Oh, this is interesting — American regulators have just removed that $25 mil requirement for day trading stocks. You know that rule that required an absurd minimum balance for anyone who wanted to trade intraday? Well, that’s gone.



What caught my attention is that now, instead of a fixed limit, they’ll use a real-time margin system. Basically, instead of saying “you need to have $25k mil sitting in your account,” it’s now “you need to have sufficient collateral while you’re trading.” Much more dynamic.

And here’s the point that’s really worth discussing: this is exactly how crypto exchanges have worked for years. No minimum net-worth limit, continuous position monitoring, automated liquidation when risk gets high. Traditional finance is finally looking at how the crypto market has been operating since the beginning and thinking, “Why don’t we do that too?”

Think carefully about the implications. Lowering the barriers to entry in stocks means retail traders who previously only had crypto as an option — because it was more accessible — now have alternatives. But it also means traditional finance is, unintentionally, validating an approach that has always been standard in crypto day trading. Less bureaucracy, more flexibility.

What impresses me is that this isn’t just a regulatory change. It’s a recognition that markets have evolved, the technology has improved, and those old controls no longer make sense. American regulators are basically saying: instead of blocking access, we’ll monitor actual risk in real time.

This reinforces a bigger trend I’ve been noticing: the two worlds — traditional finance and crypto — are moving closer together. It’s not that crypto is going to replace stocks, but rather that both are converging toward more agile and accessible models. The next phase will likely be less about competition between the systems and more about how they coexist under increasingly similar rules.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin