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So Elon has just confirmed that X Money arrives in April with peer-to-peer transfers, a debit card, and a 6% return on balances. It sounds good in theory, but here comes the interesting part: the crypto market immediately speculated that this meant crypto integration, and Dogecoin surged for a few minutes. Typical.
The reality is quite different from what many expected. X Money is basically a fiduciary fintech app, more like Venmo with an attached social network than a crypto wallet. Period. Visa is part of the agreement; the platform has licenses in more than 40 states through X Payments, but zero cryptocurrencies for now. Although, honestly, the speculation has some historical sense. Musk has called Dogecoin his favorite cryptocurrency; Tesla accepted DOGE for merchandise a few years ago, so every time he mentions payments on X, the crypto community automatically assumes that Elon Musk’s cryptocurrency will be involved. But this time, it isn’t.
X’s product did mention future crypto trading tools via Smart Cashtags, although Nikita Bier of X made it clear that the platform would not execute trades directly. Only data and links to exchanges. Musk recently reposted a third-party forecast that included crypto integration, but nothing officially confirmed.
Now, what really matters to regulators and the market isn’t whether they add DOGE. It’s that 6% return. Think about it: six percent on deposits in a social media app with hundreds of millions of users is higher than almost any savings account in the U.S. and competitive with money market funds. That raises uncomfortable questions about how that return is generated and who subsidizes it.
The timing is particular because Congress is debating the Ley CLARITY, which seeks to establish rules for yield-bearing products, including stablecoins. The central question is whether non-bank platforms should be allowed to offer returns similar to deposits. X Money isn’t a stablecoin, but it targets the same consumer demand that Elon Musk’s cryptocurrency and other assets have captured: people looking for better returns than what their bank offers. If X Money launches at scale with a 6% APY before CLARITY is approved, it creates an uncomfortable comparison: a fiduciary fintech app on social networks offering returns that crypto products are being legislated to eliminate.
As for Dogecoin, Elon Musk’s cryptocurrency is currently at $0.09, with a 0.22% gain in 24 hours. Nothing spectacular after the announcement. The overall crypto market has been under pressure. But the dynamic is clear: every move Musk makes generates speculation, even if the product is entirely fiduciary. It’s interesting how market psychology works sometimes.