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A $44 billion IPO. A Senate bill with bipartisan momentum. And now, a wave of Fortune 500 firms launching crypto tokens of their own.

Stablecoins — once a niche corner of the cryptocurrency world — are entering the corporate and policy mainstream, potentially reshaping how money moves in the United States and around the world.

“Many of the users out there today are not aware of stablecoins, or not interested in stablecoins, and they should not be,” said Jose Fernandez da Ponte, PayPal’s SVP of blockchain, crypto and digital currencies. “It should just be a way in which you move value, and in many cases, is going to be an infrastructure layer.”

For corporations, stablecoins are an opportunity to slash millions in transaction fees and turbocharge payment infrastructure with instantaneous settlement.

Stablecoins ‘mature’

USDC issuer Circle’s long-awaited public debut exposed a wave of pent-up demand for digital dollars as investors sent the stock soaring as much as 750% in June. Partnerships, and competition, quickly followed.

Coinbase announced a deal with e-commerce platform Shopify to bring USDC payments to merchants. Payments firm Fiserv announced a stablecoin to pair with the 90 billion transactions it processes every year.

“We’re entering the utility phase right now, where the technology has matured. It’s gotten fast, it’s gotten cheap,” said Jesse Pollak, head of base and wallet at Coinbase. “It’s gotten easy to use, and that’s leading to real-world adoption across businesses and consumers.”

Base is Coinbase’s Ethereum layer-2 network, designed to make blockchain applications faster, cheaper, and more accessible to developers and users.

Merchants are a particular focus for stablecoins, as payment processing fees for these businesses totaled a record $187.2 billion in 2024, according to the Nilson Report. Payment companies are looking to fend off potential disruption by stablecoin issuers.

Stablecoins in payments

Mastercard this week announced support for four stablecoins on its Multi-Token Network. The private blockchain is targeted toward institutions and promises 24-hour settlement.

Visa’s CEO told CNBC the payment processor is modernizing its infrastructure with the help of stablecoins.

“Visa and MasterCard are leaning into the disruption,” said Nic Carter, founding partner at Castle Island Ventures. “They’re trying to disrupt themselves, so they seem to be ahead of the curve.”

JPMorgan took a slightly different approach to the crypto token boom on Wall Street. The financial giant launched a token backed by commercial bank deposits rather than U.S. dollars.

JPMorgan’s Naveen Mallela, global co-head of Kinexys, the bank’s blockchain unit, told CNBC the JPMD token would allow for round-the-clock settlement for institutional clients looking for faster, cheaper transactions while staying connected to the traditional banking system.

Stablecoins in D.C.

The boom in crypto adoption on Wall Street is bolstered by growing support in Washington.

The Senate passed its framework of rules for stablecoins, called the GENIUS Act. The bill includes guidelines for consumer protections, reserve requirements for issuers, and anti-money laundering guidance.

Stablecoins and other cryptocurrencies have faced criticism for their use in illicit activity, and some Democrats argue the bill doesn’t do enough to address those concerns. Those lawmakers also argue the bill doesn’t curtail conflicts of interest, including the recent launch of a stablecoin tied to President Donald Trump through World Liberty Financial.

The crypto-focused firm run by his family is behind the dollar-pegged token USD1.

When asked about Trump’s ties to crypto projects in his name, the White House told CNBC there are no conflicts of interest and the president’s assets are in a trust managed by his children.

“I think it was a mistake for Trump to have a Trump-affiliated DeFi project issue a stablecoin. I think that really set back his stablecoin legislative agenda,” Carter said. “I think we could do it a lot more in terms of tackling these conflicts of interest. And I completely understand the Democrats when they try and weed this out.”

Watch the video above to learn why corporate giants are racing to launch their own crypto tokens

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Trump budget cuts, agency gutting, leave Americans and economy at greater risk of being hacked, experts warn

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Trump budget cuts, agency gutting, leave Americans and economy at greater risk of being hacked, experts warn

Almost a year into the second Trump administration, public sector leaders and cybersecurity experts say budget cuts and gutting of federal agencies are weakening critical lines of government communication to help companies prepare and respond to cyberattacks, even as AI threats are rising.

The most recent assessment of cybersecurity, based on the goals set forward by the bipartisan U.S. Cyberspace Solarium Commission, found that the U.S. was slipping in its progress toward 82 goals to create a strong cyber defense. “We were surprised and disappointed,” said Ret. Admiral Mark Montgomery, the executive director of Cybersolarium.org. The goals include things like reducing complex regulations on critical infrastructure companies, adding to cyber capacity in the FBI and within intelligence agencies, and improving K-12 cybersecurity education.

Montgomery said the primary causes of the slip in cyber readiness are cuts at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency, as well as earlier DOGE efforts carving a wide swath through the State Department, the National Science Foundation, National Institute of Standards and Technology and the U.S. Department of Commerce.

Meanwhile, a law that enabled companies to share information about cybersecurity without antitrust or liability concerns lapsed on Sept. 30.

The assessment of the Cyberspace Solarium Commission, now part of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, came despite public commitments by the Trump administration to cyber defense improvements, which the White House outlined in a June executive order framing its approach as “sustaining select efforts to strengthen the nation’s cybersecurity.” 

“Under the leadership of President Trump and Secretary Noem [Department of Homeland Security Secretary Krisit Noem], CISA is steadfastly fulfilling its core mission by demonstrating daily operational collaboration, accelerating intelligence sharing, and strengthening our defense of cybersecurity and critical infrastructure across the nation,” wrote a CISA spokeswoman in an emailed statement.

“I agree that we have more pessimistic view of government cybersecurity efforts over the past eight months, as opposed to the administration’s self assessment,” said Montgomery.

A less proactive federal government when it comes to cybersecurity is concerning based on the recent history of rising nation-state linked attacks. On Thursday, the Congressional Budget Office was targeted in a hack, reportedly by a foreign nation-state actor, according to the Washington Post.

Some cybersecurity actions are also stalled in Congress. For instance, the Trump administration’s nominee for head of CISA, Sean Plankey, has yet to be confirmed since summer hearings.  

The upshot, according to national security experts, is a federal government that is less active than it should be in cybersecurity efforts across the country.

“We’re shifting responsibility for primary coordination of cybersecurity to states and industry while simultaneously gutting the resources that would help them do that. Federal grant funding for state and local cybersecurity and critical partnerships has been slashed, while the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act protection expired in October,” wrote Carole House, former National Security Council Special Advisor and CEO of Penumbra Strategies in a message. “We’re handing off coordination (to industry) while kicking away the ladder,” she added.

Experts are also concerned about a rule that would have made big tech companies responsible for developing safer software for businesses and consumers, which has been stripped of its enforcement mechanism. The result, according to experts’ assessments, is that Americans and the U.S. economy are less safe from cyberattacks than a year ago.

Nor are military agencies necessarily picking up the slack. “I’ve been very concerned about the top leadership at Cyber Command and the (National Security Agency) being vacant for eight months. That translates to inertia and lack of direction,” said U.S. Rep. Don Bacon, a Republican from the second district of Nebraska who is not running for re-election, in an emailed statement. “Further, this Administration has been significantly cutting the budget and personnel for CISA, which is out on the front lines to defend our private sector and infrastructure from cyberattack.” 

‘Death by a thousand papercuts’

Montgomery cited the 2023 discovery of Volt Typhoon, a cyber attacker from the People’s Republic of China that had infiltrated critical infrastructure companies such as those operating in telecoms, water, transportation and energy, as an example of what is happening while the federal government retreats. Volt Typhoon could have been “operational preparation of the battlefield,” said Montgomery. When it was discovered, CISA issued recommendations of patches and steps that private companies should take. But not all of the infiltrations have been detected; and meanwhile, there are probably new attacks happening now. But the mechanisms for sharing that information have been gutted by the administration’s cuts and the political gridlock in Washington, D.C.

“The only way you’re going to detect this is with assistance from the government,” said Montgomery. “There are tell-tale signs that can be shared.”

In the springtime, cybersecurity experts began referring to the situation as “death by a thousand papercuts.”

Because critical infrastructure in the United States is owned and managed by companies large and small across the company, the cybersecurity defense system that had evolved under the past few administrations was complex and relied on public-private partnerships. The weakening of the public sector support for cybersecurity is throwing more responsibility onto companies.

Among many other reductions, the Trump administration disbanded an entity called the CIPAC, which enabled sharing of information between the federal government and the owners of parts of critical infrastructure, ranging from water systems to finance companies to electric grid operators to hospitals. Because it was disbanded, many industrial councils, including the one that pulled companies in the defense industrial base together to share information, are not operating as they were before. Montgomery said he believed companies were exchanging information, but not as freely or in as coordinated a way. 

The responses across industries have been haphazard. For instance, the E-ISAC, a cybersecurity information sharing council for the electric industry, is operating, but others, including the elections infrastructure council, have been defunded.

“The biggest regression is not technology, it is coordination,” said Evan Reiser, CEO of Abnormal AI, who said by email that he agreed with the concern from public sector leaders. “Signals are trapped in silos across agencies and vendors. Without real-time sharing of high-quality telemetry, defenders fight blind,” he said.

AI makes retreat on cyber defense more dangerous

Meanwhile, the threat is changing and growing exponentially because of artificial intelligence, said Kaitlin Betancourt, a partner at law firm Goodwin who focuses on cybersecurity law and compliance, and AI strategy and governance. “I think the cybersecurity risks that we’re being presented with right now have gone sharply up. Any cutting back of resources is the opposite direction of where we need to be,” she said.

Cybercriminals are embedding AI throughout their operations, from victim profiling, to automated service delivery and creating false identities. In one case in late summer, generative AI company Anthropic said criminals used its Claude chatbot to attack 17 different organizations with psychologically targeted, industry-specific extortion threats ranging from $75,000 to $500,000. The company said it was able to stop the attack.

Most cyberattacks come through legacy systems, such as email and spreadsheets, used by humans who fall prey to increasingly sophisticated lures. The Biden administration put in place a new measure requiring large software companies to attest to CISA that they had secure software. Those that failed would be referred to the attorney general for enforcement.

In June, Trump issued an executive order amending Obama and Biden executive orders on cybersecurity. The Trump order kept the requirements for attestation — meaning software companies need to report and show that they developed their software in a safe fashion. But the order also removed language that encouraged the national cyber director to refer attestations that fail validation to the attorney general for action as appropriate. In February, the Justice Department had brought an enforcement action against a software company related to compliance with cybersecurity standards. 

“Trump’s order retains an emphasis on software supply chain cybersecurity. It retains much of the Biden administration’s framework but scales back prescriptive directives and enforcement mechanisms, particularly those related to secure software development “attestations,” Betancourt and her colleagues wrote.

Cybercriminals generally aim to steal data or shut down systems in extortion schemes. In some cases, they are simply criminals; in other cases, the criminals are affiliated with nation-states, such as China, North Korea or Iran, whose missions are to damage the U.S. or fund their own operations. For instance, in February, hackers sponsored by North Korea stole approximately $1.5 billion in ethereum from the Binance cryptocurrency exchange, which has no official headquarters. Officials suspect the money will be laundered and used for the North Korean missile program.

In other cases, the attackers, especially those affiliated with geopolitical foes, may simply be undermining the economy of the United States without triggering a conventional war. And, of course, in the cat-and-mouse game, the United States can be waging its own instructions and cyberattacks on other countries’ systems. Officials from the Trump administration have spoken publicly about beefing up offensive capabilities, though it’s not clear how. Meanwhile, experts say both offense and defense are necessary – with the latter relying heavily on the private sector to spend in an informed way to protect their systems.

“I think we can recover from this,” Montgomery said. “But you can’t continue to cut.”

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Musk’s $1 trillion pay, a price cut for obesity drugs, Target’s in-store woes and more in Morning Squawk

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Musk's  trillion pay, a price cut for obesity drugs, Target's in-store woes and more in Morning Squawk

Tesla CEO Elon Musk attends the Saudi-U.S. Investment Forum, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2025.

Hamad I Mohammed | Reuters

This is CNBC’s Morning Squawk newsletter. Subscribe here to receive future editions in your inbox.

Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day:

1. +$1 trillion

The richest man in the world is about to get a lot richer.

Tesla shareholders approved CEO Elon Musk’s nearly $1 trillion pay plan yesterday, with 75% voting in support of the proposal despite opposition from top proxy advisors. The pay package will grant Musk 12 tranches of shares if the company reaches certain milestones over the next decade. It also gives the CEO more voting power over Tesla, increasing his ownership from 13% to 25%.

One of those milestones is the delivery of 1 million Optimus humanoid robots, which Musk on Thursday said “will eliminate poverty” and be “bigger than cell phones, bigger than anything.” The robots are currently not available on the market, and Musk didn’t give a timeline for their development.

2. AI angst

Traders works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

NYSE

Stocks resumed their sell-off yesterday as traders continued to weigh fears about the elevated valuations of artificial intelligence stocks. Shares of Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices and Microsoft all closed lower, putting the three major averages on track for a losing week.

Here’s what to know:

  • After Wednesday’s positive session, traders appeared to refocus on their concerns surrounding tech sector valuations and the role of AI stocks in a highly concentrated market.
  • The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.9% yesterday, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 400 points.
  • A murky employment picture has also pressured stocks this week. The Bureau of Labor Statistics will not release its nonfarm payrolls report today due to the government shutdown, but data from outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas yesterday showed that layoffs surged in October.
  • Job cuts totaled 153,074 last month, according to the report, a 183% surge from September and 175% increase from a year ago.
  • If the BLS had released its jobs report today, economists surveyed by Dow Jones expected to see a decline of 60,000 jobs in October and an increase in the unemployment rate to 4.5%.
  • Follow live market updates here.

3. Price cut

Novo Nordisk CEO Maziar Mike Doustdar shakes hands with U.S. President Donald Trump during an event to announce a deal with Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk to reduce the prices of GLP-1 weight‑loss drugs during an event in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 6, 2025.

Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

President Donald Trump announced deals with Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk yesterday to drastically cut the prices of some of the pharma giants’ obesity drugs. The agreements also mean that Medicare will cover GLP-1 drugs for obesity for the first time, starting mid-2026.

The monthly out-of-pocket price of the popular drugs could range from $50 to $350 under the deal, depending on patients’ dosage and insurance. The list prices of obesity medications reach as much as $1,350 a month before insurance.

Here’s how much the drugs could cost you under the new agreements.

4. Bailouts and backstops

David Sacks, U.S. President Donald Trump’s AI and Crypto Czar, speaks to press outside of the White House on March 07, 2025 in Washington, DC. Sacks spoke about the executive order on Crypto and U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile. 

Kayla Bartkowski | Getty Images

David Sacks, Trump’s AI and crypto advisor, said yesterday there will be “no federal bailout for AI.” His comments followed those of OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar, who earlier this week said the company was seeking a government “backstop” or “guarantee” to help fund its investments.

But Friar walked back her comments yesterday: “I used the word ‘backstop’ and it muddied the point,” Friar said in a LinkedIn post. “I was making the point that American strength in technology will come from building real industrial capacity which requires the private sector and government playing their part.”

Meanwhile, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said the AI startup expects to bring in more than $20 billion in annualized revenue this year “and grow to hundreds of billions by 2030.” The company has recently signed infrastructure deals worth more than $1.4 trillion, but investors are still unsure where it will get the money to pay for the commitments.

Get Morning Squawk directly in your inbox

5. Cleanup on aisle T

A shopper looks down an aisle in a Target store in Upper Saint Clair, Pa., on Friday, July 7, 2023.

Gene J. Puskar | AP

Shoppers aren’t happy with Target’s in-store experience. The company’s stores used to be the model for big-box retailers, but Target has been plagued by customer complaints about messy aisles, long lines and locked-up products.

So, it’s shaking up its website strategy.

Unlike its competitors, Target uses its stores as fulfillment centers for e-commerce orders. But under its new approach, the retailer will begin limiting which of its stores pick, pack and ship online purchases. Target executives are hoping the move will free up employees to focus more on the in-store experience.

The Daily Dividend

Here’s what you might have missed this week:

CNBC’s Lora Kolodny, Pia Singh, Sean Conlon, Liz Napolitano, Annika Kim Constantino, Ashley Capoot and Melissa Repko contributed to this report. Melodie Warner edited this edition.

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AI valuation fears grip global investors as tech bubble concerns grow

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AI valuation fears grip global investors as tech bubble concerns grow

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Oct. 30, 2025 in New York.

Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images

This week’s equity market wobble, which saw a retreat in U.S. artificial intelligence-related stocks amid ongoing concerns over stretched valuations, has thrust contagion fears into the spotlight for global investors.

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon warned this week of a “likely” 10-20% drawdown in equity markets at some point within the next two years, while the International Monetary Fund and the Bank of England have both sounded the alarm bells.

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey highlighted the possibilities of an AI bubble in an interview with CNBC on Thursday, noting that the “very positive productivity contribution” from technology companies could be offset by uncertainty around future earning steams in the sector.

“We have to be very alert to these risks,” Bailey said.

Legrand is one of several European companies which is benefitting from the AI boom. The French company, which sells products to Alphabet, Amazon and others to help cool servers, has seen its shares surge 37% this year, roughly as much as Nvidia.

AI valuation fears are back and European stocks aren't immune

Anders Danielsson, CEO of Swedish construction group Skanska, which builds data centers and other AI infrastructure assets, shrugged off concerns about a slowdown.

“In the U.S. we have a very strong pipeline of data centers — we don’t see any slowdown there,” he told CNBC. “We are working with large international customers and they are also interested in building data centers in central Europe, and in the Nordics and the U.K. We haven’t seen any slowdown really.”

Meanwhile Kiran Ganesh, multi-asset strategist at UBS, highlighted a notable lack of volatility, adding that the broader narrative remains positive.

“We’ve had a remarkably smooth rally given the scale of investment that’s taken place, given the uncertainty about future cash flows, and given some of those concerns about valuation,” Ganesh told CNBC’s “Europe Early Edition” on Friday.

“As we’ve gone through earnings season, I think it’s reasonable to have expected some volatility, but actually when we look at the results, and they have been reassuring, we’re still up over the course of earnings season and they have been beating expectations. So although some volatility has been materializing this week, we think that’s to be expected and the bigger picture still remains positive.”

Still, many investors appear to be souring on the increasingly-stretched valuations.

In Asia, shares of SoftBank Group — which is active across AI infrastructure, semiconductor and application companies — have fallen sharply, with the Japanese group suffering almost $50 billion in weekly losses. SoftBank resumed its downward trajectory on Friday, after dropping about 10% on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, it emerged that Scion Asset Management, the hedge fund led by “The Big Short” investor Michael Burry, had built short positions against both Palantir Technologies and Nvidia, drawing the ire of Palantir CEO Alex Karp.

“Some big tech stocks are on sale, and are presenting buying opportunities for investors, especially for investors who have missed out on the market’s strength over the past two months,” said Glen Smith, chief investment officer at GDS Wealth Management.

Other investors have flagged concentration risk in U.S. equities, and advocate looking further afield.

Luca Paolini, chief strategist at Pictet Asset Management, said stretched valuations mean the firm is neutral on U.S. names. “Emerging markets are preferred, with diversified exposure across India, Brazil, and broader EM benefiting from AI-driven investment and monetary easing,” Paolini said in a market commentary.

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