Anatoly Yakovenko, the co-founder of Solana Labs, is calling on Web3 entrepreneurs to prepare for the unexpected—specifically, the kind of brutal downturns that can shake even the most promising crypto ventures.
In a recent social media post, Yakovenko advised project leaders to regularly simulate extreme market conditions. His suggestion: run a quarterly drill imagining a catastrophic 95% market crash. These “fire drills,” he explained, aren’t just hypothetical exercises—they’re strategic planning tools meant to expose operational weaknesses before real chaos hits.
To guide these simulations, he proposed three key questions every team should confront:
Yakovenko also warned against complacency, noting that declarations of Solana’s dominance could backfire. In his view, the network’s real strength lies not in short-term hype but in continued, disciplined development. While Solana has made strides, he emphasized, it’s far from “finished”—and so is the broader crypto journey.
Large institutions accelerated their retreat from equities last month, unloading roughly $50.8 billion in U.S. shares, according to S&P Global.
Bitdeer Technologies, a Bitcoin mining firm based in Singapore, is gearing up to raise $330 million through a fresh offering of senior convertible notes maturing in 2031.
Institutional traders on Deribit and Crypto.com can now post BlackRock’s tokenized U.S. Treasury fund, BUIDL, as margin—an industry first for a low-volatility, yield-bearing digital security.
Tech shares still have plenty of room to run, argues Wedbush Securities research chief Dan Ives.