Business
FTX Payouts, U.S. Tariffs, Nonfarm Payrolls: Crypto Week Ahead

Market activity is likely to be overshadowed by Friday’s monthly U.S. employment figures, with nonfarm payrolls forecast set to increase by 39,000. The figure, seen as a barometer of the health of the world’s largest economy, is one of the most closely watched economic statistics. In the meantime, long-suffering creditors of bankrupt crypto exchange FTX, which failed in 2021, start receiving a total of $1.6 billion as the estate begins its third tranche of payouts. Arbitrum, the largest Ethereum layer-2 blockchain, is voting on investing its stash of idle ether (ETH) to earn rewards.
What to Watch
- Crypto
- Sept. 29, 8:00 p.m.: PancakeSwap (CAKE) discontinues support for Polygon zkEVM liquidity pools and Perpetual V1 orderbook. Users must withdraw funds by deadline.
- Sept. 30: FTX begins $1.6 billion third creditor payout under bankruptcy plan via BitGo, Kraken and Payoneer. Creditors must complete KYC and tax forms to qualify.
- Sept. 30: Starknet (STRK) launches BTC staking on mainnet, enabling wrapped BTC tokens staking with 25% consensus weight; un-staking period cut to 7 days; rewards start.
- Macro
- Sept. 29, 7:30 a.m.: Fed Governor Christopher J. Waller gives a speech on «Payments» in Frankfurt.
- Sept. 29, 10:30 a.m.: Sept. Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index (Prev. -1.8)
- Sept. 29, 1 p.m.: U.S. agencies SEC and CFTC hold a roundtable on regulatory harmonization efforts. Watch live.
- Sept. 30, 2 a.m.: U.K. Q2 GDP Growth Rate (final). YoY Est. 1.2%, QoQ Est. 0.3%.
- Sept. 30, 6 a.m.: Fed Vice Chair Philip N. Jefferson gives a speech on «Monetary Policy Frameworks and the U.S. Economic Outlook» in Helsinki.
- Sept. 30, 10 a.m.: U.S. Aug. JOLTS report. Openings (Prev. 7.181M), Quits (Prev. 3.208M).
- Sept. 30, 10 a.m.: U.S. Sept. CB Consumer Confidence. Est. 96.
- Sept. 30: Deadline for the U.S. Congress to pass the annual federal appropriations bill funding government operations.
- Oct. 1, 12:00 a.m.: New U.S. tariffs take effect. 100% on patented drugs without U.S. manufacturing, 50% on kitchen cabinets, 30% on upholstered furniture and 25% on heavy trucks.
- Oct. 1, 4:30 a.m.: S&P Global Canada Sept. Manufacturing PMI (flash). Est. 46.2.
- Oct. 1, 5:00 a.m.: Eurozone Sept. headline inflation rate (flash). YoY (Prev. 2%), MoM (Prev. 0.1%), core YoY (Prev. 2.3%).
- Oct. 1, 8:15 a.m.: U.S. Sept. ADP Employment Change (Prev. 54K).
- Oct. 1, 9 a.m.: S&P Global Brazil Sept. Manufacturing PMI (Prev. 47.7).
- Oct. 1, 9:30 a.m.: S&P Global Canada Sept. Manufacturing PMI (Prev. 48.3).
- Oct. 1, 9:45 a.m.: S&P Global U.S. September Manufacturing PMI (final). Est. 52.
- Oct. 1, 10 a.m.: U.S. ISM Sept. Manufacturing PMI Est. 49.2.
- Oct. 1, 10 a.m.: U.S. Senate Finance Committee hearing titled “Examining the Taxation of Digital Assets”
- Oct. 1, 11 a.m.: S&P Global Mexico Sept. Manufacturing PMI (Prev. 50.2).
- Oct. 2, 5 a.m.: Eurozone Aug. Unemployment Rate (Prev. 6.2%).
- Oct. 2, 8:30 a.m.: U.S. Jobless Claims initial (for week ended Sept. 27) Est. 220K, continuing (for week ended Sept. 20) (Prev. 1926K).
- Oct. 3, 4:30 a.m.: S&P Global U.K. Sept. Composite PMI (final). Est. 51, Services PMI (final) Est. 51.9.
- Oct. 3, 5 a.m.: Eurozone Aug. PPI YoY (Prev. 0.2%), MoM (Prev. 0.4%).
- Oct. 3, 8:30 a.m.: U.S. Sept. Employment Situation nonfarm payrolls Est. 39K, unemployment rate Est. 4.3%.
- Oct. 3, 9 a.m.: S&P Global Brazil Sept. PMI composite (Prev. 48.3), services (Prev. 49.3).
- Oct. 3, 9:30 a.m.: S&P Global Canada Sept. PMI composite (Prev. 48.4), services (Prev. 48.6).
- Oct. 3, 9:45 a.m.: S&P Global U.S. Sept. PMI composite Est. 53.6, services Est. 53.9.
- Oct. 3, 10 a.m.: U.S. ISM Sept. Services PMI Est. 52.
- Earnings (Estimates based on FactSet data)
- Nothing scheduled.
Token Events
- Governance votes & calls
- Lido DAO is voting on the design and implementation of its Lido V3 upgrade, which among other things introduces staking vaults (stVaults) that allow users to select specific staking operators. Voting ends Sept. 29.
- GnosisDAO is voting on a resubmitted proposal to create a $40,000 pilot fund. This would allow the community to directly finance small ecosystem projects using a conviction voting pool. Voting ends Oct. 1.
- ENS DAO is voting to reimburse the eth.limo team 109,818.82 USDC from the treasury. The funds are to cover legal fees for operating their public gateway. Voting ends Oct. 2.
- Arbitrum DAO is voting to transfer 8,500 idle ETH to its treasury team to earn yield and support the ecosystem. The move is expected to generate ~204 ETH annually. Voting ends Oct. 2.
- Gitcoin DAO is holding a vote to approve a revised $1,175,000 matching fund and updated grant categories for its upcoming Grants Round 24 (GG24). Voting ends Oct. 2.
- ZKSync DAO is voting on a proposal to allocate 25 million ZK tokens (~$1.25M) for the «Prividium Roadshow» through the end of 2026. Voting ends Oct. 8.
- Oct. 1: 1inch to make an announcement.
- Oct. 9: Cronos (CRO) to host an Ask Me Anything (AMA) session.
- Unlocks
- Sept, 28: Jupiter (JUP) to unlock 1.75% of its circulating supply worth $23.18 million.
- Sept. 30: Optimism (OP) to unlock 1.74% of its circulating supply worth $20.46 million.
- Oct. 1: Sui (SUI) to unlock 1.23% of its circulating supply worth $137.27 million.
- Oct. 1: EigenLayer (EIGEN) to unlock 13.77% of its circulating supply worth $64.07 million.
- Oct. 2: Ethena (ENA) to unlock 0.62% of its circulating supply worth $23.65 million.
- Oct. 3: Immutable (IMX) to unlock 1.26% of its circulating supply worth $17.56 million.
- Token Launches
- Sept. 29: Anoma (XAN) to be listed on KuCoin.
- Sept. 29: Ronin (RON) treasury buybacks begin.
- Sept. 29: Falcon Finance (FF) to be listed on Binance.
- Sept. 30: Soon (SOON) airdrop claim period ends.
Conferences
- Sept. 29: CoinFerenceX Singapore
- Sept. 29-30: Sonic Summit 2025 (Singapore)
- Sept. 30: Digital Assets Summit 2025 (Singapore)
- Sept. 30: Tokenized Capital Summit 2025 (Singapore)
- Oct. 1: ETHVenice 2025 (Venice, Italy)
- Oct. 1: Finance 2.0 – 2025 (Zurich)
- Oct. 1-2: Northern FinTech Summit 2025 (London)
- Oct. 1-2: TOKEN2049 Singapore
- Oct. 2: Stablecoin Summit 2025 (Singapore)
- Oct. 2-4: Lightning Plus Plus Berlin
- Oct. 3: DePIN Day Singapore 2025
- Oct. 4-5: Electronic Cash Conference 2025 (Barcelona)
- Oct. 4-5: The Amsterdam Cryptocurrency Conference 2025
Business
AAVE Sees 64% Flash Crash as DeFi Protocol Endures ‘Largest Stress Test’

The native token of Aave (AAVE), the largest decentralized crypto lending protocol, was caught in the middle of Friday’s crypto flash crash while the protocol proved resilient in a historic liquidation cascade.
The token, trading at around $270 earlier in Friday, nosedived as much as 64% later in the session to touch $100, the lowest level in 14 months. It then staged a rapid rebound to near $240, still down 10% over the past 24 hours.
Stani Kulechov, founder of Aave, described Friday’s event as the «largest stress test» ever for the protocol and its $75 billion lending infrastructure.
The platform enables investors to lend and borrow digital assets without conventional intermediaries, using innovative mechanisms such as flash loans. Despite the extreme volatility, Aave’s performance underscores the evolving maturity and resilience of DeFi markets.
«The protocol operated flawlessly, automatically liquidating a record $180M worth of collateral in just one hour, without any human intervention,» Kulechov said in a Friday X post. «Once again, Aave has proven its resilience.»
Key price action:
- AAVE sustained a dramatic flash crash on Friday, declining 64% from $278.27 to $100.18 before recuperating to $240.09.
- The DeFi protocol demonstrated remarkable resilience with its native token’s 140% recovery from the intraday lows, underpinned by substantial trading volume of 570,838 units.
- Following the volatility, AAVE entered consolidation territory within a narrow $237.71-$242.80 range as markets digested the dramatic price action.
Technical Indicators Summary
- Price range of $179.12 representing 64% volatility during the 24-hour period.
- Volume surged to 570,838 units, substantially exceeding the 175,000 average.
- Near-term resistance identified at $242.80 capping rebound during consolidation phase.
Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.
Business
Blockchain Will Drive the Agent-to-Agent AI Marketplace Boom

AI agents, software systems that use AI to pursue goals and complete tasks on behalf of users, are proliferating. Think of them as digital assistants that can make decisions and take actions towards goals you set without needing step-by-step instructions — from GPT-powered calendar managers to trading bots, the number of use cases is expanding rapidly. As their role expands across the economy, we have to build the right infrastructure that will allow these agents to communicate, collaborate and trade with one another in an open marketplace.
Big tech players like Google and AWS are building early marketplaces and commerce protocols, but that raises the question: will they aim to extract massive rents through walled gardens once more? Agents’ capabilities are clearly rising, almost daily, with the arrival of new models and architectures. What’s at risk is whether these agents will be truly autonomous.
Autonomous agents are valuable because they unlock a novel user experience: a shift from software as passive or reactive tools to active and even proactive partners. Instead of waiting for instructions, they can anticipate needs, adapt to changing conditions, and coordinate with other systems in real time, without the user’s constant input or presence. This autonomy in decision-making makes them uniquely suited for a world where speed and complexity outpace human decision-making.
Naturally, some worry about what greater decision-making autonomy means for work and accountability — but I see it as an opportunity. When agents handle repetitive, time-intensive tasks and parallelize what previously had to be done in sequence, they expand our productive capacity as humans — freeing people to engage in work that demands creativity, judgment, composition and meaningful connection. This isn’t make-believe, humanity has been there before: the arrival of corporations allowed entrepreneurs to create entirely new products and levels of wealth previously unthought of. AI agents have the potential to bring that capability to everyone.
On the intelligence side, truly autonomous decision-making requires AI agent infrastructure that is open source and transparent. OpenAI’s recent OSS release is a good step. Chinese labs, such as DeepSeek (DeepSeek), Moonshot AI (Kimi K2) and Alibaba (Qwen 3), have moved even quicker.
However, autonomy is not purely tied to intelligence and decision making. Without resources, an AI agent has little means to enact change in the real world. Hence, for agents to be truly autonomous they need to have access to resources and self-custody their assets. Programmable, permissionless, and composable blockchains are the ideal substrate for agents to do so.
Picture two scenarios. One where AI agents operate within a Web 2 platform like AWS or Google. They exist within the limited parameters set by these platforms in what is essentially a closed and permissioned environment. Now imagine a decentralized marketplace that spans many blockchain ecosystems. Developers can compose different sets of environments and parameters, therefore, the scope available to AI agents to operate is unlimited, accessible globally, and can evolve over time. One scenario looks like a toy idea of a marketplace, and the other is an actual global economy.
In other words, to truly scale not just AI agent adoption, but agent-to-agent commerce, we need rails that only blockchains can offer.
The Limits of Centralized Marketplaces
AWS recently announced an agent-to-agent marketplace aimed at addressing the growing demand for ready-made agents. But their approach inherits the same inefficiencies and limitations that have long plagued siloed systems. Agents must wait for human verification, rely on closed APIs and operate in environments where transparency is optional, if it exists at all.
To act autonomously and at scale, agents can’t be boxed into closed ecosystems that restrict functionality, pose platform risks, impose opaque fees, or make it impossible to verify what actions were taken and why.
Decentralization Scales Agent Systems
An open ecosystem allows for agents to act on behalf of users, coordinate with other agents, and operate across services without permissioned barriers.
Blockchains already offer the key tools needed. Smart contracts allow agents to perform tasks automatically, with rules embedded in code, while stablecoins and tokens enable instant, global value transfers without payment friction. Smart accounts, which are programmable blockchain wallets like Safe, allow users to restrict agents in their activity and scope (via guards). For instance, an agent may only be allowed to use whitelisted protocols. These tools allow AI agents not only to behave expansively but also to be contained within risk parameters defined by the end user. For example, this could be setting spending limits, requiring multi-signatures for approvals, or restricting agents to whitelisted protocols.
Blockchain also provides the transparency needed so users can audit agent decisions, even when they aren’t directly involved. At the same time, this doesn’t mean that all agent-to-agent interactions need to happen onchain. E.g. AI agents can use offchain APIs with access constraints defined and payments executed onchain.
In short, decentralized infrastructure gives agents the tools to operate more freely and efficiently than closed systems allow.
It’s Already Happening Onchain
While centralized players are still refining their agent strategies, blockchain is already enabling early forms of agent-to-agent interaction. Onchain agents are already exhibiting more advanced behavior like purchasing predictions and data from other agents. And as more open frameworks emerge, developers are building agents that can access services, make payments, and even subscribe to other agents — all without human involvement.
Protocols are already implementing the next step: monetization. With open marketplaces, people and businesses are able to rent agents, earn from specialized ones, and build new services that plug directly into this agent economy. Customisation of payment models such as subscription, one-off payments, or bundled packages will also be key in facilitating different user needs. This will unlock an entirely new model of economic participation.
Why This Distinction Matters
Without open systems, fragmentation breaks the promise of seamless AI support. An agent can easily bring tasks to completion if it stays within an individual ecosystem, like coordinating between different Google apps. However, where third-party platforms are necessary (across social, travel, finance, etc), an open onchain marketplace will allow agents to programmatically acquire the various services and goods they need to complete a user’s request.
Decentralized systems avoid these limitations. Users can own, modify, and deploy agents tailored to their needs without relying on vendor-controlled environments.
We’ve already seen this work in DeFi, with DeFi legos. Bots automate lending strategies, manage positions, and rebalance portfolios, sometimes better than any human could. Now, that same approach is being applied as “agent legos” across sectors including logistics, gaming, customer support, and more.
The Path Forward
The agent economy is growing fast. What we build now will shape how it functions and for whom it works. If we rely solely on centralized systems, we risk creating another generation of AI tools that feel useful but ultimately serve the platform, not the person.
Blockchain changes that. It enables systems where agents act on your behalf, earn on your ideas, and plug into a broader, open marketplace.
If we want agents that collaborate, transact, and evolve without constraint, then the future of agent-to-agent marketplaces must live onchain.
Business
‘Largest Ever’ Crypto Liquidation Event Wipes Out 6,300 Wallets on Hyperliquid

More than 1,000 wallets on Hyperliquid were completely liquidated during the recent violent crypto sell-off, which erased over $1.23 billion in trader capital on the platform, according to data from its leaderboard.
In total, 6,300 wallets are now in the red, with 205 losing over $1 million each according to the data, which was first spotted by Lookonchain. More than 1,000 accounts saw losses of at least $100,000.
The wipeout came as crypto markets reeled from a global risk-off event triggered by U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of a 100% additional tariff on Chinese imports.
The move spooked investors across asset classes and sent cryptocurrency prices tumbling. Bitcoin briefly dropped below $110,000 and ether fell under $3,700, while the broader market as measured by the CoinDesk 20 (CD20) index dropped by 15% at one point.
The broad sell-off led to over $19 billion in liquidations over a 24 hours period, making it the largest single-day liquidation event in crypto history by dollar value. According to CoinGlass, the “actual total” of liquidations is “likely much higher” as leading crypto exchange Binance doesn’t report as quickly as other platforms.
Leaderboard data reviewed by CoinDesk shows the top 100 traders on Hyperliquid gained $1.69 billion collectively.
In comparison, the top 100 losers dropped $743.5 million, leaving a net profit of $951 million concentrated among a handful of highly leveraged short sellers.
The biggest winner was wallet 0x5273…065f, which made over $700 million from short positions, while the largest loser, “TheWhiteWhale,” dropped $62.5 million.
Among the victims of the flush is crypto personality Jeffrey Huang, known online as Machi Big Brother, who once launched a defamation suit against ZachXBT, losing almost the entire value of his wallet, amounting to $14 million.
«Was fun while it lasted,» he posted on X.
Adding to the uncertainty, the ongoing U.S. government shutdown has delayed the release of key economic data. Without official indicators, markets are flying blind at a time when geopolitical risk is rising.
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