Solana rolls out 13 new token extensions in bid to lure finance institutions onchain

7No7...YU5L
27 Jan 2024
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Solana's new token extensions add features that normally would have only been possible with smart contracts.
Many of the extensions will help companies deploying tokens on Solana adhere to their internal compliance processes.
Others allow users to make the amount of a token sent in a transaction private.
In a bid to attract traditional businesses to the Solana blockchain, a series of 13 new features, dubbed token extensions, give companies more control and flexibility over tokens they issue.

Token extensions give token issuers on solana added features that normally would have only been possible with smart contracts
Businesses can use token extensions to establish specific rules governing who can interact with their tokens, for example by limiting transfers to people who have passed anti-money laundering and know-your-customer checks.

Despite growing institutional interest in crypto, some companies are staying on the sidelines, fearful of inadvertently stepping over legal boundaries amid a regulatory onslaught.
“A growing number of enterprises are interested in the benefits of blockchain, but want to ensure that they can adopt the technology in a responsible way that adheres to their internal compliance processes,” Amira Valliani, Head of Policy at the Solana Foundation, said in a statement.

Because these features are set at the token level, companies no longer have to spend significant amounts of time and money to add a specific functionality for their token by creating their own smart contracts.
Although the announcement was only made official today, there are already a number of Solana ecosystem projects using these new features.

New possibilities open up

Of the 13 extensions, two of the more important give token issuers the ability to dictate how users can interact with a token or hide how much is being transferred between users, according to Jon Wong, Head of Ecosystem Engineering at the Solana Foundation.
Some Solana ecosystem projects have already integrated these new features, including popular wallet providers Phantom and Solflare and a popular Telegram trading bot and decentralised exchange, Fluxbeam.

Paxos, a project building regulated blockchain and digital asset products, has added several extensions to their dollar-pegged stablecoin USDP, which has a total circulating supply of over 360 million.

Using these token extensions, Paxos can transfer or remove tokens from anyone who holds the USDP token.

Furthermore, they have the ability to blacklist any entities who are acting nefariously or may fall under sanctions, a feature already used by the two largest stablecoins, USDC and USDT, on Ethereum.
Another stablecoin issuer, GMO Trust, plans to use some of these token extensions in a pair of upcoming stablecoins, which are set to launch on February 14.

By combining token extensions, projects can create permissioned ecosystems within a permissionless blockchain.

For example, a business can limit transfers to users who have passed know-your-customer checks or require users to include a memo with each transfer, adding additional context to transactions.

Companies can use extensions featuring zero-knowledge proof technology to pay employees without revealing the total transfer amount.

This makes sensitive financial information like payroll private, allowing individuals to receive their salary in crypto without broadcasting the amount for the world to see.

Solana’s token programme

Token extensions are one of several upgrades to come out of Token 2022, a Solana Foundation-led effort to make development on the blockchain more intuitive and less fragmented.

Token 2022 has, among other things, unified fungible and non-fungible tokens on Solana, ensuring seamless interoperability with smart contracts and wallets within the Solana ecosystem.

However, transitioning to the Token 2022 standard requires the burning of previous standard tokens and is a user opt-in process, presenting a strategic decision for token creators and users alike.

Looking forward, Solana’s roadmap includes the introduction of further Zero-Knowledge features in Spring 2024.

DeFi investors sent $370m from Ethereum to other chains. Here’s where most of it went

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DeFi investors sent $370m from Ethereum to other chains. Here’s where most of it went
DeFi investors sent $370m from Ethereum to other chains. Here’s where most of it went
DeFi
By
Osato Avan-Nomayo
January 19, 2024 at 10:20 PM
What you'll learn
Most of the $370 million liquidity outflow from Ethereum via Wormhole in the last month has gone to Sui and Solana.
Outflows are possibly driven by memecoin and airdrop speculation.
Sui’s TVL has spiked 10-fold since October.
Sui and Solana have sucked a lot of liquidity from Ethereum over the past month.

That’s according to data from crypto bridge protocol Wormhole that shows $370 million in liquidity has moved from Ethereum to other blockchains, with almost 90% going to Sui and Solana.

Wormhole’s operations head Dan Reecer told DL News that part of the appeal can be explained by Sui’s incentive programme within its ecosystem that is “driving a lot of DeFi activity.”
As for Solana’s popularity, he said it may be “related to people looking to earn points on different apps after seeing the recent community rewards from apps like Jito.”

Liquidity rotation

Crypto liquidity rotators are known for keeping in touch with the latest “meta,” or trend, to position themselves for possible rewards. They do so by quickly shifting liquidity to avenues likely to offer rewards for user deposits.

One of the recent metas is “points” — a system for acknowledging user participation in DeFi protocols that may qualify them for future airdrops.
NFT marketplace giant Blur popularised the points airdrop system and used it to great effect in capturing significant market share from OpenSea, the previous dominant player.

Now, the trend has spread across platforms, protocols, and blockchains, becoming even more commonplace on Solana.
Sui announced a $50 million incentive programme in October. Such programmes are used to attract interest from developers and investors by funding grants for the former and user rewards for the latter.

Since the programme’s announcement, Sui’s total value locked, a measure of investor deposits, has risen 10-fold to $320 million, DefiLlama data shows.

Solend, Solana’s biggest DeFi lending app with $160 million in deposits, may further boost Sui’s total value following its expansion to Sui.

Despite the significant transfer of liquidity from Ethereum to both Solana and Sui, their combined TVL of $1.65 billion still falls far short of Ethereum’s $32.6 billion.

Osato Avan-Nomayo is our Nigeria-based DeFi correspondent. He covers DeFi and tech. To share tips or information about stories, please contact him at osato@dlnews.com.

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