the protocol accepts. In a drawdown, that is the difference between a closed-out equity book and a crypto-native one — and a regulator's headache.

Second, the headline numbers. A $2 trillion move in two hours is the kind of figure that resets a political conversation. Whatever the proximate cause — a tariff headline, a CPI surprise, a flash in the rates market — the velocity is the news. It hands the new product class a marketing asset it did not have to pay for: evidence that the old system is fast enough to lose $2 trillion over lunch, and that any venue offering a continuous, levered, on-chain alternative is filling a real, not a synthetic, demand.

Third, the politics. Zhao's framing — that future generations will judge today's regulators — is an appeal to the political centre. It is not the maximalist cry of 2021. It is a permission request, dressed as a generational argument, and it is the same permission request the incumbents used when they lobbied for ETFs, for options, for single-stock futures. The industry has learned the legislative grammar of its host market. That is the most consequential development on the wire.

The serious paragraph

Who wins, and who loses, if the trajectory continues? On the winning side: incumbent exchanges that list tokenised perps alongside the underlying equities — they capture the flow twice. Crypto-native venues that can credibly offer the product at depth — they get a piece of the deepest, most liquid asset class in the world. Tokenisation platforms that own the issuance and the redemption plumbing — they collect the spread. On the losing side: market makers and clearing houses that priced the old frictions as features. Brokers whose revenue is built on the assumption that leverage is a New York product. And, less visibly, the disclosure regime itself — the slow, paper-based apparatus of 10-Ks, 8-Ks, and Reg FD — which the new products treat as a cost of admission rather than a public good.

A $2 trillion afternoon is a reminder that the old system is not slow because it is careful. It is slow because the public has a claim on the time. Any new product that claims to be faster is implicitly claiming that the public's claim is negotiable. That is a serious claim. It deserves a serious rulebook, written before the volume arrives, not after.

The kicker

The next decade of finance will not be decided by the loudest voice in the room. It will be decided by the room itself. On 9 June 2026 the room got a new wall, a new floor, and a $2 trillion echo. This publication intends to keep watching who is invited in, and who is still outside when the door closes.

— Monexus Staff Writer · 10 June 2026

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/cointelegraph
  • https://t.me/cointelegraph
  • https://t.me/cointelegraph
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire