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Avalanche Blockchain’s Largest-Ever Upgrade Goes Live on Testnet

Avalanche, the eighth-largest blockchain by total value locked (TVL), is moving ahead with a major technical makeover.
The Avalanche9000 upgrade went live in a test network environment (testnet) Monday, bringing the changes one step closer to the main network (mainnet), the Avalanche Foundation said.
Avalanche9000 will be the largest upgrade that Avalanche has seen. It is designed to cut the costs of sending transactions, operating validators and building apps on the network, whose native token {{AVAX}} is the 11th-largest cryptocurrency, with a $16 billion market cap.
The foundation is trying to attract developers to Avalanche and encourage users to create customized blockchains using its technology, known as subnets. Somewhat confusingly, subnets are now officially referred to in the Avalanche community as «L1s,» even though they are roughly analogous to the layer-2, or L2, networks that augment Ethereum and other blockchains. (Avalanche’s «primary network,» the equivalent of a layer-1 in other ecosystems, is considered a subnet.)
The team is hoping to bring Avalanche9000 to mainnet by yearend. Also known as the Etna Upgrade, Avalanche9000 consists of seven proposals, but the two most significant changes are ACP-77 and ACP-125.
Roll your own
The ACP-77 proposal would allow for a new type of validator with which users can launch their own subnets. The new validators will be significantly cheaper to operate, lowering the barrier to entry. The validators will also be permissionless, meaning anyone, from the operator of a decentralized exchange to the developers of another blockchain, can spin one up.
“Before this upgrade, it wasn’t possible for a dYdX or Monad to use Avalanche to launch their own L1. And that was because all the chains were permissioned, and that was the only functionality that was available,” said Luigi D’Onorio Demeo, the chief operation officer of Ava Labs, the main developer firm behind Avalanche, in an interview with CoinDesk. “So after this upgrade, we can have a chain with thousands of validators that wasn’t possible before.”
The ACP-125 proposal would lower the base fee, or minimum cost of running computations, on the primary Avalanche network’s C-chain, the main chain that runs smart contracts, from 25 nAVAX (about $0.00000098) to 1 nAVAX ($0.00000004.) One nAVAX equals one-billionth of one AVAX. (Avalanche also has a P-chain where users can stake AVAX and operate validators and an X-chain which is used for sending and receiving funds.)
“This basically puts C-chain fees equivalent to Arbitrum and Polygon,” D’Onorio Demio said, referring to two of the leading L2s on the Ethereum chain.
Referral grants
In addition to Avalanche9000 going live on testnet, the blockchain’s grants program, Retro9000, opened up Monday for developers to register and start building subnets in the testing environment. The foundation will reward them retroactively when they launch those subnets on mainnet.
“We’d love to see people experiment with different types of infrastructure like staking contracts. We’d love to see people experiment by building their own L1s,” D’Onorio Demio told CoinDesk. “If you’re more in the market for building a chain, this is a great way to start.”
Retro9000 has $40 million in rewards to distribute, with $2 million designated for business development executives, influencer-investors («key opinion leaders«) and the like who refer others to build on Avalanche.
“For the referral component: the idea there is if you’re a KOL or a BD person, and you know people that are potentially viable to build this kind of stuff, they can list you as a referral. And you will be eligible to also receive parts of the $2 million as well in retroactive grants,” D’Onorio Demio said.
Read more: Avalanche Unveils $40M Grant Program Ahead of ‘Avalanche9000’ Upgrade
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CoinDesk 20 Performance Update: AVAX Falls 2.1% as Nearly All Assets Trade Lower

CoinDesk Indices presents its daily market update, highlighting the performance of leaders and laggards in the CoinDesk 20 Index.
The CoinDesk 20 is currently trading at 2428.16, down 1.0% (-25.41) since 4 p.m. ET on Tuesday.
One of 20 assets is trading higher.
Leaders: AAVE (+0.2%) and BTC (-0.1%).
Laggards: AVAX (-2.1%) and BCH (-2.1%).
The CoinDesk 20 is a broad-based index traded on multiple platforms in several regions globally.
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Resolv Labs Raises $10M as Crypto Investor Appetite for Yield-Bearing Stablecoins Soars

Resolv Labs, the firm behind the $450 million decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Resolv, has closed a $10 million seed round to expand its crypto-native yield platform and USR stablecoin, the team told CoinDesk in an exclusive interview.
The investment round was led by Cyber.Fund and Maven11, with additional backing from Coinbase Ventures, Susquehanna’s subsidiary SCB Limited, Arrington Capital, Gumi Cryptos, NoLimit Holdings, Robot Ventures, Animoca Ventures and others.
Stablecoins, a $230 billion and rapidly expanding class of cryptocurrencies with pegged prices to an external asset, are capturing attention well beyond their traditional use in payments and trading. A growing cadre of crypto protocols offer yield-bearing stablecoins or «synthetic dollars,» wrapping diverse investment strategies into a digital token with a stable price and passing on part of the earnings to holders.
«I view stablecoins as the perfect rails for yield distribution,» Ivan Kozlov, founder and CEO of Resolv, said in an interview with CoinDesk. «This may actually become larger than transaction stablecoins like [Tether’s] USDT in the future.»
The most notable example of the trend is Ethena’s $5 billion USDe token, which primarily pursues a delta-neutral position by holding cryptocurrencies like BTC, ETH and SOL and simultaneously shorting equal size of perpetual futures, scooping up yield from funding rates.
Resolv also pursues a similar strategy: its USR token, anchored to $1, is a delta-neutral stablecoin designed to deliver stable yields from crypto markets, while shielding holders from sharp price swings.
The protocol achieves this by splitting risk between two layers, inspired by Kozlov’s background in structured products in traditional finance. USR stablecoin holders sit in the less risky senior tranche earning stable but lower yields, with risk-tolerant investors in the protocol’s insurance layer represented by the RLP token with floating price. This model, borrowed from structured finance, aims to make crypto yields more predictable without sacrificing decentralization, Kozlov explained.
Following its launch in September 2024, the protocol quickly ballooned to over $600 million in assets driven by attractive yields during the crypto rally after Donald Trump’s election victory, DefiLlama data shows. However, as markets turned bearish and yields compressed, Resolv’s total value locked (TVL) also slid around $450 million this month.
With the new capital raise, Resolv plans to expand its yield sources to include bitcoin (BTC)-based strategies and deepening its integrations with institutional digital asset managers, Kozlov said. The protocol also aims to expand to new blockchains, widening its reach beyond early crypto adopters.
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Trump-Family Backed World Liberty Gets $25M Investment From DWF Labs

DWF Labs is investing $25 million in World Liberty Financial (WLFI), the decentralized finance protocol backed by U.S. President Donald Trump and his family.
The crypto market maker is also entering the U.S. market with a new office in New York City as part of its broader expansion plans, according to a press release on Wednesday.
By establishing a physical presence in the U.S., DWF aims to work more closely with traditional financial institutions, expand its local workforce and engage more directly with U.S. regulators.
The firm also plans to deepen ties with American colleges and universities to promote education on cryptocurrencies. The WLFI token purchase gives DWF Labs a governance stake in the project, which includes USD1, the project’s soon-to-launch stablecoin backed by short-term U.S. Treasury bills, cash, and equivalents.
DWF Labs said it will supply liquidity for the USD1 ecosystem, using its trading infrastructure to support activity on both centralized and decentralized platforms.
Zak Folkman, co-founder of WLFI, said DWF’s involvement is expected to accelerate “the next-generation infrastructure we’re actively building and deploying at WLFI.” DWF Labs Managing Partner Andrei Grachev, meanwhile, said that the firm’s physical presence in the U.S. reflects its confidence in “America’s role as the next growth region for institutional crypto adoption.”
WLFI is positioning USD1 as a stable, institutional-grade stablecoin designed to meet rising demand from “sovereign investors and major institutions.”
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